[go: up one dir, main page]

Academia.eduAcademia.edu
SOLUTIONS MANUAL Frank Wood’s Business Accounting 1&2 ELEVENTH EDITION Frank Wood BSc(Econ), FCA and Alan Sangster BA, MSc, CertTESOL, CA ISBN 978-0-273-71824-6 © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Lecturers adopting the main text are permitted to download and photocopy this manual as required. Pearson Education Limited Edinburgh Gate Harlow Essex CM20 2JE England and Associated Companies around the world Visit us on the World Wide Web at www.pearsoned.co.uk Eleventh edition published in 2008 © Pearson Education Limited 2008 The rights of Frank Wood and Alan Sangster to be identified as authors of this Work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby given for the material in this publication to be reproduced for OHP transparencies and student handouts, without express permission of the Publishers, for educational purposes only. In all other cases, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the Publishers or a licence permitting restricted copying in the United Kingdom issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, Saffron House, 6–10 Kirby Street, London ECIN 8TS. ISBN 978-0-273-71824-6 10 11 9 8 7 6 5 10 09 08 Printed in Great Britain 4 3 2 1 Contents Preface iv Part 1 Business Accounting 1 Students and examination success Answers 1 3 6 Part 2 Business Accounting 2 Answers 93 95 Preface This solutions manual contains answers to all the questions not already answered in Business Accounting 1 and Business Accounting 2. It can be seen that there are a considerable number of questions in both textbooks. About one-half of these have the answers at the back of the relevant textbook, while the remainder of the answers are contained in this manual. The result of this is to give a high degree of flexibility in the use of the textbooks. To illustrate the contents of each chapter, the questions can be used which have answers in the textbook. Any students who are absent can be told what they have missed and can look up the answers themselves. Students who arrive late on the course can also be told what work to do and they can check their own progress against the answers as given. However, quite obviously work must be set, either in class or for homework, for which answers are not available to students. This manual can therefore be used to check such work. Whilst every endeavour has been made to show workings quite fully, it must be appreciated that there are often different ways of getting to the same answer. This manual would be unduly lengthy and complicated if every version of arriving at the answer were to be shown. The methods chosen are therefore those judged to be the best from a teaching point of view. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster By writing on letterheaded paper of the institution where you teach, giving details of the course for which you use Business Accounting 1 or Business Accounting 2 with your classes, you can obtain complimentary copies of this manual. This manual is not available for students, nor is it in any way available for sale to the general public. It is also available on the lecturer’s password-protected section of the Frank Wood website at www.pearsoned.co.uk/wood PART 1 BUSINESS ACCOUNTING 1 Students and examination success Experienced teachers and lecturers know just as much as we do about this topic. There will, however, be quite a lot of people reading this who are new to teaching, and who have little experience in understanding how the examiner views things. If we have anything to offer, it is simply that we have, between us, been concerned with accounting education for many years and have been examiners for several external examining bodies. The Notes for Students at the start of both Business Accounting 1 and Business Accounting 2 deal with examination techniques. Make certain the students read these. Go through these with them. If we all tell students that what these say is true, then they are more likely to believe us. How students lose marks 1 Lack of knowledge (obviously) but they throw away marks unnecessarily for all of the following reasons: (a) (b) (c) (d) Untidy work, including columns of figures not lined up. Bad handwriting. Do not make it difficult for the examiner to read and mark. Lack of headings, dates, sub-totals, etc. in accounting statements. Not submitting proper workings. You can only get them to rectify everything under this heading by insisting on them correcting (a), (b), (c) and (d) from early on in the course. Do not wait until a few weeks before the examination to insist upon properly laid out and neatly constructed work. 2 Students very often do not follow the rubric on the examination paper. If it asks for two questions only from Section A, then it means just that. A remarkably high percentage do not follow the instructions per the rubric. 3 Students fail to answer the questions as set. If, for example, an examiner wants a list, students will lose marks by giving explanations instead. Students must tackle the question in the prescribed way and not do it differently. The percentage of students passing examinations would rise dramatically if only we could correct this failing. A good plan is to get them to highlight the instruction that shows how the examiner wants the question to be answered, e.g. List the ways by which . . . Describe the ways by which . . . Write a report to the managing director about the ways by which . . . Discuss how the ways by which . . . Explain how the ways by which . . . Then, get them to underline the key words in the rest of the question. They need as much practice as possible in doing this, especially for essay-type questions. Practice is even more essential for students for whom English is not their first language. At the end of this section are 20 essay questions in which we have already highlighted the instruction and underlined the key words. See if your students can do the same. 4 Poor technique with essay questions. Business Accounting 2, Notes for students, the section headed ‘Answering essay questions’ covers this point. Discuss this with your students who have to tackle essay questions. 5 Not tackling the required number of questions. I have always found it very difficult to convince students to get hold of the idea that they will get more marks for five uncompleted questions than they will for four completed questions, when the examiner has asked for five to be attempted. Time planning is essential. 6 By not tackling the easiest questions first. Years ago, we did quite a lot of research into the results of students who had followed this advice, compared with those who ignored it. Following the advice produced better results. 7 By simply regurgitating the contents of a textbook in essay answers. For instance, when an examiner set a question on, say, materiality. Most of the answers simply gave exactly the same examples, word for word sometimes, that we have given in Business Accounting 1. Examiners are looking for originality and imagination. Students will get excellent marks if they give their own examples. A good idea is that, for each of the concepts and conventions, they think up their own examples before the examination. There are going to be more and more questions on these things in the years ahead. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 3 8 Examiners like to see answers where students realise that all accounting is not found in textbooks, but exists for the use of businesses. Get them to use examples in essay questions based on what they have observed in the businesses around them. For example, a question on ratios and interpretation will often be answered by students just using figures. They should also say why the figures have changed; what possible causes there might have been. In their life outside their studies, they should observe how accounting is carried out. They all go at one time or another to refectories, restaurants, shops, department stores, clothes shops, travel on buses and trains, etc. They should observe how the money is calculated and collected, what sort of bills or tickets are given out, how fraud or errors could occur, and so on. They can give this flavour of the real world in their answers. Believe us, they will get better marks. Essay questions – how not to misunderstand them 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 List the various pieces of information which should be shown on a sales invoice. Describe what is meant by an imprest system. Accounting based on historical costs can be misleading. Discuss. The bookkeeper has said that if an error does not affect trial balance agreement then it cannot affect anything else very much. You are to write a report to the managing director stating whether or not you agree with the bookkeeper. Give five examples of different compensating errors and explain why they cancel each other out. Explain the differences between the straight line and reducing balance methods of depreciation. Briefly describe the benefits to be gained from maintaining control accounts. List six instances of errors which could cause the trial balance totals to disagree. Name three methods of inventory valuation, and briefly describe any one of them. ‘Without the use of accounting ratios, much of the accounting work already performed would be wasted.’ Discuss the amount of truth in this statement. How can retail stores use accounting ratios to help them to plan future inventory levels? Assess the benefits of double entry as compared with single entry methods of bookkeeping. Define depreciation and describe how the annual charge is worked out using the straight line method. For a firm buying goods on credit, how can it calculate the figure of purchases even though a Purchases Journal has not been kept? List the differences between the income and expenditure account of a club and the income statement of a trading concern. ‘It is unsatisfactory for the treasurer of a club to prepare and present to the members only the receipts and payments account as a summary of the records of the club’s activities for the year.’ Why is this true? What is the better thing to do? You are to give your advice to the managing director of a company on the best manner of constructing departmental income statements. How do the financial statements of a partnership vary from those of a sole trader, and why? Consider the view that if profit was not calculated at all until the business was closed down, then such a calculation would be a simple and straightforward affair. You are to write a letter to a friend explaining in simple terms why profit does not necessarily mean that you have cash in the bank. Practice on past full examination papers If students have not tackled past papers, under as near examination conditions as possible, they will often get quite a shock when they first sit an accounting examination. This very often is due to two main reasons: (a) There is such a lot to do in such a short time. (b) Even though there is so much to do, in professional examinations in particular, many of the questions are quite difficult with some complicated calculations or adjustments. If students can attempt, say, at least two such papers and then have their attempts marked and criticised, they will normally learn a lot from the experience. Examination questions and marking schemes We had originally intended to put here some typical examination questions and their marking schemes. However, after some considerable thought, we decided against doing so. There is no one precise mode of marking and any suggestions that we might make could perhaps create more arguments and consequent misunderstandings. 4 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 In front of a group of people, it would be possible to do this, as we could deal with all the comments from the group and arrive at a consensus of opinion. However, the books sell world-wide and practices can vary. It can, however, be said that: (a) By and large, marking is ‘positive’, i.e. marks are awarded for what a student gets right, rather than being deducted for what a student gets wrong. (b) However, marks are deducted for untidy work, lack of headings, dates, sub-totals, etc. (c) An incorrect part of an answer, with no workings attached to it, will get nil marks. (d) Extra, unnecessary answers, resulting from students failing to follow the rubric, will not be marked. (e) Not following the examiner’s instructions will lose marks. For example, marks will be lost if, when asked for a ‘report’, a student gives a ‘list’; or if asked to ‘discuss’, a student gives only one side of the argument; or if asked to ‘define’, a student gives an ‘explanation’. Some examiners will award zero marks, even though the answers given by the student show good knowledge of the topic. Others (including ourselves) would be kinder than that. (f ) An error which repeats itself through an answer should lose only one set of marks. For instance, an error in the trading account will also affect balances in the profit and loss account, appropriation account and balance sheet. In cases of this type, only one set of marks should be lost. (g) Guessing by students is not normally penalised. The one exception that may arise concerns multiple choice questions where wrong answers may be penalised as an incentive to prevent students guessing. In this case, the examining body would make this information known well in advance of the examination date. (h) The easiest marks to get, especially in an essay question, are the first few marks. (i) Good handwriting and well displayed answers will often (although theoretically they should not) get higher marks than they deserve. This is simply because examiners are human beings with human failings, and work that can be easily marked makes them feel generous. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 5 Answers Answer to Question 1.2A (a) 38,100 (e) 26,000 (b) 51,600 (f ) 159,000 BA 1 (c) 7,600 Answer to Question 1.4A Liabilities: Assets: (d) 104,100 BA 1 Accounts payable for inventory Owing to bank Loan from D Jones Motor vehicles Premises Inventory Accounts receivable Cash in hand Machinery Answer to Question 1.6A BA 1 Wrong: Accounts payable, Capital, Machinery, Motor vehicles. Answer to Question 1.8A BA 1 Fixtures 1,200 + Van 6,000 + Inventory 2,800 + Bank 200 + Cash 175 = Total Assets 10,375. Loan 2,500 + Accounts payable 1,600 + Capital (difference) 6,275. Answer to Question 1.10A BA 1 M Kelly Balance Sheet as at 30 June 2006 Non-current assets Equipment Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash at bank Less Current liabilities Accounts payable 3,400 3,600 4,500 2,800 10,900 4,100 Capital 6 6,800 10,200 10,200 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 1.12A Assets (a) +Van (b) −Cash (c) +Inventory −Bank (d) +Cash (e) +Inventory −Accounts receivable (f ) +Inventory (g) −Cash (h) −Bank BA 1 Liabilities +Accounts payable −Loan from P Smith Capital +Capital +Accounts payable −Accounts payable Answer to Question 1.14A −Capital BA 1 J Hill Balance Sheet as at 7 December 2009 Non-current assets Equipment Car 6,310 7,300 13,610 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash 8,480 3,320 9,510 485 21,795 35,405 Current liabilities Accounts payable 1,760 33,645 Capital 33,645 Answer to Question 2.2A Debited (a) Lorry (c) Loan from P Logan (e) Office machinery (g) Bank (i) Cash BA 1 Credited Cash Cash Ultra Ltd J Cross Loan from L Lowe Debited (b) T Lake (d) Cash (f ) Cash (h) Bank (j) D Lord Credited Bank Lorry A Hill Capital Cash To save time and space, the months are omitted in the Ledger accounts which follow. The day of the month is shown in brackets. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 7 Answer to Question 2.5A (1) Capital (25) Cash (5) Old Ltd (15) Cash (30) Bank Bank 16,000 (2) 400 (12) (19) (30) BA 1 Van 6,400 Cash 180 Carton Cars 7,100 Office fixtures 480 Office Fixtures 900 120 480 (12) Bank (21) Loan: Berry Cash 180 (15) Office fixtures 120 500 (25) Bank 400 Vans (2) Bank 6,400 (8) Carton Cars 7,100 Old Ltd (5) Office fixtures 900 Capital (1) Bank 16,000 (19) Bank Carton Cars 7,100 (8) Van Loan from Berry (21) Cash Answer to Question 2.6A 500 BA 1 Bank (1) Capital 9,000 (8) Cash (2) Loan Blane 2,000 (15) Loan Blane (17) Clearcount (15) Bank (24) Cash 7,100 Loan: B Blane 500 (2) Bank 250 200 500 420 (1) Capital (8) Bank Cash 750 (3) Computer 200 (24) Loan Blane (3) Cash Computer 600 600 250 2,000 (17) Bank Clearcount Ltd 420 (5) Display eqt 420 Display Equipment (5) Clearcount 420 Capital (1) Cash (1) Bank Answer to Question 3.2A (a) (c) (e) (g) (i) 8 Debited Purchases L Jones Ltd Van Bank B Henry 750 9,000 (31) F Jones F Jones (31) Printer Printer 200 BA 1 Credited T Morgan Machinery D Davies Ltd D Picton Bank (b) (d) (f ) (h) (j) Debited Returns in Purchases I Prince Purchases J Mullings Credited J Thomas Cash Returns out Bank Sales Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 200 Answer to Question 3.4A BA 1 Cash 7,400 (2) Bank 54 (7) Purchases (1) Capital (19) Sales 7,000 362 Bank 7,000 (5) Van 4,920 (29) J Watson 368 1,500 (31) Firelighters Ltd820 (2) Cash (24) F Holmes (Loan) Purchases 410 362 (4) J Watson (7) Cash Returns Outwards (12) J Watson (12) Returns (29) Bank J Watson 42 (4) Purchases 368 (10) Sales L Less 218 Sales (10) L Less (19) Cash 42 Fixtures 410 (22) Firelighters Ltd (5) Bank 820 Van 4,920 F Holmes (Loan) (24) Bank (31) Bank Firelighters Ltd 820 (22) Fixtures Capital (1) Cash Answer to Question 3.6A (1) Capital (18) Cash Cash 210 (18) Bank 305 B Hind (6) Returns Out 82 (2) Purchases (29) Bank 1,373 620 1,373 820 7,400 (10) Sales P Syme 483 (23) Returns In 160 (22) Sales H Buchan 394 (25) Returns In 18 A Cobb (31) Machinery 419 18,000 Purchases 1,455 472 370 Sales (5) (10) (12) (22) 1,455 472 370 Capital (1) Bank (2) B Hind (3) G Smart (8) G Smart 250 G Smart 47 (3) Purchases (8) Purchases (28) Returns Out 1,500 BA 1 Bank 18,000 (21) Printer 250 (29) B Hind (5) Sales (12) Sales 218 54 (23) P Syme (25) H Buchan Cash P Syme Cash H Buchan 210 483 305 394 Returns Inwards 160 18 Returns Outwards (6) B Hind (28) G Smart (31) A Cobb Machinery 419 (21) Bank Printer 620 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 82 47 9 Answer to Question 4.3A July 1 Bank Cash Capital 2 Stationery Bank 3 Purchases T Smart 4 Cash Sales 5 Insurance Cash 7 Computer J Hott 8 Expenses Bank 10 C Biggins Sales 11 T Smart Returns Out 14 Wages Cash 17 Rent Bank 20 Bank C Biggins 21 J Hott Bank 23 Stationery News Ltd 25 F Tank Sales 31 News Ltd Bank 10 BA 1 Dr 5,000 1,000 Cr 6,000 75 75 2,100 2,100 340 340 290 290 700 700 32 32 630 630 55 55 210 210 225 225 400 400 700 700 125 125 645 645 125 125 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 4.4A Bank (1) Capital 11,000 (5) (24) K Fletcher 250 (16) (28) Business rates 45 (19) (28) (28) (28) (1) Capital Cash 1,600 (3) (4) (7) (11) (18) (21) (23) BA 1 Stationery 62 Business rates 970 Rent 75 J Biggs 830 D Martin 415 B Black 6,100 Purchases Rent Wages Rent Insurance Motor exps Wages Capital (1) Bank (1) Cash (4) Cash (11) Cash (19) Bank Rent 75 75 75 (7) Cash (23) Cash Wages 160 170 (5) Bank (16) Bank (2) (2) (2) (3) Sales (6) (6) (6) (15) (15) (15) 370 75 160 75 280 24 170 11,000 1,600 D Twigg B Hogan K Fletcher T Lee F Sharp G Rae Returns Outwards (10) D Martin (13) B Hogan B Black 6,100 (20) Van (28) Bank J Biggs 830 (2) Purchases (10) Returns Out (28) Bank D Martin 195 (2) Purchases 415 P Lot (2) Purchases 45 (6) Sales D Twigg 370 (18) Cash Insurance 280 (6) Sales B Hogan 290 (13) Returns In (21) Cash Motor Expenses 24 (6) Sales K Fletcher 410 (24) Bank (20) B Black Van 6,100 370 290 410 205 280 426 195 Returns Inwards 35 (28) Bank Stationery 62 Business rates 970 (28) Bank Purchases 830 610 590 370 J Biggs D Martin P Lot Cash (15) Sales T Lee 205 (15) Sales F Sharp 280 (15) Sales G Rae 426 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 6,100 830 610 590 35 250 11 Answer to Question 4.6A (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) BA 1 Goods bought on credit £27,000. Borrowed £35,000 and immediately spent it on land and buildings £35,000. Sold goods costing £20,000 for £30,000 on credit. Debtors paid £13,000. Debtors paid £2,000: this amount taken by proprietors. Took £5,000 drawings by cheque and paid off £3,000 accrued expenses by cheque. Equipment costing £30,000 sold for £21,000; paid by cheque. Goods taken for own use £1,000. Took £6,000 cash as drawings. Could have been £6,000 cash stolen – thus reducing cash and causing a loss. Answer to Question 5.6A (1) Sales (21) Sales (1) Balance b/d (1) Sales (8) Sales (21) Sales (1) Balance b/d (1) Sales (8) Sales (1) Balance b/d (1) Sales BA 1 G Wood 310 (19) Bank 90 (31) Balance c/d 400 310 90 400 (15) Returns (28) Bank 90 K Hughes 42 (31) Balance c/d 161 430 633 (31) Balance c/d 633 F Dunn 1,100 (10) Returns 31 224 (19) Bank 750 (31) Balance c/d 543 1,324 1,324 543 M Lyons 309 (10) Returns (12) Cash 309 82 227 309 190 J Leech 278 (2) Purchases (9) Purchases 278 63 215 278 (1) Balance b/d 633 633 T Sim 15 (2) Purchases 175 190 (28) Bank (31) Balance c/d P Tidy 180 (2) Purchases 30 210 (31) Balance b/d (15) (28) (31) (31) Returns Bank Returns Balance c/d F Rock 21 (2) Purchases 100 (9) Purchases 18 215 354 (1) Balance b/d Wood, Hughes and Dunn are debtors. Leech, Tidy and Rock are creditors. 12 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 190 278 210 210 30 190 164 354 215 Answer to Question 5.7A G Wood Dr 310 2008 May 1 Sales May 19 Bank May 21 Sales 310 K Hughes Dr 42 161 430 Sales Sales Returns Bank 2008 May 1 Sales May 10 Returns May 12 Bank 2008 May 2 Purchases May 15 Returns May 28 Bank 2008 May 2 May 9 F Dunn Dr 1,100 224 M Lyons Dr 309 Cr Balance 1,100 Dr 1,324 Dr 1,293 Dr 543 Dr Cr P Tidy Dr Balance 190 Cr 175 Cr 0 Cr 63 215 Balance 63 Cr 278 Cr Cr 210 Balance 210 Cr 30 Cr Cr 190 164 Balance 190 Cr 354 Cr 333 Cr 233 Cr 215 Cr 180 F Rock Dr Balance 309 Dr 227 Dr 0 Cr 190 15 175 Purchases Purchases Purchases Purchases Returns Bank Returns Balance 42 Dr 203 Dr 633 Dr 82 227 T Sim Dr Balance 310 Dr 0 90 Dr Cr 31 750 J Leech Dr 2008 May 2 Purchases May 28 Bank 2008 May 2 May 9 May 15 May 28 May 31 Cr 90 2008 May 1 Sales May 8 Sales May 21 Sales 2008 May 1 May 8 May 10 May 19 BA 1 21 100 18 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 13 Answer to Question 6.3A (1) (28) (28) (30) Capital T Potts J Field Capital (1) Balance b/d (5) Sales (26) Loan from B Bennet (1) Balance b/d (3) (3) (3) (3) (19) (19) (19) J Small F Brown R Charles T Rae R Charles T Rae F Jack (1) Balance b/d (30) Balance c/d Bank 15,000 (6) 71 (7) 42 (23) 900 (23) (23) (25) (30) 16,013 BA 1 Rent 175 Business rates 130 J Small 272 F Brown 1,200 T Rae 500 Van 6,200 Balance c/d 7,536 16,013 7,536 Cash 610 (17) Wages (30) Balance c/d 750 1,360 Sales 2,383 (5) (11) (11) (11) 2,383 Cash T Potts J Field T Gray Returns Outwards 45 (18) J Small (18) R Charles 45 (1) Balance b/d (20) J Field (20) T Potts (1) Balance b/d (30) Balance c/d 1,360 Returns Inwards 6 (30) Balance c/d 14 20 3,225 610 85 48 1,640 2,383 18 27 45 45 20 20 15,000 900 15,900 Van (21) Turnkey Motors 4,950 (30) Balance c/d 11,150 (25) Bank 6,200 11,150 11,150 (6) Bank (1) Balance b/d 14 11,150 Rent 175 (30) Balance c/d 175 (18) (23) (23) Bank (18) Returns Out (30) Balance c/d (30) Balance c/d (11) Sales (11) Sales 2,383 (1) Balance b/d 15,900 (1) Balance b/d (30) (23) Bank (30) Balance c/d 20 Capital 15,900 (1) Bank (30) Bank 15,900 (17) (1) 3,225 3,225 (1) Balance b/d (30) Balance c/d 290 1,070 1,070 Purchases 290 (30) Balance c/d 1,200 530 610 110 320 165 3,225 Business rates 130 (30) Balance c/d 130 Wages Cash 290 (30) Balance c/d Balance b/d 290 Loan from B Bennet Balance c/d 750 (26) Cash (1) Balance b/d J Small Returns Out 18 (3) Purchases Bank 272 290 (7) Bank (1) Balance b/d 175 F Brown 1,200 (3) Purchases R Charles 27 (3) 613 (19) 640 (1) T Rae 500 (3) 430 (19) 930 (1) F Jack 165 (19) (1) T Potts 85 (20) (28) 85 Purchases Purchases Balance b/d Purchases Purchases 130 290 750 750 290 290 1,200 530 110 640 613 Balance b/d 610 320 930 430 Purchases Balance b/d 165 165 Returns In Bank 14 71 85 J Field 48 (20) Returns In (28) Bank 48 6 42 48 T Gray 1,640 (30) Balance c/d 1,640 1,640 Turnkey Motors (30) Balance c/d 4,950 (21) Van 4,950 (1) Balance b/d 4,950 Trial Balance as at 30 November 2007 Bank 7,536 Cash 1,070 Purchases 3,225 Sales 2,383 Returns Outwards 45 Returns Inwards 20 Capital 15,900 Van 11,150 Rent 175 Business rates 130 Wages 290 Loan from B Bennet 750 R Charles 613 T Rae 430 F Jack 165 T Gray 1,640 Turnkey Motors 4,950 25,236 25,236 (11) Sales (1) Balance b/d Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 6.4A Cash Capitals 10,500 (2) Sales 145 (3) Loan: B Barclay 500 (11) A Tom 614 (30) 11,759 (1) Balance b/d 1,419 (1) (21) (30) (30) Bank Cash 9,000 (8) Loan: B Barclay2,000 (15) R Pleat 158 (26) L Fish 370 (26) (30) 11,528 (1) Balance b/d 3,790 (2) (16) (29) (29) (3) (4) (4) (4) (4) Cash T Dry F Hood M Smith G Low (1) Balance b/d (30) Balance c/d (30) Balance c/d (18) R Tong (18) M Singh (1) Balance b/d BA 1 Bank Purchases Salaries Balance c/d Rent Van F Hood M Smith Balance c/d Purchases 550 (30) Balance c/d 800 930 160 510 2,950 2,950 Sales 1,783 (6) (6) (6) (6) (21) (24) (24) (24) 1,783 (1) R Tong L Fish M Singh A Tom Cash L Fish A Tom R Pleat 9,000 550 790 1,419 11,759 220 6,500 900 118 3,790 11,528 2,950 Balance b/d Returns Outwards 72 (14) F Hood (14) M Smith 72 (1) Balance b/d 30 42 72 72 790 (10) Chiefs Ltd (1) Balance b/d Fixtures 610 (30) Balance c/d 610 610 (15) Bank (1) Balance b/d Van 6,500 (30) Balance c/d 6,500 6,500 Loan from B Barclay 2,500 (16) Bank (30) Cash 2,500 (1) Balance b/d 2,000 500 2,500 2,500 (30) Balance c/d Chiefs Ltd 610 (10) Fixtures (1) Balance b/d 610 610 (6) Sales (24) Sales L Fish 240 (29) Bank 130 370 (30) Balance c/d (6) Sales (1) Balance b/d (6) Sales (24) Sales (24) Sales (6) Sales (14) Returns Out (26) Bank (30) Balance c/d T Dry 800 (4) Purchases (1) Balance b/d 800 800 (14) Returns Out (26) Bank M Smith 42 (4) Purchases 118 160 160 G Low 510 (4) Purchases (1) Balance b/d 510 510 Buttons Ltd 89 (5) Stationery (1) Balance b/d 89 89 (5) Buttons Ltd (1) Balance b/d Salaries 790 (30) Balance c/d 790 25 10,500 10,500 Stationery 89 (30) Balance c/d 89 (11) Cash (1) Balance b/d (1) Balance b/d (30) Balance b/d (30) Balance c/d 220 25 Capital 10,500 (1) Cash (1) Balance b/d (30) Balance c/d Rent 220 (30) Balance c/d 220 2,950 170 240 326 204 145 130 410 158 1,783 1,783 Returns Inwards 5 (30) Balance c/d 20 25 25 (8) Bank (1) Balance b/d 160 89 M Singh 326 (18) Returns In (30) Balance c/d 326 306 370 370 20 306 326 A Tom 204 (30) Cash 410 614 614 R Pleat 158 (29) Bank 158 R Tong 170 (18) Returns In (30) Balance c/d 170 170 F Hood 30 (4) Purchases 900 930 Trial Balance as at 31 January 2008 Cash 1,419 Bank 3,790 Purchases 2,950 Sales Returns Outwards Returns Inwards 25 Capital Stationery 89 Rent 220 Salaries 790 Fixtures 610 Van 6,500 Loan from B Barclay Chiefs Ltd M Singh 306 R Tong 165 T Dry G Low Buttons Ltd 16,864 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 614 5 165 170 930 930 1,783 72 10,500 2,500 610 800 510 89 16,864 15 Answer to Question 7.3A BA 1 B Morse Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2008 Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Purchases Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Salaries Business rates Motor expenses General expenses Insurance Net profit 235,812 121,040 14,486 39,560 2,400 910 305 1,240 Answer to Question 7.4A 106,554 129,258 44,415 84,843 BA 1 G Graham Income Statement for the year ending 30 June 2008 Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Purchases Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Salaries and wages Equipment rental Insurance Lighting and heating Motor expenses Sundry expenses Net profit Answer to Question 8.3A 382,420 245,950 29,304 48,580 940 1,804 1,990 2,350 624 216,646 165,774 56,288 109,486 BA 1 B Morse Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2008 Non-current assets Premises Car 53,000 4,300 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash 14,486 21,080 2,715 325 38,606 95,906 Total assets Less Current liabilities Accounts payable Capital Balance at 1.1.2008 Add Net profit Less Drawings 16 57,300 11,200 84,706 23,263 84,843 108,106 23,400 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 84,706 Answer to Question 8.4A BA 1 G Graham Balance Sheet as at 30 June 2008 Non-current assets Shop Fixtures Lorry 174,000 4,600 19,400 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 29,304 44,516 11,346 198,000 85,166 283,166 Current liabilities Accounts payable 23,408 259,758 Capital Balance at 1.7.2007 Add Net profit 194,272 109,486 303,758 44,000 Less Drawings Answer to Question 8.6A 259,758 BA 1 = 18,000 + 4,800 + 24,000 + 760 + 15,600 − 8,000 − 6,000 = 49,160 Capital at 31 December 2009 = 16,200 + 5,800 + 28,000 + 240 + 4,600 + 16,000 − 11,000 − 2,000 = 57,840 Increase in capital = 8,680 Add Drawings (200 × 52) 10,400 19,080 Less Capital introduced 4,000 Net profit 15,080 Capital at 1 January 2009 A Trader Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2009 Non-current assets Fixtures Motor vehicle 16,200 16,000 32,200 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash 28,000 5,800 4,600 240 Current liabilities: Accounts payable 11,000 Non-current liabilities: Loan 2,000 Capital account Balance at 1 January 2009 Add Capital introduced Net profit Less Drawings Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 38,640 70,840 13,000 57,840 49,160 4,000 15,080 68,240 10,400 57,840 17 Answer to Question 9.2A BA 1 P Frank Trading Account part of the Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2008 Sales 469,320 Less Returns in 16,220 Less Cost of goods sold: Purchases 394,170 Less Returns out 19,480 374,690 Carriage inwards 2,490 377,180 Less Closing inventory 52,400 Gross profit Answer to Question 9.5A 453,100 324,780 128,320 BA 1 T Owen Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2009 Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Returns out Carriage inwards 276,400 52,800 141,300 2,408 Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Wages and salaries Carriage outwards Business rates Communication expenses Commissions paid Insurance Sundry expenses Net profit 138,892 1,350 193,042 58,440 63,400 5,840 3,800 714 1,930 1,830 208 134,602 141,798 77,722 64,076 Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2009 Non-current assets Buildings Fixtures 125,000 1,106 126,106 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash 58,440 45,900 31,420 276 Current liabilities Accounts payable Capital Balance at 1.4.2008 Add Net profit Less Drawings 136,036 262,142 24,870 237,272 210,516 64,076 274,592 37,320 237,272 18 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 9.6A BA 1 F Brown Income Statement for the year ending 30 September 2008 Sales Less Returns in Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Returns out Carriage inwards 391,400 2,110 389,290 72,410 254,810 1,240 Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Wages and salaries Carriage out Motor expenses Rent and rates Telephone charges Insurance Office expenses Sundry expenses 253,570 760 326,740 89,404 39,600 2,850 1,490 8,200 680 745 392 216 237,336 151,954 54,173 97,781 Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2008 Non-current assets Van Office equipment 5,650 7,470 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash 89,404 38,100 4,420 112 Current liabilities Accounts payable 132,036 145,156 26,300 118,856 Capital Balance as at 1.10.2007 Add Net profit 49,675 97,781 147,456 28,600 Less Drawings Answer to Question 9.8A 13,120 118,856 BA 1 Capital July 1 Balance b/d 9,700 Balance b/d Purchases 500 3,900 4,400 1,400 Inventory July 1 Balance b/d 5,000 OK Ltd July July 31 Bank Balance c/d 3,000 1,400 4,400 July 1 Aug 1 Balance b/d Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 19 AB Ltd July 1 Balance b/d Sales Aug 1 Balance b/d 300 600 900 600 July Bank July 31 Balance c/d 300 600 900 Equipment July 1 Aug 1 Balance b/d Balance b/d 3,700 3,700 July 31 Balance c/d 3,700 Bank July 1 Balance b/d Sales AB Ltd Aug 1 Balance b/d 1,200 3,200 300 4,700 1,200 July OK Ltd General expenses July 31 Balance c/d 3,000 500 1,200 4,700 July 3,200 600 3,800 3,800 Sales July 31 Balance c/d 3,800 Bank AB Ltd 3,800 Aug 1 Balance b/d Purchases July Aug 1 OK Ltd Balance b/d 3,900 3,900 July 31 Balance c/d 3,900 Balance c/d 500 General Expenses July Aug 1 Bank Balance b/d 500 500 July 31 Ms Porter Trial Balance as at 31 July Dr 3,700 5,000 1,200 500 3,900 600 Equipment Inventory Bank General expenses Purchases AB Ltd OK Ltd Sales Capital 14,900 Cr 1,400 3,800 9,700 14,900 Ms Porter Income Statement for July Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Purchases Less Closing inventory 3,800 5,000 3,900 8,900 6,200 Gross profit Less General expenses Net profit 20 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 2,700 1,100 500 600 Balance Sheet as at 31 July Non-current assets Equipment 3,700 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 6,200 600 1,200 8,000 11,700 1,400 10,300 9,700 600 10,300 Current liability: Accounts payable Capital Add Net profit Answer to Question 13.2A (1) (2) (3) (4) (9) (11) (13) (16) (20) BA 1 Cash Book Bank 4,240 (3) (5) 200 (6) 194 (7) 115 (11) (12) (14) (28) 174 (30) (30) 4,923 Cash 295 310 Balances b/d Sales Cash F Bell Business rates Bank Sales J Bull (Loan) K Brown 150 430 1,500 2,685 Answer to Question 13.4A Disct (1) (2) (2) (2) (2) (3) (8) (10) (12) (29) (30) (30) Balances b/d S Braga L Pine G Hodd M Rae Sales Bank Sales B Age A Line Sales Balance c/d (30) Total for month Bank 310 94 150 400 81 35 1,970 2,685 320 3,968 4,923 BA 1 Cash 420 41 16 22 52 400 1,260 4 980 135 Cash 200 80 Bank Postage Office equipment L Root Cash Wages Motor expenses General expenses Insurance Balances c/d 3,060 Cash Book Bank 4,940 (5) 779 (6) 304 (6) 418 (6) 988 (8) 740 (14) (16) (16) 276 (20) 324 (24) (30) 12,623 (30) 21,392 Disct Rent M Peters G Graham F Bell Cash Wages R Todd F Dury Fixtures Lorry Stationery Balance c/d Cash 340 9 24 10 Bank 351 936 390 400 540 15 12 70 295 400 4,320 14,300 56 2,124 3,060 21,392 Discounts Allowed 135 Discounts Received (30) Total for month Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 70 21 Answer to Question 13.6A BA 1 Cash Book Disct Balance b/d AB CD EF Bank ¢ Balance c/d Cash 80 8 20 12 Bank 900 192 480 288 Disct Cash ¢ GH IJ Wages Cash 45 70 Bank 100 555 1,330 130 100 40 Balance b/d 180 50 125 1,985 Balance c/d 115 Balance b/d 50 180 1,985 125 AB Balance b/d 200 Bank Discount received 200 192 8 200 CD Balance b/d 500 Bank Discount received 500 480 20 500 EF Balance b/d 300 Bank Discount received 300 288 12 300 GH Bank Discount allowed 555 45 Balance b/d 600 600 600 IJ Bank Discount received 1,330 70 Balance b/d 1,400 22 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,400 1,400 Answer to Question 14.2A BA 1 Sales Day Book (1) (3) (5) (7) (16) (23) (30) I Hood S Bell J Smart K Byers T Todd W Morris F Lock 520 318 64 165 540 360 2,040 4,007 General Ledger Sales (31) Total for month (1) Sales (3) Sales (a) Invoice summaries: A Portsmouth 22 metres plastic tubing @ £1 6 sheets foam rubber @ £3 4 boxes vinyl padding @ £5 Less Trade discount 25% B Butler 50 lengths polythene sheeting @ £2 8 boxes vinyl padding @ £5 20 sheets foam rubber @ £3 Less Trade discount 20% A Gate 4 metres plastic tubing @ £1 33 lengths polythene sheeting @ £2 30 sheets foam rubber @ £3 Less Trade discount 25% L Mackeson 29 metres plastic tubing @ £1 M Alison 32 metres plastic tubing @ £1 24 lengths polythene sheeting @ £2 20 boxes vinyl padding @ £5 Less Trade discount 331/3% S Bell 318 (5) Sales J Smart 64 (7) Sales K Byers 165 (16) Sales T Todd 540 (23) Sales W Morris 360 4,007 (30) Sales Answer to Question 14.4A Sales Ledger I Hood 520 F Lock 2,040 BA 1 22 18 20 60 15 45 100 40 60 200 40 160 4 66 90 160 40 120 29 32 48 100 180 60 120 (b) (1) (5) (11) (21) (30) Sales Journal A Portsmouth B Butler A Gate L Mackeson M Alison (1) Sales Sales Ledger A Portsmouth 45 (5) Sales B Butler 160 (11) Sales A Gate 120 (21) Sales L Mackeson 29 (30) Sales M Alison 120 (c) 45 160 120 29 120 474 General Ledger Sales (30) Total for month Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 474 23 Answer to Question 15.2A BA 1 Workings: Invoices F Day 2 sets golf clubs @ £800 5 footballs @ £40 Less Trade discount 25% 1,600 200 1,800 450 1,350 G Smith 6 cricket bats @ £60 6 ice skates @ £35 4 rugby balls @ £30 Less Trade discount 20% (a) (2) (11) (18) (25) (30) Purchases Day Book F Day G Smith F Hope L Todd M Moore (b) (c) (30) Total for month 24 360 210 120 690 138 552 F Hope 6 sets golf trophies @ £90 4 sets golf clubs @ £900 Less Trade discount 331/3% L Todd 5 cricket bats @ £52 Less Trade discount 25% M Moore 8 goal posts @ £80 Less Trade discount 40% 1,350 552 2,760 195 384 5,241 Purchases Ledger F Day (2) Purchases 1,350 G Smith (11) Purchases 552 F Hope (18) Purchases 2,760 L Todd (25) Purchases 195 M Moore (30) Purchases 384 General Ledger Purchases 5,241 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 540 3,600 4,140 1,380 2,760 260 65 195 640 256 384 Answer to Question 15.4A BA 1 (a) Purchases Day Book (9) C Clarke (16) A Charles (31) M Nelson (b) (c) 240 160 50 450 Sales Day Book (1) M Marshall (7) R Richards (23) T Young Purchases Ledger C Clarke (9) Purchases 240 (1) Sales Sales Ledger M Marshall 45 A Charles (16) Purchases 160 (7) Sales R Richards 200 M Nelson (31) Purchases 50 (23) Sales T Young 160 General Ledger Purchases Account (31) Total for month 450 Sales Account (31) Total for month Answer to Question 16.2A 405 BA 1 Sales Day Book (1) (1) (1) (1) (6) (6) (6) (20) (30) 45 200 160 405 B Dock M Ryan G Soul F Trip P Coates L Job T Man B Uphill T Kane 240 126 94 107 182 203 99 1,790 302 3,143 Returns Inwards Day Book (10) B Dock (10) F Trip (24) L Job 19 32 16 67 General Ledger Sales (30) Total for the month 3,143 (1) Sales (1) Sales M Ryan 126 (1) Sales (6) Sales G Soul 94 99 (1) Sales F Trip 107 (10) Returns (6) Sales P Coates 182 (6) Sales L Job 203 (24) Returns (20) Sales B Uphill 1,790 (30) Sales T Kane 302 Returns Inwards (30) Total for the month Sales Ledger B Dock 240 (10) Returns 19 32 16 67 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 25 Answer to Question 16.4A BA 1 (3) (3) (3) (8) (8) (8) (20) (20) (20) Sales Day Book E Rigby E Phillips F Thompson A Green H George J Ferguson E Phillips F Powell E Lee (14) (14) (31) (31) Returns Inwards Day Book E Phillips F Thompson E Phillips E Rigby 510 246 356 307 250 185 188 310 420 2,772 (1) (1) (1) (5) (5) (5) (5) (24) (24) Purchases Day Book K Hill M Norman N Senior R Morton J Cook D Edwards C Davies C Ferguson K Ennevor 18 22 27 30 97 (12) (12) (31) (31) Returns Outwards Day Book M Norman N Senior J Cook C Davies (3) Sales Sales Ledger E Rigby 510 (31) Returns In 30 (3) Sales (20) Sales E Phillips 246 (14) Returns In 188 (31) Returns In 18 27 (3) Sales F Thompson 356 (14) Returns In (8) Sales A Green 307 (8) Sales H George 250 (8) Sales J Ferguson 185 (20) Sales F Powell 310 (20) Sales E Lee 420 380 500 106 200 180 410 66 550 900 3,292 30 16 13 11 70 Purchases Ledger K Hill (1) Purchases 380 (12) Returns Out M Norman 30 (1) Purchases 500 (12) Returns Out N Senior 16 (1) Purchases 106 R Morton (5) Purchases 200 J Cook 13 (5) Purchases 180 D Edwards (5) Purchases 410 C Davies 11 (5) Purchases 66 C Ferguson (24) Purchases 550 K Ennevor (24) Purchases 900 22 (31) Returns Out (31) Returns Out General Ledger Sales (31) Sales Day Book Purchases (31) Purchases Day Book 26 3,292 Returns Inwards 2,772 (31) Returns In Day Book 97 Returns Outwards (31) Returns Out Day Book Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 70 Answer to Question 17.2A Fixtures Drawings Purchases Computer equipment Bell and Co Bad debts Office equipment Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Answer to Question 18.3A BA 1 1,153 340 68 640 42 124 1,710 527 (1) (1) (2) (2) (3) (6) (8) (11) (12) (12) (14) (16) (16) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (29) (30) (30) (30) Bell and Co Purchases Drawings H Cowes Fixtures P Lees Furniture Today Ltd Petty Cash Book Total Office Exps Balance b/d F Black Letterheadings Abel Motors Cleaning materials Envelopes Petrol P Lyon T Upton Paper clips Petrol Adhesive tape Petrol Motor tax F Luck T Upton J Lamb Copy paper Lively Cars Petrol F Tred 18 41 67 4 11 22 16 8 3 19 2 25 95 19 14 27 8 83 24 21 527 Cash Balance c/d (a) 1,153 340 68 640 42 124 1,710 Motor Exps Cleaning Casual Labour 18 41 67 4 11 22 16 8 3 19 2 25 95 19 14 27 8 83 24 65 335 26 21 101 600 1,127 1,127 Answer to Question 19.2A Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr BA 1 Receipts 600 : : : : : : : BA 1 A Duff Middle Road Paisley INVOICE number 1876 To: R Wilson 24 Peter Street Loughborough VAT Registration No. 454 366 812 Date: 1 March 2006 Your Order No. 943 20,000 Coils Sealing Tape @ £6.10 per 1,000 = 40,000 Sheets Bank A5 @ £4.60 per 1,000 = 24,000 Sheets Bank A4 @ £8.20 per 1,000 = Add VAT 10% Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 £ 122.00 184.00 196.80 502.80 50.28 552.88 27 (b) Books of R Wilson: A Duff 2006 Mar 1 Purchases 552.88 Books of A Duff: R Wilson 2006 Mar 1 Sales 552.88 Answer to Question 19.5A BA 1 Sales Day Book (1) (4) (14) (28) H Impey Ltd B Volts L Marion B Volts Net 180 410 190 220 1,000 VAT 18 41 19 22 100 Gross 198 451 209 242 1,100 Net 90 150 130 350 720 VAT 9 15 13 35 72 Gross 99 165 143 385 792 Purchases Day Book (5) (8) (18) (30) G Sharpe and Co R Hood and Associates F Tuckley Ltd R Hood and Associates Sales Ledger H Impey Ltd 198 (1) Sales (4) Sales (28) Sales B Volts 451 242 (14) Sales L Marion 209 Purchases Ledger G Sharpe and Co (5) Purchases 99 R Hood and Associates (8) Purchases (30) Purchases 165 385 F Tuckley Ltd (18) Purchases 143 General Ledger Sales (31) Credit sales per month (31) Credit purchases for month (31) VAT content purchases (31) Balance c/d 28 1,000 Purchases 720 Value Added Tax 72 (31) VAT content sales 28 100 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 100 100 Answer to Question 19.7A (a) 2007 May 25 27 28 29 30 BA 1 Sales Day Book Invoice No 3045 3046 3047 3048 3049 Laira Brand Brown Bros Penfold’s T Tyrrell Laira Brand Net 1,060.00 2,200.00 170.00 460.00 1,450.00 5,340.00 VAT 159.00 330.00 25.50 69.00 217.50 801.00 Gross 1,219.00 2,530.00 195.50 529.00 1,667.50 6,141.00 (b) Personal accounts in Sales Ledger: debit gross amounts Sales account in General Ledger: credit net total for period VAT account in General Ledger: credit total of VAT column for period (c) 2007 May 1 15 25 30 Balance b/d Sales Sales Sales Answer to Question 20.4A Laira Brand 2007 2,100.47 May 21 Bank 680.23 29 Returns In 1,219.00 31 Balance c/d 1,667.50 5,667.20 1 4 7 8 9 9 17 19 21 22 23 24 25 25 28 30 J Syme T Hill F Love Topp Garages BT Gilly Shop G Farmer B&T Ltd T Player Overnight Couriers Ltd J Moore Topp Garages PowerNorth Ltd H Noone PMP Ltd Topp Garages Answer to Question 20.5A 5,667.20 BA 1 G Graham Purchases Analysis Book Total Purchases Light & Heat 2008 June 2,500.00 609.50 2,557.70 108 210 195 265 65 19 181 13 222 46 12 364 39 193 38 66 2,036 Motor Exps Stationery Carriage Inwards 108 210 195 265 65 19 181 13 222 46 12 364 39 193 38 1,109 117 66 695 31 84 BA 1 General ledger: Purchases Dr 1,109; Lighting and heating Dr 117; Motor expenses Dr 695; Stationery Dr 31; Carriage inwards Dr 84. Purchases ledger: Credits in personal accounts should be obvious. