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The term _____ value refer to the estimated proceeds on the disposition of an asset less all removal and selling costs.


A) salvage
B) present
C) future
D) end game
E) current

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Assume the following long-term debt structure for Parton Stores: Construction Loan at 5% on Building Under Construction .........$2,000,000 Other Borrowings at 6% Average Rate .........................7,200,000 Total Long-Term Debt ....................................$9,200,000 The account Building Under Construction has an average balance during the year of $6,000,000.Parton Stores bases the amount of interest capitalized on the new construction-related borrowing, $2,000,000, and enough of the other borrowing to bring the total to $6,000,000. How much does Parton Stores capitalize interest on the new construction?


A) $240,000
B) $300,000
C) $320,000
D) $340,000
E) $360,000

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Which of the following is/are true regarding the fair value of long-lived assets?


A) U.S.GAAP does not permit firms to increase the balance sheet carrying values of tangible and intangible long-lived assets when the fair values of their assets increase.
B) IFRS permits upward asset revaluations, the recognition of unrealized increases in the fair value of tangible and intangible long-lived assets under certain conditions.
C) IFRS requires that firms credit the increase in the tangible and intangible revalued asset's balance sheet carrying value to other comprehensive income.
D) U.S.GAAP firms recognize the increase in the fair value of the tangible and intangible asset only as the firm realizes the value increase through either sale or continuing use.
E) all of the above

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E

Firms recognize expenditures to acquire intangibles externally from third parties as _____ if the intangibles are either separable or arise from contractual or other legal rights.


A) assets
B) liabilities
C) retained earnings
D) revenue
E) expenses

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Describe the depreciation and amortization methods used in accounting.

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MEASUREMENT OF DEPRECIATION AND AMORTIZATION Calculating depreciation or amortization of long-lived assets requires management to 1. Measure the depreciable or amortizable basis of the asset. 2. Estimate its service (useful) life. 3. Decide the pattern of expiration of asset cost over its service life. Depreciable or Amortizable Basis of Long-Lived Assets: Acquisition Cost Less Salvage Value Firms base depreciation and amortization charges on the acquisition cost less the estimated salvage value of long-lived assets. The terms salvage value and residual value refer to the estimated proceeds on the disposition of an asset less all removal and selling costs. Firms recover salvage value through the proceeds of sale, so it is not part of the depreciable or amortizable basis of an asset. For buildings, common practice assumes a zero salvage value on the assumption that the costs a firm will incur in tearing down the building will approximate the sales value of the scrap materials recovered. Other tangible assets may have substantial salvage value. For example, a car-rental firm will replace its automobiles at a time when other owners can use the cars for several years more. The car rental firm expects to recover a substantial part of acquisition cost from selling used cars. Intangible assets related to a contractual right, such as landing rights at an airport or franchise rights to sell a franchiser’s products, generally expire at a specific time and therefore have zero residual value. Identifiable intangibles acquired in a business combination that are separable, such as customer lists or brand names, may have significant salvage values. Some assets are not readily salable at the end of their useful lives, and retiring them may impose substantial costs. Consider, for example, the cost of dismantling a nuclear power plant at the end of its service life. Firms must estimate the fair value of the dismantling costs and include that amount in the initial measurement of the asset. The firm must also recognize a liability, referred to as an asset retirement obligation, of equal amount. The firm computes depreciation based on the combined cost of the plant assets, including the fair value of the dismantling obligation, because the firm must recover this cost through depreciation during the asset’s useful life. The second factor in calculating depreciation and amortization is the expected service life. Both physical and functional factors limit service lives. Physical factors for tangible assets include ordinary wear and tear from use, chemical action such as rust, and the effects of wind and rain. The most important functional factor for both tangible and intangible assets is obsolescence. Changes in production processes, for example, might reduce the unit cost of production to the point where a firm finds continued operation of old equipment uneconomical, even though the equipment remains usable. Computers may work as well as ever, but firms replace them because new, smaller computers occupy less space and compute faster. Although display cases and storefronts may not have worn out, retail stores replace them to make the store look better. Technology-based intangibles can become obsolete overnight. Although the legal life of a drug patent is 20 years, the expected economic life of the drug is often less than half of that period. Estimating service lives presents the most difficult task in the depreciation and amortization calculation. Because obsolescence typically results from external forces, its effect on the service life is particularly uncertain. As a result, firms must review their estimates of service lives each year. A change in this estimate will change the depreciation and amortization amounts going forward. IFRS, but not U.S. GAAP, requires firms to calculate depreciation separately for significant portions of plant and equipment if those portions have different service lives. Therefore, management must analyze the components of fixed assets to determine if those components have different service lives; if they do, firms must use a component’s service life to depreciate the cost of that component. For example, the airframe and the engines of an aircraft likely have different service lives, and the firm would therefore depreciate them separately. Pattern of Depreciation and Amortization An asset’s acquisition cost, salvage value, and service life determine both the total of depreciation or amortization charges and the time span over which to charge those costs. The firm must also select the pattern for allocating those charges to the specific years of the service life. Depreciation of tangible assets follows one of three basic patterns. 1. Straight line over time. 2. Straight line with respect to usage. 3. Accelerated over time (with higher depreciation in the early years of the service life). Amortization of intangible assets is usually straight line over time. The next section describes and illustrates the depreciation and amortization patterns. When acquiring or retiring a long-lived asset during an accounting period, a firm calculates depreciation and amortization only for that portion of the period during which it uses the asset. Straight-Line (Time) Method The straight-line (time) method is the most common method for financial reporting. This method divides the acquisition cost of an asset (including the cost to dismantle and retire) less its estimated salvage value by the estimated service life to calculate depreciation or amortization. Straight-Line (Use) Method. For assets whose use is not uniform over time, the straight-line (time) method of depreciation may result in depreciation patterns unrelated to usage patterns. A straight-line (use) method is appropriate for such assets. Accelerated Depreciation The service capacity of some depreciable assets declines with age or use. Cutting tools lose some of their precision; printing presses require more frequent shutdowns for repairs; rent receipts from an old office building fall below those from a new one. Some assets provide more and better services in the early years of their lives and require increasing amounts of maintenance as they grow older. These cases justify accelerated depreciation methods, which recognize larger depreciation charges in early years and smaller depreciation charges in later years. However, authoritative guidance does not require the use of an accelerated method. Two common accelerated depreciation methods are the declining-balance method and the sum-of-the-years’-digits method. U.S. GAAP and IFRS provide firms considerable flexibility in choosing their depreciation method(s).

