Answer:
See below
Explanation:
1. Cost of the Tramel Job
= Direct material cost + Direct labor cost + Overhead applied
= $1,900 + $500 + (140% × $500)
= $1,900 + $500 + $700
= $3,100
2. Journal entry to record the overhead cost
Overhead cost account Dr $500
To Material account Cr $400
To Labor account Cr $100
3. Effect of additional rework required $200 of direct labor on the cost of Tramel job
= Direct material cost + Direct labor cost + Overhead applied
= $1,900 + ($500 + $200) + (140% × $500)
= $1,900 + $700 + $700
= $3,300
The effect of additional rework required of $200 of direct labor cost is an increase of $200 on the cost of job for Tramel
Answer:
$400 .Since inventory is valued at cost or market value(current replacement cost) whichever is lower .
Therefore value of inventory : $400*8=$3200
Explanation:
Answer: 1. Goodwill
2. a. Record no entry in the books
b. Record a loss in the books
Explanation:
1. The Special asset created by Heartland Telecom's acquisition of Surety Wireless is Goodwill.
Goodwill is the difference between what the company was worth and what it was purchased for if the purchase price was higher than the worth (market value).
2. a. Goodwill should be accounted for by recoding it in the Long term Assets under Intangible Assets in the balance sheet. It should not be amotrized. If Goodwill increases, there should be no recording this <u>gain</u> on the books.
b. If the value of the asset has decreased, Heartland should record a loss in the books to represent the loss on this account.
Answer:
Calculate the dirty price.
Here, coupon interest is compounded semiannually. Hence, divide coupon rate by 2.
Dirty Price = Bond Clean Price + Accrued Interest
Dirty Price = Bond Clean Price +(Face Value X Coupon Rate/2 X Day Count/ Total Days
Dirty price = 1026 + (1000 x 6.6%/2 x 74/183)
Dirty price = $1,039.34
Answer:
A 1031 Exchange allows a taxpayer like Rodriguez to temporarily differ any capital gains when they sell a property and immediately purchase another property using the proceeds from the sale. In the first part of the question, Rodriguez sold a property that had a basis of $57,000 for $65,000, and immediately but another property worth $65,000. That means that he doesn't need to immediately pay any taxes for the $8,000 gain.
But if the situation is the opposite. Instead of making a gain, Rodriguez lost money, then he should immediately record the $8,000 loss in order to lower his taxes. The less taxes you pay, the better. The whole idea of the 1031 Exchange is to defer taxes that you owe, not to defer losses that will lower your taxes.