50
Used, New, and Out of Print Books - We Buy and Sell - Powell's Books
Cart |
|  my account  |  wish list  |  help   |  800-878-7323
Hello, | Login
MENU
  • Browse
    • New Arrivals
    • Bestsellers
    • Featured Preorders
    • Award Winners
    • Audio Books
    • See All Subjects
  • Used
  • Staff Picks
    • Staff Picks
    • Picks of the Month
    • Bookseller Displays
    • 50 Books for 50 Years
    • 25 Best 21st Century Sci-Fi & Fantasy
    • 25 PNW Books to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Books From the 21st Century
    • 25 Memoirs to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Global Books to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Women to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Books to Read Before You Die
  • Gifts
    • Gift Cards & eGift Cards
    • Powell's Souvenirs
    • Journals and Notebooks
    • socks
    • Games
  • Sell Books
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Find A Store

Don't Miss

  • Proud Voices Sale
  • PNW Authors Sale
  • Powell's Author Events
  • Oregon Battle of the Books
  • Audio Books

Visit Our Stores


Powell's Staff: Books to Fill the TV-Shaped Hole in Your Heart (0 comment)
This last week, we had to say goodbye to TV shows about a complicated, rich family; a murdery, wannabe actor; an enthusiastically kind football coach and his team; and a would-be stand-up comedian in 1950s New York. We already miss them...
Read More»
  • Theodore McCombs: Impolite Influences: Theodore McCombs’s Bookshelf for ‘Uranians’ (0 comment)
  • Jenny Fran Davis: My Novel’s Clique: Jenny Fran Davis’s Bookshelf for 'Dykette' (0 comment)

{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##

Financial Accounting

by Walter T Harrison
Financial Accounting

  • Comment on this title
  • Synopses & Reviews

ISBN13: 9780133427530
ISBN10: 0133427536



All Product Details

View Larger ImageView Larger Images
Ships free on qualified orders.
Add to Cart
0.00
List Price:0.00
Hardcover
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

ALERT:¿Before you purchase, check with your instructor or review your course syllabus to ensure that you¿select the correct ISBN. Several versions of Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products exist for each title, including customized versions for individual schools, and registrations are not transferable. In addition,¿you may need a CourseID, provided by your instructor, to register for and use Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products.

¿

Packages

Access codes for Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products may not be included when purchasing or renting from companies other than Pearson; check with the seller before completing your purchase.

¿

Used or rental books

If you rent or purchase a used book with an access code, the access code may have been redeemed previously and you may have to purchase a new access code.

¿

Access codes

Access codes that are purchased from sellers other than Pearson carry a higher risk of being either the wrong ISBN or a previously redeemed code. Check with the seller prior to purchase.

¿ --

For introductory courses in Financial Accounting taught from a more traditional “preparer” approach

Financial Accounting helps students “nail” the accounting cycle!

Financial Accounting features the ‘accounting cycle’ up front in the text in order to increase success and retention later on. The concepts and mechanics students learn in the critical ‘accounting cycle’ chapters are used consistently and repetitively—and with clear-cut details and explanations—throughout the remainder of the text, thus minimizing confusion.

MyAccountingLab for Financial Accounting is an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program that truly engages students in learning. It helps students better prepare for class, quizzes, and exams—resulting in better performance in the course—and provides educators with a dynamic set of tools for gauging individual and class progress.

¿

Teaching and Learning Experience

¿

This program presents a better teaching and learning experience–for you and your students. Financial Accounting, Tenth Edition will:

¿

  • Personalize learning with MyAccountingLab: MyAccountingLab provides instructors with a rich and flexible set of course materials, along with course-management tools that make it easy to deliver all or a portion of your course online.
  • Use consistency, repetition, and a high level of detail when teaching core accounting concepts.
  • Teach with a better coverage of the accounting cycle from start to finish. The text covers a wide range of topics that prepares students for their field.¿
  • Reinforce learning by using exercises: End-of-chapter, analytical, and Challenge Problems allows students to review the material and gain a better grasp of the text.

