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List of Accounts Attempts: 2 of 3 used (c) Your Answer Correct Answer (Used) Prepare the journal entry to record bad debt expense for 2022, assuming that aging the accounts receivable indicates that estimated uncollectibles are $45,000. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry” for the account titles and enter O for the amounts.) Account Titles and Explanation Debit Credit Bad Debt Expense 30,000 Allowance for Doubtful Accounts 30,000 A Your answer is incorrect. Compute the accounts receivable turnover and average collection period. assuming the expected uncollectibles information provided in (c). (Round answers to 1 decimal place, e.g. 25.2. Use 365 days for calculation.) Accounts receivable turnover 37 times Average collection period 98.6 days eTextbook and Media List of Accounts Save for Later Attempts: 1 of 3used T LGT g
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Related Questions
Show Attempt History
Current Attempt in Progress
On May 1, 2020, Christina Fashions borrowed $106,000 at a bank by signing a four-year, 6% loan. The terms of the loan require
equal principal payments of $26,500 and accrued interest at 6% due annually on April 30. The loan agreement requires the
company to maintain a minimum current ratio of 2.0. The December 31, 2020, year-end statement of financial position, immediately
prior to the reclassification of long-term debt, follows:
Current assets
$137,800
Current liabilities
$53,000
Non-current assets
163,200
Loan payable
106,000
Common shares
72,000
Retained earnings
70,000
Total liabilities and
Total assets
$301,000
shareholders' equity
$301,000
Your answer is partially correct.
Does Christina Fashions comply with the bank's current ratio requirement prior to recording the accrued interest and
reclassification of the current portion of the long-term loan? (Round answer to 1 decimal place, e.g. 1.2.)
Current ratio
2.6
Christina Fashions…
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Prepare the journal entries for Shamrock in 2020. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is
entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No entry" for the account titles and enter O for the
amounts.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Sep. 1, 2020 +
Cash
1920
Accounts Receivable
450
Unearned Service Revenue
Sales Revenue
(To record sales)
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Exercise 9-14
On July 1, 2020, Blue Spruce Aggregates Ltd. purchased 5% bonds having a maturity value of $55,000 for $57,014. The bonds provide the bondholders with a 4% yield. The bonds mature four years later, on July 1, 2024, with interest receivable June 30 and December 31 of
each year. Blue Spruce uses the effective interest method to allocate unamortized discount or premium. The bonds are accounted for using the FV-OCI model with recycling. Blue Spruce has a calendar year end. The fair value of the bonds at December 31, 2020 and 2021,
was $57,017 and $56,205, respectively. Assume fair value adjustments are recorded at year end only. Immediately after collecting interest on December 31, 2021, the bonds were sold for $56,205.
Prepare the journal entry at the date of the bond purchase. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the
amounts.…
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On December 31, 2024, Blossom Inc. borrowed $4,380,000 at 12% payable annually to finance the construction of a new building. In
2025, the company made the following expenditures related to this building: March 1, $525,600; June 1, $876,000; July 1,
$2,190,000; December 1, $2,190,000. The building was completed in February 2026. Additional information is provided as follows.
1.
2.
Other debt outstanding:
10-year, 13% bond, December 31, 2018, interest payable annually
6-year, 10% note, dated December 31, 2022, interest payable annually
March 1, 2025, expenditure included land costs of $219,000.
3. Interest revenue of $71,540 earned in 2025.
$5,840,000
2,336,000
Determine the amount of interest to be capitalized in 2025 in relation to the construction of the building.
The amount of interest $
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On June 30, 2017, Bramble Company issued 12% bonds with a par value of $760,000 due in 20 years. They were issued at 98 and were
callable at 105 at any date after June 30, 2025. Because of lower interest rates and a significant change in the company's credit rating,
it was decided to call the entire issue on June 30, 2026, and to issue new bonds. New 8% bonds were sold in the amount of
$920,000 at 103; they mature in 20 years. Bramble Company uses straight-line amortization. Interest payment dates are December
31 and June 30.
(a)
(b)
Prepare journal entries to record the redemption of the old issue and the sale of the new issue on June 30, 2026.
Prepare the entry required on December 31, 2026, to record the payment of the first 6 months' interest and the
amortization of premium on the bonds.
