Exercise 6-1 Part A (1) Sales 2‚700‚000 Purchases (Cost of Goods Sold) 2‚700‚000 To eliminate intercompany sales of 2011 (2) 12/31 Inventory-Income Statement (Cost of Goods Sold) 487‚500 12/31 Inventory (Balance Sheet) 487‚500 To eliminate unrealized intercompany profit in inventory Exercise 6-2 Reported Net Income- S Company $ 525‚000 Noncontrolling Interest Percentage 0
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Long-Term Construction Contracts 163 CHAPTER 10 MULTIPLE CHOICE ANSWERS AND SOLUTIONS 10-1: a Percentage of Completion Method: Contract Price P1‚000‚000 Less: Total estimated cost Cost incurred P 200‚000 Estimated remaining cost _400‚000 __600‚000 Gross profit estimated 400‚000 % of completion (200‚000/600‚000) __33 1/3% Gross profit to be recognized P 133‚333 Zero Profit Method: 0 10-2: a P100‚000 2007 2008 Contract Price P9
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Introduction Of Apple Inc. Apple Inc. is globally renowned as one of the leading companies‚ especially for its specialization in the personal computers and consumer electronics industry. The company is most well-known for the iPod‚ a digital music player and Macintosh‚ a personal computer released in 1984. Co-founded by Steve Jobs in 1976‚ the company was named under Apple Computers Inc. and its initial product Apple IIe gained relative popularity and success. The release of the Macintosh revolutionized
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Ahmed Alqahtani Food Inc – Summary The documented film "Food‚ Inc." rapt by Robert Kenner opens with the sentence‚ "The way we eat has altered in the past 50 years than in the previous 10‚000 years.” Later in the film it’s illustrated that one of the significant deviations in what we eat is that our food source has been flooded with sugar and other advanced carbohydrates. It also highlights that not all the food we consume is good for our health. Some areas of food production such as meat and
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for bankruptcy prediction Alexander S. Reisz a‚∗ ‚ Claudia Perlich b‚1 a U.S. Treasury Department‚ Office of the Comptroller of the Currency‚ 250 E Street SW‚ Mail Stop 2-1‚ Washington‚ DC 20219‚ United States b Data Analytics Research Group‚ IBM T.J. Watson Research Center‚ 1101 Kitchawan Road‚ Route 134‚ P.O. Box 218‚ Yorktown Heights‚ NY 10598‚ United States Received 12 October 2006; received in revised form 16 February 2007; accepted 20 February 2007 Available online 28 February 2007
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Introduction The Gap Inc. is a global specialty retailer that operates stores selling casual apparel and accessories for men‚ women‚ and children (Yahoo Market Guide‚ 2001). Under the Gap‚ are the Old Navy and Banana Republic brands (Yahoo Market Guide‚ 2001). Demographic/Psychographic/Geographic Segmentation Gap The Gap’s target age segment is males and females ranging from seventeen to twenty-five years old (Cosmopolitan‚ 2000‚ p. 2). The typical family life cycle for a Gap customer
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CHAPTER 12 MULTIPLE CHOICE 12-1: d. This is recorded when the working fund is replenished. 12-2: c. Sales P 700‚000 Cost of goods sold: Purchases P800‚000 Merchandise inventory‚ end 180‚000 620‚000 Gross profit P 80‚000 Expenses 198‚000 Net income (loss) P (118‚000) 12-3: b Sales P 70‚000 Cost of goods sold (P70‚000 / 140%) 50‚000 Gross profit P 20‚000 Less: Samples (P8‚000 – P6‚000) P
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THERMAL DAIRY By Carlos Val Background 2 In order to achieve a better understanding of the concept of Adaptive Thermal comfort I have recorded my thermal sensation by an hour intervals during a week. At this time‚ the relative humidity and temperature of my surrounding environment was been recorded by a sensor carried by me at all the time‚ every 900seconds. Background 3 A further thermal study of my living space was developed at the same time but carried out for a longer period
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Reorganization and Troubled Debt Restructuring 135 CHAPTER 8 MULTIPLE CHOICE ANSWERS AND SOLUTIONS 8-1: a Trade accounts payable (P52‚000 + P62‚700) P114‚700 12% preferred stock (5‚000 x P1) P 5‚000 Paid in capital in excess of par (5‚000 x P9) 45‚000 Cash (P62‚700 x P0.80) _50‚160 _100‚160 Gain from discharge of indebtedness P 14‚540 8-2: c 8-3: c 8-4: b Carrying value of the
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Acquisition of legal subsidiary in bankruptcy According to the fact of this case‚ Parent Co. (Parent) wholly owns Poor Son Co. (Poor Son) as a legal subsidiary‚ and both of them all nonpublic companies. However‚ in January 2007 Poor Son filed a voluntary bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code because of its inability of meet obligations as they became due. Then‚ Parent claimed the loss of control of Poor Son and deconsolidated Poor Son from its financial statement. Through the
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