Note: Financial Accounting Plus NEW MyAccountingLab with Pearson eText Access Card Package, 10e contains:

• 0133427536 / 9780133427530 Financial Accounting, 10e

• 0133437280 / 9780133437287 NEW MyAccountingLab with Pearson eText -- Access Card -- for Financial Accounting, 10e

MyAccountingLab is not a self-paced technology and should only be purchased when required by an instructor.


About the Author

Walter T. Harrison Jr. is professor emeritus of accounting at the Hankamer School

of Business, Baylor University. He received his BBA from Baylor University, his MS

from Oklahoma State University, and his PhD from Michigan State University.

Professor Harrison, recipient of numerous teaching awards from student groups

as well as from university administrators, has also taught at Cleveland State Community

College, Michigan State University, the University of Texas, and Stanford

University.

A member of the American Accounting Association and the American Institute

of Certified Public Accountants, Professor Harrison has served as chairman of the

Financial Accounting Standards Committee of the American Accounting Association,

on the Teaching/Curriculum Development Award Committee, on the Program

Advisory Committee for Accounting Education and Teaching, and on the Notable

Contributions to Accounting Literature Committee.

Professor Harrison has lectured in several foreign countries and published articles

in numerous journals, including Journal of Accounting Research, Journal of Accountancy,

Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, Economic Consequences of Financial Accounting

Standards, Accounting Horizons, Issues in Accounting Education, and Journal of Law and

Commerce.

He is co-author of Financial & Managerial Accounting, second edition, 2009 and

Accounting, eighth edition, 2009 (with Charles T. Horngren and M. Suzanne Oliver),

published by Pearson Prentice Hall. Professor Harrison has received scholarships,

fellowships, and research grants or awards from PricewaterhouseCoopers, Deloitte &

Touche, the Ernst & Young Foundation, and the KPMG Foundation.


Charles T. Horngren (1926—2011) was the Edmund W. Littlefield professor of

accounting, emeritus, at Stanford University. A graduate of Marquette University,

he received his MBA from Harvard University and his PhD from the University of

Chicago. He was also the recipient of honorary doctorates from Marquette University

and DePaul University.

A certified public accountant, Horngren served on the Accounting Principles

Board for six years, the Financial Accounting Standards Board Advisory Council for

five years, and the Council of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants

for three years. For six years he served as a trustee of the Financial Accounting Foundation,

which oversees the Financial Accounting Standards Board and the Government

Accounting Standards Board.

Horngren is a member of the Accounting Hall of Fame.

A member of the American Accounting Association, Horngren was its president

and its director of research.

He received its first annual Outstanding Accounting Educator Award.

The California Certified Public Accountants Foundation gave Horngren its

Faculty Excellence Award and its Distinguished Professor Award. He was the first person to have received both awards.

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants presented its first

Outstanding Educator Award to Horngren.

Horngren was named Accountant of the Year, in Education, by the national

professional accounting fraternity, Beta Alpha Psi.

Professor Horngren was also a member of the Institute of Management Accountants,

from whom he received its Distinguished Service Award. He was a member

of the institute’s Board of Regents, which administers the Certified Management

Accountant examinations.

Horngren is the author of these other accounting books published by Pearson:

Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis, Fifteenth Edition, 2015 (with Srikant Datar

and George Foster); Introduction to Financial Accounting, Eleventh Edition, 2014

(with Gary L. Sundem, John A. Elliott, and Donna Philbrick); Introduction to Management

Accounting, Sixteenth Edition, 2014 (with Gary L. Sundem, Jeff Schatzberg,

and Dave Burgstahler); Financial & Managerial Accounting, Sixteenth Edition, 2014

and Horngren’s Accounting, Tenth Edition, 2014 (revised by Tracie Nobles, Brenda

Mattison, and Ella Mae Matsumura).

Horngren was the consulting editor for Pearson’s Charles T. Horngren Series in

Accounting.


