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Colo Company comprehensive Problem

ACC 325 WK 9 Spreadsheet 1 Final Colo Company comprehensive Problem

Assume it is Monday, May 1, the first business day of the month, and you have just been hired as the accountant for Colo Company, which operates with monthly accounting periods. All of the company’s accounting work is completed through the end of April and its ledgers show April 30 balances.

During your first month on the job, the company experiences the following transactions and events (terms for all its credit sales are 2_10, n_30 unless stated differently):

May 1 Issued Check No. 3410 to S&P Management Co. in payment of the May rent, $3,710. (Use two lines to record the transaction. Charge 80% of the rent to Rent Expense—Selling Space and the balance to Rent Expense—Office Space.)
2 Sold merchandise on credit to Hensel Company, Invoice No. 8785, for $6,100 (cost is $4,100).
2 Issued a $175 credit memorandum to Knox, Inc., for defective (worthless) merchandise sold on April 28 and returned for credit. The total selling price (gross) was $4,725.
3 Received a $798 credit memorandum from Peyton Products for the return of merchandise purchased on April 29.
4 Purchased the following on credit from Gear Supply Co.: merchandise, $37,072; store supplies, $574; and office supplies, $83. Invoice dated May 4, terms n_10 EOM. 302 Chapter 7 Accounting Information Systems
5  Received payment from Knox, Inc., for the balance from the April 28 sale less the May 2 return and the discount.
8 Issued Check No. 3411 to Peyton Products to pay for the $7,098 of merchandise purchased on April 29 less the May 3 return and a 2% discount.
9 Sold store supplies to the merchant next door at their cost of $350 cash.
10 Purchased $4,074 of office equipment on credit from Gear Supply Co., invoice dated May 10, terms n_10 EOM.
11 Received payment from Hensel Company for the May 2 sale less the discount.
11 Purchased $8,800 of merchandise from Garcia, Inc., invoice dated May 10, terms 2_10, n_30. 
12 Received an $854 credit memorandum from Gear Supply Co. for the return of defective office equipment received on May 10.
15 Issued Check No. 3412, payable to Payroll, in payment of sales salaries, $5,320, and office
salaries, $3,150. Cashed the check and paid the employees.
15 Cash sales for the first half of the month are $59,220 (cost is $38,200). (Cash sales are recorded daily but are recorded only twice here to reduce repetitive entries.)
15 Post to the customer and creditor accounts. Also post individual items that are not included in column totals at the end of the month to the general ledger accounts. (Such items are posted daily but are posted only twice each month because they are few in number.)
16 Sold merchandise on credit to Hensel Company, Invoice No. 8786, for $3,990 (cost is $1,890).
17 Purchased $13,650 of merchandise from Fink Corp., invoice dated May 14, terms 2_10, n_60.
19 Issued Check No. 3413 to Garcia, Inc., in payment of its May 10 invoice less the discount.
22 Sold merchandise to Lee Services, Invoice No. 8787, for $6,850 (cost is $4,990), terms 2_10, n_60.
23 Issued Check No. 3414 to Fink Corp. in payment of its May 14 invoice less the discount. 
24 Purchased the following on credit from Gear Supply Co.: merchandise, $8,120; store supplies, $630; and office supplies, $280. Invoice dated May 24, terms n_10 EOM.
25 Purchased $3,080 of merchandise from Peyton Products, invoice dated May 23, terms 2_10, n_30.
26 Sold merchandise on credit to Crane Corp., Invoice No. 8788, for $14,210 (cost is $8,230).
26 Issued Check No. 3415 to Perennial Power in payment of the May electric bill, $1,283.
29 The owner of Colo Company, Jenny Colo, used Check No. 3416 to withdraw $7,000 cash from the business for personal use.
30 Received payment from Lee Services for the May 22 sale less the discount.
30 Issued Check No. 3417, payable to Payroll, in payment of sales salaries, $5,320, and office salaries, $3,150. Cashed the check and paid the employees.
31 Cash sales for the last half of the month are $66,052 (cost is $42,500).
31 Post to the customer and creditor accounts. Also post individual items that are not included in column totals at the end of the month to the general ledger accounts. Foot and crossfoot the journals and make the month-end postings.

