Answer:
Explanation:
Interest capitalization is the sum of unpaid interest and the principal amount of a loan . Please note that interest are capitalized on outstanding note payable.
Workings
Outstanding note payable
Amount Interest
10% 5 - year note payable - 2,241,900 224,190
11% 4 year note payable - 3,500,300 385,033
Total 5,742,200 609,223
Weighted average interest rate = 609,223/5742200*100= 10.61%
Travis invested $9,250 in an account that pays 6 percent simple interest. How much more could he have earned over a 7-year period if the interest had compounded annually
Answer: $773.58
Explanation:
From the question, we are told that Travis invested $9,250 in an account that pays 6 percent simple interest over a 7 year period.
We need to calculate the simple interest first. This will be:
= PRT/100
where
P = principal = $9250
R = rate = 6%
T = time = 7 years
Simple interest = (9250 × 6 × 7)/100
= $388500/100
= $3885
Amount after 7 years will now be:
= $9250 + $3885
= $13135
If the interest was compounded annually, this will be:
FV = PV(1 + r)^n
= $9,250(1 + 0.06)^7
= $13,908.58
Therefore, the difference will be:
= $13,908.58 - $13,135
= $773.58
You are considering two mutually exclusive projects. Both projects have an initial cost of $52,000. Project A produces cash inflows of $25,300, $37100, and $22,000 for years 1 through 3, respectively. Project B produces cash inflows of $43,600, $19,800 and $10,400 for years 1 through 3, respectively. The required rate of return is 14.2 percent for Project A and 13.9 percent for Project B. Which project should you accept and why? a) Project A because it has the higher required rate of return b) Project A because it has the larger NPV c) Project 8, because it has the largest cash inflow in year 1. d) Project B; because it has the lower required rate of return
Answer:
b) Project A because it has the larger NPV
Explanation:
Net present value is the present value of after tax cash flows from an investment less the amount invested.
NPV can be calculated using a financial calculator
Project A
Cash flow in year 0 = $-52,000
Cash flow in year 1= $25,300,
Cash flow in year 2 = $37100
Cash flow in year 3= $22,000
I = 14.2
NPV = $13,372.95
Project B
Cash flow in year 0 = $-52,000
Cash flow in year 1= $43,600
Cash flow in year 2 =, $19,800
Cash flow in year 3= $10,400
I = 13.9
NPV = $8,579.62
The NPV of project A is larger than that of project B, so, project A is more suitable
During May, Darling Company incurred factory overhead costs as follows: indirect materials, $2,250; indirect labor, $6,370; utilities cost, $2,660; and factory depreciation, $3,320.
Required:
Journalize the entry to record the factory overhead incurred during May.
Answer:
factory overheads $14,600 (debit)
indirect materials, $2,250 (credit)
indirect labor, $6,370 (credit)
utilities cost, $2,660 (credit)
factory depreciation, $3,320 (credit)
Explanation:
The factory overheads account is debited with factory overheads actually incurred during the period.
Overheads applied to work in process are credited in the overheads account.
This leaves the balance of over or under-applied overheads on either the debit or credit of this account.
Dinklage Corp. has 7 million shares of common stock outstanding. The current share price is $79, and the book value per share is $10. The company also has two bond issues outstanding. The first bond issue has a face value of $120 million, a coupon rate of 4 percent, and sells for 92 percent of par. The second issue has a face value of $105 million, a coupon rate of 3 percent, and sells for 104 percent of par. The first issue matures in 22 years, the second in 7 years. Both bonds make semiannual coupon payments.
The tax rate is 25 percent. What is the company’s WACC? (Do not round intermediate calculations and enter your answer as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)
Some information is missing on this question:
I looked for similar questions and they include a recently paid dividend of $4.75 and a growth rate of 5.2%
Answer:
8.97%
Explanation:
total value of equity = $79 x 7,000,000 = $553,000,000
cost of equity:
$79 = $4.997 / (rrr - 5.2%)
rrr - 5.2% = 6.3%
rrr = 11.5%
total value of debt:
$120 million x 0.92 = $110,400,000
YTM = {40 + [(1,000 - 920)/22]} / [(1,000 + 920)/2] = 43.64 / 960 = 4.55%
$105 million x 1.04 = $109,200,000
YTM = {30 + [(1,000 - 1,040)/7]} / [(1,000 + 1,040)/2] = 24.29 / 1,020 = 2.38%
total value of the firm = $553,000,000 + $110,400,000 + $109,200,000 = $772,600,000
equity weight = $553,000,000 / $772,600,000 = 0.7158
debt₁ weight = $110,400,000 / $772,600,000 = 0.1429
debt₂ weight = $109,200,000 / $772,600,000 = 0.1413
WACC = (0.7158 x 11.5%) + (0.1429 x 4.55% x 0.75) + (0.1413 x 2.38% x 0.75) = 8.23% + 0.49% + 0.25% = 8.97%
Open market operations:___________.
