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Rzqust [24]
2 years ago
11

Patrick purchased a used passenger automobile on June 1, 2018. He paid $19,000 for the automobile. During 2018, he uses the auto

mobile 75 percent of the time for business. Patrick wishes to claim the maximum amount of depreciation possible (no bonus depreciation or election to expense).a.Calculate Patrick's depreciation expense on the automobile for 2018.
b.Calculate Patrick's depreciation expense on the automobile for 2019, assuming the same 75 percent business use.
Business
1 answer:
kkurt [141]2 years ago
8 0

Solution:

a. The first year depreciation = $3,160

The second year depreciation = $5,100

b. By considering 75% used for business purchase

    For 2018 , for 7 months remaining

   Depreciation = $3,160 x 75% ( \frac{7}{12}

                         = $1382.50

  For 2019 ,

   Depreciation = $5,100 x 75% = $3,825

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Littman LLC placed in service on July 29, 2019, machinery and equipment (seven-year property) with a basis of $600,000. Littman'
n200080 [17]

Answer:

Option C) Littman's $179 expense will be greater than $100,000

Explanation:

Data:

Littman LLC placed in service on July 29, 2019, machinery and equipment (seven-year property) with a basis of $600,000. Littman's income for the current year before any depreciation deduction was $100,000

From the options, In order to minimize depression, Littman's $179 expense will be greater than $100,000. This will come from the profit loss reconciliation. Hence option C will be the correct option in this case.

4 0
1 year ago
You are considering replacing your aging propane furnace for a natural gas model. The propane model originally cost $2,200, will
Nat2105 [25]

Answer:

The information is not complete (we do not know the useful life of the propane model), but the difference in costs between one project and the other is two large. The NPV of the savings for the gas model almost pays for the initial investment, plus the present value of the costs of using the gas model are much lower for future equivalent projects, we can assume that replacing the propane furnace with the gas model is a good investment.

We cannot determine exactly by how much the actual worth of the costs of the gas model are lower than the costs of the propane model, but there is no doubt that they are much lower. The only way that the propane model would have lower actual costs would that its useful life is much longer.

Explanation:

                                             use propane model            use gas model

initial investment                         $0                                     $1,800

operating costs                         $800                                    $600

useful life                                 6 years                                 13 years

present value of the costs for first product life cycle:

                                                $3,559 (6 years)              $6,129 (13 years)

Since the useful lives of the alternatives are not the same, we must find a common denominator for the useful life of the alternatives. Here we have a problem because we are not given the information.

But we can assume that the useful life of a propane furnace is also 13 years:

                                             use propane model            use gas model

initial investment                    $2,200                                  $2,200

operating costs                         $800                                    $600

useful life                                 13 years                                 13 years

residual value                            $0                                        $500

present value of total costs per life cycle:

                                                $8,190                                   $6,529

Now we need to determine the NPV of the money saved by using gas propane = -$140 (-$1,800, 9%, $200 saved during 12 periods and $700 received at last period), so basically the gas model almost pays for itself with the money it saves.

5 0
2 years ago
Bonds issued by the Coleman Manufacturing Company have a par value of $1,000, which of
miss Akunina [59]

Answer:

19.05%

Explanation:

the approximate yield to maturity (YTM) formula is:

approximate YTM = {C + [(FV - PV) / n]} /  [(FV + PV) / 2]

  • C = coupon payment = $130
  • FV = face value or value at maturity = $1,000
  • PV = present value or current market value = $690
  • n = 10 years

approximate YTM = {$130 + [($1,000 - $690) / 10]} /  [($1,000 + $690) / 2] = ($130 + $31) / $845 = $161 / $845 = 0.1905 or 19.05%

8 0
1 year ago
On January 3, 2018, Roberts Company purchased 30% of the 100,000 shares of common stock of Thomas Corporation, paying $1,500,000
Helen [10]

Answer:

The gain/loss on the sale of the 15,000 shares is $20,000

Explanation:

The value of the investment as at the end of 2018 using the equity method is computed thus:

Note that 30% of 100,000 shares=30,000 shares

ending value =initial investment+share of profit-share of dividends

ending value =$1,500,000+($300,000*30%)-($100,000*30%)

ending value=$1560000

gain/(loss)=$800,000-($1560000 *15000/30000)

gain/(loss)=$20,000

6 0
1 year ago
Boxer Industries worked on four jobs during its first year of operation: nos. 401, 402, 403, and 404. A review of job no. 403's
kkurt [141]

Answer:

Overhead= $6,000

Explanation:

Giving the following information:

Job 403:

Direct material=  $40,000

Total manufacturing costs = $50,000

Boxer applies overhead at 150% of direct labor cost.

Total manufacturing costs= direct material + direct labor + allocated overhead

50,000= 40,000 + (direct labor + allocated overhead)

(direct labor + allocated overhead)= $10,000

<u>We know that overhead is 50% higher than direct labor. In 100%, direct labor would de 40% and overhead 60%.</u>

direct labor=10,000*0.4= $4,000

Overhead= 10,000*0.6= $6,000

3 0
2 years ago
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