Business
Business, 26.03.2020 22:20, kdenormandie3122

The Wheat Company has used the LIFO method for inventory valuation since the start of business 15 years ago. The current year ending inventory is $375,000. If the FIFO method of inventory had been used, the inventory would be $450,000. If Wheat Company had used the FIFO inventory method, income before income taxes would have been 6 P Flag question Select one 0 A, $75,000 higher over the 15 year period B. $75.000 lower over the 15 year period. c. $75,000 higher in the current year. 0 . D. S75000 lower in the current year. Question 28 Other things held constant, which of the following will NOT affect the current ratio, assuming an initial Not yet current ratio greater than 1.0? Select one: O A. Fixed assets are sold for cash Points out of 5.00 Flag question B. Long-term debt is issued to pay off current liabilities C. Accounts recelvable are collected in cash D. Cash is used to pay off accounts payable is book Question 29 General information applicable to Phoenix Company is provided below.

answer
Answers: 3

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 22.06.2019 06:40, lexhorton2002
Burke enterprises is considering a machine costing $30 billion that will result in initial after-tax cash savings of $3.7 billion at the end of the first year, and these savings will grow at a rate of 2 percent per year for 11 years. after 11 years, the company can sell the parts for $5 billion. burke has a target debt/equity ratio of 1.2, a beta of 1.79. you estimate that the return on the market is 7.5% and t-bills are currently yielding 2.5%. burke has two issuances of bonds outstanding. the first has 200,000 bonds trading at 98% of par, with coupons of 5%, face of $1000, and maturity of 5 years. the second has 500,000 bonds trading at par, with coupons of 7.5%, face of $1000, and maturity of 12 years. kate, the ceo, usually applies an adjustment factor to the discount rate of +2 for such highly innovative projects. should the company take on the project?
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 07:10, Pipemacias1711
9. tax types: taxes are classified based on whether they are applied directly to income, called direct taxes, or to some other measurable performance characteristic of the firm, called indirect taxes. identify each of the following as a “direct tax,” an “indirect tax,” or something else: a. corporate income tax paid by a japanese subsidiary on its operating income b. royalties paid to saudi arabia for oil extracted and shipped to world markets c. interest received by a u. s. parent on bank deposits held in london d. interest received by a u. s. parent on a loan to a subsidiary in mexico e. principal repayment received by u. s. parent from belgium on a loan to a wholly owned subsidiary in belgium f. excise tax paid on cigarettes manufactured and sold within the united states g. property taxes paid on the corporate headquarters building in seattle h. a direct contribution to the international committee of the red cross for refugee relief i. deferred income tax, shown as a deduction on the u. s. parent’s consolidated income tax j. withholding taxes withheld by germany on dividends paid to a united kingdom parent corporation
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 07:50, ShawnSaviro4918
In december of 2004, the company you own entered into a 20-year contract with a grain supplier for daily deliveries of grain to its hot dog bun manufacturing facility. the contract called for "10,000 pounds of grain" to be delivered to the facility at the price of $100,000 per day. until february 2017, the supplier provided processed grain which could easily be used in your manufacturing process. however, no longer wanting to absorb the cost of having the grain processed, the supplier began delivering whole grain. the supplier is arguing that the contract does not specify the type of grain that would be supplied and that it has not breached the contract. your company is arguing that the supplier has an onsite processing plant and processed grain was implicit to the terms of the contract. over the remaining term of the contract, reshipping and having the grain processed would cost your company approximately $10,000,000, opposed to a cost of around $1,000,000 to the supplier. after speaking with in-house counsel, it was estimated that litigation would cost the company several million dollars and last for years. weighing the costs of litigation, along with possible ambiguity in the contract, what are three options you could take to resolve the dispute? which would be the best option for your business and why?
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 08:00, Shyshy876
3. describe the purpose of the sec. (1-4 sentences. 2.0 points)
Answers: 3
Do you know the correct answer?
The Wheat Company has used the LIFO method for inventory valuation since the start of business 15 ye...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
Chemistry, 18.10.2021 21:00
Konu
Mathematics, 18.10.2021 21:00