Problem 3
An entity entered into a construction contract to build a condo building at a fixed price of $54,000,000. Construction started in 20x0 and ended in 20x3. Data on the contract is as follows (in ‘000’s):
20x0 20x1 20x2 20x3
Costs incurred during the year $ 6500 19500 25000 5800
Estimated costs to complete 38500 26000 6500 -
Billings 18000 18000 - 18000
For each of the parts below, prepare the ‘mini’ income statement for the project for each year and calculate the net investment of the project that will be shown on the balance sheet at the end of each year.
a. The entity uses an input based approach to calculating the percentage of completion.
b. The entity uses an output based approach to calculating the percentage of completion and has calculated the percentages of completion as follows: 20x0:16% | 20x1: 60% | 20x2: 90% | 20x3: 100%
In: Accounting
Case:
Rent Relief Caravans4Hire Ltd1 provides short-term rental of caravans to tourists for camping holidays throughout Australia. Caravans4Hire Ltd leases several large properties in Adelaide, Perth and Sydney, which it needs to park its caravans when not in use. Due to border restrictions, travel restrictions, localised lockdowns and Government advice to stay home, Caravans4Hire Ltd has suffered a significant loss of revenue and cash flow. On 1 May 2020 the National Hotel and Tourism Industry Association which is a non-government, not-for-profit industry association. It supports its members, who are businesses operating in the hospitality and tourism industry awarded Caravans4Hire Ltd a grant of $360 000 in total for rent relief for the three months ended 31 July 2020. The grant was received in cash on 1 May 2020. Caravans4Hire Ltd is under no obligation to repay the money received. REQUIRED All questions should be answered from the perspective of Caravans4Hire Ltd. The word lengths are a suggestion only, i.e., they are NOT strict word limits for each part.
a) What is the main accounting policy issue(s) that need to be resolved to account for the grant from the National Hotel and Tourism Industry Association? (20%) (part a) 15 – 50 words)
b) i) Identify one principle that is relevant to the accounting policy issue that you identified in part a) by providing a reference for that principle (e.g., Conceptual Framework, Chapter X, para. x.xx) AND explain why you chose that principle. (20%)
ii) identify another principle that is relevant to the accounting policy issue that you identified in part a) by providing a reference for that principle.(10%) (part b) 50 – 100 words).
c) Describe an accounting policy to account for the grant from the National Hotel and Tourism Industry Association. Do not justify your policy. Just describe it. (50%) (part c) 20 - 80 words)
In: Accounting
Caterpillar, Inc., headquartered in Peoria, Illinois, is an American corporation with a worldwide dealer network which sells machinery, engines, financial products and insurance. Caterpillar is the world's leading manufacturer of construction and mining equipments, -diesel and natural gas engines, industrial gas turbines and diesel-electric locomotives. Although providing financial services through its Financial Products segment, Caterpillar primarily operates through its three product segments of Construction Industries, Resource Industries, and Energy & Transportation. Founded in 1925, the company presently has sales and revenues of $55.2 billion, total assets of $78.5 billion, and 114,000 employees. Caterpillar machinery are commonly recognized by its trademark “Caterpillar Yellow” and it's “CAT” logo. Some of its manufactured construction products include: mini excavators, small-wheel loaders, backhoe loaders, multi-terrain loaders, and compact-wheel loaders. Other products include: machinery in mining and quarrying applications, reciprocating engines and turbines in power systems, the remanufacturing of CAT engines and components, and a wide range of financial alternatives to customers and dealers for Caterpillar machinery and engines.
Caterpillar tractors have undertaken and completed many difficult tasks since the company's beginning. In the late 1920s, the Soviet Grain Trust purchased 2,050 Caterpillar machines for use on its large farm cooperatives. This sale helped to keep Caterpillar's factories busy during the Great Depression. In the 1930s, Caterpillar track-type tractors helped construct the Hoover Dam, worked on the Mississippi Levee construction project, helped construct the Golden Gate Bridge, and were used in the construction of the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal. During this time period, CATs were also used in construction projects around the world in countries such as Palestine, Iraq, India, Canada, the Netherlands, Belgium and the building of the Pan American Highway. In World War II, Caterpillar built 51,000 track-type tractors for the U.S. military.
