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Norman’s Televisions produces television sets in three categories: portable, midsize, and flat-screen. On January 1, 2017, Norman adopted dollar-value LIFO and decided to use a single inventory pool. The company’sJanuary 1 inventory consists of:

Category Quantity Cost per Unit Total Cost

Portable 6,000 \(100 \) 600,000

Midsize 8,000 250 2,000,000

Flat-screen 3,000 400 1,200,000

17,000 \(3,800,000

During 2017, the company had the following purchases and sales.

QuantitySelling Price

Category Purchased Cost per Unit Sold per Unit

Portable 15,000 \)110 14,000 $150

Midsize 20,000 300 24,000 405

Flat-screen 10,000 500 6,000 600

45,000 44,000

Instructions

(Round to four decimals.)

(a) Compute ending inventory, cost of goods sold, and gross profit.

(b) Assume the company uses three inventory pools instead of one. Repeat instruction (a).

Short Answer

Expert verified

Under Single pool

Ending Inventory $4,654,000

COGS $11,796,000

Gross Profit $3,624,000

Under Multiple Pool

Ending Inventory

Portable Size $720,000

Mid-Size $3,200,000

Flat-screen $3,200,000

COGS

Portable Size $1,540,000

Mid-Size $4,800,000

Flat-screen $3,000,000

Gross Profit

Portable Size $560,000

Mid-Size $4,920,000

Flat-screen $600,000

Step by step solution

01

Ending inventory, COGS, and gross profit under the single pool

Computation of ending inventory

Category

Opening Quantity

+ Purchases

  • Quantity sold

Ending inventory

Portable

6000

+15000

-14000

7000

Midsize

8000

+20000

-24000

4000

Flat-screen

3000

+10000

-6000

7000

Ending inventories in values

Category

Ending Inventory

Base year cost

Inventory at base year

Current year cost

Inventory at the current year

Portable

7000

$100

$700000

110

$770000

Midsize

4000

$250

$1000000

300

$1200000

Flat-screen

7000

$400

$2800000

500

$3500000

Total

$4500000

$5470000

PriceIndex=EndinginventoryatcurrentyearcostEndinginventoryatbaseyearcost=54700004500000=1.22or122%

Ending Inventory at dollar value LIFO

Date

Inventory at base year cost

Layer

X

Price Index

=

Dollar Value LIFO

1 Jan 2017

$3800000

$3800000

X

100

=

$3800000

31 Dec 2017

$4500000

$700000

X

122

=

$854000

Total

$4500000

=

$4654000

Ending inventory at dollar value LIFO comes out to be $4,654,000.

Costofgoodssold=TotalCostofavailablegoods-EndinginventoryatdollarvalueLIFO=$3800000+(15000×$110+20000×$300+10000×$500)-$4654000=$3800000+$12650000-$4654000=$11,796,000

GrossProfit=Totalsalevalue-Costofgoodssold=(14000×$150+24000×$405+6000×$600)-$11796000=$15420000-$11796000=$3,624,000

02

Ending inventory, COGS, and Gross Profit under three pools

Computation of ending inventory

Category

Ending Inventory

Base year cost

Inventory at base year

Current year cost

Inventory at the current year

Price Index

Portable

7000

$100

$700000

110

$770000

1.1 or 110%

Midsize

4000

$250

$1000000

300

$1200000

1.2 or 120%

Flat-screen

7000

$400

$2800000

500

$3500000

1.25 or 125%

Ending Inventory at dollar value LIFO

Date

Inventory at base year cost

Layer

X

Price Index

=

Dollar Value LIFO

Portable Size

1 Jan 2017

$600000

$600000

X

100

=

$600000

31 Dec 2017

$700000

$100000

X

110

=

$110000

Total

$700000

=

$710000

MidSize

1 Jan 2017

$2000000

$2000000

X

100

=

$2000000

31 Dec 2017

$1000000

$1000000

X

120

=

$1200000

Total

$3000000

=

$3200000

Flat Screen

1 Jan 2017

$1200000

$1200000

X

100

=

$1200000

31 Dec 2017

$2800000

$1600000

X

125

=

$2000000

Total

$2800000

=

$3200000

Computation of cost of goods sold

Category

Total cost of goods available for sale

-

Ending Inventory at dollar value LIFO

=

COGS

Portable Size

$2250000

-

$710000

=

$1540000

Midsize

$8000000

-

$3200000

=

$4800000

Flat Screen

$6200000

-

$3200000

=

$3000000

Computation of gross profit

Category

Total Sales Revenue

-

COGS

=

Gross Profit

Portable Size

$2100000

-

$1540000

=

$560000

Midsize

$9720000

-

$4800000

=

$4920000

Flat Screen

$3600000

-

$3000000

=

$600000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

George Solti, the controller for Garrison Lumber Company, has recently hired you as assistant controller. He wishes to determine your expertise in the area of inventory accounting and therefore asks you to answer thefollowing unrelated questions.

