a
Introduction: When an affiliate of the issuer later acquires bonds from an unrelated party, the bonds are retired at the time of purchase. The bonds are not held outside the consolidated entity once another company within the consolidated entity purchases them, it must be treated as repurchase by the debtor. The acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company within affiliated entities is referred to as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
When constructive retirement occurs the consolidated income statement reports gain or loss based on the difference between carrying value and purchase price paid by the affiliate to acquire it. And it is not reported in the consolidated balance sheet either as bond payable or as an investment because the bonds are no longer outstanding.
The worksheet consolidation entries as of December 31, 20X4, to complete consolidated balance sheet worksheet assuming S earned $74,476 and paid $10,000 in dividends during the year.
b
Introduction: When an affiliate of the issuer later acquires bonds from an unrelated party, the bonds are retired at the time of purchase. The bonds are not held outside the consolidated entity once another company within the consolidated entity purchases them, it must be treated as repurchase by the debtor. The acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company within affiliated entities is referred to as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
When constructive retirement occurs the consolidated income statement reports gain or loss based on the difference between carrying value and purchase price paid by the affiliate to acquire it. And it is not reported in the consolidated balance sheet either as bond payable or as an investment because the bonds are no longer outstanding.
The preparation of consolidation worksheet for 20X4
c
Introduction: When an affiliate of the issuer later acquires bonds from an unrelated party, the bonds are retired at the time of purchase. The bonds are not held outside the consolidated entity once another company within the consolidated entity purchases them, it must be treated as repurchase by the debtor. The acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company within affiliated entities is referred to as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
When constructive retirement occurs the consolidated income statement reports gain or loss based on the difference between carrying value and purchase price paid by the affiliate to acquire it. And it is not reported in the consolidated balance sheet either as bond payable or as an investment because the bonds are no longer outstanding.
The preparation of consolidation worksheet for 20X4
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Advanced Financial Accounting
- Porter Corporation owns all 30,000 shares of the common stock of Street, Inc. Porter has 65,000 shares of its own common stock outstanding. During the current year, Porter earns net income (without any consideration of its investment in Street) of $239,000 while Street reports $191,000. Annual amortization of $14,000 is recognized each year on the consolidation worksheet based on acquisition-date fair-value allocations. Both companies have convertible bonds outstanding. During the current year, bond-related interest expense (net of taxes) is $51,000 for Porter and $43,000 for Street. Porter’s bonds can be converted into 8,000 shares of common stock; Street’s bonds can be converted into 10,000 shares. Porter owns none of these bonds. What are the earnings per share amounts that Porter should report in its current year consolidated income statement? (Round your answers to 2 decimal places.) Basic and dilutedarrow_forwardE 1-5 Journal entries to record an acquisition with direct costs and fair value/book value differences On January 1, Pop Corporation pays $400,000 cash and also issues 36,000 shares of $10 par common stock with a market value of $660,000 for all the outstanding common shares of Son Corporation. In addition, Pop pays $60,000 for registering and issuing the 36,000 shares and $140,000 for the other direct costs of the business combination, in which Son Corporation is dissolved. Summary balance sheet information for the companies immediately before the merger is as follows (in thousands): Pop Book Value Son Book Value Son Fair Value Cash $ 700 $ 80 $ 80 Inventories 240 160 200 Other current assets 60 40 40 Plant assets—net 520 360 560 Total assets $1,520 $640 $880 Current liabilities $ 320 $ 60 $ 60 Other liabilities 160 100 80 Common stock, $10 par 840 400…arrow_forwardPorter Corporation owns all 30,000 shares of the common stock of Street, Inc. Porter has 60,000 shares of its own common stock outstanding. During the current year, Porter earns net income (without any consideration of its investment in Street) of $213,000 while Street reports $193,000. Annual amortization of $10,000 is recognized each year on the consolidation worksheet based on acquisition-date fair-value allocations. Both companies have convertible bonds outstanding. During the current year, bond-related interest expense (net of taxes) is $53,000 for Porter and $45,000 for Street. Porter’s bonds can be converted into 7,000 shares of common stock; Street’s bonds can be converted into 10,000 shares. Porter owns none of these bonds. What are the earnings per share amounts that Porter should report in its current year consolidated income statement? Compute diluted EPS only.arrow_forward