a. are used infrequently
b. are a prime source of income for the U.S. economy
c. are used by the Fed to alter bank reserves
d. are used by the Fed to issue securities
Answer:
The answer is D.
Explanation:
Open market operation is one of the moneytary tools used by The Fed in the United States and the Central banks in other countries to control the money supply in the economy.
In the tools, The Fed increase the money supply by buying bonds/securities from the country's commercial banks This act will inject money into the economy. And to reduce the money supply, The Fed sells bonds/securities to the commercial banks.
The other moneytary tools are reserve requirement and discount rates(Interest rate).
"The nature and purpose of the public sector result in a unique organizational characteristics". Discuss
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although the question is incomplete because it does not provide the location, country, or any other further reference, we can say the following.
The nature and purpose of the public sector result in unique organizational characteristics, basically in the formation of bureaucracies that are a form of governmental and administrative organizations with many employees and hierarchies that more that improve management and operations, complicate it and make it slow due to the fact that the number of people working is numerous.
Experts say that this is not the more efficient and effective form of managing governmental offices. On the contrary, it is slow and inefficient.
Economic growth is illustrated by: Group of answer choices a leftward shift of the short-run aggregate supply curve. a rightward shift of the short-run aggregate supply curve. a leftward shift of the long-run aggregate supply curve. a rightward shift of the long-run aggregate supply curve.
Answer:
a rightward shift of the short-run aggregate supply curve.
Explanation:
a rightward shift of the short-run aggregate supply curve shows that more quantity of real GDP is produced at every price level.
a leftward shift of the short-run aggregate supply curve shows that less quantity of real GDP is produced at every price level.
Journalize the following entries on the books of Winston Co. for August 1, September 1, and November 30. (Assume a 360-day year is used for interest calculations.) Refer to the Chart of Accounts for exact wording of account titles.Aug. 1 Winston Co. purchased merchandise for $75,000 on account from Bagley Co., terms n/30.Sept. 1 Winston Co. issued a 90-day, 6% note for $75,000 on account.Nov. 30 Winston Co. paid the amount due.CHART OF ACCOUNTSWinston Co.General LedgerASSETS110 Cash111 Accounts Receivable112 Interest Receivable113 Notes Receivable115 Inventory116 Supplies118 Prepaid Insurance120 Land123 Building124 Accumulated Depreciation-Building125 Office Equipment126 Accumulated Depreciation-Office EquipmentLIABILITIES210 Accounts Payable213 Interest Payable214 Notes Payable215 Salaries Payable216 Social Security Tax Payable217 Medicare Tax Payable218 Employees Federal Income Tax Payable219 Employees State Income Tax Payable220 Medical Insurance Payable221 Retirement Savings Deductions Payable222 Union Dues Payable224 Federal Unemployment Tax Payable225 State Unemployment Tax Payable226 Vacation Pay Payable228 Product Warranty PayableEQUITY310 Common Stock311 Retained Earnings312 Dividends313 Income Summary REVENUE410 Sales610 Interest RevenueEXPENSES510 Cost of Merchandise Sold520 Salaries Expense525 Delivery Expense526 Repairs Expense531 Rent Expense533 Insurance Expense534 Supplies Expense535 Payroll Tax Expense536 Vacation Pay Expense538 Cash Short and Over539 Product Warranty Expense541 Depreciation Expense-Building542 Depreciation Expense-Office Equipment590 Miscellaneous Expense710 Interest ExpenseJournalize the entries on the books of Winston Co. for August 1, September 1, and November 30. (Assume a 360-day year is used for interest calculations.) Refer to the Chart of Accounts for exact wording of account titles.PAGE 1JOURNALDATE DESCRIPTION POST. REF. DEBIT CREDIT1234567
Answer and Explanation:
The journal entries are shown below:
On Aug. 1
Merchandise Inventory $75,000
To Accounts Payable $75,000
(Being the purchase of merchandise inventory is recorded)
For recording this we debited the merchandise inventory as it increased the assets and credited the account payable as it also increased the liabilities
