Compute the costs of goods sold for each month


Question 1: The Ferdon Company uses a periodic inventory system. The following is partial information from its income statements for 2007 and 2008:

                                     2007        2008
Beginning inventory         $(2)         $(4)
Sales                           220,000        (6)
Purchases                    118,000    140,000
Purchases returns           2,000        3,000
Ending Inventory            48,000     74,000
Sales returns                  1,000       3,000
Gross Profit                       (1)        77,000
Cost of goods sold         106,000       (5)
Expenses                        65,000     62,000
Net Income                        (3)       15,000

Fill in the blanks numbered 1 through 6:

Question 2: The Houston Manufacturing Company presents the following partial list of account balances, after adjustments, as of December 31, 2007:

Sales salaries expense    27,400    Sales personnel travel expenses 8,300
Misc admin expenses        3,000    Property taxes and insurance expenses    9,000
Sales Returns                   5,000    Retained earnings, Jan 1, 2007    200,800
Sales                            468,200    Depreciation expense: sales equip    9,000
Interest revenue               3,200    Advertising expenses 15,700
Office & admin salaries    30,000    Misc rent revenue    5,900
Delivery expenses           11,700    Common stock, $10 par    200,000
Loss on sales of factory equip 4,100    Depreciation expense: buildings & office equip    14,400
Cost of goods sold             232,200

The following information is also available but is not reflected in the preceding accounts:

1. The company sold Division E (a component of the company) on August 1, 2007. During 2007, Division E had incurred a pretax loss from operations of $16,000. However, because the acquiring company could vertically integrate Division E into its facilities, the Houston Manufacturing Company was able to recognize a $42,000 pretax gain on the sale.

2. On January 2, 2007, without warning, a foreign country expropriated a factory of Houston Manufacturing Company which had been operating in that country. As a result of that expropriation, the company has incurred a pretax loss of $30,000.

3. In preparing its 2007 adjusting entries at year-end, the company discovered that it had no recorded $10,100 of depreciation on its office building during 2006. This error did not affect the 2007 depreciation expense.

4. The common stock was outstanding for the entire year. A cash dividend of $1.20 per share was declared and paid in 2007.

5. The 2007 income tax expense totals $28,020 and consists of the following:
Tax expense on income from continuing operations $32,250
Tax credit on Division E operating loss (4,800)
Tax expense on gain from sale of Division E 12,600
Tax credit on loss from expropriation (9,000)
Tax credit on 2006 depreciation error (3,030)

Question 3: Statement of Cash Flows. A list of selected items involving the cash flow activities of the Topps Company for 2007 is presented here:

a. Patent amortization expense, $3,500
b. Machinery was purchased for $39,500
c. At year-end, bonds payable with a face value of $20,000 were issued for $17,000
d. Net income, $47,200
e. Dividends paid, $16,000
f. Depreciation expense, $12,900
g. Preferred stock was issued for $13,600
h. Investments were acquired for $21,000
i. Accounts receivable increased by $4,300
j. Land was sold at cost, $11,000
k. Inventories increased by $15,400
l. Accounts payable increased by $2,700
m. Beginning cash balance, $19,400

Question 4: Examination of Accounts Receivable. You are engaged in the annual examination of Faulane Company, a wholesale office supply business, for the year ended June 20, 2007. You have been assigned to examine the accounts receivable. The following information is available at June 30, 2007.

1. Your review of accounts receivable and discussions with the client disclose that the following items are included in the accounts receivable (of both the control and the subsidiary ledgers):

a. Accounts with credit balances total $1,746
b. Receivables from officers total $8,500
c. Advances to employees total $1,411
d. Accounts that are definitely uncollectible total $1,187

2. Uncollectible accounts are estimated to be 0.50% of the year's net credit sales of $16,750,000

Required:

Prepare any journal entry (entries) required:

1. to reclassify items that are not trade accounts receivable ,
2. to write off uncollectible accounts, and
3. to adjust the allowance for doubtful accounts.

Question 5: Correction of Allowance Account. From inception of operations in 2004 Summit carried no allowance for doubtful accounts. Uncollectible receivables were expensed as written off, and recoveries were credited to income as collected. On March 1, 2008 (after the 2007 financial statements were issued), management recognized that accounts were necessary. A policy was established to maintain an allowance for doubtful accounts based on Summit's historical bad debt loss percentage applied to year-end accounts receivable. The historical bad debt loss percentage is to be recomputed each year based on the relationship of net write-offs to credit sales for all available past years up to a maximum of five years.

Information from Summit's records for five years is as follows:

Credit Accounts
Year Sales Written Off Recoveries
2004 $1,500,000 $15,000 $0
2005 2,250,000 38,000 2,700
2006 2,950,000 52,000 2,500s
2007 3,300,000 65,000 4,800
2008 4,000,000 83,000 5,000

Accounts receivable balances were $1,250,000 and $1,460,000 at December 31, 2007 and December 31, 2008 respectively.

Required:

1. Prepare the journal entry, with appropriate explanation, to set up the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts as of January 1, 2008. Disregard income taxes. Show supporting computations in good form.
2. Prepare a schedule analyzing the changes in the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts account for the year ended December 31, 2008. Show supporting computations in good form.

Question 6:

The Garrett Company has the following transactions during the months of April and May:

Date    Transaction    Units    Cost/unit

4/1    Balance    400
4/17    Purchase    200    $5.50
4/25    Sale    150
4/28    Purchase 100    $5.75
5/5    Purchase    250    $5.50
5/18    Sale    300
5/22    Sale    50

The cost of the inventory on April 1is $5, $4, and $2 per unit, respectively, under the FIFO, average, and LIFO cost flow assumptions.

Required:

1.    Compute the costs of goods sold for each month and the inventories at the end of each month for the following alternatives:

a.    FIFO periodic
b.    FIFO perpetual
c.    LIFO periodic
d.    LIFO perpetual
e.    Weighted average (round unit costs to 2 decimal places)
f.    Moving average (round unit costs to 2 decimal places)

2.    Reconcile the difference between the LIFO periodic and the LIFO perpetual results.

Question 7: The Kwestel Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO method for inventory valuation at the beginning of 2006. The following information about the inventory at the end of each year is available from the company records:

Year    Current Cost    Index
2005    $8,000    100
2006    10,800    120
2007    11,500    130
2008    14,000    145
2009    10,500    125

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Accounting Basics: Compute the costs of goods sold for each month
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