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Summary Financial Accounting Fundamentals

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Summary of the lectures from semester 1 of the Financial Accounting Fundamentals at Loughborough University.

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  • July 24, 2023
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  • 2022/2023
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Financial Accounting Fundamentals
Financial Statements

1. Primary Statements
 Statement of Profit or Loss (income statement) – shows the financial performance of the
entity during a particular period
 Statement of Financial Position (balance sheet) – shows the financial position of the entity at
a particular date
 Statement of Changes in Equity – change in equity from the start to end of a period of time
 Statement of Cash Flows – presents cash movements of an entity

2. Accounting Policies – summarises the rules followed in preparing the financial statements using
accounting standards

3. Notes to the Accounts – provides more details about the numbers in the financial statements

Purpose of Financial Statements:

 Management accounting  use to make internal business decisions to maximise growth
 Financial accounting  display figures/information externally to users, to be audited


Users of Financial Statements

Shareholders – buy/sell/hold Competitors – revenue/profit, merger or acquisition
Future investors – invest or not CEP/CFO/Managers – assess performance, strategy,
Government – strategy dividends
Auditors – omissions/fraud Suppliers – credit worthiness
Banks/lenders – lend? Risk of default Employees – job security, wages, pensions, bonuses
HMRC - tax Customers – size/resources, future trading
Credit rating agencies – loan? Local People - stability
Pressure groups (environmental) – protests, ownership

International Accounting Standards Board (IASB)

 Conceptual Framework – provide information, principles, reporting practices
 Relevant – difference in decisions, predictive value, confirmatory value
 Faithful – ‘true and fair’, completeness, neutrality, freedom from error

Compatibility, timeliness, verifiability, understandability


International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)


Different types of business:

Sole trader – an individual selling goods or providing Partnership – when two or more people come
a service together and combine their skills, provide resources
and increase efficiency
1. Ordinary – legally partnered
2. Limited Liability - legally separate
Limited Company Not for Profit
1. Private – no shares to public 1. Chairty
2. Listed - shares on stock market, dividends 2. Trust
3. Housing Association

, Financial Accounting

Day to day Year End Financial Statements
 Recording transactions  Produce trial balance  Prepare from accounting
(sales, purchases, cash)  Year-end adjustments records
 Follow IASB

Statement of Profit or Loss (income – expenses)

Types of Income:

o Revenue = from ordinary activities of the entity (sales of goods or provision of services)
o Other income = non-revenue income (profit from PPE)


Types of Expenses

 Cost of sales – production, manufacturing,
 Administrative expenses – rent, energy costs, cleaning, maintenance
 Tax expenses – corporation tax
 Distribution costs – postage, packaging, transport
 Finance costs – business rates, interest, loans, insurance


Statement of Financial Position (Equity = Assets – Liabilities)

Assets – economic resource that is controlled by an entity due to past events and has the pot3ential to
produce economic benefits in the future

Current asset if the entity expects to realise, sell or consume the asset within the next 12 months or the
normal operating cycle and it is cash and is to be used in trading

 Current = inventory, cash, trade receivables, prepayments
 Non-current = Property, plant and equipment

market share, customers and employees are NOT ASSETS as not controlled

Recognised in SoFP when the economic benefit flows into the entity and the asset has a cost/value that can be
measured reliably



Liabilities – a present obligation of the entity to transfer an economic resource as a result of past events

Current liability if it will be settles in the next 12 months or within the normal operating cycle, or there is no
unconditional right to defer payment beyond 12 months and it is to be used in trading

 Current = trade payables, tax payables, accruals, overdrafts, interest payables
 Bank Loans depend on repayment terms (Current/Non-Current)

Recognised when the outflow of resources embodying economic benefit settles the present obligation and the
amount can be measured reliably



Equity – the residual interest in the assets of the entity after deducting all its liabilities

 Share Capital and Share Premium – cash invested into the company for shares
 Retained earnings and other reserves – value generated by the company, belongs to owners

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