The method of depreciation for assets whose utilization is not uniform over time is the _____ method.


A) Accelerated
B) Decelerated
C) Straight-Line (Time)
D) Straight-Line (Use)
E) Sum-of-the-years'-digits

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Long-lived financial assets include investments in securities.

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Wheaton Company Wheaton Company owns an apartment building that originally cost $40 million and by the end of the current period has accumulated depreciation of $10 million, with net carrying value of $30 million.Wheaton Company had originally expected to collect rentals of $3.34 million each year for 30 years before selling the building for $16 million.Unanticipated placement of a new shopping center has caused Wheaton Company to reassess the future rentals.Wheaton Company expects the building to provide rentals for only 15 more years before Wheaton will sell it.Wheaton Company uses a discount rate of 8% per year in discounting expected rentals from the building. Wheaton now expects to receive annual rentals of $1,200,000 per year for 15 years and to sell the building for $6.0 million after 15 years; these payments, in total, have a present value of $12.2 million when discounted at 8% per year.The building's fair value is $11.0 million today and costs to sell are $600,000. Under U.S.GAAP, Wheaton would record the following entry


A) Accumulated Depreciation ........................... 11,000,000
Apartment Building (New Valuation) ....................10,000,000
Loss on Impairment................................. 19,000,000
Apartment Building (Acquisition Cost) ......................... 40,000,000

B) Accumulated Depreciation ........................... 10,000,000
Apartment Building (New Valuation) ....................10,000,000
Loss on Impairment................................. 20,000,000
Apartment Building (Acquisition Cost) ......................... 40,000,000

C) Accumulated Depreciation ........................... 10,000,000
Apartment Building (New Valuation) ...................11,000,000
Loss on Impairment................................. 19,000,000
Apartment Building (Acquisition Cost) ......................... 40,000,000

D) Accumulated Depreciation ........................... 10,000,000
Apartment Building (New Valuation) ...................12,000,000
Loss on Impairment................................. 18,000,000
Apartment Building (Acquisition Cost) ......................... 40,000,000

E) Accumulated Depreciation ........................... 10,000,000
Apartment Building (New Valuation) ...................12,200,000
Loss on Impairment................................. 17,800,000
Apartment Building (Acquisition Cost) ......................... 40,000,000

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A firm may retire an asset from service by trading it in on a new asset.U.S.GAAP and IFRS require that firms record trade-in transactions at _____ unless they lack commercial substance.


