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Notes
to the Financial Statements
The purpose
of notes to financial statements is to provide adequate disclosure of
important facts about a company that would not be obvious simply by reviewing
the financial statements. Although notes to the financial statements,
like the financial statements themselves, are representations made by
the client company, when asked to offer an unqualified opinion about the
accuracy of a company's financial statements a CPA firm will normally
assist their client in writing the notes to the financial statements.
Disclosure
requirements that have become a part of the basic audit include:
- The disclosure
of significant accounting policies, such as inventory valuation methods
- Disclosure
of changes in accounting policies
- Comments
relating to any contingent liabilities and their potential impact on
the company
- Information
about to operating leases
- Information
about off balance sheet financing
- Comments
relating to changes in demand for the company's goods and services,
loss of key customers, and concentration of business among a limited
number of customers
- Information
about pension liabilities, both funded and unfounded
Analysis relating to whether or not the company seems to be a "going
concern".
Source:
Michael Dennis, author of "Credit and Collection Handbook" available
at the NACM Bookstore. |
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