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The management of Tritt Company has asked its accounting department to describe the effect upon the company’s financial position and its income statements of accounting for inventorieson the LIFO rather than the FIFO basis during 2017 and 2018. The accounting department is to assume that the change to LIFO wouldhave been effective on January 1, 2017, and that the initial LIFO base would have been the inventory value on December 31, 2016. Thefollowing are the company’s financial statements and other data for the years 2017 and 2018 when the FIFO method was employed.

Financial Position as of

12/31/16 12/31/17 12/31/18

Cash \( 90,000 \)130,000 \(154,000

Accounts receivable 80,000 100,000 120,000

Inventory 120,000 140,000 176,000

Other assets 160,000 170,000 200,000

Total assets \)450,000 \(540,000 \)650,000

Accounts payable \( 40,000 \) 60,000 \( 80,000

Other liabilities 70,000 80,000 110,000

Common stock 200,000 200,000 200,000

Retained earnings 140,000 200,000 260,000

Total liabilities and equity \)450,000 \(540,000 \)650,000

Income for Years Ended

12/31/17 12/31/18

Sales revenue \(900,000 \)1,350,000

Less: Cost of goods sold 505,000 756,000

Other expenses 205,000 304,000

710,000 1,060,000

Income before income taxes 190,000 290,000

Income taxes (40%) 76,000 116,000

Net income \(114,000 \) 174,000

Other data:

1. Inventory on hand at December 31, 2016, consisted of 40,000 units valued at \(3.00 each.

2. Sales (all units sold at the same price in a given year):

2017—150,000 units @ \)6.00 each 2018—180,000 units @ \(7.50 each

3. Purchases (all units purchased at the same price in given year):

2017—150,000 units @ \)3.50 each 2018—180,000 units @ $4.40 each

4. Income taxes at the effective rate of 40% are paid on December 31 each year.

Instructions

Name the account(s) presented in the financial statements that would have different amounts for 2018 if LIFO rather than FIFOhad been used, and state the new amount for each account that is named. Show computations.

Short Answer

Expert verified

By adopting LIFO, ending inventory would have a new balance having $120,000 in both years. COGS in 2017 and 2018 would be $525,000 and $792,000, respectively.

Step by step solution

01

Cost of goods sold under LIFO

The LIFO method values the cost of goods sold for the latest cost price. So the ending inventory would be lowest under the LIFO method.

For the given data, COGS for 2017 and 2018 would be as follows:

COGSfor2017=No.ofunitssoldfor2017×Costpriceofpurchasefor2017=150,000×$3·5=$525,000

COGSfor2018=No.ofunitssoldfor2018×Costpriceofpurchasefor2018=180,000×$ 4·4=$792,000

02

Ending Inventory under LIFO

EndingInventory2017=Openingstock+Purchasevalue-COGS=$120,000+150,000×$3·5-$525,000=$120,000

EndingInventory2018=Openingstock+Purchasevalue-COGS=$120,000+180,000×$4·4-$792,000=$120,000

03

Affected accounts

Due to a change in inventory valuation method, only two accounts would be affected – COGS and Inventory.

The value of COGS would be higher in both years, and ending inventory would be lowest in both years.

Affected accounts with their new balances

2017 2018

Inventory Account $120,000 $120,000

COGS $525,000 $792,000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Inventory information for Part 311 of Monique Aaron Corp. discloses the following information for the month of June.

June 1 Balance 300 units @ \(10 June 10 Sold 200 units @ \)24

11 Purchased 800 units @ \(12 15 Sold 500 units @ \)25

20 Purchased 500 units @ \(13 27 Sold 300 units @ \)27

Instructions

(a) Assuming that the periodic inventory method is used, compute the cost of goods sold and ending inventory under(1) LIFO and (2) FIFO.

(b) Assuming that the perpetual inventory method is used and costs are computed at the time of each withdrawal, what is the value of the ending inventory at LIFO?

(c) Assuming that the perpetual inventory method is used and costs are computed at the time of each withdrawal, what is the gross profit if the inventory is valued at FIFO?

(d) Why is it stated that LIFO usually produces a lower gross profit than FIFO?

The following independent situations relate to inventory accounting.

1. Kim Co. purchased goods with a list price of \(175,000, subject to trade discounts of 20% and 10%, with no cash discounts allowable. How much should Kim Co. record as the cost of these goods?

