cash & cash equivalents
TRANSCRIPT
"Rather fail with honor than succeed by fraud."
--Sophocles (496-406 BC)
Cash and Cash Equivalents
URSUA, KARRYL C.VELEZ, ARVIN KAYE B.
OBLINO, CINDY Z.MUSA, MARIA CIELO F.
NATURE and COMPOSITION OF CASH
CASH - belongs to broad category of assets called financial assets
FINANCIAL ASSET - cash or contractual right to receive cash or another financial instrument in the future
other example:
*receivables
* investments in debt and securities
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH
CASH ITEM - any item used as standard medium of
exchange
- for a limited viewpoint, it refers to currency and coins in the circulation
- for accounting purposes, an item is considered cash if it is acceptable by bank or other financial institution for deposit at face value
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH
- not all cash items qualify for reporting as part of the account title “cash” or “Cash on Hand and in Banks” on the statement of financial position
- the cash item must be unrestricted and must be immediately available for use in current operations to qualify for presentation as part of Cash on the statement of financial position
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH
Other non-current
financial asset
“CASH” in the current asset
section
For acquisition of current asset
For payment of current liabilities
For payment of operating expenses
For use other than for current
operations
Unrestricted and immediately available
for use in current operations
CASH ITEMS
CASH ON HAND a. Undeposited cash collections – currencies such as bills and coins
b. Cash items awaiting deposit – customers’ checks, travelers’ checks, bank drafts, money orders.
CASH IN BANK includes demand deposits. There are unrestricted funds deposited in a bank that can be withdrawn upon demand such as amounts in checking and savings account.
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH
WORKING FUNDS cash segregated for current use in the ordinary conduct of business.
a. Petty cash fund
b. Change fund
c. Payroll fund
d. Dividend fund
e. Tax fund
f. Interest fund
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH
CASH EQUIVALENTS • These are highly liquid financial
instruments that are so near their maturity and that there is insignificant risk of change in value due to fluctuation of interest rates
• Maturity dates start from the date of acquisition of the instrument and not from the date indicated on the face of the instrument.
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH EQUIVALENTS
TEMPORARY INVESTMENTS • These are not included as part of cash
equivalents because these equity securities do not have maturity dates.
• Redeemable preference shares that are to be reacquired by the issuing corporation at a determined redemption date, qualify to be reported as cash equivalents if purchased within three months or less before redemption date.
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH EQUIVALENTS
• Although cash equivalents are not cash, they are generally presented on the statement of financial position together with cash using the account title “Cash and Cash Equivalents”
NATURE AND COMPOSITION OF CASH EQUIVALENTS
• CASH is generally measured at face value, which is its fair value.
• DEMAND DEPOSITS are measured using the exchange rate in effect on the reporting date.
• Not necessary to classify cash to distinguish between currencies on hand, cash in banks, or deposits at various locations.
PRESENTATION AND MEASUREMENT OF CASH
FOREIGN CURRENCY should be translated to Philippine currency using exchange rate at the reporting date.
CASH IN CLOSED BANKS OR BANKS HAVING FINANCIAL DIFFICULTY OR IN BANKRUPTCY should be reclassified as receivable and should be written down to its recoverable amount.
PRESENTATION AND MEASUREMENT OF CASH
CUSTOMERS’ POST-DATED CHECKS AND NSF CHECKS AND IOUS should be reported as receivables rather than cash.
EXPENSE ADVANCES such as advances for employee travel, and postage stamps should be reported as prepaid expenses and not as “cash”.
BANK OVERDRAFTS should be reported as a current liability, except when the depositor has sufficient funds in another account with the same bank.
PRESENTATION AND MEASUREMENT OF CASH
UNDELIVERED OR UNRELEASED CHECKS are the company’s checks drawn and recorded but are not actually issued or delivered to the payees as of the reporting date.
COMPANY’S POSTDATED CHECK which has been recorded as issued and delivered to payees before or at the reporting date should be reverted to cash.
