FNSICGEN305B Prepare and Process Banking Documents
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Prepare and process banking documents
One of the key elements to success in business is to manage the money – both incoming and outgoing. All businesses operate a business cheque account and rarely pay for goods or services with cash – the exception is when purchasing low cost items (eg tea and coffee for the staff, courier fees and stationery items) payment for which comes from the Petty Cash fund. Larger amounts for payment of trade goods and expenses incurred in the day to day operation of the organisation will be paid with cheques, BPAY, internet banking, EFTPOS and/or Debit/Credit Cards.
Sales and services result in collection of monies commonly in the form of:
Cash (notes and coin) Cheques
Debit/Credit card payments (Visa, MasterCard) Internet banking
EFTPOS (Electronic funds transfer at point of sale)
Cash, Cheques, manual Debit/Credit card vouchers, and money orders are taken to the bank and deposited. These items are usually banked daily. Daily banking minimises the risk of theft and fraud.
Internet banking and electronic funds transfer using Debit/Credit cards or savings/cheque account cards will be processed directly by the bank and are therefore not recorded in the bank deposit book.
Organisations will have policies and procedures (written or practiced) for receiving and receipting money, balancing cash register drawers and forwarding funds for banking.
An organisation must comply with its bank‟s policies and procedures, which are agreed to when an organisation‟s account is established.
Important features of business cash control are:
An individual should be responsible for its security at all times. If responsibility moves from one person to another, the cash should be counted, verified correct, and signed for.
Bank daily the cash received on that day (or the previous day, depending on the type of business and its proximity to the bank). Businesses operating over the weekend and on public holidays should make separate deposits for each day‟s trading when the bank reopens.
Bank intact: that is, the whole of the cash received should be banked without any payments or expenses being taken out of it. This leaves a clear audit trail that proves the honesty of those handling the cash.
Regardless of whether an organisation is large or small, a complete record must be made of all monies received. Each transaction must be acknowledged by at least one of the following:
a receipt a cash register docket a credit card sales voucher
A receipt may be prepared electronically by a computer program such as MYOB or Quicken, a cash register or manually by using a carbonised receipt book.
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Receipts contain the following information:
Date of the transaction. The receipt number – all receipts are accountable forms and are numbered sequentially. The amount in figures. The amount in words (on a manual receipt). The amount of discount given (if applicable). The amount of GST included in the cost. A description of what the payment is for.
Manual receipt
Smith & Brown Incorporated Receipt No 56987
Received from M Student Date: 2/2/XX
For 10 X blue biros & 2 X red biros
The sum of Thirteen dollars and 22 cents
Signed Ben Brown Cash/Cheque $ 13.20
GST inclusive
Cash register receipt
Preparing accurate bank deposits involves entering and balancing all the different types of payments received. When preparing money for banking you will need a calculator, pen, cash analysis form, elastic bands, cash bags and the bank deposit form.
Remember when you are counting cash and preparing a bank deposit, it should be done away from public view.
TAX INVOICE
Smith & Brown Incorporated
ABN 1234 567 8910
BIR0987
Biro – Red Fine Tip
2 1.10 2.20
BIB5623
Biro – Blue Med Tip
10 1.10 11.00
Total 13.20
Pay Only 13.20
Cash tendered 15.00
Change 1.80
GST inclusive
Please keep receipt for
return or exchange
50 Mann St Gosford
Ph 4344 5566
2/2/XX 10.15 am 452378
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Preparation of money for banking
Cash
As you are no doubt aware, cash consists of notes and coins.
Australian notes are made of polymer in denominations of
$100 $50 $20 $10 $5
When preparing the cash for banking the notes are batched. The process for this is:
Sort notes into the same denomination with the transparent window in the bottom right-hand corner Bundle each denomination into groups of ten and secure the flat with an elastic band. Each flat is then grouped into batches of ten flats known as a bundle and secured with two elastic
bands
Australian coins are sorted into the following denominations
$2 $1 50c 20c 10c 5c
The value of damaged notes is as follows:
If two-thirds of a note is present, it can be counted at full value. Half a banknote has half the face value. Less than half a note has no value at all.
Coin is batched into plastic bags in the quantity marked on the bag. These values are as follows:
A bag of $2.00 coins = $50.00
A bag of $1.00 coins = $20.00
A bag of 50c, 20c, or 10c coins = $10.00
A bag of 5c coins = $2.00
If there are insufficient coins for a bag, write the value of each denomination on a piece of paper marked with a red cross and put it in a separate bag. This indicates to the bank teller that it is not a complete bag.
