|
Wally’s Widget Company (WWC) incorporated near the end of 2011. Operations began in January of 2012. WWC prepares adjusting entries and financial statements at the end of each month. Balances in the accounts at the end of January are as follows: |
| Cash | $ | 18,920 | Unearned Revenue (30 units) | $ | 4,450 | ||
| Accounts Receivable | $ | 9,950 | Accounts Payable (Jan Rent) | $ | 1,500 | ||
| Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | $ | (1,000) | Notes Payable | $ | 14,500 | ||
| Inventory (35 units) | $ | 2,800 | Contributed Capital | $ | 5,200 | ||
| Retained Earnings – Feb 1, 2012 | $ | 5,020 | |||||
| • | WWC establishes a policy that it will sell inventory at $165 per unit. |
| • | In January, WWC received a $4,450 advance for 30 units, as reflected in Unearned Revenue. |
| • | WWC’s February 1 inventory balance consisted of 35 units at a total cost of $2,800. |
| • | WWC’s note payable accrues interest at a 12% annual rate. |
| • | WWC will use the FIFO inventory method and record COGS on a perpetual basis. |
| February Transactions | |
| 02/01 |
Included in WWC’s February 1 Accounts Receivable balance is a $1,700 account due from Kit Kat, a WWC customer. Kit Kat is having cash flow problems and cannot pay its balance at this time. WWC arranges with Kit Kat to convert the $1,700 balance to a note, and Kit Kat signs a 6-month note, at 12% annual interest. The principal and all interest will be due and payable to WWC on August 1, 2012. |
| 02/02 |
WWC paid a $600 insurance premium covering the month of February. The amount paid is recorded directly as an expense. |
| 02/05 |
An additional 130 units of inventory are purchased on account by WWC for $9,750 – terms 2/15, n30. |
| 02/05 |
WWC paid Federal Express $260 to have the 130 units of inventory delivered overnight. Delivery occurred on 02/06. |
| 02/10 |
Sales of 100 units of inventory occurred during the period of 02/07 – 02/10. The sales terms are 2/10, net 30. |
| 02/15 |
The 30 units that were paid for in advance and recorded in January are delivered to the customer. |
| 02/15 |
15 units of the inventory that had been sold on 2/10 are returned to WWC. The units are not damaged and can be resold. Therefore, they are returned to inventory. Assume the units returned are from the 2/05 purchase. |
| 02/16 | WWC pays the first 2 weeks wages to the employees. The total paid is $2,400. |
| 02/17 |
Paid in full the amount owed for the 2/05 purchase of inventory. WWC records purchase discounts in the current period rather than as a reduction of inventory costs. |
| 02/18 | Wrote off a customer’s account in the amount of $1,100. |
| 02/19 |
$3,000 of rent for January and February was paid. Because all of the rent will soon expire, the February portion of the payment is charged directly to expense. |
| 02/19 |
Collected $8,200 of customers’ Accounts Receivable. Of the $8,200, the discount was taken by customers on $4,500 of account balances; therefore WWC received less than $8,200. |
| 02/26 |
WWC recovered $420 cash from the customer whose account had previously been written off (see 02/18). |
| 02/27 |
A $600 utility bill for February arrived. It is due on March 15 and will be paid then. |
| 02/28 | WWC declared and paid a $800 cash dividend. |
| Adjusting Entries: |
| 02/29 |
Record the $2,400 employee salary that is owed but will be paid March 1. |
| 02/29 |
WWC decides to use the aging method to estimate uncollectible accounts. WWC determines 8% of the ending balance is the appropriate end of February estimate of uncollectible accounts. |
| 02/29 | Record February interest expense accrued on the note payable. |
| 02/29 | Record one month’s interest earned Kit Kat’s note (see 02/01). |
| Required: |
| 1-a. |
Prepare all February journal entries and adjusting entries. (If no entry is required for a transaction/event, select "No Journal Entry Required" in the first account field.) |
| No. | Date | General Journal | Debit | Credit |
| 1 | Feb. 1 | Accounts Payable | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 2 | Feb. 2 | Insurance Expense | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 3 | Feb. 5 | Inventory | ||
| Accounts Payable | ||||
| 4 | Feb. 6 | Inventory | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 5 | Feb. 10a | Accounts Receivable | ||
| Sales Revenue | ||||
| 6 | Feb. 10b | Cost of Goods Sold | ||