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 29 Answer to Question 21.5A BA 1 Gross pay Less Income tax National Insurance Net pay Answer to Question 21.6A 210 28 18 46 164 BA 1 Basic pay Danger money 200 40 240 Less Income tax* National Insurance Net pay 35 19 54 186 * 240 − 90 = 150. First 50 @ 20% = 10 + (100 @ 25%) 25 = 35 Answer to Question 21.7A BA 1 Basic pay Maternity pay 860 90 950 Less Income tax* National Insurance Net pay 145 79 224 726 * 950 − 320 = 630. First 250 @ 20% = 50 + (380 @ 25%) 95 = 145 Answer to Question 21.8A BA 1 Pay Sick pay 1,500 150 1,650 Less Superannuation Income tax* National Insurance Net pay 90 290 130 510 1,140 * 1,650 − 90 − 350 = 1,210. First 250 @ 20% = 50 + (960 @ 25%) 240 = 290 Answer to Question 24.2A BA 1 Capital (a) (c) (f ). Revenue (b) (d) (e) (g). Answer to Question 24.4A BA 1 See text for how to distinguish between capital and revenue expenditure. (i) Cost of repairs is always revenue; an extension to an asset is always capital. (ii) This is capital expenditure in the same way as buying a van to replace a van is capital expenditure. (iii) This is capital expenditure because the asset was improved by the expenditure. Answer to Question 24.6A BA 1 Capital: 2,600 of (a); 600 of (c); 150 of (d); all of (e). Revenue: 300 of (a); all of (b); 2,680 of (c); 1,110 of (d). 30 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 24.8A (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f ) Revenue Revenue Capital Revenue Capital Revenue (g) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l) BA 1 Capital Revenue Revenue Capital Revenue Capital Answer to Question 24.10A (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) Capital Revenue Revenue Revenue Capital (f ) (g) (h) (i) BA 1 Capital Revenue Revenue Capital Answer to Question 24.13A BA 1 (a) Balance b/d Survey fees Legal charges Cost of premises Architect’s fees Subcontractors Transfer from wages Inventory of materials used Premises 521,100 1,500 3,000 90,000 8,700 69,400 11,600 76,800 Balance c/d 782,100 Balance b/d Vendor of Press A Installation costs (A) Vendor of Press B Installation costs (B) Transport costs (A) 407,500 87,300 2,310 105,800 2,550 2,900 608,360 782,100 782,100 Plant Balance c/d 608,360 608,360 (b) Cash discount 2% on Press A. Connected with finance not plant. Debenture interest similarly not applicable. The £4,700 demolition cost and £1,400 plus £1,750 cost of hiring lifting gear are not shown separately as they are included in other figures used above. Answer to Question 24.15A (a) Computers Cabling Installation Less Cash discount (21/2%) Printers Software Amount capitalised Amount charged to revenue Consumables (250 – 50) Training BA 1 7,000 300 500 7,800 195 7,605 375 350 8,330 200 500 700 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 31 (b) When an amount is not considered to be material – i.e. it is not of interest to the users of the financial statements – it may be treated as a revenue expense rather than being capitalised. In this case, it might be considered that the cost of the cabling (300 – 21/2% = 292.50) was not material – the business may, for example, use £300 as the minimum amount that should be capitalised, anything costing less than this being treated as a revenue expense. Answer to Question 25.4A BA 1 Note: The answer assumes that the figure for accounts receivable in the question is after deduction of bad debts. (a) Bad Debts 2007 2007 Dec 31 Various accounts receivable 1,240 Dec 31 Profit and Loss 1,240 2008 2008 Dec 31 Various accounts receivable 2,608 Dec 31 Profit and Loss 2,608 2009 2009 Dec 31 Various accounts receivable 5,424 Dec 31 Profit and Loss 5,424 (b) 2007 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2008 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2009 Dec 31 Profit and Loss Dec 31 Balance c/d Allowance for Doubtful Debts 2007 1,640 Dec 31 Profit and Loss 2008 4560 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and Loss 4,560 2009 160 Jan 1 Balance b/d 4,400 1,640 1,640 2,920 4,560 4,560 4,560 (c) Debtors Less Allowance for doubtful debts Answer to Question 25.6A Balance Sheet (extracts) 2007 41,000 76,000 1,640 39,360 4,560 4,560 2008 71,440 2009 88,000 4,400 83,600 BA 1 (a) (i) Prudence. Always provide for probable losses. (ii) To match the expense of bad debts with the sales which occasioned the debts. (iii) Overall percentage. Percentages using ageing schedule. Flat sum. (b) (i) 2008 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2009 Dec 31 Profit and loss Balance c/d 2000 Dec 31 Balance c/d Allowance for Doubtful Debts 2008 600 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 600 2009 200 Jan 1 Balance b/d 400 600 2000 400 Jan 1 Balance b/d 500 100 600 600 600 400 (ii) (Extracts) Profit and Loss Account section of the income statement for the year ending 31 December (2008) Allowance for doubtful debts 100 (2009) Reduction in allowance for doubtful debts 200 Note: See textbook Exhibit 25.5 for an alternative layout to adopt on this answer. (c) A bad debt is a debt which has proved to be irrecoverable and so is written off. Allowance for doubtful debts: the amount of accounts receivable on a certain date which will probably turn out to be bad debts and have to be written off eventually. 32 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Warren Mair 2010 130 Aug 25 Bank Aug 25 Bad debts 130 (d) 2010 Jan 1 Balance b/d Answer to Question 25.8A BA 1 Allowance for Doubtful Debts 2008 1,284 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,284 930 354 1,284 Provision for Discount on Debtors 2008 415 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 415 301 114 415 Bad Debts 2008 1,110 Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,110 Discounts Allowed 2008 362 Dec 31 Profit and loss 362 2008 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2008 Dec 31 Balance c/d* 39 91 130 2008 Dec 31 Various debtors 2008 Dec 31 Total for year Profit and Loss Bad debts 1,110 Increase in allowance for doubtful debts 354 Discounts allowed 362 Increase in provision for discounts on debtors 114 * 1% of [42,800 − 1,284] (obviously we do not give discounts on bad debts). Answer to Question 25.11A (a) 2004 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2005 Dec 31 Profit and loss Balance c/d 2003 Dec 31 Accounts receivable 2004 Dec 31 Accounts receivable (b) 2006 Jan 1 Balance b/d BA 1 Allowance for Doubtful Debts 2004 1,800 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,800 2005 1,600 Jan 1 Balance b/d 200 1,800 2006 Jan 1 Balance b/d Bad Debts 2003 2,100 Dec 31 Profit and loss 2004 750 Dec 31 Profit and loss B. Roke 2006 70 Dec 31 Bad debts Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,500 300 1,800 1,800 1,800 200 2,100 750 70 33 H A Ditt 2006 42 Dec 31 Bad debts 2006 Jun 1 Balance b/d Bad Debts 2006 70 Dec 31 Profit and loss 42 112 2006 Dec 31 B Roke HA Ditt Answer to Question 26.4A (a) Straight line Photocopier cost Yr 1 Depreciation Yr 2 Depreciation Yr 3 Depreciation Yr 4 Depreciation 42 112 112 BA 1 23,000 4,750* 18,250 4,750 13,500 4,750 8,750 4,750 4,000 (b) Reducing balance Photocopier cost Yr 1 Depn 35% of 23,000 Yr 2 Depn 35% of 14,950 Yr 3 Depn 35% of 9,717 Yr 4 Depn 35% of 6,316 23,000 8,050 14,950 5,233 9,717 3,401 6,316 2,211 4,105 * Calculation: 23,000 − 4,000 19,000 = = 4,750 4 4 Answer to Question 26.5A BA 1 (a) Reducing balance Printer cost Yr 1 Depreciation 60% 800 480 320 192 128 77 51 31 20 12 8 Yr 2 Depn 60% of 320 Yr 3 Depn 60% of 128 Yr 4 Depn 60% of 51 Yr 5 Depn 60% of 20 (b) Straight line Printer cost Yr 1 Depreciation Yr 2 Depreciation Yr 3 Depreciation Yr 4 Depreciation Yr 5 Depreciation 800 160* 640 160 480 160 320 160 160 160 – * Calculation: 800 = 160 5 Answer to Question 26.6A (a) Reducing balance Bus cost Yr 1 Depreciation 25% Yr 2 Depn 25% of 42,000 Yr 3 Depn 25% of 31,500 Yr 4 Depn 25% of 23,625 BA 1 56,000 14,000 42,000 10,500 31,500 7,875 23,625 5,906 17,719 (b) Straight line Bus cost Yr 1 Depreciation Yr 2 Depreciation Yr 3 Depreciation Yr 4 Depreciation * Calculation: 56,000 − 18,000 38,000 = = 9,500 4 4 34 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 56,000 9,500* 46,500 9,500 37,000 9,500 27,500 9,500 18,000 Answer to Question 26.10A BA 1 (a) (i) Straight line: 100,000 − 20,000 = 80,000 ÷ 4 = 20,000 depreciation per year. 31.12.2003 31.12.2004 31.12.2005 Cost/NBV 100,000 80,000 60,000 Depn 20,000 20,000 20,000 (ii) Reducing balance: Percentage = 1 − 4 NBV 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 100,000 = 33% 31.12.2003 31.12.2004 31.12.2005 Cost/NBV 100,000 67,000 44,890 (b) Depn 33,000 22,110 14,814 NBV 67,000 44,890 30,076 Straight line Reducing balance 45,000 40,000 5,000 45,000 30,076 14,924 Sale proceeds Balance b/d at 1.1.2006 Gain on sale (c) See text. Straight line is more appropriate when the economic benefits of using an asset reduce evenly over its useful economic life, such as in the case of office furnishings which will deteriorate gradually through wear and tear. Reducing balance is more appropriate when the economic benefits of using an asset reduce rapidly from the start, such as in the case of a motor vehicle – the cost of maintaining it, for example, is very low at the start and, generally, higher the longer it is in use. (d) Net book value represents an estimate of the remaining economic value of an asset expressed financially on a basis which is usually directly related to its original cost, original estimate of its residual value, and original estimated useful economic life. Answer to Question 26.11A 2003 2004 BA 1 Bought 1.1.2003 Depreciation 30% for 9 months A 2,400 540 1,860 Bought 1.5.2004 Depreciation 30% × 1,860 30% for 5 months 558 2005 Bought 1.4.2006 Depreciation 30% × 911 30% × 1,531 30% × 2,560 30% for 6 months D 313 2,187 3,200 391 656 911 2006 Forklift trucks C 2,500 1,302 Bought 1.10.2004 Depreciation 30% × 1,302 30% × 2,187 30% for 12 months B 1,531 640 2,560 3,600 273 459 768 638 1,072 1,792 1,080 2,520 2006 Total Depreciation Provision = 273 + 459 + 768 + 1,080 = 2,580 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 35 Answer to Question 27.3A BA 1 Machinery 2005 2,800 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2006 2,800 Dec 31 Balance c/d 3,500 6,300 (a) 2005 Jan 1 Bank 2006 Jan 1 Balance b/d Oct 1 Bank (b) 2005 Jan 1 Jul 1 6,300 6,300 Fixtures 2005 290 Dec 31 Balance c/d 620 910 2006 910 Dec 31 Balance c/d 130 1,040 Bank Bank 2006 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 1 Bank (c) 2005 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2006 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2,800 910 910 1,040 1,040 Provision for Depreciation: Machinery 2005 420 Dec 31 Profit and loss 2006 1,302 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,302 420 420 882* 1,302 *(2,800 − 420) × 15% = 357 3,500 × 15% = 525 882 2005 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2006 Dec 31 Balance c/d Provision for Depreciation: Fixtures 2005 46 Dec 31 Profit and loss 2006 96 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 96 46 46 50* 96 * (910 − 46) × 5% = 43.2 130 × 5% = 6.5 49.7 rounded to 50. (d) 31 December 2005 Machinery at cost Less Depreciation Fixtures at cost Less Depreciation 31 December 2006 Machinery at cost Less Depreciation to date Fixtures at cost Less Depreciation to date 36 Balance Sheets (extracts) 2,800 420 910 46 6,300 1,302 1,040 96 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 2,380 864 4,998 944 Answer to Question 27.7A BA 1 (a) Per text. (b) Any three from physical deterioration, economic factors, obsolescence, inadequacy, time, wasting character (e.g. mines). (c) Straight line and reducing balance. (d) Keep consistently to one particular method for an asset. (e) Briefly: otherwise would not be able to calculate figures until asset put out of use, possibly many years hence. Need to calculate profits, allowing for depreciation, even though figures not absolutely accurate. (f ) Profits would be overstated. Values per balance sheet also overstated. (g) Prudence concept does not take profits into account until they have been realised. An increase in value, without sale, does not represent realisation. (h) (i) Machinery 2007 2009 Jan 1 Bank 5,000 Jan 4 Machinery disposals 5,000 (ii) 2009 Jan 4 (iii) 2009 Jan 4 Machinery disposals Provision for Depreciation of Machinery 2007 1,000 Dec 31 Profit and loss 2008 Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,000 Machinery Disposals 2009 5,000 Jan 4 Provision for depreciation Jan 4 Bank Dec 31 Profit and loss 5,000 Machinery 500 500 1,000 1,000 3,760 240 5,000 Profit and Loss (extracts) 2007 Dec 31 2008 Dec 31 2009 Dec 31 Provn for depn of machinery 500 Provn for depn of machinery 500 Machinery disposals (loss) 240 (iv) (Extracts) Income Statement for the year ending 31 December (2007) Provision for depreciation (2008) Provision for depreciation (2009) Loss on sale of machinery Answer to Question 27.9A 500 500 240 BA 1 Workings: AAT 101 Cost Less Estimated residual value Estimated total depreciation Estimated life 5 years Depreciation charge per year Accumulated depreciation at 1.4.2006 2 years 6 months @ 1,200 Depreciation 1.4.2006 to 30.6.2006 3 months @ 1,200 p.a. Depreciation to 30.6.2006 Cost was Written-down value on disposal Trade-in allowance Loss on disposal Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 8,500 2,500 6,000 1,200 3,000 300 3,300 8,500 5,200 5,000 200 37 DJH 202 Cost Less Estimated residual value Estimated total depreciation Estimated life 8 years Depreciation charge per year Accumulated depreciation at 1.4.2006 2 years @ 1,250 Remainder of estimated depreciation Adjust to cover 4 years in future: i.e. 7,500 ÷ 4 now yearly charge Depreciation for year to 31 March 2007 AAT 101 As above DJH 202 As above KGC 303 Cost 15,000 – residual value 4,000 = 11,000 ÷ 5 years = 2,200 p.a. For 9 months 30.6.2006 to 31.3.2007 2,200 × 9/12 12,000 2,000 10,000 1,250 2,500 7,500 1,875 300 1,875 1,650 3,825 Journal (a) (dates omitted) Motor vehicles Motor vehicle disposals Pinot Finance Bank Purchase of KGC 303 Motor vehicle disposals Motor vehicles Cost of vehicle AAT 101 Provision for depreciation: Motors Motor vehicle disposals Depreciation to date of disposal of AAT 101 Profit and loss Motor vehicle disposals Loss on disposal of vehicle AAT 101 8,500 8,500 3,300 3,300 200 200 3,825 3,825 Motor Vehicles 20,500 Motor vehicle disposals 15,000 Balance c/d 35,500 (c) (dates omitted) Balance b/d Purchase of KGC 303 8,500 27,000 35,500 Provision for Depreciation: Motor Vehicles 3,300 Balance b/d 6,025 Profit and loss 9,325 Answer to Question 27.11A Cr 5,000 6,000 4,000 (b) Profit and loss Provision for depreciation: Motor vehicles Depreciation on motor vehicles for years to 31 March 2007 Motor vehicle disposals Balance c/d Dr 15,000 5,500 3,825 9,325 BA 1 Depreciation on Machines each year 2006 2007 Machine 1 (95% 40,000 @ 10%) 3,800 (12 months) 3,800 (12 months) Machine 2 (95% 40,000 @ 10%) 3,800 (12 months) 3,800 (12 months) Machine 3 (95% 15,200 @ 10%) 361 (3 months) 1,444 (12 months) Machine 4 (95% 15,200 @ 10%) 361 (3 months) 1,444 (12 months) Machine 5 (95% 20,000 @ 10%) Total per year 8,322 10,488 (a) (i) (ii) Sale proceeds Machine 3 cost Depreciation provision (361 + 1,444 + 722) Loss on sale of Machine 3 38 2008 3,800 (12 months) 3,800 (12 months) 722 (6 months) 1,444 (12 months) 950 (6 months) 10,716 12,640 15,200 2,527 12,673 33 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (b) Assuming that the depreciation rate was set to match the estimated useful economic life, it should not matter which depreciation method was used. The overall reported profits during the economic life of the vehicle would be identical. However, the diminishing balance method (or reducing balance method) will result in lower reported profits in the first few years, but higher reported profits in the later years. Answer to Question 27.13A BA 1 Accumulated provision for depreciation 2007 2008 Balance c/d Balance c/d 10,000 17,500 2007 2008 Depreciation Balance b/d Depreciation 2009 Balance c/d 17,500 20,500 2009 Balance b/d Depreciation 20,500 10,000 10,000 7,500 17,500 17,500 3,000 20,500 Balance Sheet extract as at 31 December 2007 Machine 30,000 2008 Machine 22,500 2009 Machine 19,500 Answer to Question 27.15A BA 1 Lorries 2006 April 1 June 7 October 30 2007 March 6 Lorry disposal 37,600 209,000 2007 April 1 Balance b/d 119,200 Balance b/d Bank Bank 99,600 32,800 39,000 2006 June 1 August 21 2007 March 6 31 Lorry disposal Lorry disposal 19,600 31,200 Lorry disposal Balance b/d 39,000 119,200 209,000 Accumulated depreciation on lorries 2006 June 1 Lorry disposal August 21 Lorry disposal 2007 March 31 Balance c/d 7,840 24,960 2006 April 1 2007 March 31 Balance b/d 42,560 Depreciation 23,840 33,600 66,400 66,400 2007 April 1 Balance b/d 33,600 Lorry disposal 2006 June 1 Lorries August 21 Lorries 19,600 31,200 2006 June 1 1 2007 March 6 Lorries 39,000 89,800 Accumulated depreciation on lorries 7,840 Bank 10,500 August 21 Accumulated depreciation on lorries 24,960 21 Bank 7,000 2007 March 6 Lorries 37,600 31 Profit and loss (loss on disposal) 1,900 89,800 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 39 Bank 2006 June 1 Lorry disposal August 21 Lorry disposal 10,500 7,000 2006 June 7 Lorries October 30 Lorries 32,800 39,000 Depreciation on lorries 2007 March 3 Accumulated depreciation on lorries Answer to Question 27.17A 2007 March 31 Profit and loss 23,840 Machinery disposal Balance c/d 2,800 52,630 55,430 23,840 BA 1 Machinery 2009 Jan 1 2009 Balance b/d Bank 52,950 2,480 55,430 Dec 31 Machinery disposal 2009 2009 Machinery 2,800 Dec 31 2,800 Accumulated provision for depreciation – machinery 1,120 Bank 800 Profit and loss (loss on disposal) 880 2,800 Accumulated provision for depreciation – machinery 2009 Dec 31 Machinery disposal Balance c/d 1,120 29,813 30,933 2009 Jan 1 Dec 31 Balance b/d Depreciation 25,670 5,263 30,933 Office furniture 2009 Jan 1 Balance b/d Bank 2,860 320 3,180 2009 Dec 31 Balance c/d 3,180 3,180 Accumulated provision for depreciation – office furniture 2009 Dec 31 Balance c/d 1,649 2009 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Depreciation 1,490 159 1,649 1,649 Balance Sheet extract as at 31 December 2009 Machinery, at cost Less Accumulated depreciation 52,630 29,813 22,817 Office furniture, at cost Less Accumulated depreciation 3,180 1,649 1,531 40 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 27.19A (a) BA 1 M Jackson Income Statement for the year ending 30 April 2007 Sales Less Returns inwards 18,614 440 18,174 Less Cost of Sales Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Returns outwards 3,776 11,570 355 11,215 234 15,225 4,000 Carriage inwards Less Closing inventory 11,225 6,949 Gross profit Less Expenses: Carriage outwards Salaries Motor expenses Rent Sundry expenses Bad debts Depreciation: Fixtures and fittings Motor vehicles 326 2,447 664 576 1,202 800 60 850 6,925 24 Net profit Balance Sheet as at 30 April 2007 Non-current assets Fixtures and fittings (600 – 60) Motor vehicles (3,400 – 850) Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable (4,577 – 800) Bank Cash Less Current liabilities – Accounts payable 540 2,550 3,090 4,000 3,777 3,876 120 11,773 3,045 8,728 11,818 Capital account Opening balance Add Net profit 13,844 24 13,868 2,050 11,818 Less Drawings (b) See text Chapters 25 (bad debts) and 27 (depreciation). Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 41 Answer to Question 27.21A Annual Depreciation Charge (ii) Diminishing balance 60% × 1,800 = 1,080 60% × 720 = 432 60% × 288 = 173 60% × 115 = 69 1,754 (a) (i) Straight line Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 BA 1 450 450 450 450 1,800 (i) Laser Printer 1,800 Assets disposals (b) (Dates omitted) Balance b/d (ii) Provision for Depreciation: Laser Printer 1,720 Balance b/d Profit and loss 1,720 Assets disposals (iii) Assets Disposals 1,800 Provision for depreciation 120 Bank 1,920 Laser printer Profit and loss Answer to Question 28.2A (a) 2007 Jul 1 Stock b/d 2008 Jun 30 Cash and bank (b) 2008 Jun 30 Cash and bank 30 Owing c/d (c) 2008 Jun 30 Cash and bank 30 Rates owing c/d (d) 2008 Jun 30 Cash and bank 30 Owing c/d (e) 2007 Jul 1 Owing b/d 2008 Jun 30 Profit and loss 42 (iii) Units of output 35,000/180,000 × 1,800 = 350 45,000/180,000 × 1,800 = 450 45,000/180,000 × 1,800 = 450 55,000/180,000 × 1,800 = 550 1,800 1,800 1,685 35 1,720 1,720 200 1,920 BA 1 Stationery 2008 60 Jun 30 Profit and loss 30 Inventory c/d 240 300 General Expenses 2007 470 Jul 1 Owing b/d 60 2008 Jun 30 Profit and loss 530 Rent and Rates 2007 5,410 Jul 1 Owing b/d 393 Rent Rates 2008 Jun 30 Profit and loss 30 Rent prepaid c/d 5,803 Motor Expenses 2007 1,410 Jul 1 Owing b/d 67 2008 Jun 30 Profit and loss 1,477 Commission Receivable 2008 50 Jun 30 Cash and bank 30 Owing c/d 1,132 1,182 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 205 95 300 32 498 530 220 191 5,022 370 5,803 92 1,385 1,477 1,100 82 1,182 Answer to Question 28.4A 2006 Jan 1 Dec 31 31 31 Balance b/d Bank (electricity) Bank (oil) Owing c/d BA 1 Lighting and Heating 2006 192 Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,300 31 Inventory c/d 810 162 2,464 2,464 Insurance 2006 1,410 Jun 30 Bank 1,164 Dec 31 Profit and loss 1,464 31 Prepaid c/d * 4,038 82 2,617 1,339 4,038 2006 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Bank (fire) 31 Bank (general) * Prepaid calculated: Fire 5 months 1,164 @ 5/12 = General 7 months 1,464 @ 7/12 = Answer to Question 28.6A (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) 2,259 205 485 854 1,339 BA 1 Expense. Revenue. Nominal ledger. Current assets: Debtors and prepayments. Current liabilities: Revenue prepaid. The Journal. Cheque counterfoil as written up in the bank column of cash book. Bank paying-in book, as written up in bank column of cash book. £620 Dr. £960 Cr. Understated £90. Overstated £75. Answer to Question 28.7A BA 1 No set answer. Note: Avoid very technical language as it is for a non-accountant. Keep it fairly brief. (a) ‘Assets’ means the resources possessed by the business, but there is one important qualification to this statement. That is that the asset must have cost the business something that can easily be measured in monetary terms. Whilst, therefore, your skill and knowledge may be an ‘asset’ in ordinary everyday language, it cannot be classed as an ‘asset’ in an accounting sense as it did not cost anything to the business. (b) The house you live in, we assume, is not used at all for your business. It cannot therefore be included as a business asset. Accordingly the increase in the value is also irrelevant. If the house is owned by the business it would be included as an asset at £30,000 until a proper revaluation takes place. (c) Assets are called non-current assets when they are of long life, are to be used in the business and were not bought with the main purpose of resale. Examples are buildings, machinery, motor vehicles, and fixtures and fittings. Assets are called current assets when they represent cash or are primarily for conversion into cash or have a short life. An example of a short-lived asset is that of the stock of oil held to power the boilers in a factory, as this will be used up in the near future. Other examples of current assets are cash itself, stocks of goods, debtors and bank balances. (d) Some vehicles may have been bought specifically for resale, and are therefore current assets. Other vehicles, such as a breakdown truck, have been bought for use, not resale, and are consequently noncurrent assets. See definitions in (c) above. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 43 (e) The profit in the income statement is calculated by matching up sales for the year with those costs that have been incurred in order to achieve the sales. Some of the costs were paid for in a previous year, some items are still owed for. This means that costs do not mean items paid for in the year. Similarly, a lot of sales will still be owed for – see accounts receivable – so that this does not equal cash received in the year. As many items in the income statement do not equal cash received or paid out, then obviously there is not necessarily any easy comparison between profit and cash and bank balances. (f ) No, that is not true. Depreciation represents the part of the cost used up in the year. As equipment may last for several years, only part will be charged against one year. The remaining value of the equipment is shown in your balance sheet. The total cost will be charged against your profits, but spread over several years. The total costs will only be charged once against the profits. Answer to Question 28.10A BA 1 J Wright Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2009 Sales Less Returns in Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Returns out 127,245 3,486 123,759 7,940 61,420 1,356 Less Closing inventory Gross profit Add Discounts received Less Expenses: Wages and salaries (39,200 + 3,500) Rent and insurance (8,870 − 600) Carriage outwards General office expenses (319 + 16) Discounts allowed Allowance for doubtful debts Depreciation: Fixtures and fittings Delivery van Net profit 60,064 68,004 6,805 61,199 62,560 62 62,622 42,700 8,270 3,210 335 2,480 110 190 1,400 1,590 58,695 3,927 Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2009 Non-current assets Fixtures and fittings Less Depreciation Delivery van Less Depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Less Provision for doubtful debts Prepaid expenses Cash in hand Less Current liabilities Accounts payable Expenses owing (3,500 + 16) Bank overdraft 1,900 190 5,600 1,400 1,710 4,200 5,910 6,805 12,418 740 11,678 600 140 19,223 25,133 11,400 3,516 2,490 17,406 7,727 Financed by: Capital Balance at 1/4/2008 Add Net profit Less Drawings 44 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 25,200 3,927 29,127 21,400 7,727 Answer to Question 28.12A BA 1 Mr Yousef Income Statement for the year ending 31 May 2006 Sales Less Cost of goods sold Inventory 1 June 2005 Purchases Carriage inwards 138,078 11,927 82,350 2,211 96,488 13,551 Less Inventory 31 May 2006 Gross profit Less Carriage outwards Salaries and wages Rent, rates and insurance (6,622 + 210 – 880) Postage and stationery Advertising Bad debts Allowance for doubtful debts Depreciation Net profit 2,933 26,420 5,952 3,001 1,330 877 40 8,700 82,937 55,141 49,253 5,888 Balance Sheet as at 31 May 2006 Non-current assets Equipment at cost Less Depreciation to date Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Less Allowance for doubtful debts Prepayments Bank Cash 58,000 27,700 30,300 13,551 12,120 170 Current liabilities Accounts payable Expenses accrued 11,950 880 1,002 177 27,560 57,860 6,471 210 6,681 51,179 Financed by: Capital: Balance at 1 June 2005 Add Net profit 53,091 5,888 58,979 7,800 51,179 Less Drawings Answer to Question 29.3A BA 1 (i) FIFO: 15 @ £19 = £285 (ii) LIFO: Jan Apr Received 120 @ £16 80 @ £18 June Oct Nov Issued 45 @ £16 80 @ £18 125 150 @ £19 Inventory after each transaction 120 @ £16 120 @ £16 1,920 80 @ £18 1,200 75 @ £16 75 @ £16 150 @ £19 60 @ £16 150 @ £19 210 1,920 3,120 1,200 1,200 2,850 15 @ £16 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 4,050 240 45 (iii) AVCO: Jan Apr Jun Oct Nov Received Issued 120 @ £16 80 @ £18 125 150 @ £19 210 Answer to Question 29.4A Average cost per unit of inventory £16 £16.80 £16.80 £18.27 £18.27 No. of units in inventory 120 200 75 225 15 Total value of inventory £1,920 £3,360 £1,260 £4,110 £274 BA 1 Trading Accounts for the year ended 31 December 2010 FIFO LIFO AVCO Sales (All methods) Purchases 6,210 6,210 6,210 125 @ £22 2,750 Less Closing inventory 285 240 274 210 @ £25 5,250 8,000 Cost of goods sold 5,925 5,970 5,936 Gross profit 2,075 2,030 2,064 8,000 8,000 8,000 Sales Answer to Question 29.7A BA 1 (a) Mary Smith Income Statement for the 3 months ending 30 November 2009 FIFO Sales 15,840 Less Cost of sales (note 1) 10,408 Gross profit 5,432 Less Overhead expenses 1,520 Sales commission (note 2) 136 Depreciation of lawn mower (note 3) 12 1,668 Net profit 3,764 Note 1 (FIFO) Closing inventory 10 @ 489 4,890 1 @ 350 (net realisable value) 350 5,240 Purchases Less Taken for business use 384 Inventory 5,240 Cost of sales (LIFO) Closing inventory 10 @ 384 3,840 1 @ 350 (net realisable value) 350 4,190 Purchases Less Taken for business use Inventory Note 2 Sales commission: Note 3 Depreciation: 46 LIFO 15,840 11,392 4,448 1,520 111 14 1,645 2,803 16,032 5,624 10,408 16,032 450 4,190 FIFO 21/2% @ 5,432 = 135.80 LIFO 21/2% @ 4,448 = 111.20 FIFO 1/8 @ 3 months @ 384 = 12.00 LIFO 1/8 @ 3 months @ 450 = 14.06 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 4,640 11,392 (b) Mary Smith’s income, 3 months to 31 August 2009: Salary 3,750 + Interest (1/4 @ 10% @ 7,000) 175 = 3,925 Business: 3 months to 30 November 2009 = 3,764 (c) FIFO: Advantage: related to actual movements of goods therefore closing inventory nearer to actual current price levels. Disadvantage: during inflation profits include holding gains. LIFO: Advantage: cost of sales nearer to current price levels. Disadvantages: not related to actual movement of goods, therefore inventory valuations will not match up to current price levels. Answer to Question 29.10A BA 1 (a) Inventory at 9 March 2008 Sales at cost [w1] Purchases Sales returns [w2] Purchase returns Office cleaning Inventory with Marketing [w3] Sale or return [w4] Free sample £ Increase 33,400 £ Decrease £ 100,600 14,000 3,336 850 600 1,320 320 35,890 20 (17,956) Inventory at 29 February 2008 17,934 118,534 Workings [1] (43,838 × 100/105) × 100/125 [2] 4,170 × 100/125 [3] 1,650 × 100/125 [4] 800 × 100/125 = 640; 1/2 sold = 320. (b) Revised Net Profit for the year ending 29 February 2008 £ Draft net profit Add: undervaluation of inventory goods sold on sale or return [w5] £ 249,600 17,934 400 Less: Office cleaning material 18,334 267,934 600 267,334 Revised total current assets at 29 February 2008 Draft current assets Add: undervalued inventory Revised total current assets £ 300,000 17,934 317,934 Workings [5] 320 × 125/100 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 47 Answer to Question 30.2A BA 1 Cash Book 2,740 Bank charges 201 Giffy Ltd Balance c/d 2,941 Balance b/d B Barnes 32 98 2,816 2,941 Bank Reconciliation Statement as on 31 March 2009 Bank balance per cash book Add Unpresented cheque 2,816 131 2,947 410 3,357 Less Bankings not yet on bank statement Bank balance per bank statement Answer to Question 30.4A (a) 2007 Jun 1 7 16 28 30 30 BA 1 D Hogan: Cash Book 2007 1,410 Jun 5 L Holmes 62 12 J Rebus 75 16 T Silver 224 29 Blister Disco 582 29 SLM 64 30 Bank charges 30 Balance c/d 2,417 Balance b/d J May T Wilson F Slack G Baker Flynn 180 519 41 22 52 43 1,560 2,417 (b) D Hogan: Bank Reconciliation Statement as on 30 June 2007 Balance in hand per cash book Add unpresented cheque 1,560 22 1,582 582 1,000 Less Bank lodgement not yet entered on bank statement Balance in hand as per bank statement Answer to Question 30.6A (a) BA 1 Thomas P Lee Computation of Bank Balance for Balance Sheet Purposes as on 31 October 2009 Balance per cash book Add Cheque duplicated Traders’ credits not in cash book Less T Andrews: dishonoured cheque Bank charges not in cash book: Bank commission Bank interest Incorrect entry of cheque (310.84 – 301.84) Standing order not in cash book Corrected bank balance 894.68 15.10 210.10 225.20 1,119.88 29.31 169.56 109.10 9.00 15.00 Thomas P Lee Bank Reconciliation Statement as on 31 October 2009 Corrected cash book balance Add Unpresented cheques 331.97 787.91 (b) Less Bankings not on bank statements Overdraft per bank statement (c) Briefly: helps verify correctness of cash book and bank statement. 48 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 787.91 395.80 1,183.71 1,895.60 711.89 Answer to Question 30.8A BA 1 F King: Cash Book 2007 230 Dec 1 Balance b/d 265 10 J Lamb 325 19 P Wilson 102 29 K Coull 1,746 30 Tox 31 Bank charges 2,668 (a) 2007 Dec 6 P Pan 20 C Hook 31 W Britten 31 F Ray 31 Balance c/d (b) F King: Bank Reconciliation Statement as on 31 December 2007 Bank overdraft per cash book Add Bank lodgements not yet entered on bank statement Less Unpresented cheque Bank overdraft per bank statement Answer to Question 31.2A Returns outwards Bank Discounts received Balance c/d Answer to Question 31.4A Balance b/d Sales journal Bank: dishonoured cheques Answer to Question 31.7A Balance b/d Cash book Discount received Returns outwards Sales ledger Balance c/d 1,746 325 2,071 37 2,034 BA 1 Purchases Ledger Control 246 Balance b/d 8,300 Purchases 749 8,046 17,341 11,241 6,100 17,341 BA 1 Sales Ledger Control 28,409 Bad debts 26,617 Bank 120 Discounts Returns in Set-offs to purchases ledger Balance c/d 55,146 342 24,293 416 924 319 28,852 55,146 BA 1 Sales Ledger Control 20,040 Balance b/d 124,600 Cash book 37 Bad debts Discount allowed Returns inwards Purchase ledger Balance c/d 144,677 Balance b/d Sales day book Balance c/d 1,900 304 261 37 94 72 2,668 Purchases Ledger Control 12 Balance b/d 93,685 Purchases day book 2,850 Balance c/d 240 438 13,241 110,466 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 56 119,930 204 3,480 1,063 438 19,506 144,677 14,860 95,580 26 110,466 49 Answer to Question 31.8A BA 1 (a) (i) Purchases invoices; (ii) Debit notes. (b) Sales journal, Returns inwards journal. Descriptions per text. (c) 2010 Apr 9 Bank 9 Discount 29 Returns out 30 Balance c/d (d) 2010 Apr 30 Bank 30 Discounts 30 Returns out 30 Contra to sales ledger 30 Balance c/d T Sage 2010 690 Apr 1 Balance b/d 30 17 Purchases 80 330 1,130 1,130 May 1 Balance b/d 330 720 410 Purchases Ledger Control 2010 1,596 Apr 1 Balance b/d 84 30 Purchases 130 30 Balance c/d* 180 1,360 3,350 May 1 Balance b/d * Debit balance on J Morris account. 10 1,530 1,810 10 3,350 May 1 Balance b/d 1,360 (e) 1 Arithmetical check on accuracy of entries in purchases ledger. 2 Quick way to find figure of creditors. Answer to Question 32.3A BA 1 (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) B Roy Dr 1,410 : A Ray Cr Cash Dr 94 : Bank Cr D Rolls Dr 734 : D Rollo Cr Purchases Dr 72 : L Hand Cr G Boyd Dr 128 : Cash Cr (Needs double the amount to cancel out the error and replace it with the correct amount.) (f ) Sales Dr 320 : Fittings Cr (g) Cash Dr 400 : Bank Cr (Needs double the amount.) (h) Purchases Dr 1,182 : Furnishings Cr Answer to Question 32.6A (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f ) (g) (h) 50 Commissions received Dr Bank charges Dr Motor expenses Dr Fax machine Dr Returns inwards Dr Capital Dr Loan interest Dr Drawings Dr (double the original amount) 1,410 94 734 72 128 320 400 1,182 BA 1 430 34 37 242 216 2,000 400 168 : : : : : : : : Rent received Business rates Bank Purchases Returns outwards Loan G Bain Van Purchases Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr Cr 430 34 37 242 216 2,000 400 168 Answer to Question 32.7A (a) BA 1 Thomas Smith Corrected Trial Balance as at 31 March 2008 Inventory in trade 1.4.2007 Discounts allowed Discounts received Allowance for doubtful debts Purchases Purchases returns Sales Sales returns Freehold property: at cost provision for depreciation Motor vehicle: at cost provision for depreciation Capital Bank Trade accounts receivable Trade accounts payable Establishment and administrative expenditure Drawings 10,700 310 450 960 94,000 1,400 132,100 1,100 70,000 3,500 15,000 4,500 84,600 7,100 11,300 7,600 16,600 9,000 235,110 235,110 (b) (Dates omitted) The Journal Dr Inventory 1,300 Capital (Being adjustment for items on mislaid inventory lists.) Trade accounts payable 210 Purchases returns (Being goods returned to J Hardwell Ltd.) Sales 1,000 Trade accounts receivable (Being reversal of trade sample sent to John Grey wrongly treated as a sale.) Trade samples 1,000 Purchases (Being correction of treatment of trade sample.) Repairs and renewals 150 Purchases (Being correction of treatment of paint used to paint stockroom wrongly charged to purchases.) Answer to Question 33.3A (a) (Narratives omitted) (i) Sales Office equipment (ii) Suspense Purchases (iii) Drawings Purchases (iv) Bank charges Suspense (v) Suspense K Lamb Cr 1,300 210 1,000 1,000 150 BA 1 The Journal Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Dr 125 Cr 125 10 10 140 140 22 22 90 90 51 Suspense 10 Balance 90 Bank charges 100 (b) Purchases K Lamb 78 22 100 (c) Statement of Corrected Net Profit for the year ended 31 December 2007 Net profit per the financial statements Add Purchases overcast 10 Add Private purchases 140 Less Sales shown in error Less Bank charges omitted Corrected net profit Answer to Question 33.7A 1 125 22 147 28,403 Trial Balance as at 31 March 2009 Dr 18,300 Cr 2,800 3,700 1,825 864 382 26,860 7,740 26,080 18,327 6,904 90 280 57,076 57,076 The Journal 2 Dr 120 Sales Suspense Office equipment (Non-current assets) Purchases Bank Account payable Return inwards Account receivable Drawings Suspense Cr 120 360 360 45 45 37 37 160 160 Suspense 280 Sales Drawings 280 4 Per text. 52 150 28,550 BA 1 Non-current assets at cost Provision for depreciation 1 April 2008 Inventory as at 1 April 2008 Trade accounts receivable Trade accounts payable Balance at bank (overdrawn) Capital Drawings Sales Purchases Running expenses Allowance for doubtful debts Suspense 3 Per trial balance 28,400 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 120 160 280 Answer to Question 33.9A (a) Balance b/d (iv) Sales undercast BA 1 Suspense 1,536 (i) Debtor balance omitted 360 (iii) Undercast of cash book (v) Supplier incorrectly credited for returns out (double the amount) (vii) Cheque omitted: Mr Smith 1,896 87 720 358 731 1,896 Items (ii) and (vi) do not pass through suspense account. (b) (i) Account receivable increased in balance sheet. (ii) Net profit will be increased by 1,200 but further depreciation needed. Machinery increased by 1,200 (subject to depreciation) in the balance sheet. (iii) Cash in the balance sheet increased by 720. (iv) Sales increased 360; so too are gross profit and net profit. (v) Accounts payable reduced 358 in balance sheet. (vi) Electricity increased 152, so net profit reduced 152. Also electricity owing 152 to be included as extra accrual in balance sheet. (vii) Cash increased 731 in balance sheet. Can now be removed from allowance for doubtful debts, so net profit increased 731 and accounts receivable (net) in balance sheet increased 731. Answer to Question 33.10A BA 1 Sales Ledger Control 110,172 Purchases ledger: set-off (iii) 200 Customer: posting error (vii) Balance c/d 110,372 Balance b/d Customer Y (x) Sales ledger: set-off (iii) Purchases: wrong posting (vi) Purchases overcast (viii) Balance c/d 700 100 109,572 110,372 Purchases Ledger Control 700 Balance b/d 198 1,000 76,368 78,266 78,266 78,266 Suspense 2,315 Trial balance error (ix) 90 Balance c/d 2,405 Balance b/d Insurances (xi) 2,400 5 2,405 Purchases Ledger Balances As given Add M Smith: credit posted in error (iv) Less Debit balances Set-off (iii) Invoice entered in error (vi) Revised list of balances 77,777 600 78,377 1,111 700 198 2,009 76,368 Now, identify what has led to the balance on the suspense account, and make the appropriate correcting entries needed to close the account. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 53 Answer to Question 33.13A BA 1 Dr 62 62 (a) Discount allowed Discount received Suspense (b) Sales Suspense (c) Fittings Bank Motor van Gain on sale of motor van (d) Premises Wages Purchases (e) C Blimp Bank Discounts allowed (f ) D Hood D I Hoade Suspense Answer to Question 34.2A (a) Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Inventory 1 April 2004 Add Purchases Cr 124 100 100 1,400 700 1,800 300 810 470 340 90 86 4 76 67 9 BA 1 R Jack Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2005 (iv) Less Inventory 31 March 2005 Gross profit Less Expenses Net profit (i) (ii) (iii) (vi) (v) 106,400 14,000 82,000 96,000 20,000 76,000 30,400 21,888 8,512 The closing inventory as at 31 March 2005, as shown above, is 20,000. Order of solving problem: 14,000 + (a) (i) Average inventory is 17,000. Therefore = 17,000 2 Therefore (a) = 20,000. (ii) can now be found by deducting (a) 20,000 from 96,000 = 76,000. (iii) is 40% of (ii), therefore (iii) is 30,400. (iv) is therefore needed to balance the account, i.e. 106,400. (v) if net profit was 8% of sales it would be 8,512. (vi) therefore expenses are 30,400 − (v) 8,512 = 21,888. (b) The total amount of profit and loss expenditure Jack must not exceed if he is to maintain a net profit on sales of 8% is, as shown in step (vi): 21,888. 54 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 34.4A BA 1 (a) Cost of goods sold = Sales less trade discount Category X 9,000 − 15% = 7,650 Category Y 24,000 − 18% = 19,680 (b) Sales – Cost of goods sold = Gross profit 9,000 − 7,650 = 1,350 24,000 − 19,680 = 4,320 1,260 3,360 1,350 − 1,260 = 90 4,320 −3,360 = 960 7,650 = 10 ? 19,680 = 16 ? = 765 = 1,230 (c) Total expenses = 14% of sales (d) Gross profit − Expenses = Net profit (e) Cost of goods sold = Inventory turnover Average inventory So, by arithmetical deduction Answer to Question 34.6A (a) Mark-up therefore 1 3 (b) BA 1 Margin 1 1 = (see text) = 25% 3+1 4 14,500 100 × = 24.166% 60,000 1 (c) Such as: wastage; pilferage; sales at reduced prices; incorrect inventory valuation; arithmetical errors on selling prices. (d) Trading Account for the year ending 31 December 2009 Sales Less: Cost of goods sold Inventory 1 January 2009 Add: Purchases (47,000 + 5%) Less: Inventory 31 December 2009 (4,500 + 5%) Gross profit (e) 60,000 3,000 49,350 52,350 4,725 47,625 12,375 45,500 45,500 = = 12.133 times (3,000 + 4,500) ÷ 2 3,750 (f ) Gross profit 14,500 − Expenses (10% of 60,000) 6,000 = Net profit 8,500. (g) Amended net profit: Gross profit 12,375 − Expenses 6,000 = 6,375 Reduction compared with (f ) 8,500 − 6,375 = 2,125 As a percentage of (f ) 2,125 100 × = 25% 8,500 1 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 55 Answer to Question 34.8A BA 1 (a) Bank transactions Opening balance Add Receipts 3,063 1,467 4,530 Less Payments: Rent Adverts Miscellaneous Drawings 60 66 12 150 288 4,242 (b) Closing inventory A: (3 + 12 − 11) ⇒ 4 × 54 = B: (3 + 10 − 8) ⇒ 5 × 48 = 216 240 456 Arthur is correct (c) Gross profit A: (81 − 54) × 11 = B: (72 − 48) × 8 = Net profit 489 − (60 + 66 + 12) = (d) Sales (11 × 81) + (8 × 72) Opening inventory Purchases 297 192 489 = 33.33% 351 = 23.9 % Arthur Income Statement for the month ending 31 October 1,467 306 1,128 1,434 456 Closing inventory 978 489 Gross profit Less Expenses: Rent Advertising Miscellaneous 60 66 12 138 351 Net profit Balance Sheet as at 31 October Current assets Inventory Bank Current liabilities Raleigh 456 4,242 4,698 1,128 3,570 Capital account Opening balance Add Net profit Less Drawings 3,369 351 3,720 150 3,570 (e) Profit of £351 Drawings Increase in Inventory Increase in Bank Increase in Accounts payable 56 150 150 1,179 (1,128) 351 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 35.3A BA 1 Opening Capital: 31 October 2003 Cash Bank Fixtures Inventory Accounts receivable Motor van Less Creditors 210 4,700 2,800 18,200 26,600 6,800 59,310 12,700 46,610 B Barnes Statement of Affairs as at 31 October 2004 Non-current assets Motor van Less Depreciation Fixtures Less Depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Prepaid expenses Cash Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Expenses owing Bank overdraft 6,800 1,360 3,700 370 23,900 29,400 460 190 5,440 3,330 8,770 53,950 62,720 9,100 320 1,810 11,230 51,490 Financed by: Capital Balance at 31 October 2003 Add Net profit Add Cash introduced 44,610 (C) 7,600 (B) Less Drawings 32,200 (A) Missing figures deduced: (A) 51,490 (B) 83,690 (C) 31,480. Answer to Question 35.5A BA 1 Workings: Balance b/d Receipts from debtors Cash sales Loan from F Tung Bank Cash 194 Bank 920 94,200 1,540 2,500 12,600 14,334 Cash Cash Trade accounts payable Rent Insurance Drawings* Sundry expenses Balance c/d 97,620 1,310 xxx 180 272 14,334 Bank 12,600 63,400 3,200 1,900 11,400 820 4,300 97,620 * Figure for drawings is that needed to make cash columns balance, i.e. 12,572. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 57 Capital at 31 December 2007 Bank 920 Cash 194 Inventory 24,200 Accounts receivable 9,200 Insurance prepaid 340 Motor van 5,500 40,354 Less Accounts payable 7,300 33,054 Purchases Bank Cash − Opening Crs + Closing Crs 63,400 1,310 64,710 7,300 57,410 8,100 65,510 Sales Bank Cash − Opening Drs + Closing Drs 94,200 1,540 95,740 9,200 86,540 11,400 97,940 A Bell Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2008 Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases 97,940 24,200 65,510 89,710 27,100 Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Rent (3,200 + 360) Insurance (1,900 + 340 − 400) Sundry expenses (820 + 180) Depreciation: motor van Net profit 3,560 1,840 1,000 900 62,610 35,330 7,300 28,030 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2008 Non-current assets Motor van Less depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Prepayments Bank Cash Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Rent owing Non-current liabilities Loan – F Tung 5,500 900 27,100 11,400 400 4,300 272 8,100 360 43,472 48,072 8,460 2,500 Capital Balance at 1 January 2008 Add Net profit Less Drawings (12,572 + 11,400) 58 4,600 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 10,960 37,112 33,054 28,030 61,084 23,972 37,112 Answer to Question 35.7A (a) (i) Balance b/d Credit sales (difference) BA 1 Accounts Receivable Control 2,643 Bank 46,215 Balance c/d 48,858 44,846 4,012 48,858 Total sales = credit 46,215 + cash 3,921 = 50,136 Accounts Payable Control 22,177 Balance b/d 2,445 Purchases (difference) 24,622 Bank Balance c/d 1,598 23,024 24,622 Total purchases = 23,024 + table 300 = 23,324 (ii) Bill Smithson Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2009 Sales Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Electricity Telephone Rent Advertising Insurance (946 − 177) Motor expenses (2,116 − 432 + 291) Depreciation: Motor Fittings Net profit 50,136 3,210 23,324 26,534 4,063 1,090 360 2,000 1,430 769 1,975 1,020 620 (b) Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2009 Non-current assets Fittings (4,200 + 2,550 − 300 − 250) Less Depreciation Motor Less Depreciation 6,200 620 5,100 1,020 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Prepayment Bank 4,063 4,012 177 1,775 Current liabilities Accounts payable Expenses owing 2,445 291 Capital Balance at 1.4.2008 Add Net profit Less Drawings (16,743 + shelving 250) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 22,471 27,665 9,264 18,401 5,580 4,080 9,660 10,027 19,687 2,736 16,951 15,543 18,401 33,944 16,993 16,951 59 Answer to Question 35.9A BA 1 Jean Smith Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2006 Sales Less Cost of sales: Purchases (26,400 + 120 + 880) Less Closing inventory Gross profit 50% × (50,400 − 600) Less Expenses: Wages Rent (3,500 − 700) Rates Electricity (760 + 180) Postages, stationery and sundries Van running expenses Van licence and insurance (250 − 125) Van depreciation Loan interest Net profit 50,400 27,400 1,900 14,700 2,800 1,200 940 355 890 125 750 125 25,500 24,900 21,885 3,015 Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2006 Non-current assets Motor van at cost Less Provision for depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Prepayments (125 + 700) Bank (W1) Cash 7,600 750 1,900 2,300 825 4,310 640 Less Current liabilities Accounts payable Accrued expenses (125 + 180) Non-current liabilities Loan from John Peacock Capital: Balance as at 1 April 2005 Add Net profit 880 305 1,185 10,000 Cash 60 Bank 15,000 10,000 42,340 48,100 48,100 9,975 16,825 11,185 5,640 15,000 3,015 18,015 12,375 5,640 Less Drawings (3,875 (W1) + 8,500) (W1) Capital Loan: J Peacock Bankings 42,000 + 340 Cash sales 50,400 − 2,300 6,850 67,340 Van running expenses Van licence and insurance Van Caravan Wages Rates Rent Electricity Purchases (26,400 + 120) Postages, etc Bankings Drawings (difference) Balances c/d Cash 890 Bank 250 7,600 8,500 14,700 1,200 3,500 760 26,520 355 42,340 3,875 640 48,100 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 4,310 67,340 Answer to Question 35.13A (a) BA 1 P Maclaran Capital Account on 1 January 2008 Bank Cash Inventory Machinery Accounts receivable 6,000 60 2,300 9,800 8,100 26,260 Less: Accruals Accounts payable Loan 150 5,700 7,000 12,850 13,410 P Maclaran Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2008 Sales Less: Sales returns 47,700 640 47,060 Less: Cost of sales Opening inventory at 1 January 2008 Add: Purchases Less: Withdrawn by the owner Less: Closing inventory at 31 December 2008 2,300 30,700 33,000 1,200 5,400 6,600 26,400 20,660 600 21,260 Gross profit Add: Discount received Less: Expenses Rent Bad debts written off Wages Insurance Loan interest Depreciation Repairs Electricity 850 240 9,200 850 700 2,800 1,400 570 16,610 4,650 Net profit Workings: Sales: 35,000 − 80 + 9,700 + 240 − 8,100 + 9,200 + 640 + 1,100 = 47,700. Purchases: 31,000 − 5,700 + 4,800 + 600 = 30,700. Depreciation: 9,800 + 3,400 − 10,400 = 2,800. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 61 Answer to Question 35.14A BA 1 P Maclaran Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2008 Non-current Assets Machinery at 1 January 2008 Add: Additions 9,800 3,400 13,200 2,800 Less: Depreciation 10,400 Current assets Inventory Accounts recevivable Prepayments Cash 5,400 9,200 100 90 Current liabilities Accounts payable Bank overdraft 4,800 2,930 7,730 200 7,930 7,000 Accrued charges: Loan interest Non-current liabilities Bank loan 10% Capital Account Balance at 1 January 2008 Add: Net profit 14,790 25,190 14,930 10,260 13,410 4,650 18,060 7,800 Less: Drawings 10,260 Answer to Question 36.2A BA 1 The Shire Golf Club (a) Bar Trading Account for the year ending 31 December 2003 Sales Less Cost of supplies sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Closing inventory Gross profit Wages of bar staff Profit to income & expenditure 84,600 9,400 41,300 50,700 6,410 (c) Income and Expenditure Account for the year ending 31 December 2003 Income Subscriptions (183,400 − 1,870) Profit on bar Profits from raffles Less Expenditure: Golf professional’s salary Greenkeeper’s wages General expenses Depreciation of equipment Surplus of income over expenditure 62 37,000 21,500 910 2,400 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 44,290 40,310 29,200 11,110 181,530 11,110 6,508 199,148 61,810 137,338 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2003 Non-current assets Clubhouse Equipment Less Depreciation 142,000 18,600 2,400 Current assets Bar inventory Bank 6,410 3,924 Current liabilities Subscriptions received in advance (a) 10,334 168,534 1,870 166,664 (b) Financed by: Accumulated fund Balance at 1 January 2003 Add Surplus of income over expenditure Answer to Question 36.4A 16,200 158,200 29,326 137,338 166,664 BA 1 Plumpton Leisure Centre Trading Account for the year ending 31 December 2004 Takings Less Cost of supplies Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Closing inventory Gross profit Wages Profit to income and expenditure 16,290 680 4,320 5,000 920 (c) Income and Expenditure Account for the year ending 31 December 2004 Income Subscriptions (45,060 + 860) Refreshment bar profit Profits from dances Profit on exhibition Less Expenditure Wages (31,400 − 4,680) Rent of building Travelling expenses of teams Depreciation of equipment Loss on equipment sold Surplus of income over expenditure 26,720 8,700 1,900 5,200 80 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 4,080 12,210 4,680 7,530 45,920 7,530 4,116 890 58,456 42,600 15,856 63 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2004 Non-current assets Equipment (32,400 − 420 + 18,200) Less Depreciation Current assets Refreshment bar inventory Accounts receivable for subscriptions Bank 50,180 5,200 920 860 6,076 Financed by: Accumulated fund Balance at 1 January 2004* Add Surplus for the year 44,980 7,856 52,836 36,980 15,856 52,836 * 1 January 2004 Equipment 32,400 + Inventory 680 + Bank 3,900 = 36,980. Answer to Question 36.6A (a) Cash in hand Subscriptions in arrears Savings account BA 1 Milham Theatre Club Accumulated Fund as at 1 February 2007 Less Bank overdraft Coach hire owing (b) Theatre Trips Account Income: For theatre tickets For coach travel Less Expenses for theatre tickets For coach travel (1,540 − 60) Deficit to income and expenditure account 80 150 1,950 2,180 180 60 240 2,720 1,240 3,120 1,480 (c) Income and Expenditure Account for the year ending 31 January 2008 Income: Subscriptions (1,620 + 75) Savings account interest Less Expenditure: Secretarial and administrative expenses Subscription arrears written off Deficit on theatre trips Surplus of income over expenditure (d) (Extracts) Balance Sheet as at 31 January 2008 Accumulated fund: Balance at 1 February 2007 Add Surplus for the year Add Gift from member Current liabilities Subscriptions received in advance (e) 1 2 3 4 64 1,940 1,125 1,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 3,960 4,600 640 1,695 155 1,850 55 30 640 Increase number of members. Make all subscriptions payable in advance. Charge more for coach travel. Charge more for theatre tickets. 1,940 725 1,125 4,065 165 Answer to Question 37.3A BA 1 J Jones Manufacturing Account and Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2006 Inventory of raw materials at 1.1.2006 21,000 Add: Purchases 258,000 279,000 Less: Inventory of raw materials at 31.12.2006 25,000 Cost of raw materials consumed 254,000 Factory wages 59,000 Prime cost 313,000 Indirect manufacturing costs Fuel and Light 20,000 Rent and business rates 12,000 Repairs to plant and machinery 9,000 Depreciation – plant and machinery 8,000 49,000 362,000 Add: Work in progress at 1.1.2006 14,000 376,000 Less: Work in progress at 31.12.2006 11,000 Production cost of goods completed 365,000 Sales 482,000 Less: Returns inward 7,000 475,000 Less: Cost of goods sold Inventory of finished goods at 1.1.2006 23,000 Add: Production cost of goods completed 365,000 388,000 Less: Inventory of finished goods at 31.12.2006 26,000 362,000 Gross profit 113,000 Less: Expenses Administration expenses Fuel 5,000 Salaries 17,000 Rent and business rates 4,000 Office expenses 9,000 35,000 Selling and distribution expenses Carriage outwards 4,000 Financial charges Allowance for doubtful debts 1,000 40,000 Net profit 73,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 65 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2006 Non-current assets Premises Plant and machinery 410,000 64,000 474,000 Current assets Inventory – raw materials work in progress finished goods 25,000 11,000 26,000 Accounts receivable Prepayments Bank 62,000 19,000 5,000 11,000 Current liabilities Accounts payable Accrual 37,000 4,000 97,000 571,000 41,000 530,000 Capital account Opening balance Add: Net profit 457,000 73,000 530,000 Answer to Question 37.6A BA 1 Manufacturing Account and Trading Account part of the Income Statement for the 3 months ending 31 March 2002 Inventory of raw materials at 1.1.2002 10,500 Add: Purchases 27,200 Carriage in 700 38,400 Less: Inventory of raw materials at 31.12.2002 10,200 (a) Cost of raw materials used in production 28,200 Add: Direct factory wages 72,600 (b) Prime cost 100,800 Indirect manufacturing costs: Factory wages 13,900 Rent and business rates 1,200 Power 2,000 Repairs 1,300 Sundry expenses 900 Depreciation – machinery 3,900 23,200 124,000 Add: Work in progress at 1.1.2002 2,400 126,400 Less: Work in progress at 31.3.2002 2,900 (c) Production cost of goods completed 123,500 Sales 160,400 Less: Cost of goods sold Inventory of finished goods at 1.1.2002 14,300 Production cost of goods completed 123,500 137,800 Less: Inventory of finished goods at 31.3.2002 13,200 (d) Cost of goods sold 124,600 (e) Gross profit 35,800 66 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 37.9A BA 1 (a) Jean Marsh Manufacturing Account for the year ending 31 December 2009 Cost of raw materials consumed: Inventory of raw materials at 1.1.2009 3,400 Add Purchases 18,000 Carriage inwards 800 22,200 Less Inventory of raw materials 31.12.2009 2,900 Factory wages Prime cost Factory overhead expenses: General expenses 1,200 Lighting 4/5 2,000 Rent 4/5 3,000 Insurance 3/4 600 Depreciation of plant and machinery 1,500 Factory cost of production c/d (b) Trading Account part of the Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2009 Sales Less Cost of sales of finished goods: Opening inventory 6,100 Add Factory cost of production b/d 46,100 52,200 Less Closing inventory 8,200 Gross profit c/d 19,300 18,500 37,800 8,300 46,100 90,000 44,000 46,000 (c) Profit and Loss Account part of the Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2009 Gross profit b/d 46,000 Add Discount received 1,600 47,600 Less Administrative costs: Office salaries 16,900 General expenses 825 Lighting 1/5 500 Rent 1/5 750 Insurance 1/4 200 19,175 Selling costs: Jean Marsh: Salary and expenses 10,400 Depreciation of car 500 Advertising 1,400 Bad debts 650 Carriage outwards 375 13,325 32,500 Net profit after proprietor’s salary 15,100 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 67 (d) Non-current assets Plant and machinery Less Depreciation for year Motor vehicle Less Depreciation Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2009 9,100 1,500 4,200 500 Current assets Inventory: Raw materials Finished goods Accounts receivable Prepayments Bank Cash 2,900 8,200 7,700 150 3,600 325 Current liabilities Accounts payable Expenses owing 6,000 75 7,600 3,700 11,300 22,875 34,175 6,075 28,100 Financed by: Capital Balance at 1 January 2009 Add Net profit after salary 15,000 15,100 30,100 2,000 28,100 Less Drawings Answer to Question 38.3A BA 1 Jack’s Superstores Departmental Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2005 A B C Sales 180,000 138,000 82,000 Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory 27,100 21,410 17,060 Add Purchases 101,300 81,200 62,900 128,400 102,610 79,960 Less Closing inventory 23,590 104,810 15,360 87,250 18,200 61,760 Gross profits 75,190 50,750 20,240 Add Discounts received 1,013 812 629 Less Expenses: 76,203 51,562 20,869 Salaries and wages 45,600 30,400 15,200 Rent and rates 3,100 3,100 3,100 Delivery expenses 1,620 1,242 738 Commission 4,500 3,450 2,050 Insurance 900 600 300 Advertising 769 769 769 Administration expenses 6,600 6,600 6,600 Depreciation 1,400 64,489 1,400 47,561 1,400 30,157 Net profits/(losses) 11,714 4,001 ( 9,288) 68 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 39.2A BA 1 Gerry Peace Statement of Cash Flows for the year ending 31 December 2003 Operating activities Profit from operations Adjustments for: Depreciation (fixtures 200 + van 2,020) Operating cash flows before movements in working capital Increase in inventory Increase in accounts receivable Decrease in accounts payable 21,160 2,220 23,380 (6,800) (1,800) (3,294) (11,894) 11,486 Cash generated by operations Tax paid Interest paid Net cash from operating activities Investing activities Payments to acquire tangible non-current assets (5,000 + 400) Net cash used in investing activities Financing activities Loan received Capital introduced Drawings Net cash used in financing activities Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year (900 + 220) – – – 11,486 (5,900) (5,900) 5,000 10,000 (21,600) Cash and cash equivalents at end of year Bank balances and cash ((94) + 200) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (6,600) (1,014) 1,120 106 106 69 Answer to Question 39.5A BA 1 K Rock Statement of Cash Flows for the year ending 30 June 2009 Operating activities Profit from operations Adjustments for: Depreciation (5,200 + 6,300) Loss on sale of tangible non-current assets Reduction in allowance for doubtful debts 51,000 11,500 1,600 ( 200) 12,900 63,900 Operating cash flows before movements in working capital Increase in inventory Increase in accounts payable Decrease in accounts receivable (2,900) 3,200 1,600 1,900 65,800 Cash generated by operations Tax paid Interest paid Net cash from operating activities Investing activities Payments to acquire tangible non-current assets Receipts from sale of tangible non-current assets Net cash used in investing activities Financing activities Loan repaid to T Pine Drawings Net cash used in financing activities Net increase in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year – – (18,100) 15,800 (2,300) (10,000) (38,000) (48,000) 15,500 12,600 28,100 Cash and cash equivalents at end of year Bank balances and cash Answer to Question 40.2A 28,100 BA 1 (i) Memorandum Joint Venture Account for Frank and Graham Mowers purchased 135,260 Sales Carriage 404 Frank: Mowers taken over Net Profit: Frank 1/2 14,063 Graham 1/2 14,063 28,126 163,790 (ii) Mowers purchased Carriage Bank: Graham Profit and loss Balance c/d Bank: to Graham Mowers purchased Carriage Bank: Frank Profit and loss Balance b/d 70 – 65,800 (Frank’s books) Joint Venture with Graham 120,400 Bank 320 Mowers taken over 50,000 Sales 14,063 29,807 214,590 29,807 Balance b/d (Graham’s books) Joint Venture with Frank 14,860 Bank 84 Sales 70,000 Balance c/d 14,063 99,007 29,807 Bank: to Frank Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 123,790 40,000 163,790 70,000 40,000 104,590 214,590 29,807 50,000 19,200 29,807 99,007 29,807 Answer to Question 40.4A BA 1 Memorandum Joint Venture Account for Rock, Hill and Pine Paintings (8,000 + 17,000 + 1,700) 26,700 Sales (31,410 + 4,220 + 2,300) Lighting and heating 86 Goods taken over Rent 2,100 Sale of van Van 2,200 Use of Pine’s van 600 General expenses 1,090 Net profit: Rock 3/8 4,895 Hill 1/2 6,527 Pine 1/8 1,632 13,054 45,830 37,930 6,200 1,700 45,830 (Rock’s Books) Joint Venture with Hill and Pine 2,100 Sale of van 17,000 Balance c/d 545 4,895 24,540 Rent Paintings General expenses Profit and loss Balance b/d 22,840 1,700 22,840 24,540 Cash: from Pine 22,840 (Hill’s Books) Joint Venture with Rock and Pine 2,200 Sales 8,000 Good taken over 6,527 Balance c/d 16,727 Van Paintings Profit and loss Balance b/d 6,307 4,220 6,200 6,307 16,727 Cash: from Pine 6,307 (Pine’s Books) Joint Venture with Rock and Hill 600 Sales 86 Sales 1,700 545 1,632 29,147 33,710 Use of van Lighting Paintings General expenses Profit and loss Balance c/d Cash: to Rock Cash: to Hill 22,840 6,307 29,147 Answer to Question 41.2A 31,410 2,300 33,710 Balance b/d 29,147 29,147 BA 1 Gray, Wilkes and Booth Appropriation Account for the year ending 31 December 2003 Net profit Less: Salaries – Wilkes Booth Interest on capital Gray Wilkes Booth Share of profit Gray 3/8 Wilkes 3/8 Booth 1/4 84,800 32,000 14,000 46,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 6,000 12,300 12,300 8,200 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 52,000 32,800 32,800 71 Answer to Question 41.5A BA 1 Cole, Knox and Lamb Appropriation Account for the year ending 31 December 2005 Net Profit Add: Interest on drawings Cole Knox Lamb 184,800 1,200 900 500 2,600 187,400 Less: Salaries Knox Lamb Interest on capital Cole Knox Lamb 22,000 28,000 50,000 3,600 2,700 2,100 8,400 Balance of profit shared: Cole 55% Knox 25% Lamb 20% 58,400 129,000 70,950 32,250 25,800 129,000 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2005 (extract) 60,000 45,000 35,000 Capital: Cole Knox Lamb 140,000 Current accounts Balances at 1.1.2005 Add: Salaries Interest on capital Share of profit Cole 18,000 – 3,600 70,950 92,550 (27,000) ( 1,200) 64,350 Less: Drawings Interest on drawings Answer to Question 41.6A Knox 8,000 22,000 2,700 32,250 64,950 (23,000) ( 900) 41,050 Lamb 6,000 28,000 2,100 25,800 61,900 (17,000) ( 500) 44,400 149,800 BA 1 (a) (i) Penrose and Wilcox Profit and Loss Appropriation Account for the year ending 31 December 2009 Net profit brought down Add Interest on drawings: Penrose 270 Wilcox 180 Less Salary: Penrose Interest on capital: Penrose Wilcox Balance b/d Interest on drawings Drawings Balances c/d Current Accounts (dates omitted) Penrose Wilcox 640 Balance b/d 270 180 Interest on capital 3,000 2,000 Salary 1,030 470 Share of profit 4,940 2,650 540 720 1,260 3,260 4,000 2,400 1,600 4,000 4,000 Penrose Wilcox 330 720 540 2,000 2,400 4,940 (b) Shows easily whether original investment is growing or declining. (c) He had taken out more in drawings than he was entitled to as share of profit. (d) (i) To calculate net profit. (ii) To show how net profits are divided between the partners. (e) (i) To compensate one partner for having contributed more as capital than another. (ii) To provide deterrent if partners take out more in drawings than they need to. 72 450 7,260 2,000 Balance of profit shared: Penrose 3/5 Wilcox 2/5 (ii) 6,810 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,600 2,650 Answer to Question 41.7A (a) Net profit Add: Interest on drawings A B BA 1 Profit and Loss Appropriation Account 25,800 400 300 700 26,500 4,500 22,000 Less: Salary – B Less: Interest on capital A B 1,500 500 2,000 20,000 Less: Share of Profit A B 12,000 8,000 20,000 – Partners’ Current Accounts (b) A ( 500) 1,500 1,000 – 12,000 13,000 ( 400) 12,600 (12,000) 600 Opening balance Add: Interest on capital Add: Salary Share of profit Less: Interest on drawings Less: Drawings Closing balance Answer to Question 41.10A B 1,280 500 1,780 4,500 8,000 14,280 ( 300) 13,980 (15,000) ( 1,020) BA 1 Scot and Joplin: Income Statement and Profit and Loss Appropriation Account for the year ending 31 December 2007 Sales 180,400 Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory 38,410 Add Purchases 136,680 175,090 Less Closing inventory 41,312 133,778 Gross profit 46,622 Less Expenses: Salaries 27,400 Office expenses (2,130 + 240) 2,370 Discounts allowed 312 Depreciation: Motors 5,350 Office equipment 1,840 7,190 37,272 Net profit 9,350 Add Interest on drawings: Scot 300 Joplin 200 500 9,850 Less Interest on capital: Scot 2,500 Joplin 1,000 3,500 6,350 Balance of profit shared: Scot 70% 4,445 Joplin 30% 1,905 6,350 – Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 73 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2007 Cost 9,200 21,400 30,600 Non-current assets Office equipment Motor vehicles Depreciation 5,440 18,150 23,590 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash 3,760 3,250 7,010 41,312 41,940 2,118 317 85,687 Less Current liabilities Accounts payable Expenses owing 32,216 240 32,456 Capitals Scot Joplin 50,000 20,000 Current accounts Balance 1.1.2007 Add Interest on capital Add Share of profits Scot 7,382 2,500 4,445 14,327 Less Drawings Less Interest on drawings 17,500 300 Answer to Question 41.12A 17,800 ( 3,473) 53,231 60,241 70,000 Joplin 7,009 1,000 1,905 9,914 16,000 200 16,200 ( 6,286) ( 9,759) 60,241 BA 1 Bush, Home and Wilson Income Statement for the year ending 30 April 2004 Sales Less Returns inwards Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Carriage inwards Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Salaries and wages Discounts allowed Business rates (2,900 − 200) Postages (845 – 68) Bad debts Allowance for doubtful debts General expenses Depreciation: Computers Office equipment Net profit Add Interest on drawings: Bush Home Wilson Less Salaries: Home Wilson Interest on capital: Bush Home Wilson Balance of profit shared: Bush 1/2 Home 1/8 Wilson 3/8 74 334,618 10,200 324,418 68,127 196,239 3,100 199,339 267,466 74,223 193,243 131,175 54,117 190 2,700 777 1,620 450 1,017 2,800 1,100 3,900 300 200 240 18,000 14,000 4,800 800 2,400 64,771 66,404 740 67,144 32,000 8,000 13,572 3,393 10,179 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 40,000 27,144 27,144 – Balance Sheet as at 30 April 2004 Cost 5,700 8,400 14,100 Non-current assets Office equipment Computers Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Less Allowance for doubtful debts Prepayments (200 + 68) Bank Depreciation 4,000 6,400 10,400 74,223 51,320 1,400 49,920 268 5,214 Current liabilities Accounts payable 129,625 133,325 36,480 96,845 Financed by: Capital: Bush Home Wilson 60,000 10,000 30,000 Current accounts: Balances 1.5.2003 Add Salaries Interest on capital Share of profit Bush 5,940 – 4,800 13,572 24,312 (39,000) ( 300) (14,988) Less Drawings Interest on drawings Answer to Question 42.2A Home (2,117) 18,000 800 3,393 20,076 (16,000) ( 200) 3,876 Wilson 9,618 14,000 2,400 10,179 36,197 (28,000) ( 240) 7,957 100,000 ( 3,155) 96,845 BA 1 Balance Sheet as at 1 October 2002 (a) Goodwill Other assets 72,000 180,000 252,000 Capitals Mack (30,000 + 7,200) Burns (70,000 + 28,800) Flint (35,000 + 14,400) Tonks (45,000 + 21,600) (b) Before Mack 1/10 Burns 2/5 Flint 1/5 Tonks 3/10 1,700 2,000 3,700 37,200 98,800 49,400 66,600 252,000 After 1 /5 3 /10 2 /5 1 /10 14,400 21,600 28,800 7,200 72,000 Loss or gain Gain 7,200 Loss 7,200 Gain 14,400 Loss 14,400 Action needed Debit Mack 7,200 Credit Burns 7,200 Debit Flint 14,400 Credit Tonks 14,400 Balance Sheet as at 1 October 2002 Net assets 180,000 180,000 Capitals Mack (30,000 − 7,200) Burns (70,000 + 7,200) Flint (35,000 − 14,400) Tonks (45,000 + 14,400) 22,800 77,200 20,600 59,400 180,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 75 Answer to Question 42.4A Share old goodwill 10,000 30,000 20,000 − 60,000 (a) Blunt 1/6 Dodds 1/2 Fuller 1/3 Baxter BA 1 1 /3 /12 1 /6 1 /12 5 Share new goodwill 20,000 25,000 10,000 5,000 60,000 Capital Accounts Fuller Baxter Balances b/d 10,000 5,000 Adjustment for goodwill 4,000 29,400 30,400 19,000 Cash 14,000 29,400 30,400 24,000 Blunt Dodds Adjustment for goodwill Balances c/d Action: Capital accounts Dr Capital 10,000 Cr Capital 5,000 Cr Capital 10,000 Dr Capital 5,000 Blunt Dodds Fuller Baxter 14,000 24,400 20,400 − 5,000 10,000 24,000 14,000 29,400 30,400 24,000 Balance Sheet (b) Other assets Cash 66,000 25,200 91,200 ( 8,400) 82,800 Accounts payable Capitals Blunt Dodds Fuller Baxter 4,000 29,400 30,400 19,000 82,800 Answer to Question 43.2A BA 1 (a) (i) Balance b/d Goodwill 12,400 Revaluation (ii) Goodwill Inventory Revaluation 12,400 Plant and machinery 320 Loss on revaluation Fitch 5/8 Wall 3/8 12,720 (iii) Loss on revaluation Balances c/d 76 Capitals Fitch Wall Home 7,650 4,590 Balances b/d 11,811 9,887 12,000 Cash 19,461 14,477 12,000 12,400 480 7,650 4,590 Fitch Wall 19,461 14,477 12,240 12,720 Home 12,000 19,461 14,477 12,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Balance Sheet (b) Non-current assets Plant and machinery at valuation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 16,800 6,100 4,100 16,626 22,826 38,626 Less Current liabilities Accounts payable 5,928 33,698 Capitals Fitch Wall Home 11,811 9,887 12,000 Answer to Question 43.4A BA 1 (a) Buildings Goodwill Fittings Inventory Accounts receivable Accrued expenses A Barnes C Darwin (b) 33,698 Dr 4,000 12,000 Cr 2,000 500 200 300 7,800 5,200 A Barnes, C Darwin and E Fox Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2008 Non-current assets Goodwill Buildings Fittings Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Current liabilities Accounts payable Accruals 12,000 55,000 27,000 94,000 15,500 4,800 22,000 42,300 136,300 8,000 300 8,300 128,000 Capital accounts A Barnes C Darwin E Fox (c) A Barnes C Darwin E Fox Goodwill 67,800 35,200 25,000 128,000 Dr 6,000 4,000 2,000 Cr 12,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 77 Answer to Question 44.3A BA 1 Gain and Main Profit and Loss Appropriation Account for the year ending 31 March 2008 Net profit b/d Less Salary: Main Interest on capital: Gain Main Balance of profit Shared: Gain Main 26,250 9,750 1,000 500 9,000 6,000 Gain Balance b/d Realisation: Car taken over Plain Ltd: Shares Bank: to settle 1,000 24,000 25,000 Fixtures Land and buildings Motors Inventory Accounts receivable Profit on realisation: Gain Main 1,500 1,380 920 Current Accounts Main 2,000 Balance b/d Capitals transferred P&L appropriation: 16,000 Salary 4,170 Interest Share of profit Realisation profit shared Bank: to settle 22,170 Gain 1,000 10,000 1,000 9,000 1,380 2,620 25,000 11,250 15,000 15,000 Main 5,000 9,750 500 6,000 920 22,170 Realisation 2,000 Accounts payable 30,000 Depreciation: Fixtures 4,500 Motors 3,000 Gain: Car taken over 2,000 Plain Ltd: Purchase price 500 1,000 1,300 1,000 40,000 2,300 43,800 43,800 Bank Balance b/d Gain: to settle Realisation 78 1,550 2,620 4,170 Main: to settle Plain Ltd 40,000 Gain Main 40,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 4,170 4,170 24,000 16,000 40,000 Answer to Question 44.4A BA 1 (a) (Narratives omitted) Realisation Freehold premises Equipment and machinery Cars Inventory Dr 44,000 CNO Ltd Realisation 58,000 Cash Preference shares in CNO Ltd Ordinary shares in CNO Ltd CNO Ltd 10,000 12,000 36,000 Accounts payable Bank Realisation (discount) 10,000 Cash Realisation (bad debts 800, discounts 400) Accounts receivable 12,800 1,200 Realisation (profit) Capitals 12,990 Cr 18,000 12,000 3,000 11,000 58,000 58,000 9,810 190 14,000 A 2/5 B 2/5 C 1/5 5,196 5,196 2,598 Capitals A B C Preference shares in CNO Ltd Capitals A B C Ordinary shares in CNO Ltd Loan Cash A Capitals A B C 4,800 4,800 2,400 12,000 14,400 14,400 7,200 36,000 7,000 7,000 7,996 3,996 2,998 Cash 14,990 (b) The partners will receive the following shares, the shares being split in profit sharing ratio: A B C Ordinary 11,520 11,520 5,760 28,800 Preference 4,800 4,800 2,400 12,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 79 Answer to Question 44.6A BA 1 (a) (All in £000) Furniture: decrease (12 − 5) Motors: decrease 20 − (10 + 4) Inventory written off Bad debt written off Doubtful debts provision: increase (42 − 2) × 5% − 1 Office expenses accrued Dissolution costs Capitals: Proudie 3/5 9 Slope 1/5 3 Thorne 1/5 3 (b) Proudie Motor 4 Goodwill written off (W1) Cash 8 Loan a/c: transfer 219 Balances c/d 231 (W1) Slope 45 28 73 Revaluation 7 Land and buildings: 6 increase (200 − 160) 5 2 40 1 3 1 15 40 Capitals Thorne Balances b/d 45 Current a/cs Revaluation Loan 6 Goodwill share (W1) 51 40 Proudie 100 24 9 8 90 231 Slope 60 10 3 Thorne 40 8 3 73 51 Goodwill: Profits 130 + 150 + 181 Less Stock reduction Bad debt written off Increase in allowance for doubtful debts Office expenses accrued 461 5 2 1 3 11 450 Average profit 450 ÷ 3 = 150; Proudie’s share 150 × 3/5 = 90 Split equally between Slope and Proudie. (c) Slope and Thorne Balance Sheet as at 1 June 2009 Non-current assets Land and buildings Furniture Motor vehicles Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Less Allowance for doubtful debts Prepaid expenses Cash Current liabilities Accounts payable Accrued expenses (3 + 1 + 3) 200 5 10 215 18 40 2 15 7 Non-current liabilities Loan – Proudie Capitals: Slope Thorne 80 38 2 2 60 275 22 219 241 34 28 6 34 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 44.8A BA 1 (All answers shown in £000) (a) (i) Grant and Herd Profit and Loss Appropriation Account for the year ending 31.12.2008 Net profit for the year Add Interest on drawings: Grant (40 × 10% × 1/2) Herd (40 × 10% × 3/4) Less Salary: Herd Interest on capital: Grant Herd 2 3 5 65 20 Balance of profit: Grant 3/5 Herd 2/5 (ii) Grant Salary paid Drawings Interest on drawings Car Shares in Valley Bank 60 40 2 10 300 65 417 20 15 10 25 65 Grant 300 − 15 15 87 Herd 100 20 5 10 58 60 253 Capitals Herd 10 Balances b/d 40 Salary 3 Interest on capital Share of profit 200 Realisation Bank 253 (iii) Non-current assets Inventory Accounts receivable and prepayments Trade accounts receivable Profit on realisation to capitals: Grant 3/5 Herd 2/5 (b) 15 5 417 Realisation 300 Depreciation 90 Trade accounts payable 18 Accounts payable and accruals 223 Grant: Car 87 58 776 100 141 25 10 Valley Ltd: Consideration (400,000 × 1.25) 500 776 Valley Ltd Balance Sheet as at 1 January 2009 Non-current assets at cost Intangible asset: Goodwill Tangible assets (300 − 100 − 10) 145 190 335 Current assets Inventory Trade accounts receivable Other accounts receivable and prepayments 90 223 18 Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Other accounts payable and accruals 141 25 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Share premium Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 331 666 166 500 400 100 500 81 Answer to Question 45.5A BA 1 Developing Limited Statement of Changes in Equity (extract) for 2004 (£000s) Retained General Profits Reserve Opening balance 3 7 Retained profits for the year 27 – Transferred to General Reserve (10) 10 Closing balance 20 17 Share Premium 4 – 4 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2004 (£000s) Non-current assets Current assets 140 50 190 19 171 20 151 Less: Current liabilities – Accounts payable Less: Non-current liabilities – Loan notes Authorised 100 50 150 Share capital Ordinary shares of 50p each 10% Preference shares of £1 each Reserves Share premium General reserve Retained profits Issued 80 30 110 4 17 20 41 151 Answer to Question 45.7A (a) BA 1 Budgie Ltd Balance Sheet as at . . . (£000s) Non-current assets Cost Less: Accumulated depreciation 160 50 110 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable 40 47 Current liabilities Accounts payable Bank overdraft 45 30 87 197 75 122 Shareholders’ funds Share capital Retained profits 100 22 122 (b) Inventory represents almost half the current assets – the acid test ratio is 0.63:1 compared with the current ratio of 1.16:1 – and, in the absence of any information on industry norms, this level of inventory appears to be too high. If the bank demanded payment of the overdraft, the company would face severe liquidity problems. It should probably try to reduce the level of inventory held and reduce the bank overdraft. 