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大学一年级下学期会计学原理练习及答案-Chapter_14_SM

Chapter 14

Long-Term Liabilities

QUESTIONS

1. A bond is a liability of the issuing pany. A share of stock represents an ownership

interest in the pany.

2. Notes payable generally involve borrowing from a single creditor, whereas bonds

payable are usually sold to many different lenders (bondholders).

3. Bonds can allow a pany’s owners to increase their return on equity without investing

additional amounts. This result occurs as long as the rate of return on the assets acquired from the borrowed cash is greater than the interest rate paid on the bonds.

Bonds also help the current owners remain in control of the pany. There is also a tax advantage with bonds when issued by corporations.

4. A trustee for bondholders has the responsibility of monitoring the issuer’s actions,

financial performance, and financial condition to ensure that the obligations in the bond indenture are met.

5. A bond indenture is a legal contract between the issuing pany and the bondholders that

identifies the obligations and rights of both parties. It specifies such items as the par value of the bonds, the contract interest rate, the due dates for interest payments, and the maturity date(s) of the bonds. It also may name a trustee, describe the bond issue in detail, and provide for a sinking fund.

6. The contract rate (also known as the coupon rate, stated rate, or nominal rate) is the rate

that is identified in the bond indenture. It is applied to the par value to determine the size of the cash interest payments. The market rate is the consensus rate that a pany is willing to pay and that investors are willing to accept for a specific bond.

7. In general, the supply of and demand for bonds affect market rates. The market rate for

a particular bond issue is also affected by risks unique to the issuer (e.g., financial

performance and condition) and the length of time until the bonds mature.

8.B The effective interest method creates a constant rate of interest over a bond’s life

because the market rate at the time of issuance is multiplied by the beginning balance for each period. The straight-line method produces either an increasing or decreasing rate because it allocates the same amount of expense to each period, even if the liability balance is growing (a discount) or decreasing (a premium).

9.C When issuing bonds between interest dates, a pany collects accrued interest from the

purchasers to avoid keeping detailed records of bond purchasers and the dates when bonds are purchased. If the pany did not collect accrued interest, individual checks would be needed to pay the correct amount of interest to each purchaser. By collecting in advance, the issuer merely distributes the same amount per check to all bondholders, regardless of when they purchased the bonds.

10. The price of bonds can be puted by finding the present value of both the par value at

maturity and the periodic cash interest payments discounted at the market rate of interest.

11. The issue price of a $2,000 bond sold at 98 ? is 98.25% of $2,000, or $1,965. The issue

price of a $6,000 bond priced at 101 ? is 101.5% of $6,000, or $6,090.

12. The debt-to-equity ratio is calculated by dividing total liabilities by total equity. The

higher a pany’s debt-to-equity ratio, the higher proportion of a pany’s assets that are provided by creditors. If a pany has a high debt-to-equity ratio, the pany may be at risk during poor economic times, because it must still pay off creditors even though it may not be earning as much as it did in the past.

13. An entrepreneur (owner) must repay the bondholders the principal (par value) according

to the term of the bonds. He or she must also pay interest on the bonds per the amount and frequency cited in the bond indenture, and must adhere to any stipulations (covenants) specified in the bond contract.

14. Best Buy shows long-term both “Long-term Liabilities” and “Long-Term Debt”on its

balance sheet. To determine whether the long-term debt is prised of bonds or other obligations we must read footnote 5 disclosing details of the Long-Term Debt of the pany. The footnote reports that its long-term debt is prised of Convertible debentures (bonds), Lease Obligations, and other debt.

15. Per Circuit City’s February 28, 2007, statement of cash flows (financing section), the

pany repaid $6,724,000 for the fiscal year ended February 28, 2007.

16. RadioShack’s long-term debt decreased by $149,100,000 ($494,900,000 - $345,800,000)

during the year ended December 31, 2006.

17. The financing section of the statement of cash flows of Apple indicates that for the year

ended September 30, 2006, the pany issued mon stock totaling $318,000,000. For that same period, the pany issued no additional debt.

18.D If a lease qualifies to be recorded as a capital lease, an asset account for the leased

asset will be debited with an amount equal to the present value of the future lease payments. The corresponding credit will be to a lease liability account.

19.D An operating lease is a short-term or cancelable lease in which the lessor retains the

risks and rewards of ownership. The lessee expenses operating lease payments when incurred and the lessee does not report the leased item(s) as an asset nor as a liability.

A capital lease is a long-term or noncancelable lease in which the lessor transfers

substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership to the lessee. The lessee records the leased item as its own asset along with a lease liability at the start of the lease term—the amount recorded equals the present value of all lease payments.

20.D Pension plans can be designed as defined benefit plans or defined contribution plans.

