Sunday, September 29, 2013

Balance Sheet of Juan Dela Cruz Sari-Sari Store

 What is a Balance Sheet? Balance sheet is a sheet that is balance. The balance sheet is always balance. That is Assets = Liabilities + Equity. What you can see in the Balance Sheet are balances of your assets and sources of your capital. It is a summary of balances, hence the Balance Sheet.

Before you proceed further, it is necessary to read my previous blog so that you’ll have an understanding of the reports presented below. Here it is Juan DelaCruz Sari-Sari Store.

Let’s take the trial balance we have in the previous blog.


JUAN DELA CRUZ SARI- SARI STORE
TRIAL BALANCE
AS OF OCTOBER 31, 2013
(In Philippine Peso)

Account Titles                                          Debit                   Credit
Cash                                                           15,000
Inventory                                                     15,500                
Store Building                                             20,000    
Accumulated Depreciation                                                         167
Owner’s Equity                                                                       50,000
Sales                                                                                         5,000
Cost of Goods Sold                                      4,500
Depreciation Expense                                     167
Total                                                           55,167                 55,167

Based on the above trial balance, we will generate the balance sheet. Let’s begin with Current Assets. Current Assets are assets which are current. They are expected to be sold or used within one year.

Cash and Inventories are classified as current because they are expected to be used or sold within one year. Structure of Current Assets in the Balance Sheet is shown below.


However, there are businesses whose operating cycle is greater than one year. An operating cycle is the length between paying employee salaries or buying materials and collecting cash from customers. A shipbuilder building a ship tanker takes more than two years to finish and deliver the ship to customer. Thus, the operating cycle of a shipbuilder is not one year but rather more than two years.

Let’s move to Non-Current Assets. Non-Current Assets are assets which are not current. They are not expected to be sold or used within one year.

Store Building is classified as non-current because it is expected to be used for more than one year. In fact, you estimated it to last for ten years. Thus, the economic benefits the store building will bring is more than one year, hence it is treated as non-current assets. The store building cost 20,000. This 20,000 cost should be allocated or spread out for ten years, its estimated useful life. Using straight line method, monthly depreciation is Php 167 (20,000÷120 months). Below is the structure for Non-Current Assets.




Owner’s Equity
Next is the Liabilities and Owner’s Equity. Since, there are no liabilities in our example, we’ll ignore that for the meantime. We’ll go on to the Owner’s Equity Account. The Owner’s Equity’s balance in the trial balance is 50,000.

Closing (Consolidate) the Income Statement Accounts to Income Summary Account
Sales, Cost of Goods and Depreciation Expense accounts are not Balance Sheet accounts. They are Income Statement Accounts. They do not appear in the Balance Sheet. In order to transfer these account balances, we must create closing entries. Closing entries are:

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
31-Oct-13
Income Summary
333
31-Oct-13
Sales
 5,000
31-Oct-13
Cost of Goods Sold

4,500
31-Oct-13
Depreciation Expense

        167

To close the income statement accounts to Income Summary 

What have you noticed? First, Sales which has a credit balance in the trial balance was debited in the closing entry so its balance is now zero. Cost of goods sold and depreciation expense were credited in the closing entry, their balances are now zero. What happened is that we closed the income statement accounts and created a “profit and loss” account which in this case is the Income Summary account. The income summary account is the profit of the store for the period of October 2013. Its balance of 333 is the profit of the store.

Transferring Net Income to Balance Sheet
This Income Summary account is still an Income Statement account. What we did was to consolidate all the Income Statement accounts into one summary account.
This Income Summary account which in reality is profit of the store for October 2013 can now be transfer to Owner’s Equity. The entry is:



Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
31-Oct-13
Income Summary
333
31-Oct-13
Owner’s Equity
333

To close the income summary account  tp Owner’s Equity

The Income statement account balances are all zero at this point in time after considering the closing entries. Let’s take a look at the trial balance after the closing entries.

JUAN DELA CRUZ SARI- SARI STORE
TRIAL BALANCE
AS OF OCTOBER 31, 2013
(In Philippine Peso)

Account Titles                                          Debit                   Credit
Cash                                                           15,000
Inventory                                                     15,500                
Store Building                                             20,000    
Accumulated Depreciation                                                          167
Owner’s Equity                                                                       50,333
Total                                                           50,500                 50,500

If you noticed, there are no more Income Statement Accounts. The remaining accounts are all balance sheet accounts. From this, we can proceed in generating the Balance Sheet of Juan Dela Cruz Sari Sari Store.


Thursday, September 26, 2013

Basic Accounting for Juan DelaCruz

The balance sheet is a summary of balances right? Before you can make a summary, you need the details. Now in accounting you need transactions. EACH transaction must be recorded in your books. This is important because nowadays Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) is focusing on professional services which typically are created through sole proprietorships. It was even said that teachers are paying taxes more than professional services.

