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Vargo Corp. owes \(270,000 to First Trust. The debt is a 10-year, 12% note due December 31, 2017. Because Vargo Corp. is in financial trouble, First Trust agrees to extend the maturity date to December 31, 2019, reduce the principal to \)220,000, and reduce the interest rate to 5%, payable annually on December 31.

Instructions

  1. Prepare the journal entries on Vargo鈥檚 books on December 31, 2017, 2018, 2019.
  2. Prepare the journal entries on First Trust鈥檚 books on December 31, 2017, 2018, 2019.

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. The total debit and credit side of Journal is $270,000.
  2. The total debit and credit side of the Journal is $394,054.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Journal Entry

A journal entry is a financial transaction recordthat is preserved in an organization's books of accounts.Debit and credit columns, as well as a description of each transaction, are included.

02

(a) Preparing journal entry

Becausethe carrying amount of the loan, $270,000, is more than the total anticipated cash flows, $242,000 [$220,000 + ($11,000 X 2)], a gain and a loss are recognized, and the debtor does not record interest.

Vargo Corp.鈥檚 entries

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

2017

Notes payable

28,000

Gain on the restructuring of debt

28,000

2018

Notes payable

11,000

Cash(5%$220,000)

11,000

2019

Notes payable

231,000

Cash

[$220,000+5%$220,000]

231,000

$270,000

$270,000

03

(b) Preparing journal entry

First Trust鈥檚 entries

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Dec. 31, 2017

Bad debt expense

76,027

Allowances for doubtful accounts

76,027

Dec. 31, 2018

Cash

11,000

Allowance for doubtful accounts

12,277

Interest revenue

23,277

Dec. 31, 2019

Cash

11,000

Allowances for doubtful accounts

13,750

Interest revenue

24,750

Dec. 31, 2019

Cash

220,000

Allowance for doubtful accounts

50,000

Notes receivable

270,000

$394,054

$394,054

Working notes:

Calculation of creditors鈥 loss due to restructuring of debt

Pre-restructure carrying amount

$270,000

Present value of restructured cash flows:


Present value of $220,000 due in 2 years

At 12%, interest payable annually

(Table 6-2); ($220,0000.79719)$175,382




Present value of $11,000 interest payable

Annually for 2 years at 12 % (Table 6-4);

$11,0001.6900518,591



193,973

Creditor鈥檚 loss on restructuring of debt

$(76,027)

Preparing interest payment schedule

Date

Cash interest

Effective interest

Increase in

Carrying

Amount

Carrying

Amount of Note

12/31/17

$193,973

12/31/18

$11,000


($220,0000.05)

$23,277

($193,97312%)

$12,277

($23,277-$11,000)

206,250

12/31/19

11,000

24,750

13,750

220,000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

All of the following are differences between IFRS and GAAP in accounting for liabilities except:

a) When a bond is issued at a discount, GAAP records the discount in a separate contra liability account. IFRS records the bond net of the discount.

b) Under IFRS, bond issuance costs reduce the carrying value of the debt. Under GAAP, these costs are recorded as an asset and amortized to expense over the terms of the bond.

c) GAAP, but not IFRS, uses the term 鈥渢roubled-debt restructurings.鈥

d) GAAP, but not IFRS, uses the term 鈥減rovisions鈥 for contingent liabilities which are accrued.

Coldwell, Inc. issued a \(100,000. 4-years, 10% note at face value to Flint Hills Bank on January 1, 2017, and received \)100,000 cash. The note requires annual interest payments each December 31. Prepare Coldwell鈥檚 journal entries to record (a) the issuance of the note and (b) the December 31 interest payment.

What are the two methods of amortizing discount and premium on bonds payable? Explain each.

Question: The following information is taken from the 2017 annual report of Bugant, Inc. Bugant鈥檚 fiscal year ends December 31 of each year. Bugant鈥檚 December 31, 2017, balance sheet is as follows.

Bugant, Inc.

Balance Sheet

December 31, 2017

Assets

Cash \( 450

Inventory 1,800

Total current assets 2,250

Plant and equipment 2,000

Accumulated depreciation (160)

Total assets \)4,090

Liabilities

Bonds payable (net of discount) \(1,426

Stockholders鈥 equity

Common stock 1,500

Retained earnings 1,164

Total liabilities and stockholders鈥 equity \)4,090

Note X: Long Term Debt:

On January 1, 2016, Bugant issued bonds with face value of \(1,500 and a coupon rate equal to 10%. The bonds were issued to yield 12% and mature on January 1, 2021.

Additional information concerning 2018 is as follows.

  1. Sales were \)3,500, all for cash.
  2. Purchases were \(2,000, all paid in cash.
  3. Salaries were \)700, all paid in cash.
  4. Property, plant, and equipment was originally purchased for \(2,000 and is depreciated straight-line over a 25-year life with no salvage value.
  5. Ending inventory was \)1,900.
  6. Cash dividends of \(100 were declared and paid by Bugant.
  7. Ignore taxes.
  8. The market rate of interest on bonds of similar risk was 12% during all of 2018.
  9. Interest on the bonds is paid semiannually each June 30 and December 31.

Accounting

Prepare a balance sheet for Bugant, Inc. at December 31, 2018, and an income statement for the year ending December 31, 2018. Assume semiannual compounding of the bond interest.

Analysis

Use common ratios for analysis of long-term debt to assess Bugant鈥檚 long-run solvency. Has Bugant鈥檚 solvency changed much from 2017 to 2018? Bugant鈥檚 net income in 2017 was \)550 and interest expense was $169.

Principles

The FASB and the IASB allow companies the option of recognizing in their financial statements the fair values of their long-term debt. That is, companies have the option to change the balance sheet value of their long-term debt to the debt鈥檚 fair value and report the change in balance sheet value as a gain or loss in income. In terms of the qualitative characteristics of accounting information (Chapter 2), briefly describe the potential trade-off(s) involved in reporting long-term debt at its fair value.

Question: Under what circumstances would a transaction be recorded as a troubled-debt restructuring by only one of the two parties to the transaction?

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