Answer:
losses from discontinued operations 395,000
Explanation:
From 1/1/20X1 to 8/31/20X1 <u>realized </u>loss 300,000
From 9/1/20X1 to 12/31/20X1 <u>realized </u>loss 200,00
<em><u>EXPECTED </u></em>Profit from 1/1/20X2 to 3/31/20X2 400,000
As the accounting carries the accrued principles Revsine's expectations aer not accrued thus, do not included until realized.
The company has losses for 500,000 with a tax-rate of 21%
This generates a tax-shield of 105,000
net of taxes: 500,000 - 105,000 = 395,000
Answer:
(A) The standard price per pound of this material is $87.11
(B) The standard pounds of this material per unit of product A is 1.01 pounds
Explanation:
According to the given data, in order to calculate the standard price per pound of this material, we would have to use the following formula:
Standard Price per pound of this material=Purchase Price Per Pound + Shipping Cost per pound
+Receiving Cost
=$80.00+$6.66+$0.45
=$87.11
In order to calculate the standard pounds of this material per unit of product A, we would have to use the following formula:
Standard pounds of this material per unit of Product A=Pounds of material required by Product A
+Allowance for waste and spoilage
=0.96+0.05
=1.01 pounds
105 if the vegetables, fruits, and cheeses are unique.
6 if the vegetables, fruits, and cheeses are interchangeable.
There are 2 possible solutions to this problem depending upon how you actually look at the problem. Both solutions assume that the problem gets simplified to "What 13 items out of the 4 vegetables, 5 fruits, and 6 cheeses, will Marlon select?" The reason is because Marlon is going to select the 7 breads, so he can only select 13 more items.
First possible solution is that the vegetables, fruits, and cheeses are unique. For instance he has peas, carrots, tomatoes, and beans as his vegetables and the same for fruits and cheeses. For that situation, the number of ways to fill the remaining 13 slots is 15!/(13!2!) = 105 possible ways.
The second possible solution is that he has 4 identical vegetables, 5 identical fruits, and 5 identical cheeses. Since each item of each type is identical, there isn't any real distinction between them. So let's simplify the problem and instead as "Which 2 items Marlon won't buy?" and the answer to that question will be the same as the number of things he will buy. But it will be small enough to completely enumerate the possible solutions. Marlon may throw away as the first item any of a vegetable, fruit, or cheese for a total of 3 possibilities. And for the 2nd item, it can also be any of a vegetable, fruit, or cheese. So you have 9 possibilities. But that's not completely true. There's no real difference between vegetable/cheese and cheese/vegetable. So if you ignore the order, there's a total of 6 different combinations that Marlon can toss out of his cart. And therefore there is a total of 6 possibilities for Marlon to fill the remaining 13 slots he has in order to use the express lane.
<span>This can also be termed as "Unfair limitation" and it is the term used to portray boundaries that keep ladies and minorities from progressing to administration positions in big companies and associations. The expression was first utilised around 1985 or 1986.</span>