Accounting, Analysis, and Principles

On January 1, 2016, Garner issued 10-year, \(200,000 face value, 6% bonds at par. Each \)1,000 bond is convertible into 30 shares of Garner \(2 par value common stock. The company has had 10,000 shares of common stock (and no preferred stock) outstanding throughout its life. None of the bonds have been converted as of the end of 2017. (Ignore all tax effects.)

Accounting

(a) Prepare the journal entry Garner would have made on January 1, 2016, to record the issuance of the bonds.

(b) Garner’s net income in 2017 was \)30,000 and was \(27,000 in 2016. Compute basic and diluted earnings per share for Garner for 2017 and 2016.

(c) Assume that 75% of the holders of Garner’s convertible bonds convert their bonds to stock on June 30, 2018, when Garner’s stock is trading at \)32 per share. Garner pays $50 per bond to induce bondholders to convert. Prepare the journal entry to record the conversion.

Analysis

Show how Garner will report income and EPS for 2017 and 2016. Briefly discuss the importance of GAAP for EPS to analysts evaluating companies based on price-earnings ratios. Consider comparisons for a company over time, as well as comparisons between companies at a point in time.

Principles

In order to converge GAAP and IFRS, the FASB is considering whether the equity element of a convertible bond should be reported as equity. Describe how the journal entry you made in part (a) above would differ under IFRS. In terms of the accounting principles discussed in Chapter 2, what does IFRS for convertible debt accomplish that GAAP potentially sacrifices? What does GAAP for convertible debt accomplish that IFRS potentially sacrifices?

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) Cash account is debited, and bond payable is credited by $200,000

(b) Basic and diluted EPS for the years 2016 and 2017 are:

Particular

2016

2017

Basic EPS

$2.7

$3

Diluted EPS

$2.43

$2.62

(c) The bond conversion expense is $7,500

Step by step solution

01

Definition of Convertible Bonds

The bonds issued by the business entity convertible into a stated number of company’s shares after specified periods are known as convertible bonds.

02

Journal entry for issuance of bonds

Date

Accounts and Explanation

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

1 Jan 2016

Cash

200,000

Bonds payable

200,000

$200,000

$200,000

03

Earnings per share

Basic earnings per share

Year

Net income

/

Common shares outstanding

=

Earnings per share

2016

$27,000

/

10,000

=

$2.7

2017

$30,000

/

10,000

=

$3.00

Diluted earnings per share

2016

2017

Net income

$27,000

$30,000

Add: interest saving($200,000×6%)

12,000

12,000

Adjusted net income

39,000

42,000

Outstanding shares

10,000

10,000

Add: converted bonds into shares($200,000$1,000×30)

6,000

6,000

Total outstanding shares

16,000

16,000

Diluted EPS

$2.43

$2.62

04

Journal entry to record conversion

Date

Accounts and Explanation

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Bond conversion expenses (working note 1)

7,500

Bond payable

150,000

Common stock(working note 2)

9,000

Paid-in-capital in excess of par (balancing

figure)

141,000

Cash(150×$50)

7,500

$157,500

$157,500

Working note:

  1. Calculation of bond conversion expensesBond conversion expenses=($200,000$1,000×75%×$50)=$7,500

    2.Calculation of amount credited in common stock

    Common stock=($200,000$1,000×30×75%×$2)=$9,000

05

Analysis

Representation of EPS

Particular

2016

2017

Net income

$27,000

$30,000

Basic EPS

$2.7

$3

Diluted EPS

$2.43

$2.62

EPS is important for the analyst who depends upon the earnings per share to determine the business entity’s performance. EPS is also used to calculate the price-earnings ratio, which helps determine the quality of the earnings and growth prospects of the company. If the company uses more variations in the EPS calculation, it becomes more difficult to compare the companies and the company over time.

06

Principles

Under IFRS, the company must separate the equity and debt component of the convertible bonds from recording the issuance. Suppose the business entity calculated that the equity portion of a convertible bond equals $80,000. Then, the journal entry made will be:

Date

Accounts and Explanation

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Cash

200,000

Discount on bonds payable

80,000

Bonds payable

200,000

Share premium – conversion equity

80,000

Analyst supporting treatment made under IFRS will state that separating debt and equity components will provide a clear and fair view.

While analysts supporting treatment made under GAAP will state that allocating amount to debt and equity components is difficult and does not provide real figures.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

IFRS16-3 Norman Co., a fast-growing golf equipment company, uses GAAP. It is considering the issuance of convertible bonds. The bonds mature in 10 years, have a face value of \(400,000, and pay interest annually at a rate of 4%. The equity component of the bond issue has a fair value of \)35,000. Greg Shark is curious as to the difference in accounting for these bonds if the company were to use IFRS.

(a) Prepare the entry to record issuance of the bonds at par under GAAP.

(b) Repeat the requirement for part (a), assuming application of IFRS to the bond issuance.

(c) Which approach provides the better accounting? Explain.

What are stock rights? How does the issuing company account for them?

Question: Petrenko Corporation has outstanding 2,000 \(1,000 bonds, each convertible into 50 shares of \)10 par value ordinary shares. The bonds are converted on December 31, 2017. The bonds payable has a carrying value of \(1,950,000 and conversion equity of \)20,000. Record the conversion using the book value method.

(Issuance of Bonds with Detachable Warrants) On September 1, 2017, Sands Company sold at 104 (plus accrued interest) 4,000 of its 9%, 10-year, \(1,000 face value, nonconvertible bonds with detachable stock warrants. Each bond carried two detachable warrants. Each warrant was for one share of common stock at a specified option price of \)15 per share. Shortly after issuance, the warrants were quoted on the market for \(3 each. No fair value can be determined for the Sands Company bonds. Interest is payable on December 1 and June 1. Bond issue costs of \)30,000 were incurred.

Prepare in general journal format the entry to record the issuance of the bonds

Briefly discuss the convergence efforts that are under way by the IASB and FASB in the area of dilutive securities and earnings per share.

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