Chapter 24: Question 2CA-4 (page 1456)

(Disclosures Required in Various Situations) Ace Inc. produces electronic components for sale to manufacturers of radios, television sets, and digital sound systems. In connection with her examination of Ace’s financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2018, Gloria Rodd, CPA, completed field work 2 weeks ago. Ms. Rodd now is evaluating the significance of the following items prior to preparing her auditor’s report. Except as noted, none of these items have been disclosed in the financial statements or notes.

Item 4: The company’s new manufacturing plant building, which cost \(2,400,000 and has an estimated life of 25 years, is leased from Wichita National Bank at an annual rental of \)600,000. The company is obligated to pay property taxes, insurance, and maintenance. At the conclusion of its 10-year noncancelable lease, the company has the option of purchasing the property for $1. In Ace’s income statement, the rental payment is reported on a separate line.

Instructions

For each of the above items, discuss any additional disclosures in the financial statements and notes that the auditor should recommend to her client. (The cumulative effect of the four items should not be considered.)

Short Answer

Expert verified

The lessee must capitalize the leased asset and the related obligation in the balance sheet at the appropriate discounted amount of the future rental payments under the lease agreement.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Audit report

Financial statements contain a statement called an audit report. In financial accounts, this includes the auditor's opinion. The auditor is accountable to the board of directors and the shareholders who elect them. He is required to express his views on the accuracy and fairness of the financial statements.

02

Additional disclosure in the financial statements

Since the lease agreement with Wichita National Bank includes a discount purchase option (a 25-year life building can be acquired for $1 at the end of ten years), it qualifies as a capital lease. In addition, unless the building's fair value significantly exceeds its $2,400,000 cost, the present value of the lease payment is likely to exceed 90% of the building's fair value.

Consequently, the lessee has to capitalize the leased asset and the corresponding liability in the balance sheet at the discounted amount of future rental payments under the lease agreement. The lessee must disclose the following information in a note:

  1. The gross amount of the leased asset and its accumulated depreciation,
  2. The minimum future lease payments as on the date of the most recent balance sheet, in aggregate and for each of the next five financial years, plus the number of lease payments the interest charged,
  3. A general description of the lease arrangement, and
  4. The existence of purchase option terms. A charge for depreciation of the leased asset, as well as an interest charge, must be included in the income statement.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Snider Corporation, a publicly-traded company, is preparing the interim financial data which it will issue to its shareholders at the end of the first quarter of the 2017–2018 fiscal year. Snider’s financial accounting department has compiled the following summarized revenue and expense data for the first quarter of the year.

Sales revenue \(60,000,000

Cost of goods sold 36,000,000

Variable selling expenses 1,000,000

Fixed selling expenses 3,000,000

Included in the fixed selling expenses was the single lump-sum payment of \)2,000,000 for television advertisements for the entire year.

Instructions

a) Snider Corporation must issue its quarterly financial statements in accordance with IFRS regarding interim financial reporting.

  1. Explain whether Snider should report its operating results for the quarter as if the quarter were a separate reporting period in and of itself, or as if the quarter were an integral part of the annual reporting period.

What is the difference between a CPA’s unqualified opinion or “clean” opinion and a qualified one?

What are interim reports? Why are balance sheets often not provided with interim data?

Okay. Last fall, someone with a long memory and an even longer arm reached into that bureau drawer and came out with a moldy cheese sandwich and the equally moldy notion of corporate forecasts. We tried to find out what happened to the cheese sandwich—but, rats!, even recourse to the Freedom of Information Act didn’t help. However, the forecast proposal was dusted off, polished up and found quite serviceable. The SEC, indeed, lost no time in running it up the old flagpole—but no one was very eager to salute. Even after some of the more objectionable features—compulsory corrections and detailed explanations of why the estimates went awry—were peeled off the original proposal.

Seemingly, despite the Commission’s smiles and sweet talk, those craven corporations were still afraid that an honest mistake would lead them down the primrose path to consent decrees and class action suits. To lay to rest such qualms, the Commission last week approved a “Safe Harbor” rule that, providing the forecasts were made on a reasonable basis and in good faith, protected corporations from litigation should the projections prove wide of the mark (as only about 99% are apt to do).

Instructions

  1. Why are corporations concerned about presenting profit forecasts?

The following statement is an excerpt from the FASB pronouncement related to interim reporting. Interim financial information is essential to provide investors and others with timely information as to the progress of the enterprise. The usefulness of such information rests on the relationship that it has to the annual results of operations. Accordingly, the Board has concluded that each interim period should be viewed primarily as an integral part of an annual period. In general, the results for each interim period should be based on the accounting principles and practices used by an enterprise in the preparation of its latest annual financial statements unless a change in an accounting practice or policy has been adopted in the current year. The Board has concluded, however, that certain accounting principles and practices followed for annual reporting purposes may require modification at interim reporting dates so that the reported results for the interim period may better relate to the results of operations for the annual period.

Instructions

The following six independent cases present how accounting facts might be reported on an individual company’s interim financial reports. For each of these cases, state whether the method proposed to be used for interim reporting would be acceptable under generally accepted accounting principles applicable to interim financial data. Support each answer with a brief explanation.

d) Gansner Company realized a large gain on the sale of investments at the beginning of the second quarter. The company wants to report one-third of the gain in each of the remaining quarters.

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