Concept explainers
Exercise 14-9 Preparing financial statements for a manufacturer C4 P2
Refer to the data in Exercise 14-8. For each company, prepare (1) an income statement, and (2) the current assets section of the
Income Statement:
Income statement gives a detail representation of the revenues generated and the expenses incurred by the company in a fiscal year thereby concluding the company’s financial status. It is a financial statement which deals with operating and non-operating activities of the company.
Net Income:
Net income is the net revenue earned by the company after taking into account various charges, costs, expenses and deductions. The net income is crucial for the shareholders and gives an idea of profitability level of the company.
Balance Sheet:
The balance sheet concludes the assets invested in by the company as well as reports the liabilities and equity taken up thus showing the economic or financial status of the company.
Current Assets:
It comprises of all the assets which gets converted into cash in less than a year. Example: inventory, other current assets, etcetera.
Operating Expenses:
The costs incurred in the day to day operations to continue with the business though not related directly with the production of goods are termed as operating expenses.
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS):
Cost of goods sold is the total expense or the cost incurred by the business during the process of manufacturing of goods and is directly related to the production. It generally includes the cost of material, labor and other manufacturing support costs.
(1)
To prepare: an income statement for each of the company.
Explanation of Solution
Given info,
G Company:
Sales amounts to $195,030
Selling expenses are of $50,000
Administrative and general expenses are $21,000.
For cost of goods sold of G Company refer to the question 91,030.
P Company:
Sales amount to $290,000.
Selling expenses are $46,000.
Administrative and general expenses are $43,000.
For cost of goods sold of $143,010 refer to question 8E.
Formula to calculate income before tax is,
Income statement for G Company
Income before tax:
G Company | |
Income Statement | |
For the Year Ended 31 December, 2017 | |
Particulars | Amount($) |
Sales | 195,030 |
Less: Cost of goods sold | (91,030) |
Gross profit | 104,000 |
Add: | |
Selling expenses | 50,000 |
Administrative and general expenses | 21,000 |
Income before tax | 33,000 |
Table (1)
The income before tax for G Company amounts to $33,000.
Note: Selling expenses and administrative and general expenses are operating expenses thus taken up to compute income before tax.
Income statement for P Company
Income before tax:
P Company | |
Income Statement | |
For the Year Ended 31 December, 2017 | |
Particulars | Amount ($) |
Sales | 290,010 |
Less: Cost of goods sold | (143,010) |
Gross profit | 147,000 |
Add: | |
Selling expenses | 46,000 |
Administrative and general expenses | 43,000 |
Income before tax | 58,000 |
Table (2)
The income before tax for the P Company is $58,000.
Note: Selling expenses and administrative and general expenses are operating expenses thus taken up to compute income before tax.
(2)
To compute: Current assets for both the company.
Explanation of Solution
Given info,
G Company:
Cash amounts to $20,000.
Receivable accounts to $13,200.
Raw material inventory is $5,300.
Work in progress inventory is $22,000.
Finished goods amount to $17,650.
P Company:
Cash amounts to $15,700.
Receivable accounts to $19,450.
Raw material inventory $7,200.
Work in progress inventory is $16,000.
Finished goods amount to $13,300.
G Company’s current assets
Particulars | Amount($) |
Cash | 20,000 |
Receivable accounts | 13,200 |
Raw material inventory | 5,300 |
Work in progress inventory | 22,000 |
Finished inventory | 17,650 |
Net current assets | 78,150 |
Table (3)
Current assets account to $79,150 for G Company.
P Company’s current assets
Particulars | Amount($) |
Cash | 15,700 |
Receivables accounts | 19,450 |
Raw material inventory | 7,200 |
Work in progress inventory | 16,000 |
Finished inventory | 13,300 |
Net current assets | 71,650 |
Table (4)
P Company’s current assets amount to $71,650.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 14 Solutions
FINANC. MANGERIAL ACCT. W/CONNECT (LL)
- CAL Ltd. sold $6,700,000 of 10% bonds, which were dated March 1, 2023, on June 1, 2023. The bonds paid interest on September 1 and March 1 of each year. The bonds' maturity date was March 1, 2033, and the bonds were issued to yield 12%. CAL's fiscal year-end was February 28, and the company followed IFRS. On June 1, 2024, CAL bought back $2,700,000 worth of bonds for $2,600,000 plus accrued interest. (a) Using 1. a financial calculator, or 2. Excel function PV, calculate the issue price of the bonds and prepare the entry for the issuance of the bonds. Hint: Use the account Interest Expense in your entry). there are 3 entries to be made herearrow_forwardDon't use ai to answer I will report you answerarrow_forward1. Stampede Company has two service departments — purchasing and maintenance, and two production departments — fabrication and assembly. The distribution of each service department's efforts to the other departments is shown below: FROM TO Purchasing Maintenance Fabrication Assembly Purchasing 0% 45% 45% 10% Maintenance 55% 0% 30% 15% The direct operating costs of the departments (including both variable and fixed costs) were as follows: Purchasing $ 138,000 Maintenance 60,000 Fabrication 114,000 Assembly 90,000 The total cost accumulated in the fabrication department using the direct method is: The answer is not 194100 2. Bifurcator Company produces three products — X, Y, and Z — from a joint process. Each product may be sold at the split-off point or processed further. Additional processing requires no special facilities, and production costs of further processing are entirely variable and traceable to the products involved. Last year all three products were…arrow_forward
- General accounting question please solvearrow_forwardDue Jan 26 11:59pm Module 2 Discussion Provide and discuss an example of a situation where a company would use a job cost sheet. As part of your analysis, be sure to explain the nature and importance of a job cost sheet. or Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of Job Order Costing. Be sure to include specific examples of the advantages/disadvantages that you discuss. 21 Replies, 18arrow_forwardNonearrow_forward
- Abcarrow_forwardchoose 4 nuber from 1 to 5 with repetitions allowed to create the largest standard deviation posiiblearrow_forward1. Stampede Company has two service departments — purchasing and maintenance, and two production departments — fabrication and assembly. The distribution of each service department's efforts to the other departments is shown below: FROM TO Purchasing Maintenance Fabrication Assembly Purchasing 0% 45% 45% 10% Maintenance 55% 0% 30% 15% The direct operating costs of the departments (including both variable and fixed costs) were as follows: Purchasing $ 138,000 Maintenance 60,000 Fabrication 114,000 Assembly 90,000 The total cost accumulated in the fabrication department using the direct method is: 2. Bifurcator Company produces three products — X, Y, and Z — from a joint process. Each product may be sold at the split-off point or processed further. Additional processing requires no special facilities, and production costs of further processing are entirely variable and traceable to the products involved. Last year all three products were processed beyond…arrow_forward
- Accounting Information SystemsFinanceISBN:9781337552127Author:Ulric J. Gelinas, Richard B. Dull, Patrick Wheeler, Mary Callahan HillPublisher:Cengage LearningSurvey of Accounting (Accounting I)AccountingISBN:9781305961883Author:Carl WarrenPublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Accounting Volume 2AccountingISBN:9781947172609Author:OpenStaxPublisher:OpenStax College
- 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