(a) A company is involved in the wholesaling and retailing of automobile tires for foreign cars. Most of the inventory is imported,and it is valued on the company’s records at the actual inventory cost plus freight-in. At year-end, the warehousing costs areprorated over cost of goods sold and ending inventory. Are warehousing costs considered a product cost or a period cost?

(b) A certain portion of a company’s “inventory” is composed of obsolete items. Should obsolete items that are not currentlyconsumed in the production of “goods or services to be available for sale” be classified as part of inventory?

(c) A company purchases airplanes for sale to others. However, until they are sold, the company charters and services theplanes. What is the proper way to report these airplanes in the company’s financial statements?

(d) A company wants to buy coal deposits but does not want the financing for the purchase to be reported on its financialstatements. The company therefore establishes a trust to acquire the coal deposits. The company agrees to buy the coalover a certain period of time at specified prices. The trust is able to finance the coal purchase and pay off the loan as itis paid by the company for the minerals. How should this transaction be reported?

Question:Data for Amsterdam Company are presented in BE8-4. Compute the April 30 inventory and the April cost of

goods sold using the FIFO method.

On January 1, 2017, Bonanza Wholesalers Inc. adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method for income tax and external financial reporting purposes. However, Bonanza continuedto use the FIFO inventory method for internal accounting and management purposes. In applying the LIFO method, Bonanzauses internal conversion price indexes and the multiple pools approach under which substantially identical inventory items aregrouped into LIFO inventory pools. The following data were available for inventory pool no. 1, which comprises products A andB, for the 2 years following the adoption of LIFO.

FIFO Basis per Records

Unit Total

Units Cost Cost

Inventory, 1/1/17

Product A 10,000 \(30 \)300,000

Product B 9,000 25 225,000

\(525,000

Inventory, 12/31/17

Product A 17,000 36 \)612,000

Product B 9,000 26 234,000

\(846,000

Inventory, 12/31/18

Product A 13,000 40 \)520,000

Product B 10,000 32 320,000

$840,000

Instructions

(a) Prepare a schedule to compute the internal conversion price indexes for 2017 and 2018. Round indexes to two decimal places.

(b) Prepare a schedule to compute the inventory amounts at December 31, 2017 and 2018, using the dollar-value LIFO inventory method.

Case 2: Noven Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Noven Pharmaceuticals, Inc., headquartered in Miami, Florida, describes itself in a recent annual report as follows.

Noven Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Noven is a place of ideas—a company where scientific excellence and state-of-the-art manufacturing combine to create new answers to human needs. Our transdermal delivery systems speed drugs painlessly and effortlessly into the bloodstream by means of a simple skin patch. This technology has proven application sinestrogen replacement, but at Noven we are developing a variety of systems incorporating best selling drugs that fight everything from asthma, anxiety and dental pain to cancer, heart disease and neurological illness. Our research portfolio also includes new technologies, such as iontophoresis, in which drugs are delivered through the skin by means of electrical currents, as well as products that could satisfy broad consumer needs, such as our anti-microbial mouth rinse.

Noven also reported in its annual report that its activities to date have consisted of product development efforts, some of which have been independent and some of which have been completed in conjunction with Rhone-Poulenc Rorer (RPR) and Ciba-Geigy. The revenues so far have consisted of money received from licensing fees, “milestone” payments (payments made under licensing agreements when certain stages of the development of a certain product have been completed), and interest on its investments. The company expects that it will have significant revenue in the upcoming fiscal year from the launch of its first product, a transdermal estrogen delivery system.

The current assets portion of Noven’s balance sheet follows.

Cash and cash equivalents \(12,070,272

Securities held to maturity 23,445,070

Inventory of supplies 1,264,553

Prepaid and other current assets 825,159

Total current assets \)37,605,054

Inventory of supplies is recorded at the lower-of-cost (first-in, first-out)-or-net realizable value and consists mainly of supplies for research and development.

Instructions

(a) What would you expect the physical flow of goods for a pharmaceutical manufacturer to be most like: FIFO, LIFO, or random (flow of goods does not follow a set pattern)? Explain.

(b) What are some of the factors that Noven should consider as it selects an inventory measurement method?

(c) Suppose that Noven had $49,000 in an inventory of transdermal estrogen delivery patches. These patches are from an initial production run and will be sold during the coming year. Why do you think that this amount is not shown in a separate inventory account? In which of the accounts shown is the inventory likely to be? At what point will the inventory be transferred to a separate inventory account?

Prepare a memorandum containing responses to the following items.

(a) Describe the cost flow assumptions used in average-cost, FIFO, and LIFO methods of inventory valuation.

(b) Distinguish between weighted-average-cost and moving-average-cost for inventory costing purposes.

(c) Identify the effects on both the balance sheet and the income statement of using the LIFO method instead of the FIFOmethod for inventory costing purposes over a substantial time period when purchase prices of inventoriable items arerising. State why these effects take place.

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