Dave M. Company issues 500 shares of $10 par value Common Stock and 100 shares of $40 par value Preferred Stock as a basket for a lump sum of $105,000. Total transaction costs paid to complete the sale was $5,000. Common Stock of the company was selling for $198 per share in the market that day and Preferred Stock was selling for $110 per share in the market that day.

Required:
a. Prepare a table showing how the sale price is allocated between the Common Stock and the Preferred Stock.
b. Prepare the journal entry to record the basket sale of the two stocks.

Answers

Answer 1

Answer:

a.

Allocation

Common Stock $94,500

Preferred Stock $10,500

b.

Journal Entry

Cash _____________________________$105,000  

Common stock _____________________ $5000

Paid-in capital in excess of par - Common _$89,500

Preferred stock _____________________$4,000

Paid-in capital in excess of par - Preferred _$6,500  

Explanation:

a.

First, we need to calculate the Market value of both stock using the foloowinf formula

Market value = Numbers of shares x Market value per share

Market value of common stock = 500 x $198 = $99,000

Market value of preferred stock = 100 x $110 = $11,000

Total value = $99,000 + $11,000 = $110,000

Now calculate the weight of each sock

Weight of common stock  $99,000 / $110,000 = 0.90

Weight of preferred stock = $11,000 / $110,000 = 0.10

Allocation of the sale price is as follow

Allocated sale price = Weight of Stock x Sale price

Allocated sale price of common stock = $105,000 x 0.90 = $94,500

Allocated sale price of common stock = $105,000 x 0.10 = $10,500

b.

Common Sock is recorded separately as par value and paid-in capital excess of par as follow

Common Stock ( Par Value ) = 500 x $10 = $5,000

Common Stock ( Excess of Par ) = $94,500 - $5,000 = $89,500

Preferred Stock ( Par Value ) = 100 x $40 = $4,000

Preferred Stock ( Excess of Par ) = $10,500 - $4,000 = $6,500


Related Questions

The following events apply to Montgomery Company for Year 1, its first year of operation: Received cash of $49,000 from the issue of common stock. Performed $68,000 of services on account. Incurred $10,500 of other operating expenses on account. Paid $41,000 cash for salaries expense. Collected $44,500 of accounts receivable. Paid a $5,000 dividend to the stockholders. Performed $11,500 of services for cash. Paid $7,500 of the accounts payable. Required a. Record the preceding transactions in general journal form. b. Post the entries to T-accounts and determine the ending balance in each account. c.

Answers

Answer:

Montgomery Company

a. Journal Entries

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Cash                              $49,000

Common stock                               $49,000

To record the issue of common stock for cash.

Accounts Receivable     $68,000

Service Revenue                            $68,000

To record the performance of services on account.

Operating Expense        $10,500

Accounts payable                       $10,500

To record operating expenses incurred on account.

Salaries Expense          $41,000

Cash                                            $41,000

To record the payment for salaries expense.

Cash                             $44,500

Accounts Receivable                  $44,500

To record cash collected on account.

Dividends                     $5,000

Cash                                              $5,000

To record the payment of dividend to stockholders.

Cash                           $11,500

Service Revenue                          $11,500

To record the performance of services for cash.

Accounts payable      $7,500

Cash                                                $7,500

To record the payment on account.

b. T-accounts

Cash Account

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Common stock             $49,000

Salaries expense                          $41,000

Accounts receivable      44,500

Dividends                                         5,000

Service revenue             11,500

Accounts payable                            7,500

Balance                                           51,500

Totals                        $105,000 $105,000

Common Stock

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Cash                                              $49,000

Accounts Receivable

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Service Revenue         $68,000

Cash                                               $44,500

Balance                                            23,500

Totals                             68,000     68,000

Service Revenue

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Accounts receivable                    $68,000

Cash                                                 11,500

Balance                        $79,500

Totals                             79,500    79,500

Accounts Payable

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Operating Expense                      $10,500

Cash                               $7,500

Balance                            3,000

Totals                           $10,500   $10,500

Operating Expense

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Accounts payable       $10,500

Salaries Expense

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Cash                            $41,000

Dividends

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Cash                             $5,000

c. Trial Balance as of December 31, Year 1:

Account Title                    Debit       Credit

Cash                               $51,500

Common stock                                $49,000

Accounts receivable      23,500

Service revenue                                79,500

Accounts payable                               3,000

Operating expense        10,500

Salaries expense            41,000

Dividends                         5,000

Totals                           $131,500  $131,500

Explanation:

a) Transactions:

Received cash of $49,000 from the issue of common stock.

Performed $68,000 of services on account.

Incurred $10,500 of other operating expenses on account.

Paid $41,000 cash for salaries expense.

Collected $44,500 of accounts receivable.

Paid a $5,000 dividend to the stockholders.

Performed $11,500 of services for cash.

