Client brings in his Quickbooks books a few weeks ago for his S corp. I look at the Income Statement and Balance Sheet, and notice that if you add his current year loss of $40,244.85 to his prior year ending Retained Earnings, I would have to enter a $71,783.13 plug to get it to balance.
I call client. Of course he can’t understand how that could happen. He has his “CPA” nephew call back. Also puzzled. I explain there is only one entry to retained earnings. You start with last year, add in net income or deduct loss, and there you have it. It should not be $71,783.13 different.
He calls back and explains he accidentally entered a whole bunch of 2006 transactions in 2005. Quickbooks lets you do that.
Now it balances, except his new numbers show a $15,189.60 book profit, as opposed to a $40,244.85 loss.
Details, details. Am I being picky?
I call client. Of course he can’t understand how that could happen. He has his “CPA” nephew call back. Also puzzled. I explain there is only one entry to retained earnings. You start with last year, add in net income or deduct loss, and there you have it. It should not be $71,783.13 different.
He calls back and explains he accidentally entered a whole bunch of 2006 transactions in 2005. Quickbooks lets you do that.
Now it balances, except his new numbers show a $15,189.60 book profit, as opposed to a $40,244.85 loss.
Details, details. Am I being picky?
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