Another method of batching coin is to use brown paper and roll the coins. There is quite a skill involved in this method and most people opt for the recyclable plastic bag method.
Use a cash analysis slip to help count the cash, then enter the information on the cash summary of the bank deposit.
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Cheques
A cheque is an unconditional order in writing addressed to a bank, requiring the bank to pay on demand a certain sum in money. However cheques are not legal tender in the way that cash is. This means that you can refuse to accept cheque payment and insist on cash if you wish. Businesses can decide whether they will accept cheques from their customers.
There are three parties to a cheque:
drawer – the person who writes the cheque
drawee – the bank holding the drawer‟s bank account
payee – the person (or organisation) the cheque is written out to
All cheques received by your organisation should be checked prior to banking to ensure they are accurate and valid and will not be dishonoured (returned unpaid) by the bank as follows:
The date is not postdated (dated ahead of today‟s date). The cheque is not stale (dated more than 15 months ago). The cheque is signed. The payee is correct. If another name appears next to „Pay‟, there should be an endorsement on the
back of the cheque, signing the cheque over to the organisation. The amount in words and the amount in figures agree. Any alterations are initialled by the drawer of the cheque.
Date: 23 April 2XXX
Notes Quantity Value
$100 24 2400.00
$50 9 450.00
$20 8 160.00
$10 8 80.00
$5 16 80.00
Coin
$2 28 56.00
$1 24 24.00
50 cents 29 14.50
20 cents 43 8.60
10 cents 22 2.20
5 cents 25 1.25
TOTAL: 3276.55
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Date ___22 July 2XXX
To __Hannahs BKK___
For ___Accounting Fees_
_______________________
Balance b/f ___6050.90
Deposits ___.00______
This chq ___200.00__
Balance c/f __5850.90_
123400
What? Bank Gosford NSW Date __22 July 2XXX_
Pay ___Hannahs Bookkeeping Services
___________________________________________________ or bearer
The sum of ____Two hundred dollars only__________________________
__________________________________________________________
___Jo Smith______________________
Smith & Brown Incorporated
123400 631-289 753169
There is an instance when the bank will accept a cheque with discrepancies, this is:
When the amount in words is different to the amount in figures resulting in the bank paying on the lesser of the two amounts. In this case the lesser amount should be shown on the deposit slip.
Crossing cheques
For security purposes the words „NOT NEGOTIABLE‟ written across a cheque ensures that only the Payee can receive the money.
Cheques that are to be deposited in the organisation‟s account should have „Not Negotiable‟ either written or stamped across them before depositing.
Cheques made out to CASH should not have „Not Negotiable‟ written across them as this will prevent them being cashed. Generally most cheque books for organisations have „Not Negotiable‟ preprinted on them. In this case the signatory of the cheque can turn the cheque over and write on the back of the cheque „Please pay cash‟ and sign this.
$200.00-
22__200.00_
______
The cheque butt is retained by the Drawer as a record of the payment
Drawee (where the account is held) Check the date
Payee
Drawer
Cheque Number (find this number on the cheque itself)
BSB Number Account Number Crossed “Not Negotiable”
Has the cheque been signed?
Not
Neg
oti
able
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Examples – 3 Cheques for deposit on 23th April 2XXX
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Money orders
This is a no hassle alternative to using cheques and bank cheques and usually more affordable than a bank cheque. They are a convenient and safe way to pay your bills, transfer money or send amounts overseas.
Money orders are banked in exactly the same way cheques are banked.
Once the cheques and money orders have been validated (checked for errors) they are written up in the deposit book.
Credit card transactions
Credit card sales can be made in two ways:
1. Manually using a hand held machine or 2. Electronically, using EFTPOS (electronic funds transfer at point of sale)
Manual credit card transactions
Some businesses do not have on-line facilities so manual credit card transactions are made. These transactions are also made manually in cases where the on-line network is not operating.
A portable machine is used to swipe the card across a voucher so an imprint of the credit card details is made. Details of the sale are hand-written on the voucher and the buyer signs in the signature block.
There are two carbon copies - one for the cardholder (buyer), one for the merchant (seller). The original goes to the bank with a summary of all credit card sales for the day.
