Chapter 16 - Notes Payable and Notes Receivable Flashcards
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
promissory notes
- is a written promise to pay a certain amount of money at a specific future time
- is a negotiable instrument
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
interest
- is the fee charged for the use of money
- is calculated used the formula :
Interest = Principal x Rate x Time or I = PRT - the time period is indicated in frictions of a year - 360 days
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
banker’s year
- a 360-day period used to calculate interest on a note
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
principal
- the amount shown on the face of the note
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
face value
- an amount of money indicated to be paid, exclusive of interest or discounts
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
maturity value
- the total amount (principal plus interest) payable when a note comes due
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
note payable
- a liability representing a written promise by the maker of the note (the debtor) to pay another party (the creditor) a specified amount at a specified future date
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
discounting
- deducting the interest from the principal on a note payable or receivable in advance
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
Notes Payable
- at the end of each accounting period, a schedule of notes payable is prepared from the information in the notes payable register
- the schedule of notes payable must agree with the Notes Payable account in the general ledger
- For each note payable, the notes payable register shows the following information :
- the issue date
- the payee
- where the note is payable
- the term of the note
- the maturity date
- the face amount
- the Interest rate, if any
- the interest amount, if any
- Notes due within one year are classified as current liabilities
- Notes due in more than one year are classified as long-term liabilities l
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES PAYABLE
negotiable instrument
- a financial document containing a promise or order to pay that meets all requirements of the Uniform Commercial Code in order to be transferable to another party
- The UCC requirements specify that to be negotiable an instrument must :
- be in writing and must be signed by the maker or drawer
- contain an unconditional promise or order to pay a definite amount of money
- be payable either on demand or at a future time that is fixed or that can be determined
- be payable to order of a specific person or to the bearer
- clearly name or identify the drawer if addressed to a drawee
- checks are negotiable instruments
- another important negotiable instrument is the promissory note
- promissory notes may be either notes payable or notes receivable
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES RECEIVABLE
notes receivable
- an asset representing a written promise by another party (the debtor) to pay the note holder (the creditor) a specified amount at a specified future date
- at maturity date, the holder will receive cash for the note receivable; if the holder wants cash before the maturity date, the note can be discounted (sold) at the bank; the bank pays the holder the maturity value (principal plus any interest) minus the discount charge.
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES RECEIVABLE
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
- Some lenders charge lower interest rates but add high fees; others do the reverse
- The APR allows you to compare them on equal terms
- It combines the fees and interest charges to give you the true annual interest rate.
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES RECEIVABLE
Calculating the Discount and the Proceeds
- Step 1 : Determine the maturity value of the note.
- Step 2 : Calculate the number of days in he discount period
- The discount period is the number of days from the discount date to the maturity date
- Step 3 : Compute the discount charged by the bank.
- The discount formula is similar to the interest formula
- The time is the number of days in the discount period
- Discount = Maturity Value (MV) x Discount Rate x Discount Period
- Step 4 : Calculate the proceeds, the amount received from the bank
- This is the maturity value minus the discount
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES RECEIVABLE
contingent liability
- an item that can become a liability if certain things happen
- a common way to show contingent liabilities is to present the net notes receivable on the balance sheet and to include a footnote with the information about the discounted notes receivable
ACCOUNTING FOR NOTES RECEIVABLE
Calculating the Discount and the Proceeds
- Step 1 : Determine the Maturity Value of the note
- Maturity value is the principal plus the interest
- Step 2 : Calculate the number of days in the discount period
- Step 3 : Compute the discount charged by the bank
- Step 4 : Calculate the proceeds
- Maturity Value minus the discount