FAR - Financial Statement Acct - Cash/Equiv Flashcards
true/false
The effective rate of interest on a 1-year, 5%, $5,000 loan requiring a $300 compensating balance to be maintained is 5.3%.
The cash account typically includes all cash owned by the firm
Overdrafts can be offset against cash in the same bank, but if the bank has insufficient cash at the same bank, it is reported as a current liability.
cash = cash equivalents
The bank service charge and insufficient funds are already reflected in the bank balance.
True
False
True
False
True
Not included in cash
Included in cash
Cash Equivalents
COD; (maturity more than 90 days) Legally restricted compensating balances; Restricted cash funds; Post-dated checks received; Checks written but not sent; Advances to employees; Postage stamps.
Coin and currency, petty cash, cash in bank, checks: cashier's, certified, ordinary, money orders
Treasury obligations (bills, notes, and bonds), commercial paper (very short-term corporate notes), money market funds.
Compensating balance
IFRS difference - overdraft rules
separation of duties purpose
monetary assets
minimum balance maintained by firm at a bank for borrowing
subtract balance rather reporting as a liability
safeguard cash acct/difficult for fraud to occur
fixed nominal value assets
True/False
Only amounts adjusting the balance per books require an adjusting entry because only those amounts explain why the firm’s recorded cash balance is not the same as the true cash balance. Common adjustments of this type include bank service charges, notes collected, and interest. The firm cannot alter the bank balance.
True
Book to Bank Balance Adj
Bank to Book Balance Adj
\+ Interest Earned; \+ Note Collected; - Service Charges; - NSF Checks; \+/- Errors in company's records
+ Deposits in Transit;
+ Cash on Hand (deposited cash receipts, not petty cash);
- Outstanding Checks.
+/- Bank Errors.
Deposit in transit
NSF check
3 types of bank rec
cash on hand
O/S checks
deposit made, but not cleared by bank
non-sufficient funds check rec’d by customers
1) bank to book
2) book to bank
3) book/bank to true balance (b/s balance of cash)
1) petty cash and 2) undeposited cash
written/mailed out checks, not cleared