3. Comparison of Income Statements
Operating Cycle of a Merchandising Business
Purchase Transaction
Terms of Transactions
Inventory Systems
Sales Transactions
Net Sales/Gross Sales
Cost of Goods Sold
Net Purchases
Operating Cost
4. Comparison of Income
Statement
Net sales arise from the sale of goods
Cost of goods sold represents the cost of
inventory, the entity has sold to customers
Gross margin from sales (gross profit)
Difference between net sales and cost of goods sold
Operating expenses – other that cost of goods
sold, which are incurred to generate sales
5. Operating Cycle of a
Merchandising Business
Purchases inventory, sells the inventory and
uses the cash to purchase more inventory
The faster the sale of inventory and the
collection of cash, the higher the profits
6. Source Documents
Sales invoice
Bill of landing
Statement of account
Official receipt
Deposit slip
Check
Purchase requisition
Purchase order
Receiving report
Credit memorandum
7. Steps in purchase
transaction
1. Fills a purchase requisition form and sends to
purchasing department
2. Purchasing department prepares a purchase order after
checking descriptions
3. Seller forwards an invoice to the purchaser upon
shipment of the merchandise
4. The purchaser’s receiving department sees to it that
the terms in the purchase order are complied with and
prepares a receiving report
5. Before approval of invoice payment, the AP
department compares copies to the previous
documents
8. Terms of Transactions
Merchandise may be purchased and sold either
on credit terms or for cash on delivery
When goods are sold on account, a period of
time called credit period is allowed for payment
If the credit period is 30 days, then payment is
expected within 30 days from the invoice date
Described as the net credit period on net tems
30 days is noted as “n/30”
10 days after the end of the month “n/10 eom”
9. Cash Discounts
For prompt payment (called cash discount)
This practice improves the seller’s cash position
by reducing the amount of money is accounts
receivable
Designed by such notation as “2/10”
The buyer may avail of two percent discount if the
invoice is paid within ten days from the invoice date
10 days (discount period) covered by the discount
Cash discounts are called purchase discount from
the buyer’s view point and sales discount from
the seller’s point of view.
10. example
Cash Discount of 2% on P150,000 3,000
Interest for 20 days at an annual rate of
18% on the amount due within the
discount period:
P147,000 * 18% * 20/360
Savings effected by barrowing 1,470
Amount due = 150,000 invoice price – 1,530
3,000 cash discounts
11. Trade Discount
Encourage the buyers to purchase products
because of markdown from the list price
Enables the suppliers to vary prices periodically
without the inconvenience of revising price lists
and catalogs
There is no trade discount account, instead, all
accounting entries are based on the invoice price
which is obtained by subtracting the trade
discount from the list price
12. Transportation Cost
Freight bill designates which party shoulders the
costs, and whether the shipment is freight
prepaid or freight collect
FOB (free on board)
Shipping point: the buyer shoulders the shipping
costs; ownership over the goods passes from seller to
the buyer.
Buyer already owns the goods while still in transit and
therefore, shoulders the transportation cost
13. FOB Destination
The seller bears the shipping cost
Title passes only when the goods are received by
the buyer at the point of destination; while in
transit
The seller is still the owner of the goods so the
seller shoulders the transportation costs
14. Freight prepaid
The seller pays the transportation costs before
shipping the goods sold
Freight collect
The freight company collects from the buyer
Payments by either party will not dictate who
should ultimately shoulder the costs
15. Who
Who Pays
Freight terms shoulders
the Shipper?
the Tc?
FOB Destination, Freight Prepaid Seller Seller
FOB Shipping Point, Freight Collect Buyer Buyer
FOB Destination, Freight Collect Seller Buyer
FOB Shipping Point, Freight Prepaid Buyer Seller
16. Shipping cost borne by the buyer using the
periodic inventory system are debited to
transportation in account
Shipping cost borne by the seller are debited
to transportation out account, also called
delivery expense, an operating expense in the
income statement
17. Inventory Systems
Key factor in determining cost of goods sold
Merchandising inventory represents goods
available for sale, there must be method of
determining both the quantity and the cost of
these goods.
