Norma Smith is the controller of Wildhorse Corporation and is responsible for the preparation of the year-end financial statements. For each of the following transactions that occurred during the year, indicate the dollar amount to be reported as a current liability as of December 31, 2020.
For each of the following transactions occurred during the year, indicate the dollar amount to be reported as a current liability as of December 31, 2014.
1. On December 20, 2014, a former employee filed a legal action against Baylor for $100,000 for wrongful dismissal. Management believes the action to be frivolous and without merit. The likelihood of payment to the employee is remote.
2. Bonuses to key employees based on net income for 2014 are estimated to be $150,000.
3. On December 1, 2014, the company borrowed $600,000 at 8% per year. Interest is paid quarterly.
4. Credit sales for the year amounted to $10,000,000. Baylorâs expense provision for doubtful accounts is estimated to be 3% of credit sales.
5. On December 15, 2014, the company declared a $2 per share dividend on the 40,000 shares of common stock outstanding, to be paid on January 5, 2015.
6. During the year, customer advances of $160,000 were received; $50,000 of this amount was earned by December 31, 2014.

Answers

Answer 1

Answer:

Wildhorse Corporation

Current Liabilities:

2. Bonuses Payable $150,000

3. Interest payable $4,000

5. Dividends payable $80,000

6. Unearned advances $50,000

Explanation:

a) Data and Analysis:

1. Not affected

2. Bonuses $150,000 Bonuses Payable $150,000

3. Interest expense $4,00 Interest payable $4,000 ($600,000*8% *1/12)

4. Not affected

5. Dividends $80,000 Dividends payable $80,000

6. Unearned advances $50,000


Related Questions

During the course of your examination of the financial statements of Trojan Corporation for the year ended December 31, 2018, you come across several items needing further consideration. Currently, net income is $88,000.
A. An insurance policy covering 12 months was purchased on October 1, 2018, for $16,800. The entire amount was debited to Prepaid Insurance and no adjusting entry was made for this item in 2018.
B. During 2018, the company received a $2,800 cash advance from a customer for services to be performed in 2019. The $2,800 was incorrectly credited to Service Revenue.
C. There were no supplies listed in the balance sheet under assets. However, you discover that supplies costing $2,150 were on hand at December 31, 2018.
D. Trojan borrowed $58,000 from a local bank on September 1, 2018. Principal and interest at 12% will be paid on August 31, 2019. No accrual was made for interest in 2018.
Required:
Using the information in a. through d. above, determine the proper amount of net income as of December 31, 2018.

Answers

Answer: $‭80,830‬

Explanation:

A. 3 months of this insurance should have been for the year:

= 3/12 * 16,800

= $4,200

This should be treated as an expense.

B. The services have not yet being performed so this should not be recognized as revenue but rather as Unearned revenue. It has to be deducted from Net income.

C. These supplies should have been treated as assets but they were treated as expenses. They need to be added back to the net income to correct it.

D. The interest for the 4 months of the year from September to December should have been recorded.

= 58,000* 4/12 * 12%

= $2,320

This should be treated as an expense.

Adjusted Net income = 88,000 - 4,200 - 2,800 - 2,320 + 2,150

= $‭80,830‬

For each error below, indicate:

a. Which accounts are affected
b. Which assertions are violated.

1. An inventory purchase is received but not recorded until the company pays for the goods.
2. Certain repair costs that should be expensed are capitalized.
3. No loss is recorded or disclosed for a pending lawsuit against the client that is material, probable, and can be estimated.
4. Sales shipped FOB shipping point are recorded before the balance sheet date but not shipped until after the balance sheet date.

Answers

Answer:

1. Inventory account will be affected and assertions of accuracy and valuation will be violated.

2. Assets are overstated and assertion classification is violated.

3. Liability is understated and assertions of accuracy is violated.

4. No impact.

Explanation:

Assertions are certain claims of a business which a business must fulfill in order to make its financial statements reliable. A company has to record the expense when it is incurred in order to provide accuracy in valuation. In the given cases the assertions are violated which impact business accounts.

Indicate in the table below the financial statement on which each of the following accounts appear.

Account Income Statement Statement of Changes in Owner's Equity Balance Sheet
1. Cash in Bank
2. Utilities Expense
3. Accounts Payable
4. Commissions
5. Capital
6. Withdrawals

Answers

Answer:

                                   Income Statement          Statement of            Balance

                                                                             Changes in              Sheet

                                                                           Owner's Equity

1. Cash in Bank                   NO                                 NO                        YES

2. Utilities Expense            YES                                NO                         NO

3. Accounts Payable          NO                                 NO                        YES

4. Commissions                 YES                                NO                        NO

5. Capital                             NO                               YES                       YES

6. Withdrawals                   NO                                 YES                       NO

Cash in bank is an Asset so will be in the balance sheet.

