arris Inc. had the following transactions:
1. On May 1, Harris purchased parts from a Japanese company for a
U.S. dollar equivalent value of $6,200 to be paid on June 20. The
exchange rates were
May 1 | 1 yen | = | $ | 0.0070 | |
June 20 | 1 yen | = | 0.0075 | ||
2. On July 1, Harris sold products to a Brazilian customer for a
U.S. dollar equivalent of $10,400, to be received on August 10.
Brazil’s local currency unit is the real. The exchange rates
were
July 1 | 1 real | = | $ | 0.20 | ||
August 10 | 1 real | = | 0.22 | |||
Required:
a. Assume that the two transactions are denominated in U.S.
dollars. Prepare the entries required for the dates of the
transactions and their settlement in U.S. dollars. (If no
entry is required for a transaction/event, select "No journal entry
required" in the first account field.)
b. Assume that the two transactions are denominated in the
applicable local currency units of the foreign entities. Prepare
the entries required for the dates of the transactions and their
settlement in the local currency units of the Japanese company
(yen) and the Brazilian customer (real). (If no entry is
required for a transaction/event, select "No journal entry
required" in the first account field. Round your intermediate
calculations and final answers to nearest whole
number.)
In: Accounting
May | 1 | Paid rent for May, $5,000. |
3 | Purchased merchandise on account from Martin Co., terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, $36,000. | |
4 | Paid freight on purchase of May 3, $600. | |
6 | Sold merchandise on account to Korman Co., terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, $68,500. The cost of the merchandise sold was $41,000. | |
7 | Received $22,300 cash from Halstad Co. on account. | |
10 | Sold merchandise for cash, $54,000. The cost of the merchandise sold was $32,000. | |
13 | Paid for merchandise purchased on May 3. | |
15 | Paid advertising expense for last half of May, $11,000. | |
16 | Received cash from sale of May 6. | |
19 | Purchased merchandise for cash, $18,700. | |
19 | Paid $33,450 to Buttons Co. on account. | |
20 | Paid Korman Co. a cash refund of $13,230 for returned merchandise from sale of May 6. The invoice amount of the returned merchandise was $13,500, and the cost of the returned merchandise was $8,000. |
I've done May 1st-4th
In: Accounting
You have been examining the books of a new client. Included on their previously unaudited financial statements was a balance of $299,032 for a long-term Patent as of 12/31/2017. When examining the ledger, you found these entries:
In: Accounting
Bilboa Freightlines, S.A., of Panama, has a small truck that it uses for intracity deliveries. The truck is worn out and must be either overhauled or replaced with a new truck. The company has assembled the following information:
Present Truck |
New Truck |
|||||
Purchase cost new | $ | 32,000 | $ | 40,000 | ||
Remaining book value | $ | 19,000 | - | |||
Overhaul needed now | $ | 18,000 | - | |||
Annual cash operating costs | $ | 16,500 | $ | 14,000 | ||
Salvage value-now | $ | 8,000 | - | |||
Salvage value-five years from now | $ | 7,000 | $ | 6,000 | ||
If the company keeps and overhauls its present delivery truck, then the truck will be usable for five more years. If a new truck is purchased, it will be used for five years, after which it will be traded in on another truck. The new truck would be diesel-operated, resulting in a substantial reduction in annual operating costs, as shown above.
The company computes depreciation on a straight-line basis. All investment projects are evaluated using a 11% discount rate.
Click here to view Exhibit 13B-1 and Exhibit 13B-2, to determine the appropriate discount factor(s) using tables.
Required:
1. What is the net present value of the “keep the old truck” alternative?
2. What is the net present value of the “purchase the new truck” alternative?
3. Should Bilboa Freightlines keep the old truck or purchase the new one?
In: Accounting
(Appendix 4B) Direct Method of Support Department Cost Allocation
Stevenson Company is divided into two operating divisions: Battery and Small Motors. The company allocates power and general factory costs to each operating division using the direct method. Power costs are allocated on the basis of the number of machine hours and general factory costs on the basis of square footage. Support department cost allocations using the direct method are based on the following data:
Support Departments | Operating Divisions | ||||||
Power |
General Factory | Battery |
Small Motors | ||||
Overhead costs | $160,000 | $430,000 | $163,000 | $84,600 | |||
Machine hours | 2,000 | 2,000 | 7,000 | 3,000 | |||
Square footage | 1,000 | 1,500 | 10,000 | 20,000 | |||
Direct labor hours | 18,000 | 60,000 |
Required:
1. Calculate the allocation ratios for Power and General Factory. (Note: Carry these calculations out to four decimal places, if necessary.)
Power | General Factory | |
Battery | ||
Small Motors |
2. Allocate the support service costs to the operating divisions. Round all amounts to the nearest dollar. Use a minus sign to indicate a subtraction. For those boxes in which no entry is required, leave the box blank or enter zero ("0").
