I think the the income received from selling her books is an example of earned income. It<span> is any income that is generated by working. Your salary or money made from hourly employment (regardless of whether that salary or hourly income came from working for someone else or from your own “consulting”) is considered earned income.</span>
<span>profit-and-loss statement</span>
Answer:
$89.41
Explanation:
Data provided in the question:
Dividend declared = $6.30 per share
Tax rate = 20%
Selling price of the stock = $94.45
Now,
Aftertax dividend = Dividend × ( 1 - Tax rate )
= $6.30 × ( 1 - 0.20 )
= $5.04
Thus,
Ex-dividend price = Selling price - Aftertax dividend
or
Ex-dividend price = $94.45 - $5.04
or
Ex-dividend price = $89.41
Answer:
$17,600 ; $29,000
Explanation:
The computation of the net income is shown below:
Based on Cash basis
= Received cash - Expenses incurred in cash - prepaid expenses
= $56,000 - $26,900 - $11,500
= $17,600
Based on Accrual basis
= Revenue earned - expenses incurred
= $64,000 - $35,000
= $29,000
The cash expenses incurred is
= $35,000 - $8,100
= $26,900
Answer: a) Option A
Explanation:
There will be no effect on retained earnings because retained earnings do not increase as a result of shares being sold. It increases when net income increases.
Total paid-in capital increases when stock is sold for higher than its par value or when treasury stock is sold for higher than its acquisition price. The treasury stock here was sold for higher than it was bought so this would increase the total paid in capital.