Advanced financial accounting PowerPoint presentation. In this presentation we will discuss the depreciable asset transfer. In other words, a transfer intercompany transfer with the context of our consolidation process. In essence, a transfer from parent to subsidiary or subsidiary to parent get ready to account with advanced financial accounting. In prior presentations, we talked about the transfer of land and we talked about the transfer of inventory. So the depreciable assets are going to be similar to the transfer of land but now we’ve got that added depreciation we’re going to have to deal with so it’s going to be similar to the transfer of land except that depreciation adds a level of complexity because we are now dealing with an asset that has a change in value over time.
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Notes Payable Introduction
In this presentation, we will introduce the concept of notes payable as a way to finance a business. Most people are more familiar with notes payable than bonds payable, the note payable basically just being a loan from the bank. Typically, the bond payable is a little more confusing just because we don’t see it as often, especially as a financing option. From the business perspective, we often see it more as an investing or type of investment. But from a loan perspective, it’s very similar in that we’re going to receive money to finance the business if we were to issue a bond, or if we’re taking a loan from the bank. And then of course, we’re going to pay back that money. The difference between the note and the bond is that one the note is something we typically take from the bank. Whereas a bond is something we can issue to individuals so a bond we could have more options in terms of issuing the bonds than we do for a loan. Typically when we have a loan, we typically are Gonna have less resources, we can take a loan from the bank. When we pay back the bond, we often think of the bond as two separate things. And we set it up as two separate things, meaning we have the principal of the bond that we’re going to pay back at the end. And then we have the interest payments, which are kind of like the rent on the money that we’re getting, we’re getting this money, we’re gonna have to pay rent on it, just like we would pay rent if we had got the use of any physical thing.