On Sept. 1
Accounts Payable $75,000
To Notes Payable $75,000
(Being the issued of note payable on the account is recorded)
For recording this we debited the account payable as it decreased the liabilities and credited the note payable as it increased the liabilities
On Nov. 30
Notes Payable $75,000
Interest Expense $1,125 ($75,000 × 6% × 90 days ÷ 360 days)
To Cash $76,125
(Being cash paid is recorded)
For recording this we debited the note payable and interest expense as it decreased the liabilities and increased the expense and credited the cash as it decreased the assets
First National Bank charges 13.5 percent compounded monthly on its business loans. First United Bank charges 13.8 percent compounded semiannually. Calculate the EAR for First National Bank and First United Bank. (Do not round intermediate calculations and enter your answers as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)
Answer: 14.28%
Explanation:
Effective Annual Rate is the rate that takes the periodic rates and converts it to an annual rate if compounding the periodic rate was taken into account.
The formula is;
EAR = (1 + r/m)^m - 1
Where;
r is the Annual nominal rate of interest and,
m is Number of compounding periods in a year
EAR = ( 1 + 13.8/2)² - 1
= 1.142761 - 1
= 0.142761
= 14.28%
An ad for Maybelline age-minimizing makeup in Ladies' Home Journal magazine featured actress Melina Kanakaredes and offered readers a $1-off coupon when they tried the new makeup. In the context of the communication model, measuring which of the following would be the best way for the source to measure feedback?A) the number of subscribers to Ladies' Home Journal
B) the number of people who make up the target market
C) the number of people who redeem the coupon
D) the number of people who have purchased Maybelline products in the past
E) the number of people to whom Melina Kanakaredes is an appealing spokesperson
Answer: C) the number of people who redeem the coupon.
Explanation:
The coupon was for people who tried the makeup if they saw the ad. To measure how many people tried the new makeup then based on the ad it would be best to use the number of people who redeemed that coupon when purchasing because it would mean that those people saw the ad and decided to act on it especially if the ad contained an actual physical coupon or a digital coupon that can only be used once. This way Maybelline will know for a fact that those using the coupons saw the ad.
Gross profit margin (Gross profit/Sales) is an important determinant of NOPAT. Identify two factors that can cause gross profit margin to decline. Is a reduction in the gross profit margin always bad news
Answer:
Please find the detailed answer in the explanation section.
Explanation:
Gross profit margins can decline because:
1. When the industry becomes more competitive and/or the company's products have lost their competitive advantage so that the company will have to reduce prices inorder to sell more.
2. Product costs have increased. These are the cost to produce goods and services. Examples are direct labour, direct materials etc. Gross profit will decline if these increases
Declining gross profit margins are usually viewed negatively i.e the reduction in the gross profit margin is always a bad news for a company.
What causes gross profit margin to decline? - when the competition in the industry is high and the company is losing the competition in the market.
Cullumber Company sells office equipment on July 31, 2022, for $20,260 cash. The office equipment originally cost $72,300 and as of January 1, 2022, had accumulated depreciation of $35,000. Depreciation for the first 7 months of 2022 is $4,290.Required:Prepare the journal entries to: a. Update depreciation to July 31, 2022. b. Record the sale of the equipment.
Answer:
a.
July 31, 2022
Depreciation expense $4290 Dr
Accumulated depreciation - Equipment $4290 Cr
b.
July 31. 2022
Cash $20260 Dr
Accumulated depreciation-Equipment $39290 Dr
Loss on disposal $12750 Dr
Equipment $72300 Cr
Explanation:
a.
The entry would be to charge depreciation expense for the first six months of equipment and to do so, we debit the depreciation expense account and credit the accumulated depreciation account.
b.
We first need to determine the net book value of the asset on the day of sale and then calculate the gain or loss on disposal.
