In its Year 2 income statement, what amount should Shin report as total income tax expense? 3. (TCO B) Justification for the method of determining periodic deferred tax expense is based on the concept of: 4. (TCO B) In Year 2, Ajax, Inc. reported taxable income of $400,000 and pretax financial statement income of $300,000. The difference resulted from $60,000 of nondeductible premiums on Ajax's officers' life insurance and $40,000 of rental income received in advance.
1 1. If the beginning balance of retained earnings equals $12,000, the ending balance of retained earnings equals $15,000, and dividends for the year equal $1,000, then net income for the year equals: A. B. C. D. $3,000 $4,000 $2,000 $1,000 2. A company receives a $50,000 cash deposit from a customer on October 15 but will not provide services until November 20. Which of the following statements is true?
Week 2 Practice Question Solutions EXERCISE 4-8 (15–20 minutes) (a) Net sales $ 540,000 Cost of goods sold (210,000) Administrative expenses (100,000) Selling expenses (80,000) Discontinued operations-loss (40,000) Income before income tax 110,000 Income tax ($110,000 X .30) 33,000 Net income $ 77,000 (b) Income from continuing operations before income tax $150,000* Income tax ($150,000 X .30) 45,000 Income from continuing operations 105,000 Discontinued operations, less applicable income tax of $12,000 (28,000) Net income $ 77,000 *$110,000 + $40,000 Earnings per share: Income from continuing operations
The tax on the year 1 deprecation would then be $28,050 * .40, which equals $11,220. After adding $11,020 to the $15,000 in savings, the cash flow for year 1 would equal $26,220. For year 2, the depreciation expense would equal $85,000 * .45, or $38,250. The tax on the year 2 deprecation would then be $38,250 * .40, which equals $15,300. After adding $15,300 to the $15,000 in savings, the cash flow for year 2 would equal $30,300.
Net income dropped from $63,125 to $38,197.50 which cuts losses by $24,927.50. Losses were cut by 61%. 2. A firm needs $100 to start and has the following expectations: Sales $200 Expenses $185 Tax rate 33% of earnings o What are earnings if the owners invest the $100? $10.05 o If the firm borrows $40 of the $100 at an interest rate of 10%, what are the firm's net earnings?
depreciation over 3 years Depreciation costs per year: 24/3= 8 mln per year. Q3. Tax rate in 2012 = Income Tax Expense / Income Before Tax = 1127mln/4914 mln = 22,93% Q4. | Year 0 | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | | | | | | | | R&D expenses | -77 | | | | | | | | | | | Total Revenues | | 110 | 83 | 55 | All in millions | Cost of Goods Sold | | -8 | -8 | -5 | | Gross Profit | | 102 | 75 | 50 | | depreciation | | -8 | -8 | -8 | | Adm/sales/etc | | -3 | -3 | -2 | | EBIT | -77 | 91 | 64 | 40 | | Unl Net income | -59,34 | 70,13 | 49,32 | 30,83 | | Q5.
Calculate the amount of employee taxes withheld and prepare the company's journal entry to accrue the January salaries expense and withholding of January taxes. Answer: Salaries Expense | 8,000 | | FICA–Social Security Taxes Payable ($8,000 x .062) | | 496 | FICA–Medicare Taxes Payable ($8,000 x .0145) | | 116 | Employees' Federal Income Taxes Payable ($8,000 x .15) | | 1,200 | Accrued Payroll Payable | | 6,188 | 11. On December 1, 2007 Gates Company borrowed $45,000 cash from FirstBank on a 90-day, 9% note payable. a. Prepare Gate's general journal entry to record the issuance of the note payable.
Part (b) Calculate the seasonal forecast of sales for February of Year 3. Part (c) Which forecast do you think is most accurate and why? 11. Question : (TCO 6) Davis Company is considering two capital investment proposals. Estimates regarding each project are provided below: Project A Project B Initial Investment $800,000 $650,000 Annual Net Income $50,000 45,000 Annual Cash Inflow $220,000 $200,000 Salvage Value $0 $0 Estimated Useful Life 5 years 4 years The company requires a 10% rate of return on all new investments.
Total liabilities ÷ Total stockholders' equity 283,800÷292,200=97.1% 248,000÷268,000 = 92.5% j. (Income before taxes+ Interest) Interest (55,000 + 8,000) ÷ 8,000 = 7.9 times (54,800 + 7,200) ÷ 7,200 = 8.6 times k. Plant assets ÷ Long-term debt 270,000 ÷ 132,000 = 2.05 : 1 255,000 ÷ 127,000 = 2.01 : 1 l. Net income ÷ Net sales 32,000 ÷ 230,000 = 13.9% 32,800 ÷ 210,000 = 15.6% m. Net sales ÷ Avg. total assets 230,000 ÷ 546,000=0.42 210,000 ÷ 516,000=0.41* n. Net income ÷ Avg. total assets OR (l.) x (m.) 32,000 ÷ 546,000 = 5.9% 32,800 ÷ 516,000 = 6.4%* o. Net income ÷ Avg.
He must declare the sales proceeds. $1,000 gain on sale. Ken's stock sale proceeds | Amount | Sale Proceeds ($32 x 1,000 shares) | $32,000 | Less Selling Expenses | $0 | Amount Realized | $32,000 | Less Tax basis ($31 x 1,000 shares) | $31,000 | Gain on sale | $1,000 | c.) Ken received $25,000 from an annuity he purchased eight years ago. He purchased the annuity, to be paid annually for 20 years for $210,000. Gain of $14,500 Ken's Annuity | Amount | Total investment into annuity | $210,000 | Number of payments | 20 | Return on capital for the payments | $10,500 | Ken's