Accounting
Principles
Second Canadian Edition
Weygandt · Kieso · Kimmel · Trenholm
Prepared by:
Carole Bowman, Sheridan College
CHAPTER
4
COMPLETION OF THE
ACCOUNTING CYCLE
WORK SHEET



A work sheet is a multiple-column form that
may be used in the adjustment process and
in preparing financial statements.
It is a working tool or a supplementary
device for the accountant and not a
permanent accounting record.
Use of a work sheet should make
the preparation of adjusting entries
and financial statements easier.
ILLUSTRATION 4-1
WORK SHEET
Account Titles
Trial Balance
Debit
Credit
1. Prepare
trial balance
on the
worksheet.
Adjustments
Debit
Credit
2. Enter
adjustment
data.
Adjusted Trial Balance
Debit
Credit
3. Enter
adjusted
balances
Income Statement
Debit
Credit
Balance Sheet
Debit
Credit
4. Extend adjusted
balance to appropriate
columns.
5. Calculate income/loss
and complete the
worksheet.
PURPOSE OF CLOSING ENTRIES
1. Updates the owner’s capital account
in the ledger by transferring net
income (loss) and owner’s drawings
to owner’s capital.
2. Prepares the temporary accounts
(revenue, expense, drawings) for the
next period’s postings by reducing
their balances to zero.
ILLUSTRATION 4-2
TEMPORARY VERSUS
PERMANENT ACCOUNTS
TEMPORARY (NOMINAL)
These accounts are closed
PERMANENT (REAL)
These accounts are not closed
All revenue accounts
All asset accounts
All expense accounts
All liability accounts
Owner’s drawings
Owner’s capital account
(Income Statement /
Drawings Accounts)
(Balance Sheet Accounts)
ILLUSTRATION 4-3
DIAGRAM OF CLOSING PROCESS
(INDIVIDUAL)
REVENUES
(INDIVIDUAL)
EXPENSES
Normal Dr.
Balance
-0-
Cr. to close
Dr. to close
2
Normal Cr.
Balance
-0-
1
OWNER’S
CAPITAL
Expenses
Opening Balance
Revenues
1 Debit each revenue account for its balance, and credit the
owner’s capital account for total revenues.
2 Debit the owner’s capital account for total expenses, and credit
each expense account for its balance.
ILLUSTRATION 4-3
DIAGRAM OF CLOSING PROCESS
OWNER’S
CAPITAL
Expenses
Drawings
Opening Balance
Revenues
Ending Balance
3
OWNER’S
DRAWINGS
Normal Dr.
Balance
Cr. to close
-0-
3 Debit owner’s capital for the balance in the owner’s drawings
account and credit owner’s drawings for the same amount.
CLOSING ENTRIES
STOP AND CHECK
1. Does the balance in your
Owner’s Capital account
equal the ending capital
balance reported in the
Balance Sheet and
Statement of Owner’s
Equity?
2. Are all of your temporary
account balances zero?
POST-CLOSING TRIAL BALANCE


After all closing entries have been
journalized and posted, a post-closing trial
balance is prepared.
The purpose of this trial balance is to prove
the equality of the permanent (balance
sheet) account balances that are carried
forward into the next accounting period.
ILLUSTRATION 4-8
POST-CLOSING TRIAL BALANCE
Pioneer Advertising Agency
Post-Closing Trial Balance
October 31, 2002
After Adjustment
Debit
Credit
Cash
The post-closing trial$ 15,200
Accounts Receivable
200
balance
is
prepared
Advertising Supplies
1,000
from the permanent
Prepaid Insurance
550
Office Equipment
5,000
accounts in the ledger.
Accumulated Amortization
$
83
Notes Payable
5,000
The post-closing trial
Accounts Payable
2,500
balance provides evidence
Unearned Revenue
800
that
the
journalizing
and
Salaries Payable
1,200
posting of closing entries
Interest Payable
25
has been properly
C.R. Byrd, Capital
12,342
$ 21,950
$ 21,950
completed.
STEPS IN THE ACCOUNTING CYCLE
9. Prepare
post-closing
trial balance
1. Analyse
transactions
3. Post to ledger
accounts
8. Journalize
and post
closing entries
7. Prepare
financial
statements
2. Journalize the
transactions
4. Prepare a
trial balance
6. Prepare
adjusted trial
balance
5. Journalize
and post
adjusting
entries
REVERSING ENTRIES
(OPTIONAL STEP)