Paid $7,500 of the accounts payable.

b) Journal entries record the transactions for the first time.  General ledger accounts are where the accounts are summarized.  Trial balance shows the list of the account balances extracted from the general ledger.

Consider two neighboring island countries called Euphoria and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per week that they can use to produce corn, jeans, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of corn or jeans that can be produced using 1 hour of labor.

Country Corn (Bushels per hour of labor) Jeans (Pairs per hour of labor)
Euphoria 4 16
Contente 6 12

Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of labor per week to produce jeans and 3 million hours per week to produce corn, while Euphoria uses 3 million hours of labor per week to produce jeans and 1 million hours per week to produce corn. Consequently, Euphoria produces 12 million pairs of jeans and 16 million bushels of corn, and Contente produces 6 million pairs of jeans and 36 million bushels of corn. Assume there are no other countries willing to trade goods, so, in the absence of trade between these two countries, each country consumes the amount of jeans and corn it produces.

Euphoria's opportunity cost of producing 1 bushel of corn is___________ pair of jeans, and Contente's opportunity cost of producing 1 bushel of corn is__________ pair of jeans. Therefore,___________ has a comparative advantage in the production of corn, and__________ has a comparative advantage in the production of jeans.

Answers

Answer:

4

2

Contente

Euphoria

Explanation:

Euphoria's opportunity cost of producing 1 bushel of corn is [tex]\frac{16}{4}[/tex] = 4 pair of jeans, and Contente's opportunity cost of producing 1 bushel of corn is [tex]\frac{12}{6}[/tex] = 2 pair of jeans. Therefore,  Contente has a comparative advantage in the production of corn, and Euphoria  has a comparative advantage in the production of jeans.

Taxable income terminology Taxable Income Terminology Match the terms relating to the basic terminology and concepts of personal finance on the left with the descriptions of the terms on the right. Read each description carefully and type the letter of the description in the Answer column next to the correct term These are not necessarily complete definitions, but there is only one possible answer for each term
Term Answer Description
A. To qualify for exclusion during this transaction, you must have owned and Gross income ▼ occupied for two of the five prior years
B. This term essentially includes all income subject to federal tax Active income Portfolio income
C. Using taxable income, it is based on tax tables or tax rate schedules Passive income
D. This term includes expenses that can only offset portfolio income.
E. This is used to offset passive income Investment expenses
F. This term includes income from self-employment Real estate or limited partnership expenses Capital gains
G. This item is taxed at different rates depending on the holding period Sale of a home A TH,
H. This is used to determine tax liability Taxable income
I. This term includes income gained from real estate and limited partnerships ▼ Tax liability C
J. This term refers to earnings and capital gains generated from investment holdings

Answers

Answer:

A. To qualify for exclusion during this transaction, you must have owned and occupied for two of the five prior years ⇒ Sale of a home.

B. This term essentially includes all income subject to federal tax ⇒ Gross Income.  

C. Using taxable income, it is based on tax tables or tax rate schedules ⇒ Tax liability.

D. This term includes expenses that can only offset portfolio income. ⇒ Investment expenses.

E. This is used to offset passive income Investment expenses. ⇒ Real estate or limited partnership expenses.

F. This term includes income from self-employment ⇒ Active Income.

G. This item is taxed at different rates depending on the holding period ⇒ Capital gains.

H. This is used to determine tax liability ⇒ Taxable income.

I. This term includes income gained from real estate and limited partnerships. ⇒ Passive income.

J. This term refers to earnings and capital gains generated from investment holdings. ⇒ Portfolio income.

Swifty Company showed the following balances at the end of its first year: Cash $3930 Prepaid insurance 6910 Accounts receivable 4990 Accounts payable 3960 Notes payable 5930 Owner’s Capital 2090 Owner’s Drawings 960 Revenues 32100 Expenses 24800 What did Swifty Company show as total credits on its trial balance? a. $44080 b. $49070 c. $45040 d. $9390

Answers

Answer:

$44,080

Explanation:

The total credit for swifty company can be calculated as follows

Account payable + notes payable + common stock + revenue

= 3960 + 5930 + 2090 + 32100

= 44,080

Hence the total credits is $44,080

Melissa Shallowford contributed a patent, accounts receivable, and $22,340 cash to a partnership. The patent had a book value of $8,650. However, the technology covered by the patent appeared to have significant market potential. Thus, the patent was appraised at $92,840. The accounts receivable control account was $34,300, with an allowance for doubtful accounts of $2,200. The partnership also assumed a $9,010 account payable owed to a Shallowford supplier.
Required:
On December 31, provide the journal entry for Shallowford's contribution to the partnership Rotor to the chart of accounts for the exact wordino of the account titles ONOW journals do not use ines for journal explanations. Every Ave on a journal page is used for debitor credil entries CNOW journals wol automatically indont a credit entry when a credit amount is entered.