In the 1940s, Caterpillar tractors were used in the construction of the Alaskan highway; and between 1944 and 1956, they were used to help construct 70,000 miles of highway in the United States. In the 1950s and 60s, usage of Caterpillar tractors around the world exploded and were used in such countries as Australia, Austria, Ceylon, France, Germany, Italy, Nigeria, Philippines, Rhodesia, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, Uganda, and Venezuela, in a wide variety of projects. In addition, Caterpillar products were used to help construct the St. Lawrence Seaway between Canada and the United States. In the 1970s and 80s, Caterpillar equipment were used in numerous dam, power, and pipeline projects. Since then, Caterpillars have been used in the construction of several projects such as Japan's Kansai International Airport as a marine airport approximately three miles offshore in Osaka Bay, the Chunnel between France and England, the “Big Dig” in Boston, Panama Canal expansion, and several Olympic Games sites.
Discussion
1. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), in conjunction with the Forest Service, publishes information to assist companies in estimating the cost of building a temporary road for such activities as a timber sale. Such roads are generally built for one or two seasons of use for limited traffic and are designed with the goal of reestablishing vegetative cover on the roadway and adjacent disturbed area within ten years after the termination of the contract, permit, or lease. The timber sale contract requires out sloping, removal of culverts and ditches, and building water bars or cross ditches after the road is no longer needed. As part of this estimation process, the company needs to estimate haul costs. The USDA publishes variable costs in dollars per cubic-yard-mile of hauling dirt according to the speed with which the vehicle can drive. Speeds are mainly determined by the road width, the sight distance, the grade, the curves and the turnouts. Thus, on a steep, narrow, winding road, the speed is slow; and on a flat, straight, wide road, the speed is faster. Shown below are data on speed, cost per cubic yard for a 12 cubic yard end-dump vehicle, and cost per cubic yard for a 20 cubic yard bottom-dump vehicle. Use these data and simple regression analysis to develop models for predicting the haul cost by speed for each of these two vehicles. Discuss the strength of the models. Based on the models, predict the haul cost for 35 mph and for 45 mph for each of these vehicles.
| SPEED (MPH) | HAUL COST 12-CUBIC-YARD END-DUMP VEHICLE $ PER CUBIC YD. | HAUL COST 20-CUBIC-YARD BOTTOM-DUMP VEHICLE $ PER CUBIC YD. |
| 10 | $2.46 | $1.98 |
| 15 | $1.64 | $1.31 |
| 20 | $1.24 | $0.98 |
| 25 | $0.98 | $0.77 |
| 30 | $0.82 | $0.65 |
| 40 | $0.62 | $0.47 |
| 50 | $0.48 | $0.40 |
In: Statistics and Probability
A sports team has a stadium that holds a maximum of 36,000 fans. The league has suggested that the owners of the team consider expanding its seating to 40,000. The cost of permits, project management, and construction is expected to be $40,000 per seat. Work can be accomplished over two years, at which time the club will have 4,000 additional seats to sell. Assume the investment would occur equally over years 0 and 1.
Each seat will generate an additional $3,500 of revenue per year for the first three years after completion, $4,000 per year for the next four years, and $5,000 per year for the next four years, at which time a replacement or major renovation of the park will be necessary.
a. If the cost of capital is 15%, will this project be economically feasible, given the information provided? What is the NPV? IRR?
b. The team has approached city officials to seek a subsidy from the city to guarantee a 10% return on the project. How much would the city have to advance at the beginning to accomplish this?
c. What steps might management consider to make the project more economically attractive? Show your analysis.
In: Finance
|
Price ($) |
Quantity, Adults |
Quantity, Children |
|
5 |
15 |
20 |
|
6 |
14 |
18 |
|
7 |
13 |
16 |
|
8 |
12 |
14 |
|
9 |
11 |
12 |
|
10 |
10 |
10 |
|
11 |
9 |
8 |
|
12 |
8 |
6 |
|
13 |
7 |
4 |
|
14 |
6 |
2 |
The marginal operating cost of each unit of quantity is $5. (Hint: Because marginal cost is a constant, so is average variable cost. Ignore fixed cost.) The owners of the amusement park want to maximize profits.
