How would you handle the entire situation

Assignment Help Accounting Basics
Reference no: EM131912850

Problem

Mary Milken is the CFO of the Rbeck Company in Miami, Florida. The company is a closely held custom yacht builder with about 200 technical workers (engineers, marine architects, mechanics, boat workers, and so on), and 12 employees in its main office staff. Her primary job is to prepare the financial statements with the assistance of two full-time accountants. She normally follows generally accepted accounting principles, but she sometimes ignores them when she thinks they do not lead to what she considers best practices for the small number of her company's shareholders.

In the previous decade, the company was owned by three sisters, each of whom served on the board of directors. One of the three, Vanessa Rbeck, served as the CEO during that period. The other two have always deferred to her with respect to her operational management decisions.

Only a month ago, however, Vanessa's sisters were killed when their private plane crashed en route to the Bahamas, which they frequently visited on weekends for relax-ation. Upon their death, all of their shares in the Rbeck company transferred to a single trustee in one of the large South Florida banks. Each sister had held her shares in revo-cable living trusts with the same bank named as successor trustee.

As soon as the funerals were over, Mary and Vanessa met with the trustee, Annie Crusher. The meeting did not go well. Annie had grown up working in a family-owned retail boat business, and she thought her knowledge of the industry transferred to the yacht-building business. She began asking Vanessa a rapid succession of unfriendly questions in an adversarial tone of voice. Her questions strongly implied that a yacht-building business did not belong in South Florida but offshore where labor is cheaper. After the meeting, both Mary and Vanessa became afraid that Annie would do some-thing crazy like fire them both or liquidate the business.

For the previous five years, Rbeck's stock had sold for a steady $12 per share, with$8 per share in dividends. Vanessa received a good salary, but she depended on the dividends to send her children to private schools and to pay the large mortgage on her waterfront home in South Beach. She immediately realized that she was now at Annie's mercy; she could easily cut off Vanessa's dividends, lower her salary, or put her out of work.

To make things worse, Mary was almost finished with the most recent annual report, and it appeared that earnings were down for the first time ever. Her preliminary calcu-lations showed earnings per share somewhere near $8.

The problem with earnings had been caused by large bad debts from three clients who had been arrested for drug trafficking. Rbeck had entirely financed luxury yachts for the three clients because of their excellent credit history and prominence in the busi-ness community. However, the federal government seized all of the clients' assets, leaving nothing for Rbeck but the three half-built yachts.

After thinking things over, Vanessa asked Mary to find a way to avoid having to report lower earnings because of her concern as to how Annie might respond to the decline in earnings. Mary considered various options:

• Increase the estimated percentage of completion on all yachts in work-in-process inven-tory by 15 percent. This would wipe out most of the loss. Work in process estimates have always been very conservative anyway

• Recognize revenue on the three yachts in default. It would be very difficult to sell them at a good price, but she could always argue that they could be sold if she could keep a straight face. The best strategy would be to find new buyers for them, but that could take a couple of years

• Switch to mark-to-market accounting for some of the yachts in progress so the com-pany could recognize all of the profit when contracts with other clients are signed.

a. Is any option that Mary is considering acceptable under generally accepted account-ing principles? Why or why not?

b. Do any of the options being considered by Mary constitute financial statements fraud?

c. How would you handle the entire situation if you were in Mary's shoes?

Reference no: EM131912850

Questions Cloud

Find the probability that a randomly selected student : Find the probability that a randomly selected student has a runny nose or sore throat.
Prepare a monthly master budget for toyworks for year ended : Prepare a monthly master budget for ToyWorks for the year ended December 31, 2008, including the Sales Budget & Schedule of Cash Receipts.
Normal populations with equal variances : Assume the samples come from normal populations with equal variances
Amount realized and the character by solar corporation : Determine the amount realized and the character by Solar Corporation on the sale - Determine the character and amount of Samantha's gains and losses
How would you handle the entire situation : Mary Milken is the CFO of the Rbeck Company in Miami, Florida. How would you handle the entire situation if you were in Mary's shoes?
Peanutminus-butter costing system : In activity minus-based costing, direct laborminus-hours is always the best allocation base to allocate all nonminus-manufacturing indirect costs
How much loss may gray corporation recognize : How much loss may Gray Corporation recognize on the distribution of the land to Jane? What amount of loss may Gray Corporation recognize on the distribution?
Compute the amount of depreciation expense for year ended : Compute the amount of depreciation expense for the year ended December 31, 2014, using the double-declining balance method of depreciation.
Conduct a hypothesis test : The digital music players produced by a large Canadian manufacturer during the first two months of 2010 were of poor quality.

Reviews

Write a Review

Accounting Basics Questions & Answers

  How much control does fed have over this longer real rate

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

Coures:- Fundamental Accounting Principles: - Explain the goals and uses of special journals.

  Accounting problems

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.

  Write a report on internal controls

Write a report on Internal Controls

  Prepare the bank reconciliation for company

Prepare the bank reconciliation for company.

  Cost-benefit analysis

Create a cost-benefit analysis to evaluate the project

  Theory of interest

Theory of Interest: NPV, IRR, Nominal and Real, Amortization, Sinking Fund, TWRR, DWRR

  Liquidity and profitability

Distinguish between liquidity and profitability.

  What is the expected risk premium on the portfolio

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.

  Simple interest and compound interest

Simple Interest, Compound interest, discount rate, force of interest, AV, PV

  Capm and venture capital

CAPM and Venture Capital

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd