Crane Incorporated leases a piece of machinery to Blue Company
on January 1, 2020, under the following terms.
| 1. | The lease is to be for 4 years with rental payments of $13,046 to be made at the beginning of each year. | |
| 2. | The machinery’ has a fair value of $68,934, a book value of $51,440, and an economic life of 10 years. | |
| 3. | At the end of the lease term, both parties expect the machinery to have a residual value of $25,720. To protect against a large loss, Crane requests Blue to guarantee $18,040 of the residual value, which Irving agrees to do. | |
| 4. | The lease does not transfer ownership at the end of the lease term, does not have any bargain purchase options, and the asset is not of a specialized nature. | |
| 5. | The implicit rate is 5%, which is known by Blue. | |
| 6. |
Collectibility of the payments is probable. |
|
Evaluate the criteria for classification of the lease, and describe the nature of the lease. |
Prepare the journal entries for Blue for the year 2020.
|
Suppose Blue did not guarantee any amount of the expected residual value. Prepare the journal entries for Blue for the year 2020.
Suppose Blue did not guarantee any amount of the expected residual value. Prepare the journal entries for Crane for the year 2020.
In: Accounting
Indigo Tool Company’s December 31 year-end financial statements
contained the following errors.
|
December 31, 2020 |
December 31, 2021 |
|||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Ending inventory |
$10,300 understated | $7,300 overstated | ||
|
Depreciation expense |
$2,500 understated | — |
An insurance premium of $63,300 was prepaid in 2020 covering the
years 2020, 2021, and 2022. The entire amount was charged to
expense in 2020. In addition, on December 31, 2021, fully
depreciated machinery was sold for $14,800 cash, but the entry was
not recorded until 2022. There were no other errors during 2020 or
2021, and no corrections have been made for any of the errors.
(Ignore income tax considerations.)
(a) Compute the total effect of the errors on 2021
net income.
| Total effect of errors on net income | $Enter the total effect of errors on net income in dollars | understatedoverstated |
(b) Compute the total effect of the errors on the
amount of Indigo’s working capital at December 31, 2021.
| Total effect on working capital | $Enter the total effect on working capital in dollars | overstatedunderstated |
(c) Compute the total effect of the errors on the
balance of Indigo’s retained earnings at December 31,
2021.
| Total effect on retained earnings | $Enter the total effect on retained earnings in dollars | overstatedunderstated |
In: Accounting
2. (LESSEE ENTRIES FOR AN OPERATING LEASE).
Assume that Ace Leasing Company and King Company, a lessee, agreed to the lease shown below instead on the one shown in problem 1.
Commencement of Lease Date January 1, 2020
Annual lease payment due at the beginning of the year beginning with January 1, 2020 $137,171
Lease term 6 years
Economic life of leased equipment 10 years
Fair Value of asset at January 1, 2020 $950,000
Lessor’s Implicit Rate 12% Lessee’s incremental borrowing rate 12%
The asset will revert to the lessor at the end of the lease term. The lessee uses straight-line amortization for all leased equipment.
A. Is this an operating or financing lease to the Lessee? Explain.
B. Compute the Lease Liability to be recorded by the Lessee at inception of the lease and compute the ROU Asset to be recorded by the Lessee at inception. Based on those complete the two Lessee entries 1/1/2020.
C. Compute the yearly Lease Expense on King Company financial statements.
D. Compute the Interest Expense for the first two years.
E. Compute the ROU Asset Amortization for the first two years.
F. Prepare the remaining entries for December 31, 2020 (the end of the first year).
In: Accounting
On January 1, 2018, Surreal Manufacturing issued 600 bonds, each with a face value of $1,000, a stated interest rate of 3 percent paid annually on December 31, and a maturity date of December 31, 2020. On the issue date, the market interest rate was 4 percent, so the total proceeds from the bond issue were $583,352. Surreal uses the simplified effective-interest bond amortization method and adjusts for any rounding errors when recording interest in the final year.
Required:
1. Prepare a bond amortization schedule
2-5. Prepare the journal entries to record the bond issue, the interest payments on December 31, 2018 and 2019, the interest and face value payment on December 31, 2020 and the bond retirement. Assume the bonds are retired on January 1, 2020, at a price of 101.
In: Accounting
|
|
In: Accounting
Mr. Chai sells various types of toys throughout Malaysia. Three of the accounts in the ledger of Mr. Chai indicated the following;
Balances at 1 January 2020:
(i) Insurance paid in advance RM562
(ii) Wages outstanding RM306
(iii) Rent receivable, received in advance RM36
During 2020, Mr. Chai:
(i) Paid for insurance RM1,019, by bank standing order
(ii) Paid RM15,000 wages, in cash
(iii) Received RM2,600 rent, by cheque, from the tenant
At 31 December 2020:
(i) Insurance prepaid was RM345
(ii) Wages accrued amounted to RM419
(iii) Rent receivable in arrears was RM105
Required;
(a) Prepare the prepaid insurance, accrued wages and rent receivable accounts for the year ended 31 December 2020.