Adult market price (in dollars):
Adult market quantity:
Adult market profit (in dollars):
Child market price (in dollars):
Child market quantity:
Child market profit (in dollars):
Total profit (adult + child, in dollars):
Market price (in dollars):
Quantity (child + adult at this price):
Profit:
In: Economics
The dollar cost of the Euro is $1.19.
a. You are planning a trip to Europe and read that hotel charges 125 euros per night. What is the cost to you in dollars?
b. Your dollar will buy how many dollars?
In: Finance
In: Finance
On June 15, 2018, Sanderson Construction entered into a
long-term construction contract to build a baseball stadium in
Washington, D.C., for $310 million. The expected completion date is
April 1, 2020, just in time for the 2020 baseball season. Costs
incurred and estimated costs to complete at year-end for the life
of the contract are as follows ($ in millions):
| 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | |||||||
| Costs incurred during the year | $ | 70 | $ | 60 | $ | 30 | |||
| Estimated costs to complete as of December 31 | 130 | 30 | — | ||||||
Required:
1. Compute the revenue and gross profit will
Sanderson report in its 2018, 2019, and 2020 income statements
related to this contract assuming Sanderson recognizes revenue over
time according to percentage of completion.
2. Compute the revenue and gross profit will
Sanderson report in its 2018, 2019, and 2020 income statements
related to this contract assuming this project does not qualify for
revenue recognition over time.
3. Suppose the estimated costs to complete at the
end of 2019 are $120 million instead of $30 million. Compute the
amount of revenue and gross profit or loss to be recognized in 2019
using the percentage of completion method.
Compute the revenue and gross profit will Sanderson report in its 2018, 2019, and 2020 income statements related to this contract assuming Sanderson recognizes revenue over time according to percentage of completion. (Enter your answers in millions. Loss amounts should be indicated with a minus sign. Use percentages as calculated and rounded in the table below to arrive at your final answer.)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Compute the revenue and gross profit will Sanderson report in its 2018, 2019, and 2020 income statements related to this contract assuming this project does not qualify for revenue recognition over time. (Enter your answers in millions. Loss amounts should be indicated with a minus sign.)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
In: Accounting
Even within a particular chain of hotels, lodging during the summer months can vary substantially depending on the type of room and the amenities offered. Suppose that we randomly select 50 billing statements from each of the computer databases of the Hotel A, the Hotel B, and the Hotel C chains, and record the nightly room rates. The means and standard deviations for 50 billing statements from each of the computer databases of each of the three hotel chains are given in the table.
Hotel A Hotel B Hotel C
Sample average ($) 145 160. 125
Sample standard deviation 17.6 22.6. 12.5
(a) Find a 95% confidence interval for the difference in the average room rates for the Hotel A and the Hotel C chains. (Round your answers to two decimal places.)
In: Statistics and Probability
Rocky Mountain National Park is a popular park for outdoor recreation activities in Colorado. According to U.S. National Park Service statistics, 46.7% of visitors to Rocky Mountain National Park in 2018 entered through the Beaver Meadows park entrance, 24.3% of visitors entered through the Fall River park entrance, 6.3% of visitors entered through the Grand Lake park entrance, and 22.7% of visitors had no recorded point of entry to the park.† Consider a random sample of 175 Rocky Mountain National Park visitors. Use the normal approximation of the binomial distribution to answer the following questions. (Round your answers to four decimal places.)
(a)
What is the probability that at least 65 visitors had a recorded
entry through the Beaver Meadows park entrance?
(b)
What is the probability that at least 60 but less than 70 visitors
had a recorded entry through the Beaver Meadows park entrance?
(c)
What is the probability that fewer than 11 visitors had a recorded
entry through the Grand Lake park entrance?
(d)
What is the probability that more than 40 visitors have no recorded
point of entry?
In: Statistics and Probability