 
Required
1. Enter these transactions in a sales journal, a purchases journal, a cash receipts journal, a cash disbursements journal, or a general journal as illustrated in this chapter. Post when instructed to do so. Assume a perpetual inventory system.

2. Prepare a trial balance in the Trial Balance columns of the work sheet form provided with the working papers. Complete the work sheet using the following information for accounting adjustments:
a. Expired insurance, $553.
b. Ending store supplies inventory, $2,632.
c. Ending office supplies inventory, $504.
d. Depreciation of store equipment, $567.
e. Depreciation of office equipment, $329.
Prepare and post adjusting and closing entries.

3. Prepare a May 2005 multiple-step income statement, a May 2005 statement of owner’s equity, and a May 31, 2005, classified balance sheet.

4. Prepare a post-closing trial balance. Also prove the accuracy of subsidiary ledgers by preparing schedules of both accounts receivable and accounts payable. 

TUTORIAL PREVIEW
COLO COMPANY
Sales Journal
 
 
 
 
 
COGS
 
 
Inv.
Trans.
 
Debit
Date
Account Debited
No.
No.
Amount
Inv. Credit
May 2
Hensel Company
8785
83
6,100
4,100
16
Hensel Company
8786
84
3,990
1,890
22
Lee Services
8787
85
6,850
4,990

 
File name ACC325 Wk9 Spreadsheet1 colocompany.xlsx File type.xlsx  PRICE:$25

Willies Engine Shop uses a job order cost system to determine

Willies Engine Shop uses a job order cost system to determine the cost of performing engine repair work. Estimated costs and expenses for the coming period are as follows:
Engine Parts 875000
Shop direct labor 640000
shop & repair equip depre 45000
Shop supervisor salaries 125800
Shop property tax 22600
shop supplies 16600
ad. ex 17800
admin office salaries 75000
admin office depre ex 10000
                                  -------
                               1,827,000
The average shop direct labor rate is $16 per hour

Determine the predetermined shop overhead rate per direct labor hour. Round the answer to nearest whole cent.

SOLUTION PREVIEW

No. of direct labor hours = direct labor cost/direct labor rate per hour


= 640,000/16

File name Willies Engine .doc     File type: doc  PRICE: $3

E23-19 E23-20 Calculating materials and labor variances

E23-19 Calculating materials and labor variances
Great Fender, which uses a standard cost accounting system, manufactured 20,000 boat fenders during 2014, using 144,000 square feet of extruded vinyl purchased at $1.05 per square foot. Production required 420 direct labor hours that cost $13.50 per hour. The direct materials standard was 7 square feet of vinyl per fender, at a standard cost of $1.10 per square foot. The labor standard was 0.025 direct labor hour per fender, at a standard cost of $12.50 per hour.
Compute the cost and efficiency variances for direct materials and direct labor.

E23-20 Computing overhead variances
Review the data from Great Fender given in Exercise E23-19. Consider the following additional information
Static budget variable overhead $ 5,500
Static budget fixed overhead $ 22,000
Static budget direct labor hours 550 hours
Static budget number of units 22,000 units





Great Fender allocates manufacturing overhead to production based on standard direct labor hours. Great Fender reported the following actual results for 2014:
actual variable overhead, $4,950; actual fixed overhead, $23,000.