Answers

Answer:

Date        General Journal                                    Debit          Credit

Dec. 31    Cash                                                       $22,340

               Patent                                                     $92,840

               Accounts receivable                             $34,300

                      Allowance for doubtful accounts                      $2,200

                      Accounts payable                                              $9,010  

                      Holly Shallowford's , Capital                              $138,270

               (To record capital brought in by Shallowford's)

Match each term with its definition.
A. Corporate Social Responsibility
B. Corporate governance
C. Ethics
D. The International Organization for Standardization
1. Businesses living and working together for the common good and valuing human dignity
2. Created a variety of standards that help organizations gain international acceptance of their practices and outcomes.
3. The oversight of a public corporation by its board of directors.
4. Bullying may not be illegal, but many companies have enacted policies prohibiting such incivility and abusive behavior in the workplace.

Answers

Answer:

Corporate governance - The oversight of a public corporation by its board of directors

Corporate Social Responsibility -  Businesses living and working together for the common good and valuing human dignity

Ethics - Bullying may not be illegal, but many companies have enacted policies prohibiting such incivility and abusive behavior in the workplace

The International Organization for Standardization - Created a variety of standards that help organizations gain international acceptance of their practices and outcomes.

Explanation:

Corporate Social Responsibility "is a management concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns in their business operations and interactions with their stakeholders"(UNIDO).

Corporate governance "is the system by which companies are directed and controlled. Boards of directors are responsible for the governance of their companies. The shareholders' role in governance is to appoint the directors and the auditors and to satisfy themselves that an appropriate governance structure is in place" (ICAEW).

Ethics basically refer to moral principles. These are principles enacted by companies to minimize unacceptable behavior in the workplace.

The International Organization for Standardization creates a variety of standards that help organizations gain international acceptance of their practices and outcomes.

Consider two neighboring island countries called Arcadia and Dolorium. They each have 4 million labor hours available per week that they can use to produce jeans, corn, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of jeans or corn that can be produced using 1 hour of labor.

Country Jeans (Pairs per hour of labor) Corn(Bushels per hour of labor)
Arcadia 5 10
Dolorium 4 16

Initially, suppose Arcadia uses 1 million hours of labor per month to produce corn and 3 million hours per month to produce jeans, while Dolorium uses 3 million hours of labor per month to produce corn and 1 million hours per month to produce jeans. Consequently, Arcadia produces 8 million bushels of corn and 48 million pairs of jeans, and Dolorium produces 15 million bushels of corn and 20 million pairs of jeans. Assume there are no other countries willing to trade goods, so, in the absence of trade between these two countries, each country consumes the amount of corn and jeans it produces.

Arcadia's opportunity cost of producing 1 pair of jeans is _____ of corn, and Dolorium's opportunity cost of producing 1 pair of jeans is _____ of corn. Therefore, ____ has a comparative advantage in the production of jeans, and ____ has a comparative advantage in the production of corn.

Answers

Answer:

Arcadia's opportunity cost of producing 1 pair of jeans is 2 bushels of corn, and Dolorium's opportunity cost of producing 1 pair of jeans is 4 bushels of corn. Therefore, Arcadia has a comparative advantage in the production of jeans, and Dolorium has a comparative advantage in the production of corn.

Explanation:

maximum production

                               jeans         corn

Arcadia                   20              40

Dolorium                 16              64

initial production

                               jeans         corn

Arcadia                   15                10

Dolorium                 4                48

Arcadia's opportunity costs:

jeans = 40 / 20 = 2 bushels of corn

corn = 20 / 40 = 0.5 pairs of jeans

Dolorium's opportunity costs:

jeans = 64 / 16 = 4 bushels of corn

corn = 16 / 64 = 0.25 pairs of jeans

Garcia Company issues 8.50%, 15-year bonds with a par value of $390,000 and semiannual interest payments. On the issue date, the annual market rate for these bonds is 12.50%, which implies a selling price of 79. The effective interest method is used to allocate interest expense. 1. Using the implied selling price of 79, what are the issuer's cash proceeds from issuance of these bonds.

Answers

Answer:

$308,100

Explanation:

Calculation for what are the issuer's cash proceeds from issuance of these bonds

Using this formulaIssuer's cash proceeds from issuance of bonds=Fave value*Implies a selling price percentage

Let plug in the formula

Issuer's cash proceeds from issuance of bonds=$390,000*79/100

Issuer's cash proceeds from issuance of bond=$308,100

Therefore the issuer's cash proceeds from issuance of these bonds will have be $308,100

Selected financial data regarding current assets and current liabilities for ACME Corporation and Wayne Enterprises, are as follows: ACME Wayne ($ in millions)Corporation Enterprises Current assets:Cash and cash equivalents $499 $285 Current investments 7 530 Net receivables 751 206 Inventory 10,586 8,609 Other current assets 1,344 255 Total current assets $13,187 $9,885 Current liabilities:Current debt $8,621 $4,451 Accounts payable 1,807 1,061 Other current liabilities 1,179 2,381 Total current liabilities $11,607 $7,893 Required:1-a. Calculate the current ratio for ACME Corporation and Wayne Enterprises. (Enter your answers in millions. For example, $5,500,000 should be entered as 5.5.)