Periodic Inventory or Perpetual Inventory
18. Periodic Inventory System
Primarily used by businesses that sell relatively
inexpensive goods and that are not yet using
computerized scanning system to analyze good
sold
No entries are made to the inventory account as
the merchandise is bought and sold
When goods are purchased, a separate set of
accounts is used to accumulate information on
the net cost of the purchases
Only at the end of the period, when the
inventory is counted, will entries be made to the
inventory account to establish its proper balance
19. Perpetual Inventory System
Inventory account is continuously updated
Perpetually updating the inventory account
requires that at the time of purchase,
merchandise acquisitions be recorded as debit to
the inventory account.
At the time of sale, the cost of goods sold is
determined and recorded by a debit to the cost
of goods sold account and a credit to the
inventory account
Both the inventory and cost of goods sold
accounts receive entries throughout the
accounting period.
20. POS scanners built into checkout counters to
collect transactional data for the cash register
and to update their perpetual inventory
system
Is more advisable for forms that sell low-
volume, high-priced goods
21. The ending inventory should reconcile with
the actual physical count at the end of the
period assuming that no theft, spoilage, or
error has occurred
account is adjusted for any inaccuracies
discovered
The count provides as independent check on
the amount of inventory that should be
reported at the end of the period
22. Net Sales
Net sales is the first part of the merchandising
income statement as presented below
Net Sales
Gross Sales 2,463,500
Less: Sales Returns and 27,500
Allowances
Sales Discount 42,750 70,250
Net Sales 2,393,250
23. Gross Sales
Under accrual accounting, revenues form the
sale of merchandise are considered to be earned
in the accounting period in which the title of
goods passes-usually at the point of delivery –
from the seller to the buyer
Gross sales consist of total sales for cash and on
credit during an accounting period
Cash for sale is uncollected, the revenue is
recognized as earned at the time of sale
24. As an income account, the sales account is
credited whenever sales on account or cash
are made.
Only sales of merchandise held for resale are
recorded in the sales account
If the firm sold one of its delivery trucks, the
credit would be made to the delivery
equipment account, not to sales account
25. 9-16 Cash 25,000
Sales 25,000
To record sale of merchandise for
cash
9-16 Accounts Receivable 25,000
Sales 25,000
To record sale of merchandise on
credit
26. Sales Discount
Assume that Corleto delights sold merchandise on
9-20 for P30,000; terms 2/10, n/60. at the time of
sale, the entry
9-20 Account Receivable 3,000
Sales 3,000
To record sales on credit; terms
2/10, n/60
27. The customer may take advantage of the sales
discount any time on or before 9-30, which is 10
days after the date of the invoice
9-30 Cash 2,940
Sales Discounts 60
Accounts Receivable 3,000
To record collection on the 9-20
sale, discounts taken.
• At the end of the accounting period, the sales discounts
account has accumulated all the sales discount for the
period.
• The account is considered a contra-income account and
deducted from gross sales in the income statement.
28. Sales Returns and
Allowances
The buyer may return the goods to the seller for
credit if the sale was made on account or for cash
refund if the sale was for cash
The seller may just grant an allowance or
deduction from the selling price
A high sales returns and allowances figure is not
commendable because it may signal poor quality
of goods and thus may result to dissatisfied
customers
29. Each return or allowance is recorded as a debit to an account
called sales returns and allowances.
9-17 Sales Returns and 760
Allowances
Accounts Receivable (or 760
Cash)
To record return or allowance
on unsatisfactory merchandise
• The seller usually issues the customer a credit
memorandum, which is a formal acknowledgement that the
seller has reduced the amount owned by the customer.