Net Book Value or NBV = Cost - Accumulated depreciation
Accumulated depreciation = 35000 + 4290 = 39290
NBV = 72300 - 39290 = $33010
Loss on disposal = 20260 - 33010 = - $12750 loss
Below are transactions for Wolverine Company during 2021.On December 1, 2021, Wolverine receives $4,000 cash from a company that is renting office space from Wolverine. The payment, representing rent for December and January, is credited to Deferred Revenue.Wolverine purchases a one-year property insurance policy on July 1, 2021, for $13,200. The payment is debited to Prepaid Insurance for the entire amount.Employee salaries of $3,000 for the month of December will be paid in early January 2022.On November 1, 2021, the company borrows $15,000 from a bank. The loan requires principal and interest at 10% to be paid on October 30, 2022.Office supplies at the beginning of 2021 total $1,000. On August 15, Wolverine purchases an additional $3,400 of office supplies, debiting the Supplies account. By the end of the year, $500 of office supplies remains.Required:Record the necessary adjusting entries at December 31, 2021, for Wolverine Company. You do not need to record transactions made during the year. Assume that no financial statements were prepared during the year and no adjusting entries were recorded. (If no entry is required for a particular transaction/event, select "No Journal Entry Required" in the first account field. Do not round intermediate calculations.)
Answer: Please see explanation column for answers
Explanation:
Journal for December 2021
A)To record advance in rent from customers
Date Account. Debit Credit
Dec 31 Deferred
Revenue. $2,000
Rent Revenue. $2,000
Reason--->The rent is paid for 2 months in advance ie January and December, but since the adjusting entry is for only December, we will divide .$4000 / 2=
$2,000 as Rent revenue earned.
B) To record Insurance expense
Date Account. Debit Credit
Dec 31 Insurance
Expense. $6,600
Prepaid insurance $6,600
Reason-- The company paid in advance but we consider only from July to December which is 6months as we are only preparing entry for December
Insurance Expense =13,200x 6/12=
$6600
C) To record accrued Salary
Date Account. Debit Credit
Dec 31 Salary
Expense. $3000
Salary payable $3,000
But will be paid next year.
D) To record accrued interest on loan borriwed
Date Account. Debit Credit
Dec 31 Interest
Expense. $250
Interest payable $250
Calculation
Interest =PxRxT=15,000 X 10%x 2/12=$250
Accrued interest from date of loan which is November to December the date of journal entry will be considered
E)To record supply expense for the year
Date Account. Debit Credit
Dec 31 Supply
Expense. $3,900
Supply $3,900
Calculation=
Supply expense=Supply at the onset +purchased supply - used supply.
1000 +3400 -500=$3,900
Are common abbreviations such as lol and imho and all-lowercase writing acceptable in texting or instant messaging for business?
Answer:
No
Explanation:
When texting or instant messaging among friends and colleagues such abbreviations are extremely common and accepted but when dealing with business clients it is not accepted. Business texts need to be well written, effective, and short. Replying with one word or abbreviations is taken as unprofessional and frowned upon. That is not to say that business communication cannot lead to a personal relationship.
Answer:
No
Obrigada pelos pontos
Bons aulas
Bailand Company purchased a building for $286,000 that had an estimated residual value of $6,000 and an estimated service life of 10 years. Bailand purchased the building 4 years ago and has used straight-line depreciation. At the beginning of the fifth year (before it records depreciation expense for the year), the following independent situations occur:
1. Bailand estimates that the asset has 8 years’ life remaining (for a total of 12 years).
2. Bailand changes to the sum-of-the-years’-digits method.
3. Bailand discovers that the estimated residual value has been ignored in the computation of depreciation expense.
Required: For each of the independent situations, prepare all the journal entries relating to the building for the fifth year. Ignore income taxes.
Answer:
Bailand Company
Journal Entries:
1. Re-estimated useful life to 8 years (12 in total):
Debit Depreciation Expense $21,000
Credit Accumulated Depreciation $21,000
To record depreciation expense for the year.
2. Sum of the digit method:
Debit Depreciation Expense $37,333
Credit Accumulated Depreciation $37,333
To record depreciation expense for the year.
3. Bailand discovers that the estimated residual value had been ignored:
Debit Depreciation Expense $27,600
Credit Accumulated Depreciation $27,600
To record depreciation expense for the year.
