61 Test Bank for Financial Reporting and Analysis 5th Edition by Revsine Multiple Choice Questions When independent measurers get similar results when using the same accounting measur
Trang 161 Test Bank for Financial Reporting and Analysis 5th Edition
by Revsine
Multiple Choice Questions
When independent measurers get similar results when using the same accounting measurement methods, the financial information
is
1 A relevant
2 B verifiable
3 C timely
4 D faithfully represented
Professional analysts need information on a company's future earnings and cash flow to evaluate audit vulnerabilities, to assess debt repayment prospects and to
1 A certify good values in the stock market
2 B indemnify creditors against losses
3 C certify that no fraud exists in the company
4 D value its equity securities
Financial information that does not favor one set of interested parties over another is
1 A relevant
2 B verifiable
3 C neutral
4 D faithfully represented
Analytical review procedures include all of the following except
1 A simple ratio and trend analysis
2 B complex statistical techniques
3 C general reasonableness tests
Trang 24 D comparison of the company's reported financial results to benchmarks established by the SEC
The ability to raise additional cash by selling assets, issuing stock, or borrowing more is
1 A financial flexibility
2 B a credit risk indicator
3 C a stock price predictor
4 D one way to project earnings
Companies that have projected operating cash flows that are more than sufficient to meet debt payments are
1 A financially flexible
2 B good credit risk companies
3 C undervalued
4 D overvalued
Relevant financial information
1 A is free from bias and error
2 B is measured in a similar manner among different companies
3 C can be independently verified
4 D is capable of making a difference in a decision
To achieve faithful representation, the financial information must
be
1 A consistent, unbiased, and relevant
2 B relevant, comparable, and timely
3 C relevant, consistent, and timely
4 D complete, neutral, and free from material error
All financial statements:
1 A provide a picture of the company at a moment in time
2 B describe changes that took place over a period of time
3 C help to evaluate what happened in the past
4 D contain most up to date information about the company
Trang 3Financial information that is provided to decision makers before it loses its capacity to influence their decisions is
1 A neutral
2 B verifiable
3 C timely
4 D consistent
Investors and analysts are sometimes urged to ignore traditional GAAP numbers and instead focus on nonstandard "pro forma" numbers because _
1 A the political compromises made to achieve consensus when issuing FASB pronouncements lead to inaccurate portrayals of underlying events
2 B management believes the pro forma numbers portray the company in a better light
3 C the pro forma numbers are closer to those reported under international reporting standards
4 D pro forma numbers are easier to understand
Creditors assess credit risk by comparing a firm's required
principal and interest payments to estimates of the firm's current and future
1 A net assets
2 B gross income
3 C net income
4 D cash flows
A company's financial statements reflect information about
1 A future projections of sales, expenses, and other future economic events
2 B product information and competitive positions
3 C the general economy of the industry in which the company operates
4 D economic events that affect a company that can be translated into accounting numbers
The type of analysis that does not concern itself with financial statement numbers is
Trang 41 A valuation analysis.
