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Peregrine Exam|71 Questions and Answers

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Peregrine Exam|71 Questions and Answers

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  • September 4, 2023
  • 8
  • 2023/2024
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
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Peregrine Exam|71 Questions and
Answers
What is a general ledger? - -A general ledger account is an account or record
used to sort, store and summarize a company's transactions.
asset accounts such as Cash, Accounts Receivable, Inventory, Investments,
Land, and Equipment

liability accounts including Notes Payable, Accounts Payable, Accrued
Expenses Payable, and Customer Deposits

stockholders' equity accounts such as Common Stock, Retained Earnings,
Treasury Stock, and Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income

-What is the difference between accounts payable and accounts receivable?
- -Accounts payable is a current liability account in which a company records
the amounts it owes to suppliers or vendors for goods or services that it
received on credit.

Accounts receivable is a current asset account in which a company records
the amounts it has a right to collect from customers who received goods or
services on credit.

-What is the cost of goods sold? - -The cost of goods sold is the cost of the
products that a retailer, distributor, or manufacturer has sold.

-What is owner's equity? - -Owner's equity is one of the three main sections
of a sole proprietorship's balance sheet and one of the components of the
accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity.

-What is principles of accounting? - -Principles of accounting can also refer
to the basic or fundamental accounting principles: cost principles, matching
principles, full disclosure principles, materiality principles, going concern
principles, economic entity principles, and so on. In this context, principles of
accounting refers to the broad underlying concepts which guide accountants
when preparing financial statements.

-What is equity? - -Equity can indicate an ownership interest in a business,
such as stockholders' equity or owner's equity.
Equity can mean an owner's interest in a personal asset. For example, the
owner of a $200,000 house that has a mortgage loan of $75,000 is said to
have $125,000 of equity in the house.

, -What is meant by reconciling an account? - -Reconciling an account is
likely to mean proving or documenting that an account balance is correct.

-What is included in cash and cash equivalents? - -In accounting, a
company's cash includes the following:
currency and coins
checks received from customers but not yet deposited
checking accounts
petty cash

Cash equivalents are short-term, highly liquid investments with a maturity
date that was 3 months or less at the time of purchase.
money market accounts
U.S. Treasury Bills
commercial paper

-What is the difference between an implicit cost and an explicit cost? - -An
implicit cost is present but it is not initially shown or reported as a separate
cost.

An explicit cost is a cost that is present and it is clearly shown or reported as
a separate cost.

-What is the difference between stocks and bonds? - -Stocks, or shares of
capital stock, represent an ownership interest in a corporation. Every
corporation has common stock.
Bonds are a form of long-term debt in which the issuing corporation promises
to pay the principal amount at a specified maturity date.

-AN INCREASE TO WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING ACCOUNTS WILL INCREASE
OWNERS' EQUITY? - -Client Fees

-IN TIMES OF RISING PRICES, THE INVENTORY COST METHOD THAT WILL
YIELD THE LOWEST NET INCOME IS: - -LIFO (LIFO is the acronym for last-in,
first-out, which is a cost flow assumption often used by U.S. corporations in
moving costs from inventory to the cost of goods sold.
Example: Assume that a corporation uses LIFO and has three units of a
product in its inventory. Due to its supplier raising its prices, the corporation
purchased the items at different costs and in the following sequence: $40,
$44, and $46. The corporation ships the oldest item (the one purchased for
$40) to a customer at a selling price of $60. However, under the LIFO cost
flow assumption the company reports its cost of goods sold at $46 (the latest
cost) and reports a gross profit of $14. (The costs of $40 and $44 remain in
inventory.)

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