Explanation:
A) Calculations:
Building $286,000
Residual value = $6,000
Depreciable amount = $280,000 ($286,000 = 6,000)
Straight-line Depreciation per year = $28,000 ($280,000/10)
Accumulated Depreciation after 4 years = $112,000 ($28,000 x 4)
Book value after 4 years = $174,000
Independent situations:
1. Bailand estimates that the asset has 8 years’ life remaining (for a total of 12 years).
Book Value = $174,000
Residual value = $6,000
Depreciable amount = $168,000
Remaining Lifespan = 8 years
Depreciation expense each year = $21,000
2. Bailand changes to the sum-of-the-years’-digits method.
8/36 x $168,000 = $37,333 for fifth year.
7/36 x $168,000 for the sixth year
6/36 x $168,000 for the seventh year, and so forth
B) The Sum-of-the-years'-digits (SYD) is an accelerated method for calculating an asset's depreciation. For each year, there is a digit reflecting the number of years remaining. This digit is then divided by this sum of the years to determine the percentage by which the asset should be depreciated each year, starting with the highest number in the first year of application.
3. Bailand discovers that the estimated residual value has been ignored in the computation of depreciation expense.
Determination of annual depreciation expenses:
Depreciable amount = $286,000
Depreciation expense per year = $28,600 ($286,000/10)
After four years, Accumulated Depreciation = $114,400 ($28,600 x4)
Book Value = $171,600 ($286,000 - 114,000)
less salvage value $6,000
Depreciable amount = $165,600
Depreciation expense each year = $27,600 ($165,600 / 6)
Patricia Nall was approved for a $3,000, two-year, 11 percent loan with the finance charges figured using the discount method. How much cash will Patricia receive from this loan?
Answer:
$2,340
Explanation:
The computation of cash received from this loan is shown below:-
cash received from this loan = Approved amount - (Approved amount × Two year × Percentage of loan )
= Approved amount - ($3,000 × 2 × 11% )
= $3,000 - ($3,000 × 2 × 0.11 )
= $3,000 - $660
= $2,340
Therefore, for computing the cash will Patricia receive from this loan we simply applied the above formula.
Suppose the money supply (as measured by checkable deposits) is currently $850 billion. The required reserve ratio is 20%. Banks hold $170 billion in reserves, so there are no excess reserves. The Federal Reserve ("the Fed") wants to decrease the money supply by $42.5 billion, to $807.5 billion. It could do this through open-market operations or by changing the required reserve ratio. Assume for this question that you can use the simple money multiplier.
1. If the Fed wants to decrease the money supply using open-market operations, it should (buy / sell)$_____billion worth of U.S. government bonds.
2. If the Fed wants to decrease the money supply by adjusting the required reserve ratio, it should_______the required reserve ratio.
Colgate-Palmolive Company has just paid an annual dividend of $1.50. Analysts are predicting dividends to grow by $0.12 per year over the next five years. After then, Colgate’s earnings are expected to grow 6% per year, and its dividend payout rate will remain constant. If Colgate’s equity cost of capital is 8.5% per year, what price does the dividend-discount model predict Colgate stock should sell for today?
Answer:
$66.47
Explanation:
For computation of current value of stock first we need to follow some steps which is shown below:-
Present value of dividend of next 5 years
Year Dividend Discount factor Present value
a b c = 1.085^-a d = b × c
1 $1.62 0.921659 $1.49
2 $1.74 0.849455 $1.48
3 $1.86 0.782908 $1.46
4 $1.98 0.721574 $1.43
5 $2.10 0.665045 $1.40
Total $7.25
Present value after 5 years = D5 × (1 + g) ÷ (Ke - g) × DF5
= $2.10 × (1 + 6%) ÷ (8.50% - 6%) × 0.665045
= $59.22
as
D5 indicates Dividend of year 5 = $2.10
g = Growth rate = 6%
Ke = Required return = 8.50%
DF5 Discount factor of year 5 = 1.085^-5 = 0.665045
Current value of stock = Present value of dividends
= $7.25 + $59.22
= $66.47
Which senior managers may assume a greater deal of transferability between domestic and international HRM practices?
Answer: d. All of the Above
Explanation:
All the above senior managers are more likely to apply more Domestic HRM practices to make them International HRM practices when they are put into a situation where International practices will be needed.
