a.
Prepare the journal entries made by the subsidiary to record the sale of the equipment to the parent; and by the parent to record the purchase and the [I] entries for the year of sale.
a.

Explanation of Solution
An acquisition of assets is the purchase of a corporation by purchasing its assets rather than its stock. An acquisition is when one company acquires most or all of the shares of another company to gain control over that company. An investment in equity is money which is invested in a company by buying that company's shares in the stock market. Typically, those shares are traded in a stock exchange.
The required
Date | Account title and Explanation | Post Ref | Debit ($) | Credit ($) |
Cash | ||||
Equipment | ||||
Gain on sale of Equipment | ||||
(To record the sale of equipment) |
Table (1)
The required journal entry recorded by the parent is as follows:
Date | Account title and Explanation | Post Ref | Debit ($) | Credit ($) |
Equipment | ||||
Cash | ||||
(To record the purchase of equipment) | ||||
[Igain] Gain on sale of equipment | ||||
Equipment | ||||
Accumulated depreciation | ||||
(To adjust Gain, Equipment, and Accumulated Depreciation on the date of the intercompany transfer of equipment – given that the transaction occurred at the beginning of the year, usage of the equipment for the year must be reflected in a separate entry) | ||||
[Idep] PPE, net | ||||
Depreciation Expense | ||||
(To eliminate the excess depreciation expense recorded by the parent, and to adjust accumulated depreciation from the BOY amount to the EOY amount) |
Table (1)
Working notes:
In January of 2017, the subsidiary sold Equipment to the subsidiary for a cash price of $79,200. The parent retained the depreciation policy of the parent and depreciates the equipment over its remaining 8-year useful life.
Depreciation charged by the parent on equipment is $79,200/8 i.e., $9,900
The subsidiary had acquired the equipment at a cost of $80,000 and depreciated the equipment over its 10 year useful life using the straight-line method.
Depreciation charged by the parent on equipment is $80,000/10 i.e., $8,000.
Calculate excess depreciation:
b.
Compute the remaining portion of the deferred gain on January 1, 2019.
b.

Explanation of Solution
The portion of gain noticed on a property exchange that is not currently taxed. The gain is generally taxed when the property acquired in the exchange is sold. An exchange of property that is not currently taxed is part of the realized gain. The gain is generally taxed at the time of sale of the property acquired at the exchange.
In January of 2017, the subsidiary sold Equipment to the subsidiary for a cash price of $79,200. The parent retained the
Depreciation charged by the parent on equipment is $79,200/8 i.e., $9,900
The subsidiary had acquired the equipment at a cost of $80,000 and depreciated the equipment over its 10 year useful life using the straight-line method.
Depreciation charged by the parent on equipment is $80,000/10 i.e., $8,000.
Calculate excess depreciation:
Operating expenses of the subsidiary is
Gain on the sale of equipment is
Through the BOY, three years have passed, so the deferred gain at the start of the current year is as follows:
Hence, the remaining portion of the deferred gain on Jan 1, 2019 is
c.
Compute the amount of equity income reported by the parent company for the year ended Dec 31, 2019 assuming that the parent applied the equity method.
c.

Explanation of Solution
Equity income is money generated from stock dividends that investors can access by buying dividend-declared stocks or by buying funds that invest in dividend-declared stocks.
Subsidiary net income is
AAP Depreciation is
Deferred gain on intercompany sale is
The computation to yield the income (loss) from subsidiary reported by the parent company during 2019 is as follows:
Particulars | Amount ($) |
Subsidiary net income | |
AAP Depreciation | |
Deferred gain on intercompany sale | |
Income (loss) from subsidiary |
Table (1)
Hence, the income (loss) from subsidiary is
d.
Compute the equity investment account balance on Dec 31, 2019.
d.

Explanation of Solution
An investment in equity is money which is invested in a company by buying that company's shares in the stock market. Typically, those shares are traded in a stock exchange.
EOY
EOY Common stock of subsidiary is
EOY subsidiary APIC is
Calculate EOY Unamortized AAP assets:
Particulars | Amount ($) | Dep./Amort. | Amount |
PPE, net | |||
Licenses | |||
Goodwill | |||
EOY AAP assets |
The computation to yield the Equity Investment balance on Dec 31, 2019 is as follows:
Particulars | Amount ($) |
EOY subsidiary retained earnings | |
EOY subsidiary common stock | |
EOY subsidiary APIC | |
Add: Unamortized AAP @ EOY | |
Less: Unconfirmed gain @ EOY | |
EOY Equity investment balance |
Table (1)
Hence, the equity investment balance as on Dec 31, 2019 is
e.
Prepare the consolidation entries for the year ended Dec 31, 2019.
e.