2. Keillor Company’s inventory of \)1,100,000 at December 31, 2017, was based on a physical count of goods priced at cost and before any year-end adjustments relating to the following items.

(a) Goods shipped from a vendor f.o.b. shipping point on December 24, 2017, at an invoice cost of \(69,000 to Keillor Company were received on January 4, 2018.

(b) The physical count included \)29,000 of goods billed to Sakic Corp. f.o.b. shipping point on December 31, 2017. The carrier picked up these goods on January 3, 2018.

What amount should Keillor report as inventory on its balance sheet?

3. Zimmerman Corp. had 1,500 units of part M.O. on hand May 1, 2017, costing \(21 each. Purchases of part M.O. during May were as follows.

Units Unit Cost

May 9 2,000 \)22.00

17 3,500 23.00

26 1,000 24.00

A physical count on May 31, 2017, shows 2,000 units of part M.O. on hand. Using the FIFO method, what is the cost of part M.O. inventory at May 31, 2017? Using the LIFO method, what is the inventory cost? Using the average-cost method, what is the inventory cost?

4. Ashbrook Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO method on January 1, 2017 (using internal price indexes and multiple pools). The following data are available for inventory pool A for the 2 years following adoption of LIFO.

At Base- At Current-

Inventory Year Cost Year Cost

1/1/17 \(200,000 \)200,000

12/31/17 240,000 264,000

12/31/18 256,000 286,720

Computing an internal price index and using the dollar-value LIFO method, at what amount should the inventory be reported at December 31, 2018?

5. Donovan Inc., a retail store chain, had the following information in its general ledger for the year 2018.

Merchandise purchased for resale $909,400

Interest on notes payable to vendors 8,700

Purchase returns 16,500

Freight-in 22,000

Freight-out (delivery expense) 17,100

Cash discounts on purchases 6,800

What is Donovan’s inventoriable cost for 2018?

Instructions

Answer each of the preceding questions about inventories, and explain your answers.

Zonker Inc. purchases 500 units of an item at an invoice cost of \(30,000. What is the cost per unit? If the goods are shipped f.o.b. shipping point and the freight bill was\)1,500, what is the cost per unit if Zonker Inc. pays the freight charges? If these items were bought on 2/10, n/30terms and the invoice and the freight bill were paid within the 10-day period, what would be the cost per unit?

The following example was provided to encourage the use of the LIFO method. In a nutshell, LIFO subtracts inflation from inventory costs, deducts it from taxable income, and records it in a LIFO reserve account on the books. The LIFO benefit grows as inflation widens the gap between current-year and past-year (minus inflation) inventory costs.

This gap is:

With LIFO Without LIFO

Revenues \(3,200,000 \)3,200,000

Cost of goods sold 2,800,000 2,800,000

Operating expenses 150,000 150,000

Operating income 250,000 250,000

LIFO adjustment 40,000 0

Taxable income \( 210,000 \) 250,000

Income taxes @ 36% \( 75,600 \) 90,000

Cash flow \( 174,400 \) 160,000

Extra cash \( 14,400 0

Increased cash flow 9% 0%

Instructions

(a) Explain what is meant by the LIFO reserve account.

(b) How does LIFO subtract inflation from inventory costs?

(c) Explain how the cash flow of \)174,400 in this example was computed. Explain why this amount may not be correct.

(d) Why does a company that uses LIFO have extra cash? Explain whether this situation will always exist.

Some of the transactions of Torres Company during August are listed below. Torres uses the periodic inventory method.

August 10 Purchased merchandise on account, \(12,000, terms 2/10, n/30.

13 Returned part of the purchase of August 10, \)1,200, and received

credit on account.

15 Purchased merchandise on account, \(16,000, terms 1/10, n/60.

25 Purchased merchandise on account, \)20,000, terms 2/10, n/30.

28 Paid invo

ice of August 15 in full.

Instructions

(a) Assuming that purchases are recorded at gross amounts and that discounts are to be recorded when taken:

(1) Prepare general journal entries to record the transactions.

(2) Describe how the various items would be shown in the financial statements.

(b) Assuming that purchases are recorded at net amounts and that discounts lost are treated as financial expenses:

(1) Prepare general journal entries to enter the transactions.

(2) Prepare the adjusting entry necessary on August 31 if financial statements are to be prepared at that time.

(3) Describe how the various items would be shown in the financial statements.

(c) Which of the two methods do you prefer and why?

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