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Question: Case 1: Occidental Petroleum Corporation

Occidental Petroleum Corporation reported the following information in a recent annual report.

Occidental Petroleum Corporation

Consolidated Balance Sheets (in millions)

Assets at December 31, Current Year Prior year

Current assets

Cash and cash equivalents \( 683 \) 146

Trade receivables, net of allowances 804 608

Receivables from joint ventures, 330 321

partnerships, and other

Inventories 510 491

Prepaid expenses and other 147 307

Total current assets 2,474 1,873

Long-term receivables, net 264 275

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

Cash and Cash Equivalents. Cash equivalents consist of highly liquid investments. Cash equivalents totaled approximately \(661 million and \)116 million at current and prior year-ends, respectively.

Trade Receivables. Occidental has agreement to sell, under a revolving sale program, an undivided percentage ownership interest in a designated pool of non-interest-bearing receivables. Under this program, Occidental serves as the collection agent with respect to the receivables sold. An interest in new receivables is sold as collections are made from customers. The balance sold at current year-end was \(360 million.

Instructions

  1. What items other than coin and currency may be included in “cash”?
  2. What items may be included in “cash equivalents”?
  3. What are compensating balance arrangements, and how should they be reported in financial statements?
  4. What are the possible differences between cash equivalents and short-term (temporary) investments?
  5. Assuming that the sale agreement meets the criteria for sale accounting, cash proceeds were \)345 million, the carrying value of the receivables sold was \(360 million, and the fair value of the recourse liability was \)15 million, what was the effect on income from the sale of receivables?
  6. Briefly discuss the impact of the transaction in (e) on Occidental’s liquidity.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Answer

In the case of Occidental Petroleum Corporation, other than coins are checks and bank deposits. Cash equivalent is equivalent to cash. Loss on sales receivables is $30,000,000.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Trade Receivable

In accounting terms, trade receivables are amounts for which goods and services have been provided but payment has not yet been received. This is the sum total of debt and bills receivable. Trade receivable is reflected in the balance sheet as a current asset.

02

 Step 2: (a) Explaining the items other than coins and currency may be included in “cash”

Among the forms of money that may be considered cash are bank deposits, money orders, certified checks, cashier's checks, personal checks, bank drafts, and money market funds.

03

(b) Explaining the items that may be included in “cash equivalents

Cash equivalents include:

  1. Easily convertible into cash, and
  2. The risk from interest rate changes is so limited that they are too close to maturity.

Treasury bills, commercial paper, and money market funds are examples of cash equivalents.

04

(c) Explaining the compensating balance arrangements and their reporting in financial statements.

A compensating balance is the percentage of an enterprise's cash deposit that is used to sustain current borrowing agreements with a lending institution.

A compensating amount indicating a legally restricted deposit maintained against short-term borrowing agreements should be reported separately among cash and cash equivalent items. A limited deposit used to offset long-term borrowing should be classed as a noncurrent asset in either the investments or other assets sections.

05

(d) Explaining the possible differences between cash equivalents and short-term (temporary) investments

A short-term investment is held for a short period instead of cash and can be converted to cash when the need for it arises. Short-term investments are stocks, Treasury bills, and other short-term assets.

The main differences between cash equivalents and short-term investments are that.

  1. Cash equivalents typically have shorter maturities (less than three months), whereas short-term investments typically have longer maturities (e.g., short-term bonds) or no maturity date (e.g., stock), and

Cash equivalents are readily convertible to known amounts of cash, whereas a company may incur a gain or loss when selling its short-term investments

06

(e) Explaining the effect on income from the sale of receivables

According to the following entry to record the transaction, Occidental would lose $30,000,000:

Date

Particular

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Cash

345,000,000

Loss on Sale of Receivables

30,000,000

Accounts Receivable

360,000,000

Recourse Liability

15,000,000

07

(f) Explaining the impact of the transaction in (e) on Occidental’s liquidity.

Occidental's liquidity situation will be harmed by the transaction in (e).

Current assets are decreased $15,000,000, while current liabilities are increased $15,000,000 (for the recourse liability).

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Most popular questions from this chapter

(Accounting for Zero-Interest-Bearing Note) Soon after beginning the year-end audit work on March 10 at Engone Company, the auditor has the following conversation with the controller.

Controller: The year ended March 31st should be our most profitable in history and, as a consequence, the board of directors has just awarded the officers generous bonuses.

Auditor: I thought profits were down this year in the industry, according to your latest interim report.

Controller: Well, they were down, but 10 days ago we closed a deal that will give us a substantial increase for the year.

Auditor: Oh, what was it?

Controller: Well, you remember a few years ago our former president bought stock in Henderson Enterprises because he had those grandiose ideas about becoming a conglomerate. For 6 years we have not been able to sell this stock, which cost us \(3,000,000 and has not paid a nickel in dividends. Thursday we sold this stock to Bimini Inc. for \)4,000,000. So, we will have a gain of \(700,000 (\)1,000,000 pretax) which will increase our net income for the year to \(4,000,000, compared with last year’s \)3,800,000. As far as I know, we’ll be the only company in the industry to register an increase in net income this year. That should help the market value of the stock!

