Question

In: Accounting

(Lessee-Lessor Accounting for Residual Values) Goring Dairy leases its milking equipment from King Finance Company under...

(Lessee-Lessor Accounting for Residual Values) Goring Dairy leases its milking equipment from King Finance Company under the following lease terms.


1. The lease term is 10 years, no cancelable, and requires equal rental payments of $30,300 due at the beginning of each year starting January 1, 2012.


2. The equipment has a fair value and cost at the inception of the lease (January 1, 2012) of $220,404, an estimated economic life of 10 years, and a residual value (which is guaranteed by Goring Dairy) of $20,000.


3. The lease contains no renewable options, and the equipment reverts to King Finance Company upon termination of the lease.


4. Goring Dairy’s incremental borrowing rate is 9% per year. The implicit rate is also 9%.


5. Goring Dairy depreciates similar equipment that it owns on a straight-line basis.


6. Collectibility of the payments is reasonably predictable, and there are no important uncertainties surrounding the costs yet to be incurred by the lessor.


Instructions


(a) Evaluate the criteria for classification of the lease, and describe the nature of the lease. In general, discuss how the lessee and lessor should account for the lease transaction.


(b) Prepare the journal entries for the lessee and lessor at January 1, 2012, and December 31, 2012 (the lessee’s and lessor’s year-end). Assume no reversing entries.


(c) What would have been the amount capitalized by the lessee upon the inception of the lease if:


(1) The residual value of $20,000 had been guaranteed by a third party, not the lessee?


(2) The residual value of $20,000 had not been guaranteed at all?


(d) On the lessor’s books, what would be the amount recorded as the Net Investment (Lease Receivable) at the inception of the lease, assuming:


(1) The residual value of $20,000 had been guaranteed by a third party?


(2) The residual value of $20,000 had not been guaranteed at all?


(e) Suppose the useful life of the milking equipment is 20 years. How large would the residual value have to be at the end of 10 years in order for the lessee to qualify for the operating method? (Assume that the residual value would be guaranteed by a third party.) (Hint: The lessee’s annual payments will be appropriately reduced as the residual value increases.)


Solutions

Expert Solution


Related Solutions

Tamarisk Dairy leases its milking equipment from Vaughn Finance Company under the following lease terms. 1.The...
Tamarisk Dairy leases its milking equipment from Vaughn Finance Company under the following lease terms. 1.The lease term is 10 years, noncancelable, and requires equal rental payments of $27,900 due at the beginning of each year starting January 1, 2020. 2.The equipment has a fair value at the commencement of the lease (January 1, 2020) of $211,081 and a cost of $263,000 on Vaughn Finance's books. It also has an estimated economic life of 15 years and an expected residual...
Sage Dairy leases its milking equipment from Pronghorn Finance Company under the following lease terms. 1....
Sage Dairy leases its milking equipment from Pronghorn Finance Company under the following lease terms. 1. The lease term is 10 years, noncancelable, and requires equal rental payments of $28,200 due at the beginning of each year starting January 1, 2017. 2. The equipment has a fair value and cost at the inception of the lease (January 1, 2017) of $205,207, an estimated economic life of 10 years, and a residual value (which is guaranteed by Sage Dairy) of $18,800....
Lessor enters into a seven-year lease for equipment with Lessee. Lessor sells and leases the equipment,...
Lessor enters into a seven-year lease for equipment with Lessee. Lessor sells and leases the equipment, which is not specialized in nature and is expected to have an alternative use for Lessor at the end of the lease term. Under the lease: Lessor receives annual lease payments of $25,000, with the first one payable at the commencement of the lease and one payment annually at the lease anniversary date thereafter. Lessor expects the residual value of the equipment to be...
Answer questions 14-19 from the following information. On January 1, Lessor Company leases equipment to Lessee...
Answer questions 14-19 from the following information. On January 1, Lessor Company leases equipment to Lessee Company. The lease term is 7 years; the economic life of the asset is 9 years. The cost of the equipment is $10,000; its fair value is $15,000. Lessor’s implicit rate is 4%; Lessee’s incremental borrowing rate is 4%. The lease payments of $2,400 are due at the beginning of each year. Is this a finance lease or an operating lease for Lessee? What...
Answer questions 14-19 from the following information. On January 1, Lessor Company leases equipment to Lessee...
Answer questions 14-19 from the following information. On January 1, Lessor Company leases equipment to Lessee Company. The lease term is 7 years; the economic life of the asset is 11 years. The cost of the equipment is $10,000; its fair value is $15,000. Lessor’s implicit rate is 5%; Lessee’s incremental borrowing rate is 5%. The lease payments of $2,469 are due at the beginning of each year. Is this a finance lease or an operating lease for Lessee? What...
On January 1, Year 1, lessor leases equipment to lessee. Data on the lease: Equipment fair...
On January 1, Year 1, lessor leases equipment to lessee. Data on the lease: Equipment fair value and lessor's book value, $25,771 (asset is new) Lessor's implicit rate and lessee's implicit borrowing rate, 8% Lease payments due each December 31 through Year 3 (three-year lease term) Useful life of equipment, three years (no residual value) Payments are due at the end of the year (ordinary annuity). 1. Lessor's Calculation of Lease Payments with No Residual Value 2. Lessee's Calculation of...
Lessee Company enters into a 6-year finance lease of non-specialized equipment with Lessor Company on January...
Lessee Company enters into a 6-year finance lease of non-specialized equipment with Lessor Company on January 1, 2020. Lessee has agreed to pay $44,800 annually beginning immediately on January 1, 2020. The lease includes an option for the lessee to purchase the equipment at $4,800, which is $3,200 below the estimated fair value at lease end. Lessee Company is reasonably certain that it will exercise the purchase option. The economic life of the asset is 7 years. The lessee’s incremental...
Dole Company (Lessee) desires to lease a piece of equipment from Deere & Company (Lessor). The...
Dole Company (Lessee) desires to lease a piece of equipment from Deere & Company (Lessor). The equipment will cost $100,000. The lease term will be 5 years. Lease payments will be made at the beginning of each year. Deere expects to depreciate the equipment on a straight-line basis to 0. The salvage value is expected to be $10,000. Deere’s tax rate is 40%, and its opportunity cost is 11%. What lease payment should Deere charge Dole for the equipment? Please...
Dole Company (Lessee) desires to lease a piece of equipment from Deere & Company (Lessor). The...
Dole Company (Lessee) desires to lease a piece of equipment from Deere & Company (Lessor). The equipment will cost $100,000. The lease term will be 5 years. Lease payments will be made at the beginning of each year. Deere expects to depreciate the equipment on a straight line basis to 0. The salvage value is expected to be $10,000. Deere’s tax rate is 40%, and its opportunity cost is 11%. What lease payment should Deere charge Dole for the equipment?
Lessee leases printing machine from Lessor. Lessor agrees to provide all maintenance services. Lease payment is...
Lessee leases printing machine from Lessor. Lessor agrees to provide all maintenance services. Lease payment is $1000 per month. Maintenance service has FMV of $200/month. Over what period does a Lessee amortize the Right of Use Asset in a Financing lease? Operating lease? How does the Lessee’s amortization of Right of Use Asset differ between Financing lease and Operating lease? How does Lessee report the amortization and interest components of lease expense on the income statement under an Operating Lease?...
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT