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Question - As you have seen in Chapter 17, companies depreciate, or write off, the expense of tangible assets such as trucks and equipment over a period of their useful lives. Many companies also have intangible assets that must be accounted for as an expense over a period of time. Intangible assets are resources that benefit the company but do not have any physical substance. Some examples are copyrights, franchises, patents, trademarks, and leases. In accounting, intangible assets are written off in a procedure known as asset amortization. This is much like straight-line depreciation, but there is no salvage value. Suppose you are the accountant for a certain pharmaceutical company. In January 2000, the company purchased the patent rights for a new medication from Novae, Inc., for $18,000,000. The patent had 15 years remaining as its useful life. In January 2005, your pharmaceutical company successfully defended its right to the patent in a lawsuit that cost $670,000 in legal fees.
(a) Using the straight-line method, calculate the patent's annual amortization expense (in $) for the years before the lawsuit.
(b) Calculate the revised annual amortization expense (in $) for the remaining years after the lawsuit.
Hubbard argues that the Fed can control the Fed funds rate, but the interest rate that is important for the economy is a longer-term real rate of interest. How much control does the Fed have over this longer real rate?
Coures:- Fundamental Accounting Principles: - Explain the goals and uses of special journals.
Accounting problems, Draw a detailed timeline incorporating the dividends, calculate the exact Payback Period b) the discounted Payback Period. the IRR, the NPV, the Profitability Index.
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Your Corp, Inc. has a corporate tax rate of 35%. Please calculate their after tax cost of debt expressed as a percentage. Your Corp, Inc. has several outstanding bond issues all of which require semiannual interest payments.
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