a.
Long-term debt: Long-term debt refers to the obligation of the company to be paid after one year or one operating cycle whichever is longer. Generally, the long-term debt is reported under the long-term liabilities section of the
Current portion of long-term debt: The amount of debt which would be paid within one year is called as current portion of long-term debt. The current portion of long-term debt is reported as a current liability.
To identify: The amount of long-term debt that was disclosed as a current liability on the current year’s December 31 balance sheet.
b.
The amount of change in total current liabilities between the preceding year and the current year as a result of the current portion of long-term debt.
c.
To identify: The amount of total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year.
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 11 Solutions
Accounting (Text Only)
- Current portion of long-term debt Connie's Bistro, Inc. reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Long-term debt consists of the following: December 31 December 31 Current Year Preceding Year Total long term-debt $784,700 $431,600 Current portion (227,600) (211,900) Long-term debt $557,100 $219,700 a. How much of the long-term debt was disclosed as a current liability on the current year's December 31 balance sheet? million b. How much did the total current liabilities change between the preceding year and the current year as a result of the current portion of long-term debt? million Increase c. If Connie's Bistro did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year? millionarrow_forwardCurrent portion of long-term debt Connie's Bistro, Inc. reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Long-term debt consists of the following: Total long term-debt Current portion December 31 December 31 Current Year Preceding Year $669,200 (194,100) $475,100 $368,100 (180,700) $187,400 Long-term debt a. How much of the long-term debt was disclosed as a current liability on the current year's December 31 balance sheet? million b. How much did the total current liabilities change between the preceding year and the current year as a result of the current portion of long-term debt? million ( c. If Connie's Bistro did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year? millionarrow_forwardCurrent portion of long-term debtarrow_forward
- Current Portion of Long-Term Debt PepsiCo, Inc., reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Long-term debt is composed of the following: December 31 Current Year Preceding Year Total long term-debt $27,917 $26,557 Current portion (4,096) (2,224) Long-term debt $23,821 $24,333 If PepsiCo did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year?arrow_forwardCurrent portion of long-term debt Connie's Bistro, Inc. reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Long-term debt consists of the following: Total long term-debt Current portion December 31 Current Year C. $685,100 (198,700) $486,400 million December 31 Prior Year Long-term debt a. How much of the long-term debt was disclosed as a current liability on the current year's December 31 balance sheet? $ $376,800 (185,000) $191,800 b. How much did the total current liabilities change between the preceding year and the current year as a result of the current portion of long-term debt? million If Connie's Bistro did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year? millionarrow_forwardplease answer do not image formatarrow_forward
- PepsiCo, Inc., reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Long-term debt is comprised of the following: December 31 Previous Year Current Year Total long term-debt Less current portion $33,284 $28,897 (4,071) (5,076) $29,213 $23,821 Long-term debt a. How much of the long-term debt was disclosed as a current liability on the current year's December 31 balance sheet? b. How much did the total current liabilities change between the preceding year and the current year as a result of the current portion of long-term debt? c. If PepsiCo did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year?arrow_forwardPepsiCo, Inc., reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Long-term debt is comprised of the following: December 31 Current Year Preceding Year Total long term-debt $33,284 $28,897 Less current portion (4,071) (5,076) Long-term debt $29,213 $23,821 a. How much of the long-term debt was disclosed as a current liability on the current year's December 31 balance sheet? b. How much did the total current liabilities change between the preceding year and the current year as a result of the current portion of long-term debt? c. If PepsiCo did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on December 31 of the upcoming year?arrow_forwardHello question is attached, thanks.arrow_forward
- The Cidros reported the following information on long-term debt: Current year Previous year Total long-term debts $14,578 millions $18,564 millions Minus the current portion (1,290) millions (1,540) millions Long-term debts 13,288 millions 17,024 millions Determine how much total current liabilities changed between the previous year and the current year as a result of the long-term debt portion. Explain your answer.Indicates the balance of the debt the following year if The Cidros does not acquire another long-term debt in the next few years.arrow_forwardPepsiCo, Inc., reported the following information about its long-term debt in the notes to a recent financial statement (in millions): Dec. 31 Current Year Total long-term debt $32,248 Less current portion (3,953) Long-term debt $28,295 Preceding Year Total long-term debt $37,816 Less current portion (4,020) Long-term debt $33,796 Q: If PepsiCo did not issue additional long-term debt next year, what would be the total long-term debt on Dec. 31 of the upcoming year?arrow_forwardRetirement of Debt Moore Company is preparing its statement of cash flows for the current year. During the year, the company retired two issuances of debt and properly recorded the transactions. These transactions were as follows: Paid cash of $14,400 to retire bonds payable with a face value of $17,000 and a book value of $15,000. Paid cash of $40,000 to retire bonds payable with a face value of $37,000 and a book value of $39,000. Required: Record, in journal entry form, the entries that Moore would make for the preceding transactions on its spreadsheet to prepare its statement of cash flows. If an amount box does not rectire an entry, leave it blankarrow_forward
- Managerial Accounting: The Cornerstone of Busines...AccountingISBN:9781337115773Author:Maryanne M. Mowen, Don R. Hansen, Dan L. HeitgerPublisher:Cengage LearningCornerstones of Financial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337690881Author:Jay Rich, Jeff JonesPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Century 21 Accounting Multicolumn JournalAccountingISBN:9781337679503Author:GilbertsonPublisher:CengagePrinciples of Accounting Volume 1AccountingISBN:9781947172685Author:OpenStaxPublisher:OpenStax College