1.
Single-step income statement format in which a single subtotal of all revenue items are listed in one column and a single subtotal of all expense items including cost of goods sold are listed in another column. Thus, the subtotal of all expense items is deducted from the subtotal of all revenue items to arrive at the net income at the bottom of the statement.
To Prepare: The income statement of Company K for the year ended June 30, 2016.
2.
To Prepare: The
3.
To Prepare: The
4.
Closing entries: This refers to the
To Record: The closing entries of Company K.
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Financial & Managerial Accounting
- Selected accounts and related amounts for Kanpur Co. for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2016, are presented in Problem 6-5B. Instructions 1. Prepare a single-step income statement in the format shown in Exhibit 11. 2. Prepare a statement of owners equity. 3. Prepare an account form of balance sheet, assuming that the current portion of the note payable is 7,000. 4. Prepare closing entries as of June 30, 2016.arrow_forwardThe following selected accounts and their current balances appear in the ledger of Clairemont Co. for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2019: Instructions 1. Prepare a multiple-step income statement. 2. Prepare a statement of owners equity. 3. Prepare a balance sheet, assuming that the current portion of the note payable is 50,000. 4. Briefly explain how multiple-step and single-step income statements differ.arrow_forwardSelected accounts and related amounts for Clairemont Co. for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2016, are presented in Problem 6-5A. Instructions 1. Prepare a single-step income statement in the format shown in Exhibit 11. 2. Prepare a statement of owners equity. 3. Prepare an account form of balance sheet, assuming that the current portion of the note payable is 50,000. 4. Prepare closing entries as of May 31, 2016.arrow_forward
- UNCOLLECTIBLE ACCOUNTSALLOWANCE METHOD Lewis Warehouse used the allowance method to record the following transactions, adjusting entries, and closing entries during the year ended December 31, 20--: Selected accounts and beginning balances on January 1, 20--, are as follows: REQUIRED 1. Open the three selected general ledger accounts. 2. Enter the transactions and the adjusting and closing entries in a general journal (page 6). After each entry, post to the appropriate selected accounts. 3. Determine the net realizable value as of December 31, 20--.arrow_forward2. Journalize the entries to record the transactions, and post to the eight selected accounts. Assume that the closing entry for revenues and expenses has been made and post net income of $1,196,500 to the retained earnings account. Refer to the Chart of Accounts for exact wording of account titles. When required, round your answers to the nearest dollar. PAGE 10 JOURNAL ACCOUNTING EQUATION DATE DESCRIPTION POST. REF. DEBIT CREDIT ASSETS LIABILITIES EQUITY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14…arrow_forwardUse the May 31 fiscal year-end information from the following ledger accounts (assume that all accounts have normal balances). Retained Earnings Date May 31 Dividends Date May 31 Services Revenue Date May 31 Depreciation Expense Date May 31 Required A 03 0% 3% 3% View transaction liet G2 Required B Transaction 2 Debit B Debit Record entry Debit Note: Enter debits before credits. Debit Journal entry worksheet Complete this questions by entering your answers in the tabs below. Prepare closing journal entries from the above ledger accounts. Account Number 318 Credit Balance Date 81,000 May 31 Number 319 Insurance Expense Balance 47.000 Account Credit Record the entry to close experise accounts. General Ledger Clear entry May 31 Account Number 403 Rent Expense Balance Date 142, 722 May 31 Income Summary Account Number 603 Credit Balance 21,000 Salarics Expense General Journal Date Debit (a) Prepare closing journal entries from the above ledger accounts. (b) Post the entries from…arrow_forward
