Does Jones Soda Co. have to account for the changes in its cash every year? 1.Yes 2.No.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 21 Statement of Cash Flows Revisited.
Advertisements

© 2010 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, College Accounting: A Practical Approach, 11e by Slater Statement of Cash Flows Statement of Cash Flows Chapter.
The Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 12. The statement of cash flows reports the entity’s cash flows (cash receipts and cash payments) during the period.
Copyright 2003 Prentice Hall Publishing Company1 Chapter 10 Preparing a Statement of Cash Flows.
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
Chapter 17: Cash Flow Statement
17-1 Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: [1] Indicate the usefulness of the statement of cash flows. [2] Distinguish.
12-1 STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Financial Accounting, Sixth Edition 12.
Statement of Cash Flows Chapter Understanding the purpose of a statement of cash flows. Learning Objective 1.
16 Statement of Cash Flows Accounting 26e C H A P T E R Warren Reeve
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Accounting Principles, Eighth Edition
Statement of Cash Flows The Statement of Cash Flows provides relevant information about the cash receipts and cash payments of an enterprise during a period.
Reporting and Analyzing Cash Flows Chapter 17. Purposes of the Statement of Cash Flows Designed to fulfill the following: – predict future cash flows.
Statement of Cash Flows 16 Principles of Financial Accounting, 11e Reeve Warren Duchac.
©2008 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved The Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 12.
©2002 Prentice Hall, Inc. Business Publishing Accounting, 5/E Horngren/Harrison/Bamber The Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 17.
Chapter 18 The Cash Flow Statement
Prepared by: C. Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus of Accounting Pepperdine University Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 14.
Managerial Accounting Preparing and Using the Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 17.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter Thirteen: Statement of Cash Flows.
Prepared by: C. Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus of Accounting Pepperdine University © 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned,
©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2006McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Twelve Statement of Cash Flows.
Statement of Cash Flows Purpose of the Statement of Cash Flows Reports cash flows – Cash flows from operating activities – transactions that affect net.
24-1. The Statement of Cash Flows Section 1: Sources and Uses of Cash Chapter 24 Section Objectives 1.Distinguish between operating, investing, and financing.
13-1 Preview of Chapter 13 Financial and Managerial Accounting Weygandt Kimmel Kieso.
Chapter 41 Cash, Short-term Investments and Accounts Receivable Chapter 4.
Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 1 Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 13.
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Accounting Principles, Eighth Edition
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Managerial Accounting, Fourth Edition
Chapter Indicate the usefulness of the statement of cash flows Distinguish among operating, investing, and financing activities Prepare.
Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 12 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Chapter 13.
Chapter 17-1 Chapter 17 Statement of Cash Flows Accounting Principles, Ninth Edition.
Chapter 14 The Statement of Cash Flows
The Statement of Cash Flows 15. Overview of the Statement of Cash Flows OBJECTIVE 1: Describe the principal purposes and uses of the statement of cash.
17-1 Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: [1] Indicate the usefulness of the statement of cash flows. [2] Distinguish.
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
© 2004 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, College Accounting: A Practical Approach, 9e by Slater Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 21.
Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 17—Part 2 Step 1: Operating Activities Determine net cash provided/used by operating activities by converting net income.
Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 13 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Statement of Cash Flows ACT 201 Lecture By: Ms. Adina Malik Chapter 17.
MGT 497 Financial Statements Prof. Rick Hayes, Ph.D., CPA.
The Statement of Cash Flows The statement of cash flows reports the entity’s cash flows (cash receipts and cash payments) during the period.
22–1 McQuaig Bille 1 College Accounting 10 th Edition McQuaig Bille Nobles © 2011 Cengage Learning PowerPoint presented by Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus.
Statement of Cash Flows Learning Objective Describe the nature of the adjusting process. Learning Objective Describe.
CHAPTER 14 Statement of Cash Flows. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin 14-2 Reporting Format for the Statement of Cash Flows The Statement.
13-1 Preview of Chapter 13 Financial and Managerial Accounting Weygandt Kimmel Kieso.
C Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
C Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 17-1 CHAPTER 17 STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Accounting Principles, Eighth Edition.
 Provide information about cash receipts and payments during an accounting period  Helps us see how financial position changes.
Chapter 12 Reporting and Interpreting the Statement of Cash Flows 1© McGraw-Hill Ryerson. All rights reserved.
Page 13-1 UNIT 8 SEMINAR STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS CHAPTER 13.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Statement of Cash Flows Chapter Twelve.
Operating Activities – Calculating Cash Flow Amounts (indirect)  Steps for preparing the Operating Section: Net Income - always start with the Net Income.
Chapter 16 The Statement of Cash Flows What Is the Statement of Cash Flows? The statement of cash flows reports on a business’s cash receipts and.
The Statement of Cash Flows
PreviewofCHAPTER17.
Statement of Cash Flows
Operating Activities – Calculating Cash Flow Amounts (indirect)
Statement of Cash Flows Statement of Cash Flows
Statement of Cash Flows
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
Statement of Cash Flows
Accounting, Fifth Edition
งบกระแสเงินสด(Statement of Cash Flows)
17 Statement of Cash Flows Learning Objectives
Statement of Cash Flows
Statement of Cash Flows
Presentation transcript:

Does Jones Soda Co. have to account for the changes in its cash every year? 1.Yes 2.No

Do you think that investors and creditors pay close attention to the reporting of the changes in cash for Jones Soda Co.? 1.Yes 2.No

Does the management of Jones Soda Co. rely heavily on the information from the statement of cash flows for company decision-making? 1.Yes 2.No

Does the preparation of the statement of cash flows follow all of the accounting concepts and principles discussed in previous chapters? 1.Yes 2.No

Is the statement of cash flows a required financial statement such as the income statement, balance sheet and retained earnings statement? 1.Yes 2.No

The statement of cash flows is one of the basic financial statements that must be prepared with the income statement, balance sheet, and retained earnings statement. 1.True 2.False

The order of presentation of the types of activities for the statement of cash flows does not matter. 1.True 2.False

A source of cash causes the cash flow to increase. 1.True 2.False

The ending cash balance on the statement of cash flows equals the cash account balance reported on the balance sheet. 1.True 2.False

Over 99% of all firms use the direct method to report their cash flows and to prepare their statement of cash flows. 1.True 2.False

Noncash investing and financing activities will be reported in a separate section, usually appearing at the bottom of the statement of cash flows. 1.True 2.False

Using the indirect method, an increase in accounts payable during a period is deducted from net income in computing cash from operating activities. 1.True 2.False

The order of presentation of cash flow activities on the statement of cash flows is 1.operating, financing, and investing 2.operating, investing, and financing 3.financing, investing, and operating 4.investing, operating, and financing

The most important cash flows of a business often relate to 1.operating activities 2.investing activities 3.financing activities 4.noncash investing and financing activities

The method that begins with net income and adjusts for items that affected reported net income but which did not affect cash is called the 1.direct method 2.indirect method 3.lower of cost or market method 4.straight-line method

Using the indirect method, if land is sold at a gain, the proper reporting of this transaction in the statement of cash flows is that the 1.proceeds from the sale and the gain are deducted in the operating activities section 2.proceeds from the sale and the gain are added in the operating activities section 3.proceeds from the sale are added in the investing activities section and the amount of the gain is added in the operating activities section 4.proceeds from the sale are added in the investing activities section and the amount of the gain is subtracted in the operating activities section

When dividends are paid in cash, the amount paid is shown as a cash 1.inflow in the operating activities section 2.outflow in the operating activities section 3.outflow in the financing activities section 4.outflow in the investing activities section

Which of the following would not appear in the operating activities section of the statement of cash flows prepared using the direct method? 1.Cash received from customers 2.Cash payments for merchandise 3.Depreciation expense 4.Cash payments for operating expenses

Investing activities include 1.cash received for the sale of equipment 2.cash paid for dividends 3.cash paid to retire bonds payable 4.depreciation expense

The indirect and direct methods of preparing the statement of cash flows are identical in the activities sections except for the 1.noncash investing and financing activities 2.operating activities 3.investing activities 4.financing activities

In using the indirect method for preparation of the statement of cash flows, which of the following adjustments is not added to net income to convert net income to net cash from operating activities? 1.Depreciation Expense 2.Gain on Sale of Equipment 3.Loss on Sale of Equipment 4.Amortization of Intangible Assets

Land acquired by the issuance of common stock is reported as 1.an operating activity 2.an investing activity 3.a financing activity 4.a noncash investing and financing activity