Requirements
1. Compute the overhead variances for the year: variable overhead cost variance, variable overhead efficiency variance, fixed overhead cost variance, and fixed overhead volume variance.
2. Explain why the variances are favorable or unfavorable


TUTORIAL PREVIEW
Req. 1
The organized materials and labor data is as follows:
Direct materials:
Actual price per foot
$1.05
Standard price per foot
$1.10


File name E23-19 E23-20 Great Fender.xls  File type: xls  PRICE: $15

The following summary transactions occurred during 2018 for Bluebonnet Bakers

The following summary transactions occurred during 2018 for Bluebonnet Bakers:
Cash Received from:

Customers……………………………………………………………………….$ 380,000
Interest on note receivable…………………………………………………………..6,000
Principal on note receivable…………………………………………………………50,000
Sale of investment………………………………………………………………….30,000
Proceeds from note payable………………………………………………………100,000

Cash Paid for:
Purchase of inventory……………………………………………………………..160,000
Interest on note payable……………………………………………………………..5,000
Purchase of equipment……………………………………………………………..85,000
Salaries to employees…………………………………………………………………90,000
Principal on note payable…………………………………………………………..25,000
Payment of dividends to shareholders………………………………………………..20,000
The balance of cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of 2018 was $17,000.
Required:
Prepare a statement of cash flows for 2018 for Bluebonnet Bakers. Use the direct method for reporting operating activities.

TUTORIAL PREVIEW
Bluebonnet Bakers
Statement of Cash Flows
For the Year Ended December 31, 2013

Cash flows from operating activities:

   Collections from customers  
$ 380,000

   Interest on note receivable
6,000



File name Bluebonnet Bakers.docx   File type: xls  PRICE: $3

Northwest Paperboard Company, a paper and allied products manufacturer

P12-12 Northwest Paperboard Company, a paper and allied products manufacturer, was seeking to gain a foothold in Canada. Toward that end, the company bought 40% of the outstanding common shares of Vancouver Timber and Milling, Inc., on January 2, 2011, for $400 million.

At the date of purchase, the book value of Vancouver's net assets was $775 million. The book values and fair values for all balance sheet items were the same except for inventory and plant facilities. The fair value exceeded book value by $5 million for the inventory and by $20 million for the plant facilities.

The estimated useful life of the plant facilities is 16 years. All inventory acquired was sold during 2011.

Vancouver reported net income of $140 million for the year ended December 31, 2011. Vancouver paid a cash dividend of $30 million.

Required:
1. Prepare all appropriate journal entries related to the investment during 2011.
2. What amount should Northwest report as its income from its investment in Vancouver for the year ended December 31, 2011?
3. What amount should Northwest report in its balance sheet as its investment in Vancouver?
4. What should Northwest report in its statement of cash flows regarding its investment in Vancouver?


Please see the attachment for solution


File name P12-12 northwest paper board.xlsx       File type: xls  PRICE: $8

The Fun Store, Inc., purchases very large and heavy toys from a large

P5-15 The Fun Store, Inc., purchases very large and heavy toys from a large manufacturer and sells them at the retail level. The toys cost, on the average, $9 each from the manufacturer. The Fun Store, Inc., sells the toys to its customers at an average price of $40 each. The selling and administrative costs that the company incurs in a typical month are presented below:


Costs
Cost Formula


Selling:



Advertising........................................
$1,000
per month

Sales salaries and commissions....
$800
per month, plus 5% of sales

Delivery of toys to customers........
$6
per toy sold

Utilities...............................................
$700
per month

Depreciation of sales facilities.......
$900
per month

Administrative:



Executive salaries............................
$3,500
per month

Insurance..........................................
$500
per month

Clerical...............................................
$500
per month, plus $5 per toy sold

Depreciation of office equipment
$600
per month
During June, The Fun Store, Inc., sold and delivered 450 toys.

Required:

  1.   Prepare an income statement for The Fun Store, Inc., for June. Use the traditional format, with costs organized by function.
  2.   Redo (1) above, this time using the contribution format, with costs organized by behavior. Show costs and revenues on both a total and a per unit basis down through contribution margin.

  3.   Refer to the income statement you prepared in (2) above. Why might it be misleading to show the fixed costs on a per unit basis?

CHECK FIGURE
(1) Net income is $(400)

TUTORIAL PREVIEW

THE FUN STORE INC
Income statement
For the month of October

Sales


$18,000
Cost of goods sold


4,050
Gross margin

`
13,950