(If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts. Credit account titles are automatically indented
when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually.…
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Do not give image format
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Requirement 1. Record the transactions for the last quarter of 2022 in the journal. Explanations are not required. (Record debits first, then credits. Exclude explanations from any journal entries.)
Wrote off as uncollectible the $1,400 account receivable from Blue Carpets and the $300 account receivable from Show -N- Tell Antiques.
Data table
Journal Entry
Accounts
Credit
Date
Nov
Debit
1,700
30 Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts
Accounts Receivable and aging schedule to be used at December
31, 2022
Accounts Receivable-Blue Carpets
1,400
Accounts Receivable-Show-N-Tell Antiques
300
Accounts Receivable
$235,000
Estimated percent
uncollectible
Age of Accounts
1-30 Days 31-60 Days 61-90 Days
$ 130,000 $ 38,000 $ 14,000 $
0.2%
2%
15%
Adjusted the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts and recorded doubtful-account expense at year-end, based on the aging of receivables.
Journal Entry
Date
Accounts
Debit
Credit
Dec
31
Print
Done
Over 90
Days
53,000
35%
X
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3. On July 19, 2022, a customer's account balance of $6,700 is written off as uncollectible. Record the write-off. (If no entry is required
for a particular transaction/event, select "No Journal Entry Required" in the first account field.)
View transaction list
Journal entry worksheet
1
>
Record write off of actual bad debts.
Note: Enter debits before credits.
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
July 19, 2022
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Subject: acounting
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want detailed answer
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None
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Prepare the journal entries to record the mortgage loan and the first two installment payments. (Round answers to O decimal places,
e.g. 15,250. Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select
"No Entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Dec. 31,
2017
Dec. 31,
2018
Dec. 31,
2019
Debit
Credit
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Please do not give solution and formulae in image format.. thanku
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Instructions
Assuming that the books have not been closed for 2025, make the necessary correcting entries.
P6.6 (LO 2, 3) (Journalize Various Accounts Receivable Transactions) The balance sheet of Starsky Company at December 31, 2024,
includes the following.
Notes receivable
Accounts receivable
Less: Allowance for doubtful accounts
$ 36,000
182,100
Instructions
Prepare all journal entries necessary to reflect the transactions above.
17,300 $200,800
Transactions in 2025 include the following.
1. Accounts receivable of $138,000 were collected including accounts of $60,000 on which 2% sales discounts were allowed.
2. $5,300 was received in payment of an account which was written off the books as worthless in 2024.
3. Customer accounts of $17,500 were written off during the year.
4. At year-end, Allowance for Doubtful Accounts was estimated to need a balance of $20,000. This estimate is based on an analysis of aged accounts
receivable.
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Prepare the journal entry to record the capitalization of interest and the recognition of interest expense, if any, at December 31, 2020. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the amounts.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
December 31, 2020
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Current Attempt in Progress
Pina Corp. factors $ 428,000 of accounts receivable with Grouper Finance Corporation on a without recourse basis on July 1, 2020.
The receivables records are transferred to Grouper Finance, which will receive the collections. Grouper Finance assesses a finance
charge of 1.70% of the amount of accounts receivable and retains an amount equal to 5% of accounts receivable to cover sales
discounts, returns, and allowances. The transaction is to be recorded as a sale.
(a)
Your answer has been saved. See score details after the due date.
Prepare the journal entry on July 1, 2020, for Pina Corp. to record the sale of receivables without recourse. (If no entry is required,
select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts. Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is
entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
July 1,
2020
Cash
399324
Due from Factor
21400
Loss on Sale of Receivables…
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At December 1, 2023, Imalda Inc. reported the following information on its statement of financial position:
Accounts receivable
Allowance for doubtful
accounts
$154,000
4,500 (credit balance)
The following transactions were completed during December 2023:
December 5 Sold merchandise items for $67,000. An amount of $19,000 was received in
cash and the rest on account; terms 2/10, n/60. The total cost of sales
was $35,000.
December 12 Collected amount due from customers for credit sales made on December 5.
December 20 Collected $90,000 in cash from customers for credit sales made in November
2023.
December 26 One of Imalda's customers that owed $3,000 to the company experienced
financial problems and was forced to close its business in December. The
full amount was considered uncollectible.
