Chapter 7: Question CA7-8 (page 378)

(Accounting for Zero-Interest-Bearing Note) Soon after beginning the year-end audit work on March 10 at Engone Company, the auditor has the following conversation with the controller.

Controller: The year ended March 31st should be our most profitable in history and, as a consequence, the board of directors has just awarded the officers generous bonuses.

Auditor: I thought profits were down this year in the industry, according to your latest interim report.

Controller: Well, they were down, but 10 days ago we closed a deal that will give us a substantial increase for the year.

Auditor: Oh, what was it?

Controller: Well, you remember a few years ago our former president bought stock in Henderson Enterprises because he had those grandiose ideas about becoming a conglomerate. For 6 years we have not been able to sell this stock, which cost us \(3,000,000 and has not paid a nickel in dividends. Thursday we sold this stock to Bimini Inc. for \)4,000,000. So, we will have a gain of \(700,000 (\)1,000,000 pretax) which will increase our net income for the year to \(4,000,000, compared with last year’s \)3,800,000. As far as I know, we’ll be the only company in the industry to register an increase in net income this year. That should help the market value of the stock!

Auditor: Do you expect to receive the \(4,000,000 in cash by March 31st, your fiscal year-end?

Controller: No. Although Bimini Inc. is an excellent company, they are a little tight for cash because of their rapid growth. Consequently, they are going to give us a \)4,000,000 zero-interest-bearing note with payments of $400,000 per year for the next 10 years. The first payment is due on March 31 of next year.

Auditor: Why is the note zero-interest-bearing?

Controller: Because that’s what everybody agreed to. Since we don’t have any interest-bearing debt, the funds invested in the note do not cost us anything and besides, we were not getting any dividends on the Henderson Enterprises stock.

Instructions

Do you agree with the way the controller has accounted for the transaction? If not, how should the transaction be accounted for?

Short Answer

Expert verified

There are various issues in the accounting of the controller because he states that this year is most profitable based on the transaction for which cash is not received yet, andit is also not probable because the investing company is facing issues related to liquidity.

Step by step solution

01

Definition of Auditor

An auditor can be defined as the individual responsible for providing the authentication to the financial statement issued by the business entity. It analyses the financial statement based on accuracy and then issues reports.

02

Issued with the accounting

1. The first issue is whether the transaction is fair or not without any force. It is stated by the controller that the stock of the business entity is not marketed for six months; therefore, the generation of the revenue is questionable.

2. The second issue is related to collecting cash against the note from Bimini. The company is facing liquidity issues due to development that raises questions regarding collectability.

3. Another issue is in respect of imputed interest rates. Even if the transaction is fair, then a zero-interest-bearing note will raise the question regarding the gain or loss that occurred during the transaction

4. For recognizing again, the imputed interest rate must be 5%:

Particular

Amount $

Payment of $400,000 per year @5% for 10 years (PVAF:7.72)

$3,088,000

Less: Cost of investment

(3,000,000)

Gain

$88,000

Step 3: Accounting Needed to be Done

The business entity must select the more realistic rate of 8%

Particular

Amount $

Payment of $400,000 per year @8% for 10 years (PVAF:6.71)

$2,684,000

Less: Cost of investment

(3,000,000)

Loss

($316,000)

Journal entry for same:

Date

Accounts and Explanation

Debit $

Credit $

Note receivables

$4,000,000

Loss on Disposal of Investment

$316,000

Equity Investment

$3,000,000

Discount on notes receivables

$1,316,000

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

(Note Transactions at Unrealistic Interest Rates) On July 1, 2017, Agincourt Inc. made two sales.

1. It sold land having a fair value of \(700,000 in exchange for a 4-year zero-interest-bearing promissory note in the face amount of \)1,101,460. The land is carried on Agincourt’s books at a cost of \(590,000.

2. It rendered services in exchange for a 3%, 8-year promissory note having a face value of \)400,000 (interest payable annually).

Agincourt Inc. recently had to pay 8% interest for money that it borrowed from British National Bank. The customers in these two transactions have credit ratings that require them to borrow money at 12% interest.

Instructions

Record the two journal entries that should be recorded by Agincourt Inc. for the sales transactions above that took place on July 1, 2017.

Kraft Enterprises owns the following assets at December 31, 2017.

Cash in bank – saving account

68,000

Checking account balance

17,000

Cash on hand

9,300

Post-dated Checks

750

Cash refunded due from IRS

31,400

Certificate of deposits (180-days)

90,000

What amount should be reported as cash?

Corrs Wholesalers Co. sells industrial equipment for a standard 3-year note receivable. Revenue is recognized at time of sale. Each note is secured by a lien on the equipment and has a face amount equal to the equipment’s list price. Each note’s stated interest rate is below the customer’s market rate at date of sale. All notes are to be collected in three equal annual installments beginning one year after sale. Some of the notes are subsequently sold to a bank with recourse, some are subsequently sold without recourse, and some are retained by Corrs. At year end, Corrs evaluates all outstanding notes receivable and provides for estimated losses arising from defaults.

Instructions

What is the appropriate valuation basis for Corrs’s notes receivable at the date it sells equipment?

Arness Woodcrafters sells \(250,000 of receivables to Commercial Factors, Inc. on a with recourse basis. Commercial assesses a finance charge of 5% and retains an amount equal to 4% of accounts receivable. Arness estimates the fair value of the recourse liability to be \)8,000. Prepare the journal entry for Arness to record the sale.

Horizon Outfitters Company includes in its trial balance for December 31 an item for Accounts Receivable \(789,000. This balance consists of the following items:

Due from regular customer

\)523,000

Refund receivable on prior year’s income taxes (an established claim)

15,500

Travel advance to employees

22,000

Loan to wholly owned subsidiary

45,500

Advance to creditor for goods ordered

61,000

Accounts receivables assigned security for loans payable

75,000

Notes receivable past due plus interest on these notes

47,000

Total

$789,000

Illustrate how these items should be shown in the balance sheet as of December 31.

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Business Studies Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free