(b) Prepare the income statement extract showing clearly the amounts of insurance expense, wages expense and rent revenue for the year ended 31 December 2020.
(c) Explain the effects on the financial statements of accounting for:
(i) the expenses accrued at year end
(ii) the income received in advance at year end
(d) Explain the purposes of accounting for:
(i) the expenses accrued at year end
(ii) the income received in advance at year end
In: Accounting
On May 1, 2020, Spencer Industries purchased the machine for use in its production process. The cash price of this machine was $35,000, sales tax $2,200, insurance during shipping $80, shipping costs $150, installation and testing costs $70, and $100 of oil and lubricants to be used with the machinery during its first year of operations.
Instructions:
1. Prepare the journal entry to record its purchase on May 1, 2020.
2. Compute depreciation on December 31, 2020 under the methods bellow:
A. The straight-line method of depreciation, estimates the useful life of the machine is 4 years with a $5,000 residual value remaining at the end of that time period.
B. The declining-balance method, estimates the useful life of the machine is 4 years with a $5,000 residual value remaining at the end of that time period. The rate used is twice the straight-line rate.
C. The units-of-activity method, estimates that the useful life of the machine is 125,000 units. Actual usage is as follows: 2020, 28,000 units; 2021, 37,000 units; 2022, 42,000 units; and 2023, 18,000 units.
3. The adjusting entry to record annual depreciation using straight-line method on December 31, 2020.
In: Accounting
Grape Inc. had the following balance sheet at December 31, 2019:
Grape INC. BALANCE SHEET DECEMBER 31, 2019
Cash $ 31,000
Accounts payable $ 61,000
Accounts receivable 56,800
Notes payable (long-term) 76,000
Investments 86,000
Common stock 200,000
Plant assets (net) 138,500
Retained earnings 41,300
Land 66,000
Total assets and Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity $378,300 $378,300
During 2020, the following occurred:
1. Grape liquidated its available-for-sale investment portfolio at a gain of $15,000.
2. A tract of land was purchased for $61,000 cash.
3. An additional $15,200 in common stock was issued at par.
4. Dividends totaling $41,000 were declared and paid to stockholders.
5. Net income for 2020 was $46,000, including $8,000 in depreciation expense.
6. Land was purchased through the issuance of $195,000 in additional notes payable.
7. At December 31, 2020, Cash was $68,000, Accounts Receivable was $84,000, and Accounts Payable was $72,000.
Instructions:
(a) Prepare the balance sheet as it would appear at December 31, 2020
(b) Prepare a statement of cash flows for the year 2020 for Grape. Prepare all in good form.
In: Accounting
Write a function that takes the current date and corrects the number of days, if it's wrong. The function must return true if the date passed to it is a valid date and false, if not. The main function uses the returned value to either print "Date validated", if a valid date was entered or "Invalid date entered. Changed to ", followed by the modified date.
For example: if given 11/31/2020, it will produce 12/1/2020. If given 2/29/2021, it will make it 3/1/2021. But, if 11/29/2020 is entered, it will not change it.
To check the date, the function uses the fact that months 4, 6, 9, 11 have 30 days, month 2 has 28 days in non-leap years and 29 in leap years and the remaining months have 31 days.
A year is a leap year if it's divisible by 400 or if not, it's divisible by 4, but not 100.
Example interaction between the user and the program:
Enter a date: 2/31/2021
Invalid date entered. Changed to 3/3/2021
Another example:
Enter a date: 12/32/2020
Invalid date entered. Changed to 1/1/2021
Another example:
Enter a date: 10/28/2020
Date validated.
Press any key to continue.
In: Computer Science
In its first year of business, Sweet Acacia purchased land, a
building, and equipment on March 5, 2020, for $648,000 in total.
The land was valued at $280,235, the building at $334,915, and the
equipment at $68,350. Additional information on the depreciable
assets follows:
| Asset | Residual Value | Useful Life in Years | Depreciation Method | ||
| Building | $24,720 | 60 | Straight-line | ||
| Equipment | 7,000 | 8 | Double diminishing-balance |
Allocate the purchase cost of the land, building, and equipment
to each of the assets.
| Land | $ | |
| Building | $ | |
| Equipment |
$ |
Sweet Acacia has a December 31 fiscal year end and is trying to
decide how to calculate depreciation for assets purchased during
the year.
Calculate depreciation expense for the building and equipment for
2020 and 2021 assuming depreciation is calculated to the nearest
month. (Round answers to 0 decimal places, e.g.
5,275.)
| 2020 | 2021 | ||
| Building | $ | $ | |
| Equipment | $ | $ |
Sweet Acacia has a December 31 fiscal year end and is trying to
decide how to calculate depreciation for assets purchased during
the year.
Calculate depreciation expense for the building and equipment for
2020 and 2021 assuming a half-year's depreciation is recorded in
the year of acquisition. (Round answers to 0 decimal
places, e.g. 5,275.)
| 2020 | 2021 | ||
| Building | $ | $ | |
| Equipment | $ | $ |
In: Accounting