Utilities expense goes to the Income statement alone because that is where expenses go.

Accounts Payable is a liability so will be in the Balance Sheet.

Commission is an expense.

Capital will be shown in both the Statement of Changes in Owner's Equity and the Balance Sheet

Withdrawals are a change in Owners equity and will be shown in the Statement of Changes in Owner's Equity.

The classification of the following account in the income statement, statement of change in owner equity, and the balance sheet is presented below:

                                  Income Statement          Statement of            Balance  

                                                                            Changes in              Sheet

                                                                           Owner's Equity

1. Cash in Bank                   NO                                 NO                        YES

2. Utilities Expense            YES                                NO                         NO

3. Accounts Payable          NO                                 NO                        YES

4. Commissions                 YES                                NO                        NO

5. Capital                             NO                               YES                       YES

6. Withdrawals                   NO                                 YES                       NO

In this way it should be categorized.

Learn more: brainly.com/question/13549064

My name is Ella, and my mother's name is Rhea. Twelve years before I was born, my father had a Billboard Top 200 album. What was the name of the second track on the album?

Answers

Answer:

You Gotta Believe by Marky Mark (Mark Walburg) and the Funky Bunch

Explanation:

Litton Company estimates that the factory overhead for the following year will be $1,250,000. The company has decided that the basis for applying factory overhead should be machine hours, which is estimated to be 40,000 hours. The machine hours for the month of April for all of the jobs were 4,780. If the actual factory overhead totaled $141,800, determine the over- or underapplied amount for the month.

Answers

Answer:

Overapplied overhead= $7,575

Explanation:

First, we need to calculate the predetermined overhead rate:

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= total estimated overhead costs for the period/ total amount of allocation base

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= 1,250,000 / 40,000

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= $31.25 per machine hour

Now, we can allocate overhead:

Allocated MOH= Estimated manufacturing overhead rate* Actual amount of allocation base

Allocated MOH= 31.25*4,780

Allocated MOH= $149,375

Finally, the over/under allocation:

Under/over applied overhead= real overhead - allocated overhead

Under/over applied overhead= 141,800 - 149,375

Overapplied overhead= $7,575

When the effective-interest method of bond discount amortization is used,
A. the applicable interest rate used to compute interest expense is the prevailing market interest rate on the date of each interest payment date.
B. the carrying value of the bonds will decrease each period.
C. interest expense will not be a constant dollar amount over the life of the bond.
D. interest paid to bondholders will be a function of the effective-interest rate on the date the bonds are issued.

Answers

Answer: C. interest expense will not be a constant dollar amount over the life of the bond.

Explanation:

When a bond is sold at a discount, the discount will have to be amortized over the life of the bond to ensure that it reaches par at maturity.

As a result, the interest expense will be based on a larger figure every year which would mean that it would have to be larger each time. t will therefore not be a constant dollar amount over the life of the bond.

When auditing the existence assertion for an asset, auditors proceed from the: Multiple Choice General ledger back to the supporting original transaction documents. Financial statement amounts back to the potentially unrecorded items. Potentially unrecorded items forward to the financial statement amounts. Supporting original transaction documents to the general ledger.

Answers

Answer:

General ledger back to the supporting original transaction documents

Explanation:

In the case when auditing is done with the assertion of an asset i.e. existed so here the auditor would proceed from general ledger and back to the real documents i.e. supported to the business transactions

Therefore as per the given situation, the first option is correct

A prospective MBA student earns $45,000 per year in her current job and expects that amount to increase by 12% per year. She is considering leaving her job to attend business school for two years at a cost of $35,000 per year. She has been told that her starting salary after business school is likely to be $115,000 and that amount will increase by 11% per year. Consider a time horizon of 10 years, use a discount rate of 12%, and ignore all considerations not explicitly mentioned here. Assume all cash flows occur at the start of each year (i.e., immediate, one year from now, two years from now,..., nine years from now). Also assume that the choice can be implemented immediately so that for the MBA alternative the current year is the first year of business school. What is the net present value of the more attractive choice? Please round your answer to the nearest dollar.

Answers

Answer:

She is considering leaving her job to attend business school for two years at a cost of $35,000 per year. She has been told that her starting salary after business school is likely to be $115,000 a day

Explanation:

An All-Pro defensive lineman is in contract negotiations. The team has offered the following salary structure: Time Salary 0 $ 5,700,000 1 $ 4,300,000 2 $ 4,800,000 3 $ 5,300,000 4 $ 6,700,000 5 $ 7,400,000 6 $ 8,200,000 All salaries are to be paid in lump sums. The player has asked you as his agent to renegotiate the terms. He wants a $9.2 million signing bonus payable today and a contract value increase of $1,200,000. He also wants an equal salary paid every three months, with the first paycheck three months from now. If the interest rate is 4.7 percent compounded daily, what is the amount of his quarterly check

Answers

Answer:

The amount of his quarterly check is $1,439,900.81.