C. William (Bill) Thomas is the J. E. Bush Professor of Accounting and a Master

Teacher at Baylor University. A Baylor University alumnus, he received both his BBA

and MBA there and went on to earn his PhD from The University of Texas at Austin.

With primary interests in the areas of financial accounting and auditing, Bill

Thomas has served as the J. E. Bush Professor of Accounting since 1995. He has been

a member of the faculty of the Accounting and Business Law Department of the

Hankamer School of Business since 1971, and served as chair of the department from

1983 until 1995. He was recognized as an Outstanding Faculty Member of Baylor

University in 1984 and Distinguished Professor for the Hankamer School of Business

in 2002. Dr. Thomas has received several awards for outstanding teaching, including

the Outstanding Professor in the Executive MBA Programs in 2001, 2002, and 2006.

In 2004, he received the designation as Master Teacher.

Thomas is the author of textbooks in auditing and financial accounting, as well

as many articles in auditing, financial accounting and reporting, taxation, ethics and

accounting education. His scholarly work focuses on the subject of fraud prevention

and detection, as well as ethical issues among accountants in public practice. His

most recent publication of national prominence is “The Rise and Fall of the Enron

Empire” which appeared in the April 2002 Journal of Accountancy, and which was selected

by Encyclopedia Britannica for inclusion in its Annals of American History. He

presently serves as both technical and accounting and auditing editor of Today’s CPA,

the journal of the Texas Society of Certified Public Accountants, with a circulation of

approximately 28,000.

Thomas is a certified public accountant in Texas. Prior to becoming a professor,

Thomas was a practicing accountant with the firms of KPMG, LLP, and BDO Seidman,

LLP. He is a member of the American Accounting Association, the American

Institute of Certified Public Accountants, and the Texas Society of Certified Public

Accountants.


Table of Contents

Chapter 1     The Financial Statements 1

Spotlight: The Gap, Inc. 1

Explain Why Accounting Is the Language of Business 3

Who Uses Accounting Information? 4

Two Kinds of Accounting: Financial Accounting and Management Accounting 4

Organizing a Business 5

Explain and Apply Underlying Accounting Concepts, Assumptions, and Principles 6

The Entity Assumption 8

The Continuity (Going-Concern) Assumption 8

The Historical Cost Principle 8

The Stable-Monetary-Unit Assumption 9

Apply the Accounting Equation to Business Organizations 11

Assets and Liabilities 11

Owners’ Equity 12

Evaluate Business Operations Through the Financial Statements 14

The Income Statement Measures Operating Performance 14

The Statement of Retained Earnings Shows What a Company Did with Its Net Income 16

The Balance Sheet Measures Financial Position 17

The Statement of Cash Flows Measures Cash Receipts and Payments 20

Construct Financial Statements and Analyze the Relationships Among Them 21

Evaluate Business Decisions Ethically 23

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 26

 

Chapter 2     Transaction Analysis 53

Spotlight: Whole Foods Market, Inc. 53

Explain What a Transaction Is 55

Define “Account,” and List and Differentiate Between Different Types of Accounts 55