Support Departments | Operating Divisions | |||||||||||||||
Power | General Factory | Battery | Small Motors | |||||||||||||
Direct costs | $ | $ | $ | $ | ||||||||||||
Allocate: | ||||||||||||||||
Power | ||||||||||||||||
General Factory | ||||||||||||||||
Total | $ | $ | $ | $ |
3. Assume divisional overhead rates are based on direct labor hours. Calculate the overhead rate for the Battery Division and for the Small Motors Division. Round your answers to the nearest cent.
Battery overhead rate | $ |
Small Motors overhead rate | $ |
PLEASE EXPLAIN STEP BY STEP. THANK YOU!
In: Accounting
Target Costing
Laser Impressions, Inc., manufactures color laser printers. Model J20 presently sells for $375 and has a total product cost of $300, as follows:
Direct materials | $220 |
Direct labor | 60 |
Factory overhead | 20 |
Total | $300 |
It is estimated that the competitive selling price for color laser printers of this type will drop to $360 next year. Laser Impressions has established a target cost to maintain its historical markup percentage on product cost. Engineers have provided the following cost-reduction ideas:
The direct labor rate is $25 per hour.
a. Determine the target cost for Model J20
assuming that the historical markup on product cost and selling
price are maintained. Round your final answer to two decimal
places.
$
b. Determine the required cost reduction. Enter
as a positive number. Round your final answer to two decimal
places.
$
c. Evaluate the three engineering improvements together to determine if the required cost reduction (drift) can be achieved. Enter all amounts as positive numbers. Do not round interim calculations but round your final answers to two decimal places.
1. Direct labor reduction | $ |
2. Additional inspection | $ |
3. Injection molding productivity improvement | $ |
Total savings | $ |
Check My Work5 more Check My Work uses remaining.
In: Accounting
Shaker Stairs Co. designs and builds factory-made premium wooden stairways for homes. The manufactured stairway components (spindles, risers, hangers, hand rails) permit installation of stairways of varying lengths and widths. All are of white oak wood. Budgeted manufacturing overhead costs for the year 2017 are as follows.
Overhead Cost Pools |
Amount |
|
Purchasing |
$73,800 |
|
Handling materials |
82,080 |
|
Production (cutting, milling, finishing) |
211,000 |
|
Setting up machines |
96,250 |
|
Inspecting |
96,000 |
|
Inventory control (raw materials and finished goods) |
127,680 |
|
Utilities |
270,000 |
|
Total budgeted overhead costs |
$956,810 |
For the last 4 years, Shaker Stairs Co. has been charging overhead
to products on the basis of machine hours. For the year 2017,
100,000 machine hours are budgeted.
Jeremy Nolan, owner-manager of Shaker Stairs Co., recently directed
his accountant, Bill Seagren, to implement the activity-based
costing system that he has repeatedly proposed. At Jeremy Nolan’s
request, Bill and the production foreman identify the following
cost drivers and their usage for the previously budgeted overhead
cost pools.
Activity Cost Pools |
Cost Drivers |
Expected Use of |
||
Purchasing | Number of orders | 600 | ||
Handling materials | Number of moves | 8,000 | ||
Production (cutting, milling, finishing) | Direct labor hours | 100,000 | ||
Setting up machines | Number of setups | 1,250 | ||
Inspecting | Number of inspections | 6,000 | ||
Inventory control (raw materials and finished goods) | Number of components | 168,000 | ||
Utilities | Square feet occupied | 90,000 |
Steve Hannon, sales manager, has received an order for 250
stairways from Community Builders, Inc., a large housing
development contractor. At Steve’s request, Bill prepares cost
estimates for producing components for 250 stairways so Steve can
submit a contract price per stairway to Community Builders. He
accumulates the following data for the production of 250
stairways.
Direct materials | $103,700 | |
Direct labor | $112,100 | |
Machine hours | 14,600 | |
Direct labor hours | 5,100 | |
Number of purchase orders | 60 | |
Number of material moves | 800 | |
Number of machine setups | 100 | |
Number of inspections | 450 | |
Number of components | 16,000 | |
Number of square feet occupied | 8,000 |
Compute the predetermined overhead rate using traditional costing with machine hours as the basis. (Round answer to 2 decimal places, e.g. 12.25.)
Predetermined overhead rate |
$ |
per machine hour |
What is the manufacturing cost per stairway under traditional costing? (Round answer to 2 decimal places, e.g. 12.25.)
Cost per stairway |
$ |
Calculate activity-based overhead rate for each activity. (Round answers to 2 decimal places, e.g. 12.25.)