Explanation:

Note: The data on the salary structure offered in the question are merged together. They are therefore sorted before answering the question as follows:

Time            Salary

0             $ 5,700,000

1              $ 4,300,000

2             $ 4,800,000

3             $ 5,300,000

4             $ 6,700,000

5             $ 7,400,000

6             $ 8,200,000

The explanation of the answer is now given as follows:

The amount of his quarterly check can be calculated using the following 4 steps:

Step 1: Calculation of effective annual rate (EAR)

Note: There is a need to calculate this because the interest rate in the question is compounded daily.

The effective annual rate (EAR) can be calculated using the following formula:

EAR = ((1 + (i / n))^n) - 1 .............................(1)

Where;

i = Interest rate = 4.7%, or 0.047

n = Number of compounding days in a year = 365

Substituting the values into equation (1), we have:

EAR = ((1 + (0.047 / 365))^365) - 1

EAR = 0.0481188377107922, or 4.81188377107922%

Step 2: Calculation of present of the cash of the contract offer

PV of the cash flow of the contract offer = ($5,700,000 / (1 + EAR)^Time) + ($4,300,000 / (1 + EAR)^Time) + ($4,800,000 / (1 + EAR)^Time) + ($5,300,000 (1 + EAR)^Time) + ($6,700,000 / (1 + EAR)^Time) + ($7,400,000 / (1 + EAR)^Time) + ($8,200,000 / (1 + EAR)^Time)

PV of the cash flow of the contract offer = ($5,700,000 / (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^0) + ($4,300,000 / (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^1) + ($4,800,000 / (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^2) + ($5,300,000 (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^3) + ($6,700,000 / (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^4) + ($7,400,000 / (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^5) + ($8,200,000 / (1 + 0.0481188377107922)^6)

PV of the cash flow of the contract offer = $37,861,722.19

Step 3: Calculation of present of the new contract

PV of the new contract = PV of the cash flow of the contract offer - Signing bonus payable today + Contract value increase = $37,861,722.19 - $9,200,000 + $1,200,000 = $29,861,722.19

Step 4: Calculation of quarterly check

Since the first paycheck is three months from now, this can be calculated using the formula for calculating the present value of an ordinary annuity as follows:

PV = P * ((1 - (1 / (1 + r))^n) / r) …………………………………. (2)

Where;

PV = PV of the new contract = $29,861,722.19

P = Quarterly check = ?

r = Quarterly interest rate = EAR / Number of quarters in a year = 0.0481188377107922 / 4 = 0.012029709427698

n = number of quarters = number of years * Number of quarters in a year = 6 * 4 = 24

Substitute the values into equation (2) and solve for P, we have:

$29,861,722.19  = P * ((1 - (1 / (1 + 0.012029709427698))^24) / 0.012029709427698)

$29,861,722.19  = P * 20.738735546182

P = $29,861,722.19 / 20.738735546182

P = $1,439,900.81

Therefore, the amount of his quarterly check is $1,439,900.81.

Problem 5-13 Qualified Retirement Plans Including Section 401(K) Plans (LO 5.4) During 2020, Jill, age 39, participated in a Section 401(k) plan which provides for maximum employee contributions of 12%. Jill's salary was $80,000 for the year. Jill elects to make the maximum contribution. What is Jill's maximum tax-deferred contribution to the plan for the year

Answers

Answer:

Jill's maximum tax-deferred contribution to the plan for the year is $9,600.

Explanation:

Jill's maximum tax-deferred contribution to the plan for the year can be calculated as follows:

Maximum employee contributions provided for by Section 401(k) plan = 12%

Jill's salary = $80,000

Since Jill elects to make the maximum contribution, we have:

Jill's maximum tax-deferred contribution = Maximum employee contributions provided for by Section 401(k) plan * Jill's salary = 12% * $80,000 = $9,600

Therefore, Jill's maximum tax-deferred contribution to the plan for the year is $9,600.

Before making month-end adjustments, net income of Bobwhite Company was $232,500 for March. Adjusting entries are necessary for the following items:

Depreciation for the month of March: $4,400.
Rental income accrued during March, tenant to pay in April: $910.
Supplies used in March: $310.
Fees earned in March that had been collected in advance: $3,700.

After recording these adjustments, net income for March is:_________

a. $112,400.
b. $113,620.
c. $117,000.
d. $110,800.

