National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.03 seconds. 
Financial reporting of long-term contracts under czech accounting regulations IFRS and US GAAP
Bošková, Tereza ; Roe, Jana (advisor) ; Molín, Jan (referee)
This diploma thesis deals with specifics for reporting of construction contracts in financial statements according to czech accounting regulations, IFRS and US GAAP. These are contracts that are custom-made, so they are not serial production and they are long-term, so most of their production goes into more accounting periods. In 2018, new Standards for Recognition of Revenue from contracts with customers IFRS 15 and ASC 606 will enter into force. The aim of the thesis is to characterize individual approaches to the reporting of revenues from construction contracts with a focus on the specifics in this sector and their comparison. To achieve this goal, a comparison method will be used. The thesis is divided into the theoretical and practical part. The theoretical part describes requirements and aspects related to building contracts, individual accounting standards including new revenue standards. In the practical part, an example is illustrated that shows a different approach to reporting revenue from these contracts in accordance with Czech accounting regulations and IFRS or US GAAP and comments on the changes that may occur through the application of new standards. At the end of the thesis, individual approaches are compared.
The evolution of natural gas trading in Great Britain
Zoller, Martin ; Šír, Jan (advisor) ; Váška, Jan (referee)
Bachelor thesis discusses the causes of spot gas market development in the UK, covering the period from 1986 to 1998. The first chapter describes pricing mechanism in long-term contracts and spot market pricing. The second chapter traces the transition from long-term contracts to spot trading in the UK. The work maps the legislative process of gas market liberalization, policies of the incumbent government and internal and external factors. The thesis suggests that the success of the liberalization process, which enabled the transition from long-term contracts to an advanced spot market was primarily facilitated by favourable conditions on the supply and demand side.

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.