• Sales returns and allowances is a contra-income account
and is accordingly deducted from gross sales in the income
statement
30. Transportation Out
When the freight term is FOB destination, the
seller shoulders the transportation costs; when
the term is FOB shipping point, the buyer bears
the shipping costs
31. Case1: Assume that an entity sold merchandise
totaling P17,000 FOB destination, freight
prepaid; terms 2/10, n/30. the transportation cost
amounted to P1,900
11-25 Accounts Receivable 17,000
Transportation Out 1,900
Sales 17,000
Cash 1,900
Sales on account; terms 2/10,
n/30; FOB destination, freight
prepaid, P1,900
32. If the invoice is collected on Dec 5, the sales
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%).
Transportation out is an operating expense.
12-5 Cash 16,600
Sales Discount 340
Accounts Receivable 17,000
33. Case2: Assume that an entity sold merchandise
totaling P17,000 FOB shipping point, freight
collect; terms 2/10, n/30. the transportation cost
amounted to P1,900
11-25 Accounts Receivable 17,000
Sales 17,000
Sold merchandise on account;
terms 2/10, n/30; FOB shipping
point, freight collect.
34. If the invoice is collected on Dec 5, the sales
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%).
12-5 Cash 16,600
Sales Discount 340
Accounts Receivable 17,000
35. Case3: Assume that an entity sold merchandise
totaling P17,000 FOB destination, freight collect;
terms 2/10, n/30. the transportation cost
amounted to P1,900
11-25 Accounts Receivable 15,100
Transportation out 1,900
Sales 17,000
Sales on account; terms 2/10,
n/30; FOB destination, freight
collect, P1,900
36. If the invoice is collected on Dec 5, the sales
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%) since the
discount applies to total sales
12-5 Cash 14,760
Sales Discounts 340
Accounts Receivable 15,100
37. Case4: Assume that an entity sold merchandise
totaling P17,000 FOB shipping point, freight
perpaid; terms 2/10, n/30. the transportation cost
amounted to P1,900
11-25 Accounts Receivable 18,900
Sales 17,000
Cash 1,900
Sales on account; terms 2/10,
n/30; FOB shipping point,
freight prepaid, P1,900
38. If the invoice is collected on Dec 5, the sales
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%) since the
discount applies to total sales
12-5 Cash 18,560
Sales Discounts 340
Accounts Receivable 18,900
39. Cost of Goods Sold
Or cost of sales is the largest single expense
of the merchandising business
Cost of inventory that the entity has sold to
customers
Goods available for sale during the year =
merchandise inventory at the beginning of
the year + net purchases during the period
40. Entity sold all goods available for sale during
a given acctg period, cost of goods sold =
goods that had been available for sale
Actual cost of goods sold = goods available
for sale - merchandise inventory at the end of
the period
41. Corleto Delights
Partial Income Statement
For the Year Ended Dec. 31, 2000
Cost of Goods Sold
Merchandise Inventory, 1/1/00 528,000
Purchases 1,264,000
Less: Purchases Returns and Allowances 56,400
Purchases Discounts 21,360 77,760
1,186,240
Transportation In 82,360
Net Purchases 1,268,600
Goods Available for Sale 1,796,600
Less: Merchandise Inventory, 12/31/00 483,000
Cost of Goods Sold 1,313,600
42. Merchandise inventory
Consists of goods purchased for resale.
Beginning inventory = merchandise inventory
at the start of the acctg period
Ending inventory = inventories at the end
Merchandise inventory to be reported in the
balance sheet
Beginning inventory of the next acctg period
43. Net Purchases
Under periodic inventory method
Net purchases = GP – (Pdra) + Tc
GP: gross purchases
Pdra: purchases discounts, returns, allowances
Tc: transportation costs
44. Purchases
Purchases account, a temporary account, is used
only for merchandise purchased for resale
Purpose: accumulate the total cost of
merchandising purchased during an accounting
period
At invoice price is known as the gross price
method of recording purchases
45. All purchases of merchandise are debited to the purchases
account as shown below
11-12 Purchases 15,000
Accounts Payable 15,000
To record purchases of
merchandise; term 2/10, n/30.
