subject
Business, 16.02.2021 05:30 heathkid23

On December 1, 2019, Athabasca Building Supplies Ltd. (ABS) purchased Dunbar Doors Inc. (DDI) from Kevin Osepchuk. This was ABS’ entry into the door business and they welcomed the opportunity to sell doors to existing customers. When ABS acquired DDI, they also agreed to take over a DDI loan with the Royal Dominion Bank. The loan has a limit equal to 80% of the Merchandise Inventory account balance at year-end pertaining to doors. The loan had been held with that bank for a number of years and the current balance is $200,000. The bank requires verification of the inventory balance at the end of every year. As part of the deal to acquire DDI, Kevin agreed to serve as the new manager of ABS's Door Division and to receive a bonus equal to 10% of the operating profit of that division. You are a student who is helping ABS prepare its year-end financial statements. At the inventory count on December 31, you noticed that the employees counting the inventory at that time found that there were 800 doors on hand. ABS uses the perpetual average cost method.

In looking at the company's inventory records, you discover that 2,600 doors were purchased from DDI on December 1 at a cost of $310 each. Later in the month, 800 doors were purchased from a U. S. supplier at CAD$240 each and shortly after, 600 doors were purchased from China at CAD$190 each. Finally, on the last day of the year, 100 more doors were purchased at CAD$200 but these were in transit on December 31 with terms FOB destination. The only sale for the month occurred after the purchase of the doors from China when 3,200 doors were sold at $400 each to a contractor developing the largest condominium project in the area. Kevin supervised the count and determined the cost of the ending inventory. He calculated the ending inventory to be 900 doors at $310 each. He added 100 doors to the amount counted because of the doors in transit. Kevin earned a bonus of $16,700 in December.

Instructions:
(a) Determine the number of units and cost of goods available for sale in December and the weighted average cost of inventory before the sale. (15 points)
(b) Determine the number of units and cost of ending inventory at December 31. (15 points)
(c) Determine the adjustment required to the merchandise inventory at year-end to correct it. What will be the impact on COGS? Based on the above, should there be an adjustment to Kevin's bonus, which is based on profit? (20 points)
(d) Does this adjustment have any other implications (e. g. the bank loan)? (15 points)
(e) Do you consider Kevin's actions ethical? What was his possible motivation? (10 points)
(f) Assume that the decrease in the cost of doors from China is indicative of future trends in the industry and that ABS will be forced to reduce its selling price in the future to $260 per door. Is there any adjustment that has to be made in the December financial statements related to the net realizable value of the doors in inventory, including any further adjustment to Kevin’s bonus? (15 points)

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 03:00
Compare the sources of consumer credit 1. consumers use a prearranged loan using special checks 2. consumers use cards with no interest and non -revolving balances 3. consumers pay off debt and credit is automatically renewed 4. consumers take out a loan with a repayment date and have a specific purpose a. travel and entertainment credit b. revolving check credit c. closed-end credit d. revolving credit
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 06:50
Suppose the marginal damage and marginal benefit curves in a polluted neighborhood are md = p/3 and mb = 4 – p. also, suppose that transactions costs are low, so that the consumers and the firm can bargain. we saw that in this case, the socially-optimal level of pollution is achieved. start by computing the socially-optimal p. then, for each of the following cases, compute the amount of money transferred through the bargaining process, and indicate who pays whom (i.e., whether consumers pay the firm, or vice versa). also, compute the gains to each party relative to the status quo (i.e., the starting point of the bargaining process).a)consumers have the right to clean air; firm is dominant in the bargaining process.b)consumers have the right to clean air; consumers are dominant in the bargaining process.c)firm has the right to pollute; firm is dominant in the bargaining process.d)firm has the right to pollute; consumers are dominant in the bargaining proces
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 21:00
In a transportation minimization problem, the negative improvement index associated with a cell indicates that reallocating units to that cell would lower costs.truefalse
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 23:00
Draw a flowchart for a process of interest to you, such as a quick oil-change service, a factory process you might have worked in, ordering a pizza, renting a car or truck, buying products on the internet, or applying for an automobile loan. identify the points where something (people, information) waits for service or is held in work-in-process inventory, the estimated time to accomplish each activity in the process, and the total flow time. evaluate how well the process worked and what might be done to improve it.
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
On December 1, 2019, Athabasca Building Supplies Ltd. (ABS) purchased Dunbar Doors Inc. (DDI) from K...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 03.05.2021 21:40
question
Mathematics, 03.05.2021 21:40
question
Geography, 03.05.2021 21:40
question
Mathematics, 03.05.2021 21:40
question
Mathematics, 03.05.2021 21:40
question
History, 03.05.2021 21:40
question
Mathematics, 03.05.2021 21:40
Questions on the website: 13722363