52. For each of the following situations, select the best answer concerning accounting for investments:

A.    Increase the investment account.

B.     Decrease the investment account.

C.     Increase dividend revenue.

D.    No adjustment necessary.

1.      Income reported by 40% owned investee.

2.      Income reported by 10% owned investee.

3.      Loss reported by 40% owned investee.

4.      Loss reported by 10% investee.

5.      Change from fair-value method to equity method.  Prior income exceeded dividends.

6.      Change from fair-value method to equity method.  Prior income was less than dividends.

7.      Change from equity method to fair-value method.  Prior income exceeded dividends.

8.      Change from equity method to fair-value method.  Prior income was less than dividends.

9.      Dividends received from 40% investee.

10.  Dividends received from 10% investee.

11.  Purchase of additional shares of investee.

12.  Unrealized inventory profits using the equity method.

            53.       Jarmon Company owns twenty-three percent of the voting common stock of Kaleski Corp.  Jarmon does not have the ability to exercise significant influence over the operations of Kaleski.  What method should Jarmon use to account for its investment in

Kaleski?

    54.   Idler Co. has an investment in Cowl Corp. for which it uses the equity method.  Cowl has suffered large losses for several years, and the balance in the investment account has been reduced to zero.  How should Idler account for this investment?

    55.   Which types of transactions, exchanges, or events would indicate that an investor has the ability to exercise significant influence over the operations of an investee?

    56.   You are auditing a company that owns twenty percent of the voting common stock of another corporation and uses the equity method to account for the investment.  How would you verify that the equity method is appropriate in this case?

    57.   How does the use of the equity method affect the investor’s financial statements?

    58.   What is the primary objective of the equity method of accounting for an investment?

    59.   What is the justification for the timing of recognition of income under the equity method?

    60.   What argument could be made against the equity method?

    61.   How would a change be made from the equity method to the fair value method?

    62.   Why did the APB and the FASB require an investor to accrue a liability for future income taxes when using the equity method?

    63.   Charlie Co. owns 30% of the voting common stock of Turf Services Inc.  Charlie uses the equity method to account for its investment.  On January 1, 2002, the balance in the investment account was $624,000.  During 2002, Turf Services reported net income of $120,000 and paid dividends of $30,000.

            Required:

What is the balance in the investment account as of December 31, 2002?

    64.   Tinker Co. owns 25% of the common stock of Harbor Co. and uses the equity method to account for the investment.  During 2002, Harbor reported income of $120,000 and paid dividends of $40,000.  Harbor owns a building with a useful life of twenty years which is undervalued by $80,000.

            Required:

During 2002, how much income should Tinker recognize related to this investment?

    65.   Aqua Corp. purchased 30% of the common stock of Marcus Co. by paying $500,000.  Of this amount, $50,000 is associated with goodwill.

            Required:

Make the journal entry to record the investment.

    66.   On January 2, 2002, Heinreich Co. paid $500,000 for 25% of the voting common stock of Jones Corp.  At the time of the investment, Jones had net assets with a book value and fair market value of $1,800,000.  During 2002, Jones incurred a net loss of $60,000 and paid dividends of $100,000. 

            Required:

What is the balance in Heinreich’s investment account at December 31, 2002?

    67.   On January 3, 2002, Jenkins Corp. acquired 40% of the outstanding common stock of Bolivar Co. for $1,200,000.  This acquisition gave Jenkins the ability to exercise significant influence over the investee.  The book value of the acquired shares was $950,000.  Any excess cost over the underlying book value was assigned to a patent that was undervalued on Bolivar’s balance sheet.  This patent has a remaining useful life of ten years.  For the year ended December 31, 2002, Bolivar reported net income of $312,000 and paid cash dividends of $96,000.

            Required:

At December 31, 2002, what should Jenkins report as its Investment in Bolivar Co.?

    68.   On January 1, 2002, Spark Corp. acquired a 40% interest in Cranston Inc. for $250,000.  On that date, Cranston’s balance sheet disclosed net assets of $430,000.  During 2002, Cranston reported net income of $100,000 and paid cash dividends of $30,000.  Spark sold inventory costing $40,000 to Cranston during 2002 for $50,000.  Cranston used all of this merchandise in its operations during 2002.

            Required:

Make all of Spark’s journal entries for 2002 to apply the equity method to this investment.

    69.   Wathan Inc. sold $180,000 in inventory to Miller Co. during 2002, for $270,000.  Miller resold $126,000 of this merchandise in 2000 with the remainder to be disposed of during 2003.

            Required:

Assuming Wathan owns 25% of Miller and applies the equity method, what journal entry should have been recorded at the end of 2003 to defer the unrealized gain.

