On December 31, 2017, American Bank enters into a debt restructuring agreement with Barkley Company, which is now experiencing financial trouble. The bank agrees to restructure a 12%, issued at par, \(3,000,000 note receivable by the following modifications:

  1. Reducing the principal obligation from \)3,000,000 to \(2,400,000.
  2. Extending the maturity date from December 31, 2017, to January 1, 2021.
  3. Reducing the interest rate from 12% to 10%.

Barkley pays interest at the end of each year. On January 1, 2021, Barkley Company pays \)2,400,000 in cash to American Bank.

Instructions

  1. Will the gain recorded by Barkley be equal to the loss recorded by American Bank under the debt restructuring?
  2. Can Barkley Company record a gain under the term modification mentioned above? Explain.
  3. Assuming that the interest rate Barkley should use to compute interest expense in future periods is 1.4276%, prepare the interest payment schedule of the note for Barkley Company after the debt restructuring.
  4. Prepare the interest payment entry for Barkley Company on December 31, 2019.
  5. What entry should Barkley make on January 1, 2021?

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. No, Barkley should not record gain.
  2. No, Barkley Company cannot record a gain under the mentioned term modification.
  3. The total cash paid is $720,000.
  4. Interest expense is $40,013.
  5. Notes payable is $2,400,000.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Debt Restructuring

The company is experiencing cash flow problems agreeing with lenders to renegotiate and expects them to agree with some favorable or flexible conditions so that the company can avoid bankruptcy. This process is known as debt restructuring.

02

(a) Explaining whether Barkley should record gain

No, by the debt restructuring arrangement, Barkley's gain does not equal American Bank's loss. (In the four following activities, you'll discover why this occurs.) The FASB was concerned that expanding the scope of its announcement would cause a delay in the release of GAAP for the creditor. Therefore, GAAP did not deal with debtor accounting about this "accounting asymmetry" treatment.

03

(b) Explaining whether Barkley Company records a gain under the term modification

The future cash flows following the restructuring are more than the whole pre-restructuring carrying value of the note (principal). Hence there is no gain under the new conditions.

Calculation of total cash flow after restructuring

Total future cash flows after restructuring are:

Principal

$2,400,000

Interest ($2,400,000×10%×3)

720,000

$3,120,000

The total pre-restructuring carrying amount of note(principal)

$3,000,000

04

(c) Preparing interest payment schedule

BARKLEY COMPANY

Interest Payment Schedule After Debt Restructuring

Effective Interest Rate 1.4276%

Date

Cash paid

(10%)

Interest Expense

(1.4276%)

Reduction

Of Carrying

Amount

Carrying

Amount of Note

12/31/17

$3000,000

12/31/18

$240,000

$42,828

$197,172

2,802,828

12/31/19

240,000

40,013

199,987

2,602,841

12/31/20

240,000

37,159

202,841

2,400,000

Total

$720,000

$120,000

$600,000

Working notes:

Calculation of Cash paid on 12/31/18

CashPaid=PrincipalObligation×Interestrate=$2,400,000×10%=$240,000

Calculation of interest expense on 12/31/18

InterestExpense=PrincipalObligation×Interestrate=$3,000,000×1.4276%=$42,828

Calculation of Reduction of carrying amount on 12/31/18

Reductionofcarryingamout=Cashpaid-Interestexpense=$240,000-$42,828=$197,712

05

(d) Preparing journal entry

Interest payment entry for Barkley Company is:

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Dec. 31, 2019

Notes payable

199,987

Interest expense

40,013

Cash

240,000

06

(e) Preparing journal entry

The payment entry at maturity is:

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Jan. 1, 2021

Notes payable

2,400,000

Cash

2,400,000

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

On March 1, 2017, Sealy Company sold its 5-year, $1,000 face value, 9% bonds dated March 1, 2017, at an effective annual interest rate (yield) of 11%. Interest is payable semiannually, and the first interest payment date is September 1, 2017. Sealy uses the effective-interest method of amortization. The bonds can be called by Sealy at 101 at any time on or after March 1, 2018.

Instructions

a. (1) How would the selling price of the bond be determined?

(2) Specify how all items related to the bonds would be presented in a balance sheet prepared immediately after the bond issue was sold.

b. What items related to the bond issue would be included in Sealy’s 2017 income statement, and how would each be determined?

c. Would the amount of bond discount amortization using the effective-interest method of amortization be lower in the second or third year of the life of the bond issue? Why?

d. Assuming that the bonds were called in and redeemed on March 1, 2018, how should Sealy report the redemption of the bonds on the 2018 income statement?

The following article appeared in the Wall Street Journal.

Bond Markets

Giant Commonwealth Edison Issue Hits Resale Market With \(70 Million Left Over

New york—Commonwealth Edison Co.’s slow-selling new 91 /4% bonds were tossed onto the resale market at a reduced price with about \)70 million still available from the \(200 million offered Thursday, dealers said.

The Chicago utility’s bonds, rated double-A by Moody’s and double-A-minus by Standard & Poor’s, originally had been priced at 99.803, to yield 9.3% in 5 years. They were marked down yesterday the equivalent of about \)5.50 for each $1,000 face amount, to about 99.25, where their yield jumped to 9.45%.

Instructions

  1. How will the development above affect the accounting for Commonwealth Edison’s bond issue?
  2. Provide several possible explanations for the markdown and the slow sale of Commonwealth Edison’s bonds.

Briggs and Stratton recently issued debt with issue costs of $5.1 million. How should the costs of issuing these bonds be accounted for and classified in the financial statements?

What disclosures are required relative to long-term debt and sinking fund requirements?

Assume the same information as in E14-4, except that Celine Dion Company uses the effective-interest method of amortization for bond premium or discount. Assume an effective yield of 9.7705%

Instructions

Prepare the journal entries to record the following. (Round to the nearest dollar.)

(a) The issuance of the bonds.

(b) The payment of interest and related amortization on July 1, 2017.

(c) The accrual of interest and the related amortization on December 31, 2017.

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