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MAXImum [283]
2 years ago
13

On December 31, Year 1, JM Co. exchanged a used machine for a new machine from DP Inc. The used machine had a book value of $100

,000 ($120,000 cost minus $20,000 accumulated depreciation) and a fair value of $90,000. The new machine had a list price of $150,000, and DP gave JM a trade-in allowance of $ 105,000, with the difference paid in cash. The exchange has commercial substance. 1 Question
2 How much should JM record as the cost of the new machine in Year 1?
3 How much should JM record as a gain (loss), if any, in Year 1?
Situation 2:
On December 1, Year 1, AB Inc. exchanged a used truck for a new truck from LL Co. The used truck had a book value of $57,500 ($75,000 cost minus $17,500 accumulated depreciation) and a fair value of $60,000. In addition to the exchange of the used truck, AB paid LL $8,000. The exchange has commercial substance.
1 Question
2 How much should AB record as the cost of the new truck in Year 1?
3 How much should AB record as a gain (loss), if any, in Year 1?
Situation 3:
On July 1, Year 1, DDC Co. exchanged a used crane for a new crane with ZN Corp. The used crane had a book value of $120,000 ($225,000 cost minus $105,000 accumulated depreciation) and a fair value of $125,000. The fair value of the new crane is $110,000. In addition to the exchange of the used crane, ZN paid DDC $15,000. The exchange lacks commercial substance.
1 Question
2 How much should DDC record as the cost of the new crane in Year 1?
3 How much should DDC record as a gain (loss), if any, in Year 1?
Business
1 answer:
Evgen [1.6K]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Situation 1:  JM Co.

a. The cost of the new machine in Year 1 = $150,000

b. JM should record a gain of $5,000 in Year 1.

Situation 2:  AB Inc.

a. The cost of the new machine in Year 1 = $65,500

b. AB Inc. should not record any loss or gain.

Situation 3: DDC

a. The cost of the new crane in Year 1 is $125,000

b. There is a gain of $5,000 from the transaction between DDC and ZN.

Explanation:

JM Co.

1) Used machine:

Book value = $100,000  ($120,000 cost minus $20,000 accumulated depreciation)

Fair value of $90,000

Gain on exchange = $5,000 ($105,000 - $100,000)

New machine:

List price = $150,000

Paid $105,000 with trade-in allowance

Paid $45,000 in cash

Value received from DP:

Book value                         $100,000

Cash paid                              45,000

Total value exchanged     $145,000

Fair value of new crane =   150,000

Gain on exchange               $5,000

3) JM records a gain of $5,000 being the difference between the trade-in allowance of $105,000 and the book value ($100,000) of the old machine

Situation 2:

AB Inc.

Used Truck:

Book value = $57,500 ($75,000 cost minus $17,500 accumulated depreciation)

Fair Value = $60,000

Value received from LL:

Book value                         $57,500

Cash paid                               8,000

Fair value of new crane =   65,500

No gain or loss.

Situation 3:

DDC Co.

Book value of used crane = $120,000

Fair value of $125,000

Value received from ZN:

Fair value of new crane = $110,000

Cash received                       15,000

Total value received         $125,000

Book value of old                120,000

Gain                                      $5,000

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Grey Wolf, Inc has current assets of $2,090 net fixed assets of $9,830 current liabilities of $1710 and long-termdebt of $4520.
s2008m [1.1K]

Answer:

(a) $5,690

(b) $380

Explanation:

Given that,

current assets = $2,090

Net fixed assets = $9,830

Current liabilities = $1710

Long-term debt = $4520

Total assets:

= Current assets + Net fixed assets

= $2,090 + $9,830

= $11,920

Total Liabilities:

= Current Liabilities + Long-term Debt

= $1710 + $4520

= $6,230

(a) Total assets = Total liabilities + Stockholder's equity

$11,920 = $6,230 + Stockholder's equity

$11,920 - $6,230 = Stockholder's equity

$5,690 = Stockholder's equity

(b) Net working capital:

= Current assets - Current liabilities

= $2,090 - $1,710

= $380

8 0
2 years ago
Grand Lips produces a lip balm used for​ cold-weather sports. The balm is manufactured in a single processing department. No lip
77julia77 [94]

Answer:

a. see attachment

b.

total equivalent units : Materials = 30,500 units and Conversion Costs = 16,860

cost per equivalent unit : Materials = $0.14 and Conversion Costs = $0.30

c.

