1.
Concept Introduction:
Operating lease: Operating lease is a contract in which the owner retains the risks and rewards of ownership. A lessee under an operating lease only reports lease payments as an expense and does not report leased assets or lease liability in the
The
2.
Concept Introduction:
Operating lease: Operating lease is a contract in which the owner retains the risks and rewards of ownership. A lessee under an operating lease only reports lease payments as an expense and does not report leased assets or lease liability in the balance sheet whereas a financial lease is in which the lessor transfers all risk and reward of ownership to the lessee.
The journal entry for the first year lease payment.
3.
Concept Introduction:
Operating lease: Operating lease is a contract in which the owner retains the risks and rewards of ownership. A lessee under an operating lease only reports lease payments as an expense and does not report leased assets or lease liability in the balance sheet whereas a financial lease is in which the lessor transfers all risk and reward of ownership to the lessee.
The journal entry to record straight-line amortization for three years.
4.
Concept Introduction:
Operating lease: Operating lease is a contract in which the owner retains the risks and rewards of ownership. A lessee under an operating lease only reports lease payments as an expense and does not report leased assets or lease liability in the balance sheet whereas a financial lease is in which the lessor transfers all risk and reward of ownership to the lessee.
The journal entry for lease payments at the end of years 1 and 2.
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 14 Solutions
FUND OF ACCT PRIN(LOOSE-LEAF)+ACCESS
- 22 Lessors are required to account for lease receipts from operating leases asA. revenue, on a reducing balance over the lease term.B. income, on inception date of the lease.C. income, on a straight-line basis over the lease term.D. revenue, at the end of the lease term.arrow_forwardPlease Complete all requirement and Do not give solution in image formatarrow_forwardFinancial Statement Reporting for an Operating Lease Harmeling Paint Ball (HPB) Corporation needs a new air compressor that costs $80,000. HPB will need it for only 5 years even though the compressor's economic life is long enough so that the lease is an operating lease. The firm can lease the compressor for 5 years with $30,000 lease payments at the end of each year. HPB's cost of debt is 13%. Answer the following questions. (Hint: See Table 19-1.) a. What is the initial lease liability that must be reported on the balance sheet? Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to the nearest cent. Enter your answer as a positive value. $ b. What is the initial right-of-use asset? Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to the nearest cent. $ c. What will HPB report as the Year-1 lease expense? Round your answer to the nearest cent. Enter your answer as a positive value. $ d. What is the Year-1 imputed interest expense? Do not round intermediate…arrow_forward
- hr.3arrow_forwardFinancial Statement Reporting for a Finance Lease Reynolds Construction (RC) needs a piece of equipment that costs $80,000. The equipment has an economic life of 2 years and no residual value. The equipment will not require maintenance because its useful life is so short. RC can borrow the full cost of the equipment at an interest rate of 7% with payments due at the end of the year. Alternatively, RC can lease the equipment for $45,000 with payments due at the end of the year. Assume RC chooses the lease, which is a finance lease for financial reporting purposes. Answer the following questions. (Hint: See Table 19-1.) a. What is the initial lease liability that must be reported on the balance sheet? Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to the nearest cent. Enter your answer as a positive value. $ b. What is the initial right-of-use asset? Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answer to the nearest cent. $ c. What will RC report as an interest expense…arrow_forwardApplying New Lease Accounting Standards for Operating Leases On January 1 of the current year, CCH Corporation entered into the following lease contract. Based on the facts, CCH Corporation classifies the lease as an operating lease. Details of lease contract Leased asset Office space Lease term 5 years Annual lease payment $115,487 Upfront fees $10,000 Cost of debt capital 5% a. Determine the amount of the lease liability that CCH will add to its balance sheet at the inception of the lease. Amount of lease liability b. What amount will be added to the balance sheet as an asset? Amount added as an asset The rest of the questions are given in pictures below. please answer all parts correctly. i will upvote. thank you!!arrow_forward
- Prepare the lease amortization schedulearrow_forwardAnalyzing and Interpreting Lease Footnote Disclosures The GAP Inc. discloses the following schedule to its fiscal 2018 (ended February 2, 2019) 10-K/report relating to its leasing to its leasing activities. The aggregate minimum noncancelable annual lease payments under leases in effect on February 2, 2019, are as follows: Fiscal Year ($ millions) 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 $1,156 1.098 892 730 539 Thereafter 1,520 Total minimum lease commitments $5,935 Compute the present value of GAP's operating leases using a 6% discount rate and round the remaining lease term to the nearest whole year. Round each answer to the nearest whole number. S million Present Value $ Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 After 5 Check $ 1,091 977 ✔ 749 578 ✔ 403 ✓ 1.136 x 4,934 x You have correctly selected 5.arrow_forwardNeed help to do these questions and do the amortization schedule and record the journal entries.arrow_forward
- I need the Right of Use Asset Ammortization table, not the lease liability amortization table.arrow_forwardWildhorse Manufacturing Ltd. has signed a lease agreement with Blossom Leasing Inc. to lease some specialized manufacturing equipment. The terms of the lease are as follows The lease is for 5 years commencing January 1, 2023 Wildhorse must pay Blossom $59,445 on January 1 of each year, beginning in 2023 Equipment of this type normally has an economic life of 6 years. Blossom has concluded based on its review of Wildhorse's financial statements, that there is no unusual credit risk in this situation Blossoms will not incur any further costs with regard to this leas Blossom purchases this equipment directly from the manufacturer at a cost of $225,329, and normally sells the equipment for $275,429 Wildhorse's borrowing rate is 7%. Blossom's impiled interest rate is 6%, which is known to Wildhorse at the time of negotiating the lease Wildhorse uses the straight-line method to depreciate similar equipment. Both Wildhorse and Blossom have calendar fiscal years (year end December 31), and…arrow_forwardPROBLEM NO. 3 Assume that DBP Leasing Corp. and Minasugbo Inc. sign a lease contract effective on January 1, 2019 where DBP Leasing leases to Minasugbo a bulldozer. The terms and provisions of the lease contract and other pertinent date are as follows: • The term of the lease is five years. The lease agreement is non-cancelable, requiring equal rental payments of P20,711.11 at the beginning of each year (annuity-due basis). The bulldozer has a fair value at the commencement of the lease of P100,000, an estimated economic life of five years, and a guaranteed residual value of P5,000. (Minasugbo expects that it is probable that the expected value of the residual value at the end of the lease will be greater than the guaranteed amount of P5,000.) The lease contains no renewal options. The bulldozer reverts to DBP Leasing at the termination of the lease. Minasugbo's incremental borrowing rate is 5 percent per year. • Minasugbo depreciates its equipment on a straight-line basis. DBP Leasing…arrow_forward
- Financial Accounting: The Impact on Decision Make...AccountingISBN:9781305654174Author:Gary A. Porter, Curtis L. NortonPublisher:Cengage LearningIntermediate Accounting: Reporting And AnalysisAccountingISBN:9781337788281Author:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald PagachPublisher:Cengage Learning