Answers

Answer:

Net income after adjustment          $225,000    

Explanation:

The various adjustments are effected below:

                                                                         $                        Note

Net income before adjustment                  232,500

Depreciation                                                (4,400)                    1

Rental income                                                910                        2

Supplies                                                           (310)                     3

Fees earned                                                   (3,700)                  4

Net income after adjustment                       225,000    

Notes

1 Depreciation represents a consumption of asset hence it is an expense which reduces profit .So, it deducted

2. Rental income accrued implies income earned but not received. So we need to record it for the period it was earned, hence we add it.

3. Supplies used represents consumption of assets, i.e an expense. So, we  deduct it from the income.

4. The income received in advance represents unearned income . This would be deducted from the net income

Day Company has the following sales budget: July August September $105,000 $211,000 $134,000 Credit sales represent 80 percent of budgeted sales. Of the credit sales, 20 percent is collected in the month of the sale, 60 percent in the month after the sale, and the remaining 15 percent is collected two months after the sale. Five percent of all sales are uncollectible and written-off. In September, total cash receipts from sales amount to

Answers

Answer:

Day Company

In September, total cash receipts from sales amount to:

= $162,080.

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

sales budget:               Credit (80%)   Cash (20%)

July              $105,000      $84,000      $21,000

August         $211,000      $168,800     $42,200

September $134,000      $107,200      $26,800

                       July             August           September

Sales          $105,000      $211,000           $134,000

Credit sales   84,000       168,800              107,200

Cash sales     21,000        42,200             $26,800

20%                16,800        33,750                21,400

60% after sales                50,400               101,280

15% after 2 months                                      12,600

Total cash receipts from sales                $162,080

Pedro, not a dealer, sold real property that he owned with an adjusted basis of $120,000 and encumbered by a mortgage for $56,000 to Pat in 2018. The terms of the sale required Pat to pay $28,000 cash, assume the $56,000 mortgage, and give Pedro 11 notes for $12,000 each (plus interest at the Federal rate). The first note was payable two years from the date of sale, and each succeeding note became due at two-year intervals. Pedro did not elect out of the installment method for reporting the transaction. If Pat pays the 2020 note as promised, what is the recognized gain to Pedro in 2020 (exclusive of interest)

Answers

Answer:

$64,000

Explanation:

Calculation for the recognized gain to Pedro in 2020

First step is to calculate the Realized gain

Realized gain=($120,000+$12,000+$28,000+$56,000-$120,000)

Realized gain=$96,000

Second step is to calculate the Contract Price

Contract Price=$216,000-$56,000

Contract Price=$160,000

Now let calculate the recognized gain to Pedro in 2020

Recognized gain=$160,000-$96,000

Recognized gain=$64,000

Therefore the recognized gain to Pedro in 2020 is $64,000

The Lawrence Company records its trade accounts payable net of any cash discounts. At the end of 2016, Lawrence had a balance of $300,000 in its trade accounts payable account before any adjustments related to the following items: 1. Goods shipped to Lawrence FOB shipping point were in transit on December 31. The invoice price of the goods was $50,000, with a 2% discount allowed for prompt payment. 2. Goods shipped to Lawrence FOB destination on December 29 arrived on January 2, 2017. The invoice price of the goods was $9,000, with a 4% discount allowed for payment within 20 days. 3. On December 10, Lawrence had recorded a shipment received. The recorded invoice price was $24,750, net, with a 1% discount allowed for payment within 14 days. At the end of the year, payment had not been made. At what amount should Lawrence report trade accounts payable on its December 31, 2016 balance sheet

Answers

Answer:

The Lawrence Company

The amount that Lawrence should report trade accounts payable on its December 31, 2016 balance sheet is:

= $349,000.

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Trade accounts payable balance on December 31, 2016 = $300,000

1. Shipment at FOB Shipping point at $50,000(2% discount)  49,000

2. Shipment at FOB destination on December 29 (Jan. 2)      0

3. Already recorded invoice of $24,750 (with 1% discount)     0

Total value of accounts payable balance on December 31 $349,000

The following information applies to the questions displayed below.] McAllister, Inc. employs a normal costing system. The following information pertains to the year just ended.
Total manufacturing costs were $1,310,000.
Cost of goods manufactured was $1,275,500.
Applied manufacturing overhead was 30% of total manufacturing costs.
Manufacturing overhead was applied to production at a rate of 80 percent of direct-labor cost
Work-in-process inventory on January 1 was 75% of work-in-process inventory on December 31.
Requlred:
1. Compute the total direct-labor cost for the year.
2. Calculate the total cost of direct material used during the year
3. Compute the value of the company's work-in-process inventory on December 31.