This is because they have been with the Domestic companies for much of their time and so know more about Domestic practices than international.
The first options refers to senior managers in firms with large domestic markets. To be a senior manager demands experience in the market they are in so it is not far fetched to say that they are more knowledgeable in domestic practices than international.
The second option speaks of managers with little International experience meaning they are more likely to engage in transferability between domestic and International practices.
The third option speaks of managers who built their careers on domestic experience. They will find it hard letting go of what has brought them such success so will more likely apply domestic practices on an international scale.
In December, Davis Company had the following cost flows:
Molding Department Grinding Department Finishing Department
Direct materials $112,100 $29,200 $16,900
Direct labor 8,100 13,300 11,900
Applied overhead 9,200 60,800 10,700
Transferred-in cost:
From Molding 129,400
From Grinding 232,700
Total cost $129,400 $232,700 $272,200
Required:
1. Prepare the journal entries to transfer costs from (a) Molding to Grinding, (b) Grinding to Finishing, and (c) Finishing to Finished Goods.
2. CONCEPTUAL CONNECTION: Explain how the journal entries differ from a job-order cost system.
Answer and Explanation:
1. The Journal entry is shown below:-
a. Work in process for Grinding department Dr, $129,400
To Work in process for Molding department $129,400
(Being transfer the cost to the grinding department is recorded)
b. Work in process for Finishing department Dr, $232,700
To Work in process for Grinding department $232,700
(Being transfer the cost to the finishing department is recorded)
c. Finished goods Dr, $272,200
To Work in process-Finishing department $272,200
(Being transfer the cost to the finishing goods is recorded)
2. According to the job order costing, all cost is transferred on one time to the finished goods inventory plus there is no carry forward
On the other side, the process costing is the costing in which all the journal entries are interconnected with each type of department
Diamond's Corporation has an investment in 5,000 shares of Sigmoid Company common stock with a cost of $218,000. These shares are used in a property dividend to stockholders of Diamond's. The property dividend is declared on May 25 and scheduled to be distributed on July 31 to stockholders of record on June 15. The market value per share of Sigmund stock is $63 on May 25, $66 on June 15, and $68 on July 31. The net effect of this property dividend on retained earnings is a reduction of
Answer:
$218,000
Explanation:
Calculation for the net effect of this property dividend on retained earnings
First step is to find the market value per share Total amount on May 25
Market value =(5,000 * $63)
Market value= $315,000
Second step is to find the net effect of this property dividend on retained earnings
Using this formula
Net effect = Total Market value amount-(Total Market value amount-Cost)
Let plug in the formula
Net effect =$315,000 - ($315,000 - $218,000)
Net effect=$315,000-$97,000
Net effect =$218,000
Therefore the net effect of this property dividend on retained earnings will be $218,000
Recording Factory Labor Costs A summary of the time tickets for January is as follows: Job No 3467 3470 3471 Amount Job No.Amount 3478 3480 3497 3501 $6,829 3,438 11,273 21,352 $9,106 9,891 12,638 17,474 Indirect labor
a. Determine the amounts of factory labor costs transferred to Work in Process and Factory Overhead for January
b. Illustrate the effect on the accounts and financial statements of the factory labor costs transferred in.
Answer:
Work in process = $70649
Factory overhead = 21,352
Explanation:
A.
Factory labor cost transferred to Work in process is the sum of all direct labor cost incurred
Factory labor cost transferred to Factory Overhead is the sum of all indirect labor cost incurred
Work in Process = $6,829 + $3,438 + $11,273 + $9,106 + $9,891 + $12,638 + $17,474
Work in process = $70649
Factory overhead = 21,352
B.
Balance sheet
Assets = liabilities + Capital
$70649 + $21,352 = 92,001 No Effect
Statement of cashflow = No Effect
Income statement = No Effect
"A new customer opens an account and buys a variable annuity contract, investing $20,000. 90 days later, the client calls and tells the representative that he wants to surrender the contract. The representative explains that this is not a good idea, since there will be a high surrender fee of 8% imposed. The client tells the representative that he does not care about the surrender fee and that he wants the net proceeds wired to an account at a bank in another country. What should the representative do?"