2 B efficient market analysis
3 C fundamental analysis
4 D technical analysis
Financial information capable of making a difference in a decision
is
1 A relevant
2 B verifiable
3 C consistent
4 D neutral
A company's financial statements can be used for all of the
following purposes except
1 A as a scorecard on the company's social responsibility
2 B as a management report card
3 C as an early warning signal
4 D as a measure of accountability
A firm's financial statements contain trends that give users insight into the firm's
1 A future market share
2 B position within its industry
3 C profitability, productivity, and liquidity
4 D current market price for common and preferred stock
If a company fails to disclose information about a lawsuit because
it might be embarrassing to the company, it is violating
1 A relevance
2 B verifiability
3 C neutrality
4 D timeliness
Trang 5Investors who presume that they have no insights about company value beyond the current market price and use financial
statement data to assess firm-specific variables believe in the
1 A market-to-market hypothesis
2 B efficient market hypothesis
3 C fundamental market hypothesis
4 D technical market hypothesis
When a borrower violates a loan covenant that requires minimum achievement of an accounting measure in the financial
statements, the lender can
1 A immediately seize the loan collateral
2 B fire the chief operating officer of the borrower
3 C report the borrower to the IRS
4 D call for immediate repayment of the loan
Business enterprises enter into many different types of contracts Examples of such contracts that often contain language that
refers to verifiable financial statement numbers include all of the following except
1 A royalty contracts with inventors
2 B sales contracts with customers
3 C compensation contracts with managers
4 D debt contracts with bankers
Employees demand financial statement information because the firm's performance is often linked to all of the following except
1 A negotiated increases in union contracts
2 B social security benefits
3 C pension plan benefits
4 D employee profit sharing
Investors who follow a fundamental analysis approach
1 A determine the value the company's assets would yield if sold individually
Trang 62 B.estimate the value of a stock by assessing the amount, timing, and uncertainty of future cash flows that will accrue to the issuing company
3 C assess the company's ability to meet its debt-related financial
obligations
4 D assess the company's ability to raise additional cash by selling assets, issuing stock, or borrowing more
The section of published reports of public companies that
includes a description of the company's business risks, results of operations, financial condition, and future plans for the company
is known as the
1 A management's discussion and analysis
2 B management representation letter
3 C president's message
4 D board of directors' analysis
The market analysis known as fundamental analysis
1 A predicts future trends in the financial drivers of a company's success or failure
2 B relies on price and volume movement of stock
3 C has no insights about company value beyond current market price
4 D uses microeconomic data to forecast stock values
The type of analysis that uses financial statements to assess valuation of current market price is
1 A valuation analysis
2 B efficient market analysis
3 C fundamental analysis
4 D technical analysis
Being verifiable and neutral is part of what makes financial
information
1 A useful
2 B consistent
3 C comparable
Trang 74 D relevant.
The amounts of executive compensation and bonuses are often determined by
1 A auditor's recommendations
2 B evaluations by subordinates
3 C company contracts
4 D industry guidelines
Investors who compare a firm's discounted future cash flows to the current market price of a stock are using the
1 A efficient market hypothesis
2 B market-to-market approach
3 C fundamental analysis approach
4 D technical analysis approach
61 Free Test Bank for Financial Reporting and
Analysis 5th Edition by Revsine Multiple Choice
Questions - Page 2
When a financial statement contains omissions or misstatements that would alter the judgment of a reasonable person, it violates
1 A neutrality
2 B consistency
3 C conservatism
4 D materiality
One financial disclosure cost is the possibility that competitors may use the information to harm the company providing the
disclosure All of the following disclosures might create a
competitive disadvantage except
1 A.detailed information about company operations, such as sales and cost figures for individual product lines
Trang 82 B information about the company's technological and managerial
innovations
3 C information on the company's level of spending on research and
development
4 D details about the company's strategies, plans and tactics
IFRS frequently
1 A upon issue are automatically approved for any foreign listed company
2 B permit only one accounting treatment for similar business transactions and events to promote comparability
3 C allow firms less latitude when compared to U.S GAAP
4 D follow a more generalized overview approach than do U.S GAAP counterpart standards
Some countries' philosophy of financial reporting differs from U.S GAAP because their financial reports are required to
1 A be verifiable
2 B conform to tax and/or commercial law
3 C be reported and measured in a similar manner across companies
4 D use the same accounting methods for similar events period to period
Using the same accounting methods to record and report similar events from period to period demonstrates
1 A consistency
2 B comparability
3 C neutrality
4 D faithful representation
The growth of global investing has spurred development of
worldwide accounting standards that are written by the
1 A American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
2 B Institute of Global Auditors
3 C Global Committee on Accounting Standards
4 D International Accounting Standards Board
Trang 9The ASC uses a structure in which the FASB's authoritative
accounting guidance is organized into all of the following except
1 A chapters
2 B topics
3 C sections
4 D paragraphs
The Financial Accounting Standards Board has responsibility for the establishment of U S accounting standards and
1 A full statutory power to enforce compliance with GAAP
2 B authority from the SEC to enforce compliance with GAAP
3 C no authority or responsibility to enforce compliance with GAAP
4 D responsibility imposed by AICPA to enforce compliance with GAAP
The network of conventions, rules, guidelines, and procedures used by the accounting profession is known as generally
accepted
1 A auditing standards
2 B accounting procedures
3 C accounting principles
4 D auditing principles
International accounting rules are currently established by the
1 A IASC
2 B IASB
3 C FASB
4 D none of the above
Which one of the following types of disclosure costs is the cost of disclosing the company's pricing strategies?
