changes Harnischfeger made in 1984 as stated in Note 2 of its financial statements. In 1984‚ the Corporation has computed depreciation expense on plants‚ machinery and equipment using the straight-line method for financial reporting purposes. Prior to 1984‚ the Corporation used principally accelerated methods for its U.S. operating plants. 2. What is the effect of the depreciation accounting method change on the reported income in 1984? How will this change affect profits in future years? The cumulative
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project is expected to produce annual sales of $75‚000 with associated costs of $57‚000. The project has a 5-year life. The company uses straight-line depreciation to a zero book value over the life of the project. The tax rate is 30 percent. What is the operating cash flow for this project? OCF = net income + depr (Sales-cost) * (1-T) + depreciation * T OCF = (Sales – Costs)(1 – tC) + tCDepreciation OCF = 75000-57000)(1 – 0.3) + 0.3($115‚000/5) = 18000*.7 = 12600 + 6900 =19500 XYZ is
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on a straight-line amortization period. 5) What was the effect on earnings per share of the change in depreciation method for “hit” tapes (assume that hit tapes made up 25% of new tape purchases‚ and that the average hit tape was owned for half the year)? Because of the change method of the depreciation from a straight line to the accelerated‚ therefore‚ there is recognition of a more depreciation expense up front and there is no decrease that is experienced. There is also a decrease in the ESP ratio
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successor auditor failed to request this information from the newly acquired Little Drummer Boy Inc. By requesting this information and communicating with the predecessor auditor‚ the successor auditor could have reviewed the working papers of depreciation expense and also become clear of the reasoning for the useful lives used in the
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Financial Accounting (BEA 2001) Tutorials PROPERTY‚ PLANT & EQUIPMENT Question 1: Measurement at recognition; components; depreciation Olympic plc is a diversified industrial company with many different areas of operation. The following information relates to the company’s property‚ plant and equipment. The company has a 30 September year end. All the plant was purchased and brought into use on 1 October 20X1 at a cost of £800 000. The cost of testing the plant amounted to £45 000 and samples
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tax liability in each of the following four cases. Case 1 Case 2 Case 3 Case 4 Accounting profit (loss) After debiting as expense: Goodwill impairment loss* Entertainment costs* Donation to political party* Depreciation expense – plant Long-service leave expense For tax purposes: Tax depreciation for plant Long-service leave paid *These items are non-deductible for tax purposes. Assume a tax rate of 30%. $40 000 $20 000 $5 000 $(10 000 ) 6 000 — 1 000 4 000 600 — 6 000 3 000 2 000 600 — 7 000
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therefore‚ is not subject to depreciation. Land improvements have limited lives and are subject to depreciation. 4. Often the lump-sum or basket purchase includes assets with different lives that must be depreciated separately. Sometimes the purchase may include land‚ which is never depreciated. 5. The Accumulated Depreciation—Machinery account is a contra asset account with a credit balance that cannot be used to buy anything. The balance of the Accumulated Depreciation—Machinery account reflects
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BUS 213 Intermediate Accounting I Suggested Problems (Kieso et al. Intermediate Accounting IFRS edition) Chapter Exercises/Problems 2 E2-3‚ E2-5‚ E2-6 3 E3-1‚ E3-5‚ E3-10‚ E3-11 4 E4-9‚ P4-4 5 E5-3‚ E5-7‚ E5-10‚ E5-13 18 E18-5‚ E18-10‚ E18-11‚ E18-15‚ E18-16‚ P18-6 7 E7-6‚ E7-12‚ E7-15‚ E7-18‚ E7-21‚ E7-28 8 E8-2‚ E8-9‚ E8-10‚ E8-13‚ E8-17 9 E9-1‚ E9-5‚ E9-7‚ E9-23 10 E10-4‚ E10-8‚ E10-14‚ E10-18‚ E10-25 11 E11-6‚ E11-12‚ E11-18‚ E11-19‚ E11-23‚ E11-26‚ E11-27‚ E11-29 14 E14-6
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Chapter IX - INVESTMENT PROPERTY 1. Introduction. Investment property is property (land or a building – or part of a building – or both) held to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both‚ rather than for: 1. use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes; or 2. sale in the ordinary course of business. These properties are distinguished from owner-occupied properties which generate cash flows that are directly
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title to assets may be desirable as a hedge against inflation. 2. Interest rates for leasing often are higher and a profit factor may be included in addition. 3. In some cases‚ owning the asset provides unique tax advantages‚ such as when bonus depreciation is permitted. (c) Since a long-term noncancelable lease which is used as a financing device generally results in
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