Assets 55

Liabilities 56

Stockholders’ (Owners’) Equity 56

Show the Impact of Business Transactions on the Accounting Equation 57

Example: Freddy’s Auto Service, Inc. 57

Transactions and Financial Statements 63

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 66

Analyze the Impact of Business Transactions on Accounts 68

The T-Account 68

Increases and Decreases in the Accounts: The Rules of Debit and Credit 68

Additional Stockholders’ Equity Accounts: Revenues and Expenses 70

Record (Journalize and Post) Transactions in the Books 71

Copying Information (Posting) from the Journal to the Ledger 72

The Flow of Accounting Data 73

Accounts after Posting to the Ledger 77

Construct and Use a Trial Balance 78

Analyzing Accounts 79

Correcting Accounting Errors 80

Chart of Accounts 80

The Normal Balance of an Account 81

Account Formats 81

Analyzing Transactions Using Only T-Accounts 82

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 84

Chapter 3     Accrual Accounting & Income 113

Spotlight: Starbucks Corporation 113

Explain How Accrual Accounting

Differs from Cash-Basis

Accounting 115

Accrual Accounting and Cash Flows 116

The Time-Period Concept 116

Apply the Revenue and Expense Recognition Principles 116

The Revenue Principle 116

The Expense Recognition Principle 118

Ethical Issues in Accrual Accounting 119

Adjust the Accounts 119

Which Accounts Need to Be Updated (Adjusted)? 119

Categories of Adjusting Entries 120

Prepaid Expenses 120

Depreciation of Plant Assets 123

Accrued Expenses 125

Accrued Revenues 127

Unearned Revenues 128

Summary of the Adjusting Process 129

The Adjusted Trial Balance 132

Construct the Financial Statements 133

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 135

Close the Books 141

Classifying Assets and Liabilities Based on Their Liquidity 142

Reporting Assets and Liabilities: Starbucks Corporation 143

Formats for the Financial Statements 143

Analyze and Evaluate a Company’s Debt-Paying Ability 145

Net Working Capital 145

Current Ratio 145

Debt Ratio 146

How Do Transactions Affect the Ratios? 146

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 150

Chapter 4     Internal Control & Cash 192

Spotlight: Cooking the Books: Mid-Atlantic Manufacturing Company Takes a Hit 192

Describe Fraud and Its Impact 195

Fraud and Ethics 197

Explain the Objectives and Components of Internal Control 197

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) 198

The Components of Internal Control 199

Internal Control Procedures 200

Information Technology 202

Safeguard Controls 203

Internal Controls for E-Commerce 203

Security Measures 203

The Limitations of Internal Control—Costs and Benefits 204

Design and Use a Bank Reconciliation 204

Signature Card 205

Deposit Ticket 205

Check 205

Bank Statement 206

Bank Reconciliation 207

Preparing the Bank Reconciliation 208

Online Banking 211

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 213

Evaluate Internal Controls Over Cash Receipts and Cash Payments 215

Cash Receipts Over the Counter 215

Cash Receipts by Mail 215

Controls Over Payment by Check 216

Construct and Use a Cash Budget 218

Report Cash on the Balance Sheet 220

Compensating Balance Agreements 220

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 221

Chapter 5     Short-Term Investments & Receivables 245

Spotlight: Amazing Apple! Short-term investments and accounts receivable are 37 times as large as inventories! 245

Account for Short-Term Investments 247

Reasons to Invest in Other Companies 247

Trading Securities 248

Reporting on the Balance Sheet and the Income Statement 252

Ethics and the Current Ratio 252

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 253

Apply GAAP for Proper Revenue Recognition 254

Shipping Terms, Sales Discounts, and Sales Returns 255

Account for and Control Accounts Receivable 256

Types of Receivables 256

Internal Controls Over Cash Collections on Account 257

How Do We Manage the Risk of Not Collecting? 257

Evaluate Collectibility Using the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts 258

Allowance Method 259

Direct Write-Off Method 265

Computing Cash Collections from Customers 265

Account for Notes Receivable 266

Accounting for Notes Receivable 267

Show How to Speed Up Cash Flow from Receivables 269

Credit Card or Bankcard Sales 269

Selling (Factoring) Receivables 270

Reporting on the Statement of Cash Flows 270

Evaluate Liquidity Using Two New Ratios 271

Quick (Acid-Test) Ratio 271

Days’ Sales in Receivables 271

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 273

Chapter 6     Inventory & Cost of Goods Sold 300

Spotlight: Family Dollar Stores, Inc. 300

Show How to Account for Inventory 303

Sale Price vs. Cost of Inventory 304

Accounting for Inventory in the Perpetual System 306

Apply and Compare Various Inventory Cost Methods 308

What Goes into Inventory Cost? 308

Apply the Various Inventory Costing Methods 309

Compare the Effects of FIFO, LIFO, and Average Cost on Cost of Goods Sold, Gross Profit, and Ending Inventory 311