Answers

Answer and Explanation:

The computation is shown below:

Given that

Total manufacturing costs = $1,310,000

Cost of goods manufactured = $1,275,500

Applied manufacturing O.H = 30% of manufacturing costs

= 0.3 of 1,310,000

= $393,000

(1)

The direct labor cost is

80% of direct labor cost = Applied overhead

So direct labor cost = $393,000 ÷  80%

= $491,250

(2) The total cost of direct material is

As we know that

Total manufacturing costs = Direct materials + Direct labor + Applied Overhead

So,

Direct materials = Total manufacturing costs - Direct labor - Applied overhead

= $1,310,000 - $491,250 - $393,000

= $425,750

(3)

The Ending work in process inventory is

As we know that

Cost of goods manufactured = Beginning work in process + Total manufacturing costs - Ending work in process

Le us s assume X to be ending work in process

Beginning work in process = X × 75% = 0.75X

Now

$1,275,500 = 0.75X + $1,310,000 - X

X = $138,000

The dollar change for a comparative financial statement item is calculated by: Multiple Choice Subtracting the analysis period amount from the base period amount. Subtracting the base period amount from the analysis period amount. Subtracting the analysis period amount from the base period amount, dividing the result by the base period amount, then multiplying that amount by 100. Subtracting the base period amount from the analysis period amount, dividing the result by the base period amount, then multiplying that amount by 100. Subtracting the base period amount from the analysis amount, then dividing the result by the base amount.

Answers

Answer: B)Subtracting the base period amount from the analysis period amount

Explanation:

The dollar change for a comparative financial statement item is calculated through the subtracting of the base period amount from the analysis period amount.

Therefore, based on the options given in the question, the right option is B as other options are wrong.

A lender is considering what terms to allow on a loan. Current market terms are 8 percent interest for 25 years for a fully amortizing loan. The borrower, Rich, has requested a $100,000 loan. The lender believes that extra credit analysis and careful loan control will have to be exercised because Rich has never borrowed such a large sum before. In addition, the lender expects that market rates will move upward very soon, perhaps even before the loan is closed. To be on the safe side, the lender decides to extend Rich a fixed rate, constant payment mortgage (CPM) loan commitment of $95,000 at 9 percent interest for 25 years. However, the lender wants to charge a loan origination fee to make the mortgage loan yield 10%. What origination fee should the lender charge? What fee should be charged if it is expected that the loan will be repaid after 10 years?

Answers

Answer:

1. The origination fee that the lender should charge if Rich will repay the loan after 25 years = $20,000 approximately.

2. The origination fee that the lender should charge if Rich will repay the loan after 10 years = $6,600 approximately.

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Amount requested by Rich = $100,000

Amount the bank is willing to lend Rich = $95,000

Interest rate = 9%

Period of loan = 25 years or 10 years

From an online finance calculator:

At 10% interest rate:

PMT = $-10,465.97

Sum of all periodic payments = $-261,649.17

Total Interest = $166,649.17

At 9% interest rate:

PMT = $-9,671.59

Sum of all periodic payments = $-241,789.84

Total Interest = $146,789.84

Expected Origination Fee:

Interest at 10% = $166,649.17

Interest at 9% =  $146,789.84

Required origination fee = $19,859.32 ($166,649.17 - $146,789.84)

This is equivalent to $20,000

Payment after 10 years:

At 10% interest rate:

PMT = $-15,460.81

Sum of all periodic payments = $-154,608.13

Total Interest = $59,608.13

At 9% interest rate:

PMT = $-14,802.91

Sum of all periodic payments = $-148,029.09

Total Interest = $53,029.09

Expected Origination Fee:

Interest at 10% = $59,608.13

Interest at 9% =  $53,029.09

Required origination fee = $6,579.04 or $6,600 ($59,608.13 - $53,029.09)

Consider the assembly line of a laptop computer. The line consists of 9 stations and operates at a cycle time of 2.50 minutes/unit. Their most error-prone operation is step 3. There is no inventory between the stations, because this is a machine-paced line. Final inspection happens at station 9.

Required:
What would be the information turnaround time for a defect made at station 2?

Answers

Answer:

17.5minutes

Explanation:

Calculation to determine would be the information turnaround time for a defect made at station 2

Station 2 information turnaround time=[(Station 9-Station 2)*2.50 minutes/unit]

Station 2 information turnaround time=7x 2.50

Station 2 information turnaround time=17.5minutes

Therefore the information turnaround time for a defect made at station 2 is 17.5minutes

Grayson (single) is in the 24 percent tax rate bracket and has sold the following stocks in 2019:
Date Amount
Description Purchased Basis Date Sold Realized
Stock A 1/23/1996 $7,900 7/22/2020 $5,020
Stock B 4/10/2020 15,300 9/13/2020 19,090
Stock C 8/23/2018 12,375 10/12/2020 17,510
Stock D 5/19/2010 5,750 10/12/2020 13,375
Stock E 8/20/2020 7,755 11/14/2020 3,825
1. What is Grayson's net short-term capital gain or loss from these transactions?
2. What is Grayson's net long-term gain or loss from these transactions?
3. What is Grayson's overall net gain or loss from these transactions?
4. What amount of the gain, if any, is subject to the preferential rate for certain capital gains?