Let’s say you want to open a sari-sari store in front of your house. You have Php 50,000 in savings. You withdraw your 50,000 savings to establish a sari-sari store. Your accounting entry is:

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
25-Sep-13
Cash
50,000

25-Sep-13
Owner's Equity

50,000

To record capital infusion from owner 

After withdrawing your 50,000 savings, you went to the hardware to buy hollow blocks, cement, lumber, nails, galvanized iron and steels. Total cost is 15,000. You hired a carpenter and mason to do the works. Their wages total is 5,000 upon completion of the sari-sari store.Accounting entry for this is:

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
29-Sep-13
Store Building
20,000

29-Sep-13
Cash

20,000

To record capital construction of store building 

Upon completion of the store building, you went to the grocery store nearby and bought canned goods, chips, shampoos, toothpaste, soaps, matches, and a lot of basic stuff your neighborhood needs. These products cost you 20,000.

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
30-Sep-13
Inventory
20,000

30-Sep-13
Cash

20,000

To record products bought from Pedro’s grocery

Suppose that for the month of October, you were able to sell 5,000 worth of products in cash. Your policy is “Credit is good, but we need cash”.

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
31-Oct-13
Cash
5,000

31-Oct-13
Sales

5,000

To record sales for the month of October 2013 

The cost of the products you sold in October is 4,500. Another entry is required.

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
31-Oct-13
Cost of Goods Sold
5,000

31-Oct-13
Inventory

5,000

To record cost of sales for the month of October 2013 

The store building was estimated to last for 10 years.  Your first month has gone by and you need to record a depreciation expense. Your depreciation computation is:

Cost                                                     Php 20,000
Estimated Life                                     10 years (120 months)
Depreciation/month (20,000÷120)   Php 166.67 (rounded off to 167)

Date
Account Title
Debit
Credit
31-Oct-13
Depreciation Expense
167

31-Oct-13
Accumulated Depreciation

167

To record depreciation expense for the month of October 2013 

Now that you have recorded the entries until October 31, 2013, it’s time to summarize your entries by using a T- account. T-account is an account structure that resembles letter T. Each account transactions will be recorded under the T account.

See below. 


Once all transactions are recorded in the T account, you can summarize the Accounts using the trial balance. As of October 31, 2013, the summary of your T account balances are:

JUAN DELA CRUZ SARI- SARI STORE
TRIAL BALANCE
AS OF OCTOBER 31, 2013
(In Philippine Peso)

Account Titles                                          Debit                   Credit
Cash                                                           15,000
Inventory                                                     15,500                
Store Building                                             20,000    
Accumulated Depreciation                                                         167
Owner’s Equity                                                                       50,000
Sales                                                                                         5,000
Cost of Goods Sold                                      4,500
Depreciation Expense                                     167
Total                                                           55,167                 55,167

If you noticed, the debit and credit balances are ALWAYS equal. That will always be true. The debit and credit will always be equal. From this trial balance, you can generate the major Financial Reports which includes the Balance Sheet and Income Statement.

Tip: The abbreviation of Debit is Dr. while Credit is Cr. So that you won’t forget their abbreviation, here is the Doctor’s (Dr) Comfort Room (Cr) J.




Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Brief Info on Balance Sheet...

The balance sheet (also called the statement of financial position or statement of financial condition) presents a company’s current financial position by disclosing the resources the company controls (assets) and its sources of capital (liabilities/equity) at a specific point in time.
In the balance sheet report, you’ll see the Assets, Liabilities and Owners Equity. Those three are the basic elements of the balance sheet.
Assets are resources controlled by the company as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity. This definition means that:
a.       An asset is controlled by the company. Machines, equipment, cash and vehicles are controlled by the company. Employees are not considered assets because the company doesn’t control them.
b.      An asset is a result of past events. It occurred already. It happened already. The event giving rise to the entity’s right or control over the asset has transpired already.
c.       An asset is expected to provide future economic benefits to the company. Future net cash flow is expected. Simply put, an asset is expected to provide net cash flows in the future.  
In Assets section, you’ll know which assets are current or non-current.
Liabilities represent obligations of a company arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow of economic benefits from the entity. This definition means that:
a.       It is an obligation. A duty. A responsibility. It provides little or no discretion to avoid its settlement.
b.      It came from past events. It occurred already. It transpired already. It happened already.
c.       It is expected to result in outflow of economic benefits. It is a duty to transfer economic benefits (assets) to others at a future date.
Similar to Assets, the Liabilities section will provide information which items are current and non-current.
 Owner’s Equity is the owner’s residual interest after deducting liabilities from the assets. It is normally compose of Capital, Retained Earnings and Unrealized Gain or Loss.
The amounts of the items in the balance sheet are the balances at a specific point in time. What is your bank balance last December 31, 2012? The balance sheet will answer that question. Have you notice that the date is always specific? It’s always like December 31, 2012, or March 31, 2012, or June 30, 2012 or September 30, 2012 or any specific date you have in mind. Take a look at EEI’s balance sheet date. The date specifically states it is December 31, 2012. That means that the item balances are as of December 31, 2012 and December 31, 2011. In some financial statements, you’ll see As of or As on before the date. It will be like As of December 31, 2012 or As on December 31, 2012. This As of or As on signifies the specific date of the items in the balance sheet.
PSE disclosure screengrab
From an analyst point of view, below are some of the questions that a balance sheet can answer.
■          Is the company capable on meeting its short term obligations (liquidity), and has the ratios improved?
■          Does the company has sufficient resources to cover its obligations (solvency)?
■          What is the company’s financial position relative to the industry?

          Does the company has enough resources to declare dividends to shareholders?


Source: CFA