Using the preceding data complete income statement and the


Assignment

Exercise 1

1. Liquidity ratios. Edison, Stagg, and Thornton have the following financial information at the close of business on July 10:

 

Edison

Stagg

Thornton

Cash

$4,000

$2,500

$1,000

Short-Term Investments

3,000

2,500

2,000

Accounts Receivable

2,000

2,500

3,000

Inventory

1,000

2,500

4,000

Prepaid Expenses

800

800

800

Accounts Payable

200

200

200

Notes Payable: Short-Term

3,100

3,100

3,100

Accrued Payables

300

300

300

Long-Term Liabilities

3,800

3,800

3,800

a. Compute the current and quick ratios for each of the three companies. (Round calculations to two decimal places.) Which firm is the most liquid? Why?

b. Suppose Thornton is using FIFO for inventory valuation and Edison is using LIFO. Comment on the comparability of information between these two companies.

c. If all short-term notes payable are due on July 11 at 8 a.m., comment on each company's ability to settle its obligation in a timely manner.

Exercise 2

1. Computation and evaluation of activity ratios. The following data relate to Alaska Products Inc.:

 

20X5

20X4

Net Credit Sales

$832,000

$760,000

Cost of Goods Sold

440,000

350,000

Cash, Dec. 31

125,000

110,000

Accounts Receivable, Dec. 31

180,000

140,000

Inventory, Dec. 31

70,000

50,000

Accounts Payable, Dec. 31

115,000

108,000

2. The company is planning to borrow $300,000 via a 90-day bank loan to cover short-term operating needs.

a. Compute the accounts-receivable and inventory-turnover ratios for 20X5. Alaska rounds all calculations to two decimal places.

b. Study the ratios from part (a) and comment on the company's ability to repay a bank loan in 90 days.

c. Suppose that Alaska's major line of business involves the processing and distribution of fresh and frozen fish throughout the United States. Do you have any concerns about the company's inventory-turnover ratio? Briefly discuss.

Problem 1

Horizontal and vertical analysis. The following financial statements pertain to Waterloo Corporation:

WATERLOO CORPORATION Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31,20X5 and 20X4


20X5

20X4

Assets

Current Assets

Cash

$ 11,250

$ 12,500

Accounts Receivable (net)

18,500

25,000

Inventories

38,500

35,000

Prepaid Expense

__3,750

__3,750

Total Current Assets

$ 72,000

$ 76,250

Property, Plant, and Equipment

Buildings (net)

$ 102,750

$ 101,250

Equipment (net)

28,500

30,000

Vehicles (net)

32,000

40,000

Total Property, Plant, and Equipment

$ 163,250

$ 171,250

Trademarks (net)

__$ 14,750

__$ 2,500

Total assets

$ 250,000

$ 250,000

Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

Current Liabilities

Accounts Payable

$ 49,000

$ 70,000

Notes Payable

13,500

40,000

Federal Taxes Payable

__2,500

__25,000

Total Current Liabilities

$ 65,000

$ 135,000

Long-Term Debt

__$ 50,000

__$ 25,000

Total Liabilities

$ 115,000

$ 160,000

Stockholders' Equity

Common Stock, $10 par

$ 25,000

$ 25,000

Retained Earnings

__110,000

__65,000

Total Stockholders' Equity

$ 135,000

$ 90,000

Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

$ 250,000

$ 250,000

WATERLOO CORPORATION Comparative Income Statements
For the Years Ending December 31, 20X5 and 20X4


20X5

20X4

Net Sales

$ 550,000

$500,000

Cost of Goods Sold

__330,000

__250,000

Gross Profit

$ 220,000

$250,000

Operating Expense

__132,500

__100,000

Income Before Interest and Taxes

$ 87,500

$150,000

Interest Expense

__12,500

__3,000

Income Before Taxes

$ 75,000

$147,000

Income Tax Expense

__30,000

__58,800

Net Income

$ 45,000

$ 88,200

Instructions

a. Prepare a horizontal analysis of the balance sheet, showing dollar and percentage changes. Round all calculations in parts (a) and (b) to two decimal places.

b. Prepare a vertical analysis of the income statement by relating each item to net sales.

c. Briefly comment on the results of your analysis.

Problem 2

Ratio computation. The financial statements of the Lone Pine Company follow.

LONE PINE COMPANY Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31, 20X2 and 20X1 ($000 Omitted)


20X2

20X1

Assets

Current Assets

Cash and Short-Term Investments

$ 400

$ 600

Accounts Receivable (net)

3,000

2,400

Inventories

__2,000

__2,200

Total Current Assets

$5,400

$5,200

Property, Plant, and Equipment

Land

$1,700

$ 600

Buildings and Equipment (net)

__1,500

__1,000

Total Property, Plant, and Equipment

$3,200

$1,600

Total Assets

$8,600

$6,800

Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

Current Liabilities

Accounts Payable

$1,800

$1,700

Notes Payable

__1,100

__1,900

Total Current Liabilities

$2,900

$3,600

Long-Term Liabilities

Bonds Payable

4,100

2,100

Total Liabilities

$7,000

$5,700

Stockholders' Equity

Common Stock

$ 200

$ 200

Retained Earnings

__1,400

__900

Total Stockholders' Equity

$1,600

$1,100

Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

$8,600

$6,800

LONE PINE COMPANY Statement of Income and Retained Earnings
For the Year Ending December 31,20X2 ($000 Omitted)

Net Sales*


$36,000

Less: Cost of Goods Sold

$20,000


Selling Expense

6,000


Administrative Expense

4,000


Interest Expense

400


Income Tax Expense

__2,000

_32,400

Net Income

$ 3,600

Retained Earnings, Jan. 1

___900


$ 4,500

Cash Dividends Declared and Paid

__3,100

Retained Earnings, Dec. 31


$ 1,400

*All sales are on account.



Instructions

Compute the following items for Lone Pine Company for 20X2, rounding all calculations to two decimal places when necessary:

a. Quick ratio

b. Current ratio

c. Inventory-turnover ratio

d. Accounts-receivable-turnover ratio

e. Return-on-assets ratio

f. Net-profit-margin ratio

g. Return-on-common-stockholders' equity

h. Debt-to-total assets

i. Number of times that interest is earned

j. Dividend payout rate

Problem 3

Financial statement construction via ratios. Incomplete financial statements of Lock Box Inc. are presented as follows:

LOCK BOX INC.
Income Statement
For the Year Ending December 31, 20X3

Sales

$ ?


Cost of Goods Sold

?


Gross Profit

$ 15,000,000


Operating Expenses and Interest

?


Income Before Taxes

$ ?


Income taxes, 40%

?


Net income

$ ?


LOCK BOX INC.
Balance Sheet
December 31, 20X3

Assets

Cash

$ ?


Accounts Receivable

?


Inventory

?


Property, Plant, and Equipment

___8,000,000


Total assets

$ 24,000,000


Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity



Accounts Payable

$ ?


Notes Payable: Short-Term

600,000


Bonds Payable

4,600,000


Common Stock

2,000,000


Retained Earnings

?


Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

$ 24,000,000


Further information is the following:

  • Cost of goods sold is 60% of sales. All sales are on account.
  • The company's beginning inventory is $5 million; inventory-turnover ratio is 4.
  • The debt-to-total-assets ratio is 70%.
  • The profit margin on sales is 6%.
  • The firm's accounts-receivable-turnover ratio is 5. Receivables increased by $400,000 during the year.

Instructions

Using the preceding data, complete the income statement and the balance sheet.

Attachment:- Guidance_Report.rar

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