Answers

Answer: See explanation

Explanation:

We should note that the current ratio is calculated as:

= Current assets / Current liabilities

Therefore, the current ratio for ACME Corporation will be:

= Current assets / Current liabilities

= $13,187 / $11,607

= 1.136

The current ratio for Wayne Enterprises will be:

= Current assets / Current liabilities

= $9,885 / $7,893

= 1.25

Think about the following products: cell phone, automobile, clothing, and social media site. Personally, how would you determine and assess the concept of value to the customer for each of these products? Which aspects, technical or social, have the most weight? Would you say that your analysis would be legitimate for others making the same decision?

Answers

Answer:

There are various aspects that would have the most weight.

Explanation:

Lucas Industries uses departmental overhead rates to allocate its manufacturing overhead to jobs. The company has two departments: Assembly and Sanding. The Assembly Department uses a departmental overhead rate of $50 per machine hour, while the Sanding Department uses a departmental overhead rate of $15 per direct labor hour. Job 603 used the following direct labor hours and machine hours in the two departments: Assembly Actual results Direct labor hours used Machine hours used The cost for direct labor is $30 per direct labor hour and the cost of the direct materials used by Job 603 is $1,400. How much manufacturing ovehead would be allocated to Job 603 using the departmental overhead rates?
A. $610
B. $330
C. $580
D. $740

Answers

Answer:

uush no entendí jajaja

Explanation:

que lastima

Mike Greenberg opened Cheyenne Window Washing Inc. on July 1, 2022. During July, the following transactions were completed.
July 1 Issued 9,800 shares of common stock for $9,800 cash.
1 Purchased used truck for $6,560, paying $1,640 cash and the balance on account.
3 Purchased cleaning supplies for $740 on account.
5 Paid $1,440 cash on a 1-year insurance policy effective July 1.
12 Billed customers $3,030 for cleaning services performed.
18 Paid $820 cash on amount owed on truck and $410 on amount owed on cleaning supplies.
20 Paid $1,640 cash for employee salaries.
21 Collected $1,310 cash from customers billed on July 12.
25 Billed customers $2,050 for cleaning services performed.
31 Paid $240 for maintenance of the truck during month.
31 Declared and paid $490 cash dividend.
Journalize the July transactions.
Post to the ledger accounts.
Prepare a trial balance at July 31.
Journalize the following adjustments. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
(1) Services performed but unbilled and uncollected at July 31 were $1,750.
(2) Depreciation on equipment for the month was $202.
(3) One-twelfth of the insurance expired.
(4) An inventory count shows $320 of cleaning supplies on hand at July 31.
(5) Accrued but unpaid employee salaries were $415.

Answers

Answer:

Cash (Dr.) $9.800

Common Stock (Cr.) $9,800

Truck (Dr.) $6,560

Cash (Cr.) $1,640

Accounts Payable -Truck (Cr.) $4,920

Cleaning Supplies (Dr.) $740

Accounts Payable (Cr.) $740

Prepaid Insurance (Dr.) $1,440

Cash (Cr.) $1,440

Accounts Receivable (Dr.) $3,030

Service Revenue (Dr.) $3,030

Accounts Payable - Truck (Dr.) $820

Accounts Payable - Supplies (Dr.) $410

Cash (Cr.) $1,230

Cash (Dr.) $1,310

Accounts Receivable (Cr.) $1,310

Maintenance Expense Truck (Dr.) $240

Cash (Cr.) $240

Dividend paid (Dr.) $490

Cash (Cr.) $490

Explanation:

1) Accounts Receivable (Dr.) $1,750

Service Revenue (Cr.) $1,750

2) Depreciation expense (Dr.) $202

Accumulated Depreciation (Cr.) $202

3) Insurance Expense (Dr.) $120

Prepaid Insurance (Cr.) $120

4) Ending Inventory (Dr.) $320

Cleaning Supplies (Cr.) $320

5) Salaries Expense (Dr.) $415

Salaries Payable (Cr.) $415

Decision making is often a biased and flawed process. This activity is important because a person who can identify and be aware of their biases may be able to make better decisions for themselves and may be able to diagnose flawed decisions that affect their workplace.The goal of this exercise is to test your knowledge of the nine fundamental decision-making biases.Availability BiasRepresentativeness BiasSunk-Cost BiasAnchoring and Adjustment BiasConfirmation BiasOverconfidence BiasHindsight BiasFraming BiasEscalation of Commitment BiasFirst, hover over each name and read the scenario. Next, click and drag each name into the appropriate area in the chart to correspond with the decision-making bias its scenario best represents.

