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CHAPTER 14 Distributing Dividends and Preparing a Work Sheet for a Merchandising Business 2 STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY ACCOUNTS USED BY A CORPORATION page 405 A corporation’s ownership is divided into units. •Each unit of ownership is known as a share of stock. •An owner of one or more shares of a corporation is known as a stockholder. •Each stockholder is an owner of the company •Capital Stock is the shareholders owner’s equity account. •Retained Earnings is the account for money that will be retained by the company for business expansion. •Dividends - A temporary account used to record the distribution of earnings (dividends) to stockholders. 3110 3120 3130 3140 (3000) STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY Capital Stock Retained Earnings Dividends Income Summary 3 DECLARING A DIVIDEND page 406 Board of Directors - A group of persons elected by the stockholders to manage a corporation. -An action by the board to distribute earnings to shareholders is called declaring a dividend. December 15. Hobby Shack’s board of directors declared a quarterly dividend of $2.00 per share; capital stock issued is 2,500 shares; total dividend, $5,000.00. Date of payment is January 15. Memorandum No. 79. 3 2 1 4 6 5 1. Write the date. 4. Write the debit amount. 2. Write the title of the account debited. 5. Write the title of the account cr. 3. Write the memorandum number. 6. Write the credit amount. 4 PAYING A DIVIDEND page 407 January 15. Paid cash for quarterly dividend declared December 15, $5,000.00. Check No. 379. 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 2 3 Write the date. Write the account title. Write the check number. Write the debit account. Write the credit amount. 4 5 14-2 Beginning an 8-Column Worksheet for a Merchandising Business RECORDING A TRIAL BALANCE ON A WORK SHEET 1 1. Account title 2. Account balance 3. Total, prove, and rule the debit and credit columns 5 page 410 2 3 6 RECORDING SUPPLIES ADJUSTMENTS ON A WORK SHEET page 412 3 2 3 1 1. Write the debit amounts in the Adjustments Debit column. 2. Write the credit amounts in the Adjustments Credit column. 3. Label the two parts of the Supplies—Office adjustment with small letter a and small letter b in parentheses. 7 ANALYZING AND RECORDING A PREPAID INSURANCE ADJUSTMENT page 413 3 1 3 2 1. Enter the amount of insurance used in the Adjustments Credit column. 2. Enter the same amount in the Adjustments Debit column. 3. Label the two parts of the adjustment with a small letter c in parentheses. 8 14-3 Planning & Recoding Merchandise Inventory Adjustment page 415 9 ANALYZING AND RECORDING A MERCHANDISE INVENTORY ADJUSTMENT page 416 Merchandise inventory - the amount of goods on hand for sale to customers. 3 2 3 1 1. Write the debit amount. 2. Write the credit amount. 3. Label the two parts of this adjustment with a small letter d in parentheses. ANALYZING AN ADJUSTMENT WHEN ENDING MERCHANDISE INVENTORY IS GREATER THAN BEGINNING MERCHANDISE INVENTORY Jan. 1 Bal. Adj. (d) (New Bal. Merchandise Inventory 294,700.00 4,200.00 298,900.00) Income Summary Adj. (d) 4,200.00 10 page 417 11 14-4 PLANNING AND RECORDING AN ALLOWANCE FOR UNCOLLECTIBLE ACCOUNTS ADJUSTMENT page 419 When you sell on account you take the risk that a customer will not pay. Uncollectible Accounts - Accounts receivable that cannot be collected. • This risk is a cost of doing business that should be recorded as an expense in the same accounting period the revenue is earned. We cannot predict which exact accounts will be uncollectible - if so, we could credit each accounts receivable account. So we estimate. Estimating accomplishes two objectives: 1. Reports balance sheet amount for Accts. Receivable to reflect the amount we expect to collect in the future. 2. Recognizes the expense of uncollectible accounts in the same period in which related revenue is recorded. 