Answers

Answer:

Holding period for more than  years is long term

                                      Basis      Realized      Gain/Loss

Stock A  Long term     7,900        5,020          2,880

Stock B  Short term    15,300       19,090         -3,790

Stock C  Long term     12,375       17,510          -5,135

Stock D  Long term     5,750        13,375          -7,625

Stock E  Short term     7,755         3,825           3,930

Grayson's Total or Net capital gain or loss   -$9,740

1. Stock B                                               -3,790

   Stock E                                                3,930

Net short-term capital gain or loss     $140  

2. Stock A                                               2,880

   Stock C                                              -5,135

   Stock D                                             -7,625

Net long-term capital gain or loss    -$9,880

3. Net capital gain or loss = -$9,880 - $140 = -$9,740

4. Amount subject to the preferential rate for certain capital gains = $0

Gibson Hats Corporation manufactures three different models of hats: Vogue, Beauty, and Glamour. Gibson expects to incur $666,000 of overhead cost during the next fiscal year. Other budget information follows. Vogue Beauty Glamour Total Direct labor hours 3,400 5,400 9,200 18,000 Machine hours 1,200 2,050 2,300 5,550 Required Use direct labor hours as the cost driver to compute the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product. Use machine hours as the cost driver to compute the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product.

Answers

Answer:

A. Vogue $125,800

Beauty $199,800

Glamour $340,400

B. Vogue $144,000

Beauty $246,000

Glamour $276,000

Explanation:

A. Computation for the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product Using direct labor hours as the cost driver

First step is to calculate the Product Allocation rate

Product Allocation rate =$666,000/18,000

Product Allocation rate=$37.00

Now let calculate the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product

Using this formula

Allocated Cost=Product Allocation rate * Weight of Base

Let plug in the formula

Vogue= $37.00 * 3400

Vogue = $125,800

Beauty= $37.00 * 5400

Beauty= $199,800

Glamour=$37.00 * 9200

Glamour = $340,400

Total $666,000.00

($125,800+$199,800+$340,400)

Therefore the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product Using direct labor hours as the cost driver will be :

Vogue $125,800

Beauty $199,800

Glamour $340,400

B. Computation for the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product Using

Use machine hours as the cost driver

First step is to calculate the Product Allocation rate

Product Allocation rate =$666,000/5,550

Product Allocation rate=$120.00

Now let calculate the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product

Using this formula

Allocated Cost=Product Allocation rate * Weight of Base

Vogue=$120.00 * 1200

Vogue = $144,000

Beauty= $120.00 * 2050

Beauty = $246,000

Glamour= $120.00 * 2300

Glamour = $276,000

Total $666,000

($144,000+$246,000+$276,000)

Therefore the allocation rate and the budgeted overhead cost for each product Using

Use machine hours as the cost driver will be:

Vogue $144,000

Beauty $246,000

Glamour $276,000

What is a transition?
A. An animation that happens on a single slide
B. An outline format that uses roman numerals
C. An image file imported to a title slide
D. An effect that happens between slides

Answers

Answer:

d

Explanation:

i jus answered it

Answer:

d

Explanation:

i just took the test

Lonergan Company occasionally uses its accounts receivable to obtain immediate cash. At the end of June 2021, the company had accounts receivable of $920,000. Lonergan needs approximately $570,000 to capitalize on a unique investment opportunity. On July 1, 2021, a local bank offers Lonergan the following two alternatives:
A. Borrow $570,000, sign a note payable, and assign the entire receivable balance as collateral. At the end of each month, a remittance will be made to the bank that equals the amount of receivables collected plus 10% interest on the unpaid balance of the note at the beginning of the period.
B. Transfer $620,000 of specific receivables to the bank without recourse. The bank will charge a 3% factoring fee on the amount of receivables transferred. The bank will collect the receivables directly from customers. The sale criteria are met.
Required:
1. Prepare the journal entries that would be recorded on July 1 for:
a. alternative a.
b. alternative b.
2. Assuming that 70% of all June 30 receivables are collected during July, prepare the necessary journal entries to record the collection and the remittance to the bank for:____.
a. alternative a.
b. alternative b.

Answers

Answer:

1.

ALTERNATIVE A

01-Jul

Dr Cash $570,000

Cr Notes Payable $570,000

ALTERNATIVE B

01-Jul

Dr Cash 601,400

Dr Loss on sale of receivables $18,600

Cr Accounts Receivables $620,000

2.

