Purchase option; lessor; sales-type lease; no selling profit • LO15–2, LO15–6 Universal Leasing leases electronic equipment to a variety of businesses. The company’s primary service is providing alternate financing by acquiring equipment and leasing it to customers under long-term sales-type leases. Universal earns interest under these arrangements at a 10% annual rate. The company leased an electronic typesetting machine it purchased for $30,900 to a local publisher, Desktop Inc. on December 31, 2017. The lease contract specified annual payments of $8,000 beginning January 1, 2018, the beginning of the lease, and each December 31 through 2019 (three-year lease term). The publisher had the option to purchase the machine on December 30, 2020, the end of the lease term, for $12,000 when it was expected to have a residual value of $16,000, a sufficient difference that exercise seems reasonably certain. Required: 1. Show how Universal calculated the $8,000 annual lease payments for this sales-type lease. 2. Prepare an amortization schedule that describes the pattern of interest revenue for Universal Leasing over the lease term. 3. Prepare the appropriate entries for Universal Leasing from the beginning of the lease through the end of the lease term.
Purchase option; lessor; sales-type lease; no selling profit • LO15–2, LO15–6 Universal Leasing leases electronic equipment to a variety of businesses. The company’s primary service is providing alternate financing by acquiring equipment and leasing it to customers under long-term sales-type leases. Universal earns interest under these arrangements at a 10% annual rate. The company leased an electronic typesetting machine it purchased for $30,900 to a local publisher, Desktop Inc. on December 31, 2017. The lease contract specified annual payments of $8,000 beginning January 1, 2018, the beginning of the lease, and each December 31 through 2019 (three-year lease term). The publisher had the option to purchase the machine on December 30, 2020, the end of the lease term, for $12,000 when it was expected to have a residual value of $16,000, a sufficient difference that exercise seems reasonably certain. Required: 1. Show how Universal calculated the $8,000 annual lease payments for this sales-type lease. 2. Prepare an amortization schedule that describes the pattern of interest revenue for Universal Leasing over the lease term. 3. Prepare the appropriate entries for Universal Leasing from the beginning of the lease through the end of the lease term.
Solution Summary: The author explains that sales-type lease is a parallel type of direct financing whereby the owner purchases the equipment to lease it and receives the interest revenue over the period of lease.
Purchase option; lessor; sales-type lease; no selling profit
• LO15–2, LO15–6
Universal Leasing leases electronic equipment to a variety of businesses. The company’s primary service is providing alternate financing by acquiring equipment and leasing it to customers under long-term sales-type leases. Universal earns interest under these arrangements at a 10% annual rate. The company leased an electronic typesetting machine it purchased for $30,900 to a local publisher, Desktop Inc. on December 31, 2017. The lease contract specified annual payments of $8,000 beginning January 1, 2018, the beginning of the lease, and each December 31 through 2019 (three-year lease term). The publisher had the option to purchase the machine on December 30, 2020, the end of the lease term, for $12,000 when it was expected to have a residual value of $16,000, a sufficient difference that exercise seems reasonably certain.
Required:
1. Show how Universal calculated the $8,000 annual lease payments for this sales-type lease.
2. Prepare an amortization schedule that describes the pattern of interest revenue for Universal Leasing over the lease term.
3. Prepare the appropriate entries for Universal Leasing from the beginning of the lease through the end of the lease term.
Joe and Ethan form JH Corporation. Joe transfers equipment (basis of $210,000 and fair market value of $180,000) while Ethan transfers land (basis of $15,000 and fair market value of $150,000) and $30,000 of cash. Each receives 50% of JH’s stock. As a result of these transfers:
a. Joe has a recognized loss of $30,000, and Ethan has a recognized gain of $135,000. b. Neither Joe nor Ethan has any recognized gain or loss.c. Joe has no recognized loss, but Ethan has a recognized gain of $30,000. d. JH Corporation will have a basis in the land of $45,000.e. None of the above.
What is the impact of inventory valuation method (FIFO vs. LIFO) on net income during inflation?
Please provide the answer to this general accounting question with proper steps.
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