| Inventory | ||||
| 7 | Feb. 15a | Unearned Revenue | ||
| Sales Revenue | ||||
| 8 | Feb 15b | Cost of Goods Sold | ||
| Inventory | ||||
| 9 | Feb 15c | Inventory | ||
| Cost of Goods sold | ||||
| 10 | Feb 15d | Sales Returns and Allowance | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 11 | Feb. 16 | Wages Expense | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 12 | Feb 17 | Accounts Payable | ||
| Cash | ||||
| Inventory | ||||
| 13 | Feb 18 | Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 14 | Feb 19a | Accounts Payable | ||
| Rent Expense | ||||
| Cash | ||||
| 15 | Feb. 19b | Cash | ||
| Sales Discounts | ||||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 16 | Feb. 26a | Accounts Receivable | ||
| Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | ||||
| 17 | Feb. 26b | Cash | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 18 | Feb. 27 | Utility Expense | ||
| Accounts Payable | ||||
| 19 | Feb. 28 | Dividends Declared | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 20 | Feb. 29a | Wages Expense | ||
| Accounts Payable | ||||
| 21 | Feb. 29b | Bad Debt Expense | ||
| Allowance or Doubtful Accounts | ||||
| 22 | Feb. 29c | Interest Expense | ||
| Interest Payable | ||||
| 23 | Feb. 29d | Interest Receivable | ||
| Interest Revenue | ||||
In: Accounting
Project 2: Review of Merchandising Cycle
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
|
Wally’s Widget Company (WWC) incorporated near the end of 2011. Operations began in January of 2012. WWC prepares adjusting entries and financial statements at the end of each month. Balances in the accounts at the end of January are as follows: |
| Cash | $ | 20,720 | Unearned Revenue (25 units) | $ | 5,050 | ||
| Accounts Receivable | $ | 11,750 | Accounts Payable (Jan Rent) | $ | 2,700 | ||
| Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | $ | (1,600) | Notes Payable | $ | 13,000 | ||
| Inventory (30 units) | $ | 2,550 | Contributed Capital | $ | 6,400 | ||
| Retained Earnings – Feb 1, 2012 | $ | 6,270 | |||||
| • | WWC establishes a policy that it will sell inventory at $170 per unit. |
| • | In January, WWC received a $5,050 advance for 25 units, as reflected in Unearned Revenue. |
| • | WWC’s February 1 inventory balance consisted of 30 units at a total cost of $2,550. |
| • | WWC’s note payable accrues interest at a 12% annual rate. |
| • | WWC will use the FIFO inventory method and record COGS on a perpetual basis. |
| February Transactions | |
| 02/01 |
Included in WWC’s February 1 Accounts Receivable balance is a $2,000 account due from Kit Kat, a WWC customer. Kit Kat is having cash flow problems and cannot pay its balance at this time. WWC arranges with Kit Kat to convert the $2,000 balance to a note, and Kit Kat signs a 6-month note, at 12% annual interest. The principal and all interest will be due and payable to WWC on August 1, 2012. |
| 02/02 |
WWC paid a $750 insurance premium covering the month of February. The amount paid is recorded directly as an expense. |
| 02/05 |
An additional 180 units of inventory are purchased on account by WWC for $13,500 – terms 2/15, n30. |
| 02/05 |
WWC paid Federal Express $360 to have the 180 units of inventory delivered overnight. Delivery occurred on 02/06. |
| 02/10 |
Sales of 150 units of inventory occurred during the period of 02/07 – 02/10. The sales terms are 2/10, net 30. |
| 02/15 |
The 25 units that were paid for in advance and recorded in January are delivered to the customer. |
| 02/15 |
20 units of the inventory that had been sold on 2/10 are returned to WWC. The units are not damaged and can be resold. Therefore, they are returned to inventory. Assume the units returned are from the 2/05 purchase. |
| 02/16 | WWC pays the first 2 weeks wages to the employees. The total paid is $2,200. |
| 02/17 |
Paid in full the amount owed for the 2/05 purchase of inventory. WWC records purchase discounts in the current period rather than as a reduction of inventory costs. |
| 02/18 | Wrote off a customer’s account in the amount of $1,700. |
| 02/19 |
$5,400 of rent for January and February was paid. Because all of the rent will soon expire, the February portion of the payment is charged directly to expense. |
| 02/19 |
Collected $9,400 of customers’ Accounts Receivable. Of the $9,400, the discount was taken by customers on $6,000 of account balances; therefore WWC received less than $9,400. |
