It’s crucial to gather information regarding expenses and income and create financial reports at the end of your business’s accounting year. These documents account for loan repayments, inventory expenses, employee wages/benefits, revenue assets, equity, investments, and paid taxes. Generating these reports includes reconciling, reviewing, and verifying all financial transactions since the last preparation of documents. Any discrepancies discovered between accounts payable and receivable require documentation or missing information to resolve the differences. Year-end financial reports create a picture of a business’s economic situation and inform organizational decisions (amount of inventory to order, number of employees to hire, decisions regarding loans, etc.).
Preparing Year-End Financial Reports
The following are the steps for preparing year-end financial reports.
- Prepare a schedule: List the critical activities necessary for the closing. Identify deadlines and the fiscal close date. Create a schedule with target dates for each task and assign the tasks.
- Gather documents of your organization’s financial transactions (credit card statements, bank statements, inventory counts, loan statements, payroll reports, merchant statements, last year’s tax return, outstanding invoices/receipts, etc.). Ensure you have received all invoices for the year and check that you have invoiced all customers.
- Review payroll documents (registers, employee records, timesheets, tax and benefit forms, etc.). Verify changes in compensation, policies, and tax withholding status. Reconcile payroll with financial reports (general ledger, tax filings, bank statements).
- Value and audit inventory: Do a year-end inventory count, verifying that the physical inventory matches the balance sheet. Consider the use of inventory management software to ease the task. Value your inventory to understand current assets, gross profit, and production demand.
- Review assets: Gather data on tangible assets (equipment, vehicles, property, furniture, etc.) and intangible assets (trademarks, patents, copyrights, etc.) and factor in depreciation.
- Examine accounts receivable and payable: Reconcile accounts receivable (money received and expected from customers) with accounts payable (money owed to suppliers/third parties). Review outstanding invoices, bills, and customer payments. List unpaid debts as liabilities/accrual expenses.
- Review agreements, contracts, and legal documents regarding relationships with clients, vendors, suppliers, landlords, partners, etc. Note conditions, terms, rights, obligations, and responsibilities regarding deliverables, payment, termination, indemnities, warranties, and dispute resolution. Make records of payment schedules, contract values, and billing cycles.
- Reconcile credit card statements, bank accounts, and loan balances. Ensure that recorded transactions match the evidence in bank statements, credit card statements, receipts, and invoices. Record adjustments by creating appropriate journal entries. Post balances to your general ledger. Verify records of interest and principal payments on loans.
- Prepare an income/profit and loss statement: This document summarizes revenues, net income, and expenses.
- Prepare a cash flow statement summarizing cash outflows and inflows from investing, operating, and financing activities.
- Create a balance sheet to report your company’s liabilities, assets, and shareholder equity, providing a snapshot of your business’s finances. Group assets (accounts receivable, cash, prepaid expenses, inventory, long-term investments, etc.) and liabilities (short-term loans, accounts payable, accrued expenses, long-term debt, deferred tax, etc.) and shareholder’s equity.
- Close the accounts, books, and ledgers for the last financial period.
- Distribute financial reports, sharing them with advisors, investors, consultants, and parent companies.
How Cook and Company Can Help
If preparing year-end financial reports seems bewildering and time-consuming, contact Cook & Company. They prepare year-end statements (balance sheets, income statements, statements of owner’s equity, cash-flow statements) for all sizes of organizations and assist in the evaluation of company performance.