Advertisement
Olkach

ACC 300 Week 3 Individual Assignment Part IV

Nov 23rd, 2014
163
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 3.78 KB | None | 0 0
  1.  
  2.  
  3. In the work ACC 300 Week 3 Individual Assignment Part IV you will find overview of the following tasks:
  4.  
  5.  
  6. 1. Assignments from the Readings. Prepare responses to the following assignments from the e-text, Fundamentals of Financial Accounting 1st ed., by Phillips, Libby, and Libby
  7.  
  8.  
  9. a.Chapter 3: Questions 3 and 4
  10.  
  11.  
  12. b.Chapter 3: Mini-exercise M3-2
  13.  
  14.  
  15. Prepare responses to the following assignments from the e-text, Fundamentals Financial Accounting Concepts 5th ed., by Edmonds, Edmonds, McNair, and Olds
  16.  
  17.  
  18. Chapter 1: Problem 1-30A (Part A only)
  19.  
  20.  
  21. 2. Define accrual accounting and contrast it with cash basis accounting.
  22.  
  23.  
  24. 3. What four conditions must normally be met for revenue to be recognized under accrual basis accounting?
  25.  
  26.  
  27. 4. M3-2. M3-2 Reporting Cash Basis versus Accrual Basis Income: LO1, LO2
  28.  
  29.  
  30. 5. 1-30A. L.O.3,5,8 PROBLEM 1-30A Interrelationships among Financial Statements
  31.  
  32. Business - Accounting
  33. ACC 422 All Week 3 Assignments - Individual WileyPlus assignment
  34.  
  35. Includes:
  36.  
  37. Week 3 summary
  38.  
  39. Week 3 Discussion questions 1, 2, 3, 4
  40.  
  41. Week 3 Learning team assignment
  42.  
  43. Week 3 Individual WileyPlus assignment as described below:
  44.  
  45. E9-1 (Lower-of-Cost-or-Market) The inventory of Oheto Company on December 31, 2011, consistsofthe following items.
  46. Part No. Quantity Cost per Unit Cost to Replace per Unit
  47. 110 600 $95 $100
  48. 111 1,000 60 52
  49. 112 500 80 76
  50. 113 200 170 180
  51. 120 400 205 208
  52. 121a 1,600 16 14
  53. 122 300 240 235
  54. aPart No. 121 is obsolete and has a realizable value of $0.50 each as scrap.
  55.  
  56. Instructions
  57. (a) Determine the inventory as of December 31, 2011, by the lower-of-cost-or-market method, applying
  58. this method directly to each item.
  59. (b) Determine the inventory by the lower-of-cost-or-market method, applying the method to the
  60. total of the inventory.
  61.  
  62. E9-12 (Gross Profit Method) Astaire Company uses the gross profit method to estimate  inventory for monthly reporting purposes. Presented below is information for the month of May.
  63. Inventory, May 1 $ 160,000
  64. Purchases (gross) 640,000
  65. Freight-in 30,000
  66. Sales 1,000,000
  67. Sales returns 70,000
  68. Purchase discounts 12,000
  69.  
  70. Instructions
  71. (a) Compute the estimated inventory at May 31, assuming that the gross profit is 25% of sales.
  72. (b) Compute the estimated inventory at May 31, assuming that the gross profit is 25% of cost.
  73.  
  74. E10-5 (Treatment of Various Costs) Allegro Supply Company, a newly formed corporation, incurred the following expenditures related to Land, to Buildings, and to Machinery and Equipment.
  75. Abstract company’s fee for title search $ 520
  76. Architect’s fees 3,170
  77. Cash paid for land and dilapidated building thereon 92,000
  78. Removal of old building $20,000
  79. Less: Salvage 5,500 14,500
  80. Interest on short-term loans during construction 7,400
  81. Excavation before construction for basement 19,000
  82. Machinery purchased (subject to 2% cash discount, which was not taken) 65,000
  83. Freight on machinery purchased 1,340
  84. Storage charges on machinery, necessitated by noncompletion of
  85. building when machinery was delivered 2,180
  86. New building constructed (building construction took 6 months from
  87. date of purchase of land and old building) 485,000
  88. Assessment by city for drainage project 1,600
  89. Hauling charges for delivery of machinery from storage to new building 620
  90. Installation of machinery 2,000
  91. Trees, shrubs, and ot
  92.  
  93. To download more course tutorials visit - https://bitly.com/12B3jTU
  94.  
  95. Spend all the time you can studying every day. The more you put in, the more you'll get out. Think of college as a full-time job and attend to your social life after your obligations have been met. Doing great in your classes will ensure that you make more money and have a better job.
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement