Which of the following is stated correctly?

  1. Current liabilities follow non-current liabilities on the statement of financial position under GAAP, but non-current liabilities follow current liabilities under IFRS.
  2. IFRS does not treat debt modifications as extinguishments of debt.
  3. Bond issuance costs are recorded as a reduction of the carrying value of the debt under GAAP but are recorded as an asset and amortized to expense over the term of the debt under IFRS.
  4. Under GAAP, bonds payable is recorded at the face amount and any premium or discount is recorded in a separate account. Under IFRS, bonds payable is recorded at the carrying value so no separate premium or discount accounts are used.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The correct option is(d) Under GAAP, bonds payable is recorded at the face amount, and any premium or discount is recorded in a separate account. Under IFRS, bonds payable is recorded at the carrying value, so no separate premium or discount accounts are used.

Step by step solution

01

Definition of Bonds Payable

Bonds payable is a liability account reported by the business unit to reflect the number of bonds issued by the business entity. This is reported in the non-current section of the balance sheet.

02

Explanation for the correct option

Option (d) is correct because the business entity reporting under IFRS does not reflect discounts and premiums on the balance sheet. Rather the bonds are reported at the net amount. While business entity reporting under GAAP reports discount and premium in a separate account.

03

Explanation for Incorrect options

  1. Option (a) is incorrect because, under GAAP, the assets and liabilities are reported in the order of liquidity, i.e., most liquid followed by less liquid. Under IFRS, the reverse order is followed, i.e., less liquid first and most liquid.
  2. Option (b) is incorrect because under IFRS, debt terms are modified are considered a debt extinguishment.
  3. Option (c) is incorrect because the issuance cost of bonds is capitalized under GAAP, and under IFRS, it is deducted from the carrying value of the bonds.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

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?

(Amortization Schedule—Straight-Line) Devon Harris Company sells 10% bonds having a maturity value of \(2,000,000 for \)1,855,816. The bonds are dated January 1, 2017, and mature January 1, 2022. Interest is payable annually on January 1.

Instructions

Set up a schedule of interest expense and discount amortization under the straight-line method. (Round answers to the nearest cent.)

In each of the following independent cases, the company closes its books on December 31.

1. Sanford Co. sells \(500,000 of 10% bonds on March 1, 2017. The bonds pay interest on September 1 and March 1. The due date of the bonds is September 1, 2020. The bonds yield 12%. Give entries through December 31, 2018.

2. Titania Co. sells \)400,000 of 12% bonds on June 1, 2017. The bonds pay interest on December 1 and June 1. The due date of the bonds is June 1, 2021. The bonds yield 10%. On October 1, 2018, Titania buys back \(120,000 worth of bonds for \)126,000 (includes accrued interest). Give entries through December 1, 2019.

Instructions

For the two cases prepare all of the relevant journal entries from the time of sale until the date indicated. Use the effective-interest method for discount and premium amortization (construct amortization tables where applicable). Amortize premium or discount on interest dates and at year-end. (Assume that no reversing entries were made.)

Question: Will the amortization of Discount on Bonds Payable increase or decrease Bond Interest Expense? Explain.

On January 1, 2017, Nichols Company issued for \(1,085,800 its 20-year, 11% bonds that have a maturity value of \)1,000,000 and pay interest semiannually on January 1 and July 1. The following are three presentations of the long-term liability section of the balance sheet that might be used for these bonds at the issue date.

1

Bonds payable (maturing January 1, 2037)

\(1,000,000

Unamortized premium on bonds payable

85,800

Total bond liability

\)1,085,800

2

Bonds payable—principal (face value \(1,000,000 maturing January 1, 2037)

\) 142,050a

Bonds payable—interest (semiannual payment \(55,000)

943,750b

Total bond liability

\)1,085,800

3

Bonds payable—principal (maturing January 1, 2037)

\(1,000,000

Bonds payable—interest (\)55,000 per period for 40 periods)

2,200,000

Total bond liability

\(3,200,000

aThe present value of \)1,000,000 due at the end of 40 (6-month) periods at the yield rate of 5% per period

bThe present value of \(55,000 per period for 40 (6-month) periods at the yield rate of 5% per period.

Instructions

(a) Discuss the conceptual merit(s) of each of the date-of-issue balance sheet presentations shown above for these bonds.

(b) Explain why investors would pay \)1,085,800 for bonds that have a maturity value of only $1,000,000.

(c)Assuming that a discount rate is needed to compute the carrying value of the obligations arising from a bond issue at any date during the life of the bonds, discuss the conceptual merit(s) of using for this purpose: (1) The coupon or nominal rate. (2) The effective or yield rate at date of issue.

(d)If the obligations arising from these bonds are to be carried at their present value computed by means of the current market rate of interest, how would the bond valuation at dates subsequent to the date of the issue be affected by an increase or a decrease in the market rate of interest?

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