Examining The Income Statement Examining The Income Statement
Examining The Income Statement Examining The Income Statement
Examining The Income Statement Examining The Income Statement
Examining the
the Income
Income Statement
Statement
Chapter
4
Intermediate Accounting
12th Edition
Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield
Chapter
4-1
Learning
Learning Objectives
Objectives
Chapter
4-2
Income
Income Statement
Statement and
and Related
Related Information
Information
Chapter
4-3
Income
Income Statement
Statement
Chapter
4-4 LO 1 Understand the uses and limitations of an income statement.
Income
Income Statement
Statement
Chapter
4-5 LO 1 Understand the uses and limitations of an income statement.
Income
Income Statement
Statement
Quality of Earnings
Companies have incentives to manage income to
meet or beat Wall Street expectations, so that
the market price of stock increases and
the value of stock options increase.
Chapter
4-6 LO 1 Understand the uses and limitations of an income statement.
Elements
Elements of
of the
the Income
Income Statement
Statement
Chapter
4-7 LO 1 Understand the uses and limitations of an income statement.
Elements
Elements of
of the
the Income
Income Statement
Statement
Chapter
4-8 LO 1 Understand the uses and limitations of an income statement.
Elements
Elements of
of the
the Income
Income Statement
Statement
Chapter
4-9 LO 1 Understand the uses and limitations of an income statement.
Single-Step
Single-Step Income
Income Statement
Statement
Review
The single-step income statement emphasizes
a. the gross profit figure.
b. total revenues and total expenses.
c. extraordinary items more than it is emphasized
in the multiple-step income statement.
d. the various components of income from
continuing operations.
Chapter
4-11 LO 2 Prepare a single-step income statement.
Multiple-Step
Multiple-Step Income
Income Statement
Statement
Background
Separates operating transactions from
nonoperating transactions.
Matches costs and expenses with related
revenues.
Highlights certain intermediate components of
income that analysts use.
Chapter
4-12 LO 3 Prepare a multiple-step income statement.
Multiple-Step
Multiple-Step Income
Income Statement
Statement
Income Statement (in thousands)
The
The presentation
presentation Sales $ 285,000
divides
divides information
information Cost of goods sold 149,000
Gross profit 136,000
into
into major
major sections.
sections. Operating expenses:
Advertising expense 10,000
1. Operating Section Depreciation expense 43,000
Total operating expense 53,000
Income from operations 83,000
2. Other revenue (expense):
2. Nonoperating
Nonoperating
Interest revenue 17,000
Section
Section Interest expense (21,000)
Total other (4,000)
Income before taxes 79,000
3.
3. Income
Income tax
tax Income tax expense 24,000
Net income $ 55,000
Review
A separation of operating and non operating activities of
a company exists in
a. both a multiple-step and single-step income
statement.
b. a multiple-step but not a single-step income
statement.
c. a single-step but not a multiple-step income
statement.
d. neither a single-step nor a multiple-step income
statement.
Chapter
4-14 LO 3 Prepare a multiple-step income statement.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Companies are required to report irregular items in
the financial statements so users can Illustration 4-5
determine the long-run earning power Number of Irregular
Items Reported in a
of the company. Recent Year by 600
Large Companies
Chapter
4-15 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Chapter
4-16 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Chapter
4-17 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Discontinued
Discontinued Operations
Operations
Exercise: McCarthy Corporation had after tax income from
continuing operations of $55,000,000 in 2007. During 2007,
it disposed of its restaurant division at a pretax loss of
$270,000. Prior to disposal, the division operated at a
pretax loss of $450,000 in 2007. Assume a tax rate of
30%. Prepare a partial income statement for McCarthy.
Chapter
4-21 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Extraordinary
Extraordinary Items
Items
Are these items Extraordinary?
(d) A large diversified company sells a block of
shares from its portfolio of securities which it
has acquired for investment purposes. This is NO
the first sale from its portfolio of securities.
