Finance Lease, Purchase Option, Lessee, Amortization Schedules, Journal Entries. Carrie-Ann Fashions, Inc. entered into a 5-year lease with Reese Rentals to occupy an office building. The economic life of the building is 30 years. The building had a fair value of $8,500,000 and Carrie-Ann has an option to purchase the building at the end of the lease term for $5,500,000, which is expected to be considerably below fair value at lease termination. The annual lease payments are $842,500 and are due on January 1 with the first one due at lease commencement on January 1, 2019. The implicit rate in the lease is 6% and is known by Carrie-Ann. There is no guaranteed residual value specified. The lessor did not offer any incentives to sign the lease. Carrie-Ann did not incur any initial indirect costs. The lease commencement date is January 1. All payments are due on January 1. Required a. Classify this lease for Carne-Ann Fashions (the lessee). b. Prepare the journal entries necessary to record this transaction on the lease commencement date. c. Prepare the lease amortization schedule and prepare the journal entries for the first year.
Finance Lease, Purchase Option, Lessee, Amortization Schedules, Journal Entries. Carrie-Ann Fashions, Inc. entered into a 5-year lease with Reese Rentals to occupy an office building. The economic life of the building is 30 years. The building had a fair value of $8,500,000 and Carrie-Ann has an option to purchase the building at the end of the lease term for $5,500,000, which is expected to be considerably below fair value at lease termination. The annual lease payments are $842,500 and are due on January 1 with the first one due at lease commencement on January 1, 2019. The implicit rate in the lease is 6% and is known by Carrie-Ann. There is no guaranteed residual value specified. The lessor did not offer any incentives to sign the lease. Carrie-Ann did not incur any initial indirect costs. The lease commencement date is January 1. All payments are due on January 1. Required a. Classify this lease for Carne-Ann Fashions (the lessee). b. Prepare the journal entries necessary to record this transaction on the lease commencement date. c. Prepare the lease amortization schedule and prepare the journal entries for the first year.
Solution Summary: The author explains that lease is a long-term rent agreement between two parties that is often clubbed with other clauses relating to maintenance or sale at the end of the lease period.
Entries. Carrie-Ann Fashions, Inc. entered into a 5-year lease with Reese Rentals to occupy an office building. The economic life of the building is 30 years. The building had a fair value of $8,500,000 and Carrie-Ann has an option to purchase the building at the end of the lease term for $5,500,000, which is expected to be considerably below fair value at lease termination. The annual lease payments are $842,500 and are due on January 1 with the first one due at lease commencement on January 1, 2019. The implicit rate in the lease is 6% and is known by Carrie-Ann. There is no guaranteed residual value specified. The lessor did not offer any incentives to sign the lease. Carrie-Ann did not incur any initial indirect costs. The lease commencement date is January 1. All payments are due on January 1.
Required
a. Classify this lease for Carne-Ann Fashions (the lessee).
b. Prepare the journal entries necessary to record this transaction on the lease commencement date.
c. Prepare the lease amortization schedule and prepare the journal entries for the first year.
Discuss the accounting treatment for investments in debt and equity securities.
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On December 1, Jasmin Ernst organized Ernst Consulting. On December 3, the owner contributed $84,310 in assets to
launch the business. On December 31, the company's records show the following items and amounts.
$ 10,200 Cash withdrawals by owner
Cash
Accounts receivable
15,200
Consulting revenue
Office supplies
3,550
Rent expense
Land
45,990
Office equipment
18,310
Accounts payable
8,740
Salaries expense
Telephone expense
Miscellaneous expenses
Owner investments
84,310
$ 2,340
15,200
3,910
7,350
790
610
Use the above information to prepare a December 31 balance sheet for Ernst Consulting.
AC
Graw
Hill
ERNST CONSULTING
Balance Sheet
December 31
$
0
G-SYNC
$
0
S
0
B
Audit, Fraud, Or Forensic Accounting
Introduce yourself to your peers by sharing something unique about your background. Explain how you expect this course will help you move forward in your current or future career.
This course covers forensic accounting, so it's important to establish the differences between an audit, a fraud examination, and a forensic accounting engagement. Think about the fraud conviction of Elizabeth Holmes, as described in the video, "Elizabeth Holmes Found Guilty in Theranos Fraud Trial."
Then respond to the following:
Imagine you are assigned to the Theranos case.
Write the first five questions you would ask if you were an auditor, the first five questions as a fraud examiner, and the first five as a forensic accountant.
After your questions, explain why the questions and approaches are different among the three roles.
Be sure to respond to at least one of your classmates' posts.
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