Activity |
Overhead Rate |
||
Purchasing |
$ |
per order | |
Handling materials |
$ |
per move | |
Production |
$ |
per D/L hour | |
Setting up machines |
$ |
per setup | |
Inspecting |
$ |
per inspection | |
Inventory control |
$ |
per component | |
Utilities |
$ |
per sq. ft. |
Caluclate total overhead assigned under ABC.
Total overhead assigned |
$ |
What is the manufacturing cost per stairway under the proposed activity-based costing? (Round answer to 2 decimal places, e.g. 12.25.)
Total cost per stairway |
$ |
In: Accounting
On January 1, 2017, the Mount Rogers City water department leases a truck under a noncancelable lease agreement meeting the requirements for classification as a capital lease. The present value (8% interest) of the minimum lease payment is $45000, and the lease calls for five annual lease payments of $10435 every January 1, beginning in 2017. The leased truck has a five year life and no salvage. 1. Prepare journal entries for the first year of the lease. 2. How would the lease be reflected in the Statement of Cash Flows prepared for the enterprise fund for the year ending December 31, 2017?
In: Accounting
Calculating EVA Brewster Company manufactures elderberry wine. Last year, Brewster earned operating income of $188,000 after income taxes. Capital employed equaled $2.6 million. Brewster is 45 percent equity and 55 percent 10-year bonds paying 7 percent interest. Brewster’s marginal tax rate is 40 percent. The company is considered a fairly risky investment and probably commands a 13-point premium above the 4 percent rate on long-term Treasury bonds. Jonathan Brewster’s aunts, Abby and Martha, have just retired, and Brewster is the new CEO of Brewster Company. He would like to improve EVA for the company. Compute EVA under each of the following independent scenarios that Brewster is considering. Required: Use a spreadsheet to perform your calculations and round all interim and percentage figures to four decimal places. If the EVA is negative, enter your answer as a negative amount. 1. No changes are made; calculate EVA using the original data. $ 2. Sugar will be used to replace another natural ingredient (atomic number 33) in the elderberry wine. This should not affect costs but will begin to affect the market assessment of Brewster Company, bringing the premium above long-term Treasury bills to 11 percent the first year and 8 percent the second year. Calculate revised EVA for both years. EVA Year 1 $ Year 2 $ 3. Brewster is considering expanding but needs additional capital. The company could borrow money, but it is considering selling more common stock, which would increase equity to 80 percent of total financing. Total capital employed would be $3,800,000. The new after-tax operating income would be $370,000. Using the original data, calculate EVA. Then, recalculate EVA assuming the materials substitution described in Requirement 2. New after-tax income will be $370,000, and in Year 1, the premium will be 11 percent above the long-term Treasury rate. In Year 2, it will be 8 percent above the long-term Treasury rate. (Hint: You will calculate three EVAs for this requirement.) EVA Year 1 $ Year 1 (11% premium) $ Year 2 (8% premium) $
In: Accounting
Overhead Variances, Four-Variance Analysis, Journal Entries
Laughlin, Inc., uses a standard costing system. The predetermined overhead rates are calculated using practical capacity. Practical capacity for a year is defined as 1,000,000 units requiring 200,000 standard direct labor hours. Budgeted overhead for the year is $750,000, of which $300,000 is fixed overhead. During the year, 900,000 units were produced using 190,000 direct labor hours. Actual annual overhead costs totaled $800,000, of which $294,700 is fixed overhead.
Required:
1. Calculate the fixed overhead spending and volume variances.
Fixed Overhead Spending Variance | $ | Favorable |
Fixed Overhead Volume Variance | $ | Favorable |
2. Calculate the variable overhead spending and efficiency variances.
Variable Overhead Spending Variance | $ | Unfavorable |
Variable Overhead Efficiency Variance | $ | Favorable |
3. Prepare the journal entries that reflect the following:
Note: Close the variances with a debit balance first. For compound entries, if an amount box does not require an entry, leave it blank or enter "0".
a. | Fixed Overhead Control | ||
Variable Overhead Control | |||
Miscellaneous Accounts | |||
b. | Work in Process | ||
Fixed Overhead Control | |||
Variable Overhead Control | |||
c. | Fixed Overhead Volume Variance | ||
Variable Overhead Spending Variance | |||
Variable Overhead Efficiency Variance | |||
Fixed Overhead Spending Variance | |||
Fixed Overhead Control | |||
Variable Overhead Control | |||
d. | Cost of Goods Sold | ||
Fixed Overhead Spending Variance | |||
Variable Overhead Spending Variance | |||
Variable Overhead Efficiency Variance | |||
Fixed Overhead Spending Variance | |||
Cost of Goods Sold |
In: Accounting
interstate Manufacturing is considering either replacing one of
its old machines with a new machine or having the old machine
overhauled. Information about the two alternatives follows.
Management requires a 10% rate of return on its investments. (PV of
$1, FV of $1, PVA of $1, and FVA of $1) (Use appropriate
factor(s) from the tables provided.)