PRESENTATION AND MEASUREMENT OF CASH
COMPENSATING BALANCES are minimum amounts that a company agrees to maintain in bank checking account as support or collateral for a loan by the depositor.
CASH SET ASIDE FOR LONG-TERM SPECIFIC PURPOSE is reported as non-current financial asset.
PRESENTATION AND MEASUREMENT OF CASH
CASH MANAGEMENT
• Segregation of duties for handling cash and recording cash transactions.
• Imprest system
• Voucher system
• Internal audits at irregular intervals
• Periodic reconciliation of bank statement balance and cash balance in the company’s accounting records.
CASH MANAGEMENT
PETTY CASH FUND
• Under this system of cash control, all cash receipts are deposited intact and all cash payments should be made by means of checks.
• However, an enterprise considers it inconvenient and impractical to write checks for such small items as taxi fares, newspaper delivery charges, postage, express charges, and minor supplies.
• A company usually pays for these kinds of items from a petty cash fund.
• An imprest petty cash fund is established for a fixed amount and allows a company to effectively control small amounts of cash fairly simply.
PETTY CASH FUND
A responsible employee is designated as petty cashier. A check drawn payable to petty cash is encashed, and the petty cashier places the money in the petty cash fund (which is often kept in a locked box or petty cash drawer). The check, which establishes the fund, is usually for an amount that the company estimates will last from two to four weeks. Journal entry for the establishment of the petty cash fund is as follows:
Petty Cash Fund xxx
Cash in Bank xxx
PETTY CASH FUND
As time passes, the petty cashier disburses money from the fund, but only upon authorization of a responsible officer designated to authorize payment from the fund. To request payment from the petty cash fund, a petty cash voucher must be prepared by the petty cash custodian for payment. Upon payment, the petty cashier keeps the petty cash voucher, and he shall have it signed by the person receiving cash. Any receipt or invoice supporting the payment must be attached to the signed voucher. Ideally at anytime, the remaining bills and coins and the total amount of the paid petty cash fund was established.
PETTY CASH FUND
When the amount of cash in the fund is low, the petty cashier submits the signed petty cash vouchers and accompanying receipts and invoices to the general cashier to request for reimbursement. Reimbursement is made equal in amount to the sum of the petty cash vouchers submitted. The reimbursement, therefore, is for an amount that will increase the amount of bills and coins remaining in the fund to its original amount. The replenishment of the fund is recorded as:
Expenses xxx
Cash in Bank xxx
PETTY CASH FUND
At year-end, prior to the preparation of financial statements, an adjusting entry is made to recognize the payments from the fund that are not replenished. This adjustment likewise updates and brings the petty cash fund general ledger account to an amount equal to actual cash items in the petty cash fund as of the reporting date. This avoids understatement of expenses and overstatement of cash. This adjustment is usually reversed at the beginning of the ensuring period. Year-end adjustment is recorded as follows:
Expenses xxx
Petty Cash Fund xxx
PETTY CASH FUND
In instances that the amount in the petty cash fund may be deemed inadequate to satisfy the company’s needs, the fund balance is increased and the following journal entry is made:
Petty Cash Fund xxx
Cash in Bank xxx
PETTY CASH FUND
CASH SHORT AND OVER
• Is a nominal account that is debited for shortages and credited for overages in the petty cash fund.
• Such shortages and overages usually result from errors in making change or failure to obtain receipts for very small amounts.
• In addition, receipts may have been written for an incorrect amount, or money from the fund may have been lost or stolen.
CASH SHORT AND OVER
Petty Cash Fund 10 000
Cash in Bank 10 000
*Establishment of petty cash fund
Transportation Expense 2 300
Representation Expense 3 400
Office Supplies Expense 4 200
Cash in Bank 9 900
*Replenishment
JOURNAL ENTRIES
Transportation Expense 1500
Office Supplies Expense 2500
Advances to Employees 3000
Representation Expense 720
Cash Short and Over 80
Petty Cash Fund 7800
*Adjusting Entry
JOURNAL ENTRIES
BANK RECONCILIATION
The balances of the bank statement and the bank
account in the cash book rarely agree because of the timing difference, omissions and
errors made by the bank or the firm itself.
