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Fin621 Fin Statement Analysis GDB No. 1 solution

Saturday, October 22, 2011 Posted In Edit This
Semester “FALL 2011”
“Financial Statement Analysis (FIN 621)”
This is to inform that Graded Discussion Board (GDB) has been opened according to the following schedule

Schedule
Opening Date
October 21, 2011


Closing Date and Time
October 26, 2011 At 11:59 P.M. (Mid-Night)

Note: No extra or bonus/grace period is available for attempting GBD.

Discussion Question
“Mr. Jahanzaib has set up a new sole proprietorship business one year ago. At the end of the financial year, he has to prepare financial statements of the business. In the last month of the closing year, he had an offer to sell the freehold land for Rs. 600,000/- which was previously purchased for Rs. 400,000/-. Mr. Jahanzaib had reported the land in his balance sheet at Rs. 600,000/- considering the offered value. Required:Do you think that Mr. Jahanzaib has rightly reported the land’s value in the Balance Sheet? Justify your answer in the light of accounting principle(s) discussed in the video lectures. You are only required to mention the name of applied principle(s). 

Details are not required.” Note: Your comments should not be more than 40 words.

Instructions:
Read the following instructions before giving your comments on GDB:

Use the font style “Times New Roman” and font size “12”.

Your answer should be relevant to the topic i.e. clear and concise.

Do not copy or exchange your answer with other students. Two identical / copied comments will be markedZero (0) and may damage your grade in the course.

Books, websites and other reading material may be consulted before posting your comments but copying or reproducing the text from books, websites and other reading materials is strictly prohibited. Such comments will be marked as Zero (0).

Obnoxious or ignoble answer should be strictly avoided.


SOLUTION:



Cost Principle
From an accountant's point of view, the term "cost" refers to the amount spent
(cash or the cash equivalent) when an item was originally obtained, whether that purchase happened last year or thirty years ago. For this reason, the amounts shown on financial statements are referred to as historical cost amounts.


Because of this accounting principle asset amounts are not adjusted upward for inflation. In fact, as a general rule, asset amounts are not adjusted to reflect any type of increase in value. Hence, an asset amount does not reflect the amount of money a company would receive if it were to sell the asset at today's market value. (An exception is certain investments in stocks and bonds that are actively traded on a stock exchange.) If you want to know the current value of a company's long-term assets, you will not get this information from a company's financial statements - you need to look elsewhere, perhaps to a third-party appraiser.


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Effect of Cost Principle and Monetary Unit Assumption:


The amounts reported in the asset accounts and on the balance sheet reflect actual costs recorded at the time of a transaction. For example, let's say a company acquires 40 acres of land in the year 1950 at a cost of $20,000. Then, in 1990, it pays $400,000 for an adjacent 40-acre parcel. The company's Land account will show a balance of $420,000 ($20,000 for the first parcel plus $400,000 for the second parcel.). This account balance of $420,000 will appear on today's balance sheet even though these parcels of land have appreciated to a current market value of $3,000,000. 


There are two guidelines that oblige the accountant to report $420,000 on the balance sheet rather than the current market value of $3,000,000: (1) the cost principle directs the accountant to report the company's assets at their original historical cost, and (2) the monetary unit assumption directs the accountant to
presume the U.S. dollar is stable over time—it is not affected by inflation or deflation. In effect, the accountant is assuming that a 1950 dollar, a 1990 dollar, and a 2011 dollar all have the same purchasing power.
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Cost Principle
From an accountant's point of view, the term "cost" refers to the amount spent (cash or the cash equivalent) when an item was originally obtained, whether that purchase happened last year or thirty years ago. For this reason, the amounts shown on financial statements are referred to as historical cost amounts. Because of this accounting principle asset amounts are not adjusted upward for inflation. In fact, as a general rule, asset amounts are not adjusted to reflectany type of increase in value. Hence, an asset amount does not reflect the amount of money a company would receive if it were to sell the asset at today's market value. (An exception is certain investments in stocks and bonds that are actively traded on a stock exchange.) If you want to know the current value of a company's long-term assets, you will not get this information from a company's financial statements—you need to look elsewhere, perhaps to a third-party appraiser.

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