82 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 45.9A BA 1 Tully Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2005 Sales Less Cost of goods sold Opening inventory Purchases 975,600 81,300 623,800 705,100 102,400 Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses Wages Motor expenses Machinery repairs Sundry expenses Depreciation: Premises Machinery Motor vehicles Directors’ remuneration Net loss 602,700 372,900 241,500 4,580 3,600 2,900 13,250 21,820 6,940 42,010 82,600 377,190 4,290 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2005 Non-current assets Premises Machinery Motor vehicles Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Current liabilities Accounts payable Motor expenses owing Cost 265,000 109,100 34,700 408,800 Depn 73,250 63,220 25,140 161,610 102,400 169,600 17,900 289,900 537,090 74,900 280 75,180 461,910 Total assets less current liabilities Capital and reserves Called-up share capital General reserve Retained profits (−4, 290 + 31,200 − 7,500) Net 191,750 45,880 9,560 247,190 375,000 67,500 19,410 86,910 461,910 Note: The proposed dividend will be shown as a note. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 83 Answer to Question 45.11A BA 1 Falta Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 30 April 2005 Sales Less Returns inwards Less Cost of goods sold Opening inventory Add Purchases Add Carriage inwards 880,426 18,400 Less Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses Wages and salaries Rent, business rates and insurance Discounts allowed Debenture interest Depreciation: Equipment Motor vehicles Directors’ remuneration Net profit Non-current assets Equipment Motors Balance Sheet as at 30 April 2005 Cost 225,000 57,200 282,200 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash Current liabilities Expenses owing Loan notes interest Accounts payable Non-current liabilities 8% Loan notes Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Non-current asset replacement reserve General reserve Retained profits (12,411 + 155,040 − (5,000 + 10,000)) 102,994 419,211 1,452 523,657 111,317 123,289 17,042 3,415 3,200 45,000 14,300 88,400 Depreciation 77,600 32,500 98,850 111,317 227,219 4,973 62 412,340 449,686 294,646 155,040 Net 147,400 24,700 172,100 343,571 515,671 6,802 1,600 54,818 63,220 40,000 103,220 412,451 200,000 40,000 20,000 152,451 Note: The proposed dividend will be shown as a note. 84 862,026 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 212,451 412,451 Answer to Question 45.13A BA 1 (a) (Narratives omitted) (i) Accounts payable Accounts receivable Operating profit Accounts receivable Operating profit Suspense (ii) Bank Accounts receivable Operating profit Bank (iii) Operating profit Accounts receivable Allowance for doubtful debts (note 1) Operating profit (iv) Retained profit brought forward Operating profit Inventory Operating profit (v) Suspense (note 2) Operating profit The Journal Dr 10,000 Cr 10,000 1,000 1,000 4,000 4,000 2,000 2,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,140 1,140 1,000 1,000 2,000 2,000 3,000 3,000 Notes: 1 Accounts receivable 200 − 10 (i) − 1 (i) − 2 (ii) − 1 (iii) = 186 (£000) New allowance 1% × 186,000 = 1,860 Reduction in allowance 3,000 − 1,860 = 1,140 2 See note (v) in question. Credit balance on suspense account treated as sales. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 85 (b) Fiddles PLC Income Statement for the year ending . . . Operating profit (note 1) Loan note interest (note 2) Net profit for the year Add Retained profits brought forward from last year Retained profits carried forward to next year 80,140 7,200 72,940 199,000 271,940 Balance Sheet as at . . . Non-current assets Land Buildings Plant and machinery Less Depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Less Allowance for doubtful debts Bank Current liabilities Accounts payable Loan note interest Non-current liabilities 16% Loan notes 100,000 120,000 170,000 120,000 50,000 270,000 192,000 186,000 1,860 184,140 13,000 389,140 659,140 100,000 7,200 107,200 180,000 287,200 371,940 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Retained profits 100,000 271,940 371,940 Notes: 1 80,000 + (iii) 1,140 + (iv) 1,000 + (iv) 2,000 + (v) 3,000 − (i) 1,000 − (i) 4,000 − (ii) 1,000 − (iii) 1,000 = 80,140 2 180,000 × 16% × 3 months = 7,200 3 The proposed dividend will be shown as a note 86 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 46.2A (a) Accounts payable Bank BA 1 Business Purchase 9,000 Premises 50,000 Plant Inventory Accounts receivable Goodwill (difference) 59,000 35,000 6,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 59,000 (b) Balance Sheet at 1 January 2009 Non-current assets Goodwill Premises Plant and machinery, at cost less depreciation Fixtures and fittings, at cost less depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash (4,500 + 300 − 4,000) Total assets Current liabilities Accounts payable Bank overdraft Expenses owing Non-current liabilities Capital: Balance Add Cash introduced Less Loss on plant 4,000 90,000 30,000 4,000 128,000 25,000 15,500 800 41,300 169,300 17,000 15,800 200 33,000 25,000 87,000 25,000 112,000 700 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 58,000 111,300 111,300 87 Answer to Question 47.2A BA 1 (a) Spendlight Easylawn (i) Gross profit as % of sales 430 100 × = 17.2% 2,500 1 430 100 × = 26.9% 1,600 1 (ii) Net profit as % of sales 166 100 × = 6.6% 2,500 1 170 100 × = 10.6% 1,600 1 (iii) Expenses as % of sales 264 100 × = 10.6% 2,500 1 260 100 × = 16.25% 1,600 1 (iv) Inventory turnover 2,070 = 10.1 times (190 + 220) ÷ 2 1170 , = 8.7 times (110 + 60) ÷ 2 (v) ROCE 166 100 × = 45.1% 368 1 170 100 × = 76.2% 223 1 (vi) Current ratio 399 = 2.1 189 199 = 5.2 38 179 = 0.95 189 39 = 1.03 38 (viii) Accounts receivable/sales ratio 104 × 12 = 0.5 months 2,500 29 × 12 = 0.2 months 1,600 (ix) 189 × 12 = 1.08 months 2,100 38 × 12 = 0.37 months 1,220 (vii) Acid test ratio Accounts payable/purchases ratio (b) Easylawn is the more efficient company. It has made £170,000 profit as compared with £166,000 profit and has achieved a return on capital employed of 76.2% per cent, almost 70% higher than that of Spendlight, with 45.1%. Reasons: These are conjecture – you really have to know more about the businesses before you can be definite. (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) 88 Easylawn has managed to achieve a far greater percentage gross profit, whilst maintaining a reasonable level of sales. Because expenses are lower, but gross profit is the same as for Spendlight, a higher figure of net profit is achieved by Easylawn. Easylawn has kept inventory down to relatively lower figures than Spendlight, although Spendlight has managed to get higher rate of inventory turnover. Easylawn has a 69% higher rate of return on capital employed, helped by lower inventory, better debt/sales ratio and relatively lower accounts payable. Acid test ratio with Easylawn appears healthier than with Spendlight. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 47.5A (a) (i) BA 1 40 100 × = 25% 160 1 (ii) Cost of sales 120 = = 12 Average inventory 10 (iii) 32 100 × = 20% 160 1 (iv) 32 100 × = 25% 128 1 (v) 20 = 2 :1 10 (vi) Accounts receivable and bank 10 = = 1:1 Accounts payable liabilities 10 (b) Although the gross profit percentage is the same, inventory turnover is down from 12 to 9. This would mean a relatively lower gross profit figure for CD. Net profit percentage is markedly lower, down from 20% to 10%. This implies that CD has far higher expenses than AB. For the amount of assets used AB is getting twice the return on them than CD, 25% compared with 121/2%. CD has kept current assets to a minimum – a figure of 1 : 1 is too low for comfort under normal circumstances. Similarly the quick asset ratio is too low. AB is by far the more successful business. It is turning over its inventory more frequently and has kept expenses under control. This has meant overall a return of 25% on its capital employed. It is also in a good liquid position and able to meet its debts. CD on the other hand is in a worse position on each factor. It is not only less profitable; it may well be unable to meet its debts as they fall due. Answer to Question 47.6A BA 1 1 (i) Loan note interest has to be paid whether profits are made or not. Dividends on shares can only be paid if there are sufficient available profits. (ii) Shareholders are part owners of the company and can exercise their powers with the votes at their disposal. Loan note holders normally have no voice in the running of the company. (iii) If the company ceases to trade, then loan note holders are entitled to a full return of their money before the shareholders get anything. 2 (i) Galloway Ltd Profit and Loss Appropriation Account for the year ending 30 April 2008 Net profit for the year brought down Add Retained profits brought forward from last year Less Transfer to general reserve Retained profits carried forward to next year Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 36,600 3,950 40,550 5,000 35,550 89 (ii) Balance Sheet as at 30 April 2008 Non-current assets Freehold premises at cost Furniture and equipment at cost Less Depreciation to date Motor vehicles at cost Less Depreciation to date 44,000 7,460 38,400 16,300 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Prepayments Rent receivable 32,124 4,782 280 175 190,000 Current liabilities Accounts payable Bank overdraft Expenses owing 36,540 22,100 248,640 37,361 286,001 3,847 1,830 774 6,451 Non-current liabilities 8% Loan notes 15,000 Share capital: Ordinary shares Reserves: General reserve Retained profits 21,451 264,550 200,000 29,000 35,550 64,550 264,550 3 (i) Net profit as % of sales. (ii) Lower gross profit % ratio. Higher expenses. (iii) Acid test ratio. (iv) More capital introduced in cash; loans received in cash; non-current assets sold; profits. Answer to Question 47.8A BA 1 (a) Schedule of Accounting Ratios and Resource Utilisation Year ended 30 September 2007 2008 2009 (i) Net profit as % of sales 13,000 90,000 = 14.4% 20,000 100,000 = 20% 22,000 120,000 = 18.3% (ii) Gross profit as % of sales 16,000 90,000 = 17.8% 25,000 100,000 = 25% 28,000 120,000 = 23.3% (iii) Inventory turnover 74,000 3,500 = 21.1 75,000 5,500 = 13.6 92,000 18,500 = 5.0 (iv) Current ratio 24,000 4,000 =6:1 25,000 6,000 = 4.2 : 1 40,000 11,000 = 3.6 : 1 (v) Acid test ratio 20,000 4,000 =5:1 18,000 6,000 =3:1 10,000 11,000 = 0.9 : 1 (vi) Accounts receivable/ sales (months) 19,000 × 12 = 2.5 90,000 15,000 × 12 = 1.8 100,000 10,000 × 12 = 1.0 120,000 These are not the only six ratios or measures available. 90 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (b) Your answer should be in report fashion. The main points you should cover include: (i) The increase of sales by £20,000 from 2008 to 2009 has been accompanied by a fall in net profit ratio of 1.7%, and worse liquidity ratios. The acid test ratio shows that there may be difficulties in paying your debts soon. The year to 2008 showed a considerable increase in profitability. Can this be maintained? Why has inventory increased to £30,000 at end of 2009? Does this show difficulties in achieving sales? Investigate. If the above indicate problems in the future, what is the value of assets if sold at break-up prices? A government investment involves no risk, except for inflation. Your return from Space Age should have a figure deducted for the value of your services. Only then can we sensibly compare the return from the business with the return from the investment. There is a case for the investment in the loan stock being better than carrying on the business. (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) (vi) (vii) Answer to Question 47.10A BA 1 Table of Accounting Ratios (a) A 1 Current ratios 180 160 2 Acid test B = 1.1 200 120 = 1.7 100 160 = 0.6 100 120 = 0.8 3 Net profit as % of sales 30 1,000 = 3% 100 3,000 = 3.3% 4 Gross profit as % of sales 600 1,000 = 60% 1,000 3,000 = 33% 5 Accounts receivable/sales (months) 100 × 12 = 1.2 1,000 90 × 12 = 0.36 3,000 6 Accounts payable/cost of sales (months) 110 × 12 = 3.3 400 120 × 12 = 0.7 2,000 7 Return on owners’ equity 30 100 = 30% 100 520 = 19.2% 8 Gearing 100 200 = 50% 130 650 = 20% (b) Should be in report fashion. Main points, briefly: (i) Both have similar net profit percentage: A 3%; B 3.3%. However, result obtained very differently as A has high GP% and very high expenses, whereas B has lower GP% and relatively lower expenses. (ii) Higher gearing of A leads to higher return on owners’ equity. The extra debt of A could lead to problems when profits fall. (iii) A’s high accounts payable/cost of sales ratio is very worrying, as is the low current ratio. (iv) Figures considerably distorted by B’s land revaluation. This leads to B’s ROOE being understated, whilst that of A – by comparison – is overstated. Answer to Question 47.20A BA 1 See text. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 91 PART 2 BUSINESS ACCOUNTING 2 Answers Answer to Question 1.4A BA 2 (a) All in £000 Balance b/d Goods to branch Branch accounts receivable: returns Balance b/d Branch Inventory (Selling price) 75 Returns 600 Cash sales 8 Branch accounts receivable Inventory deficiency to branch adjustment Balance c/d 683 90 Returns from branch Head office trading a/c Returns from branch Branch inventory deficiency Branch profit and loss Unrealised profit c/d Goods Sent to Branch (Cost price) 20 Branch inventory 380 400 Branch Adjustment (Profit loading) 10 Unrealised profit b/d 6 Goods to branch 179 30 225 Unrealised profit b/d Balance b/d Branch inventory Balance b/d Branch Accounts receivable 66 Branch inventory: Returns 437 Bank Discounts Bad debts Balance c/d 503 400 400 25 200 225 30 8 390 9 15 81 503 81 Balance b/d Cash sales Branch accounts receivable Balance b/d 30 120 437 6 90 683 Branch Bank 3 General expenses 120 To HO bank 390 Balance c/d 513 42 459 12 513 12 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 95 (b) Paper Products Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2006 Head Office Branch Revenue: Cash 1,500 120 Credit 1,960 429 3,460 549 Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory 180 50 Add Purchases 2,400 380 2,580 430 Less Closing inventory 220 2,360 60 370 Gross profit 1,100 179 Less Expenses: General expenses 410 42 Discounts allowed 29 9 Bad debts 24 463 15 66 Net profit 637 113 Total 1,620 2,389 4,009 230 2,780 3,010 280 452 38 39 2,730 1,279 529 750 (c) See text, but merits mainly concern tight control as HO can see what profits the branch ought to be making; also saves branch staff having to keep full accounting records. Demerits depend on whether branch staff are given room for initiative within the above system, or else the HO stupidly lets the system strangle all initiative. Answer to Question 1.6A BA 2 LR Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2009 Head Office Revenue 83,550 Less Cost of goods sold: Purchases 123,380 Goods to branch 44,264 79,116 Less Closing inventory 12,276 66,840 Gross profit 16,710 Less General expenses 8,470 Net profit 8,240 Branch 51,700 44,264 2,664 41,600 10,100 6,070 4,030 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2009 Non-current assets Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash in transit Bank 39,000 14,940 15,020 1,000 5,260 Less Current liabilities Accounts payable Equity Capital introduced Add Net profit Less Drawings 96 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 36,220 75,220 12,690 62,530 52,000 12,270 64,270 1,740 62,530 Workings: Inventory: Head office Purchases Less Cost of sales: 100/125 × £83,550 Cost of goods to branch: 100/125 × £56,250 Add 123,380 66,840 45,000 111,840 11,540 736 12,276 Cost of goods in transit: 100/125 × £920 Inventory: Branch Cost of goods sent Less Cost of sales: 100/125 × £51,700 Cost of goods in transit: Inventory shortage at cost: 100/125 × £300 Answer to Question 1.8A 45,000 41,360 736 240 42,336 2,664 BA 2 (a) (All in £000) Star Stores Income Statements for the year ending 31 December 2009 Head Office Revenue 1,200 Goods transferred to branch 360 1,560 Less Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory 80 Add Purchases 880 Transfer of goods from head office 960 Less Closing inventory 100 860 Gross profit 700 Less Administrative expenses 380 Distribution costs 157 Increase in provision for profit included in branch inventory* 13 550 Net profit 150 Branch 570 570 30 300 330 48 282 288 30 172 202 86 * (48 × 1/6) − 5 + (60 × 1/6) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 97 (b) Non-current assets Plant and equipment Motor vehicles Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2009 Cost 330 700 1,030 Depn 150 400 550 Current assets Inventory (100 + 48 + 60 − 18) Accounts receivable and prepayments Bank and cash (25 + 2 + 15) 190 206 42 Less Current liabilities Accounts payable and accruals Net 180 300 480 438 918 196 722 Capital: Balance at 1.1.2009 Add Net profit 550 236 786 64 722 Less Drawings Workings Branch Current Account 255 Inventory in transit c/d 86 Cash in transit c/d Balance c/d 341 Balance b/d Net profit Head Office Current Account 266 Balance b/d Net profit 266 Balance c/d Answer to Question 1.11A 180 86 266 BA 2 Conversion of currency to sterling: Dr Balances: Non-current assets at cost Accounts receivable and cash Operating costs Cr 60 15 266 341 Balances: Sales Accounts payable HO current account Accumulated depreciation Mics 900,000 36,000 225,000 1,161,000 Rate 8 to £ 4 to £ 5 to £ £ 112,500 9,000 45,000 166,500 480,000 25,000 420,000 236,000 1,161,000 5 to £ 4 to £ actual 8 to £ 96,000 6,250 42,600 29,500 174,350 Difference represents exchange loss: to be written off Home Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2004 Revenue (96,000 + 186,300) Less Operating costs (103,700 + 45,000) Exchange losses Net profit for the year Add Retained profit 31 December 2003 Retained profit at 31 December 2004 98 7,850 166,500 282,300 148,700 7,850 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 156,550 125,750 110,800 236,550 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2004 Non-current assets (W1) Current assets Accounts receivable and cash (17,600 + 9,000) Creditors: amounts falling due within one year Trade accounts payable (9,700 + 6,250) 425,900 26,600 15,950 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Retained profits 10,650 436,550 200,000 236,550 436,550 (W1) Cost 450,000 + 112,500 = 562,500 – accumulated depreciation 107,100 + 29,500 = (net) 425,900. Answer to Question 2.2A BA 2 Computer (a) 2005 Jan 1 Dowe Ltd 2005 Dec 31 2006 Dec 31 2007 Dec 31 Balance c/d Balance c/d Balance c/d 1,046 Accumulated Provision for Depreciation 2005 418 Dec 31 Profit and loss 2006 669 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 669 2007 820 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 820 Dowe Ltd 2005 300 Jan 1 300 Dec 31 521 1,121 2006 300 Jan 1 273 Dec 31 573 2007 300 Jan 1 Dec 31 300 2005 Jan 1 Bank Dec 31 Bank 31 Balance c/d 2006 Dec 31 Bank 31 Balance c/d 2007 Dec 31 Bank (b) Non-current assets Computer at cost Less Depreciation Computer HP interest (10% of 746) 418 418 251 669 669 151 820 1,046 75 1,121 Balance b/d HP interest 521 52 573 Balance b/d HP interest 273 27 300 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2005 (extract) 1,046 418 628 Current liabilities Owing on HP 521 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 99 Answer to Question 2.4A (a) 2002 July 31 Nov 30 2003 Jan 1 BA 2 Motor Vehicles HP Company: Cash price DL1 HP Company: Cash price DL2 27,000 2002 Dec 31 Balance c/d 63,000 36,000 63,000 Balance b/d 63,000 63,000 2003 Sept 1 Disposal DL1 Dec 31 Balance c/d 27,000 36,000 63,000 63,000 (b) 2002 Dec 31 Depreciation 3,563 2002 Dec 31 Balance c/d Profit and loss: DL1 25% × 5/12 × £27,000 DL2 25% × 1/12 × £36,000 2,813 750 3,563 3,563 2003 Sept 1 Dec 31 Disposals re: DL1 Balance c/d 7,313 9,750 2003 Jan 1 Balance b/d Sept 1 Profit and loss: DL1 25% × 8/12 × £27,000 DL2 25% × £36,000 17,063 (c) 2002 July 31 Nov 30 Dec 31 Hire Purchase Company DL1 DL2 Cash: deposit 4,680 2002 Motors Cash: deposit 7,200 July 31 Cash: instalments Nov 30 5 × £1,050 5,250 Dec 31 1 × £1,350 1,350 Balance c/d 17,670 27,600 27,600 2003 Jan–Aug 31 Cash: 8 × £1,050 8,400 Sept 20 Cash to settle 10,700 Jan–Dec 31 Cash 12 × £1,350 Balance c/d 19,100 (d) 2003 Sept 1 100 Motor vehicles DL1 DL1 36,150 Cash price 27,000 Cash price Profit and loss: HP interest 5 × £120 600 1 × £150 27,600 16,200 13,200 29,400 2003 Jan 1 Balance b/d 17,670 Sept 20 Profit and loss: HP interest 1,430 Dec 31 12 × £150 19,100 Assets Disposal 27,000 2003 Sept 1 Depreciation Sept 20 Cash Dec 31 Profit and loss: Loss on disposal 27,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 3,563 4,500 9,000 17,063 DL2 36,000 150 36,150 27,600 1,800 29,400 7,313 18,750 937 27,000 Answer to Question 2.8A BA 2 Object Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 31 August 2006 Hire purchase sales Cash sales 540,000 71,000 611,000 Less Cost of goods sold Opening inventory Purchases Inventory repossessed 15,000 342,000 2,500 359,500 12,000 Less Closing inventory (see W1) Add Profit on repossessed goods (see W2) Less Provision for unrealised profit (see W3) Gross profit Less Administration and shop expenses Depreciation Net profit for the year 130,000 15,000 Balance Sheet as at 31 August 2006 Non-current assets Intangible assets Premises and equipment at cost Less Depreciation to date Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable (see W4) 223,560 Less Provision for unrealised profit (W3) 99,360 Bank and cash 100,000 60,000 145,000 19,408 40,000 12,000 124,200 6,208 Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Net current assets 142,408 182,408 80,000 102,408 Equity Called-up share capital Retained profits Workings: (W1) Opening inventory Purchases Cash sales Less Repossessed Accordingly: Cost of sales 67,500 × 100/150 HP sales: Cost £540,000 × 100/180 Closing inventory 347,500 263,500 700 264,200 99,792 164,408 75,500 27,408 102,408 15,000 342,000 71,000 3,500 357,000 67,500 45,000 300,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 345,000 12,000 101 Repossessions 3,240 Provision for unrealised profit 700 Purchases 3,940 (W2) HP Accounts receivable Profit to trading a/c (W3) Repossessions £3,240 × 80/180 Balance c/d £223,560 × 80/180 (W4) Balance b/d HP sales Answer to Question 2.9A 1,440 2,500 3,940 Provision for Unrealised Profit 1,440 Balance b/d 99,360 Trading account 100,800 1,008 99,792 100,800 HP Accounts receivable 2,268 Cash 540,000 Repossessions Balance c/d 542,268 315,468 3,240 223,560 542,268 BA 2 (a) First assumption F Ltd Hire Purchase Income Statement (extract) Hire purchase sales Cost of sales Provision for unrealised profit Loss on repossessed goods Gross profit 1,815 1,210 229 53 Hire purchase accounts receivable Less Provision for unrealised profit 1,492 323 Balance Sheet (extract) 687 229 458 Workings: Cost Jan 10 Mar 8 May 12 July 6 Sept 20 Oct 15 Nov 21 150 350 90 200 70 190 160 1,210 HP sales price 225 525 135 300 105 285 240 1,815 Cash collected 180 420 81 247 42 57 48 1,075 Balance 45 105 54 – 63 228 192 687 Balance of profit Earned Unearned 60 15 140 35 27 18 47 – 14 21 19 76 16 64 323 229 Cost 30 70 36 – 42 152 128 458 (b) Second assumption F Ltd Hire Purchase Income Statement (extract) Hire purchase sales Cost of sales Provision for unrealised profit Loss on repossessed goods Gross profit Hire purchase accounts receivable Less Provision for unrealised profit 102 1,815 1,210 405 53 Balance Sheet (extract) 687 405 282 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,668 147 Workings: Cost Jan 10 Mar 8 May 12 July 6 Sept 20 Oct 15 Nov 21 150 350 90 200 70 190 160 1,210 Answer to Question 2.10A (a) (i) 1.1.07 HP Loan (ii) 31.12.08 Balance c/d 31.12.09 Balance c/d (iii) 1.1.07 31.12.07 31.12.08 Bank Bank Balance c/d Bank Balance c/d HP sales price 225 525 135 300 105 285 240 1,815 Cash collected 180 420 81 247 42 57 48 1,075 Balance Balance of profit Earned Unearned 30 45 70 105 – 45 47 – – 35 – 95 – 80 147 405 45 105 54 – 63 228 192 687 BA 2 Machinery 20,000 Provision for Depreciation: Machinery 31.12.07 Profit and loss 8,000 31.12.08 Profit and loss 8,000 12,000 12,000 1.1.09 31.12.09 Hire Purchase Loan 6,000 1.1.07 5,828 31.12.07 9,852 21,680 5,828 5,206 1.1.08 31.12.08 4,000 4,000 8,000 Balance b/d Profit and loss 8,000 4,000 12,000 Machinery Profit and loss (12% × 14,000) 20,000 1,680 21,680 Balance b/d Profit and loss (12% × 9,852) 9,852 1,182 11,034 11,034 31.12.09 Bank Cost – – 9 – 28 133 112 282 5,831 1.1.09 31.12.09 Balance b/d Profit and loss (12% × 5,206) 5,206 625 5,831 5,831 (Extracts) Balance Sheet as at 31 December (b) Non-current assets Machinery at cost Less Depreciation to date Non-current liabilities Owing under hire purchase Current liabilities Owing under hire purchase 2007 2008 2009 20,000 4,000 16,000 20,000 8,000 12,000 20,000 12,000 8,000 5,206 4,646 5,206 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 103 Answer to Question 3.3A Materials issued Materials bought Direct expenses Administration charge Wages Plant bought Accrued wages c/d Accrued expenses c/d Profit and loss (6,750 × 2/3) Reserve (part of apparent profit not recognised as being earned yet) Answer to Question 3.4A Plant Materials Wages Sundry expenses Head office charges BA 2 Cantilever Ltd – Contract Account 9,411 Architect’s certificates (64,170 × 10/9 ) 28,070 Inventory of materials 6,149 Plant 2,146 18,493 12,180 366 49 76,864 4,500 2,250 83,614 83,614 BA 2 Contract Account – Year ended 31 December 2010 30,000 Sale of materials (at cost) 124,000 Unused materials c/d 95,000 Plant c/d 5,000 Cost of contract to date c/d 9,000 263,000 Cost of contract b/d Unused materials b/d Plant b/d Profit and loss account Profit taken to date 8,000 10,000 20,000 225,000 263,000 225,000 10,000 20,000 43,000 Workings: Cash received to date Value of work certificated (100/75 thereof) Work completed but not yet certified Total value of work executed to date Further costs to be incurred: Wages Materials 74,400 + 10,000 Sundry expenses Plant 25,000 + 20,000 Plant residual value Head office charges (6/9 × 9,000) + 10% Contingency provision Value 195,000 260,000 30,000 290,000 Cost Profit 225,000 65,000 520,000 209,000 434,000 86,000 64,000 84,400 9,000 45,000 (15,000) 6,600 15,000 209,000 Work certified to date 260,000: Profit to be taken now 260/520 × 86,000 = 104 71,300 2,164 10,150 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 43,000 Answer to Question 3.5A BA 2 (All in £000) (a) Workings: (i) Profits/(losses) Contract price Less Costs to date 664 estd further costs to completion 106 estd post-completion costs 30 Estd total profits/(losses) Profit/loss recognised Profit: Cost of sales to date Total cost: Contract 1 580/800 × 300 Contract 2 470/620 × 330 Overall losses 1 1,100 800 300 Contracts 3 1,400 2 950 5 1,200 535 810 640 1,070 75 680 800 165 10 620 330 45 1,535 ( 135) 20 1,460 ( 160) 5 ( 1,240 40) 218 250 (135) (ii) Payments on account Turnover to 31.10.2010 Progress payments: received awaited retained Yet to recover Excess paid Transferred to long-term Payments on account (net) 4 1,300 1 798 615 60 75 750 48 2 720 680 40 80 800 (80) 65 (15) (160) Contracts 3 646 615 25 60 700 (40) 4 525 385 200 65 (54) 29 (25) 650 5 900 722 34 84 840 60 (125) (125) Data for Income Statement for the year ending 31 October 2010 Contracts 1 2 3 4 5 Turnover to 31.10.2010 580 470 646 525 900 Profit to 31.10.2010 218 250 798 720 Turnover to 31.10.2009 560 340 517 400 610 To profit and loss 238 380 129 125 290 (iii) Cost of sales to 31.10.2010 Loss to 31.10.2009 580 470 646 135 781 525 160 685 900 40 940 Cost of sales to 31.10.2009 To profit and loss 460 120 245 225 517 264 470 215 610 330 218 100 188 250 95 155 (135) (160) ( 70) ( 90) 664 580 84 535 470 65 84 65 – Profit/loss (proof) to 31.10.2010 to 31.10.2009 Costs to 31.10.2010 To cost of sales Less Losses foreseeable Transfers from payments on a/c Long-term contract balances Provision for losses (135) 810 646 164 135 29 29 – 640 525 115 160 ( 45) – ( 40) ( 40) Profit or Loss 1,162 1,154 8 1,070 900 170 40 130 130 ( 45) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 105 (b) Balance Sheet extracts at 31 October 2010 Current assets Inventory Long-term contracts (84 + 130) Accounts receivable Recoverable on long-term contracts (48 + 60) Creditors Payments on account (15 + 125 + 25) Provisions for liabilities and charges Foreseeable losses provision Note attached to balance sheet: Long-term contract balances (84 + 65 + 29 + 130) Less Payments on account (29 + 65) Answer to Question 5.4A (Dates omitted) (a) Forfeited shares (5,000 × £1) Balance c/d Balance c/d (c) Bank refunds (75,000 × 65p) Bank refunds re 3 for 4 allotment (25,000 × 65p) Ordinary share capital Share premium (d) Ordinary share capital (100,000 × 30p) (e) First and final call Amber Ltd Share premium (f ) Ordinary share capital Ordinary Share Capital 5,000 Balance b/d Application and allotment 595,000 First and final call 600,000 Balance b/d Amber Application and Allotment 48,750 Bank (200,000 × 65p) Bank (100,000 × 55p) 16,250 70,000 50,000 185,000 First and Final Call Bank (95,000 × 30p) 30,000 Forfeited shares (5,000 × 30p) 30,000 Forfeited Shares 1,500 Ordinary share capital 1,000 2,500 5,000 Amber Ltd 5,000 Bank (5,000 × 80p) Forfeited shares* 5,000 * discount on reissue 106 165 45 308 94 214 Share Premium Application and allotment 52,500 Forfeited shares 52,500 Balance c/d 108 BA 2 600,000 600,000 (b) 214 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 500,000 70,000 30,000 600,000 595,000 5,000 600,000 50,000 2,500 52,500 130,000 55,000 185,000 28,500 1,500 30,000 5,000 5,000 4,000 1,000 5,000 Answer to Question 5.6A BA 2 Grobigg Ltd Application and Allotment Cash: 180,000 × 0.75 6,000 Cash: Balance due on allotment 120,000 22,500 148,500 Cash: return of unsuccessful application monies 8,000 × 0.75 Share capital: Due on application and allotment 150,000 × 0.80 Share premium 150,000 × 0.15 Call Share capital 150,000 × 0.20 30,000 135,000 13,500 148,500 Cash: 149,600 × 0.20 Forfeited shares 29,920 80 30,000 30,000 Forfeited Shares 80 Share capital 400 Cash: 400 × 0.90 280 760 Call Share capital Share premium Forfeited shares Balance c/d Answer to Question 6.2A 400 360 760 Share Premium Application and allotment Forfeited shares 22,500 280 Share Capital 400 Application and allotment 150,000 Forfeited shares Call 150,400 120,000 400 30,000 150,400 BA 2 (a) (A1) Bank (A2) Preference share applicants Cash received from applicants (B1) Dr 7,000 7,000 Preference share applicants (B2) Preference share capital Preference shares allotted 7,000 (C1) 3,000 Retained profits (C2) Capital redemption reserve Part of purchase price of shares not covered by new issue, to comply with Companies Acts 7,000 3,000 (D1) Ordinary share capital (D2) Ordinary share purchase Shares being purchased 10,000 (E1) 10,000 Ordinary share purchase (E2) Bank Payment made for share purchase Cr 10,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 10,000 107 Net assets (except bank) Bank Preference share capital Preference share applicants Ordinary share capital Ordinary share purchase Capital redemption reserve Share premium Retained profits Balances before 31,000 16,000 47,000 Effect Dr Cr (A1) 7,000 (B1) (D1) (E1) 7,000 10,000 10,000 (C1) 3,000 8,000 20,000 4,000 32,000 15,000 47,000 (E2) 10,000 (B2) (A2) 7,000 7,000 (D2) (C2) 10,000 3,000 Dr 12,000 (b) (A1) Ordinary share capital (A2) Ordinary share purchase Shares being purchased Retained profits (B2) Ordinary share purchase Premium on purchase of shares not previously issued at premium 2,400 Retained profits (C2) Capital redemption reserve Transfer because shares purchased out of distributable profits 12,000 (D1) Ordinary share capital (D2) Bank Payment of redemption 14,400 Capital redemption reserve Share premium Retained profits 108 Cr 2,400 (C1) Preference share capital Ordinary share capital Ordinary share purchase 15,000 – 10,000 – 3,000 4,000 32,000 12,000 44,000 12,000 (B1) Net assets (except bank) Bank Balances after 31,000 13,000 44,000 12,000 14,400 Balances before 31,000 16,000 47,000 8,000 20,000 Effect Dr Cr (D2) (A1) (D1) 12,000 14,400 14,400 8,000 8,000 (A2) (B2) (C2) 12,000 2,400 12,000 4,000 32,000 15,000 47,000 (C1) (B1) Balances after 31,000 1,600 32,600 12,000 2,400 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 12,000 4,000 32,000 600 32,600 Dr 8,000 (c) (A1) Preference share capital (A2) Preference share purchase Shares to be purchased 8,000 (B1) Preference share purchase (B2) Bank Cash paid on purchase 8,000 (C1) 8,000 8,000 Retained profits (C2) Capital redemption reserve Transfer per Companies Acts Net assets (except bank) Bank Preference share capital Preference share purchase Ordinary share capital Capital redemption reserve Share premium Retained profits 8,000 Balances before 31,000 16,000 47,000 8,000 Effect Dr (A1) (B1) Cr 8,000 8,000 (B2) 8,000 (A2) 8,000 (C2) 8,000 20,000 4,000 32,000 15,000 47,000 (C1) 8,000 Dr 12,000 (d) (A1) Bank (A2) Preference share applicants Cash received from applicants Preference share applicants (B2) Preference share applicants Preference shares allotted 12,000 (C1) Ordinary share capital (C2) Ordinary share purchase Shares to be purchased 12,000 (D1) Ordinary share purchase (D2) Bank Payment made to purchase shares 12,000 Preference share capital Preference share applicants Ordinary share capital Ordinary share purchase Share premium Retained profits Balances after 31,000 8,000 39,000 – – 20,000 8,000 4,000 32,000 7,000 39,000 Cr 12,000 (B1) Net assets (except bank) Bank Cr 12,000 12,000 12,000 Balances before 31,000 16,000 47,000 8,000 – 20,000 – 4,000 32,000 15,000 47,000 Effect Dr (A1) 12,000 (B1) (C1) (D1) 12,000 12,000 12,000 Cr (D2) 12,000 (B2) (A2) 12,000 12,000 (C2) 12,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Balances after 31,000 16,000 47,000 20,000 – 8,000 – 4,000 32,000 15,000 47,000 109 Dr 10,000 (e) (A1) Bank (A2) Preference share applicants Cash received from applicants 10,000 (B1) Preference share applicants (B2) Preference share capital Preference shares allotted 10,000 10,000 (C1) Ordinary share capital (C2) Ordinary share purchase Shares being purchased 6,000 (D1) Share premium account (D2) Ordinary share purchase Amount of share premium account used for redemption 1,200 (E1) Retained profits (E2) Ordinary share purchase Excess of premium payable over amount of share premium account usable for the purpose 1,800 (F1) 9,000 6,000 1,200 1,800 Ordinary share purchase (F2) Bank Amount payable on purchase 9,000 Balances before 31,000 16,000 47,000 Net assets (except bank) Bank Preference share capital Preference share applicants Ordinary share capital Ordinary share purchase 8,000 – 20,000 – Share premium account 4,000 32,000 15,000 47,000 Retained profits Answer to Question 6.4A (a) 2004 Dec 31 2005 Dec 31 2006 Dec 31 Balance c/d Balance c/d Effect Dr Cr (A1) 10,000 (B1) (C1) (F1) 10,000 6,000 9,000 (D1) 1,200 (E1) 1,800 (F2) 9,000 (B2) (A2) 10,000 10,000 (C2) (D2) (E2) 6,000 1,200 1,800 Balances after 31,000 17,000 48,000 18,000 – 14,000 – 2,800 34,800 13,200 48,000 BA 2 Loan Note Redemption Reserve 2003 Dec 31 Retained profits* 2004 Dec 31 Bank: Interest 14,268.74 Dec 31 Retained profits 14,268.74 21,942.52 21,942.52 Retained profits: Loan notes now redeemed 30,000.00 30,000.00 6,960.36 348.02 6,960.36 14,268.74 2005 Jan 1 Dec 31 Dec 31 Balance b/d Bank: Interest Retained profits 14,268.74 713.42 6,960.36 21,942.52 2006 Jan 1 Dec 31 Dec 31 Balance b/d Bank: Interest Retained profits 21,942.52 1,097.12 6,960.36 30,000.00 * 0.232012 × 30,000 = 6,960.36 110 Cr Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (b) 2003 Dec 31 2004 Dec 31 2005 Dec 31 2006 Dec 31 (c) 2006 Dec 31 (d) 2003 2004 2005 2006 Loan Note Sinking Fund Investment Bank 6,960.36 Bank 7,308.38 Bank 7,673.78 Bank 8,057.48 30,000.00 Bank (redemption) 2006 Dec 31 Loan Notes 2003 30,000.00 Jan 1 Bank 30,000.00 30,000.00 Bank 30,000.00 Retained Profits (extracts) for the years ended 31 December Loan note Redemption Reserve Loan note Redemption Reserve Loan note Redemption Reserve Loan note Redemption Reserve Answer to Question 6.6A 6,960.36 6,960.36 6,960.36 6,960.36 BA 2 (Dates omitted) (a) Bank Application and allotment Application monies received (b) Application and allotment Bank Oversubscriptions refunded (c) Application and allotment Ordinary share capital Share premium Amount due on allotment ordinary shares (d) Bank (see workings W1) Application and allotment (e) Call Ordinary share capital First and final call made (f ) Bank Call Amount paid on call (g) Ordinary share capital Forfeited shares Shares forfeited (h) Forfeited shares Application and allotment Call Amounts not received cancelled (i) Forfeited shares Ordinary share capital Forfeited shares now reissued (j) Bank Forfeited shares Cash received on reissue (k) Forfeited shares Share premium Profit on reissue transferred (l) Bank Application and allotment – redeemable shares Monies received on issue Dr 1,320,000 Cr 1,320,000 1,032,000 1,032,000 340,000 140,000 200,000 51,975 51,975 60,000 60,000 59,910 59,910 300 300 115 25 90 300 300 500 500 385 385 800,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 800,000 111 (m) Application and allotment – redeemable shares Share premium Redeemable shares Redeemable shares allotted (n) (Old) redeemable preference shares Share premium Redemption of shares Shares to be redeemed at premium 40p (o) Redemption of shares Bank Monies paid on redemption (p) Investments Ordinary share capital 400,000 March Hares shares of 25p purchased, payment being 200,000 50p ordinary shares (q) 8 per cent loan notes Share premium Loan note redemption Amount due on loan notes to be redeemed (r) Loan note redemption Bank Redeemed loan notes paid for (s) Bank Share premium 7% Loan notes Issue of 7% loan notes at 5% discount Workings (W1): Due on application and allotment Received on application Less Returned 800,000 300,000 500,000 500,000 200,000 700,000 700,000 700,000 100,000 100,000 400,000 40,000 440,000 440,000 440,000 475,000 25,000 500,000 340,000 1,320,000 1,032,000 Less Unpaid 100 × 25p Answer to Question 6.8A (All in £000) (a) (b) and (c) Bank (10,000 × 3) Ordinary share capital