Answers

Answer:

Availability Bias(Amber)

Representativeness Bias(Logan)

Sunk-Cost Bias(Katrina)

Anchoring and Adjustment Bias(Sue)

Confirmation Bias(Mike)

Overconfidence Bias(Bill)

Hindsight Bias(Kathy)

Framing Bias(Allison)

Escalation of Commitment Bias(Patrick)

Explanation:

Bias can as well be regarded as cognitive bias, it can be explained as tendency that comes in when making decisions or taking actions in ways that are illogical.It should be noted Decision making can often be biased as well as flawed process.

The fundamental decision making bias are been listed below as;

1)Availability Bias

2)Representativeness Bias

3)Sunk-Cost BiasAnchoring

3)Adjustment Bias

4)Confirmation Bias

5)Overconfidence Bias

6)Hindsight Bias

7)Framing Bias

8)Escalation of Commitment Bias

The Campbell Company is considering adding a robotic paint sprayer to its production line. The sprayer's base price is $820,000, and it would cost another $17,500 to install it. The machine falls into the MACRS 3-year class, and it would be sold after 3 years for $604,000. The MACRS rates for the first three years are 0.3333, 0.4445, and 0.1481. The machine would require an increase in net working capital (inventory) of $15,500. The sprayer would not change revenues, but it is expected to save the firm $338,000 per year in before-tax operating costs, mainly labor. Campbell's marginal tax rate is 25%. (Ignore the half-year convention for the straight-line method.) Cash outflows, if any, should be indicated by a minus sign. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to the nearest dollar.
a. What is the Year 0 net cash flow?
b. What are the net operating cash flows in Years 1, 2, 3?
c. What is the additional Year 3- cash flow (i.e. after tax salvage and the return of working capital)?
d. If the project's cost of capital is 12%, should the machine be purchased?

Answers

Answer:

a. What is the Year 0 net cash flow?

-$820,000 - $17,500 - $15,500 = -$853,000

b. What are the net operating cash flows in Years 1, 2, 3?

Operating cash flow year 1 = {[$338,000 - ($837,500 x 1/3)] x (1 - 25%)} + ($837,500 x 1/3) = $323,292

Operating cash flow year 2 = {[$338,000 - ($837,500 x 0.4445)] x (1 - 25%)} + ($837,500 x 0.4445) = $346,567

Operating cash flow year 3 = {[$338,000 - ($837,500 x 0.1481)] x (1 - 25%)} + ($837,500 x 0.1481) = $284,508

c. What is the additional Year 3- cash flow (i.e. after tax salvage and the return of working capital)?

= $62,031 + [($604,000 - $62,031) x 0.75] + $17,500 = $486,008

d. If the project's cost of capital is 12%, should the machine be purchased?

using a financial calculator, NPV = $260,373, so the project should be accepted

Steinberg Company produces commercial printers. One is the regular model, a basic model that is designed to copy and print in black and white. Another model, the deluxe model, is a color printer-scanner-copier. For the coming year, Steinberg expects to sell 100,000 regular models and 20,000 deluxe models. A segmented income statement for the two products is as follows:

Regular Model Deluxe Model Total

Sales $12,000,000 $10,720,000 $22,720,000
Less: Variable costs 7,200,000 6,432,000 13,632,000
Contribution margin $4,800,000 $4,288,000 $9,088,000
Less: Direct fixed costs 1,200,000 960,000 2,160,000
Segment margin $3,600,000 $3,328,000 $6,928,000
Less: Common fixed costs 1,702,400
Operating income $5,225,600

Required:
a. Compute the number of regular models and deluxe models that must be sold to break even.
b. Using information only from the total column of the income statement, compute the sales revenue that must be generated for the company to break even.

Answers

Answer:

Results are below.

Explanation:

First, we need to calculate the sales proportion of each product:

Regular= 12,000,000/22,720,000= 0.53

Deluxe= 10,720,000/22,720,000= 0.47

Now, we will determine the break-even point for the company as a whole:

Break-even point (units)= Total fixed costs / Weighted average contribution margin

Total fixed costs= 2,160,000 + 1,702,400= $3,862,400

Unitary contribution margin:

Regular= 4,800,000/100,000= $48

Delux= 4,288,000/20,000= $214.4

Weighted average contribution margin= (0.53*48) + (0.47*214.4)

Weighted average contribution margin= $128.35

Break-even point (units)= 3,862,400/128.35

Break-even point (units)= 30,093

For each product:

Regular= 0.53*30,093= 15,949

Deluxe= 0.47*30,093= 14,144

Finally, we need to calculate the break-even point in dollars for the whole company:

Break-even point (dollars)= fixed costs/ contribution margin ratio

Break-even point (dollars)= 3,862,400/ (9,088,000/22,720,000)

Break-even point (dollars)= 3,862,400/0.4

Break-even point (dollars)= $9,206,000

Stan and Dwight were playing in a golf tournament and came to a hole where there was a hill that required a blind shot to the green. Dwight asked Stan to drive ahead in the golf cart to see if they could hit their shots. Stan drove the cart over the hill, saw the green was clear, and started driving back to the tee box. Dwight never saw Stan heading back in the cart, became impatient and without warning hit his shot. The shot conked Stan on the head, knocking him out and resulting in a long term disability. Stan sued Dwight for negligence. What is the likely result? a) Dwight is liable for negligence because a tortfeasor is always liable for whatever damages their behavior causes. b) Dwight is liable for negligence because Stan did not knowingly assume the risk that Dwight would hit a shot in his direction. c) Dwight is not liable for negligence but is liable for assault and battery because he committed an intentional tort. d) Dwight is not liable for negligence because Stan knowingly assumed the risk that Dwight would hit a shot in his direction.