PURPOSE OF BANK RECONCILIATION
Bank reconciliation statements can be used to explain the
reasons for the differences and to identify errors and omissions
in both documents, so that corrections can be made as
soon as possible.
PURPOSE OF BANK RECONCILIATION
DEPOSIT IN TRANSIT or UNDEPOSITED COLLECTION
These are amounts already received and recorded by the company, but are not yet
recorded by the bank, either because it is not yet received by the bank as of cutoff time (deposit in transit) or it has not yet been
deposited as of the end of the month (undeposited collection)
* It understates the bank balance.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
OUTSTANDING CHECKSThese are checks that have been written and recorded in the company's Cash account, but
have not yet cleared the bank account. Checks written during the last few days of
the month plus a few older checks are likely to be among the outstanding checks.
* It overstates the bank balance.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
BANK ERRORSThese are mistakes made by the bank. Bank errors
could include the bank recording an incorrect amount, entering an amount that does not belong on a company's bank statement, or omitting an amount
from a company's bank statement. The company should notify the bank of its errors. Depending on
the error, the correction could increase or decrease the balance shown on the bank statement.
* (Since the company did not make the error, the company's records are not changed.)
Balance per bank statement on Sept. 30, 2011
Adjustments:
Add: Deposits in transit
Deduct: Outstanding checks
Add or Deduct: Bank errors
Adjusted/corrected balance per bank
ADJUSTING THE BALANCE PER BANK
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
DEBIT MEMOS – BANK SERVICE CHARGE
These are fees deducted from the bank statement for the bank's processing of the checking account
activity (accepting deposits, posting checks, mailing the bank statement, etc.) The bank might deduct
these charges or fees on the bank statement without notifying the company. When that occurs the company usually learns of the amounts only
after receiving its bank statement.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
DEBIT MEMOS – NSF, DAIF, DAUDThese are checks that were not honored by the
bank of the person or company writing the check because that account did not have a sufficient
balance. As a result, the check is returned without being honored or paid.
When the NSF check comes back to the bank in which it was deposited, the bank will decrease the
checking account of the company that had deposited the check. The amount charged will be
the amount of the check plus a bank fee.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
DEBIT MEMOS – CHECK PRINTING CHARGES
This occurs when a company arranges for its bank to handle the reordering of its checks.
The cost of the printed checks will automatically be deducted from the
company's checking account.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
CREDIT MEMOS – INTEREST EARNED
It will appear on the bank statement when a bank gives a company interest on its account
balances. The amount is added to the checking account balance and is automatically on the bank statement. Hence there is no need to adjust the balance per the bank statement. However, the amount of interest earned will increase the balance in the company's Cash
account on its books.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
CREDIT MEMOS – NOTES RECEIVABLE
These are assets of a company. When notes come due, the company might ask its bank
to collect the notes receivable. For this service the bank will charge a fee. The bank
will increase the company's checking account for the amount it collected (principal and interest) and will decrease the account
by the collection fee it charges.
REASONS FOR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
ERRORSIt is in the company's Cash account result from the company entering an incorrect
amount, entering a transaction that does not belong in the account, or omitting a
transaction that should be in the account. Since the company made these errors, the
correction of the error will be either an increase or a decrease to the balance in the
Cash account on the company's books.
