Journalise the necessary adjusting entries

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Reference no: EM132922586

HI5001 Accounting For Busniss Decisions

Question 1

Mac Ltd. provides legal advice to customers for fees. On 30 June 2020, Mac Ltd. completed its first year of operations. Some of the ledger account balances of the business, before any financial year end (30 June) adjustments, are provided below:

 

$

Fees Revenue

295,000

Rent Expense

14,640

Electricity Expense

5,640

Wages Expense

108,800

Advertising Prepaid

1,800

No adjusting entries have been made to these accounts at any time during the year. An analysis of the business records reveals the following.

1. The total Fees Revenue recorded includes $1,500 that was prepaid by a client as a deposit for legal advice to be provided in July 2020.
2. The balance in AdvertisingPrepaid represents the amount paid for an advertising on a legal magazine for 6 months. The agreement with the publisher of the magazine covers the period 1 May 2020 to 31 October 2020.
3. The ElectricityExpense ledger balance does not include the amount for June 2020. The account amounted to $1,050 and was received and paid during July.
4. The firm's lease agreement for the office premises commenced from 1 July 2019. The agreement indicates a rent of $1,220 per month is to be paid on the first day of each month. In addition, an annual amount equal to 0.2% of the entity's total fees revenue earned each year should be paid. This extra rental is payable within 15 days of the end of the reporting period.
5. The entity hired part-time employees. Wages are paid fortnightly on Fridays (5 working day each week and each pay period covers Monday from preceding week to Friday in the pay week). In 2020, 30 June falls on a Tuesday and the wages for the two-week pay period ended on Friday 3 July 2020 is $7,800. All employees worked the normal office hours during the two--week pay period.

Required:
a) Journalise the necessary adjusting entries at the end of the period.
b) Apply the knowledge that you have learned from Lecture 4, using an example to explain the differences between cash basis and accrual basis accounting, and further discuss why adjusting entries are necessary.

Question 2

You are the bookkeeper of Holmes Traders. You undertake a bank reconciliation at the end of every month. Holmes Traders received its bank statement for the month ending 31 March 2021. The bankreconciliation at the end of February showed a deposit in transit of $780 and two outstanding cheques (no. 563 for $204 and no. 571 for $420). The adjusted cash balance in the entity's records was $7087 debit at the end of February.

Below are the entity's March bank statement and the entity's book records that indicate the deposits made and cheques written during the month of March:

AU Bank - Bank Statement

For the period 01/03/2021 - 31/03/2021

Holmes Traders, NSW

 

 

 

Dr

Cr

Balance $

 

 

 

Balance brought forward

 

 

6931

CR

1

March

Deposit

 

780

7711

CR

3

March

Deposit

 

708

8419

CR

 

March

Cheque # 582

312

 

8107

CR

6

March

Deposit

 

408

8515

CR

8

March

# 571

420

 

8095

CR

9

March

Deposit

 

504

8599

CR

12

March

Deposit

 

252

8851

CR

 

March

# 584

420

 

8431

CR

13

March

# 583

1020

 

7411

CR

15

March

Deposit

 

972

8383

CR

 

March

# 587

888

 

7495

CR

20

March

Deposit

 

336

7831

CR

22

March

# 585

816

 

7015

CR

26

March

Deposit

 

912

7927

CR

29

March

# 586

756

 

7171

CR

30

March

# 580

516

 

6655

CR

31

March

interest

 

23

6678

CR

31

March

Transaction fees

13

 

6665

CR

Holmes Traders' Book Records

Date

Deposits made

Cheques written

 

 

$

No.

$

March

3

708

# 579

288

 

6

408

# 580

516

 

9

504

# 581

414

 

12

252

# 582

312

 

15

972

# 583

1020

 

20

336

# 584

420

 

26

912

# 585

816

 

29

756

# 586

432

 

 

$ 4848

# 587

888

 

 

 

 

$ 5106

The cash at bank account balance on 31 March was $6829.

In reviewing cheques, a mistake was discovered: Cheque no. 586, written for insurance expenses of $756, was recorded in the general journal as $432.

Required:
a) As the entity does not use special journals, prepare the necessary general journal entries to bring the cash at bank account up to date as at 31 March 2021.
b) Prepare a bank reconciliation statement for Holmes Traders at 31 March 2021. Please ensure you indicate the balance of each amount with either a debit or credit in the bank reconciliation statement.