12 ESTIMATING UNCOLLECTIBLE ACCOUNTS EXPENSE page 420 Many businesses use a percentage of total sales on account To estimate uncollectible accounts expense. Hobby Shack Uses 1%. Estimated Total Sales Uncollectible × Percentage = on Account Accounts Expense $124,500.00 × 1% = $1,245.00 13 ANALYZING AND RECORDING AN ADJUSTMENT FOR UNCOLLECTIBLE ACCOUNTS EXPENSE 3 3 2 1. Enter the estimated uncollectible amount. 2. Enter the same amount in the Adjustments Debit column. 3. Label the two parts with a small letter e in parentheses. Accounts Receivable - Bal. of Allow for Uncollectible Accts. = Book Value of Accts. Rec. $14,698.40 - $1,372.52 = $13,325.88 Accounts Receivable - Balance of Allowance 1 page 421 LESSON 14-5 Planning & Recording Depreciation Adjustments Most businesses use two broad categories of assets. Current Assets - Cash and other assets expected to be exchanged for cash or consumed within one year. Plant Assets - Assets that will be used for a number of years - computers, cash registers, furniture, etc. May have three major types of plant assets - Equipment, Buildings, & Land In order to match revenue with expenses used to earn the revenue, the cost of a plant asset should be expensed over the plant asset’s useful life. A portion of a plant asset’s cost is transferred to an expense account in each fiscal period the asset is used to earn revenue. •Depreciation Expense - The portion of a plant assets cost that is transferred each fiscal period of the assets useful life. 15 CALCULATING DEPRECIATION EXPENSE AND BOOK VALUE (continued on next slide) 1. Subtract the asset’s estimated salvage value from original cost. 2. Divide the estimated total depreciation expense by the years of estimated useful life. Straight-line Method – Estimated Salvage Value = Estimated Total Depreciation Expense – $250.00 = $1,000.00 1 Estimated Total Depreciation Expense ÷ Years of Estimated Useful Life = $1,000.00 ÷ 5 = Original Cost $1,250.00 Annual Depreciation Expense $200.00 2 page 424 16 CALCULATING DEPRECIATION EXPENSE AND BOOK VALUE (continued from previous slide) 20X2 Accumulated Depreciation $400.00 Original Cost $1,250.00 20X3 + Depreciation = Expense + $200.00 = Accumulated – = Depreciation – $600.00 = 20X3 Accumulated Depreciation $600.00 Ending Book Value $650.00 page 424 17 ANALYZING AND RECORDING ADJUSTMENTS FOR DEPRECIATION EXPENSE page 425 3 2 3 1 1. Write the debit amounts. 2. Write the credit amounts. 3. Label the adjustments. LESSON 14-6 Calculating Federal Income Tax and Completing a Work Sheet Corporations owing more than $500 a year in federal income taxes are required to pay estimated federal taxes each quarter. -However you do not know what you actually owe until the end of the fiscal year. Hobby Shack estimated $18,000 in federal income tax and made four quarterly payments of $4,500. At the end of the fiscal period, we can calculate what we actually owe using the work sheet. 19 FEDERAL INCOME TAX EXPENSE ADJUSTMENT page 427 Total of Income Statement Credit column Less total of Income Statement Debit column before federal income tax Equals Net Income before Federal Income Tax $ 500,253.10 –396,049.91 $ 104,203.19 20 CALCULATING FEDERAL INCOME TAX page 428 21 RECORDING THE FEDERAL INCOME TAX ADJUSTMENT page 429 3 1 1 1. Calculate the amount of federal income tax expense adjustment. 2 3 2. Total and rule the Adjustments columns. 3. Extend account balances. 22 COMPLETING A WORK SHEET page 430 1 1 2 4 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 5 3 Total the Income Statement and Balance Sheet columns. Calculate and enter the net income after federal income tax. Extend the net income amount. After recording the adjustment for federal Calculate the column totals. income tax, the worksheet is ready to be Rule double lines. completed. A COMPLETED 8-COLUMN WORK SHEET 23 page 432 24 A 10-COLUMN WORK SHEET page 434-435 1 2 3 5 4 6 Some large businesses with many accounts to be adjusted may use the 10 column worksheet. 4. Total, prove, and rule 1. Trial balance 5. Extend balances 2. Adjustments 6. Calculate net income; total, 3. Extend adjusted balances prove and rule