Intermediate Accounting
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781259722660
Author: J. David Spiceland, Mark W. Nelson, Wayne M Thomas
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Question
Chapter 20, Problem 20.23E
(a)
To determine
Error correction:
Error correction is an adjustment to previously issued financial statements. It is not considered as an accounting change.
To identify: The error made by Corporation WB in the transaction of office supplies expense on December 31, 2017.
(b)
To determine
To identify: The error made by Importers M in the transaction of prepayment of tenant for 2018 rent of a building on the last day of 2017.
(c)
To determine
To identify: The error made by Corporation DL in the transaction of accrue interest at the end of 2017.
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E6.14 (LO 5) (Gift Card Sales and Redemptions) During December 2023, Soft Skin Ltd. sells $20,000 of gift cards to customers. From reliable past experience, management estimates that 8% of the gift cards sold will not be redeemed by customers. In January 2024, $2,000 of these cards is redeemed for merchandise with a cost of $1,500. In February 2024, a further $10,000 of these cards is redeemed for merchandise with a cost of $8,000. The company uses a perpetual inventory system and has a February 28 year end
Instructions
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block c/2019/4
On 31.12.t1, Frieda OHG has trade receivables with a book value of € 35,700, which also includes receivables from Alma AG in the amount of € 11,900 and from Belma AG in the amount of € 5,950 . On 31.12. t0, Frieda OHG had accounted for supposedly secure receivables in the amount of € 23,800 gross. Create the posting records for the following business transactions in year t1:
Frieda OHG considers it likely that only 30% of the claim against Alma AG will be received.
Insolvency proceedings are opened against Belma AG and an entry rate of 80% is set by the insolvency administrator with regard to the claim of Frieda OHG.
It is known from the past that approximately 2% of receivables that are not individually impaired are not paid.
Alma AG transfers € 5,950 to Frieda OHG
Exercise 5-16 (Algo) Deferred annuities [LO5-8] President Company purchased merchandise from Captain Corporation on September 30, 2024. Payment was made in the form of a noninterest-bearing note requiring President to make six annual payments of $7,800 on each September 30, beginning on September 30, 2027. Required: Calculate the amount at which President should record the note payable and corresponding purchase on September 30, 2024, assuming that an interest rate of 9% properly reflects the time value of money in this situation. Note: Use tables, Excel, or a financial calculator. Round your final answers to nearest whole dollar amount. Round your intermediate calculations to the nearest whole dollar. (FV of $1, PV of $1, FVA of $1, PVA of
Chapter 20 Solutions
Intermediate Accounting
Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.1QCh. 20 - There are three basic accounting approaches to...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.3QCh. 20 - Lynch Corporation changes from the...Ch. 20 - Sugarbaker Designs Inc. changed from the FIFO...Ch. 20 - Most changes in accounting principles are recorded...Ch. 20 - Southeast Steel, Inc., changed from the FIFO...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.8QCh. 20 - Its not easy sometimes to distinguish between a...Ch. 20 - For financial reporting, a reporting entity can be...
Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.11QCh. 20 - Describe the process of correcting an error when...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.13QCh. 20 - If it is discovered that an extraordinary repair...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.15QCh. 20 - Change in inventory methods; FIFO method to the...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory methods; average cost method...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory methods; FIFO method to the...Ch. 20 - Change in depreciation methods LO203 Irwin, Inc.,...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.5BECh. 20 - Book royalties LO204 Three programmers at Feenix...Ch. 20 - Warranty expense LO204 In 2017, Quapau Products...Ch. 20 - Change in estimate; useful life of patent LO204...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.9BECh. 20 - Error correction LO206 In 2018, internal auditors...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.11BECh. 20 - Error correction LO206 In 2018, the internal...Ch. 20 - Change in principle; change in inventory methods ...Ch. 20 - Change in principle; change in inventory methods ...Ch. 20 - Change from the treasury stock method to retired...Ch. 20 - Change in principle; change to the equity method ...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.5ECh. 20 - FASB codification research LO202 Access the FASB...Ch. 20 - Change in principle; change in inventory cost...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory methods; FIFO method to the...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory methods; FIFO method to the...Ch. 20 - Change in depreciation methods LO203 For...Ch. 20 - Change in depreciation methods LO203 The Canliss...Ch. 20 - Book royalties LO204 Dreighton Engineering Group...Ch. 20 - Loss contingency LO204 The Commonwealth of...Ch. 20 - Warranty expense LO204 Woodmier Lawn Products...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.15ECh. 20 - Accounting change LO204 The Peridot Company...Ch. 20 - Change in estimate; useful life and residual value...Ch. 20 - Classifying accounting changes LO201 through...Ch. 20 - Error correction; inventory error LO206 During...Ch. 20 - Error corrections; investment LO206 Required: 1....Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.21ECh. 20 - Prob. 20.22ECh. 20 - Prob. 20.23ECh. 20 - Inventory errors LO206 Indicate with the...Ch. 20 - Classifying accounting changes and errors LO201...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory costing methods; comparative...Ch. 20 - P 20-2 Change in principle; change in method of...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory costing methods; comparative...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory methods LO202 The Rockwell...Ch. 20 - Change in inventory methods LO202 Fantasy...Ch. 20 - Change in principle; change in depreciation...Ch. 20 - Depletion; change in estimate LO204 In 2018, the...Ch. 20 - Accounting changes; six situations LO201, LO203,...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.9PCh. 20 - Inventory errors LO206 You have been hired as the...Ch. 20 - Error correction; change in depreciation method ...Ch. 20 - Accounting changes and error correction; seven...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.13PCh. 20 - Prob. 20.14PCh. 20 - Prob. 20.15PCh. 20 - Prob. 20.16PCh. 20 - Prob. 20.17PCh. 20 - Integrating Case 201 Change to dollar-value LIFO ...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.2BYPCh. 20 - Prob. 20.3BYPCh. 20 - Analysis Case 204 Change in inventory methods;...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.5BYPCh. 20 - Prob. 20.6BYPCh. 20 - Analysis Case 208 Various changes LO201 through...Ch. 20 - Analysis Case 209 Various changes LO201 through...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.10BYPCh. 20 - Prob. 20.11BYPCh. 20 - Prob. 20.12BYPCh. 20 - Prob. 1CCTC
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- Exercise 5-16 (Algo) Deferred annuities [LO5-8] President Company purchased merchandise from Captain Corporation on September 30, 2024. Payment was made in the form of a noninterest-bearing note requiring President to make six annual payments of $5,200 on each September 30, beginning on September 30, 2027. Required: Calculate the amount at which President should record the note payable and corresponding purchase on September 30, 2024, assuming that an interest rate of 11% properly reflects the time value of money in this situation. Note: Use tables, Excel, or a financial calculator. Round your final answers to nearest whole dollar amount. Round your intermediate calculations to the nearest whole dollar. (FV of $1, PV of $1, FVA of $1, PVA of $1, FVAD of $1 and PVAD of $1) Amount recorded:arrow_forwardEB9. 12.4 Airplanes Unlimited purchases airplane parts from a supplier on March 19 at a quantity of 4,800 parts at $12.50 per part. Terms of the purchase are 3/10, n/30. Airplanes pays one-third of the amount due in cash on March 30 but cannot pay the remaining balance due. The supplier renegotiates the terms on April 18 and allows Airplanes to convert its purchase payment into a short-term note, with an annual interest rate of 9%, payable in six months.Show the entries for the initial purchase, the partial payment, and the conversion. EB10. 12.4 Use information from EB9. Compute the interest expense due when Airplanes Unlimited honors the note. Show the journal entry to recognize payment of the short-term note on October 18arrow_forwardIA 9. Problem Solving. A promissory note which is dated October 1, 20A was received from a client for service delivered by the ML Company for P450,500. Its term is 90 days and carries with it an 12% interest. On November 15, 20A, due to financial difficulty, ML company have the client’s promissory note discounted to a C19 Financing even at 18% discount. Pertaining to this transaction alone, compute the net amount of increase in profit assuming the bank was paid by its client on the said due date. Although we assume 360 days a year, use the actual number of days of each month mentioned. Round off final answer to the nearest peso.arrow_forward
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