Answer:
The insurance representative should first verify that the call was actually received from the customer that opened the annuity account.
Then, she should follow due process established by her insurance company. After these, she can then comply with the customer's instructions.
Explanation:
Investopedia.com defines a variable annuity as the "type of annuity contract, the value of which can vary based on the performance of an underlying portfolio of mutual funds." This means that variable annuities differ from fixed annuities. Fixed annuities provide a specific and guaranteed return.
Tyrell Co. entered into the following transactions involving short-term liabilities in 2016 and 2017. 2016 Apr. 20 Purchased $38,000 of merchandise on credit from Locust, terms n/30. Tyrell uses the perpetual inventory system. May 19 Replaced the April 20 account payable to Locust with a 90-day, $35,000 note bearing 7% annual interest along with paying $3,000 in cash. July 8 Borrowed $60,000 cash from NBR Bank by signing a 120-day, 11% interest-bearing note with a face value of $60,000. __
Missing information:
Amount paid to Locust (interest + principal)
Amount paid to NBR bank (interest + principal)
Answer:
Amount paid to Locust
interest = $604.11principal = $35,000total = $35,604.11Amount paid to NBR bank
interest = $2,169.86principal = $60,000total = $62,169.86Explanation:
Tyrell Co. entered into the following transactions involving short-term liabilities in 2016 and 2017.
April 20, 2016 Purchased $38,000 of merchandise on credit from Locust, terms n/30. Tyrell uses the perpetual inventory system.
Dr Merchandise inventory 38,000
Cr Accounts payable 38,000
May 19, 2016, replaced the April 20 account payable to Locust with a 90-day, $35,000 note bearing 7% annual interest along with paying $3,000 in cash.
Dr Accounts payable 38,000
Cr Cash 3,000
Cr Notes payable 35,000
August 17, 2016, paid the note to Locust with interest ($35,000 x 7% x 90/365)
Dr Notes payable 35,000
Dr Interest expense 604.11
Cr Cash 35,604.11
July 8. 2016, borrowed $60,000 cash from NBR Bank by signing a 120-day, 11% interest-bearing note with a face value of $60,000.
Dr Cash 60,000
Cr Notes payable 60,000
November 5, 2016, paid the note to NBR Bank with interest ($60,000 x 11% x 120/365)
Dr Notes payable 60,000
Dr Interest expense 2,169.86
Cr Cash 62,169.86
Janelle Heinke, the owner of Ha'Peppas!, is considering a new oven in which to bake the firm's signature dish, vegetarian pizza. Oven type A can handle 20 pizzas an hour. The fixed costs associated with oven A are $20,000 and the variable costs are $2.00 per pizza. Oven B is larger and can handle 40 pizzas an hour. The fixed costs associated with oven B are $30,000 and the variable costs are $1.25 per pizza. The pizzas sell for $14 each.
a) What is the break-even point for each oven?
b) If the owner expects to sell 9,000 pizzas, which oven should she purchase?
c) If the owner expects to sell 12,000 pizzas, which oven should she purchase?
d) At what volume should Janelle switch ovens?
Answer:
a) Oven A = 1,667; Oven B = 2,353 pizzas.
b) Oven A
c) Oven A
d) 13,334 pizzas
Explanation:
Since nothing was mentioned regarding her time availability, the capacity of each oven will not be taken into account.
The income equation for ovens A and B, respectively, are:
[tex]A=(14-2)x-20,000\\B=(14-1.25)x-30,000[/tex]
Where 'x' is the number of pizzas sold.
a) The break-even occurs when income is zero:
[tex]A=0=(14-2)x-20,000\\x_A=1,666.66\\B=(14-1.25)x-30,000\\x_B=2,352.94[/tex]
Rounding up to the next whole pizza, the break-even for oven A is 1,667 pizzas and for oven B it is 2,353 pizzas.
b) For x = 9,000:
[tex]A=(14-2)*9,000-20,000\\A=\$88,000\\B=(14-1.25)*9,000-30,000\\B=\$84,750[/tex]
Income is greater with oven A, so Janelle should use oven A.
c) For x = 12,000
[tex]A=(14-2)*12,000-20,000\\A=\$124,000\\B=(14-1.25)*12,000-30,000\\B=\$123,000[/tex]
Income is greater with oven A, so Janelle should use oven A.
d) She should switch ovens at the value for 'x' that causes B to be greater than A:
[tex]A<B\\(14-2)*x-20,000<(14-1.25)*x-30,000\\10,000<0.75x\\x>13,333.33[/tex]
Rounding up to the next whole pizza, she should switch ovens at a volume of 13,334 pizzas.
