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Presented below is information related to Blowfish radios for the Hootie Company for the month of July.

Units Unit Total Units Selling Total

InCostSoldPrice

Date Transaction

July 1 Balance 100 \(4.10 \) 410

6 Purchase 800 4.20 3,360

7 Sale 300\(7.00 \) 2,100

10 Sale 300 7.30 2,190

12 Purchase 400 4.50 1,800

15 Sale 200 7.40 1,480

18 Purchase 300 4.60 1,380

22 Sale 400 7.40 2,960

25 Purchase 500 4.58 2,290

30 Sale 200 7.50 1,500

Totals 2,100\(9,240 1,400\)10,230

Instructions

(a) Assuming that the periodic inventory method is used, compute the inventory cost at July 31 under each of the following cost flow assumptions.

(1) FIFO.

(2) LIFO.

(3) Weighted-average.

(b) Answer the following questions.

(1) Which of the methods used above will yield the lowest figure for gross profit for the income statement? Explain why.

(2) Which of the methods used above will yield the lowest figure for ending inventory for the balance sheet? Explain why.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The value of ending inventory under FIFO, LIFO, and Weighted average are $3,210, $2,930, and $3,080, respectively.

Step by step solution

01

Value of ending inventory under FIFO, LIFO, and Weighted Average

Endinginventoryinunits=Totalinventoryin-Totalinventorysold=2,100-1,400=700Units

1) Using FIFO

Date

Units

Cost per unit

Amount

July 25

500

$4.58

$2,290

July 18

200

$4.6

$920

Total

700

$3,210

The value of ending inventory by FIFO is $3,210.

2) Using LIFO

Date

Units

Cost per unit

Amount

Beginning

100

$4.10

$410

July 6

600

$4.2

$2,520

Total

700

$2,930

The value of ending inventory by FIFO is $2,930.

3) Using Weighted Average

Averagecost=TotalvalueofavailableunitsTotalavailableunits=$9,2402,100=$4.4

Valueofendinginventory=Averagecost×Endinginventory=$4.4×700=$3,080


02

Use of method

1)

LIFO method would yield the lowest profit as the value of the cost of goods sold would be high. Further, the value of the closing stock is lowest under the LIFO method.

LIFO yields the lowest profit due to computing COGS at the current or inflationary prices.

2)

The LIFO method would yield the lowest inventory value. The reason for this is the computation of COGS on the current prices and leaving the ending inventory with the historical prices.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Dimitri Company, a manufacturer of small tools, provided the following information from its accounting records for the year ended December 31, 2017.

Inventory at December 31, 2017 (based on physical count of goods in Dimitri’s plant, at cost, on December 31, 2017) \(1,520,000

Accounts payable at December 31, 2017 1,200,000

Net sales (sales less sales returns) 8,150,000

Additional information is as follows.

1. Included in the physical count were tools billed to a customer f.o.b. shipping point on December 31, 2017. These tools had a cost of \)31,000 and were billed at \(40,000. The shipment was on Dimitri’s loading dock waiting to be picked up by the common carrier.

2. Goods were in transit from a vendor to Dimitri on December 31, 2017. The invoice cost was \)76,000, and the goods were shipped f.o.b. shipping point on December 29, 2017.

3. Work in process inventory costing \(30,000 was sent to an outside processor for plating on December 30, 2017.

4. Tools returned by customers and held pending inspection in the returned goods area on December 31, 2017, were not included in the physical count. On January 8, 2018, the tools costing \)32,000 were inspected and returned to inventory. Credit memos totaling \(47,000 were issued to the customers on the same date.

5. Tools shipped to a customer f.o.b. destination on December 26, 2017, were in transit at December 31, 2017, and had a cost of \)26,000. Upon notification of receipt by the customer on January 2, 2018, Dimitri issued a sales invoice for \(42,000.

6. Goods, with an invoice cost of \)27,000, received from a vendor at 5:00 p.m. on December 31, 2017, were recorded on a receiving report dated January 2, 2018. The goods were not included in the physical count, but the invoice was included in accounts payable at December 31, 2017.