Total
Estimated %
uncollectible
The company records sales revenue net of the sales discount. If a customer pays after the discount period, the sales
discount that is forfeited is recorded in a…
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When Sunland Holdings Ltd. received its bank statement for the month of October, it showed that the
company had a cash balance of $19,426 as at October 31. Sunland's general ledger showed a cash
balance of $20,400 at that date. A comparison of the bank statement and the accounting records
revealed the following information:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Bank service and credit card charges for the month were $7.
A cheque, in the amount of $570, from one of Sunland's customers that had been deposited
during the last week of October was returned with the bank statement as "NSF."
Cheque #3421, which was a payment for utilities expenses, had been correctly written for
$870 but had been incorrectly recorded in the general ledger as $780.
Sunland had written and mailed out cheques with a value of $2,570 that had not yet cleared
the bank account.
During the month, the bank collected a $2,700 note receivable plus the outstanding interest
of $243 on behalf of Sunland. The interest had already been accrued.…
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View Policies
Show Attempt History
Current Attempt in Progress
On January 1, 2020, Teal Company sold 11% bonds having a maturity value of $500.000 for $ 518.953, which provides the
bondholders with a 10% yield. The bonds are dated January 1, 2020. and mature January 1. 2025, with interest payable December 31
of each year. Teal Company allocates interest and unamortized discount or premium on the effective interest basis.
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Don't provide answer in image format
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Account
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complete each table by filling in the blanks
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Record the following transactions for Sheridan Company in the general journal. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when
amount is entered. Do not indent manually. Record journal entries in the order presented in the problem.)
.2020
May 1
Dec. 31
Dec. 31
2021
May
Received a $27,450, 12-months, 8% note in exchange for Mark Chamber's outstanding accounts receivable.
Date
Accrued interest on the Chamber note.
Closed the interest revenue account.
1 Received principal plus interest on the Chamber note. (No interest has been accrued in 2021.)
V
>
Account Titles and Explanation
(To record accrued interest on note.)
(To close the interest revenue account.)
Debit
Credit
I
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Instructions: fill in the missing information.
1- The adjusting entry on December 31st 2021 to recognize the bad debts expense would require a debit entry to ...blank... of ...blank... and a credit entry to allowance for doubtful accounts
2. The adjusting entry on December 31st 2021 to recognize the bad debts expense would require a debit entry to bad debt expense of 8160 and a credit entry to allowance for doubtful accounts During January 2022, a $51000 account receivable is written off as uncollectible. The journal entry for the write-off would be a debit to ...blank... and a credit to ...blank... of 51000
1. The adjusting entry on December 31st 2021 to recognize the bad debts expense would require a debit entry to bad debt expense of 8160 and a credit entry to allowance for doubtful accounts During January 2022, a $51000 account receivable is written off as uncollectible. The journal entry for the write-off would be a debit to allowance for doubtful accounts and a credit to…
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1. Prepare the entry to record the write-off ofuncollectible accounts during 2019.
2. Prepare the entries to record the recovery ofthe uncollectible account during 2019
3. Prepare the entry to record bad debt expense(BDE) at the end of 2019. Ending balance ofAFDA was Rp18,200 (Cr.)
4. Determine the ending balance of AccountsReceivable as of December 31, 2019.
5. What is the net realizable value of thereceivables at the end of 2019?
6. The company has a notes receivable ofRp24,000 at January 15, 2019 for 3 months at10% interest rate. Prepare journal entry as ofApril 15, 2019, on its due date.
