(1)
Stock options: Stock options are the stock-based compensation plans provided in the form of an option to buy certain number of shares for a certain price during certain period.
To determine: The compensation cost of stock options
(1)
Explanation of Solution
Compute the total compensation cost of stock options.
(2)
Debit and credit rules:
- Debit an increase in asset account, increase in expense account, decrease in liability account, and decrease in stockholders’ equity accounts.
- Credit decrease in asset account, increase in revenue account, increase in liability account, and increase in stockholders’ equity accounts.
To journalize: The entry for compensation expense on December 31, 2018
(2)
Explanation of Solution
Prepare journal entry for compensation expense on December 31, 2018.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2018 | |||||
December | 31 | Compensation Expense | 40,000,000 | ||
Paid-In Capital–Stock Options | 40,000,000 | ||||
(To record compensation expense) |
Table (1)
- Compensation Expense is an expense account. Since expenses decrease stockholders’ equity, and a decrease in stockholders’ equity is debited.
- Paid-in Capital–Stock Options is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are considered as earned by the employee, stockholders’ equity increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
Working Notes:
Compute the compensation cost allocated each year.
Note: Refer to Equation(1) for the value and computation of compensation cost.
Prepare journal entry to record the tax effect of compensation expense on December 31, 2018.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2018 | |||||
December | 31 | 16,000,000 | |||
Income Tax Expense | 16,000,000 | ||||
(To record income tax expense) |
Table (2)
- Deferred Tax Asset is an asset account. Since the stock options are not qualified as incentive plans, tax expense is recorded on compensation expense for which the tax deduction is available in future. To record this tax benefit, which is accounted as the tax expense payment in advance, this account is debited.
- Income Tax Expense is an expense account. Since tax expense is reduced for accounting purposes, tax expense is credited.
Working Notes:
Compute the deferred tax asset amount allocated.
Note: Refer to Equation (2) for the value and computation of compensation expense.
(3)
To journalize: The entry for compensation expense on December 31, 2019
(3)
Explanation of Solution
Prepare journal entry for compensation expense on December 31, 2019.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2019 | |||||
December | 31 | Compensation Expense | 40,000,000 | ||
Paid-In Capital–Stock Options | 40,000,000 | ||||
(To record compensation expense) |
Table (3)
- Compensation Expense is an expense account. Since expenses decrease stockholders’ equity, and a decrease in stockholders’ equity is debited.
- Paid-in Capital–Stock Options is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are considered as earned by the employee, stockholders’ equity increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
Note: Refer to Equation(2) for the value and computation of compensation expense.
Prepare journal entry to record the tax effect of compensation expense on December 31, 2019.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2019 | |||||
December | 31 | 16,000,000 | |||
Income Tax Expense | 16,000,000 | ||||
(To record income tax expense) |
Table (4)
- Deferred Tax Asset is an asset account. Since the stock options are not qualified as incentive plans, tax expense is recorded on compensation expense for which the tax deduction is available in future. To record this tax benefit, which is accounted as the tax expense payment in advance, this account is debited.
- Income Tax Expense is an expense account. Since tax expenseis reduced for accounting purposes, tax expense is credited.
Note: Refer to Equation (3) for the value and computation of income tax expense.
(4)
To journalize: The exercise of options
(4)
Explanation of Solution
Journalize the entry for options exercised.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2023 | |||||
March | 20 | Cash | 320,000,000 | ||
Paid-in Capital – Stock Options | 80,000,000 | ||||
Common Stock | 40,000,000 | ||||
Paid-in Capital–Excess of Par | 360,000,000 | ||||
(To record options exercised by stock option holders) |
Table (5)
- Cash is an asset account. Since cash is received, asset value increased, and an increase in asset is debited.
- Paid-in Capital–Stock Options is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are exercised and shares are issued, stock options value is decreased, and a decrease in equity is debited.
- Common Stock is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are exercised and shares are issued, common stock value increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
- Paid-in Capital–Excess of Par is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are exercised and shares are issued, excess of par value increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
Working Notes:
Compute cash received by Corporation WAV.
Compute the paid-in capital of stock options amount.
Compute the common stock amount.
Compute the paid-in capital–excess of par amount.
Note: Refer to Equations (4), (5), and (6) for all the values.
Journalize the entry for tax effect if all the options are exercised.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2023 | |||||
March | 20 | Income Taxes Payable | 64,000,000 | ||
Deferred Tax Asset | 32,000,000 | ||||
Income Tax Expense | 32,000,000 | ||||
(To record income taxes payable) |
Table (6)
- Income Taxes Payable is a liability account. Since the tax expense is recognized in advance, the future tax liability is reduced, and a reduction in liability is debited.
- Deferred Tax Asset (DTA) is an asset account. Since the tax expense which is paid in advance is recognized on exercise date, asset is reduced and a reduction in asset is credited.
- Income Tax Expense is an expense account. Since DTA is recognized, the future tax benefit is recorded.
Working Notes:
Compute income taxes payable amount.
Compute DTA for the years 2016 and 2017.
Compute paid-in capital.
Note: Refer to Equations (8), and (9) for the value and computation of income taxes payable and DTA.
