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OnMyWay732.
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August 30, 2014 at 3:33 pm #188294
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September 19, 2014 at 8:18 pm #627624
23KParticipant367,000 seems to be correct –
When acquiring land, certain costs are ordinary and necessary and should be assigned to Land. These costs include the cost of the land, title fees, legal fees, survey costs, and zoning fees. Also included are site preparation costs like grading and draining, or the cost to raze an old structure. All of these costs may be considered ordinary and necessary to get the land ready for its intended use.
AUD--52,68,83, expired. Retake = 74 RETAKE - 7.24.26
FAR--73,70,68,75
BEC-- 79
REG-- 68,62,75September 20, 2014 at 1:50 am #627625
AnonymousInactiveCan someone please explain these 2 questions to me from Inter company transactions in simple words:
Question 1: Wagner, a holder of a $1,000,000 Palmer, Inc. bond, collected the interest due on March 31, Year 1, and then sold the bond to Seal, Inc. for $975,000. On that date, Palmer, a 75% owner of Seal, had a $1,075,000 carrying amount for this bond. What was the effect of Seal's purchase of Palmer's bond on the retained earnings and noncontrolling interest amounts reported in Palmer's March 31, Year 1, consolidated balance sheet?
Retained earnings Noncontrolling interest
a. $75,000 increase $25,000 increase
b. $0 $25,000 increase
c. $100,000 increase $0
d. $0 $100,000 increase
Answer :
Choice “c” is correct, $100,000 increase in consolidated earnings. $0 effect on noncontrolling interest. The purchase of the parent company bond by the subsidiary is treated as if the bond were retired when the financial statements are consolidated. Because the bond had a book value of $1,075,000, but was “retired” for $975,000, a gain is recorded upon consolidation.
Noncontrolling interest is only adjusted if the bonds were originally issued by the subsidiary and, as a result, a portion of the gain must be allocated to the noncontrolling interest. In this problem, the parent issued the bonds, so the elimination has no impact on noncontrolling interest.
Question 2:
P Co. purchased term bonds at a premium on the open market. These bonds represented 20 percent of the outstanding class of bonds issued at a discount by S Co., P's wholly owned subsidiary. P intends to hold the bonds until maturity. In a consolidated balance sheet, the difference between the bond carrying amounts in the two companies would be:
a.Included as an increase to retained earnings.
b.Reported as a deferred credit to be amortized over the remaining life of the bonds.
c.Included as a decrease to retained earnings.
d.Reported as a deferred debit to be amortized over the remaining life of the bonds.
Answer: Choice “c” is correct, in a consolidated balance sheet, the difference between the bond carrying amounts would be included as a decrease to retained earnings because a premium was paid to “retire” the bonds.
Rule: When members of a consolidated group have intercompany bond holdings, the bonds are eliminated in consolidation and the difference (gain or loss) between the discounted issue price and the premium on reacquisition would be included in retained earnings.
September 20, 2014 at 2:16 am #627626
Future NinjaParticipanthey everyone. starting F1 this weekend. hopefully it's enough for Nov 14th first take on FAR.
AUD - 79 (expired) retaking July 28,2016
FAR - 76 expiring July 31, 2016
BEC - 85
REG - 74,74,74,74,59,70,September 20, 2014 at 3:42 pm #627627
TootsieMemberSeptember 20, 2014 at 4:57 pm #627628
golfball7773ParticipantDuke Co. reported cost of goods sold of $270,000 for 20X1. Additional information is as follows:
December 31 January 1
Inventory $60,000 $45,000
Accounts payable 26,000 39,000
If Duke uses the direct method, what amount should Duke report as cash paid to suppliers in its 20X1 statement of cash flows?
A.
$242,000
Incorrect B.
$268,000
C.
$272,000
D.
$298,000
Answer is D. What I don't understand is why an increase in inventory is added to your cash flow.
FAR: 63, 55, 62
REG: 65, 77*
AUD: Fail, 64, 71
BEC: 72, 74, 81*expired
September 20, 2014 at 8:55 pm #627629
AnonymousInactiveSo Inventory increased by 15, and accounts payable decreased by 13? JE:
DR
COGS 270,000
INV 15,000
AP 13,000
CR
Cash 298,000
One easy trick for this is, inventory is an asset account so when it increases, it is debited. AP is an liability account so when it increases, it is credited and when it decreases, it is debited. Make JEs for problems like these, helps big time.
September 20, 2014 at 9:28 pm #627630
AnonymousInactiveFor LCM, if OC is the lowest number would it be considered the floor or is that only one of the market numbers? And whatever LCM number you pick, you only multiple it to ending inventory right?
September 20, 2014 at 11:03 pm #627631
AnonymousInactiveSeptember 21, 2014 at 2:07 am #627632
ksfc2727MemberIs anyone using Ninja notes for this bad boy? I've had great success with Becker on the other tests but several chapters in and it's not clicking. I'm great a memorizing rules and formulas by doing rapid fire MCQ. With some many numbers and figures in the Becker MCQ its been hard to comprehend what exactly is going on. I can whine all day about being burnt out but that won't help come test day so thinking NINJA notes might make the Becker craziness make a bit more sense. Thoughts?
September 21, 2014 at 8:06 am #627633
AnonymousInactiveHow do you guys remember when to debit/credit Retained Earnings/ APIC- Treasury Stock in Stockholders Equity transactions related to treasury stock reacquisition and retirement. Its so confusing. Please help!!
September 21, 2014 at 9:35 am #627634
Future NinjaParticipant@caakankshajain im still in F1. sorry I cant you help you with that.
AUD - 79 (expired) retaking July 28,2016
FAR - 76 expiring July 31, 2016
BEC - 85
REG - 74,74,74,74,59,70,September 21, 2014 at 2:40 pm #627635
AnonymousInactiveOk, you will usually only debit RE using the cost method. When the reissue price of the TS is less than the original, you debit RE. For example, company A purchased its own stock at $12 per share on January 1, and later reissued its own stock at $10 per share. JE:
DR Cash 10
DR RE 2
CR 12
If company A had reissued stock for $14, you would credit APIC-TS
DR. Cash 14
CR TS 12
CR APIC-TS 2
Hope that helps!
September 21, 2014 at 3:22 pm #627636
LilyanaMemberHi guys,
Can you explain how is “The difference in bad debts on the tax return being $30,000 less than on the books creates a deferred tax asset-current”? I don't understand why it's a deferred asset instead of liability.
Thank you!
September 21, 2014 at 5:49 pm #627637
Peterman25ParticipantFor LCM, if OC is the lowest number would it be considered the floor or is that only one of the market numbers? And whatever LCM number you pick, you only multiple it to ending inventory right?
If OC is lower than NRV, Replacement cost, and NRV-gross profit that would be your LCM number and yes, would be multiplied by units in ending inventory.
BEC 7/14 - PASS
FAR 10/14 - PASS
AUD 1/15 - PASS
REG 4/15 - PASSAZ license - Official 8/20/2015
September 21, 2014 at 6:01 pm #627638
Peterman25ParticipantLilyana- Here is how I see it. Somebody please correct me if I am wrong…
Bad debt for for GAAP = allowance method. Bad debt for tax = direct write off. At some point in the future that $30,000 difference will eventually make its way to the tax return and reduce tax liability. Hence the deferred tax asset.
BEC 7/14 - PASS
FAR 10/14 - PASS
AUD 1/15 - PASS
REG 4/15 - PASSAZ license - Official 8/20/2015
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