Concept explainers
Bonds of affiliate purchased from non-affiliate: When an affiliate of issuer later acquires bonds form unrelated party, the bonds are retired at the time of purchase. The bonds are not held outside the consolidated entity once another company within the consolidated entity purchases them, it must be treated as repurchase by debtor. Acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company with in affiliated entities is referred as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
When constructive retirement occurs the consolidated income statement reports gain or loss based on difference between carrying value and purchase price paid by affiliate to acquire it. And it is not reported in consolidated
To explain : how is the gain or loss on bond retirement reported by the subsidiary for consolidation. When subsidiary retires the bond shortly after parent purchased it from non-affiliate.
![Check Mark](/static/check-mark.png)
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution![Blurred answer](/static/blurred-answer.jpg)
Chapter 8 Solutions
ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING IA
- L.L. Bean operates two factories that produce its popular Bean boots (also known as "duck boots") in its home state of Maine. Since L.L. Bean prides itself on manufacturing its boots in Maine and not outsourcing, backorders for its boots can be high. In 2014, L.L. Bean sold about 450,000 pairs of the boots. At one point during 2014, it had a backorder level of about 100,000 pairs of boots. L.L. Bean can manufacture about 2,200 pairs of its duck boots each day with its factories running 24/7. In 2015, L.L. Bean expects to sell more than 500,000 pairs of its duck boots. As of late November 2015, the backorder quantity for Bean Boots was estimated to be about 50,000 pairs. Question: Assume another customer has returned a pair of duck boots (original cost $109) to L.L. Bean. What journal entry would L.L. Bean make to process the return and refund the original purchase price to the customer?arrow_forwardKreeps Corporation produces a single productarrow_forwardA college's food operation has an average meal price of $9.20. Variable costs are $4.35 per meal and fixed costs total $95,000. How many meals must be sold to provide an operating income of $33,000? How many meals would have to be sold if fixed costs declined by 23%? (round to the nearest meal)arrow_forward
- A firm has net working capital of $980, net fixed assets of $4,418, sales of $9,250, and current liabilities of $1,340. How many dollars worth of sales are generated from every $1 in total assets? Need answerarrow_forwardA firm has net working capital of $980, net fixed assets of $4,418, sales of $9,250, and current liabilities of $1,340. How many dollars worth of sales are generated from every $1 in total assets?arrow_forward???arrow_forward
- Intermediate Accounting: Reporting And AnalysisAccountingISBN:9781337788281Author:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald PagachPublisher:Cengage Learning
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9781337788281/9781337788281_smallCoverImage.jpg)