Answers

Answer:

b) Dwight is liable for negligence because Stan did not knowingly assume the risk that Dwight would hit a shot in his direction

Explanation:

In this scenario there was an agreement between Stan and Dwight where Dwight asked Stan to drive ahead in the golf cart to see if they could hit their shots.

However Stan drove the cart over the hill, saw the green was clear, and started driving back to the tee box.

Instead of waiting as agreed Dwight made a shot that hit Stan on the head injuring him.

Dwight is liable in this case because he was supposed to wait and get feedback from Stan before making a shot.

He knowingly made the shot knowing there was a blind spot.

This is negligence on Dwight's part.

Three categories of activities (operating, investing, and financing) generate or use the cash flow in a company. In the following table, identify which type of activity is described below.

a. Fitzi Chemical Co. earns revenue from its cash receipts from royalties.
b. The Yum chain of restaurants conducts an initial public offering to raise funds for expansion.
c. A company records a decrease in its total raw materials inventory from the previous year.
d. A pharmaceutical company buys marketing rights to sell a drug exclusively in East Asian markets.

Answers

Answer and Explanation:

The classifications are as follows:

a. Operating activities: As there is a cash receipts from royalities so the same come under this activity

b. Financing activities:  As the funds are raised so the same would be come under this activity.

c. Operating activities: As there is a decrease in raw material inventory as compared to the last year so the same is come under this activity

d. Investing activities: As the marketing rights are purchased so the same would be come under this activity

Part II: Article II, Section I of the U.S. Constitution provides that the president must "take care that the laws be faithfully executed." Presidents have used this authority to issue executive orders, which are orders to federal agencies that are a part of the executive branch and which contain detailed instructions on how laws enacted by Congress should be carried out.

Presidents are not specifically given the power to issue executive orders by the U.S. Constitution. Is it appropriate for the president to exercise powers that the Constitution does not specifically grant to him or her? Why, or why not?

Answers

Answer: Yes it is.

Explanation:

The Constitution puts the President at the head of the Executive branch of government and provides that the President should ensure that the laws of the land are faithfully executed.

Seeing as executive orders are issued to members of the executive - which are under the President - and are done to ensure that the laws of the land are carried out, the President is not only following the Constitution's directives in  Article II, Section I of the Constitution but doing it within their power as head of the executive.

Executive orders are therefore an implied constitutional power that the President has.


Cost of goods manufactured in a manufacturing company is analogous to

Answers

cost of goods purchased in a merchandising company

what is the most important law after starting a business​

Answers

create a LLC or corporation

You are given the following information concerning a noncallable, sinking fund debenture: Principal: $1,000 Coupon rate of interest: 7 percent Term to maturity: 15 years Sinking fund: 4 percent of outstanding bonds retired annually; the balance at maturity If you buy the bond today at its face amount and interest rates rise to 13 percent after two years have passed, what is your capital gain or loss

Answers

Answer:

Capital loss of $257.38

Explanation:

Use the following formula to calculate the capital gain or (loss).

Capital Gains / (Loss) = Current Price - Purchase price

As two year have been passed and we need to calculate the current price of the debenture using the following formula

Use the following formula to calculate the price of the bond

Price of the bond = [ C x ( 1 - ( 1 + r )^-n ) / r ] + [ F / ( 1 + r )^n ]

Where

F = Face value = $1,000

C = Periodic coupon payment = 7% x $1,000 = $70

r = Periodic interest rate = 13%

n = Numbers of periods = 15 years - 2years = 13 years

Placing values in the formula

Price of the bond = [ $70 x ( 1 - ( 1 + 13% )^-13 ) / 13% ] + [ $1,000 / ( 1 + 13% )^13 ]

Price of the bond = $538.46 + $204.16 = $742.62

Purchase price = $1,000

Placing values in the capital gain or (loss) formula

Capital Gain / ( Loss ) = $742.62 - $1,000

Capital Gain / ( Loss ) = ($257.38)

USAco, a domestic corporation, manufactures widgets for sale worldwide. In year 2020, USAco had $10 million of net income related to sales of products it manufactures in the US, of which 3 million relates to sales to customers outside the US. USACO also owns a factory, which it uses to produce the above income, and which has an average adjusted U.S. tax basis of $40 million (taking into account the straight-line depreciation method). As a result of these activities, USACo will be allowed a Foreign Derived Intangible Income ("FDII") deduction of _______________

Answers

Answer:

USAco

As a result of these activities, USACo will be allowed a Foreign Derived Intangible Income ("FDII") deduction of _______________

$236,250.