| 02/26 |
WWC recovered $540 cash from the customer whose account had previously been written off (see 02/18). |
| 02/27 |
A $650 utility bill for February arrived. It is due on March 15 and will be paid then. |
| 02/28 | WWC declared and paid a $850 cash dividend. |
| Adjusting Entries: |
| 02/29 |
Record the $2,200 employee salary that is owed but will be paid March 1. |
| 02/29 |
WWC decides to use the aging method to estimate uncollectible accounts. WWC determines 8% of the ending balance is the appropriate end of February estimate of uncollectible accounts. |
| 02/29 | Record February interest expense accrued on the note payable. |
| 02/29 | Record one month’s interest earned Kit Kat’s note (see 02/01). |
| 1 | Feb. 1 | Notes Receivable | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 2 | Feb. 2 | Insurance Expense | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 3 | Feb. 5 | Inventory | ||
| Accounts Payable | ||||
| 4 | Feb. 6 | Inventory | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 5 | Feb. 10a | Accounts Receivable | ||
| Sales Revenue | ||||
| 6 | Feb. 10b | Cost of Goods Sold | ||
| Inventory | ||||
| 7 | Feb. 15a | Unearned Revenue | ||
| Sales Revenue | ||||
| 8 | Feb. 15b | Cost of Goods Sold | ||
| Inventory | ||||
| 9 | Feb. 15c | Inventory | ||
| Cost of Goods Sold | ||||
| 10 | Feb. 15d | Sales Returns and Allowance | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 11 | Feb. 16 | Wages Expense | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 12 | Feb. 17 | Accounts Payable | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 13 | Feb. 18 | Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | ||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 14 | Feb. 19a | Accounts Payable | ||
| Rent Expense | ||||
| 15 | Feb. 19b | Cash | ||
| Sales Discounts | ||||
| Accounts Receivable | ||||
| 16 | Feb. 26a | Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | ||
| 17 | Feb. 26b | Cash | ||
| Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | ||||
| 18 | Feb. 27 | Utility Expense | ||
| Accounts Payable | ||||
| 19 | Feb. 28 | Dividends Declared | ||
| Cash | ||||
| 20 | Feb. 29a | Wages Expense | ||
| Wages Payable | ||||
| 21 | Feb. 29b | Bad Debt Expense | ||
| Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | ||||
| 22 | Feb. 29c | Interest Expense | ||
| Interest Payable | ||||
| 23 | Feb. 29d | Interest Receivable | ||
| Interest Revenue |
In: Accounting
You have been hired to test whether the demand for a product that your client produces varies between two demographic markets – the Urban and Rural markets.
As such, in each market, you run a short survey that gauges customers demand for your product and assigns them to one of three categories – (i) High (ii) Mediumor (iii) Low.
You survey 70 people in the “Urban” market and find that their demand falls into the following “buckets”
High 32
Medium 20
Low 18
You survey 30 people in the “Rural” market time. Their demand for the product its reflected below.
High 8
Medium 10
Low 12
The Null hypothesis that you are asked to test is that "the demand for the product is INDEPENDENT of the whether the market is Urban or Rural.”
Under this null hypothesis, what is the EXPECTED NUMBER OF PEOPLE THAT WILL ANSWER "LOW" in the RURAL Market? What is the EXPECTED NUMBER OF PEOPLE THAT WILL ANSWER "HIGH" ?
In: Statistics and Probability
You have been hired to test whether the demand for a product that your client produces varies between two demographic markets – the Urban and Rural markets.
As such, in each market, you run a short survey that gauges customers demand for your product and assigns them to one of three categories – (i) High (ii) Medium or (iii) Low.
You survey 70 people in the “Urban” market and find that their demand falls into the following “buckets”
High 32
Medium 20
Low 18
You survey 30 people in the “Rural” market time. Their demand for the product its reflected below.
High 8
Medium 10
Low 12
The Null hypothesis that you are asked to test is that "the demand for the product is INDEPENDENT of the whether the market is Urban or Rural.”
Assuming that you can tolerate no more than a 5% probability of a Type I error ("p" no larger than 0.05), what is the critical value for the Chi-Square test of the above hypothesis?
