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Financial
Statement Analysis-FIN621
VU
Lesson-18
NOTES
TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Continued)
Notes
to Financial Statements:
These
are integral part of the
Financial Statements, which
provide summary of accounting
policies,
adopted by Management in preparation of
Accounts and preparing Financial
Statements there
from.
These also present details
about particular accounts (e.g.
inventory, investments etc). Notes
to
Financial
Statements also include
other information e.g. leasing
arrangements, pending
legal
proceedings,
income taxes etc.
Information
by segment for firms with
several lines of business is also
given in these Notes.
Notes
to the accounts are the
explanatory notes of all the items shown
in the profit and loss account
and
the
balance sheet. It is the requirement of
the Companies Ordinance and the International
Accounting
Standards.
Following are explained in Notes to the
accounts:
o Nature
of business of the company
o Accounting
Policies of the company
o Details
and explanation of items given in the
Profit and Loss Account and
Balance
Sheet.
Accounting
Policies
The
two major areas of
Accounting Policies are
Inventory and Depreciation of Plant
Assets.
Inventory:
This
consists of items held for
sale or used in manufacture of products
that would be sold.
Inventory
in merchandising business consists of
goods owned and held for
sale. This is called
Merchandise.
Inventory in manufacturing business
consists of three parts i.e.
raw material,
work-in-
process
and finished goods.
Inventory is an Asset which is shown at
cost in balance
sheet.
Inventory
Accounting Policies
Before
we discuss Accounting Policies
regarding Inventory, let us
discuss the following
three types of
maintaining and recording
inventory:-
a) Perpetual inventory
system. This
is most widely used: In
this, the transactions are
recorded
as
they occur. The flow would
be as follows:-
Purchase
of →
Dr.
Current → Merchandise
→
Dr.
Cost of → Cr.
Inventory
Merchandise
Assets
sold
good
sold
"Inventory"
Cr.
Cash or
Cr.
Revenue
Dr.
Cash or
A/C
payable
A/C
Receivable
In a
perpetual inventory system, merchandising
transactions are recorded as they occur.
The system
draws
its name from the fact
that the accounting records
are kept perpetually
up-to-date. Purchase of
merchandise
is recorded by debiting an asset account
entitled inventory. When
merchandise is sold,
two
entries
are necessary: One to recognize the
revenue earned and the second to recognize the
related cost
of
goods sold. This second
entry also reduces the balance of
inventory account to reflect the
sale of
some
of the company's inventory.
A
perpetual inventory system
uses an inventory subsidiary
ledger. This ledger provides
company
personnel
with up-to-date information
about each type of product
that the company buys and sells,
including
the per-unit cost and the number of units
purchased, sold, and currently on
hand.
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Financial
Statement Analysis-FIN621
VU
b)
Periodic
inventory system: In
this case, accounting
records are updated periodically
usually
at
year's end: "Cost of goods
sold" is also determined at
year's end. The flow in this
case
would
be as follows:-
Purchase
of →
Dr.
Purchase
→
Merchandise
→
No
entry for "cost of goods
sold"
Merchandise
A/C
sold
or
inventory. This is done at years
end.
Cr.
Cash or
Cr.
Revenue
Dr.
Cash or A/C
A/C
Payable
Receivable
Complete
physical inventory is taken at
year's end as follows:-
Opening
balance (year's beginning)
12,000
+
Purchases.
130,000
Inventory
available.
142,000
Less
closing balance (year's
end).
8,000
Inventory
used/sold.
134,000
This
i.e. Rs.134, 000 is "cost of
goods sold", charged to
Income Statement, and closing
inventory
is Rs.8, 000 recorded on balance sheet.
Both entries are recorded at year's
end.
Assumptions
under this method are that
all units of inventory were
acquired at the same
unit
costs.
"Taking physical inventory" at or
near year-end also takes
into account
Inventory
Shrinkage
(breakage, spoilage, theft), which is
written off to Income
Statement in the form of
"losses".
A
periodic inventory system is an
alternative to a perpetual inventory
system. In a periodic
inventory
system,
no effort is made to keep up-to-date
records of either the inventory or the
cost of goods sold.
Instead,
these amounts are determined
only periodically, usually at the
end of each year.
A
traditional periodic inventory
system operates as follows.
When merchandise is purchased,
its cost is
debited
to an account entitled purchases, rather
than to the inventory account. When
merchandise is
sold,
an entry is made to recognize the sales
revenue, but no entry is made to record
the sost of goods
sold
or to reduce the balance of the inventory
account. As the inventory records are
not updated as
transactions
occur, there is no inventory subsidiary
ledger.
The
foundation of the periodic inventory
system is the taking of a complete
physical inventory at
year-
end.
This physical count determines the amount
of inventory appearing in the balance
sheet. The cost of
goods
sold for the entire year
then is determined by a short
computation.
c)
Just in
time (JIT) Inventory System.
