On January 1, 2017, Bonanza Wholesalers Inc. adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method for income tax and external financial reporting purposes. However, Bonanza continuedto use the FIFO inventory method for internal accounting and management purposes. In applying the LIFO method, Bonanzauses internal conversion price indexes and the multiple pools approach under which substantially identical inventory items aregrouped into LIFO inventory pools. The following data were available for inventory pool no. 1, which comprises products A andB, for the 2 years following the adoption of LIFO.

FIFO Basis per Records

Unit Total

Units Cost Cost

Inventory, 1/1/17

Product A 10,000 \(30 \)300,000

Product B 9,000 25 225,000

\(525,000

Inventory, 12/31/17

Product A 17,000 36 \)612,000

Product B 9,000 26 234,000

\(846,000

Inventory, 12/31/18

Product A 13,000 40 \)520,000

Product B 10,000 32 320,000

$840,000

Instructions

(a) Prepare a schedule to compute the internal conversion price indexes for 2017 and 2018. Round indexes to two decimal places.

(b) Prepare a schedule to compute the inventory amounts at December 31, 2017 and 2018, using the dollar-value LIFO inventory method.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The price index for A and B

2017 120 104

2018 133 128

The ending inventory at dollar value LIFO for A and B is $409,172.4 and $257,000, respectively.

Step by step solution

01

Schedule of price index

Current cost of inventory

/

Base cost of inventory

=

Price Index

For Product A, Beg

$30

/

$30

=

1 or 100%

2017

$36

/

$30

=

1.2 or 120%

2018

$40

/

$30

=

1.33 or 133%

For Product B, Beg

$25

/

$25

=

1 or 100%

2017

$26

/

$25

=

1.04 or 104%

2018

$32

/

$25

=

1.28 or 128%

02

Ending inventory for the period at base year cost

ForProductA2017=EndingInventoryPriceIndex=612,0001·2=$510,000

ForProductA2018=EndingInventoryPriceIndex=$520,0001·33=$390,977

ForProductB2017=EndingInventoryPriceIndex=234,0001·04=$225,000

ForProductB2018=EndingInventoryPriceIndex=320,0001.28=$250,000

03

Inventory value at dollar value LIFO

For Product A

Ending inventory at base year prices

Layer at base year prices

X

Price index (percent)

=

Dollar value LIFO

2016

$300,000

$300,000

X

100

=

$300,000

2017

$510,000

$90,977

X

120

=

$109,172.4

2018

$390,977

Total

$409,172.4

For Product B

Ending inventory at base year prices

Layer at base year prices

X

Price index (percent)

=

Dollar value LIFO

2016

$225,000

$225,000

X

100

=

$225,000

2017

$225,000

0

X

104

=

0

2018

$250,000

$25,000

X

128

=

$32,000

Total

$257,000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Question:Where, if at all, should the following items be classified on a balance sheet?

(a) Goods out on approval to customers.

(b) Goods in transit that were recently purchased f.o.b. destination.

(c) Land held by a realty firm for sale.

(d) Raw materials.

(e) Goods received on consignment.

(f) Manufacturing supplies.

Question:Data for Amsterdam Company are presented in BE8-4. Compute the April 30 inventory and the April cost of goods sold using the LIFO method.

Arruza Co. is considering switching from the specific-goods LIFO approach to the dollar-value LIFO approach. Because the financial personnel at Arruza know very little about dollar-value LIFO, they ask youto answer the following questions.

(a) What is a LIFO pool?

(b) Is it possible to use a LIFO pool concept and not use dollar-value LIFO? Explain.

(c) What is a LIFO liquidation?

(d) How are price indexes used in the dollar-value LIFO method?

(e) What are the advantages of dollar-value LIFO over specific-goods LIFO?

Jane Yoakam, president of Estefan Co., recently read an article that claimed that at least 100 of the country’s largest 500 companies were either adopting or considering adopting the last-in, first-out (LIFO) method for valuing inventories. The article stated that the firms were switching to LIFO to

(1) neutralize the effect of inflation in their financial statements,

(2) eliminate inventory profits, and (3) reduce income taxes. Ms. Yoakam wonders if the switch would benefit her company.

Estefan currently uses the first-in, first-out (FIFO) method of inventory valuation in its periodic inventory system. The company has a high inventory turnover rate, and inventories represent a significant proportion of the assets.

Ms. Yoakam has been told that the LIFO system is more costly to operate and will provide little benefit to companies with high turnover. She intends to use the inventory method that is best for the company in the long run rather than selecting a method just because it is the current fad.

Instructions

(a) Explain to Ms. Yoakam what “inventory profits” are and how the LIFO method of inventory valuation could reduce them.

(b) Explain to Ms. Yoakam the conditions that must exist for Estefan Co. to receive tax benefits from a switch to the LIFO method.

The following is a record of Pervis Ellison Company’s transactions for Boston Teapots for the month of May 2017.

May 1 Balance 400 units @ \(20 May 10 Sale 300 units @ \)38

12 Purchase 600 units @ \(25 20 Sale 540 units @ \)38

28 Purchase 400 units @ $30

Instructions

(a) Assuming that perpetual inventories are not maintained and that a physical count at the end of the month shows 560units on hand, what is the cost of the ending inventory using (1) FIFO and (2) LIFO?

(b) Assuming that perpetual records are maintained and they tie into the general ledger, calculate the ending inventory using (1) FIFO and (2) LIFO.

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