For each of the following, compute the present value (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your final answers to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16)): Present Value Years Interest Rate Future value $ 13 7 % $ 15,451 4 13 51,557 29 14 886,073 40 9 550,164
Answer:
To calculate these values, we use the present value formula:
FV = PV (1 + i)^n
Where:
FV = Future ValuePV = Present Valuei = interest raten = number of compounding periods (years in this case)Present value #1
15,451 = PV (1 + 0.07)^13
15,451 = PV (2.41)
15,451 / 2.41 = 6,411
Present value #2
51,557 = PV (1 + 0.13)^4
51,557 = PV (1.63)
51,557 / 1.63 = 33,471
Present value #3
886,073 = PV (1 + 0.14)^29
886,073 = PV (44.69)
886,073 / 44.69 = 19,827
Present value #4
550,164 = PV (1 + 0.09)^40
550,164 = PV (31.41)
550,164 / 31.41 = 17,516
What is google pay level? How do you define and measure its pay level?
Answer: Google pay level involves the total compensation for its employees.
Hope it helps.
Explanation:
1) In the previous problem, suppose Ferguson has announced it is going to repurchase $15,600 worth of stock. What effect will this transaction have on the equity of the firm? How many shares will be outstanding? What will the price per share be after the repurchase? Ignoring tax effects, show how the share repurchase is effectively the same as a cash dividend.
Answer:
1. Equity reduces to $372,300
2. 11,517 shares
3. $32.33
Explanation:
1. Effect on Equity
The company will use $15,600 cash to buy the equivalent amount of shares.
Cash Balance will reduce by;
= 52,900 - 15,600
= $37,300
Equity will reduce by the amount of stock repurchased;
= 387,900 - 15,600
= $372,300
2. Shares Outstanding
Current Stock Price = [tex]\frac{Equity Value}{Number of shares outstanding}[/tex]
= 387,900/12,000
= $32.33
Number of shares repurchased = 15,600/32.33
= 483 shares
New Shares Outstanding = 12,000 shares - 483 shares
= 11,517 shares
3. Price per share after repurchase
= [tex]\frac{New Equity Value}{New Number of shares outstanding}[/tex]
= 372,300 / 11,517
= $32.33
4. Dividends declared reduces the equity value.
= 32.33 - 1.30
= $31.03
The share repurchase is the same as the cash dividend because the stock price after the repurchase is the same as the stock price if dividends are declared less the cash dividends.
As the discount rate applied to a single amount (lump sum) future value increases, the present value __________________.
Answer:
Decreases
Explanation:
present value is the sum of discounted cash flows.
as interest rate increases, which is used in discounting cash flow,present value decreases.
for example, the present value of $10 one year from now with a 10% discount rate is $9.09
when discount rate is 12%, it becomes $8.92
Clooney Corp. establishes a petty cash fund for $200 and issues a credit card to its office manager. By the end of the month, employees made one expenditure from the petty cash fund (entertainment, $25) and three expenditures with the credit card (postage, $47; delivery, $72; supplies expense, $37).Record all employee expenditures, and record the entry to replenish the petty cash fund. The credit card balance will be paid later.
Answer:
1.Dr Postage expense $47
Dr Delivery expense $72
Dr Supplies expense $37
Dr Entertainment expense $25
Cr Petty cash $181
2.
Dr Petty cash $181
Cr Cash $181
Explanation:
Preparation of the Journal entry to record all employee expenditures and the entry to replenish the petty cash fund.
1.Since we were told to record all employee expenditures this means that the employee expenditures Journal entry will be recorded as:
Dr Postage expense $47
Dr Delivery expense $72
Dr Supplies expense $37
Dr Entertainment expense $25
Cr Petty cash $181
($47+$72+$37+$25)
2. Since we were told to record the entry to replenish the petty cash fund, this means that the petty cash fund will be recorded as:
Dr Petty cash $181
($47+$72+$37+$25)
Cr Cash $181