In
this case, the purchase of
merchandise or raw
materials and
component parts is done just in time
for sale or for use in
manufacture; often a
few
hours, before the manufacture or sale. It
involves completing the manufacturing
process
just
in time to dispatch finished goods. It
reduces money "tied-up" in
inventory of raw
material
and
finished goods. There is no need to
maintain large inventory
storage facilities. But
the
disadvantage is
that delay in arrival of raw
material may halt
operations.
Just-in-time
(JIT) inventory systems are
not a simple method that a company
can adopt; it has a
whole
philosophy
that the company must follow in
order to avoid its downsides.
The ideas in this
philosophy
come
from many different
disciplines including statistics,
industrial engineering,
production
management
and behavioral science. In the JIT
inventory philosophy there are
views with respect to
how
inventory is looked upon,
what it says about the
management within the company, and the
main
principle
behind JIT.
66
Financial
Statement Analysis-FIN621
VU
Inventory
is seen as incurring costs, or
waste, instead of adding value,
contrary to traditional
thinking.
This
does not mean to say
that JIT is unaware that
removing inventory exposes
manufacturing issues.
Under
the philosophy, businesses are
encouraged to eliminate inventory
that doesn't compensate
for
manufacturing
issues, and to constantly improve
processes so that inventory
can be removed.
Secondly,
allowing
any stock habituates the management to stock
and it can then be a bit
like a narcotic.
Management
is then tempted to keep stock there to hide problems
within the production system.
These
problems
include backups at work
centers, machine reliability, and process
variability, lack of
flexibility
of employees and
equipment, and inadequate capacity among
other things.
In short, the
just-in-time inventory system is
all about having "the
right material, at the right
time, at the
right
place, and in the exact amount" but its
implications are broad for
the implementors.
Criticisms
Shocks
JIT
emphasizes inventory as one of the seven
wastes, and as such its practice
involves the philosophical
aim
of reducing input buffer
inventory to zero. Zero
buffer inventories means
that production is
not
protected
from exogenous (external) shocks. As a
result, exogenous shocks reducing the
supply of input
can
easily slow or stop
production with significant
negative consequences.
Transaction
Cost Approach
JIT
reduces inventory in a firm,
however unless it is used
throughout the supply chain, then it
can be
proposed
that firms are simply
outsourcing their input
inventory to suppliers.
Implementation
Effects
Some
of the initial results at vehicle
manufacturing company were horrible, but
in contrast to that a huge
amount of
cash appeared, apparently
from nowhere, as in-process
inventory was built out and
sold. This
by
itself generated tremendous
enthusiasm in upper
management.
Another
surprising effect was that
the response time of the factory
fell to about a day. This
improved
customer
satisfaction by providing vehicles
usually within a day or two
of the minimum economic
shipping
delay.
Also,
many vehicles began to be
built to order; completely
eliminating the risk they
would not be sold.
This
dramatically improved the company's
return on equity by eliminating a
major source of risk.
.
Benefits
As
most companies use an
inventory system best suited
for their company, the
Just-In-Time Inventory
System
(JIT) can have many benefits
resulting from it. The
main benefits of JIT are
listed below.
1.
Set
up times is significantly reduced in the
warehouse. Cutting down the
set up time to be more
productive
will allow the company to improve
their bottom line to look
more efficient and focus time
spent
on other areas that may
need improvement.
2.
The
flows of goods from
warehouse to shelves are
improved. Having employees focused
on
specific
areas of the system will
allow them to process goods faster
instead of having them vulnerable
to
fatigue
from doing too many
jobs at once and simplifies the
tasks at hand.
3.
Employees
who possess multiple skills
are utilized more efficiently.
Having employees trained
to
work on different parts of the
inventory cycle system will
allow companies to use
workers in
situations
where they are needed when
there is a shortage of workers and a high
demand for a
particular
product.
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Financial
Statement Analysis-FIN621
VU
4.
Better
consistency of scheduling and consistency
of employee work hours. If there is
no
demand
for a product at the time,
workers don't have to be working.
This can save the company
money
by
not having to pay workers
for a job not completed or
could have them focus on other jobs
around the
warehouse
that would not necessarily be done on a
normal day.
5.
Increased
emphasis on supplier relationships. No
company wants a break in their
inventory
system
that would create a shortage
of supplies while not having
inventory sit on shelves.
Having a
trusting
supplier relationship means
that you can rely on
goods being there when you
need them in order
to
satisfy the company and keep the company
name in good standing with
the public.
6.
Supplies
continue around the clock
keeping workers productive and
businesses focused on
turnover.
Having management focused on
meeting deadlines will make employees
work hard to meet
the company goals
to see benefits in terms of
job satisfaction, promotion or even
higher pay.
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