When accepting payment by credit card using the manual method, you should ensure that the transaction is valid by:
Comparing the customer‟s signature on the voucher with the signature on the card Checking the expiry date on the card – is it current? Telephone the merchant authorisation centre for approval if the amount is above the authorised credit
card limit for your organisation. Check the card number against the latest list of stolen and invalid cards issued through the banks.
If you suspect that the card is stolen or being used illegally, you should follow company policy in dealing with the situation.
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Examples - 2 sales voucher (please note there is now no BANKCARD option)
A credit voucher is issued when a customer returns goods.
Example – 1 credit voucher (please note there is now no BANKCARD option)
At the end of each day the ‘sales’ vouchers and the credit vouchers are recorded on a merchant summary.
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Example - Merchant Summary
After completion check that the Merchant Summary contains the following information
The name of the business banking the Merchant Summary. The signature of the person preparing the deposit. The date. The listing of the individual Sales voucher amounts. The total number of Sales vouchers. The total value of Sales vouchers. Notice the space for Credit vouchers. These REDUCE the value of the Merchant Summary because
they represent money going out of the business
The details from the Merchant Summary are recorded on the bank deposit. The summary and the bank copy of all vouchers are placed in a special envelope and included in the day’s banking.
EFTPOS – (Electronic funds transfer at point of sale
Transactions are made electronically through a system of EFTPOS terminals with details of the sale printed on a docket through the cash register. If the customer has used a credit card and has elected to sign rather than use a PIN the Merchant will check the signature against the credit card after the customer has signed.
Two printed reports of the sale are made. One is given to the cardholder and the other is retained by the merchant. The bank‟s record is generated by the electronic transaction.
The money is transferred from the customer‟s bank account to the merchant‟s bank account instantly. There is no need to record these transactions on the Bank deposit slip.
The EFTPOS system checks that the:
Card has not been reported stolen. Card expiry date is not earlier than the current date. Merchant has authority to accept the amount of the transaction.
If the card holder has reached their credit limit, or if there are insufficient funds in the customer‟s account, the transaction will not be processed.
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Benefits of EFTPOS for an organisation
Reduces the amount of cash taken (and therefore the amount of cash to be banked). Reduces paperwork and office time. Lowers the risk of theft or fraud. Reduces losses from dishonoured cheques. Reduces cash holdings. Is easier and safer than paper-based credit card processing. Increases the likelihood of a sale (impulse spending).
Benefits for a customer
Provides a safe, fast alternative to carrying cash. Reduces the number of transactions required to obtain cash.
Is convenient and easy to use.
Electronic banking
Many organisations now pay accounts using electronic banking facilities. Organisations submit data containing payment instructions on diskette, nine-track magnetic tape or by secure modem transfer to their bank. The bank processes the data. Files are then presented to other financial institutions (usually during the night) and cleared funds are available in the recipient‟s account the next day. This is a fast, efficient and inexpensive way for a computerised organisation to pay accounts. For the person or organisation receiving the money, payments received electronically have similar benefits to those listed above for EFTPOS. Transactions received electronically are identified on the monthly statement received from the bank. Codes for the various types of deposits are indicated on the statement. Many banks have a system of telephone banking for their customers, allowing them to pay accounts and transfer funds from one account to another by telephone. Some banks now have Internet services. These services allow people to transfer funds between accounts, pay regular accounts to certain institutions, review transactions and order statements from their home computer.
Night safe
Banks provide a night safe service for use by customers. Deposits are prepared in the normal way and placed in the safe outside the bank building. Most banks close at 4.00 pm Monday to Friday. By using the night safe an organisation can prepare the bank deposit at the close of training. This practice removes all funds from the premises overnight, reducing possible loss in the event of robbery or some other disaster. Bank staff will process the deposit on the next working day.
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Cash, cheques and credit cards are listed in banking forms in accordance with the banking institution’s guidelines
All banks produce their own deposit forms or slips. These are often encoded (printed) with the customer‟s name and account number, as well as the Bank and Branch and BSB (Bank, State, Branch) number. The size of the book is determined by the number of cheques the business is likely to deposit within a reasonable time period. Most business deposit books are designed so that a duplicate (carbon) copy of the deposit is left in the book. Smaller businesses will have a deposit book with a butt (similar to a cheque book) which is the organisation‟s record of the deposit.
While each bank‟s deposit slip looks slightly different, each requires the following information:
Name of the bank, the branch and the BSB number. Name of the depositor/account holder and the account number. Date of deposit. Total of coin/notes/cash. Total of credit card transactions/Merchant summary. A listing of the cheques showing drawer, bank and branch of each cheque. Total number of cheques. Total value of the deposit (cash, credit and cheque transactions). Signature of the person depositing/preparing the deposit slip. Space for the teller‟s signature, the number of cheques and other information for bank use only.
Deposit for account at
What? Bank Where this deposit is lodge at a bank or branch other than
shown below it will be transferred under internal procedures
of the Bank. The Bank will not be liable for delays in
transmission to branch or transfer to Nominated Bank.
Proceeds of cheques will not be available until cleared.
100 CREDIT 50 Date / / 20 Cash 10 Cheques 5 MC/Visa
Branch (where
Account kept) Total Notes Less charges
Paid in by
Signature Coin Total Deposit
Credit
A/c Number Total Cash Comm
Account
Name Total No of
Cheques Teller:
Particulars of cheques etc to be completed by the depositor
Drawer Bank Branch Amount
Total Cheques
This information is required
Itemise the cash being deposited
The totals being deposited
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Preparing the deposit
The bank requires the name of the drawer of the cheque, the bank and branch (alternatively the BSB number) and the amount of the cheque. The name of the business or person on whose account the cheque is drawn should be put in the drawer column NOT the signature.
The following is a sample completed bank deposit form:
Deposit for account at
What? Bank Where this deposit is lodge at a bank or branch other than
shown below it will be transferred under internal procedures
of the Bank. The Bank will not be liable for delays in
transmission to branch or transfer to Nominated Bank.
Proceeds of cheques will not be available until cleared.
100 0.00 CREDIT 50 200.00 Date 01/ 07/XX
20 200.00 Cash 473.00 10 40.00 Cheques 3599.35 5 30.00 MC/Visa 200.00
Branch (where
Account kept) Newcastle
Total Notes 470.00 Less charges 0.00
Paid in by
Signature Student Coin 3.00 Total Deposit 4272.35
Credit
A/c Number 25863982
Total Cash 473.00 Comm
Account
Name Sample Co.
Total No of
Cheques 6 Teller:
Particulars of cheques etc to be completed by the depositor
Drawer Bank Branch Amount
P. J. Lewis Natpac Newcastle 300.85
All Australia Ltd ZNA Newcastle 900.00
Oz Goods P/L ZNA Maitland 420.00
Davos Ltd Natpac Cardiff 350.00
Hunter Suppliers Ltd RBC Newcastle 119.50
Below the Bridge RBC Hamilton 1509.00
Total Cheques 3599.35
Pay-in documentation is reconciled with all money calculations Before taking the deposit to the bank it should be ensured that all financial documentation is accurate and balances with other records and calculations. Check the following.
Total of cash register receipts agrees with the amount to be deposited. Total of credit transactions agrees with the Merchant Summary. Final total of receipts for the day agrees with the total to be banked – it may be necessary to check the
Cash Receipts Journal or similar record. Total generated by computer software for the day‟s banking agrees with what is to be banked. Cash agrees with what is recorded on the deposit slip.
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NOTE Business deposit books are usually accompanied by a book of personalised credit summary slips. A slip needs to be completed and handed in with each deposit. This is purely for the bank‟s convenience and no office record of it is held.
The following is the credit summary slip that would accompany the completed bank deposit form (above):
Going to the bank
Now that we‟ve completed all the preparation for banking, let‟s look at a checklist of what you need to take to the bank. You‟ll need: The completed deposit form (book) The completed merchant summary with cash register tape (if required) The bank‟s copy of each of the credit card vouchers- bundled in the order listed on the merchant
summary and inside the Merchant envelope All the cheques and/or money orders– bundled together in the order that they are listed on the
deposit form All the bundles of notes All the bags of coin
Security measures to remember Risks to avoid Try to bank at least once a day if your company is small, several times a day if a larger company Ensure cash and cheques on the premises are kept to a minimum Remove cash and cheques from the till every hour.