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations

Net income = $10 million

Export sales income = $3 million

Normal tax on $3 million at 21% = $630,000

FDII 13.125% tax on $3 million = $393,750

Difference = $236,250

b) A foreign derived intangible income (FDII) arises from the ownership, sale, or exchange of intangible property, patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade names, or other products tied to intangible assets by USACo, which entitles it to make a tax deduction of the calculated amount or to be taxed at a reduced tax rate of 13.125% instead of the normal 21% corporate tax rate.  The FDII is aimed at encouraging US-based corporations to export more goods and services while locating more intangible assets in the US.

Sweeten Company had no jobs in progress at the beginning of March and no beginning inventories. The company has two manufacturing departments-Molding and Fabrication. It started, completed, and sold only two jobs during March- Job P and Job Q. The following additional information is available for the company as a whole and for Jobs P and Q (all data and questions relate to the month of March):
Molding Fabrication Total
Estimated total machine-hours used 2,500 1,500 4,000
Estimated total fixed manufacturing overhead $ 14,000 $ 17,400 $ 31,400
Estimated variable manufacturing overhead per machine-hour $ 3.00 $ 3.80
Job P Job Q
Direct materials $ 29,000 $ 16,000
Direct labor cost $ 33,800 $ 13,900
Actual machine-hours used:
Molding 3,300 2,400
Fabrication 2,200 2,500
Total 5,500 4,900
Sweeten Company had no underapplied or overapplied manufacturing overhead costs during the month.
What was the company's plantwide predetermined overhead rate? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.)

Answers

Answer:

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= $11.15 per machine hour

Explanation:

Molding Fabrication Total

Estimated total machine-hours used 2,500 1,500 4,000

Estimated total fixed manufacturing overhead $ 14,000 $ 17,400 $ 31,400

Estimated variable manufacturing overhead per machine-hour $ 3.00 $ 3.80

To calculate a single plantwide predetermined overhead rate, we need to use the following formula:

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= total estimated overhead costs for the period/ total amount of allocation base

Total fixed overhead= $31,400

Total variable overhead= (3*2,500) + (3.8*1,500)= $13,200

Total Machine hours= 4,000

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= (31,400 + 13,200) / 4,000

Predetermined manufacturing overhead rate= $11.15 per machine hour

Suman said that, "she didn't understand the
direct and indirect speech

Answers

Explanation:

Indirect speech, also known as reported speech or indirect discourse (US), is a means of expressing the content of statements, questions or other utterances, without quoting them explicitly as is done in direct speech. For example, He said "I'm coming" is direct speech, whereas He said (that) he was coming is indirect speech. Indirect speech should not be confused with indirect speech acts.

Suppose a company is currently manufacturing 39 smartphones per day. The variable cost is $120 per smartphone with daily fixed costs totaling $684. What is the least number of smartphones that need to be produced each day in order to sell the smartphones for $132 each and earn a profit? radioImage a) 55 radioImage b) 53 radioImage

Answers

Answer:

57 smartphones per day

Explanation:

contribution margin per each smartphone = $132 - $120 = $12

total daily fixed costs = $684

break even point in units = total fixed costs / contribution margin per unit = $684 / $12 = 57 smartphones per day

break even in $ = 57 x $132 = $7,524 total daily sales

Desert, Inc. has year-end account balances as of December 31, 2020 of Sales Revenue $907,000; Interest Revenue $24,000; Cost of Goods Sold $593,000; Administrative Expenses $188,000; Income Tax Expense $31,000; Dividends $18,000, Unrealized Pension Liability Adjustments of $21,500 (dr) and a correction of an error in recording Depreciation Expense for 2018 of $12,000 (dr).

To prepare the year-end closing entry required to close the Income Summary account, Desert would record a:_________

a. Debit to Net Income for $107.000.
b. Debit to Income Summary for $119,000
c. Debit to Retained Earnings for $89,000
d. Debit to Income Summary for $67,500

Answers

Answer:

Dr to income summary for $119,000

Explanation:

The year end closing entry to required to close the income entry would be ;

Sales revenue. Dr $907,000

Interest revenue Dr $24,000

Income summary Cr $931,000

Income summary Dr $812,000

Cost of goods sold Cr $593,000

Administrative expenses Cr $188,000

Income tax expense Cr $31,000

*Income summary Dr. $119,000

Retained earnings Cr $119,000

Retained earnings. Dr $18,000

Dividend Cr $18,000

find three examples of managers
you would describe as master managers. Write a paper describing these individuals
as managers and why you think they deserve this title.
ms​

Answers

Answer:

All managers must be comfortable with three main types of activities or roles. To do their jobs, managers assume these different roles. No manager stays in any one role all of the time, but shifts back and forth. These roles are leadership (or interpersonal), informational, and decision making.