Share premium Ordinary Share Application and Allotment 30 Bank (85,000 × 3) 300 Bank (50,000 × 8) − 75,000 250 580 Share Premium Ordinary share allotment 305 Investments (own shares) 305 (d) Balance c/d (e) Ordinary share capital 112 BA 2 Ordinary Share Capital Balance b/d Ordinary share application Ordinary share allotment Ordinary share first call 1,000 Ordinary share final call 1,000 Balance c/d 288,000 52,000 25 51,975 Ordinary Share: First Call 100 Bank Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 500 150 150 100 100 1,000 255 325 580 250 55 305 100 (f ) Ordinary share capital Ordinary Share: Final Call 100 Bank Investments (own shares) 100 (g) Ordinary share capital: final call Share premium Investments: Own Shares 10 Bank 55 65 Answer to Question 7.4A 90 10 100 65 65 BA 2 (a) Cash Freehold premises Gain on sale of non-current asset Sale of freehold premises Hubble Ltd: Journal Freehold premises Revaluation reserve Surplus on revaluation of premises (400,000 − (375,000 − 55,000)) Dr 75,000 55,000 20,000 80,000 80,000 Freehold premises Plant and machinery Inventory Vendor: A Bubble Assets taken over as per purchase agreement 100,000 10,000 55,000 Vendor: A Bubble Ordinary share capital Share premium Cash Discharge of purchase consideration by issue of 120,000 ordinary shares £1 each and a cash payment of £25,000 165,000 (b) Hubble Ltd: Balance Sheet as at 31 May 2010 Non-current assets Freehold premises at cost or valuation Plant and machinery at cost Less Depreciation Motor vehicles at cost Less Depreciation Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank Cash Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Financed by: Share capital Authorised: 650,000 ordinary shares Issued: 520,000 ordinary shares Reserves Share premium Revaluations reserve Retained profits Cr 165,000 120,000 20,000 25,000 500,000 160,000 48,765 8,470 1,695 157,550 96,340 11,825 105 111,235 6,775 618,010 265,820 883,830 63,200 820,630 650,000 520,000 20,000 80,000 200,630 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 300,630 820,630 113 Workings Freehold premises Plant and machinery Bank Retained profits 375,000 + 100,000 + 80,000 − 55,000 = 500,000 101,235 + 10,000 = 111,235 75,000 − 38,175 − 25,000 = 11,825 180,630 + 20,000 = 200,630 Answer to Question 7.5A BA 2 VU Limited Pre-incorporation 1.4.2009 to 30.6.2009 Revenue Less Cost of sales 30,000 20,779 9,221 (A) Less Depreciation Directors’ fees Administration expenses Sales commission Interest on purchase consideration Distribution costs: Variable Fixed Loan note interest Net profit for the periods Less Goodwill impaired written-off Preliminary expenses written-off Dividend paid (B) 555 (B) (C) (B) 2,210 1,050 1,400 (C) (B) 900 625 Postincorporation 1.7.2009 to 31.3.2010 95,000 59,221 35,779 1,665 500 6,630 3,325 467 2,850 1,875 1,600 6,740 2,481 (D) (D) 1,000 1,481 18,912 16,867 169 7,560 2,481 7,729 9,138 Retained profit carried forward Notes: (A) See workings below. (B) Time basis. (C) Pro rata to sales. (D) The goodwill impaired is written-off against the pre-incorporation profit of £2,481, as are preliminary expenses (so far as possible). The split of cost of sales is rather tricky. The answer will be demonstrated in an arithmetical, rather than algebraic, fashion: Sales are: Pre-incorporation Post-incorporation 30,000 = 24% 95,000 = 76% As post-incorporation cost of sales fell by 10% then the relationship between pre- and post-incorporation cost of sales is: Pre-incorporation 24 Post-incorporation 76% − (1/10 76%) 68.4 92.4 ∴ Pre-incorporation costs are 80,000 × 100/924 × 24/100 = 20,779 Note: The proposed dividend is not relevant as it is an appropriation of profit and is not part of the calculation of profit. Answer to Question 7.6A BA 2 Rowlock Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 31 May 2009 Revenue Cost of goods sold: Opening inventory Add Purchases Less Closing inventory Gross profit 114 52,185 5,261 38,829 44,090 4,946 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 39,144 13,041 Postincorporation 9,936 Pre-incorporation Gross profit (allocated on basis of sales 5 : 16) Variable expenses: Wrapping Postage Packing (5 : 16) Fixed expenses Office Warehouse rent, etc. (4 : 8) Expenses attributable to company: Director’s salary Loan note interest 3,105 840 441 1,890 3,171 755 2,416 627 921 1,548 516 1,032 1,000 525 1,271 1,834 218 1,616 Formation expenses Net profit 4,973 4,963 – 4,963 Balance Sheet as at 31 May 2009 Non-current assets Goodwill Sundry 4,434 25,000 29,434 Current assets Inventory Sundry Total assets 4,946 9,745 Current liabilities Non-current liabilities 7% loan notes Net assets Equity Ordinary share capital 14,691 44,125 4,162 15,000 19,162 24,963 20,000 4,963 24,963 Workings: Gross profit allocated per volume sales in each period: Oct 2 Nov 2 Dec 2 Jan 2 Feb 2 Mar 2 Apr 2 May 2 Jun 1 16 Drawings Purchase consideration: Ordinary shares Debentures Answer to Question 8.2A (a) 2007 Jan 31 Bank Jul 10 Bank July 1 Aug 1 Sept 2 5 Purchase of Business Account 500 Balance Rowlock’s capital account at 1.6.2008 = net assets 20,000 Pre-incorporation profits 15,000 Goodwill (difference) 35,500 29,450 1,616 4,434 35,500 BA 2 Ordinary Dividends 2007 48,000 Dec 31 Profit and loss 40,000 88,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 88,000 88,000 115 Corporation Tax 2007 145,000 Jan 1 Balance b/d 160,000 Dec 31 Profit and loss 305,000 2007 Oct 1 Bank Dec 31 Accrued c/d 145,000 160,000 305,000 Deferred Taxation 2007 28,000 Jan 1 Balance b/d Dec 31 Profit and loss 28,000 (30,000 × 40%) 2007 Dec 31 Balance c/d 2007 Jan 30 Bank Dec 31 Loan note Int. receivable Dec 31 Balance c/d 16,000 12,000 28,000 Income Tax 2007 3,500 Jan 1 Balance b/d 2,100 Dec 31 Loan note Interest payable 1,400 7,000 Loan note Interest Payable 2007 14,000 Dec 31 Profit and loss 3,500 17,500 2007 Dec 31 Bank Dec 31 Income tax 2007 Dec 31 Profit and loss 2007 Dec 31 Profit and loss 17,500 Loan note Interest Receivable 2007 10,500 Dec 31 Bank Dec 31 Income tax 10,500 8,400 2,100 10,500 Investment Income 2007 4,200 Sep 30 Bank 4,200 Less Loan note interest payable Profit before taxation Taxation: Corporation tax Deferred tax Profit for the year 160,000 12,000 Balance Sheet (extract) as at 31 December 2007 116 7,000 17,500 (b) Income Statement (extract) for the year ending 31 December 2007 Net trading profit Add Loan note interest received 14,000 Investment income 4,200 Current liabilities Corporation tax Non-current liabilities Deferred taxation 3,500 3,500 160,000 28,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 540,000 18,200 558,200 17,500 540,700 172,000 368,700 Answer to Question 8.4A BA 2 Joytan Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 31 December 2009 Trading profit Income from other non-current asset investments Other interest receivable and similar income 500,000 13,500 8,000 Interest payable and similar charges Profit before taxation Tax on profit on ordinary activities Profit for the year Answer to Question 8.7A 21,500 521,500 30,000 491,500 210,000 281,500 BA 2 (a) Tax on profit on ordinary activities (£000): Corporation tax at 35% (740 + 104) (W1) Deferred taxation Corporation tax overprovided in previous years (W2) 844 20 864 ( 80) 784 Workings (W1) £740,000 plus tax relief £104,000 (W2) Balance due at 31 March 2002 Less: CT paid to Revenue and Customs (b) Corporation tax liability: Estimated CT charged on profits for year ended 31 March 2003 Less Tax credit on investment income (12 × 20/80) Total tax liability (c) Deferred taxation: Balance at 31 March 2002 Transfer from profit and loss 600,000 (520,000) 80,000 740,000 3,000 737,000 300 20 320 No provision has been made in respect of timing differences totalling £400,000. Answer to Question 10.4A (a) Goodwill Non-current assets Inventory Work in progress Accounts receivable Bank Formation expenses Retained profits Loss on realisation Rays Ltd: Shares BA 2 Realisation 50,000 Rays Ltd 190,000 Loss on realisation 21,000 3,000 25,000 18,000 3,000 310,000 Sundry Shareholders 80,000 Ordinary share capital 70,400 Preference share capital 149,600 300,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 239,600 70,400 310,000 200,000 100,000 300,000 117 (b) (i) To Loan note holders: Cash + 6% Loan notes To Creditors: Cash Shares To Preference shareholders: Dividend arrears Shares: 9 for every 10 To Ordinary shareholders: 50,000 shares (1 for 4) Total purchase consideration 30,000 30,000 60,000 18,000 12,000 30,000 9,600 90,000 99,600 50,000 239,600 (ii) Agreed value of assets Inventory Work in progress Accounts receivable Bank Non-current assets (balance) (c) 15,000 3,000 25,000 18,000 178,600 239,600 Rays Ltd Balance Sheet as at 1 January 2009 Non-current assets Current assets Inventory Work in progress Accounts receivable Bank Total assets Non-current liability Loan notes 178,600 15,000 3,000 25,000 58,400 101,400 280,000 30,000 Equity Issued share capital 250,000 250,000 Bank Balance b/d Shares issued (250,000 − 161,600) Answer to Question 10.5A 18,000 88,400 106,400 Loan note holders Accounts payable Balance c/d 30,000 18,000 58,400 106,400 BA 2 Workings Development expenditure Debit balance of the retained profits Plant (balance) TickTick Ltd Capital Reduction 110,000 Preference share capital 121,000 Ordinary shares 219,000 450,000 Journal Capital reduction Development expenditure Retained profits 50,000 400,000 450,000 Dr 231,000 110,000 121,000 Preference share capital Ordinary shares Capital reduction 50,000 400,000 Capital reduction Plant 219,000 118 Cr 450,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 219,000 Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2010 Non-current assets Freehold premises Plant 90,000 81,000 171,000 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash at bank Total assets 82,000 96,000 11,000 Current liabilities Accounts payable Net assets 60,000 300,000 Equity Issued capital: Ordinary shares 500,000 of 20p each Preference shares 250,000 8 per cent of 80p each Answer to Question 11.3A 189,000 360,000 100,000 200,000 300,000 BA 2 Turnover should not include VAT on taxable outputs. It would be permissible to show gross turnover only where VAT is deducted to clearly describe turnover net of VAT. (ii) Where there is irrecoverable VAT in respect of non-current assets, or other items needing disclosure, these should all be shown inclusive of VAT. (i) IAS 33 requires that earnings per share should be shown with the income statement for the current and preceding year. (ii) Where the basic EPS differs materially from the diluted EPS, this should also be shown. IAS 16 and IAS 36 require that the following are disclosed: 1 Methods of depreciation used. 2 Useful lives or the depreciation rates in use. 3 Total depreciation charged for the period. 4 Where material, the financial effect of a change in either useful lives or estimates of residual values. 5 The cost or revalued amount at both the start and end of the accounting period. 6 The cumulative amount of provisions for depreciation or impairment at the beginning and end of the financial period. 7 A reconciliation of the movements, separately disclosing additions, disposals, revaluations, transfers, depreciation, impairment losses, and reversals of past impairment losses written back in the period. 8 The net carrying amount at the beginning and end of the financial period. (i) depreciation methods in use; (ii) useful lives, or alternatively the depreciation rates; (iii) total depreciation for the period; (iv) gross amounts of these assets and accumulated depreciation. IAS 38 – expenditure for research and development concerned with research to be written off immediately. IAS 20 – such grants are to be: credited to profit and loss over expected useful life of the asset, by treating it as a deferred credit, where a proportion of it is transferred annually to profit and loss; Grants are not to be shown as part of shareholders’ funds. IFRS 3 (Chapter 25) states that goodwill should be capitalised and shown on the face of the balance sheet. It should be reviewed annually for impairment. It should not be amortised. IAS 8 and the Framework for the preparation and presentation of financial statements deal with this. Financial statements should be drawn up on the accrual basis and on the assumption that the entity is a going concern. See Chapter 13 Section 13.9 for a fuller answer. The parent company should prepare consolidated accounts covering both of them. Uniform accounting policies should be used and, if possible, the same accounting date. (a) (i) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f ) (g) (h) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 119 Answer to Question 11.4A (a) (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) BA 2 Leasehold land and buildings (IAS 16 and IAS 17) The total cost of £375,000 can be amortised over a period longer than the lease where there are sufficient reasons for believing that the lease will be renewed for a further period. A more permanent state would appear to be indicated by the fact that £300,000 was spent on buildings; such a period would be permissible, given sufficient reasons regarding lease extensions. Freehold land and buildings (IAS 16) Cost of building should be separated from that of land. Land (normally) is not to be depreciated. Buildings are to be depreciated over normal expected useful life. Increase in value due to inflation could result in a revaluation which in turn would mean increased charge for depreciation. Costs of maintenance do not mean that depreciation should not be charged. Plant and machinery (IAS 16) Depreciation rate to be fixed by reference to expected useful life. The degree of obsolescence and the full physical life will have to be taken into consideration. Straight line 25 per cent would take only four years to write cost down to nil. On the other hand, 15 per cent reducing balance would take over three times that period. Some compromise between these figures must be the obvious choice. If repairs and maintenance are likely to be light in early years and heavy in later years, it may make sense to use a fairly high rate using the reducing balance method. Research and development (IAS 38) The £250,000 spent on grass-cutting characteristics is purely research and should be completely written off. It will depend on whether the £100,000 spent has resulted in an asset with a future which is economically viable. If it has, then this sum can be written off over an appropriate period. The £75,000 for market research has not produced an identifiable product and consequently should be written off. Inventory (IAS 2) Included in the balance sheet valuation should be all costs attributable to bringing the inventory to its existing location and condition. Sales prices are only used in certain cases, e.g. in retailing where the usual gross profit percentage is used to find cost price which will then be used for the valuation. (b) (Figures in £000) Profit per draft accounts Add Amortisation of leaseholds added back (125 − 7.5) Less: Depreciation of freeholds (assuming land is 200 and buildings 150) over 50 years Plant and machinery (assume 25% reducing balance) Research and development – write off Drive system treated as viable – to be written off over 4 years Market research Already charged Revised figure of profit 120 370.0 117.5 487.5 3 131 250 25 75 350 50 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 300 434.0 53.5 Answer to Question 12.4A BA 2 (i) (Internal use) Breaker plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2004 Sales Less Returns inwards Less Cost of sales: Inventory 1.4.2003 Add Purchases Less Returns outwards 1,450,000 29,000 1,421,000 208,000 700,000 22,000 Less Inventory 31.3.2004 Gross profit Distribution costs: Wages and salaries Motor expenses Hire of motors General distribution expenses Depreciation: Plant and machinery Administrative expenses: Wages and salaries Motor expenses Hire of motors General administrative expenses Discounts allowed Directors’ remuneration Auditor’s remuneration Depreciation: Plant and machinery Less Discounts received Balance c/d Balance b/d Licence fees receivable Operating profit Bank interest receivable Profit before taxation Taxation Profit for the year Retained profit brought forward from last year 678,000 886,000 230,000 177,000 8,800 14,000 26,000 17,500 243,300 98,000 2,200 5,000 19,000 7,000 41,000 8,000 8,750 188,950 6,000 182,950 Transfer to general reserve Ordinary dividend paid Retained profit carried forward to next year 25,000 80,000 656,000 765,000 426,250 338,750 338,750 13,000 351,750 3,000 354,750 143,000 211,750 88,000 299,750 105,000 194,750 (ii) (Published) Breaker plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2004 Revenue Cost of sales 1,421,000 656,000 765,000 Distribution costs Administrative expenses 243,300 182,950 Licence fees receivable Operating profit Bank interest receivable Profit before taxation Taxation Profit for the year Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 426,250 338,750 13,000 351,750 3,000 354,750 143,000 211,750 121 Answer to Question 12.5A (i) (Internal use) BA 2 Mitchell plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 July 2002 Sales Less Returns inwards Less Cost of sales: Inventory 1.8.2001 Add Purchases Less Returns outwards Carriage inwards Less Inventory 31.7.2002 Cost of goods sold Wages Hire of plant and machinery Gross profit Distribution costs: Salaries and wages Motor expenses Rent and business rates General distribution expenses Advertising Depreciation: Motors Plant and machinery Administrative expenses: Salaries and wages Motor expenses Rent and business rates General administrative expenses Bad debts Discounts allowed Auditor’s remuneration Directors’ remuneration Hire of plant and machinery Depreciation: Motors Less Discounts received Operating profit Income from shares in group entities Income from shares in associates and joint ventures Loan note interest Profit before taxation Taxation Profit after taxation Profit on disposal of investments Tax on profit from disposal of investments Profit for the year Retained profit brought forward from last year Transfer to general reserve Preference dividend paid Ordinary dividend paid Retained profits 122 1,790,000 29,000 1,761,000 317,000 1,310,000 57,000 1,253,000 10,000 1,580,000 303,000 1,277,000 109,000 12,000 41,000 26,000 12,750 7,000 19,000 15,000 1,300 122,050 62,000 8,000 4,250 6,000 3,000 11,000 15,000 35,000 2,000 6,000 152,250 15,000 137,250 1,408,000 353,000 259,300 93,700 8,000 5,000 14,000 3,000 50,000 20,000 110,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 13,000 106,700 7,000 99,700 29,000 70,700 11,000 81,700 141,000 222,700 180,000 42,700 (ii) (Published) Mitchell plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 July 2002 Revenue Cost of sales 1,761,000 1,408,000 353,000 Distribution costs Administrative expenses Operating profit Profit on disposal of investments 122,050 137,250 14,000 Income from shares in group entities Income from shares in associates and joint ventures 8,000 5,000 Interest payable and similar charges Profit before taxation Taxation Profit for the year Answer to Question 12.6A 259,300 93,700 27,000 120,700 7,000 113,700 32,000 81,700 BA 2 (All in £000) Bunker plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2010 Revenue (note 1) Cost of sales (5,000 + 24,000 − 6,000 + 500 + 1,000 + 400) Distribution costs (1,200 + 40 + 700) Administrative expenses (30 + 3 + 800 + 100 + 300) Operating profit (note 2) Income from non-current asset investment (note 3) Loss on disposal of discontinued operations (note 4) Profit before taxation Taxation (note 5) Profit for the year Earnings per share (1,057/1,000) (note 6) Notes 1 Revenue is net of value added tax. 2 Operating profit is found after charging: Depreciation (500 + 40 + 3) Auditors’ remuneration Directors’ emoluments Staff costs (700 + 400 + 100) 3 Income from listed companies 4 Closure of overseas operations 5 Taxation UK corporation tax at 35% Previous year’s overprovision Deferred taxation – transfer Tax relief on overseas operations closure costs 35,000 24,900 10,100 1,940 1,233 3,173 6,927 1,600 8,527 350 8,177 7,120 1,057 105.7p 543 30 300 1,200 1,600 350 7,200 ( 200) 150 ( 30) 7,120 6 Earnings per share: Based on 1 million ordinary shares of £1 each and ordinary profit after taxation of £1,057,000. 7 Dividends: Ordinary interim 100 Ordinary final 200 300 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 123 Answer to Question 13.4A BA 2 (a) (For internal use) Jeremina plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2002 Sales Less Returns inwards Less Cost of sales: Inventory 1 April 2001 Add Purchases Add Carriage inwards 1,320,000 34,000 184,000 620,000 6,000 810,000 163,000 647,000 104,000 25,200 Less Inventory 31 March 2002 Wages Depreciation: Plant and machinery Gross profit Distribution costs: Warehouse wages Wages and salaries: Sales staff Motor expenses General distribution expenses Depreciation: Plant and machinery Motor vehicles Administrative expenses: Wages and salaries Motor expenses General administrative expenses Directors’ remuneration Bad debts Discounts allowed Depreciation: Plant and machinery Motor vehicles Less Discounts received 40,000 67,000 23,200 17,000 7,200 19,200 173,600 59,000 5,800 12,000 84,000 10,000 14,000 3,600 4,800 193,200 11,000 182,200 Other operating income: Royalties receivable Loan note interest Profit before taxation Taxation Profit on ordinary activities after taxation Retained profits from last year Preference dividend Ordinary dividend Retained profits carried forward to next year 124 12,000 40,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,286,000 776,200 509,800 355,800 154,000 5,000 159,000 2,000 157,000 38,000 119,000 21,000 140,000 52,000 88,000 (b) (For publication) Jeremina plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2002 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses 1,286,000 776,200 509,800 173,600 182,200 Other operating income Operating profit Interest payable and similar charges Profit before taxation Taxation Profit for the year Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2002 Non-current assets Intangible assets Development costs 24,000 Goodwill 200,000 Tangible assets Plant and machinery 132,000 Motor vehicles 48,000 Current assets Inventory: Finished goods and goods for resale Trade accounts receivable Total assets Current liabilities Bank loans and overdrafts 7,000 Trade accounts payable 45,000 Bills of exchange payable 7,000 Corporation tax payable 38,000 Non-current liabilities Loan notes Equity Called-up share capital Reserves: General reserve Exchange reserve Retained profits (21,000 + 119,000 − 12,000 − 40,000) 355,800 154,000 5,000 159,000 2,000 157,000 38,000 119,000 224,000 180,000 163,000 188,000 404,000 351,000 755,000 97,000 30,000 127,000 628,000 500,000 25,000 15,000 88,000 128,000 628,000 Note: It is assumed that both the ordinary dividend and the preference dividend were paid during the year. Notes 1 The called-up capital consists of: 400,000 Preference shares of 50p each 300,000 Ordinary shares of £1 each 200,000 300,000 500,000 2 Plant and machinery: Cost Depreciation to 31 March 2001 Depreciation for the year to 31 March 2002 72,000 36,000 3 Motor vehicles at cost: Less Depreciation to 31 March 2001 Less Depreciation for the year ended 31 March 2002 48,000 24,000 240,000 108,000 132,000 120,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 72,000 48,000 125 Answer to Question 13.5A BA 2 (All in £000) Plott plc Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2011 Non-current assets Tangible assets Investments Current assets Inventory Trade and other accounts receivable Total assets Current liabilities Trade and other accounts payable Bank overdraft Current tax 2,400 100 2,500 400 5,500 5,900 8,400 2,300 500 900 3,700 Non-current liabilities Deferred tax Net assets Equity Called-up share capital Reserves 80 Notes to the balance sheet (1) Tangible assets: Cost at 1.4.2010 Additions Disposals At 31.3.2011 Depreciation at 1.4.2010 Additions Disposals At 31.3.2011 Net book value: at 31.3.2011 at 31.3.2010 3,780 4,620 (6) 2,100 2,520 4,620 (7) (8) 3,400 600 ( 200) 3,800 1,200 500 ( 300) 1,400 2,400 2,200 100 (3) Inventory: Finished goods No significant difference between replacement cost and value shown on balance sheet. 400 (4) Accounts receivable: Trade 5,300 + Other 200 (5) Trade and other accounts payable Trade accounts payable Other accounts payable (6) Provisions for liabilities and charges: Deferred taxation Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (3) (4) (5) (2) Investments: Cost at 1.4.2010 and 31.3.2011 No purchase or sales of non-current asset investments took place during the year. Market value of investments at 31.3.2011 was £110,000. 126 Notes (1) (2) 5,500 2,000 300 2,300 80 (7) Called-up share capital Ordinary shares £1 each (8) Reserves At 1 April 2010 Profit for the year (585 + 420) At 31 March 2010 (9) The proposed dividend will be shown as a note Answer to Question 13.6A Authorised 2,500 Share Retained premium profits 315 1,200 1,005 315 2,205 Issued 2,100 Total 1,515 1,005 2,520 BA 2 (All in £000) Quire plc Income Statement for the year ending 30 September 2011 Revenue Cost of sales (500 + 12,000 + 720 − 400) Gross profit Distribution costs (2,800 + 360 − 50) Administrative expenses (3,000 + 130 + 120) Operating loss Income from non-current asset investments 40 + (1/4 × 40) 19,000 12,820 6,180 3,110 3,250 Interest payable Loss before taxation Taxation (80 + 10 − 60) Loss for the period ⎛ 560 ⎞ Loss per share ⎜  ⎝ 4,000 ⎠ Note: The proposed dividend should not be accrued. Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2011 Non-current assets Tangible assets (3,500 − 1,100 − 1,200) Investments Current assets Inventory Trade and other account receivables (5,320 + 160 + 50) Total assets Current liabilities Trade and other accounts payable (100 + 180 + 130) Bank overdraft Current tax 6,360 (180) 50 (130) (400) (530) ( 30) (560) (14.0p) 1,200 100 400 5,530 1,300 5,930 7,230 410 2,400 80 2,890 Non-current liabilities Deferred tax (200 − 60) Total liabilities Net assets Equity Called-up share capital Retained profits (820 − 560 − 60) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 140 3,030 4,200 4,000 200 4,200 127 Workings: 1 Depreciation: Fixed assets at cost Less Depreciation to 1 October 2010 3,500 1,100 2,400 × 50% Apportioned: Cost of sales (60%) Distribution (30%) Administration (10%) Answer to Question 13.7A 1,200 720 360 120 1,200 BA 2 (All in £000) Patt plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2010 Revenue Cost of sales (130 + 3,700 − 170 + 42 + 2,230) Gross profit Distribution costs (100 − 15 + 12) Administrative expenses (200 + 6 + 290 + 20) + [5% × (2,290 − 290)] Profit before taxation Taxation Profit for the year Earnings per share (195 ÷ 1,440) Note: Dividends proposed of 10p per ordinary share = £144,000 Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2010 Non-current assets Tangible assets Current assets Inventory Trade and other accounts receivable Total assets Current liabilities Trade and other accounts payable Bank overdraft Current tax Net assets Notes 7,000 (1) 5,932 1,068 97 616 (2) (3) (4) Notes 120 (5) 170 1,965 235 25 160 Equity Called-up share capital Retained profits 128 713 355 160 195 13.54p Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 2,135 2,255 (6) (7) 420 1,835 1,440 395 1,835 (8) (9) Notes (1) Revenue is in respect of invoices sent to customers, exclusive of value added tax. (2) Profit on operating activities before taxation: After charging: Depreciation Bad debt Allowance for doubtful debts (3) Tax on profit on ordinary activities: UK corporation tax at 35% (4) Earnings per share. Based on the profit on ordinary activities, after taxation, on 1,440,000 ordinary shares £1 each in issue. (5) Tangible fixed assets Total cost at 1 April 2009 and 31 March 2010 300 Depreciation at 1 April 2009 120 Charge for year 60 180 (6) Trade and other accounts receivable: Trade (2,290 − 100 − 290) 1,900 Other accounts receivable 50 Prepayments 15 (7) Trade and other accounts payable Trade 160 Other accounts payable 55 Accruals 20 60 290 100 160 120 1,965 235 (8) Share capital Ordinary shares £1 each (9) Retained profit At 1 April 2009 Profit for year (10) Dividend proposed of 10p per share = 144,000 Answer to Question 14.3A 1,440 200 195 395 BA 2 Cosnett Ltd Income Statement for the year ending 30 September 2005 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses (W1) 3,058,000 2,083,500 974,500 82,190 484,480 Loss on disposal of discontinued operations Dividends received from investments Interest payable Profit before taxation Taxation: Current tax Deferred tax Profit for the year 120,000 26,500 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 566,670 407,830 86,100 321,730 2,800 324,530 19,360 305,170 146,500 158,670 129 Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2005 Non-current assets Tangible assets Plant and machinery Current assets Inventory Trade accounts receivable (W2) Investments (W3) Cash at bank Total assets Current liabilities Trade and other accounts payable Taxation (W4) Accruals Bank loan Non-current liabilities Loan notes Bank loan Deferred taxation Account payable for plant 1,184,300 421,440 332,100 20,000 17,950 212,560 120,000 3,260 5,000 340,820 150,000 20,000 71,600 30,000 271,600 Net assets Equity Ordinary share capital Retained profits Workings: (W1) Administrative expenses: Salaries: office staff Directors’ emoluments Travel and entertainment Political and charitable donations Rent and rates: offices General expenses Allowance for doubtful debts Hire of plant (W2) 396,100 − (80% × 80,000) = 332,100 (W3) Obviously a current asset was bought with temporary surplus cash (W4) Mainstream corporation tax 130 791,490 1,975,790 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 612,420 1,363,370 600,000 763,370 1,363,370 42,100 63,000 4,350 750 82,180 221,400 64,000 6,700 484,480 120,000 Notes to Published Accounts 1 Accounting policies. These were . . . [should be given] 2 Directors’ emoluments were £63,000. [Details should be shown of highest paid and bands of payments.] 3 Depreciation. [Details of methods etc. to be given.] 4 Plant and machinery account showed cost £1,475,800 and aggregate depreciation £291,500. [Details of year’s movements should be stated.] 5 Auditors’ remuneration was £ . . . 6 Hire of plant and machinery cost £6,700. 7 The closure of the factory at . . . incurred a loss of £86,100. 8 Tax charged for the year is calculated: Corporation tax on profit 120,000 Deferred tax 26,500 146,500 9 Deferred taxation consists of: Balance 1 October 2004 45,100 Add Change to profit or loss 26,500 71,600 10 Retained profits Balance at 1 October 2004 625,700 Profits for the year 158,670 Balance at 30 September 2005 784,370 Interim dividend paid 21,000 763,370 Answer to Question 14.4A BA 2 (All in £000) Arran plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2007 Revenue Cost of sales (140 + 1,210 − 150) Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses (95 + 5 + 40) Operating profit Income from non-current asset investment Profit before taxation Taxation: Current tax (180 − 5) Deferred tax Profit for the year Earnings per share (W2) 2,265 1,200 1,065 500 140 640 425 12 437 175 4 179 258 129p Note: Dividends proposed at 20p per ordinary share = £60,000. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 131 Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2007 Non-current assets Tangible assets Land and buildings (W3) Plant and machinery (W3) Investments 165 190 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash and bank Total assets 150 230 25 Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Taxation (W4) 64 374 666 200 466 666 Workings: (W1) Corporation tax for the year Less Overprovision in previous year 180 5 175 4 179 Deferred tax Profit after tax Number of ordinary shares issued 258 = = 129p 200 EPS = Land and buildings 200 (W3) Cost 1 April 2006 Depreciation b/d Depreciation for year Written-down value 31 March 2007 (W4) Corporation tax for the year 132 405 1,040 130 180 310 Non-current liabilities Deferred tax (60 + 4) Net assets Equity Called-up share capital Retained profits (229 + 258 − 21) (W2) 355 280 635 30 5 35 165 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Plant, etc. 400 170 40 210 190 180 Answer to Question 14.5A BA 2 (All in £000) Greet plc Income Statement for the year ending 31 March 2008 Notes Revenue Cost of sales (140 + 960 − 150) Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses Operating profit Gain on disposal of discontinued operations 1,950 950 1,000 (1) (1) (1) 420 210 (2) Income from other non-current asset investment Profit before taxation Taxation: Current tax Deferred tax Profit for the year (3) (4) Earnings per share (5) 630 370 60 430 72 502 27 16 43 459 76.5p Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2008 Non-current assets Tangible assets Investments (7) (8) Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash and bank Total assets 150 470 40 Current liabilities Trade accounts payable Taxation Non-current liabilities Deferred tax Total liabilities Net assets Equity Called-up share capital Retained profits (182 + 459) 530 560 1,090 660 1,750 261 52 313 (9) 196 509 1,241 (10) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 600 641 1,241 133 Notes attached to the accounts for year ended 31 March 2008 1 In calculating distribution and administrative costs, the following items have already been charged: Hire of plant 35 Depreciation 32 Directors’ emoluments 45 Auditors’ remuneration 30 2 Sale of factory 60 3 Non-current asset income is on listed non-current asset investments 4 Tax on profit on ordinary activities: UK corporation tax (estimated) 52 Previous year’s overprovision (25) Deferred tax: increase in provision 16 43 5 EPS based on 600,000 shares in issue and the profit after tax 76.5p 6 Proposed final dividend 50p a share 300 7 Plant and machinery: Cost 31 March 2007 750 Depreciation to 31 March 2007 188 Depreciation for the year 32 220 530 8 Investments: These comprise of non-current asset investments at cost, with market value £580,000 No movements during year 560 9 Deferred taxation: at 31 March 2007 180 Add Provided during year 16 196 10 Called-up share capital: Ordinary shares £1 each Authorised 1,000 Issued 600 Answer to Question 14.7A BA 2 Per text. Answer to Question 15.2A BA 2 See text. 134 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 15.4A BA 2 Pennylane Ltd (IAS 7) Statement of Cash Flows (using the indirect method) for the year ending 31 December 2003 (£000) Cash flows from operating activities Profit from operations Adjustments for: Depreciation 90 Loss on sale of tangible non-current assets 13 Profit on sale of financial investment ( 5) Operating cash flows before movements in working capital Increase in inventories ( 16) Increase in accounts receivable (105) Increase in accounts payable 14 98 428 (107) 321 Cash generated by operations Tax paid Interest paid (110) ( 75) Net cash from operating activities Cash flows from investing activities Interest received Payments to acquire intangible non-current assets Payments to acquire tangible non-current assets Receipts from sale of tangible non-current assets Receipts from sale of financial investments Net cash used in investing activities Cash flows from financing activities Issue of ordinary share capital Dividends paid Long-term loan Net cash from financing activities Net increase in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period Cash and cash equivalents at end of period Answer to Question 15.8A 330 (185) 136 25 ( 50) (205) 37 30 (163) 60 ( 80) 100 80 53 (181) (128) BA 2 (All in £000) (a) Income Statement for the year ending 30th April 2006 Trading profit 520 Less Depreciation on property 36 Depreciation on plant and vehicles 84 Loss on sale of plant and vehicles 20 140 Net profit before tax 380 Less Taxation: Provision for corporation tax 172 Transfer to deferred tax 176 (348) Net profit for the year 32 Note: The transfer of profit for the year to a general reserve would be shown in the statement of changes in Equity. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 135 (b) Statement of Cash Flows for the year ending 30 April 2006 Cash flows from operating activities Profit before taxation Adjustments for: Depreciation Loss on sale of tangible non-current assets Increase in inventories Increase in accounts receivable Decrease in accounts payable Cash generated from operations Taxation paid Net cash used in operating activities Cash flows from investing activities Payments to acquire tangible non-current assets Payments to acquire intangible non-current assets Receipts from sales of tangible non-current assets Net cash used in investing activities Cash flows from financing activities Proceeds from issue of share capital Payment to redeem share capital Net cash from financing activities Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period Cash and cash equivalents at end of period 380 120 20 ( 24) ( 76) 24 64 444 (450) ( 6) (420) ( 40) 40 (420) 440 (125) 315 (111) 50 ( 61) Workings: Loss on sale of tangible non-current assets = 40 − 60 = (20) Cash and cash equivalent at end of period = 64 (per movement of assets table) less 125 (unrecorded redemption of shares) ( 61) Answer to Question 15.10A BA 2 (All in £000) (a) Statement of Cash Flows for V Ltd for the year ending 31 December 2003 (indirect method) Cash flows from operating activities Profit before taxation 331 Adjustments for: Depreciation 74 Loss on sale of tangible non-current assets 4 Increase in inventories ( 3) Increase in accounts receivable ( 9) Increase in accounts payable ( 5) 61 Cash generated from operations 392 Interest paid ( 23) Taxation paid ( 68) Net cash from operating activities 301 Cash flows from investing activities Payments to acquire tangible non-current assets ( 98) Receipts from sales of tangible non-current assets 2 Net cash used in investing activities ( 96) Cash flows from financing activities Proceeds from issue of share capital 91 Payment of long-term loan (250) Dividend paid ( 52) Net cash used in financing activities (211) Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents ( 6) Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period 37 Cash and cash equivalents at end of period 31 136 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Working Loss on sale of tangible non-current assets = 2 − (18 − 12) = (4) Taxation paid = charge in income statement 87 new provision (100) ( 13) old provision 81 paid 68 (b) In the long term, if a business is not profitable, it will not produce sufficient revenues to cover its expenses. Despite the importance of short-term cash flow to meet payments as they fall due, it is in the long-term interests of the business to invest in non-current assets, research and development, and advertising in order to generate future revenues in a profitable manner. Sometimes, management is accused of short-termism, for example delaying necessary capital expenditure in order to keep costs low. While this will indeed improve short-term cash flow, the long-term viability of the business can be at risk. Answer to Question 17.4A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet Goodwill Non-current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 20,000 158,000 41,000 28,000 3,000 250,000 Share capital 250,000 250,000 Answer to Question 17.5A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet Non-current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 170,000 42,000 78,000 5,000 295,000 Share capital Retained profits 235,000 60,000 295,000 Elimination of negative goodwill of 60,000 by Parental Ltd recognising the gain in profit or loss. Answer to Question 17.8A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet Non-current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 64,200 15,200 19,900 6,100 105,400 Share capital Minority interest 100,000 5,400 105,400 Elimination of negative goodwill of 1,200 uplifted for minority interest element to 1,200 plus 1,200 × 1/2 = 1,800. Non-current assets in Son and Daughter reduced by 1,800. Minority interest = 1/3 of 16,200 = 5,400. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 137 Answer to Question 17.9A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet Goodwill Non-current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Bank 3,000 57,000 11,000 17,000 7,000 95,000 Share capital Minority interest 90,000 5,000 95,000 Answer to Question 17.12A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet Goodwill Non-current assets Current assets 2,000 129,000 51,000 182,000 Share capital Retained profits General reserve Minority interest 100,000 56,000 20,000 6,000 182,000 Elimination of negative goodwill of 18,000 by reducing non-current assets in Sub 1. Answer to Question 17.13A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet Goodwill* Non-current assets Current assets 19,500 189,000 55,000 263,500 Share capital Retained profits General reserve Minority interest 160,000 58,000 20,000 25,500 263,500 * Goodwill 10,500 + 9,000 = 19,500 Answer to Question 18.3A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 October 2008 Goodwill* Non-current assets Current assets 7,980 165,000 55,000 227,980 Share capital Retained profits: 45,000 + (51% of 8,000) Minority interest 39,200 + [49% of (15,000 + 15,000)] 125,000 49,080 53,900 227,980 * Goodwill: Cost 60,000 − [51% of (80,000 + 7,000 + 15,000)] = 7,980 138 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 18.5A BA 2 P, S1 and S2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2003 Goodwill Non-current assets Current assets 1,800 157,667 114,300 273,767 Share capital Retained profits: 27,000 − (80% of 1,600) + (75% of 3,400) General reserve Minority interest: [20% of (50,000 + 1,400 + 6,000) + 25% of (36,000 + 8,067)] 200,000 28,270 23,000 22,497 273,767 Goodwill S1 Cost 49,000 − [80% of (50,000 + 3,000 + 6,000)] = 1,800 Negative goodwill S2 Cost 30,500 − [75% of (36,000 + 4,800 + 1,800)] = 1,450 Elimination of negative goodwill of 1,450 uplifted for minority interest element in S2 to 1,450 plus 1,450 × 25/75 = 1,933 (to nearest £). Non-current assets in S2 reduced by 1,933. Minority interest in S2 = 25 per cent of 44,067 = 11,017. S2 Balance Sheet (restated) £ 29,467 14,600 44,067 36,000 Non-current assets Current assets Share capital Retained profits as at 31.12.02 Add profit for 2003 Answer to Question 18.6A 4,667 3,400 8,067 44,067 BA 2 (All in £000) (a) Cost of acquisition Nominal value shares bought Retained profits (50 × 80%) Goodwill (b) Heather Thistle (120 − 50) × 80% Group retained profit (c) Minority interest: Nominal value of shares Retained profits 150 80 40 120 30 700 56 756 100 120 220 Minority interest 220 × 20% = 44 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 139 Answer to Question 19.4A BA 2 (All in £000) Seneley Group Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2006 Non-current assets Goodwill (W4) Other non-current assets Total non-current assets 58 745 803 Current assets Inventory (225 + 45 + 150 − 4) Accounts receivable (W1) Cash and bank Total assets 416 420 65 Current liabilities: Accounts payable (W1) 430 1,274 Equity Called-up share capital Retained profits (W2) 800 289 1,089 185 1,274 Minority interest (W3) Accounts Receivable 240 180 50 470 (W1) Seneley Lowe Wright Less Intercompany debts: Wright owed Lowe Lowe owed Seneley Seneley owed Wright 25 20 5 50 420 Accounts Payable 320 90 70 480 25 20 5 (W2) Retained profits: Seneley Wright (50 − 60) × 70% Lowe (150 − 90) × 80% (W3) Minority interest: Lowe 550 × 20% Wright 250 × 30% 140 50 430 252 ( 7) 48 293 ( 4) 289 Less Profit in inventory (W4) Cost of control: Cost of investment Share capital Retained profits Goodwill/(Negative goodwill) 901 1,704 110 75 185 80% 80% Lowe 450 (320) ( 72) 58 (70%) (70%) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Wright 130 (140) ( 42) ( 52) Answer to Question 19.5A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2005 Non-current assets Goodwill (125,000 − 113,000) + (85,000 − 77,840) Other non-current assets Current assets Inventory (101,000 − 350) Accounts Receivable (85,000 − 5,700) Bank Total assets 19,160 322,000 341,160 100,650 79,300 48,000 Current liabilities Accounts Payable (30,000 − 5,700) Net assets Share capital Retained profits (37,000 − 350 + 26,000 − (56% × 4,000)) General reserve 24,300 544,810 325,000 60,410 100,000 485,410 59,400 544,810 Minority interest 44% × (135,000) Answer to Question 19.7A 227,950 569,110 BA 2 (All in £000) Block Group of Companies Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2008 Non-current assets Goodwill (W1) Other non-current assets (8,900 + 2,280 + 3,240) Total non-current assets 100 14,420 14,520 Current assets Inventory (300 + 80 + 160 − 50) Accounts receivable (1,600 + 50 + 130 − 30 − 20) Cash (400 + 120 + 110) Total assets Accounts payable (300 + 140 + 130 − 20 − 30) 490 1,730 630 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Retained profits (W2) 10,000 5,190 15,190 1,660 16,850 Minority interest (W3) Workings: (W1) Goodwill: Cost Shares Retained profits 2,850 17,370 520 17,850 Chip Knot 2,500 3,000 200 3,200 × 80% ( 2,560 60) 1,600 2,000 500 2,500 × 60% Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,500 100 141 (W2) Retained profits Block Chip (500 − 200) × 80% Knot (400 − 500) × 60% Inventory profit unrealised 100 × 50% 5,060 240 ( 60) ( 50) 5,190 (W3) Minority interest Chip 20% × 3,500 Knot 40% × 2,400 Answer to Question 20.2A 700 960 1,660 BA 2 75% Share capital and reserves 31 October 2008 Shares bought 31 October 2004 Shares bought 31 October 2008 Holding Cost 150,000 300,000 450,000 260,000 650,000 765,000 910,000 145,000 Goodwill on acquisition Note Comprising: 31 October 2004: £260,000 − ((25% of £600,000 + 340,000) = £235,000) = 25,000 31 October 2008: £650,000 − ((50% of £600,000 + 420,000) = £510,000) = 140,000 165,000 Post first purchase profits 31 October 2004 to 31 October 2008 (25% of £80,000) ( 20,000)* 145,000 * This is the goodwill ‘lost’ by delaying acquisition until 31 October 2008. Answer to Question 20.4A BA 2 Shares bought Reserves at 31 December 2007 20,000 + 16,000 = Add proportion of 2008 profits before acquisition (1/4 × 24,000) Proportion of pre-acquisition profits 175,000 36,000 6,000 42,000 175,000 × 42,000 = 200,000 36,750 211,750 Paid for shares 240,000 Therefore goodwill is 240,000 − 211,750 = 28,250 Answer to Question 21.2A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2007 Goodwill Other non-current assets Current assets 39,000 279,000 107,000 425,000 Share capital Retained profits (74,000 + 46,000 − 25,000 + 30,000) 300,000 125,000 425,000 Workings: Goodwill: Cost 160,000 − 80,000 − 16,000 − Dividend 25,000 = 39,000 142 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 21.4A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2008 Goodwill (380,000 − 195,000 − 65% of 62,000) Other non-current assets 144,700 510,000 654,700 212,000 866,700 50,000 816,700 Current assets Current liabilities Share capital Retained profits (112,000 − 65% of 22,000) Minority interest (105,000 + 35% of 40,000) Answer to Question 21.7A 600,000 97,700 119,000 816,700 BA 2 (a) (All in £000) P plc & S plc Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 30 April 2008 Non-current assets Goodwill 22 Cost Other non-current assets Freehold property Plant Current assets Inventory (W1) Accounts receivable (W2) Cash (W3) Total assets Current liabilities Trade Accounts payable (W4) Taxation 141 440 581 Depreciation to date 55 148 203 172 35 25 86 292 378 400 232 632 51 80 131 501 Equity Called-up share capital Reserves Share premium General reserve (W6) Retained profits (W7) Minority interest (W5) 300 20 64 73 457 44 501 Workings: Cost of Control Account Cost of investment in ordinary share capital 150 Ordinary share capital (80% × 100) Share premium (80% × 10) General reserve (80% × 20) Profit and loss (80% × 30) Goodwill 150 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 80 8 16 24 22 150 143 (W1) Inventory P S Less Profit in unsold inventory 20% margin × 20 111 65 176 4 172 45 10 35 19 2 4 25 57 6 51 (W5) Minority interest: Ordinary share capital 20% × 100 Preference share capital 50% × 20 Share premium 20% × 10 General reserve 20% × 15 Retained profits 20% × 45 20 10 2 3 9 44 (W6) General reserve: P Less 80% reduction S reserve × 5 68 4 64 (W2) Accounts receivable P S Less Intercompany account (W3) Cash 30 15 P S Cheque in transit (W4) Trade accounts payable P S Less Intercompany account 35 22 (W7) Retained profits P S 80% × 15 65 12 77 ( 4) Less Profit on intercompany inventory (see W1) 73 (b) ‘Cost of control’ is the excess of the purchase price over the value of the assets acquired when one company takes a controlling interest in another company. It is usually called, ‘goodwill’, although the term ‘cost of control’ is more explicit. The treatment adopted complies with International GAAP. Answer to Question 22.2A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2004 Non-current assets Goodwill (74,000 − 30,000 − 18,000 − 16,000) Other non-current assets Less Depreciation Current assets 10,000 263,000 64,900 Share capital Retained profits (65,000 − 1,000 + 10,000 + 100) Answer to Question 22.4A 210,000 74,100 284,100 BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2008 Non-current assets Goodwill (68,000 − 65,000) Other non-current assets Less Depreciation Current assets 3,000 155,000 15,500 Share capital Retained profits (42,000 + 12,000 − 1,500) 144 198,100 76,000 284,100 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 139,500 20,000 162,500 110,000 52,500 162,500 Answer to Question 23.2A BA 2 Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2003 Non-current assets Goodwill Other non-currents assets Current assets 50,100 566,250 123,750 740,100 Share capital Retained profits (197,500 + 80% of 10,000 + 56% of 12,500) Minority interest 500,000 212,500 27,600 740,100 Goodwill: Cost of shares to group in Sub A Ltd Cost of shares to group in Sub B Ltd 80% of 32,500 Less Shares: in Sub A in Sub B 56% of 25,000 Retained profits: in Sub A 80% of 15,000 in Sub B 56% of 2,500 General reserve: in Sub A 80% of 7,500 97,500 26,000 40,000 14,000 12,000 1,400 Minority interest: Shares in Sub A 10,000 Shares in Sub B 44% of 25,000 11,000 Retained profits: in Sub A 20% of 25,000 5,000 in Sub B 44% of 15,000 6,600 General reserve: in Sub A 20% of 7,500 Less Cost of shares in Sub B to minority interest of Sub A 20% of 32,500 Answer to Question 23.4A 123,500 54,000 13,400 6,000 73,400 50,100 21,000 11,600 1,500 34,100 6,500 27,600 BA 2 The dividend on the preference share should be treated like interest and accrued (see W7). Bryon Ltd & its subsidiaries Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2006 Non-current assets Goodwill Tangible assets Freehold land and buildings at cost (W1) Plant and equipment at cost (W2) Less Depreciation 550,625 2,825,000 11,468,400 8,419,600 Current assets Inventory (W4) Accounts receivable (W5) Cash at bank (W6) Total assets 2,870,500 4,600,000 142,000 Current liabilities Accounts payable Preference dividends accrued (W7) Bank overdraft 4,073,050 80,000 1,450,850 5,603,900 Non-current liabilities 8% Redeemable preference shares 10% Loan note 2,000,000 2,000,000 4,000,000 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Reserves (W9) Minority interests (W8) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 3,048,800 7,612,500 14,036,925 9,603,900 4,433,025 2,000,000 949,675 1,483,350 4,433,025 145 Workings: Bryon owns 75% of Carlyle Bryon owns 75% × 662/3% = 50% of Doyle (W1) Land and buildings per balance sheets Extra value: Doyle (W2) Plant per balance sheets Extra value: Doyle (W3) Depreciation per balance sheets Extra depreciation: Doyle 8,280,000 139,600 8,419,600 (W4) Inventory per balance sheets Less Intercompany profit: Doyle 2,950,500 80,000 2,870,500 (W5) Accounts receivable per balance sheets Less Cheque in transit 4,700,000 100,000 4,600,000 (W6) Bank per balance sheets Cheque in transit (W7) Preference dividend 1/2 year accrued: 8% × 2,000,000 × 6 months (W8) Minority interests Shares: Ordinary: 2,625,000 200,000 2,825,000 11,250,000 218,400 11,468,400 42,000 100,000 142,000 80,000 Carlyle (25%) Doyle (50%) Reserves: Carlyle Per question Less Preference dividend 1.10.2006 25% Reserves: Doyle Per balance sheet Fair value adjustments 250,000 600,000 850,000 1,013,400 80,000 933,400 233,350 521,200 278,800 800,000 50% share (W9) (i) 400,000 1,483,350 Reserves Profit in Doyle Per question Less Additional depreciation Amended profit for 12 months Post-acquisition = 310,000 40,000 270,000 No of shares bought × Profit × Months owned Issued shares = (Bought 31 March 2006) = (Bought 30 June 2006) 400,000 6 × 270,000 × = 1,200,000 12 400,000 3 × 270,000 × = 1,200,000 12 75% goes to group reserves* 45,000 22,500 67,500 = 50,625 * Not 662/3 as the shares shown in the above calculation do not include minority interest. As Bryon Ltd owns 75% of Carlyle Ltd, that is the proportion to use. 146 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (ii) Reserves in Doyle per balance sheet Add Fair value adjustment 521,200 278,800 800,000 Minority owns 50% 400,000 Bryon’s share 50% Less 75% share of post-acquisition profits (see (i)) Value of reserves at date of purchases Reserves for balance sheet therefore per unconsolidated balance sheets: Bryon 879,000 Carlyle 1,013,400 Doyle 521,200 Add Fair value adjustment (Doyle) Less Unrealised profits on inventory (W4) Pre-acquisition profits Carlyle (75%) Doyle reserves: pre-acquisition (see above) Minority interest (Doyle) Minority interest (Carlyle): 1,013,400 − preference dividend due 80,000 = 933,400 × 25% Accrued dividend preference shares (Carlyle) Answer to Question 24.3A 400,000 50,625 349,375 2,413,600 278,800 2,692,400 80,000 600,000 349,375 400,000 233,350 80,000 1,742,725 949,675 BA 2 Old plc & subsidiaries Consolidated Income Statement for the year ending 30 April 2006 Revenue (1,250,000 + (875,000 − 150,000 − (3/4 × 120,000)) + (3/4 × 650,000) Cost of sales (W4) Gross profit Distribution expenses 255,000 Administration expenses 122,000 Profit before taxation Taxation Profits for the year after taxation Minority interest (8,400 L (W1) + 4,000 Preference Dividend F) 12,400 Pre-acquisition dividend 1,000 Profit for the year (W2) 2,372,500 1,450,500 922,000 377,000 545,000 215,000 330,000 13,400 316,600 Workings: (W1) Lodge: Year Revenue 650,000 Cost of goods sold (Purch. 475,000 + Op. Inv. 80,000 − Cl. Inv.85,000) (470,000) 180,000 Distribution expenses ( 60,000) Administration ( 72,000) 48,000 Taxation ( 20,000) 28,000 Minority interest 40% Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 9 months 487,500 (352,500) 135,000 ( 45,000) ( 54,000) 36,000 ( 15,000) 21,000 8,400 147 (W2) Turnover Purchases Adjust stock Distribution Administration Corporation tax Profit unrealised (see W3) Minority interest (see W1) Preference dividend: minority Pre-acquisition preference dividend Old 1,250,000 ( 780,000) 20,000 490,000 125,000 28,000 337,000 125,000 212,000 ( 8,000) Profit @ 25% (W4) Cost of sales Per W2 Intra-group purchases Cost of purchases Inventory adjustment Profit unrealised in net inventory (W3) Profit in closing inventory Cost of sales Answer to Question 24.4A Lodge 487,500 (356,250) 3,750 135,000 ( 45,000) ( 54,000) 36,000 15,000 21,000 ( 204,000 (W3) Unrealised profit Opening intra-group inventory Closing intra-group inventory Field 875,000 (555,000) ( 15,000) 305,000 85,000 40,000 180,000 75,000 105,000 ( 4,000) ( 1,000) 100,000 Old 36,000 40,000 4,000 1,000 Field Old 780,000 (150,000) 630,000 ( 20,000) 1,000 – 611,000 Field 555,000 555,000 15,000 – – 570,000 8,400) 12,600 316,600 Lodge – 28,000 28,000 7,000 Total Lodge 356,250 ( 90,000)* 266,250 (3,750) – 7,000 269,500 Total 8,000 1,450,500 BA 2 ATH Ltd Consolidated Income Statement for year ending 31 December 2008 Revenue (194,000 + 116,000 + 84,000 − 1,000) Cost of sales (153,000 + 87,000 + 63,000 − 1,000) Gross profit General expenses (32,600 + 22,900 + 18,750) Profit for the year Minority interest (W1) Group profit for the year 393,000 302,000 91,000 74,250 16,750 1,220 15,530 Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2008 Goodwill (W3) Non-current assets Current assets Total assets Current liabilities Net assets Share capital Retained profits (W2 + 15,530) Minority interest (W4) 148 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 5,450 99,000 104,450 91,000 195,450 55,000 140,450 100,000 32,330 8,120 140,450 Workings: (W1) Minority interest: 20% × £6,100 for GLE 1,220 (W2) Profit brought forward: ATH Ltd FRN (1,900 − 700) GLE 33,700 (24,000) ( 4,800) 4,900 (W3) Goodwill: Cost of shares Par value Pre-acquisition profit Goodwill 15,600 1,200 16,800 FRN 21,250 (20,000) ( 700) 550 5,450 GLE 6,000 2,120 8,120 (W4) Minority interest: Share capital Retained profits 20% × (6,000 − 1,500 + 6,100) Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit General expenses Net profit Dividend received Dividend paid Summarised Income Statements ATH 194,000 153,000 41,000 32,600 8,400 1,200 9,600 Answer to Question 26.3A (a) GLE 116,000 87,000 29,000 22,900 6,100 FRN 84,000 63,000 21,000 18,750 2,250 Total 394,000 303,000 91,000 74,250 16,750 1,500 4,600 BA 2 Jasmin (Holdings) Group plc Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2004 (£000) Intangible fixed assets Tangible fixed assets Investment in associated company (note 1) Current assets: Inventory (285,600 + 151,400 = 437,000 − 300 unrealised profit) Cash 38,300 379,400 8,624 426,324 436,700 319,500 756,200 1,182,524 528,100 654,424 Total assets Current liabilities: Accounts payable Share capital and reserves Ordinary £1 shares Revaluation reserve [W1 (iv)] Retained profits [W1 (v)] 60,000 37,964 553,320 591,284 3,140 654,424 Minority interest Notes to financial statements (extract): 1 Investment in associated company, Fortran plc: (8,000 + post-combination share 624) Share of net assets (pre-combination 7,202 plus post-combination of 52% × 1,200) Premium on acquisition (not yet written off) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 7,696 928 8,624 149 Workings: (W1) Kasbah: (i) Goodwill on acquisition = 97,600 − [18,000 + 800 (goodwill on preference shares) + 40,500] 38,300 (ii) Minority interest = ordinary share capital 2,000 + preference share capital 3,200 = 5,200 (retained profits 1,880 + revaluation reserve reduction 180) = 3,140 (iii) Group share of Kasbah retained profits = balance 18,800 + capitalised at acquisition 40,500 59,300 − minority interest 1,880 = 57,420 (post-combination loss) (iv) Revaluation reserve = Jasmin 40,000 − group share of Kasbah revaluation reduction 1,620 38,380 minus post-combination reduction Fortran 416 = 37,964 (v) Group retained profits = Jasmin 610,000 − (unrealised inventory profit 300 + Kasbah 57,420) 552,280 + [Fortran post-combination of 52% (3.6 − 1.6 =) 1.04] = 553,320 = − = = = (W2) Fortran: (i) As Jasmin only controls 40% of the voting equity of Fortran, Fortran is an associate company, rather than a subsidiary. Nevertheless, it is 52% of the profits and losses that should be included under equity accounting, being the proportion of ownership. Jasmin ‘A’ ordinary shares ‘B’ ordinary shares (ii) (iii) 4,800 800 5,600 (80%) (10%) (40%) Voting rights Others 1,200 7,200 8,400 (20%) (90%) (60%) Total 6,000 8,000 14,000 (100%) (100%) (100%) Premium on acquisition = cost 8,000 − [52% of (share capital 10,000 + revaluation reserve 2,000 + retained profits 1,600)] = 928 Investment in Fortran = cost of shares 8,000 + share of post-acquisition reserves [52% revaluation reserves of (800) = (416) + 52% retained profits of 2,000 = 1,040] = 8,624 (c) The 63.8 million losses of Kasbah plc (the balance on reserves at 1 April 2003 was 45 million; at 3 March 2004 it was 18.8 million), could indicate a possible going concern problem that should be investigated. Answer to Question 26.4A BA 2 (a) Huge has 75% of Large’s share capital. Large is therefore quite clearly a subsidiary undertaking and will be treated as such in the consolidated accounts. Huge has 25% of the ordinary share capital of Medium. This means that Medium is an associated or related undertaking. The equity method of accounting therefore applies under IAS 27, where the test of it is based on the ability to exert significant influence. Huge owns only 10% in Small and there is nothing stated in the question to suggest it should be treated as an associated undertaking. It will simply be shown as an investment. 150 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (b) (All in £000) Huge plc and subsidiary Large plc Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2007 Fixed assets Goodwill (W2) Property, plant and machinery (2,004 + 780) Investment in related company (Medium) Add Share of post-acquisition profits (W1) Other investments (Small) 60 2,784 180 15 Current assets Inventory (489 + 303) Accounts receivable (488 + 235 + 10) Accounts receivable – related company Bank and cash (45 + 62) Total assets 792 733 40 107 Current liabilities Trade accounts payable (318 + 170) 195 12 3,051 1,672 4,723 488 4,235 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital Revenue reserves (see W3) 2,400 1,530 3,930 305 4,235 Minority interest (see W4) Workings: (W1) Medium: Post-acquisition profits Reserves 30.9.2007 Less Reserves 1.10.2006 25% of 60,000 = 210,000 150,000 (W2) Purchase of Large shares 600,000 shares at par 600,000/800,000 × Revenue reserves of 320,000 600,000 240,000 840,000 900,000 60,000 Cost of purchase Goodwill (W3) Revenue reserves: Huge Large 75% × post-acquisition profits of 100,000 (420,000 − 320,000) = Medium (W1) 60,000 15,000 1,440,000 75,000 15,000 1,530,000 200,000 105,000 305,000 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 151 (W4) 25% share capital (Large) × 800,000 = 25% reserves (Large) × 420,000 = Answer to Question 27.2A BA 2 See text, Section 27.1. Answer to Question 27.4A BA 2 See text, Section: (a) 27.3 (b) 27.2 (c) 27.4 (d) 27.6 (e) 27.5 Answer to Question 27.6A (a) (b) (c) (d) BA 2 1 : 8.33 or 12% 2.5% 48p 5 Answer to Question 27.8A BA 2 Any ten ratios could be selected, but it would be expected that the selection would include ratios from each of the groups given in the chapter. In this case, the company appears as if it may have liquidity problems, possibly due to excessively high inventory. The gross profit percentage is not very high at 30%, and much of it is eroded by the time all the other expenses have been charged to profit or loss. The EPS and dividend cover ratios would need to be compared to those of other companies in the same sector, as would all the other ratios calculated, before any further conclusions could be drawn. It would also be interesting to compare these ratios (and others) with the equivalent figures for the previous year. Ratio category Formula Solvency Current ratio Current assets Current liabilities = 1.06 : 1 Acid test ratio Current assets − Inventory Current liabilities = 0.18 : 1 Gross profit : Revenue Gross profit Sales = 30% Return on capital employed Profit before interest and tax Total assets – current liabilities = 10.2% Inventory turnover Cost of goods sold Average inventory = 5.09 times Accounts receivable days Accounts receivable × 365 Sales = 10.95 days Accounts payable days Accounts payable × 365 Purchases = 40.28 days Prior charge capital Total capital = 23.8% Profitability Efficiency Capital structure Capital gearing ratio Shareholder ratios Earnings per share Net profit after tax and preference dividends = 7.6p Number of ordinary shares in issue Dividend cover Net profit after tax and preference dividends = 3.17 times Net dividend on ordinary shares 152 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 27.10A BA 2 R T 500 100 × = 25% 2,000 1 500 100 × = 35.7% 1,400 1 (a) (i) Gross profit as % of revenue (ii) Net profit as % of revenue 60 100 × = 3% 2,000 1 100 100 × = 7% 1,400 1 (iii) Expenses as % of revenue 440 100 × = 22% 2,000 1 400 100 × = 28.6% 1,400 1 (iv) Inventory turnover 1,500 = 3.2 times (440 + 490) ÷ 2 900 = 4.7 times (144 + 240) ÷ 2 (v) ROCE 60 100 × = 5.4% 1,120 1 100 100 × = 14.7% 678 1 (vi) Current ratio 1,250 = 3.86 324 687 = 7.63 90 760 = 2.35 324 447 = 4.97 90 (viii) Accounts receivable : revenue ratio 680 × 12 = 4.08 months 2,000 320 × 12 = 2.74 months 1,400 (ix) 324 × 12 = 2.51 months 1,550 90 × 12 = 1.08 months 996 (vii) Acid test ratio Accounts payable : purchases ratio (b) T is obviously the more efficient company. It has made £100,000 profit compared with the £60,000 profit of R and also has achieved a return on capital employed of 14.7%, almost three times that of R (5.4%). Reasons: These are conjecture – you really have to know more about the businesses before you can be definite. (i) Somehow T has managed to achieve a far greater percentage gross profit while maintaining a reasonable level of sales. (ii) Because expenses are lower, but gross profit is the same as for R, T has made the higher net profit. (iii) T has kept inventory down to relatively lower figures than R, something made possible by T’s higher level of inventory turnover. (iv) T has almost three times R’s rate of return on capital employed, helped by lower inventory, better accounts receivable : revenue ratio and relatively lower accounts payable. (v) T appears to have far better control over its accounts receivables and its accounts payables than R. Answer to Question 28.3A Calculations BA 2 Income Statements for the year ending 31 May 2006 6 months to 30 Nov Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Expenses Net profit Opening inventory Closing inventory Average inventory 140,000 42,000 98,000 56,000 42,000 12,000 16,000 14,000 6 months to 31 May % 100 30 70 40 30 196,000 70,000 126,000 112,000 14,000 16,000 25,000 20,500 Year to 31 May % 100 36 64 57 7 336,000 112,000 224,000 168,000 56,000 12,000 25,000 18,500 % 100 33 67 50 17 Average inventory could be calculated for the year as [(opening inventory 12,000 + closing inventory 25,000) ÷ 2] £18,500 or [(12,000 + 16,000 + 25,000) ÷ 3] £17,666 or [(14,000 + 20,500) ÷ 2] £17,250. Inventory turnover Cost of sales = Average inventory 3 3.4 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 6.0 153 Influence of New Premises New premises % 70,000 100 28,000 40 42,000 60 21,000 30 21,000 30 – 10,000 5,000 5.6 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Expenses Net profit/(loss) Opening inventory Closing inventory Average inventory Inventory turnover Existing business % 126,000 100 42,000 33 84,000 67 91,000 72 ( 7,000) ( 5) 16,000 15,000 15,500 2.7 6 months to 31 May % 196,000 100 70,000 36 126,000 64 112,000 57 14,000 7 16,000 25,000 20,500 3.4 Note: The New Premises average inventory is probably understated since it is assumed that inventory builds up gradually over the period from zero to £10,000. In reality it may have held £10,000 throughout the period of trading. Report to Martha The analysis of the results which are shown above indicates a major query associated with the expenses of the existing business in the second half of the year. Gross profit has declined by 3 per cent compared with the first half year but the expenses have increased from 40 per cent to 72 per cent of sales. Even if it is assumed that expenses are largely fixed for rent, business rates, etc. the absolute level has increased from £56,000 to £91,000, i.e. by £35,000 or 62.5 per cent in the six-month period. This is in a period when, for the existing business, revenue reduced from £140,000 to £126,000, i.e. by 10 per cent. The inventory turnover figure indicates some improvement in the second half which is mainly attributable to the new business. This may not be an entirely acceptable measure until a further full halfyear’s funding had been completed. The return on capital employed is as follows (using the capital employed balances at the end of the period): Capital employed Net profit Return 6 months to 30 Nov £90,000 £42,000 47% 6 months to 31 May 104,000 14,000 13% 12 months to 31 May 104,000 56,000 54% Despite the decline in profits during the second half of the year, the return on capital employed is high at 54 per cent. Future trends in gross profit margins and the level of expenses need to be examined. Answer to Question 28.5A BA 2 (a) (i) Current ratio Current assets Current liabilities Ratio (ii) Acid test ratio Current assets – inventory Current liabilities Ratio 2004 35,000 25,000 1.4 : 1 15,000 25,000 0.6 : 1 (b) (i) The change in net working capital is as follows: Items increasing working capital Increase in inventory Trade accounts receivable increase 2005 45,000 50,000 0.9 : 1 20,000 50,000 0.4 : 1 5,000 7,000 12,000 Items reducing working capital Increase in trade accounts payable Reduction in net liquid assets: reduced cash balance increase in overdraft Net reduction in working capital 4,000 2,000 27,000 29,000 33,000 21,000 The information explains the detailed changes in working capital that have taken place. The reasons behind these changes cannot be given since information is not given. 154 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (ii) The main issue is the trend of declining liquidity over the year to 31 March 2005. If this trend continues, the business will be unable to meet its liability to creditors. It could, of course, be that major new funding is imminent for the issue of new long-term capital or rising volume/projects. If this is not managed, the owner needs to be advised of the necessity of urgent action. (c) The balance sheet can be used to prepare a cash flow statement which indicates changes in source and application of cash balances. It will give some indication if comparisons are made over a period of time as to whether the business is investing and expanding or declining, and whether a proper capital structure is in place. The capital structure will depend on the nature of the business and the risks it is involved with, whether it is high or low geared for example. The balance sheet, being a position statement at one point in time, does not give a dynamic picture of future prospects which are essential in planning liquidity. Answer to Question 28.7A BA 2 Note how the question has the years in the ‘wrong’ columns – normally the previous year is on the far right. Examiners have been known to switch them, so always check which is which. (a) Witton Way Ltd The following six ratios could be calculated in answering this part of the question, but other relevant ratios would be acceptable: 2005 2006 (i) Gross profit ratio Gross profit × 100 Revenue 1,850 × 100 7,650 2,070 × 100 11,500 = 24.2% = 18.0% 1,650 + 50 × 100 5,900 + 5,000 + 350 1,500 + 350 × 100 5,900 + 5,700 + 3,350 = 15.1% = 12.7% (ii) Return on capital employed Profit before tax + long-term interest Share capital + reserves + loans and other borrowings (iii) Acid test or quick assets or liquidity ratio Current assets − Inventory Current liabilities 3,600 − 1,500 2,400 6,300 − 2,450 2,700 = 0.9 = 1.4 (iv) Trade accounts receivable collection period Trade accounts receivable × 365 Credit sales 1,200 × 365 7,650 3,800 × 365 11,500 = 57 days = 121 days 1,500 × 365 5,800 2,450 × 365 9,430 = 94 days = 95 days 350 × 100 10,900 + 350 3,350 × 100 11,600 + 3,350 = 3.1% = 22.4% (v) Inventory turnover ratio Inventory × 365 Cost of sales (vi) Gearing Long-term borrowings × 100 Shareholders’ interest + long-term borrowings Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 155 (b) In making a comparison between the two years to 30 April 2005 and 30 April 2006 respectively (as required by part (a) of the question), the following points could be made: 1 Profitability (a) In absolute terms, revenue has increased by £3,850,000 (50.3%), the cost of sales by £3,630,000 (62.6%), and gross profit by £220,000 (11.9%). The company’s gross profit on revenue has fallen from 24.2% to 18.0%, presumably because it reduced its selling price. (b) Other expenses have increased by £20,000 (13.3%), probably as a result of the increased sales activity. (c) To fund the extra expansion, it would appear that the company has borrowed another £3 million as a long-term loan. Hence, the interest charges have increased by £300,000. (d) Overall, the profit before tax has decreased by £100,000 although the tax based on profits is down by £50,000. (e) Not surprisingly, the company’s return on its long-term funds employed was down from 15.1% to 12.7%. This is a most disappointing result after experiencing such a marked increase in its sales activity. A decrease in the selling price of goods apparently led to an increase in sales volume, but at the expense of overall profitability. (f ) In brief, it appears that the increase in the company’s sales did not lead to a corresponding increase in profits. Indeed, the company was less profitable in 2006 than it was in 2005. It should also be noted that these results do not take into account the effects of inflation on the company’s performance. Allowing for inflation would make the 2006 results even more disappointing. 2 Liquidity (a) At the end of 2005 the company has a healthy cash balance of £900,000. By the end of 2006, it was down to £50,000 notwithstanding that the company had raised £3 million in long-term loans during the year. (b) However, its liquidity position appears to have improved in 2006 even though its cash position has declined so dramatically during the year. The company’s current assets (excluding its inventory) more than cover its current liabilities in 2006, while in 2005 its current liabilities exceeded the current assets (excluding inventory) by some £300,000. 3 Efficiency (a) Bearing in mind the company’s increased sales activity, its inventory at the end of 2006 compared with 2005 was proportionate to the increase in trading activity. At each year end the company held the equivalent of 95 days’ sales in hand. (b) Its efficiency in dealing with its trade accounts receivable has, however, worsened. At the end of 2006, they represented 121 days’ sales, whereas at the end of 2005 they represented just 57 days’ sales (itself not a particularly low level). Of course this is not a surprising result since more generous credit terms were offered in 2006 in order to stimulate sales. The company has been able to finance this policy by running down its cash reserves and by increasing its long-term loans. In subsequent years it may not be possible to carry on with this policy unless it is able to raise even more long-term funds. 4 Shareholders’ interests (a) Although the volume of its business increased dramatically, its profitability was down. Hence the company has maintained its dividend at the same level as in 2005. (b) By borrowing an extra £3 million, the company’s interest charges have increased substantially, although interest charges on loans outstanding at the year end fell from 14.2% to 10.5%. Thus at a time when profits were falling, the ordinary shareholders’ dividend may have to be reduced in order to help pay the interest on the long-term debt, especially if even more funds have to be raised in 2007 and onwards. (c) In 2005 the gearing ratio was only 3.1% but by the end of 2006 it had risen to 22.4%. Nonetheless, Witton Way is still a low-geared company, and provided no more long-term loans are raised, the ordinary shareholders have little to fear – unless profitability continues to decline. 5 Conclusion In the short term the company’s new policy appears to have failed. While its revenue has increased substantially, its overall profit is down, its liquidity is threatened and it has had to finance its increased sales activity by a considerable amount of extra borrowing. It would appear that the extra borrowing enabled it to finance its extended credit terms, as well as help to purchase new non-current assets – presumably to cope with the extra activity. 156 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (c) The following points could be made in answering part (c) of the question: 1 What was the effect of inflation upon the company’s sales? 2 How many new customers were attracted to the company as a result of the extended credit terms and what extra volume of business did they bring? 3 What increase in sales was achieved by individual products? 4 Were the extended credit terms applied to all products? 5 Were all customers offered the extended credit terms? 6 Were more profitable products displaced by less profitable products? 7 Has the proportion of bad debts increased? 8 What effect has the increase in sales activity had on other costs? 9 To what extent has the expected depreciation rate on non-current assets been affected by the increased sales activity? 10 What facilities has the company arranged in order to finance the more generous credit terms in later years? Answer to Question 28.9A BA 2 (a) To: From: Subject: 1 The Chairman The Accountant State and progress of the business The last three years’ trading may be summarised thus: 2004 £000 % Sales 260 100.0 Cost of sales 207 79.6 Trading profit 53 20.4 Depreciation 15 5.8 Loan interest – – Net profit before tax 38 14.6 2005 £000 265 215 50 15 – 35 % 100.0 81.1 18.9 5.7 – 13.2 £000 510 373 137 45 30 62 2006 % 100.0 73.1 26.9 8.8 5.9 12.2 Gross profit fell in 2005 but rose sharply in 2006 – was this caused by an increase in sales prices or a decrease in cost of sales? The additional investment in plant has brought a higher charge for depreciation and created a loan interest cost, but the amount of net profit is sharply up, almost in line with sales. 2 Inventory Closing inventory represent the following days’ cost of sales: 20 × 365 = 35 days 207 45 × 365 = 76 days 215 85 × 365 = 83 days 373 Inventory now seem very high. Is this level necessary? 3 Accounts receivable 33 × 365 = 46 days 260 101 × 365 = 139 days 265 124 × 365 = 89 days 510 89 days seems high, even though a big improvement on 2005 figure. What terms are customers given? 4 Accounts payable Turnover of accounts payable should be calculated on purchases, not cost of goods sold. Purchases cannot be calculated for 2004 but for the later years is: Cost of goods sold Add Closing inventory Less Opening inventory Purchases 2005 215 45 260 20 240 2006 373 85 458 45 413 Purchases for 2004 are taken as cost of goods sold. 20 × 365 = 35 days 207 80 × 365 = 122 days 240 35 × 365 = 31 days 413 The figures of 35 days and 31 days indicate a normal monthly credit period, but the figure of 122 days in 2005 seems strange, unless some large purchases were made just before the balance sheet date. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 157 5 Working capital or current ratio 63 = 263% 24 6 161 = 166% 97 209 = 317% 66 116 = 120% 97 124 = 188% 66 Quick ratio or acid test 43 = 179% 24 Both the above series of figures show a satisfactory position but the difference between the two 2006 figures underlines the large investment in inventory at that date. 7 Gearing 317 : 0 325 : 0 445 : 200 Gearing is comfortably low after loan taken up in 2006. 8 Return on shareholders’ funds 38 = 12.0% 317 35 = 10.8% 325 62 = 18.0% 345 2006 shows a welcome rise but all percentages are probably overstated as freehold land and buildings in the balance sheet are probably at original cost; if they have increased in value, shareholders’ funds will be understated. 