subject
Business, 08.03.2021 06:10 payshencec21

The following transactions are from Ohlm Company. (Use 360 days a year.) Year 1 Dec. 16 Accepted a $10,800, 60-day, 8% note in granting Danny Todd a time extension on his past-due account receivable. 31 Made an adjusting entry to record the accrued interest on the Todd note. Year 2 Feb. 14 Received Todd’s payment of principal and interest on the note dated December 16. Mar. 2 Accepted a $6,100, 8%, 90-day note in granting a time extension on the past-due account receivable from Midnight Co. 17 Accepted a $2,400, 30-day, 7% note in granting Ava Privet a time extension on her past-due account receivable. Apr. 16 Privet dishonored her note. May 31 Midnight Co. dishonored its note. Aug. 7 Accepted a $7,440, 90-day, 10% note in granting a time extension on the past-due account receivable of Mulan Co. Sep. 3 Accepted a $2,100, 60-day, 10% note in granting Noah Carson a time extension on his past-due account receivable. Nov. 2 Received payment of principal plus interest from Carson for the September 3 note. Nov. 5 Received payment of principal plus interest from Mulan for the August 7 note. Dec. 1 Wrote off the Privet account against the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts. Required: 1-a. First, complete the table below to calculate the interest amount at December 31, Year 1. 1-b. Use the calculated value to prepare your journal entries for Year 1 transactions. 1-c. First, complete the table below to calculate the interest amounts. 1-d. Use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries for Year 2 transactions. 2. If Ohlm pledged its receivables as security for a loan from the bank, where on the financial statements does it disclose this pledge of receivables?

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 13:50
Selected t-account balances for bloomfield company are shown below as of january 31, which reflect its accounting adjustments. the firm uses a calendar-year accounting period, but prepares monthly accounting adjustments.suppliesjan. 31 bal. 1,800 1,800 jan. 31 bal.supplies expensejan. 31 bal. 1,920 1,148 jan. 31 bal.prepaid insurancejan. 31 bal. 1,148 1,148 jan. 31 bal.insurance expensejan. 31 bal. 164 164 jan. 31 bal.wages payablejan. 31 bal. 1,400 1,400 jan. 31 bal.wages expensejan. 31 bal. 6,400 6,400 jan. 31 bal.truckjan. 31 bal. 17,376 17,376 jan. 31 bal.accumulated depreciation -truckjan. 31 bal. 5,068 5,068 jan. 31 bal.a. if the amount in supplies expense represents the january 31 adjustment for the supplies used in january, and $1,240 worth of supplies were purchased during january, what was the january 1 beginning balance of supplies? $answerb. the amount in the insurance expense account represents the adjustment made at january 31 for january insurance expense. if the original insurance premium was for one year, what was the amount of the premium, and on what date did the insurance policy start? amount of the premium $answerthe policy began on answerjune 1july 1august 1september 1october 1november 1 of the previous year.c. if we assume that no beginning balance existed in either in either wage payable or wage expense on january 1, how much cash was paid as wages during january? $answerd. if the truck has a useful life of four years (or 48 months), what is the monthly amount of depreciation expense, and how many months has bloomfield owned the truck? answermonths
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 17:00
Cadbury has a chocolate factory in dunedin, new zealand. for easter, it makes two kinds of “easter eggs”: milk chocolate and dark chocolate. it cycles between producing milk and dark chocolate eggs. the table below provides data on these two products. demand (lbs per hour) milk: 500 dark: 200 switchover time (minutes) milk: 60 dark: 30 production rate per hour milk: 800 dark: 800 for example, it takes 30 minutes to switch production from milk to dark chocolate. demand for milk chocolate is higher (500lbs per hour versus 200 lbs per hour), but the line produces them at the same rate (when operating): 800 lbs per hour. a : suppose cadbury produces 2,334lbs milk chocolate and 1,652 lbs of dark chocolate in each cycle. what would be the maximum inventory (lbs) of milk chocolate? b : how many lbs of milk and dark chocolate should be produced with each cycle so as to satisfy demand while minimizing inventory?
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 21:00
Suppose either computers or televisions can be assembled with the following labor inputs: units produced 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 total labor used 3 7 12 18 25 33 42 54 70 90 (a) draw the production possibilities curve for an economy with 54 units of labor. label it p54. (b) what is the opportunity cost of the eighth computer? (c) suppose immigration brings in 36 more workers. redraw the production possibilities curve to reflect this added labor. label the new curve p90.
Answers: 2
question
Business, 23.06.2019 00:30
Activity-based costing (abc) is not truly a cost collection mechanism as much as it is an inventory valuation method. the main purpose for implementing an activity-based cost system is to try to overcome some of the cost distortions that occur in traditional costing from product differences when there are variations in size and complexity. however, one of the disadvantages of utilizing abc is that the additional information gathering necessary to implement costing with that level of detail might be beyond the reach of some companies with resource or financial constraints. with this in mind, what kinds of industries or companies do you think would benefit most from using activity-based costing and why? in designing or modifying an accounting system to capture appropriate costs for abc, what considerations do you think would need to be made?
Answers: 3
You know the right answer?
The following transactions are from Ohlm Company. (Use 360 days a year.) Year 1 Dec. 16 Accepted a $...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 15.12.2020 23:20
question
History, 15.12.2020 23:20
Questions on the website: 13722363