    70.   Jager Inc. holds 30% of the outstanding voting shares of Kinson Co. and appropriately applies the equity method of accounting.  Amortization associated with this investment equals $11,000 per year.  For 2002, Kinson reported earnings of $100,000 and paid cash dividends of $40,000.  During 2002, Kinson acquired inventory for $62,400, which was then sold to Jager for $96,000.  At the end of 2002, Jager continued to hold merchandise with a transfer price of $50,000.

            Required:

What amount of Equity in Investee Income should Jager have reported for 2002?

    71.   On January 2, 2002, Hull Corp. paid $516,000 for 24% (48,000 shares) of the outstanding common stock of Oliver Co.  Hull used the equity method to account for the investment.  At the end of 2003, the balance in the investment account was $620,000.  On January 2, 2004, Hull sold 10,000 shares of Oliver stock for $12 per share.  For 2004, Oliver reported income of $118,000 and paid dividends of $30,000.

            Required:

A.    Make the journal entry to record the sale of the 8,000 shares.

B.     After the sale has been recorded, what is the balance in the investment account?

C.     Because of the sale of stock, Hull can no longer exercise significant influence over the operations of Oliver.  What effect will this have on Hull’s accounting for the investment?

D.    Make Hull’s journal entries related to the investment for the rest of 2004.

    72.   On January 1, 2004, Jolley Corp. paid $250,000 for 25% of the voting common stock of Tige Co.  On that date, the book value of Tige was $850,000, and a building with a carrying value of $160,000 was actually worth $220,000.  The building had a remaining life of twenty years.  Tige owned a trademark valued at $90,000 over cost that was to be amortized over 20 years. Jolly uses a perpetual inventory system.

            During 2002, Tige sold to Jolley inventory costing $60,000, at a markup 50% on cost.  At the end of the year, Jolley still owned goods with a transfer price of $33,000.

            Tige reported net income of $200,000 during 2002.  This amount included an extraordinary gain of $35,000.  Tige paid dividends totaling $40,000.

            Required:

Make Jolley’s journal entries for 2002, assuming the equity method is appropriate, rounding amounts to the nearest dollar.

    73.   Dotes Inc. owns 40% of Abner Co.  Dotes accounts for its investment using the equity method.  Abner follows a policy of paying dividends equal to 30% of its income each year.  During the current year, Abner reported net income of $216,000.  Dotes has an effective income tax rate of 32%.

            Required:

What journal entry would Dotes record at the end of the current year for income taxes relating to the investment in Abner?  Assume the investment is to be held for an indefinite time and that all amounts are to be rounded to the nearest dollar.

    74.   On January 1, 2002, Pond Co. acquired 40% of the outstanding voting common shares of Ramp Co. for $700,000.  On that date, Ramp reported assets and liabilities with book values of $2.2 million and $700,000, respectively.  A building owned by Ramp had an appraised value of $300,000, although it had a book value of only $120,000.  This building had a 12-year remaining life and no salvage value.  It was being depreciated on the straight-line basis. 

            Ramp generated net income of $300,000 in 2002 and a loss of $120,000 in 2003.  In each of these two years, Ramp paid a cash dividend of $70,000 to its stockholders.

            During 2002, Ramp sold inventory to Pond that had an original cost of $60,000.  The merchandise was sold to Pond for $96,000.  Of this balance, $72,000 was resold to outsiders during 2002 and the remainder was sold during 2003.  In 2003, Ramp sold inventory to Pond for $180,000.  This inventory had cost only $108,000.  Pond resold $120,000 of the inventory during 2003 and the rest during 2004.

            Required:

For 2002 and then for 2003, calculate the equity income to be reported by Pond for external reporting purposes.

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

 For each of the following situations, indicate whether ANOVA is appropriate; if not appropriate, the reason why not; and, if appropriate, the type of ANOVA that would be used (i.e., one-way, repeated measures, etc.)

a.        The IVs are ethnicity (Asian, White, African American, Hispanic) and gender (male vs female); the DV is serum cholesterol levels.

b.        The IV is smoking status – smokers vs non-smokers; the DV is health-related hardiness as measured on a 20-item scale.

c.        The IV is maternal breast feeding status (breastfeeds daily vs breastfeeds at least 1-3 times/week vs doesn’t breastfeed); the DV is maternal bonding with infant, as measured on a 20-item self-report scale.

d.        The IV is treatment group for patients with drug-induced shivering (extremity wraps vs high room temp vs normal room temp without wraps) different patients used for each treatment; the DV is myocardial oxygen consumption (measured in ml O2/min per 100g of tissue).

e.        The IV is length of gestation (preterm vs term vs postterm) using the same multiple birth mothers over time; the DV is blood pressure 10 minutes post delivery.