A) present value of future cash flows
B) replacement value
C) liquidation value
D) fair value
E) undiscounted cash flows

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The entry to record periodic depreciation of $4,500 on office facilities is as follows:


A) Depreciation (or Administrative) Expense . . . . . . . . . 4,500
Accumulated Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
B) Accumulated Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
Depreciation (or Administrative) Expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
C) Depreciation (or Administrative) Expense . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
Office Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
D) Office Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
Depreciation (or Administrative) Expense . . . . . . . . . . 4,500
E) none of the above

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The Llama Company spent $300,000 on research and development during Year 8 to generate new product lines.One of the three projects resulted in a successful patented product while the other two projects resulted in unsuccessful efforts.How much of the $300,000 should be recognized as an expense in Year 8?


A) $300,000
B) $200,000
C) $150,000
D) $100,000
E) $0

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Discuss the concepts of depreciation and amortization.

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FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS OF DEPRECIATION AND...

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U.S.GAAP and IFRS provide firms considerable flexibility in choosing their depreciation method(s).

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Tangible long-lived assets include all of the following except


A) land.
B) buildings.
C) equipment.
D) factories.
E) franchise rights.

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Which of the following is/are not true regarding repairs?


A) Repairs include routine costs such as for cleaning and adjusting.
B) Repairs include the costs of restoring an asset's service potential after breakdowns or other damage.
C) Repairs do not extend the estimated service life or increase its productive capacity of an asset beyond original expectations.
D) U.S.GAAP and IFRS treat repair expenditures as expenses of the period when the firm makes the expenditure.
E) Distinguishing repairs from maintenance is difficult but typically not necessary because expenditures for both are period expenses.

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Depreciation and amortization expenses appear in the income statement, and are sometimes


A) disclosed separately.
B) included in selling and administrative expenses.
C) included as part of cost of goods sold expense.
D) all of the above
E) none of the above

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U.S.GAAP authoritative guidance requires that financial statements report depreciation charges based on _____ estimates; in practice, the _____ method is the most common.


A) aggressive; straight-line (time)
B) reasonable; straight-line (time)
C) aggressive; straight-line (use)
D) reasonable; straight-line (use)
E) reasonable; accelerated

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What happens when the fair value of long-lived assets change?

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CHANGES IN THE FAIR VALUE OF LONG-LIVED ...

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Firms treat expenditures to develop intangibles internally as assets under U.S.GAAP when _____ the point of technological feasibility; and under IFRS when _____ the point of technological feasibility.


A) software development costs are incurred after; development costs are incurred generally after
B) software development costs are incurred after; development costs are incurred generally before
C) software development costs are incurred before; development costs are incurred generally before
D) software development costs are incurred before; development costs are incurred generally after
E) none of the above.

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Nebraska Steakhouse opened a new restaurant on the site of an existing building.It paid the owner $520,000 for the land and building, of which it attributes $104,000 to the land and $416,000 to the building.Nebraska incurred legal costs of $25,200 to conduct a title search and prepare the necessary legal documents for the purchase.It then paid $71,800 to renovate the building to make it suitable for Nebraska's use.Property and liability insurance on the land and building for the first year was $24,000, of which $8,000 applied to the period during renovation and $16,000 applied to the period after opening.Property taxes on the land and building for the first year totaled $30,000, of which $10,000 applied to the period during renovation and $20,000 applied to the period after opening.Calculate the amounts that Nebraska Steakhouse should include in the Land account and in the Building account.

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Nebraska Steakhouse; calculating acquisition costs of long-lived assets. The relative market values of the land and building are 20% (= $104,000/$520,000) for the land and 80% (= $416,000/$520,000) for the building. We use these percentages to allocate joint cost of the land and building. \(\begin{array} { l }&\text { Land }&\text { Building }\\ \text {Purchase Price of }&\\ \text { Land and Building}&\$104,000&\$416,000\\ \text { Legal Costs Split } 20 \% \text { and } 80 \%&5,040&20,160\\ \text { Renovation Costs }&--&71,800\\ \text {Property and Liability Insurance Costs }&\\ \text {during Renovation Split \( 20 \% \) and80\% }&1,600&6,400\\\text { Property Taxes during Renovation }\\ \text { Split } 20 \% \text { and } 80 \%&2,000&8,000\\ \text { Total }& \$ 112,640 & \$ 522,360\\ \end{array}\) Note also that the insurance and property taxes for the period after opening are expenses of the first year of operation.

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