ALTERNATIVE A

Dr Cash $644,000

Cr Notes Payable $644,000

Dr Interest Expense $4,750

Dr Notes Payable 570,000

Cr Cash 574,750

ALTERNATIVE B

Dr Cash $210,000

Cr Accounts Receivable $210,000

Explanation:

1. Preparation of the journal entries that would be recorded on July 1 for alternative a and

alternative b.

ALTERNATIVE A

01-Jul

Dr Cash $570,000

Cr Notes Payable $570,000

(Notes payable collected)

ALTERNATIVE B

01-Jul

Dr Cash 601,400

($620,000-$18,600)

Dr Loss on sale of receivables $18,600 (3%*$620,000)

Cr Accounts Receivables $620,000

(Remittance to bank)

2. Preparation of the necessary journal entries to record the collection and the remittance to the bank for alternative a and

alternative b.

ALTERNATIVE A

Dr Cash (920,000 x 70%) $644,000

Cr Notes Payable $644,000

Dr nterest Expense($570,000 x 10%x 1/12) $4,750

Dr Notes Payable 570,000

Cr Cash 574,750

($570,000+$4,750)

ALTERNATIVE B

Dr Cash [ (920,000 -620,000)x 70%] $210,000

Cr Accounts Receivable $210,000

I have learned that the tools and equipment in preparing sandwich are important because​

Answers

because they contribute to having good quality of sandwiches and fillings.
yes that’s true!! the tools and equipment are important because without them the sandwich wouldn’t be good

Intercontinental Inc., uses a periodic inventory system. At the end of Year 2, the account records provided the following information relating to one of its products. Units Unit Cost Inventory, December 31, Year 1 1,830 $ 6 For Year 2: Purchase, March 21, Year 2 6,200 $ 5 Purchase, August 1, Year 2 4,070 $ 3 Inventory, December 31, Year 2 2,910 What is the amount of ending inventory and cost of goods sold under the LIFO inventory costing method

Answers

Answer:

Intercontinental Inc.

The amount of ending inventory is = $16,380

The cost of goods sold is = $37,810

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

                                                                    Units      Unit Cost    Total Cost

Inventory, December 31, Year 1                  1,830          $ 6         $10,980

For Year 2: Purchase, March 21, Year 2   6,200          $ 5          31,000

Purchase, August 1, Year 2                        4,070          $ 3           12,210

Total cost of inventory                              12,100                        $54,190

Inventory, December 31, Year 2                2,910                          16,380

Cost of units sold                                       9,190                        $37,810

Cost of ending inventory, 2,910

= 1,830 at $6 = $10,980

 1,080 at $5 =     5,400

2,910           =  $16,380

Cost of goods sold = Cost of inventory available minus the cost of ending inventory

= $54,190 - $16,380

= $37,810

Miao Clinic uses client-visits as its measure of activity. During July, the clinic budgeted for 3,000 client-visits, but its actual level of activity was 2,980 client-visits. The clinic has provided the following data concerning the formulas used in its budgeting and its actual results for July: Data used in budgeting: Fixed element per month Variable element per client-visit Revenue − $39.80 Personnel expenses $26,500 $12.30 Medical supplies 1,400 8.20 Occupancy expenses 8,200 1.00 Administrative expenses 5,300 0.40 Total expenses $41,400 $21.90 Actual results for July: Revenue $114,494 Personnel expenses $60,564 Medical supplies $26,936 Occupancy expenses $10,980 Administrative expenses $6,192 The administrative expenses in the planning budget for July would be closest to:

Answers

Mayonnaise is delicious, agree? Yes indeed.

Brown Fashions Inc.'s December 31, 2014 balance sheet showed total common equity of $4,050,000 and 290,000 shares of stock outstanding. During 2015, the firm had $450,000 of net income, and it paid out $100,000 as dividends. What was the book value per share at 12/31/15, assuming no common stock was either issued or retired during 2015? (Round your final answer to two decimal places.)