(e) An earthquake destroys one of the oil refineries
owned by a large multi-national oil company. YES
Earthquakes are rare in this geographical
location.
(f) A company experiences a material loss in the
repurchase of a large bond issue that has been NO
outstanding for 3 years. The company regularly
repurchases bonds of this nature.
Chapter
4-22 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Extraordinary
Extraordinary Items
Items
Exercise: McCarthy Corporation had after tax income from
continuing operations of $55,000,000 in 2007. In addition,
it suffered an unusual and infrequent pretax loss of
$770,000 from a volcano eruption. The corporation’s tax
rate is 30%. Prepare a partial income statement for
McCarthy Corporation beginning with income from continuing
operations.
Chapter
4-23 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Extraordinary
Extraordinary Items
Items
Income Statement (in thousands)
Extraordinary Items Sales $ 285,000
are reported after Cost of goods sold 149,000
“Income from continuing
operations.” Other revenue (expense):
Interest revenue 17,000
Interest expense (21,000)
Total other (4,000)
Income before taxes 79,000
Income tax expense 24,000
Previously labeled as
Income from continuing operations 55,000
“Net Income”. Extraordinary loss, net of tax 539
Net income $ 54,461
Moved to
Chapter
4-24 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Income Statement (in thousands)
Reporting when both Sales $ 285,000
Discontinued Operations Cost of goods sold 149,000
and
Extraordinary Items Interest expense (21,000)
Total other (4,000)
are present. Income before taxes 79,000
Income tax expense 24,000
Income from continuing operations 55,000
Discontinued operations:
Discontinued Loss from operations, net of tax 315
Operations Loss on disposal, net of tax 189
Total loss on discontinued operations 504
Income before extraordinary item 54,496
Extraordinary Item Extraordinary loss, net of tax 539
Net income $ 53,957
Chapter
4-25 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Review
Irregular transactions such as discontinued operations
and extraordinary items should be reported separately
in
a. both a single-step and multiple-step income
statement.
b. a single-step income statement only.
c. a multiple-step income statement only.
d. neither a single-step nor a multiple-step income
statement.
Chapter
4-26 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Chapter
4-28 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Changes in Estimate
Accounted for in the period of change and
future periods
Not handled retrospectively
Not considered errors or extraordinary items
Examples include:
Useful lives and salvage values of depreciable
assets
Allowance for uncollectible receivables
Inventory obsolescence
Chapter
4-29 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Change
Change in
in Estimate
Estimate Example
Example
Arcadia HS, purchased equipment for $510,000 which
was estimated to have a useful life of 10 years with a
salvage value of $10,000 at the end of that time.
Depreciation has been recorded for 7 years on a
straight-line basis. In 2005 (year 8), it is determined
that the total estimated life should be 15 years with a
salvage value of $5,000 at the end of that time.
Questions:
What is the journal entry to correct No Entry
the prior years’ depreciation? Required
Calculate the depreciation expense
for 2005.
Chapter
4-30 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Change
Change in
in Estimate
Estimate Example
Example After 7 years
Chapter
4-32 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Reporting
Reporting Irregular
Irregular Items
Items
Corrections of Errors
Result from:
mathematical mistakes
mistakes in application of accounting principles
oversight or misuse of facts
Chapter
4-33 LO 4 Explain how to report irregular items.
Intraperiod
Intraperiod Tax
Tax Allocation
Allocation
Chapter
4-34 LO 5 Explain intraperiod tax allocation.
Example
Example of
of Intraperiod
Intraperiod Tax
Tax Allocation
Allocation
Income Statement (in thousands)
Sales $ 285,000
Cost of goods sold 149,000
Note: losses reduce
the total tax
Total Tax
Interest expense (21,000)
Total other (4,000)
Allocated
Income from cont. oper. before taxes 79,000
Income tax expense 24,000 $24,000
Income from continuing operations 55,000
Discontinued operations:
Loss on operations, net of $135 tax 315 (135)
Loss on disposal, net of $61 tax 189
(61)
Total loss on discontinued operations 504
Income before extraordinary item 54,496
Extraordinary loss, net of $231 tax 539 (231)
Net income $ 53,957
$23,573
Chapter
4-35 LO 5 Explain intraperiod tax allocation.