In a defined benefit plan the employer estimates the contribution necessary to pay a pre-defined benefit amount to its retirees. For example, an employee’s monthly pension benefit may be set at $1,000 per month. The employer must contribute the amount necessary to the pension plan to fund the $1,000 a month to the employee when the employee retires. Alternatively, with a defined contribution plan, the pension contribution is defined and the employer or employee contributes the amount specified in the pension agreement. For example, a defined contribution plan might specify that the employer will contribute 2% of an employee’s annual salary to the pension plan every year.

QUICK STUDIES

Quick Study 14-1 (10 minutes)

1. Bond’s cash proceeds: $150,000 x 0.9325 = $139,875

2. Twenty semiannual interest payments of $5,250* ...... $105,000

Plus bond discount ($150,000 - $139,875) ................... 10,125

Total bond interest expense ......................................... $115,125

*$150,000 x 0.07 x ? = $5,250

3. Bond interest expense on first payment date:

$115,125 / 20 semiannual periods = $5,756.25 (or $5,756 rounded)

Quick Study 14-2B (10 minutes)

1. Bond’s cash proceeds: $350,000 x 1.0975 = $384,125

2. Thirty semiannual interest payments of $12,250* ...... $367,500

Less premium ($384,125 - $350,000) ............................ (34,125)

Total bond interest expense ......................................... $333,375

*$350,000 x 0.07 x ? = $12,250

3. Bond interest expense on first payment date:

$384,125 x 3% = $11,523.75 (or $11,524 rounded)

Quick Study 14-3 (10 minutes)

2009

Jan. 1 Cash ...........................................................................139,875

Discount on Bonds Payable.....................................10,125

Bonds Payable ....................................................150,000

To record issuing bonds at a discount.

Jan. 1 Cash ...........................................................................384,125

Bonds Payable ....................................................350,000

Premium on Bonds Payable...............................34,125

To record issuing bonds at a premium.

a. Using facts in QS 14-1, the bond’s cash proceeds for the bond selling at a discount are puted as follows

Cash Flow Table Value Present Value $ 5,250 interest payment .................... 13.5903 71,349

Price of Bond ....................................... $139,809* *Agrees with $139,875 as given in QS 14-1, except for rounding difference.

(Instructor note: The price in QS 14-1 is adjusted to 93 ? from 93.21, yielding the $66 difference.) b. Using facts in QS 14-2, the bond’s cash proceeds for the bond selling at a premium are puted as

Cash Flow Table Value Present Value $ 12,250 interest payment .................... 19.6004 240,105

Price of Bond ....................................... $384,305* *Agrees with $384,125 as given in QS 14-2, except for rounding difference.

(Instructor note: The price in QS 14-2 is adjusted to 109 ? from 109.8 yielding the $180 difference.)

Quick Study 14-5 (15 minutes)

2008

(a)

Dec. 31 Cash .................................................................92,277

Discount on Bonds Payable...........................7,723

Bonds Payable ..........................................100,000

Sold bonds at discount.

2009

(b)

June 30 Bond Interest Expense ...................................4,772

Discount on Bonds Payable* (772)

Cash** .........................................................4,000

Paid semiannual interest and record amor-

tization. *$7,723 - $6,951 **$100,000 x 8%/2

(c)

Dec. 31 Bond Interest Expense ...................................4,772

Discount on Bonds Payable* (772)

Cash** .........................................................4,000

Paid semiannual interest and record amor-

tization. *$6,951 - $6,179 **$100,000 x 8%/2

2009

July 1 Bonds Payable .......................................................200,000 Premium on Bonds Payable .................................8,000 Gain on Retirement of Bonds* ....................... 4,000 Cash .................................................................. 204,000 To record retirement of bonds before maturity.

*$4,000 = $208,000 - $204,000

Quick Study 14-7 (10 minutes)

2009

Jan. 1 Bonds Payable ........................................................1,000,000 mon Stock* ........................................................

500,000 Paid-In Capital in Excess of Par Value ...............

500,000 To record retirement of bonds by stock

conversion. *500,000 shares x $1.00

Quick Study 14-8 (10 minutes)

Amount of annual payment =

a. 4%: Payment = $600,000 / 4.4518 = $134,777

b. 6%: Payment = $600,000 / 4.2124 = $142,437

c. 8%: Payment = $600,000 / 3.9927 = $150,274

Quick Study 14-9 (10 minutes)

1. E Convertible bond 5. A Registered bond

2.

D Bond Indenture 6. C Serial bond 3.

G Sinking fund bond 7. H Secured bond 4. B Debenture 8. F Bearer bond Initial cash proceeds from note Table B.3 present value for 5 payments

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