Keeping Track of Perpetual Inventories under LIFO and Weighted-Average Cost Methods 312

The Tax Advantage of LIFO 313

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 314

Explain and Apply Underlying GAAP for Inventory 316

Disclosure Principle 316

Lower-of-Cost-or-Market Rule 316

Inventory and the Detailed Income Statement 318

Compute and Evaluate Gross Profit (Margin) Percentage and Inventory Turnover 318

Gross Profit Percentage 318

Inventory Turnover 319

Use the COGS Model to Make Management Decisions 320

Computing Budgeted Purchases 321

Estimating Inventory by the Gross Profit Method 321

Analyze Effects of Inventory Errors 322

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 325

Chapter 7     Plant Assets, Natural Resources, & Intangibles 362

Spotlight: FedEx Corporation 362

Measure and Account for the Cost of Plant Assets 365

Land 365

Buildings, Machinery, and Equipment 365

Land Improvements and Leasehold Improvements 366

Lump-Sum (or Basket) Purchases of Assets 366

Distinguish a Capital Expenditure from an Immediate Expense 367

Measure and Record Depreciation on Plant Assets 369

How to Measure Depreciation 370

Depreciation Methods 370

Comparing Depreciation Methods 375

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 377

Other Issues in Accounting for Plant Assets 378

Depreciation for Tax Purposes 378

Depreciation for Partial Years 380

Changing the Useful Life of a Depreciable Asset 380

Fully Depreciated Assets 382

Analyze the Effect of a Plant Asset Disposal 382

Disposing of a Fully Depreciated Asset for No Proceeds 383

Selling a Plant Asset 383

Exchanging a Plant Asset 384

T-Accounts for Analyzing Plant Asset Transactions 385

Apply GAAP for Natural Resources and Intangible Assets 387

Accounting for Natural Resources 387

Accounting for Intangible Assets 388

Accounting for Specific Intangibles 388

Accounting for Research and Development Costs 390

Explain the Effect of an Asset Impairment on the Financial Statements 390

Analyze Rate of Return on Assets 392

DuPont Analysis: A More Detailed View of ROA 393

Analyze the Cash Flow Impact of Long-Lived Asset Transactions 394

End-of-Chapter Summary Problem 397

Chapter 8     Long-Term Investments & the Time Value of Money 428

Spotlight: Intel Holds Several Different Types of Investments 428

Stock and Bond Prices 430

Reporting Investments on the Balance Sheet 430

Analyze and Report Investments in Held-to-Maturity Debt Securities 431

Analyze and Report Investments in Available-for-Sale Securities 433

Accounting Methods for Long-Term Stock Investments 433

The Fair Value Adjustment 435

Selling an Available-for-Sale Investment 436

Analyze and Report Investments in Affiliated Companies Using the Equity Method 437

Buying a Large Stake in Another Company 437

Accounting for Equity-Method Investments 438

Analyze and Report Controlling Interests in Other Corporations Using Consolidated Financial Statements 440

Why Buy Controlling Interest in Another Company? 440

Consolidation Accounting 440

The Consolidated Balance Sheet and the Related Work Sheet 441

Goodwill and Noncontrolling Interest 442

Income of a Consolidated Entity 442

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 444

Consolidation of Foreign Subsidiaries 446

Foreign Currencies and Exchange Rates 446

The Foreign-Currency Translation Adjustment 447

Report Investing Activities on the Statement of Cash Flows 448

Explain the Impact of the Time Value of Money on Certain Types of Investments 449