Earnings
Earnings Per
Per Share
Share
Calculation
Net income - Preferred dividends
Weighted average number of shares outstanding
Chapter
4-36 LO 6 Identify where to report earnings per share information.
Earnings
Earnings Per
Per Share
Share
Brief Exercise 4-8 In 2007, Kirby Puckett Corporation
reported net income of $1,200,000. It declared and paid
preferred stock dividends of $250,000. During 2007,
Puckett had a weighted average of 190,000 common shares
outstanding. Compute Puckett’s 2007 earnings per share.
$1,200,000 - $250,000
= $5.00 per share
190,000
Chapter
4-37 LO 6 Identify where to report earnings per share information.
Retained
Retained Earnings
Earnings Statement
Statement
Increase Decrease
Net income Net loss
Change in Dividends
accounting Change in
principle accounting
Error corrections principles
Error corrections
Chapter
4-38 LO 7 Prepare a retained earnings statement.
Retained
Retained Earnings
Earnings Statement
Statement
Woods, Inc.
Statement of Retained Earnings
For the Year Ended December 31, 2007
Before issuing the report for the year ended December 31, 2007, you
discover a $50,000 error (net of tax) that caused the 2006 inventory
to be overstated (overstated inventory caused COGS to be lower and
thus net income to be higher in 2006). Would this discovery have any
impact on the reporting of the Statement of Retained Earnings for
2007?
Chapter
4-39 LO 7 Prepare a retained earnings statement.
Retained
Retained Earnings
Earnings Statement
Statement
Woods, Inc.
Statement of Retained Earnings
For the Year Ended December 31, 2007
Chapter
4-40 LO 7 Prepare a retained earnings statement.
Retained
Retained Earnings
Earnings Statement
Statement
Chapter
4-41 LO 7 Prepare a retained earnings statement.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
All changes in equity during a period except those
resulting from investments by owners and distributions
to owners.
Income Statement (in thousands)
Other Comprehensive
Sales
Cost of goods sold
$ 285,000
149,000
+ Income
Gross profit 136,000 Unrealized gains and
Operating expenses: losses on available-
Advertising expense 10,000
Depreciation expense 43,000
for-sale securities.
Total operating expense 53,000 Translation gains and
Income from operations 83,000
losses on foreign
Other revenue (expense):
Interest revenue 17,000
currency.
Interest expense (21,000) Plus others
Total other (4,000)
Income before taxes 79,000
Income tax expense 24,000 Reported in
Net income $ 55,000 Stockholders’ Equity
Chapter
4-42
LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
Review
Gains and losses that bypass net income but affect
stockholders' equity are referred to as
a. comprehensive income.
b. other comprehensive income.
c. prior period income.
d. unusual gains and losses.
Chapter
4-43 LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
Chapter
4-44 LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
Illustration 4-19
Two-Statement
Format for
Comprehensive
Income
Chapter
4-45 LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
Combined
Combined Income
Income Statement
Statement
V. Gill Inc.
Combined Statement of Comprehensive Income
For the Year Ended December 31, 2007
Chapter
4-46 LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
Statement of Stockholders’ Equity (most common)
Illustration 4-20
Chapter
4-47 LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.
Comprehensive
Comprehensive Income
Income
Balance Sheet Presentation
Illustration 4-21
Review
The FASB decided that the components of other
comprehensive income must be displayed
a. in a second separate income statement.
b. in a combined income statement of comprehensive
income.
c. as a part of the statement of stockholders'
equity.
d. Any of these options is permissible.
Chapter
4-49 LO 8 Explain how to report other comprehensive income.