Cash flows - gaap360
• Statement of Cash Flows Required
o As part of a full set of general-purpose financial statements
o For all business enterprises and not-for-profits
▪ Some limited exclusions from requirement to provide
o Provide for each period results of operations (income statement) provided
▪ SEC Rules differ in some respects
• Cash & cash equivalents (C&C)
▪ Cash
• Cash on hand
• Demand deposits
▪ Cash equivalents
• Short-term, highly liquid investments that are
o Readily convertible to amounts of cash, and
o So near maturity (THREE months or less) that the risk of changes in value because of changes in interest rates is not significant
• Examples
o Treasury bills
o Commercial paper
o Money market funds
o Federal funds sold
• Company can elect to treat a by definition “cash equivalent” as something else
o Accounting policy election (see disclosures below)
o Any change in policy is a change in accounting principle
▪ Restate financial statements for earlier years presented
▪ Gross vs. net reporting
• Gross amounts of cash receipts and payments more relevant
• Qualify for net reporting
o Turnover is quick
o Amounts are large
o Maturities are short
o Specific items that qualify
▪ Investments
▪ Loans receivable
▪ Debt (3 months or less)
• Purpose of Statement of Cash Flows
o Provide information on cash receipts (sources of cash) and cash disbursements (uses of cash) during a period
o Provide liquidity or cash information to interested parties, should help these parties assess:
▪ Ability to generate positive future net cash flows
▪ Ability to meet obligations, pay dividends
▪ Need for external financing
▪ Reasons for differences between net income and associated cash receipts and cash payments
▪ Effects on financial position of both cash and noncash investing and financing transactions
o Reconciles C&C of:
▪ Balance of C&C presented on balance sheet at BEGINNING of period, with
▪ Balance of C&C presented on balance sheet at END of period
▪ Statement of Cash Flows shows the change between these two amounts
• Classification of cash flows (three, based on nature of activity):
o Operating
▪ Items that get to net income (activities involved in producing goods and delivering services to customers)
▪ Transactions involving trading securities under 115
▪ Residual category – item not classified as investing or financing, goes here
▪ Differences how shown based on two methods (see below)
o Investing
▪ Noncurrent asset transactions
• Fixed assets
• Investments
• Lending to others
▪ Uses
• Making loans to other entities
• Purchasing available for sale and held to maturity investment securities of other entities (remember trading securities are operating)
• Acquiring PPE
▪ Sources
• Collecting on previous loans you made
• Disposing of available for sale and held to maturity investments (not trading)
• Disposing of PPE
o Financing
▪ Sources
• Obtaining resources from owners
• Borrowing debt
▪ Uses
• Repurchasing stock
• Repayment of debt (principal, not interest)
• Paying dividends
• Non-cash investing and financing activities
o Material, must be supplemental disclosure
o Portion is cash, include that in cash flow statement
▪ Fixed asset for stock
▪ Convert bonds to equity
▪ Acquire assets through capital lease obligation
▪ Exchange of non-cash assets
• Two methods of presenting statement of cash flows(only operating different)
o Direct method
▪ Recommended
▪ Shows major classes of operating cash receipts and cash disbursements
• Sources
o Cash received from customers
o Interest received
o Dividends received
o Other operating cash receipts (insurance proceeds, lawsuit settlements)
o Cash from sale of securities classified as trading securities under 115
• Uses
o Cash paid to suppliers or employees
o Interest paid
o Income taxes paid
o Cash paid to acquire securities classified as trading securities under 115
o Other operating cash payments
▪ If use, also required to provide (in separate schedule) indirect – net income to net cash flows from operating activities
▪ Cash collections
• Sales to customers –
• increase in receivables+
• decrease in receivables+
• increase in unearned revenue-
• decrease in unearned revenue
▪ Cash paid to suppliers/employees
• COGS+
• Increase in inventory-
• Decrease in inventory+
• Expenses+
• Increase in prepaid-
• Decrease in prepaid
• -increase in AP/other liab+
• Decrease in AP/other liab
o Indirect method
▪ Reconciles net income to net cash flows from operating activities
▪ Supplemental disclosure of cash paid for interest and income taxes is required
▪ Adjustments to NI (remove the effects on NI for these items which don’t impact cash)
• Non-cash items, such as amortization, depreciation, gains/losses on sales
• Rules
o Increase in asset or debit balance
▪ decrease or use of cash
o decrease in asset or debit balance
▪ increase or source of cash
o increase in liability, equity or credit balance
▪ increase or source of cash
o Decrease in liability, equity or credit balance
▪ Decrease in source of cash
o Gains
▪ adjust out of operating – negative to net income – other side investing
o losses
▪ adjust out of operating – positive in net income – other side investing
o CLAD
▪ Current assets and liabilities
▪ Losses and gains
▪ Amortization and depreciation
▪ Deferred items
• Disclosures
o Accounting policy on classification of items as C&C
▪ Which items are treated as C&C
▪ Change to policy would be disclosed and is a change in accounting principle (restate prior periods)
o Investing and financing noncash transactions
o If direct method used, a reconciliation of net income to net cash flow from operating activities in separate schedule (indirect method)
o Cash flow per share (similar to EPS)
▪ Is not permitted
▪ May fall into the SEC’s rules on “Non-GAAP” financial measures if presented
................
................
In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.
To fulfill the demand for quickly locating and searching documents.
It is intelligent file search solution for home and business.
Related searches
- cash flows financing activities
- cash flows from financing activities include
- statement of cash flows financing activities
- operating cash flows would not include
- cash flows from operating activities
- statement of cash flows template
- cash flows from investing activities include
- cash flows investing activities
- cash flows from investing activities include quizlet
- cash flows from investing activities
- cash flows from financing activities include quizlet
- statement of cash flows investing