Answer:
1. Inventory account will be affected and assertions of accuracy and valuation will be violated.
2. Assets are overstated and assertion classification is violated.
3. Liability is understated and assertions of accuracy is violated.
4. No impact.
Explanation:
Assertions are certain claims of a business which a business must fulfill in order to make its financial statements reliable. A company has to record the expense when it is incurred in order to provide accuracy in valuation. In the given cases the assertions are violated which impact business accounts.
Answer:
2016: $300 million; 40%; $60 million
2017: $450 million; 60%; $90 million
Explanation:
Total costs:
= Costs incurred in 2016 + Costs incurred in 2017
= $240 + $360
= $600
In 2016:
Percent of total excepted costs:
= Costs incurred in 2016 ÷ Total costs
= $240 ÷ $600
= 0.4 or 40%
Revenue recognized:
= Percent of total excepted cost × Contract price
= 0.4 × $750 million
= $300 million
Income = Revenue recognized - Costs incurred in 2016
= $300 million - $240 million
= $60 million
In 2017:
Percent of total excepted costs:
= Costs incurred in 2017 ÷ Total costs
= $360 ÷ $600
= 0.6 or 60%
Revenue recognized:
= Percent of total excepted cost × Contract price
= 0.6 × $750 million
= $450 million
Income = Revenue recognized - Costs incurred in 2017
= $450 million - $360 million
= $90 million
Answer:
The answer to the question is B I51,753 bonds
Explanation:
The present price of the bond and the total amount to be raised of $170m were used in arriving at the number of bonds to be issued.
n 20
Coupon 6.60%
YTM 7.7%*1000=77
FV 1000
PV ($1,120.25)
The current price of the bond $1,120.25
Total amount to be raised $170,000,000
Number of bonds to be issued=total amount /bond price 151,752 approx...151753
Find attached spreadsheet with formulas so as to be able to follow through.
Answer:
The answer is: Obligation that has a distant due date exceeding company's operating cycle.
Explanation:
A current liability is a financial obligation due within one year (or one normal operation cycle).
So a financial obligation that has a due date that exceeds a company´s operating cycle should have been directly classified as a long term liability (or a non current liability) in the first place. It simply is not a current liability that is changed into a long term liability, it always was a long term liability.
The other options represent the steps necessary for turning a current liability into a long term liability.
- Intend to refinance the obligation on a long-term basis.
- Demonstrate the ability to complete the refinancing.
- Subsequently refinance the obligation on a long-term basis.