Auditor: Do you expect to receive the \(4,000,000 in cash by March 31st, your fiscal year-end?

Controller: No. Although Bimini Inc. is an excellent company, they are a little tight for cash because of their rapid growth. Consequently, they are going to give us a \)4,000,000 zero-interest-bearing note with payments of $400,000 per year for the next 10 years. The first payment is due on March 31 of next year.

Auditor: Why is the note zero-interest-bearing?

Controller: Because that’s what everybody agreed to. Since we don’t have any interest-bearing debt, the funds invested in the note do not cost us anything and besides, we were not getting any dividends on the Henderson Enterprises stock.

Instructions

Do you agree with the way the controller has accounted for the transaction? If not, how should the transaction be accounted for?

Presented below are a number of independent situations.

Instructions

For each individual situation, determine the amount that should be reported as cash. If the item(s) is not reported as cash, explain the rationale.

1. Checking account balance \(925,000; certificate of deposit \)1,400,000; cash advance to subsidiary of \(980,000; utility deposit paid to gas company \)180.

2. Checking account balance \(600,000; an overdraft in special checking account at same bank as normal checking account of \)17,000; cash held in a bond sinking fund \(200,000; petty cash fund \)300; coins and currency on hand \(1,350.

3. Checking account balance \)590,000; postdated check from customer \(11,000; cash restricted due to maintaining compensating balance requirement of \)100,000; certified check from customer \(9,800; postage stamps on hand \)620.

4. Checking account balance at bank \(37,000; money market balance at mutual fund (has checking privileges) \)48,000; NSF check received from customer \(800.

5. Checking account balance \)700,000; cash restricted for future plant expansion \(500,000; short-term Treasury bills \)180,000; cash advance received from customer \(900 (not included in checking account balance); cash advance of \)7,000 to company executive, payable on demand; refundable deposit of $26,000 paid to federal government to guarantee performance on construction contract.

(Bank Reconciliation and Adjusting Entries) The cash account of Aguilar Co. showed a ledger balance of \(3,969.85 on June 30, 2017. The bank statement as of that date showed a balance of \)4,150. Upon comparing the statement with the cash records, the following facts were determined.

1. There were bank service charges for June of \(25.

2. A bank memo stated that Bao Dai’s note for \)1,200 and interest of \(36 had been collected on June 29, and the bank had made a charge of \)5.50 on the collection. (No entry had been made on Aguilar’s books when Bao Dai’s note was sent to the bank for collection.)

3. Receipts for June 30 for \(3,390 were not deposited until July 2.

4. Checks outstanding on June 30 totaled \)2,136.05.

5. The bank had charged the Aguilar Co.’s account for a customer’s uncollectible check amounting to \(253.20 on June 29.

6. A customer’s check for \)90 (as payment on the customer’s Accounts Receivable) had been entered as \(60 in the cash receipts journal by Aguilar on June 15.

7. Check no. 742 in the amount of \)491 had been entered in the cash journal as \(419, and check no. 747 in the amount of \)58.20 had been entered as $582. Both checks had been issued to pay for purchases and were payments on Aguilar’s Accounts Payable.

Instructions

(a) Prepare a bank reconciliation dated June 30, 2017, proceeding to a correct cash balance.

(b) Prepare any entries necessary to make the books correct and complete.

Finman Company designated Jill Holland as petty cash custodian and established a petty cash fund of \(200. The fund is reimbursed when the cash in the fund is at \)15, which it is. Petty cash receipts indicate funds were disbursed for office supplies \(94 and miscellaneous expense \)87. Prepare journal entries for the establishment of the fund and the reimbursement.

Francis Equipment Co. closes its books regularly on December 31, but at the end of 2017 it held its cash book open so that a more favorable balance sheet could be prepared for credit purposes. Cash receipts and disbursements for the first 10 days of January were recorded as December transactions. The information is given below.

1. January cash receipts recorded in the December cash book totaled \(45,640, of which \)28,000 represents cash sales, and \(17,640 represents collections on account for which cash discounts of \)360 were given.

2. January cash disbursements recorded in the December check register liquidated accounts payable of \(22,450 on which discounts of \)250 were taken.

3. The ledger has not been closed for 2017.

4. The amount shown as inventory was determined by physical count on December 31, 2017.

The company uses the periodic method of inventory.

Instructions

(a) Prepare any entries you consider necessary to correct Francis’s accounts at December 31.

(b) To what extent was Francis Equipment Co. able to show a more favorable balance sheet at December 31 by holding its cash book open? (Compute working capital and the current ratio.) Assume that the balance sheet that was prepared by the company showed the following amounts:

Debit

Credit

Cash

\(39,000

Accounts receivables

42,000

Inventory

67,00

Accounts payable

\)45,000

Other Current liabilities

14,200

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