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW
  1. For each of the following situations, explain which of the four leadership styles covered in the Situational model should be used and explain your reasoning 
    1. You are in charge of a team of architects. They are highly skilled but have strong opinions and do not necessarily follow instructions. These architects are independent thinkers who are used to doing things their own way.
    2. You are in charge of a fast-food restaurant. The employees are all teenagers who have not yet graduated from high school, and this is the first job for most of them.
    3. You are the supervisor of a team of software engineers. They are all highly skilled and highly motivated, and are used to working independently. All of them believe in the mission of the company.
  2. Each of the three models (Situational, Fielder Contingency, Path-Goal) covered in this module involves both “inputs” and “outputs.” For example, Situational Leadership involves taking employee commitment and competency as inputs and then—based on the employee information—choosing Directing, Coaching, Supporting, or Delegating as an output. Create a table comparing and contrasting the three models in terms of inputs and outputs, and include a 1- or 2-paragraph discussion of your table.
  3. Based on your table in Part 2 above and the readings, which of the three models do you think is most useful? Take into consideration both its ability to adapt leadership styles to realistic situations you may face, as well as ease of use of the model.
 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

 For each of the following production functions, (Total 6 Marks) • Write an equation and graph the isoquant for Q = 100. • Find the marginal rate of technical substitution and discuss how MRTSLK changes as the firm uses more L, holding output constant.

(a) Q(K,L) = 2K + 3L (2 Marks) (b) Q(K,L) = K0.5L0.25 (2 Marks) (c) Q(K,L) = LK + L (2 Marks)

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

For each of the following production functions, draw a diagram showing the general shape of itscorresponding isoquant. Comment on the ease at which labor and capital can be substituted forone another relative to the other two production functions.a. Q = K + L.b. Q = K0.5L0.5.c. Q = min(K, L).

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

For each of the following problems, the input consists of two arrays X[1 .. k] and Y [1 .. n] where k ≤ n.

Describe a recursive backtracking algorithm to find the smallest number of symbols that can be removed from Y so that X is no longer a subsequence. Equivalently, your algorithm should find the longest subsequence of Y that is not a supersequence of X. For example, after removing removing two symbols from the string PENPINEAPPLEAPPLEPEN, the string PPAP is no longer a subsequence. 

You can refer longest increasing subsequence algorithm : http://jeffe.cs.illinois.edu/teaching/algorithms/book/02-backtracking.pdf

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

For each of the following polynomials, apply either the Muller’s method or the Bairstow’s method to find all real or complex roots. Analyze and contrast performance between the two methods. Plot the functions to choose root guesses appropriately. You can apply any simplifications you deem appropriate prior to applying the numerical methods.

f(x) = x3 – x2 + 2x – 2

f(x) = 2×4 + 6×2 + 8

f(x) = -2 + 6.2x – 4×2 + 0.7×3

f(x) = x4 – 2×3 + 6×2 – 2x + 5

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

A4-9. For each of the following policies, explain whether the policy is correcting a market failure or pursuing some other societal goal. Be sure to identify the goal. Using diagrams where possible, describe the efficiency impact of the policy. To simplify your analysis, assume that the marginal private cost (MPC = willingness-to-accept) is constant and ignore the efficiency costs of taxation (where applicable).

A) Since flu vaccinations not only benefit the vaccinated (decreasing their chance of getting the flu),but also benefit everyone else in the same way, the Ontario government funds flu shots from taxation and distributes them for free to the population. [6]

B)Many governments have banned smoking in restaurants because they are worried about the effects of secondhand smoke on the health of non-smoking diners. [6]

C) The Canadian government has made many medical/health-related transactions illegal(ex.tradein body organs, payments for pregnancy surrogates, etc.). [6]

D) In Canada, healthcare(even for non-communicable diseases)is provided by the government and funded through progressive taxation. [6]

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

For each of the four accounts listed below, prepare an example of a journal entry that would cause the account to be (1) decited and (2) credited using a prcess costing system, Assume perpetual inventory records are maintained, Include written explanations with your journal entries and use “XXX” in place of dollar amounts.a. Materials Inventory b. Direct Labor c. Manufacturing Overhead d. Finished Goods Inventory

For each of the four accounts listed below, prepare an example of a journal entrythat would cause the account to be (1) debited and (2) credited using a processcosting system, Assume perpetual…

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW

For each of the following two situations, determine which principle of internal control has been violated.

1. Owner takes daily cash receipts home and makes a bank deposit the next morning.

Choose One ?

Establishment of authority and responsibility.

Segregation of duties.

Documentation procedures.

Mechanical, physical, and electronic controls.

Independent internal verification.

Bonding of employees who handle cash.

Employee job rotation and mandatory annual vacations.

2. Purchase orders may be written by all department heads.

Choose One ?

Establishment of authority and responsibility.

Segregation of duties.

Documentation procedures.

Mechanical, physical, and electronic controls.

Independent internal verification.

Bonding of employees who handle cash.

Employee job rotation and mandatory annual vacations.

 
"Looking for a Similar Assignment? Get Expert Help at an Amazing Discount!"
ORDER NOW