7. Goods received from a vendor on December 26, 2017, were included in the physical count. However, the related \(56,000 vendor invoice was not included in accounts payable at December 31, 2017, because the accounts payable copy of the receiving report was lost.

8. On January 3, 2018, a monthly freight bill in the amount of \)8,000 was received. The bill specifically related to merchandise purchased in December 2017, one-half of which was still in the inventory at December 31, 2017. The freight charges were not included in either the inventory or in accounts payable at December 31, 2017.

Instructions

Using the format shown below, prepare a schedule of adjustments as of December 31, 2017, to the initial amounts per Dimitri’s accounting records. Show separately the effect, if any, of each of the eight transactions on the December 31, 2017, amounts. If the transactions would have no effect on the initial amount shown, enter NONE.

Accounts Net

Inventory Payable Sales

Initial amounts \(1,520,000 \)1,200,000 \(8,150,000

Adjustments—increase

(decrease)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Total adjustments

Adjusted amounts \) \( \)

Accounting, Analysis, and Principles

Englehart Company sells two types of pumps. One is large and is for commercial use. The other is smaller and is used in residentialswimming pools. The following inventory data is available for the month of March.

Price per

Units Unit Total

Residential Pumps

Inventory at Feb. 28: 200 \( 400 \) 80,000

Purchases:

March 10 500 \( 450 \)225,000

March 20 400 \( 475 \)190,000

March 30 300 \( 500 \)150,000

Sales:

March 15 500 \( 540 \)270,000

March 25 400 \( 570 \)228,000

Inventory at March 31: 500

Commercial Pumps

Inventory at Feb. 28: 600 \( 800 \)480,000

Purchases:

March 3 600 \( 900 \)540,000

March 12 300 \( 950 \)285,000

March 21 500 \(1,000 \)500,000

Sales:

March 18 900 \(1,080 \)972,000

March 29 600 \(1,140 \)684,000

Inventory at March 31: 500

Accounting

(a) Assuming Englehart uses a periodic inventory system, determine the cost of inventory on hand at March 31 and thecost of goods sold for March under first-in, first-out (FIFO).

(b) Assume Englehart uses dollar-value LIFO and one pool, consisting of the combination of residential and commercialpumps. Determine the cost of inventory on hand at March 31 and the cost of goods sold for March. Assume Englehart’sinitial adoption of LIFO is on March 1. Use the double-extension method to determine the appropriate price indices.

(Hint:The price index for February 28/March 1 should be 1.00.) (Round the index to three decimal places.)

Analysis

(a) Assume you need to compute a current ratio for Englehart. Which inventory method (FIFO or dollar-value LIFO) doyou think would give you a more meaningful current ratio?

(b) Some of Englehart’s competitors use LIFO inventory costing and some use FIFO. How can an analyst compare theresults of companies in an industry, when some use LIFO and others use FIFO?

Principles

Can companies change from one inventory accounting method to another? If a company changes to an inventory accounting methodused by most of its competitors, what are the trade-offs in terms of the conceptual framework discussed in Chapter 2 of the textbook?

Inventory information for Part 311 of Monique Aaron Corp. discloses the following information for the month of June.

June 1 Balance 300 units @ \(10 June 10 Sold 200 units @ \)24

11 Purchased 800 units @ \(12 15 Sold 500 units @ \)25

20 Purchased 500 units @ \(13 27 Sold 300 units @ \)27

Instructions

(a) Assuming that the periodic inventory method is used, compute the cost of goods sold and ending inventory under(1) LIFO and (2) FIFO.

(b) Assuming that the perpetual inventory method is used and costs are computed at the time of each withdrawal, what is the value of the ending inventory at LIFO?

(c) Assuming that the perpetual inventory method is used and costs are computed at the time of each withdrawal, what is the gross profit if the inventory is valued at FIFO?

(d) Why is it stated that LIFO usually produces a lower gross profit than FIFO?

Explain the following terms.

(a) LIFO layer.

(b) LIFO reserve.

(c) LIFO effect.

Define “cost” as applied to the valuation of inventories.

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