Explanation of Solution
Consolidated financial statements are a group of entities financial statements that are presented as those of a single economic entity. They are the financial statements of a group in which the parent company and its subsidiaries introduce their assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, expenses and
Consolidated accounting is used to club a parent company's financial information and one or more subsidiaries. The parent prepares consolidated financial statements through
The computation of BOY [ADJ] for 2019 consolidation is as follows:
Particulars | Amount ($) |
Change in retained earnings (S) thru BOY | |
Cumulative AAP amort thru BOY | |
Less: BOY Downstream Unconf Asset | |
ADJ Amount |
Table (1)
The required consolidation journal entries are as follows:
Date | Account title and Explanation | Post Ref | Debit ($) | Credit ($) |
[ADJ] BOY Equity Investment | ||||
BOY Retained Earnings (P) | ||||
[C] Income (loss) from subsidiary | ||||
Dividends | ||||
[E] Common Stock (S) @ BOY | ||||
BOY APIC (S) | ||||
Retained Earnings (S) @BOY | ||||
Equity Investment | ||||
[A] PPE, net | ||||
Licenses | ||||
Goodwill | ||||
Equity Investment | ||||
[D Depreciation and Amort. expenses | ||||
PPE, net | ||||
Licenses | ||||
(To record depreciation and amortization expense for the [A] assets) | ||||
[Igain] Equity investment @BOY | ||||
PPE, net | ||||
[Idep] PPE, net | ||||
Depreciation Expense |
Table (1)
f.
Prepare the consolidation spreadsheet for the year ended December 31, 2019.
f.

Explanation of Solution
Consolidated financial statements are a group of entities financial statements that are presented as those of a single economic entity. They are the financial statements of a group in which the parent company and its subsidiaries introduce their assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, expenses and cash flows as those of a single business organization.
A consolidated balance sheet provides a parent company's assets and liabilities and all of its subsidiaries in a legal document, without any differentiation on which items pertain to which companies.
Consolidation worksheet is an instrument used to prepare a parent's consolidated financial statements and their subsidiaries. It demonstrates the individual book values of companies, the adjustments and eliminations necessary, and the consolidated final values.
The consolidated spreadsheet for the year ended December 31, 2019 is shown below:
Elimination entries | ||||||||||
Income Statement | Parent | Subsidiary | Dr | Cr | Consolidated | |||||
Sales | $960,000 | $16,000 | ] | $1,360,000 | ||||||
Cost of goods sold | (560,000) | (240,000) | (8,000,000) | |||||||
Gross Profit | 400,000 | 160,000 | 560,000 | |||||||
Deprec. & amort. expense | (24,000) | (16,000) | [D] | 20,800 | (58,900) | |||||
Operating Expenses | (240,000) | (64,000) | [Idep] | 1,900 | (304,000) | |||||
Interest Expense | (12,000) | (4,000) | (16,000) | |||||||
Total Expenses | (276,000) | (84,000) | (378,900) | |||||||
Income (loss) from subsidiary | 28,000 | [C] | 28,000 | |||||||
Net Income | $152,000 | $76,000 | $181,100 | |||||||
Statement of Retained Earnings | ||||||||||
Beginning Retained Earnings | $440,000 | $200,000 | [E] | 200,000 | [ADJ] | 73,400 | $513,400 | |||
Net Income | 152,000 | 76,000 | 181,100 | |||||||
Dividends | (92,000) | (28,000) | [C] | 28,000 | (92,000) | |||||
Ending retained Earnings | $500,000 | $248,000 | $602,500 | |||||||
Balance Sheet | ||||||||||
Assets | ||||||||||
Cash | $80,000 | $40,000 | $120,000 | |||||||
88,000 | 80,000 | 168,000 | ||||||||
Inventory | 240,000 | 120,000 | 360,000 | |||||||
Equity investment | 512,000 | [ADJ] | 73,400 | [E] | 440,000 | 0 | ||||
[Igain] | 11,400 | [A] | 156,800 | |||||||
PPE, net | 400,000 | 192,000 | [A] | 32,000 | [D] | 6,400 | 608,100 | |||
[Idep] | 1,900 | [Igain] | 11,400 | |||||||
Other Assets | 80,000 | 148,000 | 228,000 | |||||||
Licenses | 20,000 | [A] | 28,800 | [D] | 14,400 | 34,400 | ||||
Goodwill | [A] | 96,000 | 96,000 | |||||||
Total Assets | $1,400,000 | $600,000 | 1,614,500 | |||||||
Liabilities and | ||||||||||
Accounts payable | $200,000 | $24,000 | $224,000 | |||||||
Accrued liabilities | 100,000 | 36,000 | 136,000 | |||||||
Notes Payable | 120,000 | 52,000 | 172,000 | |||||||
Common stock | 200,000 | 48,000 | [E] | 48,000 | 200,000 | |||||
APIC | 280,000 | 192,000 | [E] | 192,000 | 280,000 | |||||
EOY Retained Earnings | 500,000 | 248,000 | 602,500 | |||||||
Total liabilities and equity | $1,400,000 | $600,000 | $732,300 | $732,300 | $1,614,500 | |||||
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Chapter 4 Solutions
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