Accounting: What the Numbers Mean
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781259535314
Author: David Marshall, Wayne William McManus, Daniel Viele
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Textbook Question
Chapter 5, Problem 5.37C
Case 5.37
LO 5, 7, 8
Focus company-
Required:
Review the note disclosures provided in your focus company’s annual report and discuss what you’ve learned about how your company’s accounts receivable and inventory are accounted for and presented.
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PROBLEM 3
You were engaged to audit the financial statements of Goblin Corporation as of and for the year ended December 31, 2018.
Information directly obtained from your client's working trial balance are as follows:
Accounts receivable
950,000
Inventory, January 1
Net purchases
Accounts payable
544,500
2,450,000
430,000
Sales
3,940,000
Goblin conducted an inventory count on its warehouse on December 31, 2018 and determined its inventory balance to be P365,000.
Based from your audit procedures, you were able to ascertain the following:
Inventory costing P55,000 (sold for P90,000) were shipped on December 27, 2018 with freight term FOB Destination. The sale
was recorded upon shipment.
Goods costing P12,000 were sold for P18,000 on December 30, 2018. The term is FOB Destination. The sale was recorded on
January 3, 2019 when the goods were received by the customer.
Goods costing P8,500 were purchased on December 28, 2018; term is FOB Shipping Point. The purchase was recorded upon
receipt…
Question 14
Revenue and accounts receivable in a company that sells product should be recorded when:
only when items have been paid for
The customer's order is received
all supporting documentation of shipping is in complete and in order
All of the answers provided would result in revenue recognition and accounts receivable being recorded.
!
Required information
Problem 6-6B Record transactions using a perpetual system, prepare a partial income statement, and
adjust for the lower of cost and net realizable value(LO6-2, 6-3, 6-4, 6-5, 6-6)
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
At the beginning of November, Yoshi Inc.'s inventory consists of 63 units with a cost per unit of $94. The following
transactions occur during the month of November.
November
November
2 Purchase 100 units of inventory on account from Toad Inc. for $100 per unit, terms 3/10, n/30.
3 Pay cash for freight charges related to the November 2 purchase, $300.
9 Return 25 defective units from the November 2 purchase and receive credit.
November
November 11 Pay Toad Inc. in full.
November 16 Sell 100 units of inventory to customers on account, $12,700. [Hint: The cost of units sold from
the November 2 purchase includes $100 unit cost plus $4 per unit for freight less $3 per unit for
the purchase discount, or $101 per unit.]…
Chapter 5 Solutions
Accounting: What the Numbers Mean
Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.1MECh. 5 - Prob. 5.2MECh. 5 - Mini-Exercise 5.3 LO 5 Accounts receivable, bad...Ch. 5 - Mini-Exercise 5.4 LO 5 Bad debts...Ch. 5 - Mini-Exercise 5.5 LO 7, 8 Cost flow...Ch. 5 - Mini-Exercise 5.6 LO 7, 8 Cost flow...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.7ECh. 5 - Prob. 5.8ECh. 5 - Prob. 5.9ECh. 5 - Prob. 5.10E
Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.11 LO 5 Bad debts analysis-Allowance,...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.12 LO 5 Bad debts analysis-Allowance...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.13 LO 5 Cash discounts-ROI Annual...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.14ECh. 5 - Exercise 5.15 LO 6 Notes receivable-interest...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.16 LO 6 Notes receivable-interest...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.17 LO 7, 8 LIFO versus FIFO-matching...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.18ECh. 5 - Prob. 5.19ECh. 5 - Prob. 5.20ECh. 5 - Exercise 5.21 LO 5, 6, 8 Transaction...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.22 LO 5. 8, 10 Transaction...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.23 LO 5, 6, 7 Transaction...Ch. 5 - Exercise 5.24 LO 7, 8, 10 Transaction...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.25PCh. 5 - Prob. 5.26PCh. 5 - Problem 5.27 LO 5 Bad debts analysis-Allowance...Ch. 5 - Problem 5.28 LO 5 Bad debts analysis-Allowance...Ch. 5 - Problem 5.29 LO 5 Analysis of accounts receivable...Ch. 5 - Problem 5.30 LO 5 Analysis of accounts receivable...Ch. 5 - Problem 5.31 LO 7, 8 Cost flow assumptions-FIFO...Ch. 5 - Problem 5.32 LO 7, 8 Cost flow assumptions-FIFO,...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.33PCh. 5 - Prob. 5.34PCh. 5 - Problem 5.35 LO 7 Effects of inventory errors If...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.36PCh. 5 - Case 5.37 LO 5, 7, 8 Focus company-accounts...Ch. 5 - Case 5.38
LO 5, 7
Comparative analysis of current...
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- Purchase-related transactions using periodic inventory system Selected transactions for Betz Company during July of the current year are listed in Problem 5-1 A. Instructions Journalize the entries to record the transactions of Betz Company for July using the periodic inventory system.arrow_forwardAppendix Sales-related and purchase-related transactions using periodic inventory system Selected transactions for Babcock Company during November of the current year are listed in Problem 5-3A. Instructions Journalize the entries to record the transactions of Babcock Company for November using the periodic inventory system.arrow_forward( Appendix 6A) Recording Purchase and Sales Transactions Refer to the information for Raymond Company in Brief Exercise 6-34 and assume that the company uses the periodic inventory system. Required: Prepare the journal entries to record these transactions on the books of Raymond Company.arrow_forward
- Our narrative and DFDs are created assuming that accounts payable result from the purchase of inventory using a perpetual inventory system. However, inventory is not the only item that a company might purchase. For each of the following situations, show the journal entry (in debit/credit journal entry format with no dollar amounts) that would result when the accounts payable was created. Make and state any assumptions you think are necessary. Situations: 1. Merchandise is purchased, and a periodic inventory process is used. 2. Merchandise is purchased, and a perpetual inventory process is used. 3. Office supplies are purchased. 4. Plant assets are purchased. 5. Legal services are purchased.arrow_forwardQuestion 4 For each of the following records, indicate the appropriate related file structure: master file,transaction file, reference file, or archive file customer ledgers purchase orders list of authorized vendors records related to prior pay periods vendor ledgers hours each employee has worked during the current pay period tax tables sales orders that have been processed and recordedarrow_forwardQuestion 28 The sum of customers' unpaid balances that is compared to the general ledger comes from: the total of sales invoices a total of shipping orders the sales journal the accounts receivable trial balancearrow_forward
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Chapter 6 Merchandise Inventory; Author: Vicki Stewart;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnrcQLD2yKU;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Accounting for Merchandising Operations Recording Purchases of Merchandise; Author: Socrat Ghadban;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQp5UoYpG20;License: Standard Youtube License