9 Conclusion Business appears sound and profitable. The investment in the new plant, part financed by a loan, has caused liquidity problems but these are probably only of a temporary nature. (b) Answers to specific questions (i) A statement of cash flows best shows how a company can make a profit but still be short of cash. Cash flows from operating activities Operating profit before taxation (62 + 30) Adjustment for Depreciation Operating cash flows before movements in working capital Increase in inventories Increase in accounts receivable Decrease in accounts payable Cash generated by operations Tax paid (17 + 1 − 6) Interest paid Net cash used in operating activities Cash flows from investing activities Payments to acquire tangible non-current assets Net cash used in investing activities Cash flows from financing activities Dividends paid Issue of share capital Loan Net cash from financing activities Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year Cash and cash equivalents at end of year 92 45 137 ( 40) ( 23) ( 45) (108) 29 ( 12) ( 30) ( 42) (13) (300) (300) ( 12) 100 200 288 ( 25) 15 ( 10) (ii) A balance sheet is not a valuation of a business but more like a historic record where non-current assets are concerned. Revaluations of non-current assets do take place in many companies, but these are usually based on the views of professional valuers (e.g. chartered surveyors) and it is not good practice to introduce guesses of current values. Any revaluation surplus would go to a revaluation reserve and would not affect the declaration of annual profits (unless there were consequential changes to the depreciation charge for the year). 158 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 28.11A BA 2 (a) An Investor Sometown, UK Dear Sir Report on AA plc and BB plc 1 In accordance with your instructions, I give below my report on these companies which I hope may help you in deciding whether to proceed with a purchase of shares in either. Balance sheets 2 AA has substantial freehold property. Such freehold property gives a large measure of solidarity to an investment, and also provides a useful security on which to borrow money if required. BB appears to own no freehold or leasehold property – at least, no entry for either appears in its balance sheet. 3 If one assumes that plant is depreciated on a straight line basis with no residual value, AA’s plant is 67% time-expired while BB’s is much newer at only 22%. AA may therefore have to face the cost of replacement before long. 4 AA has more than twice as much as BB tied up in inventory. Expressed in relation to usage (and taking sales less operating profit as the measure of cost of sales), AA’s finished goods are 10 weeks’ sales, while BB’s are only 5 weeks’. The work in progress of AA is equal to 7 weeks’ sales, while that of BB is 3 weeks’. As both companies carry on a similar trade, it is surprising that AA appears to need a much larger investment in inventory – or is it just inefficiency? 5 Debtors of AA approximate to 17 weeks’ sales, but those of BB are only 10 weeks’. Again, is this inefficiency on the part of AA? 6 AA needs a bank overdraft, while BB is comfortably liquid. The current or working capital ratio of AA is 188% against 133% of BB. The quick ratio in both companies is 100%. The working capital situation in both companies is satisfactory but the need for the overdraft in AA underlines the high stock and slow-paying debtors in that company. 7 Creditors in AA appear as 15 weeks’ supplies and expenses, while in BB they are 25 weeks’. Both these figures are astonishingly high when one considers that monthly account is the normal basis of trade. How does BB get nearly half a year’s credit? 8 Expressing gearing as Loans/Loans + Shareholders’ funds, the gearing in AA is 1,400/3,700 or 38%, while that in BB is 1,000/2,500 or 40%. Neither of these figures is regarded as high gearing. Profit and loss accounts 9 Turning to the income statements, we find the following: Operating profit as a percentage of revenue Net profit before tax Effective rate of tax Dividend yield on market price Dividend cover AA 16% £70,000 29% 2.7% 1.25 times BB 24% £360,000 25% 9.6% 2.1 times 10 BB appears both more efficient and more attractive to its shareholders, and of the two is clearly to be preferred as an investment. Yours faithfully I C Essay (b) The P/E ratio of 30 for AA is surprisingly high, since even blue chip companies usually reach only 26 to 28, and there the expected profit growth is seen to be realised every year. What is AA’s attraction to investors? It is not to be seen in the 2007 financial statements. The market price of £1.50 still compares badly with its net asset value of £2.30, and one is left to guess that perhaps the trading results for 2007 were unexpectedly bad, and that it is the asset backing rather than the profits which has kept the market price up. By contrast, the P/E ratio of 5 for BB is exceptionally low and such a figure is normally a warning to prospective investors that the profits may be in danger of drying up shortly. The asset backing is £3.00 per share. At 9.6% yield, does the market know something bad about the company which we do not? A dividend yield of only 4% or 5% is the normal expectation (and as low as 2% for many blue chip companies). Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 159 Answer to Question 28.13A BA 2 (a) Profitability ratio Gross profit as % revenue Net profit as % revenue Return on capital employed (using operating profit) Operating profit/revenue Distribution costs/revenue Administration expenses/revenue Return on shareholders’ funds (b) Liquidity ratios Current ratio Acid test ratio Inventory turnover* Accounts receivable/credit sales Accounts payable/purchases* 2004 528/2,400 = 22% 138/2,400 = 5.7% 2005 588/2,800 = 21% 142/2,800 = 5.1% 138/900 = 15.3% 138/2,400 = 5.7% 278/2,400 = 11.6% 112/2,400 = 4.7% 138/900 = 15.3% 174/1,362 = 12.8% 174/2,800 = 6.2% 300/2,800 = 10.7% 114/2,800 = 4.1% 142/1,042 = 13.6% 936/256 = 3.7:1 392/256 = 1.5:1 1,872/554 = 3.4 384/2,200 × 52 = 9.1 weeks 256/1,872 × 52 = 7.1 weeks 1414/338 = 4.2:1 754/338 = 2.2:1 2,212/660 = 3.4 644/2,640 × 52 = 12.7 weeks 333/2,328 × 52 = 7.5 weeks * Opening inventory not known for 2004. Therefore the 2004 ratios must be calculated on closing inventory figures if comparison is to be drawn between the two years. The 2005 ratio if average inventory is used is 2,216/602 = 3.7. Calculation of Purchases for 2005 is Opening inventory 544 + Purchases ? – Closing inventory 660 = 2,212. By arithmetical deduction, Purchases is therefore 2,328. Purchases for 2004 is taken (opening inventory not being known) as same as Cost of sales. Comments (a) Profitability Loan notes of £320,000 have been issued during the year. The income statement has thus had to bear an extra charge of £32,000 interest. If the rate of interest was 10%, this would mean the loan notes were issued on 1 January 2005, thus financing a full year’s expansion. The extra sales generated of 16.7% have been at the cost of cutting the gross profit percentage from 22% to 21%. The operating profit percentage has improved from 5.7% to 6.2%, possibly due partly to the fixed element in distribution and administration costs and also improved efficiency by the use of the extra loan capital being invested in better equipment. The return on capital employed, based on operating profit, has fallen from 15.3% to 12.8%. This is because the profit generated from an increase in sales at a lower rate of profitability has not been sufficient to compensate for the extra capital employed. Possibly the programme of expansion was only partly completed during 2005 with benefits not capable of being shown up until 2006 and later. Similar remarks also would apply to the return on shareholders’ funds. (b) Liquidity Both the current ratio and the acid test (or quick) ratio have improved. This will be largely due to cash received from the issue of loan notes. The debtors are taking much longer to pay: 12.7 weeks instead of 9.1 weeks as previously. This raises the question as to the creditworthiness of the businesses to whom the extra sales have been made. Every sensible effort should be made to reverse the trend in the accounts receivable ratio. There is a large cash balance which does not seem to be making a return on its funds. This should be utilised more fully. It may of course be planned already to use it profitably. Answer to Question 28.15A BA 2 From the ratios provided, you can obtain various indicators of whether the Eastown branch is being properly managed: Return on capital employed: The better return of the Eastown branch suggests it is being well managed – it is earning £6 more (i.e. 37.5% more) per £100 invested than the overall average. However, some caution is needed in that analysis – while a consistent basis for the figures in the ratio is probable (as all the branches are in the same company), there is no guarantee that all have similar assets, either in nature or in age. Unless all the branches have similar asset profiles, the ratio result will be distorted. Further information will be needed. 160 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Gross profit: Over 15% lower than the overall average (at 38% compared with 45%), which suggests Eastown is not being managed as well as other branches. However, this could have arisen because the Eastown branch has been competing locally and has had to cut prices and offer incentives to retain and/or expand its customer base. Further information will be needed. Selling and promotion costs/sales: The Eastown branch is spending 50% more per £100 of sales on promotion. While this could be an indicator of poor management, it is consistent with the suggestion, made above under gross profit, that the branch may have been competing locally (but, of course, promotion costs do not directly impact gross profit). Further information will be needed. Wages/sales: Eastown is spending 35.7% more on wages per £100 of sales than the average (19% vs. 14%) – another possible indicator of poor management. However, it is also consistent with an attempt to retain and/or expand its customer base through an increased level of service (as a result of employing more staff). Further information will be needed. Accounts receivable turnover: Eastown allows its customers 21% more time to settle their accounts than the average (63 days vs. 52 days) – another possible indicator of poor management. However, it is also consistent with an attempt to retain and/or expand its customer base through an increased level of service (as a result of employing more staff). Further information will be needed. Inventory turnover: Turning over inventory virtually 25% quicker than the average (37 days vs. 49 days) suggests good management of this aspect of working capital. However, it may be caused by inefficient buying policies that are causing inventory shortages and loss of customers. Further information will be needed. Overall: The ratios indicate a higher cost and lower profit profile exists at Eastown compared with the average. This may indicate poorer management, or may be due to the environment in which the branch is operating – it may, for example, be in competition with a price-cutting competitor. Control over debtors appears weak, but may be due to a need to compete. The only positive ratio result is the lower inventory turnover period. However, it could actually be an indication that mismanagement is occurring. The ratios in themselves are insufficient to draw any firm conclusions regarding the quality of management of the branch. However, they do indicate questions that should be asked and points that should be raised if an objective view on the quality of the branch’s management is to be reached. Answer to Question 28.16A BA 2 Ratios are used to assess managerial performance, and managers may be tempted to focus on producing ‘good’ ratio results, rather than on producing the ‘best’ performance for the company and its shareholders. Thus, short-termism may be adopted in order that profits are maximised in the short term. For example, a policy may be adopted to purchase expensive assets that remain 90% unused, rather than renting them when required, as renting would reduce the profit of the company more than the depreciation charge on the assets. Another example would be whether or not to invest in a new production facility. If the company does, it will appear less profitable in the period up to when the new facility becomes productive and, thereafter, it will start becoming more profitable. A further example would be a form of ‘window dressing’ whereby debtors are encouraged by discounts, or even coerced to settle their balances immediately before the end of the financial period – this could have the effect of customers moving their business elsewhere. By their nature, accounting ratios take a short-term view. Shareholders are interested in the longer term. An aware reader of the financial statements will be able to apply the ratios to the longer-term horizon, and it is the aware reader that managers should be concerned about. By adopting a short-term focus, managers may actually be subject to harsher and more informed criticism than would have been the case had they focused upon the longer-term interests of the company. Answer to Question 30.2A BA 2 (a) F (b) F (c) T (d) F (e) T Answer to Question 30.3A BA 2 Ascertaining an index for highly specialised assets can be difficult, and applying a general index may not give an accurate valuation. In addition, calculation of current costs takes time, particularly if the enterprise has a large number of different classes of assets. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 161 Answer to Question 30.5A BA 2 Historical cost depreciation is £30,000 × 10% = £3,000 160 = £5,333 90 Current cost depreciation is £3,000 × Answer to Question 30.7A BA 2 Balance Sheet as at: Equipment at current cost Less Accumulated depreciation 31.12.2004 60,000 15,000 45,000 31.12.2005 80,000 40,000 40,000 Adjustments to current cost reserve: Asset revaluation Equipment at cost Credit to current cost reserve at 31.12.2004 40,000 20,000 60,000 20,000 80,000 Credit to current cost reserve at 31.12.2005 Depreciation Historical cost depreciation for year ended 31.12.2004 Adjustment to current cost income statement 150 Current cost depreciation (10,000 × ) 100 10,000 5,000 15,000 Historical cost depreciation for year ended 31.12.2005 Adjustment to current cost income statement 200 Current cost depreciation (10,000 × ) 100 10,000 10,000 20,000 35,000 Adjustment debit to current cost reserve at 31.12.2005 for backlog depreciation 5,000 Current cost depreciation as per balance sheet at 31.12.2005 Answer to Question 30.9A 40,000 BA 2 Opening working capital = 7,000 Closing working capital = 10,000 Change in the year = 3,000 At average values: 150 120 150 = 10,000 × 180 Opening working capital = 7,000 × = 8,750 Closing working capital = 8,333 Change in the year = 417 The monetary working capital adjustment is 3,000 − 417 = 2,583 Answer to Question 30.11A BA 2 Current Cost Income Statement for the year ending 30 June 2004 Revenue 2,500,000 Historical cost operating profit 1,400,000 Current cost adjustments: Additional depreciation Cost of sales Monetary working capital 500,000 750,000 25,000 Current cost operating profit 162 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 1,275,000 125,000 Answer to Question 30.13A BA 2 Current Cost Income Statement for the year ending 30 June 2003 Revenue 9,000,000 Historical cost trading profit 4,000,000 Current cost adjustments: Additional depreciation Cost of sales Monetary working capital Current cost operating profit Gearing adjustment (20% × 1,370,000) 200,000 800,000 370,000 Interest payable Profit before tax Taxation Profit for the year Note: Dividends proposed are £600,000. Answer to Question 30.15A 1,370,000 2,630,000 274,000 2,904,000 500,000 2,404,000 1,500,000 904,000 BA 2 (a) Historical cost ratios: (i) Gross profit: Gross profit × 100 Revenue 2004 2005 650 × 100 = 50% 1,300 630 × 100 = 45% 1,400 115 × 100 = 8.8% 1,300 130 × 100 = 9.3% 1,400 105 × 365 = 59 days 650 130 × 365 = 64 days 770 142 × 365 = 40 days 1,300 190 × 365 = 50 days 1,400 1,300 = 3.8 times 340 1,400 = 5.5 times 255 2004 1,300 × 111/85 = 1,698 2005 1,400 × 111/111 = 1,400 114 85 29 120 85 35 (ii) Net profit: Profit before tax × 100 Revenue (iii) Inventory turnover: Inventory × 365 Cost of sales (iv) Accounts receivable collection period: Accounts receivable × 365 Turnover (v) Non-current assets revenue: Revenue Non-current assets at net book value (b) (i) Revenue (millions) Historical cost (ii) Additional adjustment for depreciation Replacement cost (10%) Less Historical cost depreciation Additional depreciation (iii) It does not make sense to compare historical cost turnover in 2004 with that for 2005. In real terms it has fallen from 1,698 to 1,400. When deciding dividends to be paid, directors should look at the amount needed to replace non-current assets, based on replacement costs rather than historical costs. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 163 Answer to Question 31.6A BA 2 There is no set answer to this question. Students should bear in mind the types of information which the various user groups may find useful, distinguishing between quantitative (numerical) and qualitative (narrative) information. In addition, consideration should be given to how useful the information is in helping a user to make a decision about the company. Answer to Question 35.2A BA 2 (i) t, v. (iii) b, d, h, o, y. (v) e, f, j, l, m, r, s, w, x. Answer to Question 35.4A (ii) n. (iv) c, g, i, p, q, u, z. (vi) a, k. BA 2 Raw materials consumed (11,400 + 209,000 − 15,600) Carriage on raw materials Direct labour (150,000 × 60%) Royalties (this is a direct expense) (a) Prime cost Factory overhead Factory indirect labour (150,000 × 40%) Rent and rates (factory block) Travelling expenses of factory workers Depreciation of factory machinery Other factory indirect expenses (b) Production cost Administrative expenses Wages and salaries Rent and rates: admin. block Travelling expenses Depreciation: Cars of administrative staff Office machinery Other administrative expenses Selling and distribution expenses Salaries: sales force Carriage costs on deliveries Rent and rates: Sales department Travelling expenses: Sales staff Depreciation: Sales staff cars Delivery vehicles Other selling expenses Finance costs Interest costs (c) Total cost Answer to Question 35.5A 204,800 1,800 90,000 400 297,000 60,000 4,900 200 1,800 6,000 72,900 369,900 26,000 1,100 300 400 200 4,000 32,000 15,000 1,100 1,000 3,400 500 300 1,000 22,300 800 425,000 BA 2 (a) Cost behaviour refers to the manner in which costs arise, e.g. are they fixed for a period; do they change in proportion to the level of activity, etc. Analysis of total cost refers to the elements of specific total costs. (b) • Factory power and lighting: would have a fixed element (light) and a variable element (power), and therefore semi-variable; however, would normally be classified as indirect factory expenses unless it was clear how much was incurred in producing each unit of the products, in which case, it could be split partly between direct costs and partly as indirect overheads. • Production line workers’ wages: a variable cost; would be analysed as a direct cost. • Sales manager’s salary: a fixed cost; would be analysed as a selling and distribution expense. • Office rent: a fixed cost; would be analysed as an indirect administrative expense. 164 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 36.2A BA 2 Answers to be drafted by students in proper memo form. Introduction: Marginal cost is 3.2 + 4.8 + 1.6 = 9.6 Selling price − Marginal cost = Contribution to overheads and profit. Projects which give negative contributions should be rejected. A change in volume can only be favourable where total contributions with new project are greater than total contributions without new project. (a) Total contributions with new project £14.80 − £9.60 = £5.20 × 240,000 = £1,248,000 Total contributions without new project £15 − £9.60 = £5.40 × 200,000 = £1,080,000 Therefore accept reduction in selling price to £14.80 Proof Direct materials Direct labour Indirect manufacturing costs Variable Fixed Selling and distribution Administrative expenses Finance At £14.80 768,000 1,152,000 At £15 640,000 960,000 384,000 160,000 80,000 120,000 40,000 2,704,000 320,000 160,000 80,000 120,000 40,000 2,320,000 Sales revenue 3,552,000 3,000,000 Net profit 848,000 680,000 (b) Total contributions with new project £15.4 − £9.6 = £5.8 × 160,000 Add saving in finance costs Total contributions without new project £15 − £9.6 = £5.4 × 200,000 Therefore reject new project. 928,000 4,000 Proof (i) At £15 net profit is (ii) At £15.4 Revenue (160,000 × £15.4) Direct materials (160,000 × £3.2) Direct labour (160,000 × £4.8) Indirect manufacturing costs: Variable (1,600 × £1.6) Fixed Selling and distribution Administrative expenses Finance (£40,000 − £4,000) 932,000 1,080,000 680,000 2,464,000 512,000 768,000 256,000 160,000 80,000 120,000 36,000 1,932,000 532,000 Net profit (c) Marginal cost is £9.6: the extra order at £9.80 would therefore be worthwhile. (d) Marginal cost is £9.6: the extra order at £9.20 should be rejected. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 165 Answer to Question 36.4A Year 1 Revenue 36,000 × £64 Less: Variable costs Direct labour £16 × 40,000 Direct materials £12 × 40,000 Variable overheads £20 × 40,000 Total variable costs Less: Closing inventory valuation (A) 4,000 × £1,920,000 40,000 Fixed factory indirect expenses BA 2 (a) Marginal cost (£000) 2,304 640 480 800 1,920 Year 2 Revenue 40,000 × £64 Less: Variable costs Direct labour £16 × 48,000 Direct materials £12 × 48,000 Variable overheads £20 × 48,000 Total variable costs Less: Closing inventory valuation (A) 9,000 × £2,304,000 40,000 Fixed factory indirect expenses Less: Closing inventory valuation (B) 9,000 × £2,368,000 40,000 Add: Opening inventory b/d Total costs Gross profit Year 3 Revenue 60,000 × £64 Less: Variable costs Direct labour £16 × 51,000 Direct materials £12 × 51,000 Variable overheads £20 × 51,000 Total variable costs Less: Closing inventory valuation (A) Fixed factory indirect expenses 640 480 800 1,920 192 1,728 64 Less: Closing inventory valuation (B) 4,000 × £1,984,000 40,000 Total costs Gross profit 64 1,984 198.4 1,792 512 1,785.6 518.4 (a) Marginal cost (£000) 2,560 (b) Absorption cost (£000) 2,560 768 576 960 2,304 768 576 960 2,304 518.4 1,785.6 64 64 2,368 532.8 1,835.2 198.4 192 2,041.6 518.4 2,033.6 526.4 (a) Marginal cost (£000) 3,840 (b) Absorption cost (£000) 3,840 816 612 1,020 2,448 816 612 1,020 2,448 – 2,448 64 64 2,512 – 2,512 532.8 Less: Closing inventory valuation (B) Add: Opening inventory b/d Total costs Gross profit (b) Absorption cost (£000) 2,304 518.4 3,030.4 809.6 3,044.8 795.2 Note how, as there is no closing inventory at the end of Year 3, the same total gross profit is made over the three years by both methods. 166 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 36.6A BA 2 (a) See text. (b) Direct labour Direct materials Variable overheads Labour: overtime Special treatment Total variable cost Contribution Selling price (i) (i) Normal 8 17 11 (ii) +A 8 17 11 2 36 29 65 38 Normal production Contribution 2,000 × £29 Fixed costs Profit (ii) Order A accepted Normal production contribution Order A contribution: sales Less: Direct costs 600 × £38 Total contribution Fixed costs Profit (iii) Order B accepted Normal production contribution Order B contribution: sales Less: Direct costs 750 × £44 Total contribution Fixed costs Profit (iii) +B 8 17 11 2 6 44 58,000 29,400 28,600 58,000 20,000 22,800 ( 2,800) 55,200 29,400 25,800 58,000 34,000 33,000 1,000 59,000 29,400 29,600 (c) See text, but (iii) above demonstrates that. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 167 Answer to Question 36.8A BA 2 (a) Contribution per product Variable costs: Labour Materials Variable overhead Selling price Contribution per unit A B C 6 20 4 30 45 15 9 24 3 36 44 8 6 16 2 24 37 13 However, September sees a shortage of materials, so work out contribution per kilo of materials. This shows: A £15 ÷ 5 kilos = £3 B £ 8 ÷ 6 kilos = £1.33 C £13 ÷ 4 kilos = £3.25 Total kilos used per month: A 6,000 × 5 = 30,000 B 8,000 × 6 = 48,000 C 5,000 × 4 = 20,000 98,000 September delivery of material = 98,000 − 15% = 83,300 kilos; i.e. shortfall of 14,700. B has the lowest contribution, therefore restrict production by 14,700 ÷ 6 kilos = 2,450 units = 5,550. Contributions: A 6,000 × £15 B 8,000 × £8 C 5,000 × £13 Fixed overhead: A 6,000 × £5 B 8,000 × £5 C 5,000 × £6 30,000 40,000 30,000 July 90,000 64,000 65,000 219,000 August 90,000 64,000 65,000 219,000 100,000 119,000 100,000 119,000 Maximum net profit possible: NB: (5,550) September 90,000 44,400 65,000 199,400 100,000 99,400 £337,400 It is assumed that direct labour cut down for B in September does not have to be paid for. C (b) See text. Answer to Question 36.10A BA 2 Firelighters Ltd Workings Opening inventory (units) Manufactured Closing inventory Units sold 2010 15,000* 105,000 120,000 20,000 100,000 * Balancing figures 168 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 2011 20,000 130,000 150,000 20,000 130,000* Firelighters Ltd Revenue Statement for the years ended: 2010 £000 Revenue 100,000 @ £10 per unit 130,000 @ £10 per unit Cost of sales Opening inventory: 15,000 @ £4 20,000 @ £4 Manufactured: 105,000 @ £4 130,000 @ £4 Closing inventory: 2011 £000 1,000 1,300 60 80 420 520 600 80 520 480 80 400 20,000 @ £4 Variable selling costs 100,000 @ 1.25 130,000 @ 1.50 Contribution Fixed manufacturing costs Other fixed costs Operating profit before interest Interest charges Net profit for the year 125 525 195* 715 585 475 105 155 117 176* 260 215 70 145 293 292 82* 210 * Balancing figures Answer to Question 36.11A BA 2 (a) (i) Contribution per unit is the difference between the variable costs of producing a unit of a product and the selling price of that unit. (ii) Key factor is anything that limits the activity of a business (also called the ‘limiting factor’). Products B 87 (b) A 147 Direct raw material Direct labour: Grade 1 Grade 2 Variable overheads 64 24 15 250 400 150 12 138 Selling price Contribution Fixed overheads Profit (c) (i) Total production labour available Grade 1 Full-time Part-time Grade 2 Full-time Part-time 28 × 40 × 4 4,480 2,240 12 × 40 × 4 1,920 1,104 C 185 56 27 10 180 350 170 12 158 60 21 15 281 450 169 12 157 6,720 3,024 9,744 (ii) Hours required to produce each unit A Grade 1 labour cost per unit Divide by hourly rate £ 64 8 Grade 2 labour cost per unit Divide by hourly rate 24 6 B Hrs £ 56 8 8 Total hours per unit C Hrs 7 27 6 4 12 £ 60 8 Hrs 7.5 21 6 4.5 11.5 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 3.5 11.0 169 (iii) Maximum possible production There is a maximum number of hours available for each grade and therefore production will be limited to the smaller of the calculated figures as follows: Product Total hours 6,720 3,024 Hours per unit 8 4 Possible units 840 756 Grade 1 Grade 2 6,720 3,024 7 4.5 960 672 672 C Grade 1 Grade 2 6,720 3,024 7.5 3.5 896 864 864 A Grade 1 Grade 2 B Maximum possible 756 (iv) The product which will give the greatest contribution in Period 7 is C: Units Direct costs (A − £250, B − £180, C − £281) Selling price (A − £400, B − £350, C − £450) Contribution A 756 B 672 C 864 189,000 302,400 113,400 120,960 235,200 114,240 242,784 388,800 146,016 (d) This part of the question would include material from a number of different parts of the book. It can be answered at a straightforward level from the material in Chapters 35 and 36. However, a more complete answer would need to include material from Chapters 3, 37, 41 and 44. The answer requires that you indicate that relevant costs and revenues would be identified; costs would be classified as fixed or variable, possibly across a range of different activity levels; contribution per unit would be identified; break-even analysis would be undertaken; product mix may also be considered when a multi-product company is involved; etc. Answer to Question 36.12A (a) Year 1 Revenue Less: Variable costs Direct materials Direct labour Variable overheads Total variable costs Less: Closing inventory 2,000 × 132,000 16,000 Fixed costs BA 2 Marginal costing 280,000 60,000 48,000 24,000 132,000 Absorption costing 280,000 60,000 48,000 24,000 16,500 115,500 40,000 40,000 155,500 Total production costs Less: Closing inventory 2,000 × 172,000 16,000 Gross profit 170 172,000 21,500 150,500 124,500 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 129,500 Year 2 Revenue Less: Variable costs Direct materials Direct labour Variable overheads Total variable costs Add: Opening inventory Less: Closing inventory 2,000 × 123,900 14,000 Fixed costs Marginal costing 280,000 49,900 44,000 30,000 123,900 16,500 140,400 Absorption costing 280,000 49,900 44,000 30,000 17,700 122,700 40,600 40,600 163,300 Total production costs Add: Opening inventory 164,500 21,500 186,000 Less: Closing inventory 2,000 × 164,500 14,000 23,500 116,700 162,500 117,500 Marginal costing 300,000 Absorption costing 300,000 Gross profit Year 3 Sales Less: Variable costs Direct materials Direct labour Variable overheads Total variable costs Add: Opening inventory Less: Closing inventory 1,000 × 137,200 14,000 Fixed costs 52,200 45,000 40,000 137,200 17,700 154,900 52,200 45,000 40,000 9,800 145,100 41,300 41,300 186,400 Total production costs Add: Opening inventory 178,500 23,500 202,000 Less: Closing inventory 1,000 × 178,500 14,000 Gross profit 12,750 189,250 113,600 110,750 (b) See text, Section 36.6. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 171 Answer to Question 36.14A BA 2 (a) Direct labour and materials Variable cost Fixed cost Add: Profit 10% Selling price P 45 18 63 12 75 7.5 82.5 Q 51 33 84 21 105 10.5 115.5 R 114 30 144 21 165 16.5 181.5 S 147 63 210 30 240 24 264 T 186 66 252 48 300 30 330 U 342 69 411 39 450 45 495 (b) Discontinue Q and T. All other items are above marginal cost. (c) (i) Followed advice 46,800 – 118,800 135,000 – 396,000 696,600 Sales revenue P 600 × £78 Q 600 × £78 R 600 × £198 S 600 × £225 T 600 × £240 U 600 × £660 Less: Costs Direct labour and materials (i) 600 × (45 + 114 + 147 + 342) (ii) 600 × (45 + 51 + 114 + 147 + 186 + 342) Variable overheads (i) 600 × (18 + 30 + 63 + 69) (ii) 600 × (18 + 33 + 30 + 63 + 66 + 69) Fixed overheads Net profit (ii) Produced all items 46,800 46,800 118,800 135,000 144,000 396,000 887,400 388,800 531,000 108,000 34,200 531,000 165,600 167,400 34,200 732,600 154,800 (i) Followed advice (ii) Produced all items 54,000 59,400 135,000 – 261,000 – 509,400 54,000 59,400 135,000 118,800 261,000 234,000 862,200 (d) Discontinue S and U. All other items are above marginal cost. (e) Sales revenue P 600 × £ 90 Q 600 × £ 99 R 600 × £225 S 600 × £198 T 600 × £435 U 600 × £390 Less: Costs Direct labour and materials (i) 600 × (45 + 51 + 114 + 186) (ii) 600 × (45 + 51 + 114 + 147 + 186 + 342) Variable overheads (i) 600 × (18 + 33 + 30 + 66) (ii) 600 × (18 + 33 + 30 + 63 + 66 + 69) Fixed overheads Net profit 172 237,600 531,000 88,200 34,200 360,000 149,400 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 167,400 34,200 732,600 129,600 Answer to Question 36.15A BA 2 (a) and (b) see text. (c) (i) Ceres £ Unit price Direct labour Direct material Variable overhead Total variable cost Fixed cost Total cost Profit 20% Selling price A S Teriod Ltd Eros Hermes £ 14 8 11 33 17 50 10 60 8 10 9 27 13 40 8 48 Icarus £ Vesta £ Total £ 18 12 15 45 15 60 12 72 26 17 19 62 18 80 16 96 88 60 70 218 82 300 60 360 22 13 16 51 19 70 14 84 (ii) Produce only those where marginal cost is lower than selling price, i.e. produce Ceres, Hermes and Vesta. (iii) All produced at new prices (100 of each): Ceres 3,300 1,700 5,000 900 5,900 Total variable cost Fixed cost Total cost Profit/(loss) Selling price Eros 2,700 1,300 4,000 (1,500) 2,500 If only Ceres, Hermes and Vesta produced: Revenue (5,900 + 8,000 + 9,200) Less Variable cost (3,300 + 5,100 + 6,200) Contribution Total fixed costs Profit Answer to Question 37.3A Hermes 5,100 1,900 7,000 1,000 8,000 Icarus 4,500 1,500 6,000 (1,600) 4,400 Vesta 6,200 1,800 8,000 1,200 9,200 23,100 (14,600) 8,500 ( 8,200) 300 BA 2 P 15,000 2,000 17,000 Q 21,000 3,000 24,000 Production departments R S 9,000 18,000 4,000 4,500 13,000 22,500 4,200 2,800 11,200 5,600 6,440 27,640 4,830 31,630 8,050 41,750 3,220 22,320 22,660 8,000 = £2.83 22,320 5,000 = £4.46 27,640 7,000 = £3.95 Dept Q 31,630 9,000 = £3.51 Dept S 41,750 14,000 = £2.98 Indirect labour Other expenses Apportionment of costs Dept F Dept G Total 21,800 8,200 30,000 – 30,000 (a) Overhead rates per direct labour hour Dept R Dept T (b) Overhead rates per machine hour Dept P 9,660 22,660 T 12,000 1,500 13,500 Service departments F G 20,000 18,000 8,000 10,000 28,000 28,000 (28,000) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 – 4,200 32,200 (32,200) – 173 Answer to Question 37.4A BA 2 Job Cost Sheet, Job 701, Dept R Direct materials Direct labour 105 × 8.0 Factory overhead 105 × 2.83 345 840 297.15 1,482.15 Job Cost Sheet, Job 702, Dept T Direct materials Direct labour 540 × 10 Factory overhead 540 × 4.46 3,240 5,400 2,408.4 11,048.4 Job Cost Sheet, Job 703, Dept P Direct materials Direct labour 400 × 6 Factory overhead 280 × 3.95 1,560 2,400 1,106 5,066 Job Cost Sheet, Job 704, Dept S Direct materials Direct labour 620 × 11 Factory overhead 90 × 2.98 196 6,820 268.2 7,284.2 Job Cost Sheet, Job 705, Dept Q Direct materials Direct labour 860 × 9 Factory overhead 610 × 3.51 11,330 7,740 2,141.1 21,211.1 Job Cost Sheet, Job 706, Depts P and T Dept P Direct materials 1,480 Direct labour 600 × 6 3,600 Factory overhead 540 × 3.95 2,133 Dept T Direct materials 32 Direct labour 36 × 10 360 Factory overhead 36 × 4.46 160.56 7,765.56 Answer to Question 37.6A BA 2 (a) See text, Section 37.5. (b) (i) Equivalent production during April: Units Equivalent production: Material Labour Overhead (ii) Cost per complete unit: Material Labour Overhead Cost per complete unit (iii) Value of work-in-progress: Materials Labour Overhead Total value of WIP 174 Earith Industries Units completed 6,000 75% completed 800 65% completed 800 55% completed 800 6,600 6,520 6,440 Total cost 12,540 8,476 7,084 Equiv. prodn 6,600 6,520 6,440 Cost per unit 1.90 1.30 1.10 4.30 600 × 1.90 = 1,140 520 × 1.30 = 676 440 × 1.10 = 484 2,300 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 37.8A BA 2 (a) Current factory overhead rate Total factory overheads 100 180 + 225 + 75 100 = × = × Total direct labour costs 1 450 + 500 + 250 1 480 = = 40% factory overhead rate. 1,200 Job 131190 Direct labour costs (2,500 + 2,200 + 4,800) Add: Materials (100 + 400 + 500) 9,500 1,000 10,500 3,800 14,300 2,860 17,160 4,290 21,450 Add: Factory overheads (40% × 9,500) Total factory costs Add: General administration (20% × 14,300) Total cost Add: Profit (25% total cost) Selling price (b) (i) Direct labour hour rate per department: Assembly £180,000 ÷ 150,000 hours = £1.20 per hour Painting £225,000 ÷ 140,625 hours = £1.60 per hour Packing £75,000 ÷ 100,000 hours = £0.75 per hour (ii) Overhead per department as percentage of direct labour costs: Assembly £180,000 ÷ £450,000 = 40% Painting £225,000 ÷ £500,000 = 45% Packing £75,000 ÷ £250,000 = 30% (i) Job 131190 (using direct labour hour rate) Assembly: Labour + 1,000 hours × £1.20 2,500 1,200 3,700 Painting: Labour + 900 hours × £1.60 2,200 1,440 3,640 Packing: Labour + 960 hours × £0.75 + Materials (100 + 400 + 500) 4,800 720 Add: General administration (20% × 13,860) Total cost Add: Profit 25% × 16,632 Selling price 5,520 1,000 13,860 2,772 16,632 4,158 20,790 (ii) Job 131190 (using percentage direct labour costs) Assembly: Labour + 40% 2,500 1,000 3,500 Painting: Labour + 45% 2,200 990 3,190 Packing: Labour + 30% 4,800 1,440 Add: General administration (20% × 12,930) Total cost Add: Profit 25% × 15,516 Selling price 6,240 12,930 2,586 15,516 3,879 19,395 (c) It depends on where there are direct relationships to overheads. Number of hours worked is more appropriate in (b) (i) and (ii). However, machine hours method for its two departments has not yet been investigated. (d) There is no set answer. Basically, the absorption rate may be too high, making for an uncompetitive selling price; or too low, making the product too cheap and uneconomic. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 175 Answer to Question 37.10A BA 2 (a) Power 55:30:15 Rent, etc. 30:20:10 Insurance 22:16:2 Depreciation 22:16:2 Indirect materials Indirect wages A 66,000 45,000 11,000 44,000 23,000 21,000 210,000 B 36,000 30,000 8,000 32,000 35,000 34,000 175,000 C 18,000 15,000 1,000 4,000 57,000 55,000 150,000 Direct wages 140,000 200,000 125,000 150% 87.5% 120% Percentage absorption rate £ 152 88 132 372 85 192 168 817 52 105 126 1,100 330 1,430 (b) Selling price of Job No. 347 Dept A Materials Direct wages Overhead 150% of £88 Dept B Total 120,000 90,000 20,000 80,000 115,000 110,000 535,000 Materials Direct wages Overhead 87.5% of £192 Dept C Materials Direct wages Overhead 120% of £105 Total production cost Add: 30% Selling price (c) (i) Absorption rate based direct labour hours Dept A £210,000 divided by 25,000 hours = £8.4 per hour Dept B £175,000 divided by 50,000 hours = £3.5 per hour Dept C £150,000 divided by 60,000 hours = £2.5 per hour (ii) Absorption rate based on machine hours Dept A £210,000 divided by 100,000 hours = £2.1 per hour Dept B £175,000 divided by 40,000 hours = £4.375 per hour Dept C £150,000 divided by 10,000 hours = £15 per hour (d) (i) Allotment: this term is not generally used in relation to overheads. Presumably, the examiner wanted students to demonstrate that they realised it was not another term for either ‘allocation’ or ‘apportionment’. (ii) Allocation: attribution of costs to a cost centre or product based on some base that clearly identifies the expenditure that was incurred on that cost centre or product. This is used for the attribution of costs that can be specifically identified with a cost centre or product. (iii) Apportionment: attribution of costs between a number of cost centres or products on the basis of some common base. For example, rates could be allocated to cost centres on the basis of the dimensions of their floor space. This is used for the attribution of costs that cannot be specifically identified as arising from the activities of one cost centre or product. Answer to Question 37.11A (a) (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) 176 BA 2 See text, Section 37.6. See text, Section 37.6. See text, Section 37.5. See text, Section 37.9. Split-off point: the point at which joint products are separately identifiable. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (b) (i) True: scrap has value, waste has none. (ii) True: a joint product is one that is produced by the same process and at the same time as another; a by-product is one that is produced incidentally as a result of manufacturing the main product. They are further distinguished by their value. By-products have relatively little value compared with the main products whose manufacturing process created them. Joint products are each of significant value compared with their own joint product(s). Answer to Question 38.3A BA 2 (a) (i) Always able to satisfy customers’ demands; strike in firm’s production could stop production of new inventory; strike at suppliers of part could stop production of new inventory. (ii) So as not to have to lay-off workers; lower costs of production; administratively easier and cheaper. J 270 300 570 280 290 (b) Opening inventory Produced Less Sales Closing inventory A 290 300 590 200 390 S 390 300 690 260 430 O 430 300 730 360 370 N 370 300 670 400 270 D 270 300 570 420 150 Inventory (by deduction) 1 July: 270 units. (c) Where higher sales could be made but there is a shortage of: skilled labour, or materials, or finance. Answer to Question 39.4A (a) BA 2 Mtoto Ltd Cash Budget for the four months ending 31 December 2011 (£) Sept Oct Nov Dec Receipts Cash sales: Main store Depot 1 Depot 2 Credit sales: Main store* Plant surplus Shop-soiled inventory 18,000 19,700 26,300 21,000 26,500 111,500 26,300 18,000 19,700 32,500 19,200 17,600 21,000 26,000 24,700 17,900 19,100 25,400 17,000 113,500 83,800 87,100 88,200 73,200 86,100 104,900 26,500 17,000 395,900 64,300 9,500 13,000 6,100 92,900 41,000 9,500 12,000 12,000 7,400 81,900 222,300 38,000 61,000 12,000 25,900 359,200 (9,100) (199,400) (208,500) 5,200 (208,500) (203,300) 36,700 (240,000) (203,300) * Per balance sheet, debtors pay 1 month after sale. Payments Purchases 55,800 61,200 Fixed overheads 9,500 9,500 Wages and salaries 17,000 19,000 Redundancy Variable costs 5,600 6,800 87,900 96,500 Surplus/(deficit) Balance b/d Balance c/d 23,600 (240,000) (216,400) Total 17,000 (216,400) (199,400) (b) Briefly: full answer to be in report form. (i) Current ratio 31.8.2011 is 420,900 : 350,500 = 1.2 : 1. However, acid test ratio shows 21,000 : 350,500 = 0.06 : 1. This latter ratio reveals considerable liquidity problems. Forecast shows a fall in bank overdraft of £36,700 over the period. The overdraft is still far too high. (ii) Find out contributions made by each depot. Reduce inventory. Sell off some non-current assets? Reduce overhead costs. See if gross profit margins can be increased, either by increasing prices or by better buying policies at cheaper prices. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 177 Answer to Question 39.7A (a) BA 2 Belinda Raglan Cash Budget (£000) Opening overdraft Receipts Payments Purchases Rent Other Compensation Closing overdraft May 5 85.2 80.2 June 8 72.8 64.8 July 54.6 82.4 27.8 Aug 22.2 56 33.8 58.2 12 8 10 88.2 116.4 – 3 – 119.4 40 – 10 – 50 43 12 14 – 69 8 54.6 22.2 35.2 (b) See text. (c) Items in the letter should include reference to the 3% discount on purchases in May and June. It is probably unwise to attempt to take advantage of the discount. The increase in the overdraft facility required is entirely due to it and the increased overdraft costs would make the actual saving much less than at first appeared. If June purchases were kept to around £76,000 it appears that the overdraft limit would not need to be raised. It may be worthwhile for Belinda to consider negotiating purchasing on credit from her suppliers. She may also consider offering less credit to her customers, etc. Answer to Question 39.8A BA 2 Periods (a) Receipts: Capital Hire charges paid in cash (W1) Hire charges (chauffeured cars) (W2) Payments: Cars bought 6 × 5,340 Cars bought 3 × 5,850 Petrol Servicing Fixed costs Drawings Initial staff Chauffeurs Balance at period end Deficit at period end Workings: (W1) Per week: Weekdays 5 × £10 × 4 cars Weekends 2 × £18 × 6 cars 1 2 3 4 1,248 34,000 1,664 1,664 1,664 2,400 4,064 1,664 2,400 4,064 35,248 300 200 400 960 720 2,580 732 360 300 200 800 960 720 3,340 1,456 32,040 200 400 960 33,600 1,648 17,550 360 300 200 800 960 720 20,890 15,370 = 200 = 216 416 3 weeks in period 1; 4 weeks other periods. (W2) Assumed additional to cars in (W1): Per period: £60 × 5 × 4 × 2 cars = 2,400 (b) Per text. (c) Internal: Profits, factoring debts, revising payment and receipt schedules where possible, extra own capital. External: Loans from individuals, bank loans and overdrafts, buying cars on hire purchase. 178 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 40.2A BA 2 (a) Cash Budget 2007 (£000) Receipts Jan Accounts receivable: Previous month’s sales 1/3 134.2 Sales two months ago 2/3 265.6 Feb 136.8 268.4 Mar 141.2 273.6 399.8 405.2 414.8 Apr 153.6 282.4 9.6 445.6 20.4 58.8 23.4 61.2 22.8 63.6 5.3 10.8 50.0 215.2 360.5 21.2 56.1 19.0 5.4 11.2 50.0 223.6 367.5 5.6 12.2 50.0 232.4 403.8 6.1 12.4 50.0 256.7 411.6 +28.7 +66.4 +77.4 +111.4 Accounts receivable April 2 /3 March × 460.8 Liabilities: Items owing 3 Materials /4 × 93.6 3 /4 × 91.2 Equipment Wages Overheads 456.3 307.2 763.5 Payments: Materials: New equipment Wages: Overheads: Current production 1/4 Previous production 3/4 Last month 1/3 Current month 2/3 Payable same month Last month’s portion Closing bank balance (b) Assets: Answer to Question 40.4A Payments (see schedule) Closing balance Closing overdraft April +60,000 May +6,700 – 60,000 53,300 +6,700 – 6,700 14,460 April May Receipts from debtors Legacy – – April Payments of accounts payable Wages and salaries General expenses Insurance Business rates Drawings Machinery Motor vehicles Premises 138.6 19.0 6.2 254.5 BA 2 (a) Opening balance Opening overdraft Received (see schedule) 70.2 68.4 2,100 1,800 8,000 6,400 35,000 53,300 −7,760 – – May 10,000 2,100 200 Cash Budget June July Aug +27,540 Sept +35,440 28,000 55,540 20,100 +35,440 28,000 63,440 20,660 +42,780 Cash Receipts Schedule June July 26,000 28,000 – 17,500 45,500 Aug 28,000 – 28,000 Sept 28,000 – 28,000 Cash Payments Schedule June July 12,000 16,000 2,100 2,100 200 200 Aug 16,000 2,100 200 Sept 16,000 2,100 200 560 −7,760 26,000 18,240 16,100 +2,140 +2,140 45,500 47,640 20,100 +27,540 360 1,800 1,800 1,800 1,800 1,800 14,460 16,100 20,100 20,100 20,660 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 179 (b) M Lamb Forecast Income Statement for the 6 months ending 30 September 2005 Revenue Less Cost of goods sold Purchases Less: Closing inventory Gross profit Less Expenses: Wages and salaries General expenses Insurance Business rates Depreciation: Motors Premises Machinery Net profit Non-current assets Premises Machinery Motors 166,000 102,000 8,000 94,000 72,000 12,600 1,200 280 720 800 875 800 2,475 Balance Sheet as at 30 September 2005 Cost 35,000 8,000 6,400 49,400 Depn 875 800 800 2,475 Current assets Inventory Debtors Accounts receivable Prepayments (insurance) Cash and bank 17,275 54,725 34,125 7,200 5,600 46,925 8,000 56,000 280 42,780 107,060 153,985 Current liabilities Accounts payable for goods General expenses Business rates 32,000 200 360 ( 32,560) 121,425 Capital Add Net profit 77,500 54,725 132,225 ( 10,800) 121,425 Less Drawings Answer to Question 40.5A BA 2 (a) See text. (b) Madingley Ltd Forecast Operating Statement for the six months ending 30 November 2010 (£000) Revenue Cost of sales: Opening inventory (91.7 + 142.4) Materials Less Closing inventory (91.7 + 136.2) Wages Variable overheads Depreciation: Plant Gross profit Fixed overheads Depreciation: Fixtures Profit for the year 180 1,185.20 234.1 205.6 439.7 227.9 211.8 36.7 340.2 0.47 226.8 0.27 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 589.17 596.03 227.07 368.96 Forecast Balance Sheet as at 30 November 2010 (£000) Cost Aggregate depreciation Non-current assets Land and buildings Plant and machinery Fixtures and fittings 134.00 9.40 2.30 145.70 Current assets Inventory: Raw materials Finished goods Accounts receivable Bank – 4.23 1.32 5.55 91.70 136.20 574.50 282.20 Current liabilities Accounts payable: Raw materials Overheads 41.00 42.60 Equity Share capital Retained profits Profit for year 134.00 5.17 0.98 140.15 1,084.60 1,224.75 83.60 1,141.15 500.00 272.19 368.96 641.15 1,141.15 Workings Opening balance Sales Cash Balance c/d Accounts Receivable Control 594.4 1,185.2 1,779.6 1,205.1 574.5 1,779.6 Purchases Ledger Control Opening balance Materials Cash Balance c/d 82.2 205.6 246.8 41.0 287.8 287.8 Overheads Opening balance Incurred Cash Balance c/d 127.4 567.0 651.8 42.6 694.4 694.4 Cash Book Opening balance Receipts Payments: Suppliers Wages Overheads Balance c/d 12.4 1,205.1 1,217.5 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 246.8 36.7 651.8 282.2 1,217.5 181 Answer to Question 40.10A BA 2 (a) (i) Sales: June, July, August, November, 121/2% of total × 4 = 50% September and October, 25% of total × 2 = 50% Sales budgets: June 100,000 July 100,000 August 100,000 September 200,000 October 200,000 November 100,000 800,000 (ii) Cost of sales 800,000 − 25% = 600,000 Opening inventory 210,000 + Purchases ? − Closing inventory 252,000 = Cost of sales 600,000. Therefore by deduction purchases = 642,000. June 75,000 July 75,000 Aug 75,000 Sept 150,000 Oct 150,000 Nov 75,000 + 42,000 117,000 Total purchases 642,000 Newland Traders Budgeted Income Statement for the 6 months ending 30 November 2007 £000 Revenue Less Cost of goods sold: Inventory 30.5.2007 Purchases 210 642 852 252 Less Inventory 30.11.2007 Gross profit Less Expenses: Wages and expenses Depreciation (6 × 5,000 + (10% × 80,000 × 3/12)) Net profit 120 32 600 200 152 48 Budgeted Balance Sheet as at 30 November 2007 (b)* Non-current assets at cost Less Depreciation £000 690 296 Current assets Inventory Accounts receivable Cash at bank and in hand Total assets Current liabilities Accounts payable Equity Issued capital General reserve Retained profits (48 + 41) * Best to tackle (c) cash budget before (b) balance sheet. 182 £000 800 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 252 300 10 £000 394 562 956 (117) 839 600 150 89 839 (c) Cash Flow Budget (£000) Aug Sept Oct +120 +125 +130 100 100 100 220 225 230 Opening bank balance Accounts receivable paid June +48 150 198 July +50 165 215 Payments Accounts payable Wages and expenses Non-current assets 128 20 75 20 75 20 75 20 148 95 95 +50 +120 +125 Closing bank balance Nov −20 200 180 150 20 95 150 20 80 250 +130 −20 +10 170 Extra finance needed October. Assumed that capital expenditure paid one month after incurred. As it appears short term, a bank overdraft or extra capital would be the best options. Answer to Question 40.11A (a) BA 2 Len Auck and Brian Land, trading as Auckland Manufacturing Co. Forecast Income Statement for the 4 months ending 30 April 2006 Revenue Less Cost of raw materials: Inventory 31.12.2005 Purchases (43,000 + 1,500) Less 86,000 10,500 44,500 55,000 12,000 43,000 17,200 15,050 18,500 18,500 Inventory 30.4.2006 Direct wages Overhead expenses Inventory of finished goods 31.12.2005 Inventory of finished goods 30.4.2006 Net profit Len Auck Brian Land 75,250 – 10,750 5,375 5,375 10,750 Non-current assets Plant and machinery at cost Less Depreciation 90,000 30,800 59,200 Current assets Inventory: Raw materials Finished goods Accounts receivable 12,000 18,500 46,000 Current liabilities Accounts payable Bank overdraft (see part (b)) 25,500 23,650 Forecast Balance Sheet as at 30 April 2006 Capital accounts: Balance 1.1.2006 Add Share of profit Less Drawings Len Auck Brian Land 40,000 39,000 5,375 5,375 45,375 44,375 1,600 1,600 43,775 42,775 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 76,500 135,700 ( 49,150) 86,550 86,550 183 Cash Budget (b) 2006 Receipts: accounts receivable Payments: Raw materials Direct wages Overheads: Wages and salaries Other overheads Drawings Plant Opening balance Closing balance Jan 18,000 Feb 18,000 Mar 18,000 Apr 22,000 13,000 3,600 13,000 4,400 10,500 4,400 11,000 4,800 900 1,550 800 25,000 44,850 +4,550 −22,300 1,000 1,550 800 1,000 2,150 800 1,000 2,150 800 20,750 −22,300 −25,050 18,850 −25,050 −25,900 19,750 −25,900 −23,650 Maximum amount of finance needed £25,900 in March. (c) Repayment of overdraft: Cash flows: Accounts receivable Less Materials Wages Overheads Wages overheads Drawings Net cash inflows May 22,000 11,000 4,800 2,500 1,000 800 Overdraft 30.4.2006 – Net cash inflow May Overdraft 31.5.2006 20,100 1,900 June 24,000 12,000 4,800 2,500 1,000 800 21,100 2,900 23,650 1,900 21,750 As following months are at the rate of £2,900 net cash inflows then it will take 71/2 months to clear overdraft: 21,750 = 71/2 months, i.e. cleared by middle of January 2007. 2,900 Answer to Question 41.2A BA 2 (i) Standard costing: a technique that compares standard costs and revenues with actual costs and revenues to obtain variances. (ii) Standard cost: the cost that should have been incurred. (iii) Standard hours: the amount of work achievable at standard efficiency levels in an hour. (iv) Variance: the difference between a standard cost or revenue and the actual cost or revenue incurred. 184 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 42.2A (i) BA 2 Actual cost per unit Standard cost per unit Materials usage variance (favourable) 171 × £11 176 × £11 £ 1,881 1,936 55 (ii) Actual cost per unit Standard cost per unit Materials price variance (adverse) 50 × £45 50 × £42 2,250 2,100 150 (iii) Actual cost per unit Standard cost per unit Materials usage variance (adverse) 83 × £22 79 × £22 1,826 1,738 88 (iv) Actual cost per unit Standard cost per unit Materials price variance (adverse) 41 × £10 41 × £8 410 328 82 (v) Actual cost per unit Standard cost per unit Materials price variance (adverse) 60 × £30 60 × £29 1,800 1,740 60 (vi) Actual cost per unit Standard cost per unit Materials usage variance (favourable) 78 × £27.5 84 × £27.5 2,145 2,310 165 Answer to Question 42.4A (i) BA 2 Favourable labour efficiency variance Adverse wage rate variance Net adverse labour variance 24 × £5.20 426 × 40p £ 124.80 170.40 45.60 (ii) Favourable wage rate variance Adverse labour efficiency variance Net favourable labour variance 660 × 20p 20 × £4.70 132.00 94.00 38.00 (iii) Favourable wage rate variance Favourable labour efficiency variance 140 × 40p 10 × £5.30 56.00 53.00 109.00 150 × £5.30 140 × £4.90 795.00 686.00 109.00 (iv) Adverse wage rate variance Adverse labour efficiency variance Total adverse labour variance 520 × 30p 10 × £5.10 156.00 51.00 207.00 (v) Favourable wage rate variance Adverse labour efficiency variance Net favourable labour variance 420 × 40p 30 × £4.80 168.00 144.00 24.00 (vi) Favourable labour variance Adverse wage rate variance Net adverse labour variance 30 × £4.60 780 × 40p 138.00 312.00 174.00 This compares with: Standard cost Actual cost Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 185 Answer to Question 42.6A BA 2 Central Grid plc It can be assumed that there has been a planning change concerning the volume of production, reducing it from 16,000 units to 12,000. Flexible budgeting can be adopted (see Section 39.5 in the text) and a revised original budget of 12,000 units used. Assume that all the various standard costs and usage level relationships would be unchanged at the lower level of output and calculate the variances requested on the basis that the budgeted volume was 12,000. This produces the following: (a) (b) £60,000 − £60,390 (i) (12,000 − 12,830) × £5 (ii) (£5 − £4.70694) × 12,830 Total Direct Material Variance for April 2008 = £390 Material Usage Variance = £4,150 Material Price Variance = £3,760 £144,000 − £153,000 (i) (36,000 − 34,000) × £4 (ii) (£4.00 − £4.50) × 34,000 Total Direct Labour Variance for April 2008 = £9,000 Labour Efficiency Variance = £8,000 Labour Rate Variance = £17,000 Workings: Material usage Material unit price Standard labour cost for output Adverse Adverse Favourable Adverse Favourable Adverse £64,150 ÷ £5 = 12,830 £60,390 ÷ 12,830 = £4.70694 £12 × 12,000 = £144,000 (c) Material: Shows an overall adverse variance of £390. Usage: Adverse £4,150. Used more material than expected for this level of output. Could have been because the material was of poorer quality (it was cheaper than expected). Price: Favourable variance £3,760. Purchasing obtained material at a lower price than expected. Labour: Shows an overall adverse variance of £9,000. Efficiency: Favourable £8,000. Perhaps using a different machine from usual? Or, perhaps working harder in order to receive the higher than expected wage rate. Rate: Adverse £17,000. Higher labour hourly cost, possibly because the amount of work was lower than expected. Polishing labour efficiency variance: The £3,000 adverse variance may have been due to the possibly poorer quality material used in machining having caused polishing to take longer than expected. (d) Briefly: Material: Possibly poorer quality material was used (it was cheaper than expected), resulting in waste. If so, it appears it cost more (in waste) than it saved (in reduced purchasing costs). It also appears that it may have led to the adverse polishing labour efficiency variance. Labour: Higher wage rates than were expected led to a significant increase in cost. These increased wage rates may have resulted from the change in the planned level of activity from 16,000 units to 12,000. 186 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 42.8A BA 2 (a) See text. (b) (i) Total materials variance: (Standard price × standard quantity) − (actual price × actual quantity) = (£8.42 × 1,940) − (£8.24 × 2,270) = £16,334.8 − £18,704.8 = £2,370 adverse. (ii) Materials price variance: (Standard price − actual price per unit) × quantity purchased = (£8.42 − £8.24) × 2,270 = £408.60 favourable. (iii) Material usage variance: (Standard quantity required − actual quantity) × standard price = (1,940 − 2,270) 330 × £8.42 = £2,778.60 adverse. (iv) Total labour variance: (Standard rate × standard hours) − (actual rate × actual hours) = (£6.53 × 800) − (£6.14 × 860) = £5,224 − £5,280.4 = £56.4 adverse. (v) Wage rate variance: (Standard rate − actual rate) × actual hours worked = (£6.53 − £6.14) × 860 = £335.40 favourable. (vi) Labour efficiency variance: (Standard hours − actual hours) × standard rate = (800 − 860) × £6.53 = £391.80 adverse. Answer to Question 42.9A BA 2 Direct material variances Boards Price variances: Gamesmaster Actual 5,050 Budget 5,050 × 5 Adverse 26,000 25,250 Gotchya Actual Budget Adverse 28,390 20,100 2,010 2,010 × 10 (750) (8,290) Usage variances: Gamesmaster Actual 5,050 × 5 Budget 5,000 × 5 Adverse 25,250 25,000 Gotchya Actual Budget Adverse 20,100 20,000 2,010 × 10 2,000 × 10 (250) (100) Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 187 Components Price variances: Gamesmaster Actual 5,060 Budget 5,060 × 20 Favourable Gotchya Actual Budget Favourable 2,025 2,025 × 30 75,000 101,200 26,200 56,409 60,750 4,341 Usage variances: Gamesmaster Actual 5,060 × 20 Budget 5,000 × 20 Adverse 101,200 100,000 ( 1,200) Gotchya Actual 2,025 × 30 60,750 Budget 2,000 × 30 60,000 Adverse Total direct material variance: Favourable Direct labour variances Assembly Wage rates Actual Budget 10,000 × 5 Favourable Efficiency Actual 10,000 × 5 Budget 7,000 × 5 Adverse 49,000 50,000 1,000 50,000 35,000 (15,000) Testing Wage rates Actual 35,700 Budget 7,000 × 5 35,000 Adverse Efficiency Actual 7,000 × 5 35,000 Budget 9,000 × 5 45,000 Favourable Total direct labour variance: Adverse Answer to Question 42.10A (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) 188 ( 750) 19,201 ( 700) 10,000 ( 4,700) BA 2 Standard cost – BCDE – standard hours at standard rates. Actual cost – ACJG – actual hours at actual rates. Total labour cost variance – ABGH and EDJH – difference between (i) and (ii) above. Efficiency variance – EDJH – additional hours required. Wage rate variance – ABGH – additional hours at wage rate differential. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 43.2A BA 2 (a) Actual fixed overhead Budgeted fixed overhead Favourable fixed overhead expenditure variance £ 18,109 19,000 891 (b) Actual hours × standard rate (280 × £12) Budgeted hours × standard rate (300 × £12) Favourable variable overhead efficiency variance 3,360 3,600 240 (c) Actual overhead Overhead applied to production (13,800 × £2) Adverse variable overhead expenditure variance 28,000 27,600 400 (d) Actual overhead Overhead applied to production (6,000 × £2) Favourable variable overhead expenditure variance 11,400 12,000 600 (e) Actual fixed overhead Budgeted fixed overhead Adverse fixed overhead expenditure variance 88,700 84,100 3,600 (f ) Actual hours × standard rate (20,000 × £10) Budgeted hours (14,600 × 1.33) × standard rate £10 Adverse variable overhead efficiency variance Answer to Question 43.4A 200,000 194,667 5,333 BA 2 The variable overhead rate is: £80,000 = £1.33 per direct labour hour or £0.33 per unit 60,000 The fixed overhead rate is: £120,000 = £2 direct labour hour or 50p per unit 60,000 The variances are: Variable overhead (i) Expenditure variance Actual overhead Overhead applied to production 64,000 × £1.33 Favourable expenditure variance (ii) Efficiency variance Actual hours × standard rate 64,000 × £1.33 Budgeted hours × standard rate (236,000 units which should be produced in 236,000 ÷ 4 = 59,000 hours × £1.33) Adverse efficiency variance £ 78,000 85,333 7,333 85,333 78,667 6,666 667 Fixed overhead (i) Budget (or spending) variance Actual overhead Budgeted overhead Favourable expenditure variance 104,000 120,000 16,000 (ii) Efficiency variance Actual units produced × standard rate 236,000 × 50p Actual labour hours × standard rate per hour 64,000 × £2 Adverse efficiency variance 118,000 128,000 10,000 (iii) Capacity variance Actual volume × standard rate 64,000 × £2 Budgeted volume × standard rate 60,000 × £2 Favourable capacity variance Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 128,000 120,000 8,000 6,000 189 The variances can be explained further: Variable overhead Actual overhead Budgeted overhead for actual production 236,000 units × £0.33 per unit Net favourable variance (made up of favourable expenditure variance £7,333 less adverse efficiency variance £6,666) Fixed overhead Actual overhead Overhead based on units of production 236,000 × £0.50 Net adverse variance (made up of adverse efficiency £10,000 − favourable expenditure £16,000 less favourable capacity variance £8,000) Answer to Question 43.6A 75,000 × Budget price 75,000 × Actual price Favourable price variance £6.00 = £6.40 = £0.40 Actual units sold 75,000 × Budget gross profit Budget units sold 80,000 × Budget gross profit Adverse volume variance £3.30 = £3.30 = A B C 1,000 800 3,000 4,800 Budget price £ 60 50 80 Actual Unit price price variance £ 58 −2 54 +4 78 −2 Adverse price variance Actual units sold Actual units in budget (%) Budget sales units Variance in units 1,000 800 3,000 4,800 686 1,027 3,087 4,800 800 1,200 3,600 5,600 −114 −173 −513 −800 Actual units in budget (%) Actual units sold Variance in units 686 1,027 3,087 4,800 1,000 800 3,000 4,800 +314 −227 −87 − A B C 104,000 118,000 14,000 £ 450,000 480,000 30,000 247,500 264,000 16,500 BA 2 Actual units sold Product A B C 667 BA 2 Actual units sold Answer to Question 43.8A 78,000 78,667 Total price variance −2,000 +3,200 −6,000 −4,800 Budget gross profit per unit £ 10 8 20 Adverse volume variance Total variance £ −1,140 −1,384 −10,260 −12,784 Budget gross profit per unit £ 10 8 20 Adverse mix variance Total variance £ +3,140 −1,816 −1,740 −416 Summary of sales variance Adverse price variance Adverse volume variance Adverse mix variance Net adverse variance 4,800 12,784 416 18,000 * Note: either this figure must be rounded to 3,087 or if recorded as 3,086 the Product A figure shown of 686 needs to be rounded to 687. Either would be correct. It would not be correct to leave both at their possible lower amounts of 3,086 and 686 as the total of ‘actual units in budget %’ must add up to 4,800. 190 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 43.10A (i) BA 2 Flint Palatignium Ltd Trading Account part of the Income Statement for the month of April 2008 Actual (£) Sales units 31,000 Revenue (534,750 + 8,691) 543,441 Materials (155,000 − 4,662 + 1,743) 152,081 Labour (77,500 − 600 + 292) 77,192 Overhead (232,500 − 147 + 9) 232,362 461,635 Operating profit 81,806 Valuation of inventory 1.4.2008 1,000 at £5 = £5,000 30.4.1008 1,750 at £5 = £8,750 Budget (£) 534,750 155,000 77,500 232,500 465,000 69,750 Workings: Units sold = £sales ÷ selling price = £534,750 ÷ £17.25 = 31,000. (ii) Standard costing uses standards of performance and of prices derived from studying operations and of estimating future prices. Each unit produced attracts a standard materials, labour and overhead cost. Flint Palatignium negotiates fixed-price contracts utilising standard costing which enables it to set standards that will remain unchanged for long periods. For example, the average cost method of pricing material issues needs a price recalculation each time there are additional receipts. The standard cost of materials will remain unchanged for a long period. Using the standard costing system would enable the company to check on the efficiency of the service provided. It would also enable faster reporting to be carried out. Answer to Question 43.11A (a) BA 2 HGW Limited Income Statement for March 2004 £ Revenue Less: Materials Labour Overheads £ 46,750 9,734 18,720 12,500 40,954 5,796 Profit for the month (b) (i) Sales variance Price Actual 550 × 85 Budget 550 × 86 Adverse Volume Actual 550 × 86 Budget 520 × 86 Favourable Total sales variance: Favourable (ii) Direct materials variance Price Actual 785 × 12.40 Budget 785 × 12 Adverse Usage Actual 785 × 12 Budget 825 × 12 Favourable Total direct material variance: Favourable 46,750 47,300 ( 550) 47,300 44,720 2,580 2,030 9,734 9,420 ( 314) 9,420 9,900 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 480 166 191 (iii) Direct labour variance Rate Actual 2,400 × 7.80 Budget 2,400 × 7.50 Adverse Efficiency Actual 2,400 × 7.50 Budget 2,420 × 7.50 Favourable Total direct labour variance: adverse 18,720 18,000 ( 720) 18,000 18,150 150 570 (c) Reconciliation Budgeted profit on actual sales [550 × 13(86 − 73)] Variances Sales (price variance only) Direct material Direct labour Overheads 7,150 (550) 166 (570) (400) (1,354) 5,796 Profit as per (a) above (d) See text, Section 41.2. Answer to Question 44.3A (a) (i) £24,000 (b) (i) £18,000 (ii) £36,000 (ii) £48,000 Answer to Question 44.5A (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) BA 2 (iii) £44,000 (iii) £33,000 (iv) £30,000 BA 2 Loss £2,000 Profit £12,000 Neither profit nor loss Profit £6,000 Profit £9,000 Answer to Question 44.7A BA 2 (a) Workings: Sales volume – units Selling price (£) Sales (£) Variable cost (£) Fixed cost (£) Profit (£) 192 Current 1,000 2 2,000 1,000 500 500 (i) 1,100 2 2,200 1,100 500 600 Changes (ii) 1,000 2.20 2,200 1,000 500 700 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 (iii) 1,000 2 2,000 900 500 600 (iv) 1,000 2 2,000 1,000 450 550 Break-even charts: (i) 10% increase in volume 2,500 Sales 2,000 Cost (£) Increase in profit: £100 Costs 1,500 1,000 500 0 200 400 600 800 Sales (units) 1,000 1,200 (ii) 10% increase in unit selling price 2,500 Sales 2,000 Cost (£) Increase in profit: £200 Costs 1,500 1,000 500 0 200 400 600 800 Sales (units) 1,000 1,200 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 193 (iii) 10% decrease in unit variable cost 2,500 Sales 2,000 Cost (£) Increase in profit: £100 1,500 Costs 1,000 500 0 200 400 600 800 Sales (units) 1,000 1,200 (iv ) 10% reduction in fixed costs 2,500 Sales 2,000 Cost (£) Increase in profit: £50 1,500 Costs 1,000 450 0 194 200 400 600 800 Sales (units) 1,000 1,200 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 44.9A BA 2 Monarch Ltd Profit Statement Original statement 60,000 £30 (a) Sales units (W1) Unit selling price Options (ii) 62,000 £30 (i) 78,000 £27 (iii) 75,000 £30 £000 Revenue Direct material Direct labour Variable overhead 1,800 480 240 240 960 840 260 90 100 450 390 Contribution Production cost Administration Selling, marketing and distribution Profit Contribution per unit (£) 2,106 585 312 312 1,209 897 290 95 110 495 402 14 1,860 496 248 248 992 868 260 90 127 477 391 2,250 577.5 300 300 1,177.5 1,072.5 285 94 147 526 546.5 14 14.3 11.50 (W1) Contribution = £840,000 for 60,000 units = £14 each. Contribution + total variable cost = selling price, therefore £14 + £16 = £30. Monarch Ltd Profit Statement Original statement Sales units Unit selling price Managing director’s option (iv) 78,000 £29 60,000 £30 Revenue Direct material Direct labour Variable overhead Contribution Production costs Administration Selling, marketing and distribution Profit Contribution per unit (£) £000 1,800 480 240 240 960 840 260 90 100 450 390 14 (F) (+ 30% × 93.75%) (E) (C) (B) (A) (D) £000 2,262 585 312 312 1,209 1,053 417 – 150 567 486 13.5 (b) Break-even point − £567,000 = 42,000 units. First insert (A) and (B). This means that (A) + (B) = (C). Given sales increase in units of 30% = 78,000 sales. Means that (C) ÷ 78,000 = contribution per unit of £13.50. (E) calculated so that (C) + (E) = (F). Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 195 Contribution/sales graph 2,400 Sales s= at fit unit o r P 000 , 60 Costs 2,000 Cost (£) 1,600 00 3,0 4 £2 1,200 800 400 0 10 20 Break-even point = 42,000 30 40 50 60 70 80 Output (000s units) (c) The report should include the following: 1 Marginal costing takes account of the variable costs of products. 2 It states that fixed factory overhead is a function of time and should not be carried forward into the next period by including it in inventory valuations. 3 To apply marginal costing means splitting up fixed and variable costs. This is not always straightforward. 4 Not all variable costs are a hundred per cent variable. 5 Intelligent cost planning and control is dependent on the knowledge of how costs behave in a particular firm. 6 Raw materials are examples of variable costs. Labour costs usually move in steps. Answer to Question 44.11A BA 2 (a) See text, Section 44.1. (It should be remembered that a break-even point is relevant only to a specific range of activity and within a specific timescale. If the volume of activity shifts onto a new level, some fixed costs may alter – for example, a second warehouse may need to be rented. This will result in a different break-even point. Also, the break-even point will alter over time as the nature of all costs change.) (b) (i) Cost of 2,000 additional units Direct materials Direct labour Overheads (36,000 − 30,000) (33,000 − 28,000) (24,100 − 20,500) 6,000 5,000 3,600 £14,600 (ii) Based on the cost for 2,000 units calculated in (i), the variable costs of 10,000 units would be £73,000. (iii) There appears to be a fixed element in both direct labour and overheads. In the case of direct labour, this would appear to be £3,000 [£28,000 − (5 × £5,000)]. In the case of overheads, it appears to be £2,500 [£20,500 − (5 × 3,600)]. (iv) On the basis of (ii) the variable cost of one unit is £7.30 and the contribution per unit is £5 [£12.30 − £7.30]. Break-even point is 1,100 units [(£3,000 + £2,500)/£5]. Answer to Question 45.2A BA 2 The amount borrowed is £3,842.20 and the interest charged is £157.80. Therefore, the real rate of interest: r= 157.80 = 0.2342 or 23.42%. 3,842.20 × (64 /365) 196 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 45.5A BA 2 £5,000 will accumulate to £5,000 × (1 + 0.035)8 = £6,584.04 Interest is £6,584.04 − £5,000 = £1,584.04 Answer to Question 45.6A BA 2 5 r = (4,400/ 2,500) − 1 = 11.2% Answer to Question 45.8A BA 2 £50,000 = 10 5,000 Therefore, from Table 4 in Appendix 1, and using the 12 year line, it lies between 2% and 3%: 2% = 10.575 3% = 9.954 Difference = 0.621 Interpolating, 10 − 9.954 = 0.046 and = 46 × 1 = 0.07 621 Therefore the offer represents a rate of interest of 3% − 0.07% = 2.93%. This is well below the 6% compound interest you could obtain by investing the £50,000 and confirms that you should accept the offer. Answer to Question 45.10A Paid in per year = = BA 2 Value × (r) (1 + r)n − 1 £40,000 × 0.07 (1.07)8 − 1 = £3,898.71 per year Answer to Question 46.4A Year: Cash outflows Machine Working capital Tax on profit @ 30% Cash inflows Profit before tax and depn WDA Working capital Net cash flow BA 2 0 Cash flow budget for the project 1 (start) 2 3 4 5 (48,000) (60,000) (30,000) 160,000 (90,000) 160,000 (48,000) (48,000) (48,000) 160,000 4,500 160,000 3,375 116,500 115,375 160,000 2,531 30,000 144,531 7,594 (40,406) Notes 1 Net outflows are shown in brackets. 2 WDA is 25% reducing balance on the machine multiplied by the tax rate of 30%. 3 At the end, as it has no residual value, the machine has an unexpired WDA that can be claimed of £60,000 − £34,688 = £25,312. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 197 Answer to Question 46.5A Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 BA 2 Net cash flow ( 90,000) 160,000 116,500 115,375 144,531 ( 40,406) Discount factor (7%) 1.000 0.935 0.873 0.816 0.763 0.713 Present value ( 90,000) 149,600 101,705 94,146 110,277 ( 28,809) Net present value of the net cash flows Answer to Question 46.6A Year: Cash outflows Machine Tax on savings @ 30% Tax on sale of old machine Cash inflows Savings on material Sale of old machine WDA on new machine Net cash flow 336,919 BA 2 0 1 (start) 2 Cash flow statement 3 4 5 6 (9,000) (90,000) 30,000 18,000 (90,000) 48,000 (9,000) (1,800) (9,000) (9,000) (9,000) 30,000 30,000 30,000 30,000 5,400 24,600 4,320 25,320 3,456 24,456 2,765 23,765 11,059 2,059 Notes 1 Net outflows are shown in brackets. 2 WDA is 20% reducing balance on the machine multiplied by the tax rate of 30%. 3 At the end, as it has no residual value, the machine has an unexpired WDA that can be claimed of £11,059. 4 The old machine is sold at a gain of £6,000 over its book value of £12,000 (4 × £3,000). The impact on annual reported profits would be: (i) operating profit would increase by £30,000; (ii) depreciation would increase by £15,000 (assuming the straight line method was used); (iii) tax payable would change by the difference between the tax and WDA rows in the statement. Answer to Question 46.11A Year 0 1 2 3 BA 2 Amount (40,000) 26,000 16,000 10,000 Balance (40,000) (14,000) – – Payback at 1 plus 14,000/16,000 years = 1.875 years. Answer to Question 46.12A Year 0 1 2 3 BA 2 Cash flow (40,000) 26,000 16,000 10,000 Discount factor (6%) 1.000 0.943 0.890 0.840 Net present value of the project 198 Present value (40,000) 24,518 14,240 8,400 7,158 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Answer to Question 46.13A BA 2 Year Amount 0 1 2 3 (40,000) 26,000 16,000 10,000 Discount factor (16%) 1.000 0.862 0.743 0.641 16% discount rate gives NPV of 18% discount rate gives negative NPV of The IRR is Present value (40,000) 22,412 11,888 6,410 710 Discount factor (18%) 1.000 0.847 0.718 0.609 Present value (40,000) 22,022 11,488 6,090 ( 400) 710 400 1,110 710 × 2% = 1.28 + 16% = 17.28%. 1110 , Answer to Question 46.14A BA 2 From Table 4 in Appendix 1, the present value of an annuity of £1 for three years at 6% is 2.673. The NPV accounting to the answer to Question 46.12A is £7,158. Therefore the annualised amount is: £7,158 = £2,677.89. 2.673 Answer to Question 46.15A Average return Average investment BA 2 = 90,000 = (128,000 + 8,000) ÷ 2 = 68,000 Accounting rate of return = 90,000 68,000 = 132.35% Answer to Question 46.16A Period 0 1 2 3 4 5 BA 2 Amount (128,000) 114,000 114,000 114,000 114,000 122,000 Discount factor (80%) 1.000 0.556 0.309 0.171 0.095 0.053 80% discount rate gives NPV of 90% discount rate gives negative NPV of The IRR is Present value (128,000) 63,384 35,226 19,494 10,830 6,466 7,400 Discount factor (90%) 1.000 0.526 0.277 0.146 0.077 0.040 Present value (128,000) 59,964 31,578 16,644 8,778 4,880 ( 6,156) 7,400 6,156 13,556 7,400 × 10% = 5.46% + 80% = 85.46% 13,556 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 199 Answer to Question 46.19A BA 2 Discount factor (7%) 1.000 0.935 0.873 0.816 Period 0 1 2 3 Project A net cash flows (68,000) 30,000 – 48,000 Present value (68,000) 28,050 – 39,168 ( 782) Project B net cash flows (58,000) 42,000 – 21,000 Present value (58,000) 39,270 – 17,136 ( 1,594) Neither should be selected on the basis of this criterion – both projects have a negative net present value. Answer to Question 46.20A BA 2 Project X = 6.4% Project Y = 5.2% Project X would be preferred. Answer to Question 46.22A BA 2 Discount factor (6%) 1.000 0.943 0.890 0.840 0.792 0.747 Period 0 1 2 3 4 5 Project X net cash flows (50,000) ( 8,000) (12,000) ( 8,000) ( 8,000) ( 8,000) Present value (50,000) ( 7,544) (10,680) ( 6,720) ( 6,336) ( 5,976) (87,256) Project Y net cash flows (110,000) ( 12,000) ( 12,000) ( 2,000) ( 2,000) ( 2,000) The present value of an annuity of £1 for 5 years at 6% = £4.212 ∴ the annualised cost of Project X = and the annualised cost of Project Y = £87,256 = £20,716 4.212 £136,754 = £32,468 4.212 As the cost of project X is cheaper than that of project Y, project X should be selected. 200 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 Present value (110,000) ( 11,316) ( 10,680) ( 1,680) ( 1,584) ( 1,494) (136,754) Answer to Question 46.25A BA 2 Hirwaun Pig Iron Co. 2006 2007 120,000 120,000 (a) Exco Tonnes Price: 80% @ 20% @ Revenue (£000) Labour (£000) Other payments Net cash flow 2005 120,000 18,000 ( 1,200) (15,600) 1,200 17,760 ( 1,200) (15,600) 960 17,760 ( 1,200) (16,200) 360 18,240 ( 1,200) (16,200) 840 Ohio Tonnes Price Revenue (£000) Labour (£000) Other payments Net cash flow 2005 240,000 £130 31,200 ( 2,500) (28,800) ( 100) 2006 240,000 £130 31,200 ( 2,500) (28,800) ( 100) 2007 240,000 £140 33,600 ( 2,500) (30,000) 1,100 2008 240,000 £170 40,800 ( 2,500) (30,000) 8,300 £150 £150 (b) Exco (£000) Period 0 Capital outlay 2005 Net cash flow 2006 Net cash flow 2007 Net cash flow 2008 Net cash flow Net present value Ohio (£000) 0 Capital outlay 2005 Net cash flow 2006 Net cash flow 2007 Net cash flow 2008 Net cash flow Net present value £150 £140 2008 120,000 £150 £140 £150 £160 (2,000) 1,200 960 360 840 PV factor for 12% 1.00 0.893 0.797 0.712 0.636 NPV (2,000) 1,072 765 256 534 627 (3,500) ( 100) ( 100) 1,100 8,300 1.00 0.893 0.797 0.712 0.636 (3,500) ( 89) ( 80) 783 5,279 2,393 (c) The calculations of net present values indicate that the Ohio investment produces a higher NPV over the four-year period. In order to determine whether this represents a reasonable decision, the management would need to consider the reliability of estimates used – on volumes, sales forces and costs. Exco involves a lower capital outlay, which is expected to produce a payback just before the end of 2006. Ohio does not achieve payback until over 6 months through the fourth year. Ohio only really comes into profit in the fourth year. If these fourth year estimates are reliable, and may extend into the future period after 2008, then Ohio is clearly preferable. The method using net present value is entirely appropriate, assuming that the cost of capital figure has been reliably estimated. However, the NPV can only be valued if the information on which it is based is accurate. Great care must be taken to assess the sensitivity of the data to changes in the inputs in order to be aware of the underlying risks involved. Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008 201 Answer to Question 46.27A BA 2 Rovers Football Club Exhibit A Jimmy Jam Year Incremental receipts Salary Transfer fee Exhibit B Johnny Star Year Incremental receipts Salary Transfer fee 0 (200,000) (200,000) 0 (100,000) (100,000) 1 200,000 ( 50,000) 2 200,000 ( 50,000) 3 200,000 ( 50,000) 4 200,000 ( 50,000) 5 200,000 ( 50,000) 150,000 150,000 150,000 150,000 150,000 1 400,000 (200,000) 2 400,000 (200,000) (200,000) (200,000) Exhibit C Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 Cash flow (200,000) 150,000 150,000 150,000 150,000 150,000 Jimmy Jam PV factor NPV 1.00 (200,000) 0.893 133,950 0.797 119,550 0.712 106,800 0.636 95,400 0.567 85,050 340,750 Cash flow (100,000) 200,000 200,000 Johnny Star PV factor NPV 1.00 (100,000) 0.893 178,600 0.797 159,400 238,000 Report to Rovers Football Club The proposed transactions have been evaluated in Exhibits A, B and C to calculate the likely returns from the two players. On the figures quoted, both transactions produce a positive net present value using 12% interest, with the Jimmy Jam proposal providing the higher of the two. However, the club should consider the fact that the J Star proposal provides a payback in the first year whereas the J Jam transfer would not achieve payback until after six months through year 2. If J Jam is successful, his five-year contract will provide benefits for three years more than J Star. In both cases the whole proposal hinges on the validity of the assumed increase in revenue and the probability that the players will be fit to play and be popular with the crowds. 202 Frank Wood and Alan Sangster, Business Accounting 1 & 2 Solutions Manual, 11th Edition © Pearson Education Limited 2008