a
Concept introduction:
Bonds of affiliate purchased from non-affiliate: When an affiliate of the issuer later acquires bonds from an 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 the debtor. The acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company within affiliated entities is referred to as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
The worksheet consolidation entries as of December 31, 20X4, to complete consolidated
b
Concept introduction:
Bonds of affiliate purchased from non-affiliate: When an affiliate of the issuer later acquires bonds from an 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 the debtor. The acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company within affiliated entities is referred to as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
The preparation of consolidation worksheet for 20X4
c
Concept introduction:
Bonds of affiliate purchased from non-affiliate: When an affiliate of the issuer later acquires bonds from an 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 the debtor. The acquisition of an affiliate’s bonds by another company within affiliated entities is referred to as constructive retirement. Although bonds are not actually retired.
The preparation of consolidation worksheet for 20X4
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EBK ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
- Phone Corporation acquired 70 percent of Smart Corporation’s common stock on December 31, 20X4, for $98,000. At that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $42,000. Data from the balance sheets of the two companies included the following amounts as of the date of acquisition: Item Phone Corporation Smart Corporation Cash $ 52,300 $ 39,000 Accounts Receivable 99,000 59,000 Inventory 136,000 92,000 Land 66,000 49,000 Buildings & Equipment 417,000 268,000 Less: Accumulated Depreciation (151,000) (73,000) Investment in Smart Corporation 98,000 Total Assets $ 717,300 $ 434,000 Accounts Payable $ 141,500 $ 27,000 Mortgage Payable 300,800 288,000 Common Stock 72,000 40,000 Retained Earnings 203,000 79,000 Total Liabilities & Stockholders’ Equity $ 717,300 $ 434,000 At the date of the business combination, the book values of Smart’s assets and liabilities approximated fair value except for inventory, which had a fair value of…arrow_forwardPhone Corporation acquired 70 percent of Smart Corporation’s common stock on December 31, 20X4, for $98,000. At that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $42,000. Data from the balance sheets of the two companies included the following amounts as of the date of acquisition: Item Phone Corporation Smart Corporation Cash $ 52,300 $ 39,000 Accounts Receivable 99,000 59,000 Inventory 136,000 92,000 Land 66,000 49,000 Buildings & Equipment 417,000 268,000 Less: Accumulated Depreciation (151,000) (73,000) Investment in Smart Corporation 98,000 Total Assets $ 717,300 $ 434,000 Accounts Payable $ 141,500 $ 27,000 Mortgage Payable 300,800 288,000 Common Stock 72,000 40,000 Retained Earnings 203,000 79,000 Total Liabilities & Stockholders’ Equity $ 717,300 $ 434,000 At the date of the business combination, the book values of Smart’s assets and liabilities approximated fair value except for inventory, which had a fair value of…arrow_forwardPhone Corporation acquired 70 percent of Smart Corporation’s common stock on December 31, 20X4, for $97,300. At that date, the fair value of the noncontrolling interest was $41,700. Data from the balance sheets of the two companies included the following amounts as of the date of acquisition: Item Phone Corporation Smart Corporation Cash $ 58,300 $ 22,000 Accounts Receivable 109,000 49,000 Inventory 144,000 79,000 Land 73,000 36,000 Buildings & Equipment 426,000 266,000 Less: Accumulated Depreciation (166,000) (75,000) Investment in Smart Corporation 97,300 Total Assets $ 741,600 $ 377,000 Accounts Payable $ 142,500 $ 26,000 Mortgage Payable 331,100 233,000 Common Stock 68,000 39,000 Retained Earnings 200,000 79,000 Total Liabilities & Stockholders’ Equity $ 741,600 $ 377,000 At the date of the business combination, the book values of Smart’s assets and liabilities approximated fair value except for inventory, which had a fair value of…arrow_forward
- Johannes Inc. acquired 80 percent of Corner Brook Ltd. common shares on January 1, Year 4, for $744,000. At that date, the fair value of the non-controlling Interest was $186,000. Corner Brook's balance sheet contained the following amounts at the time of the combination: Cash Accounts Receivable Inventory Construction Work in Progress Other Assets (net) Total Assets 66,000 140,000 40,000 Accounts Payable $ 106,000 Bonds Payable 610,000 950,000 Common Shares ($10 par value) Retained Earnings 400,000 530,000 450,000 $1,646,000 $ 1,646,000 Total Liabilities & Equities During each of the next three years, Corner Brook reported net income of $120,000 and paid dividends of $60,000. On January 1, Year 6, Johannes sold 8,800 of the Corner Brook shares for $260,000 in cash. Johannes used the equity method in accounting for its ownership of Corner Brook. Required: (a) Compute the balance in the Investment account reported by Johannes on January 1, Year 6, before its sale of shares. (Omit $ sign…arrow_forwardSagararrow_forwardSuspect Company Issued $720,000 of 8 percent first mortgage bonds on January 1, 20X1, at 105. The bonds mature in 20 years and pay interest semiannually on January 1 and July 1. Prime Corporation purchased $480,000 of Suspect's bonds from the original purchaser on January 1, 20X5, for $473,000. Prime owns 60 percent of Suspect's voting common stock. Required: a. Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the Intercorporate bond ownership In preparing consolidated financial statements for 20X5. b. Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the Intercorporate bond ownership In preparing consolidated financial statements for 20X6. Answer is not complete. Complete this question by entering your answers in the tabs below. Required A Required B Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the intercorporate bond ownership in preparing consolidated financial statements…arrow_forward
