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kaheart [24]
4 years ago
14

Andrews Corp. ended the year carrying $153,576,000 worth of inventory. Had they sold their entire inventory at their current pri

ces, how much more revenue would it have brought to Andrews Corp.?
Business
1 answer:
8_murik_8 [283]4 years ago
5 0

Answer: $153,576,000

Explanation:

At year end, all the costs of inventory have been accounted for and incurred by the company. The inventory left therefore has no costs attached to it.

If Andrews Corp had been able to sell the inventory they had at year end, they would therefore not have incurred any new costs for doing so. The revenue they would have gotten would be equal to the worth of the inventory as is which was $153,576,000.

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Kim is the sales representative for a major textbook publisher. When she calls on the business faculty at General University, sh
Juli2301 [7.4K]

Answer:

Users

Explanation:

The users be the ones to use the product, initiate the purchase process, generate purchase specs and evaluate product performance after the purchase.

5 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
On november 1, 2018, the bagel factory signed a $100,000, 6%, six-month note payable with the amount borrowed plus accrued inter
Salsk061 [2.6K]

Answer:

A) debit interest expense, $1000

Explanation:

to determine the accrued interest expense = $100,000 x 6% x 2/12 = $1,000

the journal entry should be:

December 31, 2018, accrued interest expense on note payable:

Dr Interest expense 1,000

    Cr Accrued interest payable 1,000

Accrual accounting establishes that expenses must be recognize during the period that they occur regardless of when they are paid. So we must recognize 2 months worth of interest.

6 0
3 years ago
Cutler Petroleum, Inc., is trying to evaluate a generation project with the following cash flows:Year Cash Flow0 –$ 39,800,000 1
muminat

Answer:

The two IRRs are: - 76.49% and 36.79%

Explanation:

To simplify our "Hard work", let's denote the cash flow numbers in terms of '000 (To reduce the number of zeros).

IRR is that discount rate R, for which NPV = 0

NPV is the sum of discounted cash inflows and outflows. Therefore,

NPV ($'000) = - 39,800 + (63,800 / (1 + R) - [12,800 / (1 + R)2]

When NPV = 0 [If R is the IRR],

0 = - 39,800 + [(63,800 / (1 + R)] - [12,800 / (1 + R)2]

[12,800 / (1 + R)2] - [(63,800 / (1 + R)] + 39,800 = 0

To simplify further, let's put N = 1 + R. Also, let's divide both sides by 200 [Note: We're only doing arithmetical simplification to reduce the large numbers]]:

[64 / (N)2] - (319 / N) + 199 = 0

Multiplying all terms by (N2):

64 - 319N + 199 (N)2 = 0

that is,

199 (N)2 - 319N + 64 = 0

This is a quadratic equation with large coefficients. Solving quadratic equation is outside scope of this question (it belongs to Algebra), so I've used an Online Quadratic equation solver**, which returns following values of N:

N = 1.3679, and N = 0.2351

So:

1 + R = 1.3679, Or 1 + R = 0.2351

R = (1.3679 - 1) or R = (0.2351 - 1)

R = 0.3679 or R = - 0.7649

The two IRRs are: - 76.49% and 36.79%

4 0
4 years ago
In most cases, whether the contract has not yet been performed (an executory contract) or has been fully performed (an executed
Jlenok [28]

Answer: disaffirm

Explanation:

most cases, whether the contract has not yet been performed (an executory contract) or has been fully performed (an executed contract), the minor may disaffirm the contract.

It should be noted that a contract that is signed by a minor unless in some rare exceptions is normally void and therefore, the minor can disaffirm the contract.

8 0
4 years ago
Vert Company purchased Dextrin common stock for $150,000. At December 31, Year 2, the Fair value adjustment account had a debit
VashaNatasha [74]

Answer:

B. Credit to the fair value adjustment for $6000

Explanation:

December 31 (year 2)

Fair value adjustment account balance = $10,000 (Debit)

December 31 (year 3)

Fair value adjustment account balance = $154,000 - $150,000 =$4,000 (Debit)

As you can see in year 2 there were only $10,000 (debit) in fair value adjustment account but in year 3 the value dropped down to 4,000 debit which leads us to the journal entry of $6,000 Credit in fair value adjustment account balance

7 0
3 years ago
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