A reversing entry is made at the beginning
of the next accounting period.
A reversing entry reverses certain adjusting
entries made in the previous period.
Opening balances can then be ignored
when preparing year-end adjusting entries.
This topic is illustrated in Appendix 4A.
CORRECTING ENTRIES



Errors that occur in recording transactions
should be corrected as soon as they are
discovered by preparing correcting entries.
Correcting entries are unnecessary if the
records are free of errors; they can be
journalized and posted whenever an error
is discovered.
They involve any combination of balance
sheet and income statement accounts.
ILLUSTRATION 4-10
STANDARD BALANCE SHEET
CLASSIFICATIONS
 Financial
statements become more useful when the
elements are classified into significant subgroups.
 A classified balance sheet generally has the following
standard classifications:
Assets
Current Assets
Long-Term Investments
Capital Assets
Liabilities and Equity
Current Liabilities
Long-Term Liabilities
Owner’s/ Partners’/ Shareholders’ Equity
CURRENT ASSETS



Current assets are cash and other resources
that are reasonably expected to be realized in
cash or sold or consumed in the business
within one year of the balance sheet date or
the company’s operating cycle, whichever is
longer.
Listed in the order of liquidity.
Examples of current assets are cash,
temporary investments, accounts receivable,
inventory, and prepaids.
LONG-TERM
INVESTMENTS


Long-term investments are resources that can
be realized in cash, but the conversion into
cash is not expected within one year or the
operating cycle, whichever is longer.
Examples include investments in shares or
bonds of another company or investment in
land held for resale.
100
XYZ shares
CAPITAL ASSETS

Tangible resources of a relatively permanent nature
that are used in the business and not intended for sale
are classified as (1) property, plant, and equipment
and (2) natural resources.
(1) Examples of property, plant, and equipment include land,
buildings, and machinery.
(2) Examples of natural resources include tracts of timber, oil
and gas reserves, and mineral deposits.
CAPITAL ASSETS


Intangible assets are noncurrent resources
that do not have physical substance.
Examples include patents, copyrights,
trademarks, or trade names that give the
holder exclusive right of use for
a specified period of time.
CURRENT LIABILITIES


Current liabilities are obligations that are
reasonably expected to be paid from
existing current assets or through the
creation of other current liabilities within
one year or the operating cycle, whichever
is longer.
Examples include accounts payable,
unearned revenue, interest payable, and
current maturities of long-term debt.
LONG-TERM LIABILITIES


Obligations expected to be paid after one
year are classified as long-term liabilities.
Examples include long-term notes payable,
bonds payable, mortgages payable, and
lease liabilities.
EQUITY




The content of the equity section varies with the
form of business organization.
In a proprietorship, there is a single owner’s
equity account called (Owner’s Name), Capital.
In a partnership, there are separate capital
accounts for each partner.
For a corporation, owners’ equity is called
shareholders’ equity, and it consists of two
accounts: Share Capital and Retained Earnings.
ILLUSTRATION 4-17
CLASSIFIED BALANCE SHEET IN REPORT FORM
Pioneer Advertising Agency
Balance Sheet
October 31, 2002
Assets
Current Assets
Cash
Accounts Receivable
Advertising Supplies
Prepaid Insurance
Total Current Assets
Capital Assets
Office Equipment
Less: Accumulated Amortization
Total Assets
$
$
5,000
83
$
15,200
200
1,000
550
16,950
4,917
21,867
Liabilities and Owner's Equity
Current Liabilities
Notes Payable
Accounts Payable
Unearned Revenue
Salaries Payable
Interest Payable
Total Current Liabilities
Long-term Liabilties
Notes Payable
Total Liabilities
Owner's Equity
C.R. Byrd, Capital
Total Liabilities and Owner's Equity
$
1,000
2,500
800
1,200
25
5,525
4,000
9,525
$
12,342
21,867
A classified balance
sheet helps the
financial statement
user determine:
• The availability of
assets to meet debts as
they come due, and
•The claims of shortand long-term
creditors on total
assets.
The balance sheet is
most often presented in
the report form, with
the assets shown above
the liabilities and
owner’s equity.
LIQUIDITY


Liquidity measures ability to pay shortterm obligations when they come due.
Working capital is one important measure
of liquidity.
WORKING CAPITAL = CURRENT ASSETS - CURRENT LIABILITIES
CURRENT RATIO
The current ratio (working capital ratio) is
a widely used measure for evaluating a
company’s liquidity and short-term debtpaying ability. It is calculated by dividing
current assets by current liabilities and is a
more dependable indicator of liquidity than
working capital.
CURRENT ASSETS
CURRENT RATIO = ———————————
CURRENT LIABILITIES
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