117 tagged with "Financial Reporting"
Create accurate financial reports and statements for better insights
Building a Three-Statement Financial Model: Linking Income, Balance Sheet, and Cash Flow
A three-statement financial model links the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement so one set of assumptions flows through all three — answering whether a business is profitable and when it runs out of cash. This guide covers the seven-step build order, the three links that make the model balance, and the errors that quietly break it.
Capitalizing Sales Commissions: A SaaS Guide to ASC 340-40
ASC 340-40 requires companies to capitalize incremental commissions as a deferred asset and amortize them over the benefit period—often three to five years for SaaS, set by the renewal commensurate test rather than the contract term.
How to Read a Construction WIP Schedule: Percentage-of-Completion, Over- and Under-Billing
A construction WIP schedule recognizes revenue as work is performed using cost-to-cost percentage-of-completion, then exposes over- and under-billing on every job — the report banks and surety underwriters read before the income statement.
Gift Card Breakage: How to Account for Unredeemed Balances Under ASC 606
Gift card breakage is the value customers never redeem. Under ASC 606, the proportionate method recognizes breakage revenue alongside redemptions—but state escheatment laws can override your right to keep the money.
ASC 205-40 Going Concern: Documenting Substantial Doubt, Mitigating Plans, and Audit Opinions
A step-by-step guide to ASC 205-40 — how management evaluates substantial doubt about going concern within one year of issuance, which mitigating plans qualify, what to disclose under each of the three outcomes, and how to coordinate with auditors under AU-C 570 and PCAOB AS 2415 to land an unmodified opinion.
Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value: How to Write Down Obsolete Inventory
LCNRV requires reporting inventory at the lower of its cost or net realizable value (NRV = selling price − completion costs − selling costs). Once written down under U.S. GAAP, inventory cannot be written back up.
Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value (LCNRV): How to Write Down Obsolete Inventory and Stop Overstating Your Balance Sheet
A practical walkthrough of the LCNRV rule under ASC 330 — how to calculate net realizable value, book the write-down, handle obsolete or damaged inventory, and avoid the phantom-profit trap of overstated inventory on the balance sheet.
Opening Balance Equity: How to Set Up Books Mid-Year and Zero It Out
Opening Balance Equity is a temporary holding account that must read $0.00 once setup is done. This guide explains why it appears, how to set up books mid-year from a trial balance, and the exact journal entry to move the residual into Retained Earnings or Owner's Equity.
Quality of Earnings Reports: How Sellers Protect Their Price in a Business Sale
A Quality of Earnings report normalizes a company's earnings, reconciles them to cash, and tests every add-back. Sellers who commission their own QoE averaged a 7.4x EBITDA multiple versus 7.0x for those who did not.
Quality of Earnings Reports: How Sellers Defend EBITDA, Survive Buyer Due Diligence, and Avoid Last-Minute Price Cuts
A Quality of Earnings (QoE) report decides whether a buyer accepts your EBITDA or re-trades the deal price. This guide breaks down the 12 add-backs buyers accept, the 8 they reject, and how the working capital peg quietly cuts seller proceeds at closing.
Sales Returns and Allowances: Contra-Revenue Accounting Under ASC 606
Sales returns and allowances are contra-revenue, not expenses. This guide shows the journal entries, ASC 606 refund liability and right-of-return asset, and how to estimate returns at period-end so net sales and gross margin stay honest.
The Section 1375 Sting Tax: How Former C Corps Pay 21% on Passive Income and Lose Their S Election After Three Years
Section 1375 imposes a flat 21% sting tax on S corporations that carry C-corp earnings and profits when passive investment income exceeds 25% of gross receipts, and three consecutive years over that threshold terminates the S election automatically. This guide walks through the excess net passive income formula, the three-year cliff under Section 1362(d)(3), and three planning moves to defuse exposure before year-end.