ADJUSTING THE BALANCE PER BOOK
Balance per books on Sept. 30, 2011
Adjustments:
Deduct: Bank service charges
Deduct: NSF , DAIF, DAUD checks & fees
Deduct: Check printing charges
Add: Interest earned
Add: Notes receivable collected by bank
Add or Deduct: Errors in company's cash account
Adjusted/corrected balance per books
CASH BOOK
DEBIT CREDIT
It represents an increase
It represent a decrease
NATURE OF CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
NATURE OF CASH BOOK AND BANK STATEMENT
BANK STATEMENT
DEBIT CREDITBALANC
E
It represents a decrease
It represent
an increase
It represents
the amount owed to
the clients
ILLUSTRATIVE PROBLEMCompany A's bank statement dated Dec 31, 2011 shows a balance of $24,594.72. The company's cash records on the same date show a balance of $23,196.79. Following additional information is available:
1.Following checks issued by the company to its customers are still outstanding:
No. 846 issued on Nov 29 $320.00No. 875 issued on Dec 26 49.21No. 878 issued on Dec 29 275.00No. 881 issued on Dec 31 186.50
2.A deposit of $400.00 made on Dec 31 does not appear on bank statement.3.An NSF check of $850 was returned by the bank with the bank statement.4.The bank charged $50 as service fee.5.Interest income earned on the company's average cash balance at bank was $1,250.6.The bank collected a note receivable on behalf of the company. Amount received by the bank on the note was $550. This includes $50 interest income. The bank charged a collection fee of $10.7.A deposit of $430 was incorrectly entered as $340 in the company's cash records.
ILLUSTRATIVE PROBLEM
Company ABank ReconciliationDecember 31, 2011
Balance as per Bank, Dec 31 $24,594.72Add: Deposit in Transit 400.00
$24,994.72Less: Outstanding Checks:No. 846 issued on Nov 29 $320.00
No. 875 issued on Dec 26 49.21
No. 878 issued on Dec 29 275.00
No. 881 issued on Dec 31 186.50
830.71Adjusted Bank Balance $24,164.01
ILLUSTRATIVE PROBLEM
Balance as per Books, Dec 31 $23,196.79Add:Interest Income from Bank $1,237.22
Note Receivable Collected by Bank 500.00
Interest Income from Note Receivable 50.00
Deposit Understated 90.001,877.22
$25,074.01Less:NSF Check 850.00Bank Service Fee 50.00Bank Collection Fee 10.00
910.00Adjusted Book Balance $24,164.01
ILLUSTRATIVE PROBLEM
PROOF OF CASH
A PROOF OF CASH is essentially a roll forward of each line item in a bank reconciliation from one accounting period to the next, incorporating separate columns for cash receipts and cash disbursements. The columns (and formula) used for a proof of cash are:
Beginning balance + Cash receipts in the period - Cash disbursements in the period
= Ending balance
PROOF OF CASH
When used for each line item in a bank reconciliation, the proof of cash highlights areas in which there are discrepancies, and which may therefore require further investigation, and probably some adjusting entries.
A proof of cash would be used in situations where controls over cash are weak.
It essentially combines two bank reconciliations, reconciling all transactions that occurred during the period to the client’s Cash Receipts Journal and Cash Disbursements Journal.
PROOF OF CASH
A proof of cash can indicate an array of other reconciliation issues that will require
adjustments to a company's accounting records, including:
• Bank fees not recorded
• Not sufficient funds checks not deleted from the deposit records
• Interest income or expense not recorded
• Checks or deposits recorded by the bank in different amounts than what they were recorded by the company
• Checks cashed that the company voided
• Cash disbursements and/or receipts recorded in the wrong account
PROOF OF CASH
A PROOF OF CASH can also uncover instances of fraud. If there is a difference between the totals, it can indicate the presence of unauthorized borrowings and repayments within the time period covered by a single bank statement. Thus, if a controller were to illegally withdraw 100,000 from the company accounts near the beginning of the month for his personal use, and replaced the funds before the end of the month, the issue would not appear in a normal bank reconciliation as a reconciling item. However, a proof of cash would be more likely to flag the extra cash withdrawal and cash return.
PROOF OF CASH
A PROOF OF CASH is more complicated to complete than a bank reconciliation. However, it provides a greater degree of detail, and so makes it easier to locate errors than a bank reconciliation. Thus, it may be cost-effective to use a proof of cash when you expect to find a large number of different cash-related errors within an accounting period.