Question 3
The information in the following table relates to the accounts receivable and allowance for doubtful debts of Prime Moving Ltd. The company's accounting period ends on 30 June each year. The company policy is to provide an allowance for doubtful debts at the rate of 3% of accounts receivable at 30 June each year. The balance of the Allowance for Doubtful Debts account on 1 July 2019 was $10 000.The following information is given for the year ending 30 June 2020 and 30 June 2021, to determine the bad debts expense for each year and the balance of allowance for doubtful debts at the end of each year.

 

2020

2021

Accounts receivable(ending balanceat 30 June)

$400,000

$450,000

Bad debts written off during the year

6,000

0

Allowance for doubtful debts at 1 July (Beginning of the period)

(a)

(d)

Bad debts expense for the year

(b)

(e)

Allowance for doubtful debts at 30 June (Ending balance)

(c)

(f)

Required:
a) Determine the missing amounts in the table.
b) Discuss how the following accounts are recognised or disclosed in the entity's financial statements and their effecton the financial statements.
• discount allowed
• discount received
• bad debts expenses
• bad debts recovered
c) Show the relevant section of the balance sheet prepared at 30 June 2021.

Question 4

You are the senior accountant for a shoe wholesaler that uses the periodic inventory method. You have determined the following information from your company's records, which you assume is correct:

1. Inventory of $246,720 was on hand at the start of the year.
2. Purchases for the year totalled $1,690,000. Of this, $1,412,000 was purchased on account; that is, accounts payable was credited for this amount at the time of the purchase.
3. A year-end inventory count revealed inventory of $324,800

Required:
a) Assume that the company uses periodic inventory system, calculate cost of sales.
b) Assume now that your company uses the perpetual method of inventory control, and that your records show that $1,548,325 of inventory (at cost) was sold during the year. What is the adjustment needed to correct the records, given the inventory count in item 3 above?
c) What might the need for this adjustment indicate about company operations?
d) Assume that during the year, total inventory was sold for $2,800,000 on credit. What would be the entries to record the sales transaction under periodic inventory control system? What would be the entries to record the sales transaction under perpetual inventory control system?

Question 5
Adam's mowing Limited purchased a group of new lawnmowers for $20,000at1 July 2020. As the accountant of the business, you have estimated that the mowers are to last five years and to have $500 residual value at that point. The entity's business plan projects cutting 5,000 lawns over the five years, with per-year projections of 500, 1,000, 1,200, 1,800 and 500 lawns over the five years.

Required:
a) Calculate the Accumulated Depreciation balance at the end of the second year using each of the following depreciation bases. Show your working.
• straight-line
• diminishing balance (52 per cent rate)
• units-of-production.
b) You are asked by the owner of the business which depreciation basis would result in the entity paying less tax at the end of the second year and so you should adopt that method for the mowers as it would save cost for the entity. Provide appropriate response to the owner's question and request.
c) If the 52 per cent reducing balance method is used, accumulated depreciation will be $19,500 at the end of the fifth year. Suppose that, on the first day of the sixth year, all the lawnmowers are sold as junk for $100 cash in total. Ignoring income taxes, calculate the loss on sale that would be recorded that day.

Question 6

The following events occurred during the year ended 30 June 2020 for Electrical Limited.

a) On 1 June 2020, Electrical Ltd. signed a three-month 12% per annum note payable to purchase a new equipment costing $48,000. Interest and principal are paid at maturity.

b) On 29 June 2020, Electrical Ltd. received deposit in advance of $12,000 from a construction company for completing the electrical work for a new project during the next 6 months.

c) Electricity charges of $40,000 from 24 April to 23 June are payable on 10 July.

d) Electrical's main product is backed by warranty. Sales of this product for the year totalled $445,000. The opening balance of provision for warranty claims was $10,600. During the year, Electrical's warranty expense was $31,700 and claims paid to customers totalled $25,200.

e) June sales totalled $212,000. Electrical Ltd. collected GST of 10% on this amount. This is due to be paid to the tax office by the seventh day of the following collection.

f) On 30 June 2020, Electrical Ltd. took out a loan for $110,000 from AUZ Bank. Repayments of principal are scheduled evenly over a five-year period. Interest on the loan is paid in the year it is incurred.

Required:
For each item, indicate the account nameand the amount to be included as a current liability on Electrical's balance sheet prepared at 30 June 2020. (show your working for your calculation for each amount).

Attachment:- ACCOUNTING FOR BUSNISS DECISIONS.rar

Reference no: EM132922586

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