Present Value 450

Present-Value Tables 451

Present Value of an Ordinary Annuity 452

Using Microsoft Excel to Calculate Present Value 454

Using the PV Model to Compute Fair Value of Available-for-Sale Investments 455

Present Value of an Investment in Bonds 456

End-of-Chapter Summary Problems 457

Chapter 9     Liabilities 482

Spotlight: Southwest Airlines: Still Flying High! 482

Account for Current and Contingent Liabilities 484

Current Liabilities of Known Amount 484

Current Liabilities That Must Be Estimated 490

Contingent Liabilities 491

Are All Liabilities Reported on the Balance Sheet? 492

Summary of Current Liabilities 493

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 493

Account for Bonds Payable, Notes Payable, and Interest Expense 494

Bonds: An Introduction 494

Issuing Bonds Payable at Par (Face Value) 497

Issuing Bonds Payable at a Discount 499

What Is the Interest Expense on These Bonds Payable? 499

Interest Expense on Bonds Issued at a Discount 501

Partial-Period Interest Amounts 504

Issuing Bonds Payable at a Premium 504

The Straight-Line Amortization Method: A Quick and Dirty Way to Measure Interest Expense 508

Should We Retire Bonds Payable Before Their Maturity? 509

Convertible Bonds and Notes 509

Analyze and Differentiate Financing with Debt Versus Equity 510

The Leverage Ratio 512

The Times-Interest-Earned Ratio 513

Understand Other Long-Term Liabilities 513

Leases 513

Types of Leases 513

Do Lessees Prefer Operating Leases or Capital Leases? 514

Pensions and Postretirement Liabilities 515

Report Liabilities 516

Reporting on the Balance Sheet 516

Disclosing the Fair Value of Long-Term Debt 517

Reporting Financing Activities on the Statement of Cash Flows 517

End-of-Chapter Summary Problems 518

Chapter 10     Stockholders’ Equity 550

Spotlight: The Home Depot: Building Toward Success 550

Explain the Features of a Corporation 552

Organizing a Corporation 553

Stockholders’ Rights 554

Stockholders’ Equity 555

Classes of Stock 555

Account for the Issuance of Stock 557

Common Stock 557

A Stock Issuance for Other Than Cash Can Create an Ethical Challenge 560

Preferred Stock 561

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 562

Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Stock 564

Show how Treasury Stock Affects a Company 564

How Is Treasury Stock Recorded? 564

Retirement of Treasury Stock 566

Resale of Treasury Stock 566

Issuing Stock for Employee Compensation 566

Summary of Treasury-Stock Transactions 567

Account for Retained Earnings, Dividends, and Splits 567

Should the Company Declare and Pay Cash Dividends? 568

Cash Dividends 568

Analyzing the Stockholder’s Equity Accounts 569

Dividends on Preferred Stock 570

Stock Dividends 571

Stock Splits 572

Summary of the Effects on Assets, Liabilities, and Stockholders’ Equity 573

Use Stock Values in Decision Making 573

Market, Redemption, Liquidation, and Book Value 573

ROE: Relating Profitability to Stockholder Investment 575

Report Stockholders’ Equity Transactions in the Financial Statements 577

Statement of Cash Flows 577

Statement of Stockholders’ Equity 578

A Detailed Stockholders’ Equity Section of the Balance Sheet 579

End-of-Chapter Summary Problems 581

Chapter 11     Evaluating Performance: Earnings Quality, the Income Statement, & the Statement of Comprehensive Income 617

Spotlight: The Gap, Inc.: What a Difference a Year Makes! 617

Evaluate Quality of Earnings 619

Revenue Recognition 620

Cost of Goods Sold and Gross Profit (Gross Margin) 621

Operating and Other Expenses 622

Operating Income (Earnings) 622

Account for Foreign-Currency Gains and Losses 623

Dollars versus Foreign Currency 623

Reporting Foreign-Currency Gains and Losses on the Income Statement 624

Reporting Foreign-Currency Exchange Gains and Losses on Cash and Cash Equivalents in the Statement of Cash Flows 624

Should We Hedge Our Foreign-Currency- Transaction Risk? 625

Account for Other Items on the Income Statement 625

Interest Expense and Interest Income 625

Corporate Income Taxes 625

Which Income Number Predicts Future Profits? 627

Discontinued Operations 628

Accounting Changes 629

Compute Earnings per Share 630

Analyze the Statement of Comprehensive Income, Footnotes, and Supplemental Disclosures 631

Reporting Comprehensive Income 631

For Additional Details, Don’t Forget the Footnotes 632

Nonfinancial Reports 634

Differentiate Management’s and Auditors’ Responsibilities in Financial Reporting 634

Management’s Responsibility 634

Auditor Report 634

End-of-Chapter Summary Problems 637

Chapter 12     The Statement of Cash Flows 664

Spotlight: Google: The Ultimate Answer (and Cash) Machine 664

Identify the Purposes of the Statement of Cash Flows 666

How’s Your Cash Flow? Telltale Signs of Financial Difficulty 667

Distinguish Among Operating, Investing, and Financing Activities 668

Two Formats for Operating Activities 669

Prepare a Statement of Cash Flows by the Indirect Method 669

Cash Flows from Operating Activities 671

Cash Flows from Investing Activities 675

Cash Flows from Financing Activities 676

Noncash Investing and Financing Activities 680

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 681

Prepare a Statement of Cash Flows by the Direct Method 684

Cash Flows from Operating Activities 685

Depreciation, Depletion, and Amortization Expense 687

Cash Flows from Investing Activities 687

Cash Flows from Financing Activities 688

Noncash Investing and Financing Activities 688

Computing Operating Cash Flows by the Direct Method 689

Computing Investing and Financing Cash Flows 693

Measuring Cash Adequacy: Free Cash Flow 694

End-of-Chapter Summary Problems 696

Chapter 13     Financial Statement Analysis 739

Spotlight: How Well Is Amazon.com Doing? 739

It Starts with the Big Picture 741

Perform Horizontal Analysis 743

Illustration: Amazon.com, Inc. 743

Trend Percentages 748

Perform Vertical Analysis 749

Illustration: Amazon.com, Inc. 749

Prepare Common-Size Financial Statements 752

Benchmarking 753

Benchmarking Against a Key Competitor 753

Analyze the Statement of Cash Flows 753

Mid-Chapter Summary Problem 756

Use Ratios to Make Business Decisions 757

Remember to Start at the Beginning: Company and Industry Information 758

Now Let’s Do the Numbers 759

Measuring Ability to Pay Current Liabilities 759

Measuring Turnover and the Cash Conversion Cycle 762

Measuring Leverage: Overall Ability to Pay Debts 765

Measuring Profitability 766

Analyzing Stock as an Investment 771

The Limitations of Ratio Analysis 773

Use Other Measures to Make Investment Decisions 773

Economic Value Added (EVA®) 773

Red Flags in Financial Statement Analysis 774

Efficient Markets 775

End-of-Chapter Summary Problems 778

Appendix A: Amazon.com 2012 Annual Report 821

Appendix B: Yum! Brands, Inc. Annual Report 2012 845

Appendix C: Typical Charts of Accounts for Different Types of Businesses 863

Appendix D: Summary of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) 865

Appendix E: Summary of Differences Between U.S. GAAP and IFRS Cross Referenced to Chapter 867

Company Index 871

Glindex 875


What Our Readers Are Saying

Be the first to share your thoughts on this title!




Product Details

ISBN:
9780133427530
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication date:
01/16/2014
Publisher:
Prentice Hall
Pages:
912
Height:
1.30IN
Width:
8.70IN
Thickness:
1.50
Author:
Walter T Harrison
Author:
C. William Thomas
Author:
Charles T. Horngren
Author:
Walter T. Harrison, Jr.
Media Run Time:
B
Subject:
Business-Accounting and Finance

Ships free on qualified orders.
Add to Cart
0.00
List Price:0.00
Hardcover
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
Used Book Alert for book Receive an email when this ISBN is available used.
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram

  • Help
  • Guarantee
  • My Account
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Security
  • Wish List
  • Partners
  • Contact Us
  • Shipping
  • Transparency ACT MRF
  • Sitemap
  • © 2023 POWELLS.COM Terms

{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##