When taking cash and cheques to the bank Vary the time of banking Complete all banking details on documents (ie deposit slips etc) before leaving the office Cultivate a good working relationship with the bank tellers Check bank statements to verify that deposits have been correctly entered
CREDIT DEPOSIT FOR ACCOUNT AT
RECEIVING
BANK’S
TELLERS
STAMP
TREETOPS BANKING CORPORATION
KATOOMBA 01/07/20XX
Normal Deposit slip must be lodges with this Credit
Summary Slip where lodged at a bank or branch other
than that shown above. The Deposit slip may be
retained by the receiving bank/branch and this Credit
Summary Slip transferred under the bank’s internal
procedures. The bank not to be held responsible for
delays in transmission. Cheques etc not available until
collected
Cheques incl
in deposit
6
3599
35
BRAMBLES OF KATOOMBA Net
Credit
$4272
35 048-009 543::24176
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The organisation’s financial records Making Cheque payments
As we have already discussed; a cheque is a form with pre-printed details of your bank account, on which you write a person‟s or organisation‟s name and an amount of money that you want to pay them. You must also date and sign the cheque. When the cheque is presented to the bank, the money is deducted from your bank account and paid to the person or organisation named on the cheque. Cheques are numbered consecutively and are issued by the bank either in a cheque book or in single pages. Company cheques can only be signed by a member of staff who is authorised to spend the company‟s money. It is often company policy that the signatures of two members of staff are required on a cheque to ensure that one person cannot write cheques to take money out of the company account without the knowledge of other staff. The cheque butt on the left side of the cheque is your record of your purchase and your account balance. You should keep these cheque butt records up to date, so that the information can be used as a quick reference as to the organisation‟s bank balance. The cheque butt shows: The date you write the cheque The payee‟s name A brief description of the payment The balance after the last cheque was written Any money deposited in the account since the last cheque was written The amount of the cheque you are writing The balance after the amount of the cheque is deducted
Reconciling the financial records In order to check the amount in a business bank account, a business must keep an accurate record of all deposits and withdrawals. The Cash Record Book is a method adopted by some business‟s which provides a record of the financial position of a business at any given time. Payments made by the business are by cheque or EFT; the amount appears in the Payments column and the cheque number appears in the Reference No. Column. Receipts, from all sources, appear in the Deposits column, and the corresponding receipt number appears in the Reference No. Column. The Balance shows an ongoing balance which is brought forward (b/f) from the previous period and carried forward (c/f) to the next period. An example of the Cash Record Book for Brambles of Katoomba is shown on the next page:
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CASH RECORD BOOK OF
BRAMBLES OF KATOOMBA
DATE DETAILS REF NO.
PAYMENTS ($) DEPOSITS ($) BALANCE ($)
April 10 b/f 10 500.00
J Smith 345308 155.00 10 345.00
Sales 101 350.00 10 695.00
Sales 102 200.00 10 895.00
P Abbott 345309 553.00 10 342.00
D Barwick 345310 106.00 10 236.00
Sales 103 109.00 10 345.00
Another method of recording the financial transactions of a business is to utilise a Cash payments and Cash Receipts journal. The following is an example of a joint cash payments and cash receipts journal.
CASH JOURNAL OF BRAMBLES OF KATOOMBA
Cash Receipts Cash Payments
Date Rec No Details F Bank Date Chq No Details F Bank
Apr 01 Balance b/f 10500.00 Apr 10 345308 J Smith 155.00
101 Sales 350.00 345309 P Abbott 553.00
102 Sales 200.00 345310 106.00
103 Sales 109.00
The Cash Record Book or Cash journals provide a useful check on the accuracy of banking documentation. The amounts recorded by the organisation should be the same as the amount that appears on the bank‟s records. A bank reconciliation should be carried out at the end of the month to determine that no discrepancies exist. This is done by comparing the transactions in the Cash Record Book or Cash Journals with those on the Bank statement for the same period.
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Banking Discussion Points – what would you do in these situations?
1 You are given a cheque to bank that is dated 2 years ago. 2 You are told that you must go to the bank at 3 pm daily. 3 You are not able to get to the bank during business hours to deposit the daily takings. 4 You are asked to pay for some flowers out of the daily cash takings.
5 You find discrepancies between the entries in the cashbook and your bank deposit slip.
As you work through the pack, answer the following questions:
1 What is the purpose of a credit summary slip? 2 On a cheque who is the drawer, who is the drawee and who is the payee?
3 How are you able to avoid someone banking a lost or stolen cheque? 4 What security procedures should be followed when banking cash? 5 Why is it important that you reconcile your bank deposit to your cash book entries? The answers to these questions must be submitted to your facilitator by the completion of your exercises pack.