Answers

Answer:

$15.17

Explanation:

Given that;

Beginning book value = $4,050,000

Net income = $450,000

Dividends = $100,000

Ending book value = Beginning book value + Net income - Dividends

Ending book value = $4,050,000 + $450,000 - $100,000

Ending book value = $4,400,000

Book value per share = Ending book value / Number of shares

Book value per share = $4,400,000 / 290,000

Book value per share = $15.17

Piechocki Corporation manufactures and sells a single product. The company uses units as the measure of activity in its budgets and performance reports. During May, the company budgeted for 6,100 units, but its actual level of activity was 6,050 units. The company has provided the following data concerning the formulas used in its budgeting and its actual results for May:

Data used in budgeting:

Fixed element per month Variable element per unit
Revenue - $32.60
Direct labor $0 $3.90
Direct materials 0 12.10
Manufacturing overhead 33,400 1.80
Selling and administrative expenses 28,300 0.40
Total expenses $61,700 $18.20
Actual results for May:


Revenue $200,564
Direct labor $22,786
Direct materials $73,824
Manufacturing overhead $43,922
Selling and administrative expenses $31,896

The direct labor in the planning budget for May would be closest to:_________

a. $23,010
b. $22,633
c. $22,786
d. $23,166

Answers

Answer:

$23,595

Explanation:

The computation of the direct labor in the planning budget is shown below:

Direct labor in planning budget is

= Actual level of Activity × Direct labor per unit

= 6,050 × $3.90

= $23,595

For calculating the direct labor in the planning budget we simply multiplied the actual activity level by the direct labor per unit

This is the answer but the same is not provided in the given options

David and Eleanor are a young couple with two children, ages 2 and 3. David is in law school and currently has $80,000 in student loan debt. Eleanor works part-time at a software company earning $42,000 a year. Their current financial resources are limited; therefore, the savings components associated with some insurance policies would not be of much use to them at the moment (since their first priority is paying off loans). David expects to provide for his family as a lawyer in the future, however, and wants to ensure that they will be taken care of in the event of his premature death
Because of the relatively low premiums and high face value, the best option for David is a insurance policy. life
After completing law school, David finds a job with a good law firm and wants to switch to a plan that provides a savings component as well.
He can achieve this without changing insurance companies as long as his original policy included a__________ provision.
1. whole, term, universal
2. convertability, renewability, nonfeiture

Answers

IF SOMEONE PUT A LINK AS AN ANSWER,DONT GO TO THE LINKS. PEOPLE USE THEM TO FIND YOUR ADDRESS

A shop can sell at most 200 pairs of socks and at most 100 pairs of shoes. To maximize the profit, they have decided to make 2 offers. Offer 1 is a package of 1 pair of socks and 1 pair of shoes. Offer 2 is a package of 3 pairs of socks and 1 pair of shoes. The shop sells offer 1 for 30$ and offer 2 for 50$. They also want to sell at least 20 packages of offer 1 and at least 10 packages of offer 2. How many packages of each offer do they have to sell to maximize the profit

Answers

Answer:

50 packages of offer 1 and 50 packages of offer 2

Explanation:

Determine How many packages of each offer do they have to sell to maximize the profit

Number of package of offer 1 = x

Number of package of offer 2 = y

Applying the LPP model

max Z = 30 x + 50 y  ----  ( 1 )

now subject to the constraints from Linear programming

x + 3y ≤ 200  ------ L1

x + y ≤ 100 ------ L2

x ≥ 20 ------------- L3

y ≥ 10 -------------- L4

therefore the number of packages of each offer that can be sold to maximize profit will be : X = 50 and Y = 50  referring to equation from the LPP model  considering that the shop can sell at most 100 pairs

Firms manage a variety of current assets. Permanent current assets are necessary for firms to maintain their businesses, and they will be carried even through downturns in business cycles. Temporary current assets fluctuate seasonally or with business cycles. Firms must devise a financing strategy that best fits their business situation and that best manages their risk.
Use the following table to identify the different current asset financing policies
Description Financing policy
Long-term capital finances all fixed assets and the
non-seasonal portion of current assets, as well as
seasonal needs of current assets.
Long-term capital finances some permanent current assets,
but short-term debt finances all temporary current assets
and the remaining permanent current assets.
This current asset financing policy finances current assets
with liabilities that are expected to mature at the same time
the current asset will be liquidated.
Suppose a firm wants to take advantage of an upward-sloping yield curve. If the firm believes that interest rates will stay constant and it wants to use the current yield curve to bolster profits, which approach should the firm follow?
a. Conservative approach.
b. Maturity matching approach.
c. Aggressive approach.

Answers

Answer:

1.a.  Long-term capital finances all fixed assets and the  non-seasonal portion of current assets, as well as  seasonal needs of current assets. ⇒ CONSERVATIVE APPROACH.

b. Long-term capital finances some permanent current assets,  but short-term debt finances all temporary current assets  and the remaining permanent current assets. ⇒ AGGRESSIVE APPROACH.

c. This current asset financing policy finances current assets  with liabilities that are expected to mature at the same time  the current asset will be liquidated. ⇒ MATURITY MATCHING APPROACH.

2. Conservative Approach

They should use the conservative approach by seeking long term financing for more permanent assets since the rates will increase in future. For now, seeing as rates are lower, they should use short-term debt for temporary current assets so that they can invest more and make more profit.

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