Alternative 1: Keep the old machine and have it
overhauled. If the old machine is overhauled, it will be kept for
another five years and then sold for its salvage value.
Cost of old machine | $ | 108,000 | |
Cost of overhaul | 156,000 | ||
Annual expected revenues generated | 93,000 | ||
Annual cash operating costs after overhaul | 37,000 | ||
Salvage value of old machine in 5 years | 17,000 | ||
Alternative 2: Sell the old machine and buy a new
one. The new machine is more efficient and will yield substantial
operating cost savings with more product being produced and
sold.
Cost of new machine | $ | 296,000 | |
Salvage value of old machine now | 45,000 | ||
Annual expected revenues generated | 107,000 | ||
Annual cash operating costs | 25,000 | ||
Salvage value of new machine in 5 years | 11,000 | ||
In: Accounting
1. What is treasury stock? Explain and discuss some of the reasons a corporation may purchase treasury stock.
2. What is a stock dividend? Describe and discuss reasons why a company would choose to give dividends in the form of stock rather than cash. In your response explain how issuance of a stock dividend affects the accounting records.
In: Accounting
Pureform, Inc., uses the FIFO method in its process costing system. It manufactures a product that passes through two departments. Data for a recent month for the first department follow: Units Materials Labor Overhead Work in process inventory, beginning 65,000 $ 68,500 $ 5,700 $ 21,400 Units started in process 617,000 Units transferred out 610,000 Work in process inventory, ending 72,000 Cost added during the month $ 1,484,100 $ 268,290 $ 327,910 The beginning work in process inventory was 75% complete with respect to materials and 60% complete with respect to labor and overhead. The ending work in process inventory was 55% complete with respect to materials and 35% complete with respect to labor and overhead. Required: 1. Compute the first department's equivalent units of production for materials, labor, and overhead for the month. 2. Compute the first department's cost per equivalent unit for materials, labor, overhead, and in total for the month. (Round your answers to 2 decimal places.)
In: Accounting
Direct Labor and Direct Materials Variances, Journal Entries
Jameson Company produces paper towels. The company has established the following direct materials and direct labor standards for one case of paper towels:
Paper pulp (3 lbs. @ $0.40) | $ 1.20 | |
Labor (2 hrs. @ $12) | 24.00 | |
Total prime cost | $25.20 |
During the first quarter of the year, Jameson produced 45,000 cases of paper towels. The company purchased and used 135,700 pounds of paper pulp at $0.38 per pound. Actual direct labor used was 91,000 hours at $12.10 per hour.
Required:
Instructions for parts 1 and 2: If a variance is zero, enter "0" and select "Not applicable" from the drop down box.
1. Calculate the direct materials price and usage variances.
Materials Price Variance | $ | |
Materials Usage Variance | $ |
2. Calculate the direct labor rate and efficiency variances.
Labor Rate Variance | $ | |
Labor Efficiency Variance | $ |
3. Prepare the journal entries for (1) the direct materials price variance, (2) the direct materials usage variance, and (3) the direct labor variances. If an amount box does not require an entry, leave it blank or enter "0".
1. | |||
2. | |||
3. | |||
In: Accounting
On January 1, 2017, Fisher Corporation purchased 40 percent (90,000 shares) of the common stock of Bowden, Inc. for $980,000 in cash and began to use the equity method for the investment. The price paid represented a $48,000 payment in excess of the book value of Fisher's share of Bowden's underlying net assets. Fisher was willing to make this extra payment because of a recently developed patent held by Bowden with a 15-year remaining life. All other assets were considered appropriately valued on Bowden's books.
Bowden declares and pays a $90,000 cash dividend to its stockholders each year on September 15. Bowden reported net income of $400,000 in 2017 and $348,000 in 2018. Each income figure was earned evenly throughout its respective year.
On July 1, 2018, Fisher sold 10 percent (22,500 shares) of Bowden's outstanding shares for $338,000 in cash. Although it sold this interest, Fisher maintained the ability to significantly influence Bowden's decision-making process.
Prepare the journal entries for Fisher for the years of 2017 and 2018. (If no entry is required for a transaction/event, select "No journal entry required" in the first account field. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your final answers to the nearest whole dollar.)
1 Record cost of 90,000 shares of Bowden Company.
2 Record the annual dividend declared and received from Bowden.
3 Record accrue 2017 income based on 40% ownership of Bowden.
4 Record amortization of $48,000 excess patent fair value [indicated in problem] over 15 years.
5Record the entry to accrue ½ year income of 40% ownership.
6Record ½ year amortization of patent to establish correct book value for investment as of 7/1/18.
7Record 22,500 shares of Bowden Company sold; investment basis computed below.
8Record annual dividend declared and received.
9 Record ½ year income based on remaining 30% ownership.
10Record ½ year of patent amortization.
In: Accounting