PROOF OF CASH
1. The balance on the bank statement with the general ledger balance at the beginning of the proof-of-cash period
2. Cash receipts deposited per the bank with the cash receipts journal for a given period
3. Cancelled checks clearing the bank with those recorded in the cash disbursements journal for a given period
4. The balance on the bank statement with the general ledger balance at the end of the proof-of-cash period
RECONCILIATION TASKS
ILLUSTRATION OFPROOF OF CASH
Test cash transactions for a given period to verify the following existence and completeness assertions, as it relates to transactions, when internal controls over cash transactions are not effective in design or performance and an audit of the ending cash balance is not enough because of corollary misstatements to other accounts that result from unrecorded cash transactions or fictitious transactions.
OVERALL PURPOSE OF PROOF OF CASH
•All recorded (on the client's books) cash receipts were actually deposited. (existence)•All receipts deposited in the bank were recorded on the client's books. (completeness)•All recorded cash disbursements were processed by the bank. (existence)•All disbursements processed by the bank were recorded. (completeness)
OVERALL PURPOSE OF PROOF OF CASH
The standard 4 column proof of cash reconciles client books and records with 3rd party bank records for beginning (column 1) and ending (column 2) balances, as well as cash receipts/deposits (column 2) and cash disbursements/charges (column 3) for a given period. Usually one starts with amounts from the bank statement(s) and reconciles to what is reflected in the client's general ledger and/or cash receipts and disbursements journal, as explained below:
OVERALL PURPOSE OF PROOF OF CASH
Reconciling Item
Column
Affected
Explanation
Beginning DIT 1
You must add this amount to the beginning cash balance per bank
because the bank did not receive the deposits before the prior month cut off.
2You must subtract this amount from the
deposits shown by the bank for the period because these were recorded on
the client's books in prior period.
Ending DIT 2
You must add this amount to the deposits shown by the bank for the period
because these were recorded on the client's books this period, but will not be received by the bank until next period.
4
You must add this amount to the ending balance per the bank because the bank did not received them until after the end of the period, but they were recorded on
the client's books this period.
Reconciling Item
Column
Affected
Explanation
Beginning Outstanding Checks
1You must subtract this amount from the
beginning cash balance per bank because the bank did not receive the checks for processing
before the prior month cut off.
3You must subtract this amount from the
disbursements/charges shown by the bank for the period because they were recorded on the
client's books in the prior period.
Ending Outstanding Checks
3
You must add this amount to the disbursements/charges shown by the bank for the period because they were recorded on the
client's books in this period, but will not be received by the bank for processing until next
period.
4
You must subtract this amount from the ending cash balance per bank because the
bank did not receive the checks for processing until after this month's cut off, but have been
recorded on the client's books.
Reconciling Item
Column
Affected
ExplanationCustomer NSF
Checks redeposited by client in same
period
2
You must subtract this amount from deposits per bank because the client
did not record the second deposit as an additional receipt.
3
You must subtract this amount from disbursements/charges per bank
because the return of the NSF check was not recorded on the client's books
as a cash disbursement.
Customer NSF Checks redeposited
by client in the following period
3
You must subtract this amount from disbursements/charges per bank
because the return of the NSF check was not recorded on the client's books
as a cash disbursement.
4
You must add this amount to the ending balance per the bank because the bank reduced the balance when
the check was returned NSF by the customer's bank and the client did
not record it as an additional disbursement and
it is basically a DIT at period's end.
• http://www.accountingtools.com/questions-and-answers/what-is-a-proof-of-cash.html
• http://www.mccc.edu/~horowitk/documents/arens12e_23.pdf
• http://www.principlesofaccounting.com/chapter6/chapter6.html#Reconciliation
• proflorsbach.tripod.com/Proof.doc
• http://accountingexplained.com/financial/cash-and-equiv/bank-reconciliation
• http://accountingcoach.com
• Intermediate Accounting Vol 1 (Nenita S. Robles & Patricia Empleo)
SOURCES