(5)
To journalize: The entry for compensation expense on December 31, 2018
(5)
Explanation of Solution
Prepare journal entry for compensation expense on December 31, 2018.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2018 | |||||
December | 31 | Compensation Expense | 40,000,000 | ||
Paid-In Capital–Stock Options | 40,000,000 | ||||
(To record compensation expense) |
Table (3)
- Compensation Expense is an expense account. Since expenses decrease stockholders’ equity, and a decrease in stockholders’ equity is debited.
- Paid-in Capital–Stock Options is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are considered as earned by the employee, stockholders’ equity increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
Note: Refer to Equation(2) for the value and computation of compensation expense.
(6)
To journalize: The exercise of options
(6)
Explanation of Solution
Journalize the entry for options exercised.
Date | Account Titles and Explanation | Post Ref. | Debit ($) | Credit ($) | |
2023 | |||||
March | 20 | Cash | 320,000,000 | ||
Paid-in Capital – Stock Options | 80,000,000 | ||||
Common Stock | 40,000,000 | ||||
Paid-in Capital–Excess of Par | 360,000,000 | ||||
(To record options exercised by stock option holders) |
Table (5)
- Cash is an asset account. Since cash is received, asset value increased, and an increase in asset is debited.
- Paid-in Capital–Stock Options is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are exercised and shares are issued, stock options value is decreased, and a decrease in equity is debited.
- Common Stock is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are exercised and shares are issued, common stock value increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
- Paid-in Capital–Excess of Par is a stockholders’ equity account. Since stock options are exercised and shares are issued, excess of par value increased, and an increase in equity is credited.
Note: Refer to Equations (4), (5), (6), and (7) for all the values.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 19 Solutions
Intermediate Accounting
- Please solve for items circuled in RED. Thank you.arrow_forwardQuestion text A company sells a product with an associated warranty. (The customer must separately purchase the warranty at the time the related product is purchased). After the sale of a particular warranty, the company records the following journal entry: Cash 500 Warranty Liability 500 What error now exists in the company’s financial statements? Select one: a. Liabilities are understated. b. Liabilities are overstated. C. Net income is understated. d. No error exists, as the entry has been properly recorded.arrow_forwardIndicate whether each of the following statements is true or false. Bribery in the world of business typically happens when an organization or representative of an organization gives financial benefits to an official to gain favor or manipulate a business decision. The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act was implemented in the aftermath of disclosures that businesses were violating the IMA Code of Ethics. Managers are required to follow specific rules issued by the IMA for internal financial reporting. Ethics is more than obeying laws. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act addressed public company accounting reform.arrow_forward
- Suppose the following information was taken from the 2025 financial statements of pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co. (All dollar amounts are in millions.) Retained earnings, January 1, 2025 $46,600.0 Cost of goods sold 8,900.0 Selling and administrative expenses 8,100.0 Dividends 4,000.0 Sales revenue 35,800.0 Research and development expense 5,500.0 Income tax expense 2,300.0 After analyzing the data, prepare an income statement for the year ending December 31, 2025. (Enter amounts in millions rounded to 1 decimal place, e.g. 45.5 million.) MERCK AND CO. Income Statement (in millions) +A CA $arrow_forwardThe following items and amounts were taken from Sandhill Inc.'s 2025 income statement and balance sheet, the end of its first year of operations. Interest expense $2,100 Equipment, net $55,200 Interest payable 550 Depreciation expense 3,300 Notes payable 11,700 Supplies 4,300 Sales revenue 46,300 Common stock 24,800 Cash 2,400 Supplies expense 750 Salaries and wages expense 15,300 Prepare an income statement for Sandhill Inc. for December 31, 2025. Sandhill Inc. Income Statement S GA $ $arrow_forwardOrganization/Industry Rank Employer Survey Student Survey Career Service Director Survey Average Pay Deloitte & Touche/accounting 1 1 8 1 55 Ernst & Young/accounting 2 6 3 6 50 PricewaterhouseCoopers/accounting 3 22 5 2 50 KPMG/accounting 4 17 11 5 50 U.S. State Department/government 5 12 2 24 60 Goldman Sachs/investment banking 6 3 13 16 60 Teach for America/non-profit; government 7 24 6 7 35 Target/retail 8 19 18 3 45 JPMorgan/investment banking 9 13 12 17 60 IBM/technology 10 11 17 13 60 Accenture/consulting 11 5 38 15 60 General Mills/consumer products 12 3 33 28 60 Abbott Laboratories/health 13 2 44 36 55 Walt Disney/hospitality 14 60 1 8 40 Enterprise Rent-A-Car/transportation 15 28 51 4 35 General Electric/manufacturing 16 19 16 9 55 Phillip Morris/consumer products 17 8 50 19 55 Microsoft/technology 18 28 9 34 75 Prudential/insurance 19 9 55 37 50 Intel/technology 20 14 23 63 60 Aflac/insurance 21 9 55 62 50 Verizon…arrow_forward
- In 2012 XYZ Co. had sales of $74 billion and a net income of $23 billion, and its year-end total assets were $200 billion. The firm's total debt-to-total assets ratio was 45.3%. Based on the DuPont equation, what was XYZ Co.'s ROE in 2012? a) 22.97% b) 8.67% c) 25.62% d) 21.02% e) 14.01%arrow_forwardNonarrow_forwardI need help with this solution for accountingarrow_forward
- Intermediate Accounting: Reporting And AnalysisAccountingISBN:9781337788281Author:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald PagachPublisher:Cengage Learning