Research Case 15–1 FASB codification; locate and extract relevant information and authoritative support for a financial reporting issue; finance lease; sublease of a leased asset • LO15–2, LO15–8 “I don’t see that in my intermediate accounting text I saved from college,” you explain to another member of the accounting division of Dowell Chemical Corporation. “This will take some research.” Your comments pertain to the appropriate accounting treatment of a proposed sublease of warehouses Dowell has used for product storage. Dowell leased the warehouses one year ago on December 31. The five-year lease agreement called for Dowell to make quarterly lease payments of $2,398,303, payable each December 31, March 31, June 30, and September 30, with the first payment at the lease’s beginning. As a finance lease, Dowell had recorded the right-of-use asset and liability at $40 million, the present value of the lease payments at 8%. Dowell records depreciation on a straight-line basis at the end of each fiscal year. Today, Jason True, Dowell’s controller, explained a proposal to sublease the underused warehouses to American Tankers, Inc. for the remaining four years of the lease term. American Tankers would be substituted as lessee under the original lease agreement. As the new lessee, it would become the primary obligor under the agreement, and Dowell would not be secondarily liable for fulfilling the obligations under the lease agreement. “Check on how we would need to account for this and get back to me,” he had said. Required: 1. After the first full year under the warehouse lease, what is the balance in Dowell’s lease liability? An amortization schedule will be helpful in determining this amount. 2. After the first full year under the warehouse lease, what is the carrying amount (after accumulated depreciation ) of Dowell’s leased warehouses? 3. Obtain the relevant authoritative literature on accounting for derecognition of finance leases by lessees using the FASB’s Codification Research System. You might gain access from the FASB website ( www.fasb.org ), from your school library, or some other source. Determine the appropriate accounting treatment for the proposed sublease. What is the specific Codification citation that Dowell would rely on to determine: a. if the proposal to sublease will qualify as a termination of a finance lease, and b. the appropriate accounting treatment for the sublease? 4. What, if any, journal entry would Dowell record in connection with the sublease?
Research Case 15–1 FASB codification; locate and extract relevant information and authoritative support for a financial reporting issue; finance lease; sublease of a leased asset • LO15–2, LO15–8 “I don’t see that in my intermediate accounting text I saved from college,” you explain to another member of the accounting division of Dowell Chemical Corporation. “This will take some research.” Your comments pertain to the appropriate accounting treatment of a proposed sublease of warehouses Dowell has used for product storage. Dowell leased the warehouses one year ago on December 31. The five-year lease agreement called for Dowell to make quarterly lease payments of $2,398,303, payable each December 31, March 31, June 30, and September 30, with the first payment at the lease’s beginning. As a finance lease, Dowell had recorded the right-of-use asset and liability at $40 million, the present value of the lease payments at 8%. Dowell records depreciation on a straight-line basis at the end of each fiscal year. Today, Jason True, Dowell’s controller, explained a proposal to sublease the underused warehouses to American Tankers, Inc. for the remaining four years of the lease term. American Tankers would be substituted as lessee under the original lease agreement. As the new lessee, it would become the primary obligor under the agreement, and Dowell would not be secondarily liable for fulfilling the obligations under the lease agreement. “Check on how we would need to account for this and get back to me,” he had said. Required: 1. After the first full year under the warehouse lease, what is the balance in Dowell’s lease liability? An amortization schedule will be helpful in determining this amount. 2. After the first full year under the warehouse lease, what is the carrying amount (after accumulated depreciation ) of Dowell’s leased warehouses? 3. Obtain the relevant authoritative literature on accounting for derecognition of finance leases by lessees using the FASB’s Codification Research System. You might gain access from the FASB website ( www.fasb.org ), from your school library, or some other source. Determine the appropriate accounting treatment for the proposed sublease. What is the specific Codification citation that Dowell would rely on to determine: a. if the proposal to sublease will qualify as a termination of a finance lease, and b. the appropriate accounting treatment for the sublease? 4. What, if any, journal entry would Dowell record in connection with the sublease?
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FASB codification; locate and extract relevant information and authoritative support for a financial reporting issue; finance lease; sublease of a leased asset
• LO15–2, LO15–8
“I don’t see that in my intermediate accounting text I saved from college,” you explain to another member of the accounting division of Dowell Chemical Corporation. “This will take some research.” Your comments pertain to the appropriate accounting treatment of a proposed sublease of warehouses Dowell has used for product storage.
Dowell leased the warehouses one year ago on December 31. The five-year lease agreement called for Dowell to make quarterly lease payments of $2,398,303, payable each December 31, March 31, June 30, and September 30, with the first payment at the lease’s beginning. As a finance lease, Dowell had recorded the right-of-use asset and liability at $40 million, the present value of the lease payments at 8%. Dowell records depreciation on a straight-line basis at the end of each fiscal year.
Today, Jason True, Dowell’s controller, explained a proposal to sublease the underused warehouses to American Tankers, Inc. for the remaining four years of the lease term. American Tankers would be substituted as lessee under the original lease agreement. As the new lessee, it would become the primary obligor under the agreement, and Dowell would not be secondarily liable for fulfilling the obligations under the lease agreement. “Check on how we would need to account for this and get back to me,” he had said.
Required:
1. After the first full year under the warehouse lease, what is the balance in Dowell’s lease liability? An amortization schedule will be helpful in determining this amount.
2. After the first full year under the warehouse lease, what is the carrying amount (after accumulated depreciation) of Dowell’s leased warehouses?
3. Obtain the relevant authoritative literature on accounting for derecognition of finance leases by lessees using the FASB’s Codification Research System. You might gain access from the FASB website (www.fasb.org), from your school library, or some other source. Determine the appropriate accounting treatment for the proposed sublease. What is the specific Codification citation that Dowell would rely on to determine:
a. if the proposal to sublease will qualify as a termination of a finance lease, and b. the appropriate accounting treatment for the sublease?
4. What, if any, journal entry would Dowell record in connection with the sublease?
Calculate the firm's annual cash flows associated with the new project?General accounting
The following balance sheet for the Hubbard Corporation was prepared by the company:
HUBBARD CORPORATION
Balance Sheet
At December 31, 2024
Assets
Buildings
Land
Cash
Accounts receivable (net)
Inventory
Machinery
Patent (net)
Investment in equity securities
Total assets
Accounts payable
$ 763,000
289,000
73,000
146,000
266,000
293,000
113,000
86,000
Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
Accumulated depreciation
Notes payable
Appreciation of inventory
Common stock (authorized and issued
113,000 shares of no par stock)
$ 2,029,000
$ 228,000
268,000
526,000
93,000
452,000
Retained earnings
462,000
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity
$ 2,029,000
Additional information:
1. The buildings, land, and machinery are all stated at cost except for a parcel of land that the company is holding for future sale.
The land originally cost $63,000 but, due to a significant increase in market value, is listed at $146,000. The increase in the land
account was credited to retained earnings.
2. The…
Provide correct answer this general accounting question
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