Statement of Comprehensive Income Flashcards
What is a statement of comprehensive income?
If produced correctly, will give an accurate calculation showing how much profit or loss the business has made. It records sales costs and profits over a period of time.
Sales revenue
is the money coming into the business from providing a trade.
sales revenue = quantity sold x selling price
costs of goods sold
the costs directly linked to providing that trade e.g., cost of buying in the goods or the raw materials.
Cost of goods sold = opening inventories + purchases - closing inventories.
Gross profit
amount of money left or the surplus after the cost of goods sold has been deducted from the sales turnover. It is not the business’s final profit as there still are other expenses to deduct in the next part of the account.
gross profit = sales revenue - costs of goods sold.
Profit
is the money after all expenses have been deducted from the gross profit and any other revenue income has been added.
calculation for profit for the year
profit or loss for the year = gross profit - expenses + other income
tax deduction
Tax is to be deducted from the profit, a percentage is paid to HMRC, this then gives profit after tax.
Some of profit is likely to be ploughed back into the business - retained profit.
Retained profit may be transferred from statement of comprehensive income to statement of financial position.
What is depreciation?
Depreciation is an accountancy concept used to spread the cost of an asset over its useful life. The annual amount by which the assets are depreciated is therefore included as an expense in the statement of comprehensive income.
The statement of financial position should therefore show the historic cost of an asset, the amount by which it has depreciated over its life and then a current value for the asset.
Straight line depreciation
A asset is depreciated by a set amount each year
Reducing balance depreciation
an asset is depreciated by a set percentage of its remaining value each year
How to work out straight line depreciation
involves reducing the value of an asset from the price paid, i.e. its historic cost, by a fixed amount each year. account must make two decisions:
- how long the asset is expected to be useful to the business, i.e. its expected life.
- how much the asset might be worth at the end of its useful life if it was sold i.e. its residual value.
formula for straight line depreciation
(historic value - residual value) /expected life
how to work out reducing balance depreciation
reducing the value of an asset by a set percentage each year. The percentage is decided by a senior accountant and stated in the financial reports.
This method depreciates an asset by a lower amount as the assets ages.
Net Book value = original cost - depreciated amount
Adjustments to statement of comprehensive income
Adjustments will be made to a statement of comprehensive income so that the expenditure shown matches the period in which the good or service is used.
Two types of adjustments are made to account for timing differences.
Adjustment - Prepayments
a expense is made in advance of the periods to which it relates.
the expense is taken out of expenses in the statement of comprehensive income and is shown as a current asset in the statement of financial position.
For example rental on a phone line paid quarterly in advance.