- (c) What is the balance of accounts receivable on it December 31 balance sheet? Estimating Uncollectible Accounts and Reporting Accounts ReceivableLaFond Company analyzes its accounts receivable at December 31, and arrives at the age categories below along with the percentages that are estimated as uncollectible. Age Group Accounts Receivable Estimated Loss % 0-30 days past due $ 180,000 1% 31-60 days past due 40,000 2 61-120 days past due 22,000 5 121-180 12,000 10 Over 180 days past due 8,000 25 Total accounts receivable $ 262,000arrow_forward(a) On March 1, journalize the entry to record the write-off, assuming that the direct write-off method is used. Refer to the Chart of Accounts for exact wording of account titles.PAGE 1JOURNALACCOUNTING EQUATIONDATE DESCRIPTION POST. REF. DEBIT CREDIT ASSETS LIABILITIES EQUITY12(b) On March 1, journalize the entry to record the write-off, assuming that the allowance method is used. Refer to the Chart of Accounts for exact wording of account titles.PAGE 1JOURNALACCOUNTING EQUATIONDATE DESCRIPTION POST. REF. DEBIT CREDIT ASSETS LIABILITIES EQUITY12arrow_forwardQuestion 4. This question can be copied directly into your Word document. Your typing will be minimal. Part a. Complete the form below to age the accounts receivable. Provide the necessary end-of-year journal entry. You need to fill in the “Totals” row, the “Dollar amount” row, and prepare the journal entry. Aging of accounts receivable (also called the balance sheet method) Age 1-30 days 31-60 days 61-90 days Over 90 days Totals Smith 60,000 Jones 20,000 10,000 White 10,000 Brown 40,000 Green 30,000 LeBlanc 50,000 Pelletier 10,000 Totals 230,000 Estimated uncollectible 1% 2% 10% 50% Dollar amount The Allowance for doubtful accounts currently has a credit balance of $800. Journal entry to adjust for bad debts: Dec. 31…arrow_forward
- company’s accounting records provide the following information concerning certain account balances and changes in the account balances during the current year. Transaction information is missing from each of the below. Prepare the journal entry to record the information for each account. b. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts: Jan. 1 balance, $1,500; Dec. 31 balance, $2,200; adjusting entry increasing allowance on Dec. 31, $4,800. Record write-off uncollectible accounts receivable. c. Inventory of office supplies: Jan. 1 balance, $1,500; Dec. 31 balance, $1,350; office supplies expense for the year, $9,500. Record purchase of office supplies. d. Equipment: Jan. 1 balance, $20,500; Dec. 31 balance, $18,000; equipment costing $8,000 was sold during the year. Record purchase of equipment. e. Accounts Payable: Jan. 1 balance $9,000; Dec. 31 balance, $11,500; purchases on - account for the year, $48,000. Record cash payments. Please dont provide solution in image thnxarrow_forwardCommon stock-$10 par value, 120,000 shares authorized, 50,000 shares issued and outstanding Paid-in capital in excess of par value, common stock Retained earnings Total stockholders' equity During 2020, the following transactions affected its stockholders' equity accounts. January 2 Purchased 5,000 shares of its own stock at $23 cash per share. January 5 Directors declared a $2 per share cash dividend payable on February 28 to the February 5 stockholders of record. February 28 Paid the dividend declared on January 5. July 6 Sold 1,900 of its treasury shares at $27 cash per share. August 22 Sold 3,100 of its treasury shares at $20 cash per share. September 5 Directors declared a $2 per share cash dividend payable on October 28 to the September 25 stockholders of record. October 28 Paid the dividend declared on September 5. December 31 Closed the $206,500 credit balance (from net income) in the Income Summary account to Retained Earnings. Requirement General Journal General Ledger View…arrow_forwardThe following selected transactions were taken from the records of Rustic Tables Company for the year ending December 31: June 8. Wrote off account of Kathy Quantel, $8,150. Aug. 14. Received $5,790 as partial payment on the $14,590 account of Rosalie Oakes. Wrote off the remaining balance as uncollectible. Oct. 16. Received the $8,150 from Kathy Quantel, whose account had been written off on June 8. Reinstated the account and recorded the cash receipt. Dec. 31. Wrote off the following accounts as uncollectible (record as one journal entry): Wade Dolan $2,360 Greg Gagne 1,470 Amber Kisko 5,620 Shannon Poole 3,260 Niki Spence 900 Dec. 31. If necessary, record the year-end adjusting entry for uncollectible accounts. If no entry is required, select "No entry" and leave the amount boxes blank. If an amount box does not require an entry, leave it blank. a. Journalize the transactions under the direct write-off method. June 8 Bad Debt Expense Accounts Receivable-Kathy Quantel Aug. 14 Cash…arrow_forward
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