Introduction to Business Business Administration (BA) 101 School of Business Administration THE FOURTH WEEK ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE _________________ PRINCIPAL TOPICS 1. Distinguish between Accounting and Finance Functions. Accounting records and reports firm’s financial transactions. Finance manages firm’s capital structure. 2. Accounting function: Responsible for (a) compliance with tax and other financial laws and regulations and (b) providing consistent financial information. Distinguish between “Financial Accounting” (reporting for external parties) and “Managerial Accounting” (reporting for internal analysis and strategic decision-making). 3. Finance Function: Responsible for (a) reconciling timing and amounts of sources and uses of cash and (b) implications of capital structure choices. 4. Accounting Reports: (a) Balance Sheet. Reports firm’s financial condition (Assets, Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity) as of specified date. (b) Income Statement. Reports firm’s financial performance (Revenues, Expenses, Profits and Net Income) for specified period. (c) Statement of Cash Flows. Reports sources and uses of cash organized by activity: (i) operating, (ii) investing and (iii) financing. Issues. What is basis for reported amounts: Historical cost or current value? Are amounts recorded when cash was received (cash-basis accounting) or when the service was performed or the product delivered (accrual-basis accounting)? What is the primary responsibility of a public-firm’s auditor? 5. Three sources of financing: (a) internally generated funding from retained earnings or terms of accounts payable/receivable, (b) external debt such as bank or finance company loans or direct bonds and (c) external equity obtained from investment bankers or private parties. Issues. Will future returns from investing retained earnings be greater than current payments of cash dividends? What are debt’s direct fixed costs and indirect expenses? How much control might be given up to obtain equity financing? 6. Financial Analysis - Three ratios: (1) Current Ratio. Measures liquidity, (2) Debt-toEquity Ratio. Measures leverage. (3) Return-on-Equity Ratio. Measures management’s efficiency. Know the uses for and limitations of ratio-based financial analysis. Fourth Week Study Guide Page 2 TEXTBOOK MATERIAL Chapter 15 The question of whether and when to record a transaction is no less of an essential accounting policy choice than how to report the transaction. Remember that accountants may be certified but their reports may not. Relatedly, an “audited” financial report is only a “fair presentation”; the firm’s management is responsible for the report’s accuracy. (Section 1) Know the components of an Income Statement and a Balance Sheet. Know also (1) Why a Statement of Cash Flows is necessary to better understand a firm’s operations (reports sources and uses of cash organized by operating, investing and financing activities), (2) the Basic (or General) Accounting Equation, (3) That Depreciation is a “non-cash” operating expense and (4) The difference between short- and long-term assets and liabilities (one year) (Section 3) Know the purpose for and how to compute three financial analytics: (1) Current Ratio (evaluates a firm’s liquidity), (2) Debt-to-Equity Ratio (evaluates a firm’s leverage) and (3) Return-on-Equity Ratio (evaluates the efficiency of a firm’s management). Know the conditions necessary for useful ratio analysis. (Section 4) Note that the Textbook’s answer to Self-Test Question Number 24 is wrong (p. 536). Chapter 16 Creditworthiness is determined by three “Cs”: Capacity (ability to pay debt service; sufficiency and reliability of cash flows), Collateral (secondary source of repayment; sufficiency and liquidity of assets) and Character (has Debtor (Borrower) successfully managed debt obligations). (Section 1.1) Bond form of debt is most commonly used by government entities (federal, state, local, special districts (school, fire, etc.)) and very large public companies. Primary source of repayment for government-issued bonds is legal authority to collect taxes, not collateral. (Section 1.2). Commercial Paper is unsecured, short-term (seldom more than 30 days), unregistered debt used by public companies for financing operations, e.g., accounts receivable or inventories. Funding typically provided by money-market funds. (Section 1.3) Distinguish between Common Stock (Voting) and Preferred Stock (Non-voting). (Section 2.2) TERMS AND CONCEPTS Asset Shareholders’ (Owner’s or Stockholders’) Equity Liability Audit/Auditors Liquidity Revenues Expenses Profit Net Income Income Statement Balance Sheet Statement of Cash Flows Current Ratio Debt-to-Equity Ratio Return on Equity (ROE) Accounting Equation Cost of Goods Sold Capital Structure Debt Equity Retained Earnings Commercial Bank Investment Bank Loan versus Bond Covenants Initial Public Offering (IPO) Venture Capital Debt Service Collateral (Security) Debtor/Creditor Common Stock (Voting) Preferred Stock (Non-voting) Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) Depreciation Revised: January 16, 2011