- Satum Corporation issued $300,000 par value 10-year bonds at 107 on January 1, 20X3, which Star Corporation purchased On July 1, 20X7, Pluto Corporation purchased $120,000 face value of Saturn bonds from Star. The bonds pay 12 percent interest annually on December 31 The preparation of consolidated financial statements for Saturn and Pluto at December 31, 20X9, required the following consolidation entry Prentum on Bonds Payable Interest Income Investment in Saturn Corporation Bonds Interest Expense Investment in Saturn Corporation Stock MCI in Net Assets of Saturn Corporation 120,000 2,520 14,760 118,920 13,560 3,120 1,680 on the information given above, what percentage of the subsidiary's ownership does the parent company hold?arrow_forwardSuspect Company Issued $600,000 of 9 percent first mortgage bonds on January 1, 20X1, at 103. The bonds mature in 20 years and pay Interest semiannually on January 1 and July 1. Prime Corporation purchased $400,000 of Suspect's bonds from the original purchaser on December 31, 20X5, for $397,000. Prime owns 60 percent of Suspect's voting common stock. Required: a. Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the Intercorporate bond ownership In preparing consolidated financial statements for 20X5. (If no entry is required for a transaction/event, select "No Journal entry required" In the first account fleld. Do not round your intermediate calculations. Round your final answers to nearest whole dollar.) No A B No A Event 1 B 2 Event 1 2 Bonds payable Premium on bonds payable Investment in Suspect Company bonds Gain on bond retirement Interest payable Answer is complete but not entirely correct. Accounts Interest receivable b. Prepare the worksheet…arrow_forwardSuspect Company Issued $600,000 of 9 percent first mortgage bonds on January 1, 20X1, at 103. The bonds mature in 20 years and pay Interest semiannually on January 1 and July 1. Prime Corporation purchased $400,000 of Suspect's bonds from the original purchaser on December 31, 20X5, for $397,000. Prime owns 60 percent of Suspect's voting common stock. Required: a. Prepare the worksheet consolidation entry or entries needed to remove the effects of the Intercorporate bond ownership In preparing consolidated financial statements for 20X5. (If no entry is required for a transaction/event, select "No journal entry required" In the first account field. Do not round your Intermediate calculations. Round your final answers to nearest whole dollar.) Answer is complete but not entirely correct. No Event A 1 Bonds payable Premium on bonds payable Accounts Investment in Suspect Company bonds Gain on bond retirement B 2 Interest payable Interest receivable Debit Credit 400,000 9,000 397,000 9,000…arrow_forward
- On January 1, 20X5, Peery Company acquired 100 percent of Standard Company's common shares at underlying book value. Peery uses the equity method in accounting for its ownership of Standard. On December 31, 20X5, the trial balances of the two companies are as follows: Item Peery Company Standard Company Debit Credit Debit Credit Current Assets $ 238,000 $ 95,000 Depreciable Assets 300,000 170,000 Investment in Standard Company 100,000 Other Expenses 90,000 70,000 Depreciation Expense 30,000 17,000 Dividends Declared 32,000 10,000 Accumulated Depreciation $ 120,000 $ 85,000 Current Liabilities 50,000 30,000 Long-Term Debt 120,000 50,000 Common Stock 100,000 50,000 Retained Earnings 175,000 35,000 Sales 200,000 112,000 Income from Standard Company 25,000 $ 790,000 $ 790,000 $ 362,000 $ 362,000 Required: Prepare the consolidation entries needed as of December 31, 20X5, to complete a…arrow_forwardOn 1 January 20XO Alpha Co purchased 90,000 ordinary $1 shares in Beta Co for $270,000. At that date Beta Co's retained earnings amounted to $90,000 and the fair values of Beta Co's assets at acquisition were equal to their book values. Three years later, on 31 December 20X2, the statements of financial position of the two companies were: Alpha Co Beta Co Sundry net assets Shares in Beta 230,000 180,000 410,000 260,000 260,000 Share capital Ordinary shares of $1 each Retained earnings 200,000 100,000 210,000 410,000 160,000 260,000 The share capital of Beta Co has remained unchanged since 1 January 20X0. The fair value of the non- controlling interest at acquisition was $42,000. Required: a. What amount should appear in the group's consolidated statement of financial position at 31 December 20X2 for goodwill? b. What amount should appear in the group's consolidated statement of financial position at 31 December 20X2 for non-controlling interest? c. What amount should appear in the…arrow_forwardOn December 31, 20X8, Parkway Corporation acquired 80 percent of Street Company's common stock for $104,000 cash. The fair value of the noncontrolling interest at that date was determined to be $26,000. Data from the balance sheets of the two companies included the following amounts as of the date of acquisition: Parkway Corporation Street Company Cash $ 90,000 $ 20,000 Accounts Receivable 80,000 35,000 Inventory 100,000 40,000 Land 40,000 60,000 Buildings and Equipment 300,000 100,000 Less: Accumulated Depreciation (100,000) (40,000) Investment in Street Company 104,000 Total Assets $ 614,000 $ 215,000 Accounts Payable 120,000 30,000 Mortgage Payable 200,000 100,000 Common Stock 50,000 25,000 Retained Earnings 244,000 60,000 Total Liabilities and Equity $ 614,000 $ 215,000 On that date, the book values of Street's assets and liabilities approximated fair value except for inventory, which had a fair value of $45,000, and buildings and equipment,…arrow_forward
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