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- Pizza Corporation acquired 80 percent ownership of Slice Products Company on January 1, 20X1, for $148,000. On that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $37,000, and Slice reported retained earnings of $45,000 and had $93,000 of common stock outstanding. Pizza has used the equity method in accounting for its investment in Slice. Trial balance data for the two companies on December 31, 20X5, are as follows: PizzaCorporation SliceProducts Company Item Debit Credit Debit Credit Cash & Receivables $ 86,000 $ 80,000 Inventory 270,000 94,000 Land 83,000 83,000 Buildings & Equipment 501,000 154,000 Investment in Slice Products Company 176,400 Cost of Goods Sold 115,000 45,000 Depreciation Expense 25,000 15,000 Inventory Losses 15,000 6,000 Dividends Declared 45,000…arrow_forwardPizza Corporation acquired 80 percent ownership of Slice Products Company on January 1, 20X1, for $148,000. On that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $37,000, and Slice reported retained earnings of $45,000 and had $93,000 of common stock outstanding. Pizza has used the equity method in accounting for its investment in Slice. Trial balance data for the two companies on December 31, 20X5, are as follows: PizzaCorporation SliceProducts Company Item Debit Credit Debit Credit Cash & Receivables $ 86,000 $ 80,000 Inventory 270,000 94,000 Land 83,000 83,000 Buildings & Equipment 501,000 154,000 Investment in Slice Products Company 176,400 Cost of Goods Sold 115,000 45,000 Depreciation Expense 25,000 15,000 Inventory Losses 15,000 6,000 Dividends Declared 45,000…arrow_forwardPizza Corporation acquired 80 percent ownership of Slice Products Company on January 1, 20X1, for $148,000. On that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $37,000, and Slice reported retained earnings of $45,000 and had $93,000 of common stock outstanding. Pizza has used the equity method in accounting for its investment in Slice. Trial balance data for the two companies on December 31, 20X5, are as follows: PizzaCorporation SliceProducts Company Item Debit Credit Debit Credit Cash & Receivables $ 86,000 $ 80,000 Inventory 270,000 94,000 Land 83,000 83,000 Buildings & Equipment 501,000 154,000 Investment in Slice Products Company 176,400 Cost of Goods Sold 115,000 45,000 Depreciation Expense 25,000 15,000 Inventory Losses 15,000 6,000 Dividends Declared 45,000…arrow_forward
- Pizza Corporation acquired 80 percent ownership of Slice Products Company on January 1, 20X1, for $148,000. On that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $37,000, and Slice reported retained earnings of $45,000 and had $93,000 of common stock outstanding. Pizza has used the equity method in accounting for its investment in Slice. Trial balance data for the two companies on December 31, 20X5, are as follows: PizzaCorporation SliceProducts Company Item Debit Credit Debit Credit Cash & Receivables $ 86,000 $ 80,000 Inventory 270,000 94,000 Land 83,000 83,000 Buildings & Equipment 501,000 154,000 Investment in Slice Products Company 176,400 Cost of Goods Sold 115,000 45,000 Depreciation Expense 25,000 15,000 Inventory Losses 15,000 6,000 Dividends Declared 45,000…arrow_forwardPizza Corporation acquired 80 percent ownership of Slice Products Company on January 1, 20X1, for $148,000. On that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $37,000, and Slice reported retained earnings of $45,000 and had $93,000 of common stock outstanding. Pizza has used the equity method in accounting for its investment in Slice. Trial balance data for the two companies on December 31, 20X5, are as follows: PizzaCorporation SliceProducts Company Item Debit Credit Debit Credit Cash & Receivables $ 86,000 $ 80,000 Inventory 270,000 94,000 Land 83,000 83,000 Buildings & Equipment 501,000 154,000 Investment in Slice Products Company 176,400 Cost of Goods Sold 115,000 45,000 Depreciation Expense 25,000 15,000 Inventory Losses 15,000 6,000 Dividends Declared 45,000…arrow_forwardPizza Corporation acquired 80 percent ownership of Slice Products Company on January 1, 20X1, for $148,000. On that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $37,000, and Slice reported retained earnings of $45,000 and had $93,000 of common stock outstanding. Pizza has used the equity method in accounting for its investment in Slice. Trial balance data for the two companies on December 31, 20X5, are as follows: PizzaCorporation SliceProducts Company Item Debit Credit Debit Credit Cash & Receivables $ 86,000 $ 80,000 Inventory 270,000 94,000 Land 83,000 83,000 Buildings & Equipment 501,000 154,000 Investment in Slice Products Company 176,400 Cost of Goods Sold 115,000 45,000 Depreciation Expense 25,000 15,000 Inventory Losses 15,000 6,000 Dividends Declared 45,000…arrow_forward
- Financial Reporting, Financial Statement Analysis...FinanceISBN:9781285190907Author:James M. Wahlen, Stephen P. Baginski, Mark BradshawPublisher:Cengage Learning