(a) units completed and transferred to Finished Goods = $6,732

(b) units still in process at June 30 = $1,196

d.

<u>Journals</u>

Work In Process :Direct Materials $4,305 (debit)

Raw Materials $4,305 (credit)

<em>Being Raw Materials used in Production</em>

Work In Process :Direct Labor  $3,320 (debit)

Salaries Payable $3,320  (credit)

<em>Being Labor used in Production</em>

Work In Process ; Overheads $1,738 (debit)

Overheads $1,738 (credit)

<em>Being Overheads Assigned to Production</em>

Finished Goods $6,732 (debit)

Work In Process $6,732 (credit)

<em>Being Units transferred to Finished Goods</em>

Explanation:

<u>Calculation of Equivalent units of Production in respect with Raw Materials and Conversion Costs</u>

1. Materials

Ending Work In Process (5,200 × 100%)                                         5,200

Completed and Transferred Out (15,300 × 100%)                         15,300

Equivalent units of Production in respect with Raw Materials     30,500

2. Conversion Costs

Ending Work In Process (5,200 × 30%)                                            1,560

Completed and Transferred Out (15,300 × 100%)                         15,300

Equivalent units of Production in respect with Conversion Cost 16,860

<u>Calculation of Cost per Equivalent unit of production  in respect with Raw Materials and Conversion Costs</u>

Unit Cost = Total Cost ÷ Total Equivalent units

1. Materials

Unit Cost =  $4,305 ÷ 30,500

                = $0.14

2. Conversion Costs

Unit Cost =  ($3,320 + $1,738) ÷ 16,860

                = $0.30

3. Total unit cost

Total unit cost = Material Cost + Conversion Cost

                        = $0.14 + $0.30

                        = $0.44

<u>Calculation of costs assigned to (a) units completed and transferred to Finished Goods and (b) units still in process at June 30.</u>

(a) units completed and transferred to Finished Goods

Total Cost = units completed and transferred out × total unit cost

                 = 15,300 × $0.44

                 = $6,732

(b) units still in process at June 30.

Total Cost = Materials Cost + Conversion Cost

                 = $0.14 × 5,200 + $0.30 × 1,560

                 = $1,196

8 0
2 years ago
Given a need to raise capital of $2 million and attorney costs of $150,000, with an underwriter's spread of 3%, the amount of bo
ipn [44]

Answer:

The amount of bond issuance is $2,085,500

Explanation:

The computation of the amount of bond issuance is shown below:

= Raise capital + attorney cost - underwriter spread

= $2,000,000 + $150,000 - 3% of $2,150,000

= $2,150,000 - 3% of $2,150,000

= $2,150,000 - $64,500

= $2,085,500

Hence, the amount of bond issuance is $2,085,500

We simply applied the above formula so that the correct value could come

6 0
2 years ago
Siemens AG invests €80,000,000 to build a manufacturing plant to build wind turbines. The company predicts net cash flows of €16
Nat2105 [25]

Answer:

a) the payback period of this investment = 5.00 years

b) Net Present Value is €11,945,600    

Explanation:

From the given information:

a)

The payback period of this investment is determined by using the formula:

Payback Period = Cost of investment/ annual net cashflow

Payback Period = €80,000,000/€16,000,000

Payback Period = 5.00 years

Thus; the payback period of this investment = 5.00 years

b)  What is the net present value of this investment?

The net present value of the investment is computed in the table below        

                    interest rate of return i = 8%

                    no of year n = 8 years

The PV factor is for 8 years and 8% is:

Year         8% factor rate

1               0.9259

2               0.8573

3               0.7938

4               0.7350

5               0.6806

6               0.6302

7               0.5835

<u>8               0.5403</u>

<u>                  5.7466</u>

Cash Flow    Select Chart       Amount    ×   PV Factor =   PresentValue

Annual          Table B1            16,000,000 ×   5.7466    = 91,945,600

CashFlow      (Using Excel)                          

Net Cash

Inflow                                                                                  91,945,600

Less:

<u>Investment                                                                          80,000,000       </u>

Net Present                                                                           11,945,600            

Value

<u>                                                                                                                        </u>

6 0
2 years ago
Which of the following provides a suite of integrated software modules for finance and accounting, human resources, manufacturin
MAXImum [283]

Answer:CRM software ERP system

Explanation:

This software system provide data input model for different business departments e g manufacturing, makerting, Accounting etc and facilitates their integration and making use of data from different units

4 0
2 years ago
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