<span>They originally felt that licensing would be the best first step. By letting other companies use their product in exchange for paying royalty fees, Bernerd was licensing its product out for those companies to take advantage of the company's name.</span>
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
transfer price 3.31
Explanation:
the minimun transfer price should be equal to the marginal cost:
In this case: variable manufacturing cost + shipping cost.
variable cost 3.1
shipping cos 0.21
marginal price 3.31 = cost of produce an additional unit = transfer price
there is no additional fixed cost so this should be the transfer price.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
A. True
Explanation:
Examples of situations that individually or in combination would normally lead to a lease being  classified as a finance lease are:
(a) the lease transfers ownership of the underlying asset to the lessee by the end of the lease  term;
(b) the lessee has the option to purchase the underlying asset at a price that is expected to be  sufficiently lower than the fair value at the date the option becomes exercisable for it to be  reasonably certain, at the inception date, that the option will be exercised;
(c) the lease term is for the major part of the economic life of the underlying asset even if title is  not transferred;
(d) at the inception date, the present value of the lease payments amounts to at least substantially  all of the fair value of the underlying asset; and
(e) the underlying asset is of such a specialised nature that only the lessee can use it without major  modifications.
Since at the time of lease the net present value of the payments is 88% of the actual market price and the useful life of the asset was 70% at the end of the lease term and also the title of asset shall not be transferred to lessee at the end of lease term, therefore the lease shall not be classify as finance lease and it shall be classified as operating lease so the answer is A. True
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
The clean price of the bond is $1,062.
Explanation:
Accrued interest is the coupon payment for the period times the fraction of the period that has passed since the last coupon payment. Since we have a semiannual coupon bond, the coupon payment per six months is one-half of the annual coupon payment. There are two months until the next coupon payment, so four months have passed since the last coupon payment. The accrued interest for the bond is:
Accrued interest = $99/2*4/6 
                             = $33
And we calculate the clean price as:
Clean price = Dirty price – Accrued interest 
                    = $1,095 – 33 
                    = $1,062
Therefore, The clean price of the bond is $1,062.