ACCT 405 Chapter 4: Problems 1, 4, 8, 11, and 38a
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ACCT 405 Chapter 4: Problems 1, 4,
8, 11, and 38a
Chapter 4: Problems 1, 4, 8, 11, and
38a
- What is a basic premise of the acquisition method
regarding accounting for a noncontrolling interest?
- Consolidated financial statements should be primarily
for the benefit of the parent company’s stockholders.
- Consolidated financial statements should be produced
only if both the parent and the subsidiary are in the same basic industry.
- A subsidiary is an indivisible part of a business
combination and should be included in its entirety regardless of the
degree of ownership.
- Consolidated financial statements should not report a
noncontrolling interest balance because these outside owners do not hold
stock in the parent company.
- On January 1, 2012, Brendan, Inc., reports net assets
of $760,000 although equipment (with a four-year life) having a book value
of $440,000 is worth $500,000 and an unrecorded patent is valued at
$45,000. Hope Corporation pays $692,000 on that date for an 80 percent
ownership in Brendan. If the patent is to be written off over a 10-year
period, at what amount should it be reported on consolidated statements at
December 31, 2013?
- $28,800.
- $32,400.
- $36,000.
- $40,500.
- Assuming that Pride, in its internal records, accounts
for its investment in Star using the equity method, what is Pride’s share
of consolidated retained earnings at January 1, 2013?
- $250,000.
- $286,000.
- $315,000.
- $360,000.
- A parent buys 32 percent of a subsidiary in one year
and then buys an additional 40 percent in the next year. In a step
acquisition of this type, the original 32 percent acquisition should be
- Maintained at its initial value.
- Adjusted to its equity method balance at the date of
the second acquisition.
- Adjusted to fair value at the date of the second
acquisition with a resulting gain or loss recorded.
- Adjusted to fair value at the date of the second
acquisition with a resulting adjustment to additional paid-in capital.
- Adams Corporation acquired 90 percent of the
outstanding voting shares of Barstow, Inc., on December 31, 2011. Adams
paid a total of $603,000 in cash for these shares. The 10 percent
noncontrolling interest shares traded on a daily basis at fair value of
$67,000 both before and after Adams’s acquisition. On December 31, 2011,
Barstow had the following account balances:
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