Term
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Definition
items held for sale or: goods to be used in the production of goods to be sold. |
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Term
What are the two businesses with inventory? |
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Definition
Merchandisor ( 1 ) manufacturer ( 3 ) |
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Term
What kind of inventory does wal mart have? |
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Definition
One inventory account purchase goods ready for sale |
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Term
What kind of inventory does caterpillar use? |
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Definition
three accounts, raw materials, work in process, finished goods. |
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Term
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Definition
beginning inventory and cost of goods purchased flows into cost of goods available for sale, which flows into cost of goods sold and ending inventory. |
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Term
Companies use two types of inventory for maintaining inventory, what are they? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the perpetual inventory system? |
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Definition
1.) purchases of mechandise are debited to inventory. 2.) Freight ins is debited to inventory. purchase returns and allowances and purchase discounts are credited to inventory. 3.) Cost of goods sold is debited and inventory is credited for each sale. 4.) subsidiary records show quantity and cost of each type of inventory on hand. The perpetual inventory system provides a continuous record of inventory and cost of goods sold. |
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Term
what is the periodic system? |
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Definition
1.) purchases of merchandise are debited to purchases. 2.) Ending inventory is determined by a physical count. 3.)the calculation for cost of goods sold is: beginning inventory - purchases = goods available for sale. goods available for sale less ending inventory is cost of goods sold |
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Term
Under inventory issues, what is inventory control? |
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Definition
Inventory control - all companies need periodic verification of the inventory records by actual count, weight, or measurement, with the counts compared with the detailed inventory records. Companies should take the physical inventory near the end of their fiscal year, to properly report inventory quantities in their annual accounting reports. |
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Term
What are some basic issues in inventory valuation? |
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Definition
valuation- companies must allocate the cost of all the goods available for sale ( or use ) between the goods that were sold or used and those that are still on hand. |
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Term
valuation requires determining |
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Definition
1.) the physical goods ( goods on hand, goods in transit, consigned goods, special sales agreements) 2.) the costs to include ( product vs. period costs ) 3.) the cost flow assumption ( FIFO, LIFO, average cost, specific identification, retail, etc ) |
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Term
A company should record purchases when it |
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Definition
obtains legal title to the goods. |
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Term
what is FOB shipping point? |
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Definition
inventory is buyer's when recieved except :buyers at time of delivery to common carrier. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
sales with high rates of returns |
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Definition
buyers, if you can estimate returns |
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Term
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Definition
buyers if you can estimate collectibility. |
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Term
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Definition
costs directly connected with bringing the goods to the buyer's pace of business and converting such goods to a salable condition. |
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Term
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Definition
generally selling, general, and administrative expenses. |
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Term
what are purchase discounts? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the three costs included in inventory? |
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Definition
product, period, and discounts. |
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Term
What are the four cost methods? |
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Definition
FIFO, LIFO, average cost, specific identification |
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Term
the cost flow assumption adopted does not |
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Definition
need to equal the physical movement of goods. |
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Term
Which method should be adopted. |
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Definition
method adopted should be one that most clearly reflects periodic income. |
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Term
Many companies use LIFO for: |
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Definition
tax and external financial reporting purposes |
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Term
Many companies use FIFO, average cost, or standard cost system for : |
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Definition
internal reporting purposes. |
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Term
What are some reasons that companies use FIFO? |
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Definition
1.) pricing decisions 2.) record keeping easier 3.) profit sharing or bonus arrangements 4.) LIFO troublesome for interim periods. |
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Term
What is the LIFO reserve? |
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Definition
the LIFO reserve is the difference between the inventory method used for internal reporting purposes and LIFO. |
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Term
What is the journal entry to reduce inventory to LIFO? |
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Definition
debit COGS, credit allowance to reduce inventory to LIFO |
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Term
companies should disclose either the: |
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Definition
LIFO reserve or the replacement cost of the inventory. |
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Term
What is LIFO liquidation? |
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Definition
Older , low cost inventory is sold resulting in a lower cost of goods sold, higher net income, and higher taxes. |
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Term
What is dollar value lifo? |
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Definition
Changes in a pool are measured in terms of total dollar value, not physical quantity. |
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Term
What are the advantages of dollar value LIFO? |
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Definition
broader range of goods in pool. permits replacement of goods that are similiar. helps protect LIFO layers from erosion |
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Term
What are some key facts about specific goods lifo approach? |
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Definition
costing goods on a unit basis is expensive and time consuming specific goods pooled LIFO approach reduces record keeping and clerical costs, makes it more difficult to erode the layers. Using quantitities as measurement basis can lead to untimely LIFO liquidations |
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Term
What is dollar value LIFO? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some advantages and disadvantages of LIFO? |
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Definition
advantages = matching, improved tax benefits/ improved cash flow, and future earnings hedge. disadvantages include: reduced earnings, inventory understated, physical flow, involuntary liquidation/ poor buying habits. |
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Term
LIFO is generally preferred: |
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Definition
1.) if selling prices are increasing faster than costs and 2.) if a company has a fairly constant base stock |
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Term
LIFO is not appropriate if : |
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Definition
prices tend to lag behind costs, if specific identification traditionally used, and when unit costs tend to decrease as production increases. |
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