46. Purchases Returns and Allowances
Is a contra account and is accordingly deducted
from purchases in the income statement
Cost that cannot be recovered, or lost sales
resulting from poor ordering or unsaleable goods
47. Sales R&A in the seller’s books are recorded as purchases
returns and allowances in the books of the buyer
11-14 Accounts Payable 2,000
Purchases R&A 2,000
Return of damaged
merchandise purchased on Nov
12.
48. Purchases Discounts
Purchases are usually made on credit and
commonly involve purchases discounts for early
payment
Is a contra account that is deducted from
purchases on the income statement
Does not apply to transportation or other charges
that might appear on the invoice
49. In relation with the purchase last Nov 12, discount terms
2/10, n/30, and Nov 14 Purchases R&A
11-22 Accounts Payable 13,000
Purchases discount 260
Cash 12,740
Record Purchases discount of
(P13,000 * 2%)
50. Transportation IN
Case1: Assume that an entity made purchases
totaling P17,000 FOB destination, freight
prepaid; terms 2/10, n/30. the transportation cost
amounted to P1,900
11-25 Purchases 17,000
Account Payable 17,000
Purchased merchandise on
account; terms 2/10, n/30; FOB
destination, freight prepaid
51. No debit to transportation in account since the
shipping term provided that the seller should
shoulder the transportation cost.
If the invoice is paid on Dec 5, the purchases
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%).
12-5 Accounts Payable 17,000
Purchase Discount 340
Cash 16,600
52. Case2: Assume that an entity purchases
merchandise totaling P17,000 FOB shipping
point, freight collect; terms 2/10, n/30. the
transportation cost amounted to P1,900
11-25 Purchases 17,000
Transportation In 1,900
Accounts Payable 17,000
Cash 1,900
Purchase merchandise on
account; terms 2/10, n/30; FOB
shipping point, freight collect.
53. If the invoice is paid on Dec 5, the purchases
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%).
Transportation in will form part of net purchases.
12-5 Accounts Payable 17,000
Purchases Discounts 340
Cash 16,660
54. Case3: Assume that an entity made purchases
totaling P17,000 FOB destination, freight collect;
terms 2/10, n/30. the transportation cost
amounted to P1,900
11-25 Purchases 17,000
Account Payable 15,100
Cash 1,900
Purchases on account; terms
2/10, n/30; FOB destination,
freight collect, P1,900
55. Accounts payable is decreased by the
transportation charges paid by the buyer for the
benefit of the seller
If the invoice is paid on Dec 5, the purchases
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%) since the
discount applies to total purchases
12-5 Accounts Payable 15,100
Purchases Discounts 340
Cash 14,760
56. Case4: Assume that an entity purchases
merchandise totaling P17,000 FOB shipping
point, freight prepaid; terms 2/10, n/30. the
transportation cost amounted to P1,900
11-25 Purchases 17,000
Transportation In 1,900
Accounts Payable 18,900
Purchased merchandise on
account; terms 2/10, n/30; FOB
shipping point, freight prepaid,
P1,900
57. If the invoice is paid on Dec 5, the purchases
discount will be P340 (P17,000 * 2%) since the
discount applies to total sales
Buyer not entitled to discounts on the
transportation costs.
Discounts apply only to total purchases.
12-5 Accounts Payable 18,900
Purchases Discounts 340
Cash 18,560
58. Operating Expenses
Make up the third major part of the income
statement for a merchandising entity
Expenses other than the cost of goods sold,
which are incurred to generate income from
the entity’s ,major line of business-
merchandising
Categories: Selling, Administrative, Other
operating expenses
59. Selling: related directly to the entity’s efforts to
generates sales
Payroll accounts, advertising, traveling, store supplies
used, depreciation, transportation out
Administrative: related to the general
administration of the business
Officers and office salaries, office supplies,
depreciation, business taxes, professional services,
uncollectible accounts and other general office
expenses
60. Other operating: are not related to the
central operations of the business
Expenses and loses from peripheral or incidental
transactions of the enterprise; for example, loss
on sale of investments or loss on sale of property
and equipment