1. Accounting of Non-Trading or Not-for-Profit Organisations/ Institutions, 2. Depreciation, 3. Valuation of Inventory (Stock), 4. Royalty Accounts, 5. Hire-Purchase System, 6. Instalment Payment System, 7. Branch Accounting, 8. Dissolution of a Partnership Firm-1, 9. Dissolution of a Partnership Firm-2 (Insolvency of a Partner), 10. Dissolution of a Partnership Firm-3 (Gradual Realisation of Assets and Piecemeal Distribution), 11. Sale of Partnership Firm/Conversion into Company.
4.Recording of Business Transactions : Journal, Ledger and Trial Balance , 5. Sub-Division of Journal : Subsidiary Books (Cash Book and Other Subsidiary Books), 7.Measurement of Business Income, 9.Depreciation, 10. Valuation of Inventory (Stock), 11.Capital and Revenue Expenditure and Receipts , 12. Financial Statements of Non-Corporate Entities, 13. Hire Purchase System, 14. Instalment Payment System, 15. Lease Accounting, 16. Branch Accounts, 17. Dissolution of a Partnership Firm—1, 18. Dissolution of a Partnership Firm—2 (Insolvency of Partners), 19. Dissolution of a Partnership Firm—3 (Gradual Realisation of Assets and Piecemeal Distribution), 20. Sale of Partnership Firm/Conversion into Company, 21.Insolvency Accounts, 22. Royalty Accounts.
1. Accounting Mechanism : Double Entry System, 2. Preparation of journal, Ledger and Trial Balance, 3. Goods and Services Tax (GST), 4. Sub-Division of Journal : Subsidiary Books (i) Cash Book (ii) Other Subsidiary Books 5. Preparation of Final Statement, 6. Capital and Revenue, 7. Accounting Concept of Income, 8. Valuation of Inventory (Stock), 9. Depreciation, 10. Branch Accounts, 11. Accounting of Non—Trading or Not-For-Profit Organisations
Your plain-English guide to navigating a financial accounting course Despite the economic landscape and job market, demand for accountants remains strong, and accountants will continue to see high demand for their services as the economy rebounds and businesses grow. Additionally, one of the effects of the economic downturn is a greater emphasis on accountability, transparency, and controls in financial reporting. With easy-to-understand explanations and real-life examples, Financial Accounting For Dummies provides students who are studying business, finance, and accounting with the basic concepts, terminology, and methods to interpret, analyze, and evaluate actual corporate financial statements. Covers traditional introductory financial accounting course material Explores concepts accountants and other business professionals use to prepare reports Details mergers and acquisitions purchase and pooling, free cash flow, and financial statement analysis Whether you're a student on your way to earning a bachelor's degree, MBA, or MAcc, Financial Accounting For Dummies gives you a wealth of information to grasp the subject and ace the course.
Over the past decade, credit derivatives have emerged as the key financial innovation in global capital markets. At end 2004, the market size hit $6.4 billion (in notional amounts) from virtually nothing in 1995. This rise has been spurred by the imperative for banks to better manage their risks, not least credit risks, and the appetite shown by institutional investors and hedge funds for innovative, high yielding structured investment products. As a result, growth in collateralized debt obligations and other second-generation products, such as credit indices, is currently phenomenal. It is enabled by the standardization and increased liquidity in credit default swaps – the building block of the credit derivatives market. Written by market practitioners and specialists, this book covers the fundamentals of the credit derivatives and structured credit market, including in-depth product descriptions, analysis of real transactions, market overview, pricing models, banks business models. It is recommended reading for students in business schools and financial courses, academics, and professionals working in investment and asset management, banking, corporate treasury and the capital markets. Highlights include: Written by market practitioners and specialists with first-hand experience in the credit derivatives and structured credit market A clearly-written, pedagogical book with numerous illustrations Detailed review of real-case transactions A comprehensive historical perspective on market developments including up-to-date analysis of the latest trends
This book covers the principles, concepts, techniques and practical tools of financial accounting in supporting overall business decisions. Using a comprehensive theoretical framework, this book is enhanced by practical examples, exercises, chapter summaries and complex cases in each of the eleven chapters. With the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and their specific Conceptual Framework as the baseline approach, this book also highlights Romanian regulation and practice specifically. Despite the globalisation efforts, this book demonstrates that there are still discrepancies and cultural challenges and will be of interest to students and academics of financial accounting.
Customer centricity is fundamental to business growth and ongoing success. Most executives appreciate the importance of it yet don't know how to execute it or sell the processes internally. This thoroughly revised edition of Breaking Through guides readers systematically through the ten breakthrough points of implementation, to explain how to execute a transformation to customer centricity, so that a company can engage continuously with its customers, making them allies and advocates with all the rewards that it brings. With updates on digital opportunities, social media, emerging markets (including Africa), and the social as well as financial impacts of customer centricity , this book successfully blends strategy with implementation and also features a range of innovative new and traditional business examples from across the globe. Easy to read, in-depth and full of practical advice, this is the essential step-by-step guide to implementing customer centricity to endure in the long-term.