In: Statistics and Probability
You have been hired to test whether the demand for a product that your client produces varies between two demographic markets – the Urban and Rural markets. As such, in each market, you run a short survey that gauges customers demand for your product and assigns them to one of three categories – (i) High (ii) Medium or (iii) Low. You survey 80 people in the “Urban” market and find that their demand falls into the following “buckets” High 42 Medium 20 Low 18 You survey 40 people in the “Rural” market time. Their demand for the product its reflected below. High 18 Medium 10 Low 12 The Null hypothesis that you are asked to test is that "the demand for the product is INDEPENDENT of the whether the market is Urban or Rural". CALCULATE THE TEST STATISTIC FOR THE NULL HYPOTHESIS ABOVE. Enter that answer as a number with two significant decimal places (such as 8.94 or 2.34 or 213.45
In: Statistics and Probability
| Saeko owns a yarn shop and want to expands her color selection. | ||||||||
| Before she expands her colors, she wants to find out if her customers prefer one brand | ||||||||
| over another brand. Specifically, she is interested in three different types of bison yarn. | ||||||||
| As an experiment, she randomly selected 21 different days and recorded the sales of each brand. | ||||||||
| At the .01 significance level, can she conclude that there is a difference in preference between the brands? | ||||||||
| Misa's Bison | Yak-et-ty-Yaks | Buffalo Yarns | ||||||
| 343 | 365 | 360 | ||||||
| 308 | 368 | 346 | ||||||
| 349 | 351 | 381 | ||||||
| 304 | 339 | 306 | ||||||
| 348 | 366 | 314 | ||||||
| 346 | 331 | 307 | ||||||
| Total | 1,998.00 | 2,120.00 | 2,014.00 | |||||
| 5) | What is the null hypothesis? | |||||||
| What is the alternative hypothesis? | ||||||||
| What is the level of significance? | ||||||||
| 6) | Use Tools - Data Analysis - ANOVA:Single Factor | |||||||
| to find the F statistic: | ||||||||
In: Statistics and Probability
Chapter 9 Programming Project (Inheritance, Abstract Class/Methods, Overriding Methods)
-For all classes, you need to provide the accessor and mutator methods for all instance variables, and provide/override the toString methods.
-Create a Customer class that has the attributes of name and age. Provide a method named importanceLevel. Based on the requirements below, I would make this method abstract.
-Extend Customer to two subclasses: FlightCustomer, and RetailCustomer
-FlightCustomer attributes: ticketPrice, seatNumber (The seat number should be a randomly generated number between 1 to 200)
-RetailCustomer attributes: itemsPurchased, totalSpent.
-For both FlighCustomer and RetailCustomer, you need to provide the implementation for the importanceLevel method. There are four levels: gold, silver, bronze, regular. For FlighCustomer, the level is based on the ticketPrice; for RetailCustomer, the level is based on the average price of each item.
-Instantiate three Customers for each class (six allotter) and tests ALL methods in a meaningful/informative way.
-Programming Language is Java
In: Computer Science
The AAA Aquarium Co. sells aquariums for $20 each. Fixed costs of production are $20. The total variable costs are $20 for one aquarium, $25 for two units, $35 for the three units, $50 for four units, and $80 for five units. Create a table showing total revenue, marginal revenue, total cost, and marginal cost for each output level (one to five units). What is the minimum level of output for AAA to produce and not lose money? What is the profit-maximizing level of output?
In: Economics
The manufacturer of a sports car claims that the fuel injection system lasts 48 months before it needs to be replaced. A consumer group tests this claim by surveying a random sample of 10 owners who had the fuel injection system replaced. The ages of the cars at the time of replacement were (in months): 27 46 49 48 53 46 30 51 42 52
What is the value of the sample test statistic? (Round your answer to three decimal places.)
In: Statistics and Probability
A graduate psychology department analyzes their recent applicants with regard to preferred area of concentration. The results are shown in the table below. Are the numbers of applicants across the three areas of concentration significantly different? Use the 0.05 significance level. Preferred Area of Concentration Number of Applicants Clinical Psychology 58 Experimental Psychology 27 Industrial/Organization Psychology 47 a) Research question b) Hypothesis in words Ho: Ha: c) Decision Rule d) results and conclusion
In: Statistics and Probability