1 A Political cost
2 B Litigation cost
3 C Competitive disadvantage cost
4 D Information collection, processing, and dissemination cost
Trang 10The SEC has issued a proposed roadmap for the adoption of IFRS by U.S public companies, specifying adoption by the end
of
1 A 2011
2 B 2014
3 C 2015
4 D The roadmap does not specify a "date certain" for adoption
Financial reporting philosophies differ across countries These philosophies evolve from and reflect several factors including all
of the following except
1 A the language(s) spoken in the country
2 B the specific political institutions within the country
3 C the specific financial institutions within the country
4 D the country's social customs
When financial information is measured and reported in a similar manner across different companies in the same industry it is
1 A consistent
2 B comparable
3 C neutral
4 D faithfully represented
A company manages a large portfolio of marketable securities and sells only stocks with substantial gains in poor income years
or sells only stocks with substantial losses in good income years This strategy is an indication of
1 A securities fraud
2 B unstable portfolio management
3 C income smoothing
4 D violating security trading laws
ASC content is organized
1 A alphabetically by topic
Trang 112 B in chronological order based on the issue date of the major
pronouncement on which the content is based
3 C without regard to the original standard from which the content was derived
4 D in the manner prescribed by the IASB
Companies needing to access new and ever larger sources of capital in response to increased international competitiveness face a severe disadvantage if their financial reporting
1 A is in accordance with IFRS
2 B is in accordance with U.S GAAP
3 C is based on a commercial and tax law approach
4 D is based on an economic performance approach
In 2009, the FASB completed a five-year effort to distill the existing GAAP literature into a single database known as
1 A the accounting standards database
2 B international financial reporting standards
3 C the converged accounting standards
4 D the accounting standards codification
When a company changes from straight-line to the declining balance method of accounting for depreciation, the financial statements lack
1 A comparability
2 B consistency
3 C neutrality
4 D faithful representation
IFRS are
1 A built on broad principles
2 B rules-based
3 C narrowly defined, detailed standards
4 D seldom different than those issued by the FASB
Trang 12Depending on the home-country of a reporting entity, historically (e.g., pre-IFRS) its financial statements might have been
1 A intended to capture and reflect the underlying performance and condition
of the reporting entity
2 B in conformity with mandated laws or detailed tax rules
3 C either a or b
4 D none of the above
Financial statements follow
1 A rigid guidelines that require specific adherence to regulated procedures
2 B generally accepted guidelines that allow management to choose among different procedures
3 C general guidelines with little choice among different procedures
4 D legal requirements for uniform presentation and disclosure
Companies offering higher risk securities have incentives to mask their true condition by
1 A supplying overly optimistic financial information
2 B not having their financial statements audited
3 C listing on foreign exchanges where reporting requirements are less stringent than those in the U.S
4 D including testimonials from well known executives in their financial statements
Identify the correct order of the three steps constituting the
FASB's "due process" procedure
1 A Public-hearing stage, exposure-draft stage, and voting stage
2 B Discussion-memorandum stage, public-hearing stage, and voting stage
3 C Exposure-draft stage, discussion-memorandum stage, and voting stage
4 D Discussion-memorandum stage, exposure-draft stage, and voting stage
The Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 required all publicly traded firms to
1 A purchase insurance against corporate bankruptcy
2 B register with an authorized stock exchange