Concept explainers
a.
Concept Introduction:
Consolidation: Consolidation is the process of accounting where books of the parent company are reported along with the books of the subsidiary company in consolidated/combined form after making necessary
To Calculate: The book value of the total assets (not net assets) transferred to S Company.
b.
Concept Introduction:
Consolidation: Consolidation is the process of accounting where books of the parent company are reported along with the books of the subsidiary company in consolidated/combined form after making necessary adjustment entries as required in the process of consolidation.
To Calculate: the amount that P reports as its investment in S after the transfer.
c.
Concept Introduction:
Consolidation: Consolidation is the process of accounting where books of the parent company are reported along with the books of the subsidiary company in consolidated/combined form after making necessary adjustment entries as required in the process of consolidation.
To Calculate: the number of shares of
d.
Concept Introduction:
Consolidation: Consolidation is the process of accounting where books of the parent company are reported along with the books of the subsidiary company in consolidated/combined form after making necessary adjustment entries as required in the process of consolidation.
To Calculate: the impact, the transfer of assets and accounts payable has on the amount reported by Plumb as total assets.
e.
Concept Introduction:
Consolidation: Consolidation is the process of accounting where books of the parent company are reported along with the books of the subsidiary company in consolidated/combined form after making necessary adjustment entries as required in the process of consolidation.
To Calculate: the impact, the transfer of assets and accounts payable have on the amount that P and the consolidated entity reported as shares outstanding.
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ADV.FIN.ACCT.LL W/CONNECT+PROCTORIO PLUS
- Statement 1: Current fair value of the investment adjusted for dividends received describes the amount at which a parent company reports its investment in a Subsidiary under the cost method for periods subsequent to the business combination. Statement 2: Under the cost method of accounting for investment, depreciation and amortization of the allocated difference between the fair values and book values of acquired subsidiary’s identifiable net assets is debited to the Subsidiary’s expense accounts, in the working paper. a. Only Statement 2 is correct b. Both statements are incorrect c. Only Statement 1 is correct d. Both statements are correctarrow_forwardPlease do not provide answer in image formate, thank you.arrow_forwardA partially owned subsidiary sold a machine to its parent at a gain. In the year subsequent to the year of intercompany sale of equipment, the working paper consolidation entry under cost method will debit: I. Equipment Ill. Accumulated Depreciation V. NCI lIl. Investment in subsidiary IV. Retained Earnings a. IV and V b. I, IV and V c. I, II and V d. IIII and IVarrow_forward
- TRUE OR FALSE: Indicate whether the statements are true or false. 1. Assuming the parent acquired 100 percent of the subsidiary’s stock and there are no purchase differentials, the investment income recorded by the parent in the current period will equal the subsidiary’s current net income recognized subsequent to the acquisition date. 2.arrow_forwardQUESTIONS: 1. What is the total non-controlling interest in net income of subsidiary (NCINI5) on Dec 31, 20x5? 2. What is the amount of consolidated assets on Dec 31, 20x5?arrow_forwardWhich of the following is true regarding consolidation of net income?A. Parent net income is decreased by the dividend income recognized due to declared bysubsidiary at full amount even if less than 100% ownership is acquired.B. Amortization of excess must be done to adjust net income of parent to arrive at parent netincome own operation.C. Adjusted net income of subsidiary is shared by Parent’s holding interest andnoncontrolling interest.D. Dividend declared by subsidiary is shared by Parent’s holding interest and noncontrollinginterest.arrow_forward
- Which of the following transactions will affect both the consolidated net income attributable to the parent and the non-controlling interest in net assets of subsidiary (NCINAS)? A. Goodwill impairment under the partial goodwill method. B. Dividend declared but not yet paid by the subsidiary. C. Dividend declared and paid by the parent. D. Provisional amount finalized two months prior to the preparation of consolidated financial statements.arrow_forwardThe December 31, 20x8, balance sheets for Pint Corporation and its 70 percent-owned subsidiary Saloon Company contained the following summarized amounts: Assets Cash and Receivables Inventory Buildings and Equipment (net) Investment in Saloon Company Total Assets Liabilities and Equity Accounts Payable Common Stock Retained Earnings Total Liabilities and Equity PINT CORPORATION AND SALOON COMPANY Balance Sheets December 31, 20x8 view transaction list Consolidation Worksheet Entries A B < Pint acquired the shares of Saloon Company on January 1, 20X7. On December 31, 20X8, assume Pint sold Inventory to Saloon during 20X8 for $105,000 and Saloon sold Inventory to Pint for $309,000. Pint's balance sheet contains Inventory Items purchased from Saloon for $100,000. The Items cost Saloon $60,000 to produce. In addition, Saloon's Inventory contains goods it purchased from Pint for $27,000 that Pint had produced for $16,200. Assume Saloon reported net Income of $72,000 and dividends of $14,400.…arrow_forwardTRUE OR FALSE: Indicate whether the statements are true or false. 1. Worksheet elimination 1 will include only the subsidiary’s stock (par value and additional paid-in capital), Retained Earnings, and the parent’s Investment in Subsidiary account when the parent has acquired 100 percent of the subsidiary’s stock at book value at the beginning of the period. 2.arrow_forward
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- Auditing: A Risk Based-Approach (MindTap Course L...AccountingISBN:9781337619455Author:Karla M Johnstone, Audrey A. Gramling, Larry E. RittenbergPublisher:Cengage Learning