Week 2 Homework 4-8 |Under SEC rules‚ your close family members include your spouse (or equivalent) and dependents and your parents‚ nondependent | |children‚ and siblings. If you are a covered person‚ your independence is affected if your close family member has an accounting | |role or financial reporting oversight role with the SEC Audit Client (for example‚ the family member is a treasurer‚ CFO‚ | |accounting supervisor‚ or controller) or owns more than 5 percent of a client’s
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Sandra Wilson Week 2 Discussion 1 Dreams Do Come True Imagine that you have decided you need a new car‚ but not any car will do; you have decided to purchase the car of your dreams. Conduct some research as to the cost of this car. You have determined in this imagined scenario that you could afford to make a 10% down payment. You can borrow the balance either from your local bank using a four-year loan or from the dealership’s finance company. If you purchase from your dealership’s finance
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Brittney King Week 4 Homework Chapter 7 1. Explain the nursing clinical role‚ as indicated in Exhibits 7.1‚ 7.2‚ and 7.3. A competing perspective is much more limited. In extreme form‚ it might be limited to completion of tasks indicated by patient management protocols and physicians’ orders. All other functions would be assigned to other units of the organization or left undone. Discuss why this broad view is preferable‚ in terms non-nursing stakeholders‚ such as trustees‚ physicians‚ or patients
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Week 1‚ DQ 1: How would you describe the entries to record the disposition of accounts receivables? What is their function? Since the majority of US thrive on the use of credit cards‚ the accounts receivables for a company may no longer be on a cash-to-cash basis. A company may need to sell these accounts to other companies who specialize in handling accounts receivables if they need cash more quickly or if it would be too costly to perform the necessary billing to collect on the account. The
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The Constitution of the United States should is a flexible and dynamic document‚ that changes as the country it was framed for grows. This argument is not founded by what’s written in the constitution‚ but what’s absent. The framers were some of the greatest minds of the time period‚ and fabricated the constitution to protect those freedoms that had been denied to them by their former governments. These men however chose not to address how they wanted their words to be interpreted over time. They
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and the market. c) Calculate the expected return and standard deviation of return for a portfolio that consists of ½ Big and ½ Small. d) Calculate the expected return and standard deviation of return for a portfolio that consists of 3/4 Big and 1/4 Small.
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months of 2011. 1. Paid $5‚000 of accrued taxes at time plant site was acquired. 2. Paid $200 insurance to cover possible accident loss on new factory machinery while the machinery was in transit. 3. Paid $850 sales taxes on new delivery truck. 4. Paid $17‚500 for parking lots and driveways on new plant site. 5. Paid $250 to have company name and advertising slogan painted on new delivery truck. 6. Paid $8‚000 for installation of new factory machinery. 7. Paid $900 for one-year accident insurance
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Allowance for Doubtful Accounts via an adjusting entry at the end of each period. 3. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts are actually debited and credited to accounts receivable at the time the specific account is written off as uncollectible. Question #4 4. Lauren Anderson cannot understand why the cash realizable value does not decrease when an uncollectible account is written off under the allowance method. Clarify this point for Lauren. Cash realizable value does not change or decrease due to the
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Juliana Borges Connie Robin Gibson XACC/290 June 9‚ 2013 BE5-1: A. $181‚500 B. $41‚200 C. $38‚000 D. $17‚900 E. $8‚500 F. $63‚400 BE5-2: Pocras Company buys merchandise on account from Wedell Company. The selling price of the goods is $900 and the cost of the goods sold is $590. Both companies use perpetual inventory systems. Journalize the transactions on the books of both companies. Pocras Company: Accounts Receivable: Debit = $900‚ Credit = $900. Cost of Goods Sold: Debit = $590
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2. Clarified accounting rules regarding purchased in-process restructuring charges‚ large acquisition write offs‚ and research and development. 3. Direction on qualitative key points in determining materiality in accounting measurements 4. Interpretive guidance for revenue recognition 5. Prompt resolution to the Financial Accounting Standards Boards definition of liabilities issues 6. Targeted reviews of any public company that announces restructuring liability reserves‚ has
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