Reporting Goods in Transit and Consignment Inventory
Second Chance Clothing (SCC) obtains goods on consignment and through purchase and sells them to others. The following events occurred close to SCC’s October 31 year-end.
______ a. On November 2, SCC received goods on consignment from Apparel Corp.
______ b. On October 31, SCC received goods on consignment from Apparel Corp.
______ c. Goods in transit to SCC were shipped by Shoe, Inc., on October 31, FOB shipping point.
______ d. Goods in transit to SCC were shipped by Shoe, Inc., on October 31, FOB destination.
Required:
Indicate (Yes or No) whether SCC should include each item in its inventory balance at October 31.
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 7 Solutions
Access Card To Accompany Financial Accounting Niagara County Community College Acc 116 2-semester Access Phillips
- Company accepts goods on consignment from R Company and also purchases goods from S Company during the current month. E Company plans to sell the merchandise to customers during the following month. In each of these independent situations, who owns the merchandise at the end of the current month and should therefore include it in their companys ending inventory? Choose E, R, or S. A. Goods ordered from R, delivered and displayed on Es showroom floor at the end of the current month. B. Goods ordered from S, in transit, with shipping terms FOB destination. C. Goods ordered from R, in transit, with no stated shipping terms. D. Goods ordered from S, delivered and displayed on Es showroom floor at the end of the current month, with shipping terms FOB destination. E. Goods ordered from S, in transit, with shipping terms FOB shipping point.arrow_forwardADJUSTMENT FOR MERCHANDISE INVENTORY USING T ACCOUNTS: PERIODIC INVENTORY SYSTEM Sandra Owens owns a business called Sandras Sporting Goods. Her beginning inventory as of January 1, 20--, was 33,000, and her ending inventory as of December 31, 20--, was S36,000. Set up T accounts for Merchandise Inventory and Income Summary and perform the year-end adjustment for Merchandise Inventory.arrow_forwardInventory by three cost flow methods Details regarding the inventory of appliances on January 1, 20Y7, purchases invoices during the year, and the inventory count on December 31. 2O’7. of Amsterdam Appliances are summarized as follows: Instructions Discuss which method (FIFO or LIFO) would be preferred for income tax purposes in periods of (a) rising prices and (b) declining prices.arrow_forward
- ADJUSTMENT FOR MERCHANDISE INVENTORY USING T ACCOUNTS: PERIODIC INVENTORY SYSTEM Matt Henry owns a business called Henrys Sporting Goods. His beginning inventory as of January 1, 20--, was 45,000, and his ending inventory as of December 31, 20--, was 57,000. Set up T accounts for Merchandise Inventory and Income Summary and perform the year-end adjustment for Merchandise Inventory.arrow_forwardInventory by three cost flow methods Details regarding the inventory of appliances on January 1, 20Y7, purchases invoices during the year, and the inventory count on December 31. 2O’7. of Amsterdam Appliances are summarized as follows: Instructions Determine the Cost of the inventory on December 31, 20Y7, by the last-in. first-out method, following the procedures indicated in (1).arrow_forwardGoods in Transit Gravais Company made two purchases on December 29, 2019. One purchase for 3,000 was shipped FOB destination, and the second for 4,000 was shipped FOB shipping point. Neither purchase had been received nor paid for on December 31, 2019. Required: Which of these purchases, if either, does Gravais include in inventory on December 31, 2019? What is the cost?arrow_forward
- Inventory by three cost flow methods Details regarding the inventory of appliances on January 1, 20Y7, purchases invoices during the year, and the inventory count on December 31. 2O’7. of Amsterdam Appliances are summarized as follows: Instructions Determine the cost of the inventory on December 31, 20Y7, h the average cost method, using the columnar headings indicated in (1).arrow_forwardPurchase-related transactions using perpetual inventory system The following selected transactions were completed by Niles Co. during March of the current year: Instructions Journalize the entries to record the transactions of Niles Co. for March.arrow_forward( Appendices 6A and 6B) Inventory Costing Methods Edwards Company began operations in February 2019. Edwards accounting records provide the following data for the remainder of 2019 for one of the items the company sells: Â Edwards uses a periodic inventory system. All purchases and sales were for cash. Required: 1. Compute cost of goods sold and the cost of ending inventory using FIFO. 2. Compute cost of goods sold and the cost of ending inventory using LIFO. 3. Compute cost of goods sold and the cost of ending inventory using the average cost method. ( Note: Use four decimal places for per-unit calculations and round all other numbers to the nearest dollar.) 4. Prepare the journal entries to record these transactions assuming Edwards chooses to use the FIFO method. 5. CONCEPTUAL CONNECTION Which method would result in the lowest amount paid for taxes? 6. CONCEPTUAL CONNECTION Refer to Problem 6-67B and compare your results. What are the differences? Be sure to explain why the differences occurred.arrow_forward
- Inventory by three cost flow methods Details regarding the inventory of appliances on January 1, 20Y7, purchases invoices during the year, and the inventory count on December 31. 20Y7. of Amsterdam Appliances are summarized as follows: Instructions Determine the cost of the inventory on December 31, 2O7, by the first-in, first-out method. Present data in columnar form. using the following headings: If the inventory of a particular model comprises one entire purchase plus a portion of another purchase acquired at a different unit cost, use a separate line for each purchase.arrow_forwardFIFO perpetual inventory The beginning inventory at Dunne Co. and data on purchases and sales for a three-month period ending June 30 are as follows: Instructions 1. Record the inventory, purchases, and cost of goods sold data in a perpetual inventory record similar to the one illustrated in Exhibit 3, using the first-in, first-out method. 2. Determine the total sales and the total cost of goods sold for the period. Journalize the entries in the sales and cost of goods sold accounts. Assume that all sales were on account. 3. Determine the gross profit from sales for the period. 4. Determine the ending inventory cost on June 30. 5. Based upon the preceding data, would you expect the ending inventory using the last-in, first-out method to be higher or lower?arrow_forwardJOURNAL ENTRIESPERIODIC INVENTORY Amy Douglas owns a business called Douglas Distributors. The following transactions took place during January of the current year. Journalize the transactions in a general journal using the periodic inventory method. Jan. 5 Purchased merchandise on account from Elite Warehouse, 4,100. 8 Paid freight charge on merchandise purchased, 300. 12 Sold merchandise on account to Memories Unlimited, 5,200. 15 Received a credit memo from Elite Warehouse for merchandise returned, 700. 22 Issued a credit memo to Memories Unlimited for merchandise returned, 400.arrow_forward
- Principles of Accounting Volume 1AccountingISBN:9781947172685Author:OpenStaxPublisher:OpenStax CollegeIntermediate Accounting: Reporting And AnalysisAccountingISBN:9781337788281Author:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald PagachPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege Accounting, Chapters 1-27 (New in Account...AccountingISBN:9781305666160Author:James A. Heintz, Robert W. ParryPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Financial And Managerial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337902663Author:WARREN, Carl S.Publisher:Cengage Learning,Financial Accounting: The Impact on Decision Make...AccountingISBN:9781305654174Author:Gary A. Porter, Curtis L. NortonPublisher:Cengage LearningCornerstones of Financial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337690881Author:Jay Rich, Jeff JonesPublisher:Cengage Learning