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Related Questions
- Show Attempt History Current Attempt in Progress On May 1, 2020, Christina Fashions borrowed $106,000 at a bank by signing a four-year, 6% loan. The terms of the loan require equal principal payments of $26,500 and accrued interest at 6% due annually on April 30. The loan agreement requires the company to maintain a minimum current ratio of 2.0. The December 31, 2020, year-end statement of financial position, immediately prior to the reclassification of long-term debt, follows: Current assets $137,800 Current liabilities $53,000 Non-current assets 163,200 Loan payable 106,000 Common shares 72,000 Retained earnings 70,000 Total liabilities and Total assets $301,000 shareholders' equity $301,000 Your answer is partially correct. Does Christina Fashions comply with the bank's current ratio requirement prior to recording the accrued interest and reclassification of the current portion of the long-term loan? (Round answer to 1 decimal place, e.g. 1.2.) Current ratio 2.6 Christina Fashions…arrow_forwardPrepare the journal entries for Shamrock in 2020. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts.) Date Account Titles and Explanation Debit Credit Sep. 1, 2020 + Cash 1920 Accounts Receivable 450 Unearned Service Revenue Sales Revenue (To record sales)arrow_forwardExercise 9-14 On July 1, 2020, Blue Spruce Aggregates Ltd. purchased 5% bonds having a maturity value of $55,000 for $57,014. The bonds provide the bondholders with a 4% yield. The bonds mature four years later, on July 1, 2024, with interest receivable June 30 and December 31 of each year. Blue Spruce uses the effective interest method to allocate unamortized discount or premium. The bonds are accounted for using the FV-OCI model with recycling. Blue Spruce has a calendar year end. The fair value of the bonds at December 31, 2020 and 2021, was $57,017 and $56,205, respectively. Assume fair value adjustments are recorded at year end only. Immediately after collecting interest on December 31, 2021, the bonds were sold for $56,205. Prepare the journal entry at the date of the bond purchase. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter 0 for the amounts.…arrow_forward
- On December 31, 2024, Blossom Inc. borrowed $4,380,000 at 12% payable annually to finance the construction of a new building. In 2025, the company made the following expenditures related to this building: March 1, $525,600; June 1, $876,000; July 1, $2,190,000; December 1, $2,190,000. The building was completed in February 2026. Additional information is provided as follows. 1. 2. Other debt outstanding: 10-year, 13% bond, December 31, 2018, interest payable annually 6-year, 10% note, dated December 31, 2022, interest payable annually March 1, 2025, expenditure included land costs of $219,000. 3. Interest revenue of $71,540 earned in 2025. $5,840,000 2,336,000 Determine the amount of interest to be capitalized in 2025 in relation to the construction of the building. The amount of interest $arrow_forwardOn June 30, 2017, Bramble Company issued 12% bonds with a par value of $760,000 due in 20 years. They were issued at 98 and were callable at 105 at any date after June 30, 2025. Because of lower interest rates and a significant change in the company's credit rating, it was decided to call the entire issue on June 30, 2026, and to issue new bonds. New 8% bonds were sold in the amount of $920,000 at 103; they mature in 20 years. Bramble Company uses straight-line amortization. Interest payment dates are December 31 and June 30. (a) (b) Prepare journal entries to record the redemption of the old issue and the sale of the new issue on June 30, 2026. Prepare the entry required on December 31, 2026, to record the payment of the first 6 months' interest and the amortization of premium on the bonds. (If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts. Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually.…arrow_forwardDo not give image formatarrow_forward
- Requirement 1. Record the transactions for the last quarter of 2022 in the journal. Explanations are not required. (Record debits first, then credits. Exclude explanations from any journal entries.) Wrote off as uncollectible the $1,400 account receivable from Blue Carpets and the $300 account receivable from Show -N- Tell Antiques. Data table Journal Entry Accounts Credit Date Nov Debit 1,700 30 Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts Accounts Receivable and aging schedule to be used at December 31, 2022 Accounts Receivable-Blue Carpets 1,400 Accounts Receivable-Show-N-Tell Antiques 300 Accounts Receivable $235,000 Estimated percent uncollectible Age of Accounts 1-30 Days 31-60 Days 61-90 Days $ 130,000 $ 38,000 $ 14,000 $ 0.2% 2% 15% Adjusted the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts and recorded doubtful-account expense at year-end, based on the aging of receivables. Journal Entry Date Accounts Debit Credit Dec 31 Print Done Over 90 Days 53,000 35% Xarrow_forward3. On July 19, 2022, a customer's account balance of $6,700 is written off as uncollectible. Record the write-off. (If no entry is required for a particular transaction/event, select "No Journal Entry Required" in the first account field.) View transaction list Journal entry worksheet 1 > Record write off of actual bad debts. Note: Enter debits before credits. Date General Journal Debit Credit July 19, 2022arrow_forwardSubject: acountingarrow_forward
- want detailed answerarrow_forwardNonearrow_forwardPrepare the journal entries to record the mortgage loan and the first two installment payments. (Round answers to O decimal places, e.g. 15,250. Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts.) Date Account Titles and Explanation Dec. 31, 2017 Dec. 31, 2018 Dec. 31, 2019 Debit Creditarrow_forward
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ISBN:9781947172685
Author:OpenStax
Publisher:OpenStax College