Explanation:

Hope it helps kahit na ndi ko na sagot ung main question.

The three examples of managers that we would describe as master managers are advertisement manager, accounting manager and analytics manager. The roles of managers  are leadership, informational, and decision making.

What is an information?

An information refers to something that has the power to inform. At the most fundamental level information pertains to the interpretation of that which may be sensed.

The digital signals and other data use discrete signs or alogrithms to convey information, other phenomena and artifacts such as analog signals, poems, pictures, music or other sounds, and the electrical currents convey information in a more continuous form.

Information is not knowledge itself, but its interpretation is important. An Information can be in a raw form or in an structured form as data. The information available through a collection of data may be derived by analysis by expert analysts in their domain.

Learn more about information here:

brainly.com/question/27798920

#SPJ5

What is the future of discussion of fourms?

Answers

Answer:

Improve communication. ...

Increase collaboration. ...

Better engagement. ...

Receive the 5 key methods of employee engagement straight to your inbox.

Seek assistance and support. ...

Help drive usage of your online collaboration tool.

Consider a chemical factory that is situated next to a farm. Airborne emissions from the chemical factory damage crops on the farm. The marginal benefits of emissions to the factory and the marginal costs of damage to the farmer are as follows: Quantity of emissions (Q) 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 MB to factory 320 280 240 200 160 120 80 40 0 MC to farmer 110 130 150 170 190 210 230 250 270 Calculate the total net benefit to the farmer and factory at the economically and socially efficient quantity of emissions. A. $63000 B. $62000 C. $60750 D. $61000

Answers

Answer:

Marginal Benefits of Emissions

Total net benefit to the farmer and factory at the economically and socially efficient quantity of emissions is $30,000 when the quantity of emission is 200 tons.

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Quantity of         Marginal       Marginal    Total Net Benefit

emissions (Q)     Benefits        Cost           or Cost

100                        320               110               21,000

200                        280               130               30,000

300                        240               150               27,000

400                        200               170               12,000

500                        160               190               -15,000

600                        120               210               -54,000

700                         80               230              -105,000

800                         40               250             -168,000

900                          0                270             -243,000      

On January 1, 2020, Bridgeport Corporation issued $3,740,000 of 10-year, 8% convertible debentures at 102. Interest is to be paid semiannually on June 30 and December 31. Each $1,000 debenture can be converted into 8 shares of Bridgeport Corporation $100 par value common stock after December 31, 2021. On January 1, 2022, $374,000 of debentures are converted into common stock, which is then selling at $111. An additional $374,000 of debentures are converted on March 31, 2022. The market price of the common stock is then $116. Accrued interest at March 31 will be paid on the next interest date. Bond premium is amortized on a straight-line basis. Make the necessary journal entries for: (a) December 31, 2021. (c) March 31, 2022. (b) January 1, 2022. (d) June 30, 2022.

Answers

Answer:

Bridgeport Corporation

Journal Entries:

(a) December 31, 2021.

Debit Interest on Debentures $149,600

Credit Cash $149,600

To record the interest expense and payment for the six months.

Debit Debentures Premium $3,740

Credit Interest on Debentures $3,740

To record the amortization of the debentures premium.

(b) January 1, 2022.

Debit Debenture $374,000

Credit Common Stock $299,200

Credit APIC $74,800

To record the conversion of debentures to shares.

(c) March 31, 2022.  

Debit Debenture $374,000

Credit Common Stock $299,200

Credit APIC $74,800

To record the conversion of debentures to shares.

Debit Interest on Debentures $67,320

Credit Interest Payable $67,320

To accrue interest for the quarter.

Debit Debentures Premium $1,870

Credit Interest on Debentures $1,870

To record the amortization of the debentures premium for the quarter.

(d) June 30, 2022.

Debit Interest on Debentures $59,840

Credit Interest payable $59,840

To accrue interest for the quarter.

Debit Debentures Premium $1,870

Credit Interest on Debentures $1,870

To record the amortization of the debentures premium for the quarter.

Debit Interest Payable $127,160

Credit Cash $127,160

To record payment of interest for the six months.

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Issue of 10-year 8% Convertible Debentures at 102 = $3,814,800 (Cash)

Debenture premium $74,800

Half-yearly premium amortization = $74,800/20 = $3,740

Face value = $3,740,000

b) Interest on Debenture = $3,740,000 * 8% * 1/2 = $149,600

c) $374,000 debentures converted into 8 shares for every $1,000.

= $374,000/1,000 * 8 = 2,992 shares at $100 par value

d) Interest on Debentures ($3,740,000 - $374,000) * 8% * 1/4

= $3,366,000 * 8% * 1/4 = $67,320

Plus

$3,366,000 - $374,000 * 8% * 1/4 = $59,840

Total interest = $127,160

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