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What is a repurchase agreement (product financing) arrangement? How should a product repurchase agreement be reported in the financial statements?

Short Answer

Expert verified

In a repurchase agreement title is transferred to the buyer with the implicit or explicit contract to regain it. Thus inventories would not be shown in the financial statement until repurchased.

Step by step solution

01

Repurchase agreement

A repurchase agreement is a sales arrangement in which inventories are sold (transfer) with implicit or explicit agreement to purchase again.

A repurchase agreement is a kind of product financing as money is obtained without reporting any liability or inventory on the balance sheet.

02

Reporting of repurchase agreement

In a product repurchase agreement, the title of the goods is technically transferred to the other party, but the seller retains the control by making a repurchase agreement.

So for transferring the title, the goods or inventory would not be shown in the seller's balance sheet, and the cash balance would increase. However, when the goods were repurchased, they would be added to the balance sheet, decreasing the cash balance.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

You are asked to travel to Milwaukee to observe and verify the inventory of the Milwaukee branch of one of your clients. You arrive on Thursday, December 30, and find that the inventory procedures have justbeen started. You spot a railway car on the sidetrack at the unloading door and ask the warehouse superintendent, Buck Rogers,how he plans to inventory the contents of the car. He responds, โ€œWe are not going to include the contents in the inventory.โ€

Later in the day, you ask the bookkeeper for the invoice on the carload and the related freight bill. The invoice lists the variousitems, prices, and extensions of the goods in the car. You note that the carload was shipped December 24 from Albuquerque,f.o.b. Albuquerque, and that the total invoice price of the goods in the car was \(35,300. The freight bill called for a payment of\)1,500. Terms were net 30 days. The bookkeeper affirms the fact that this invoice is to be held for recording in January.

Instructions

(a) Does your client have a liability that should be recorded at December 31? Discuss.

(b) Prepare a journal entry(ies), if required, to reflect any accounting adjustment required. Assume a perpetual inventory

system is used by your client.

(c) For what possible reason(s) might your client wish to postpone recording the transaction?

Case 3: The Kroger Company

The Kroger Company reported the following data in its annual report (in millions).

January 31, February 1, February 2,

2015 2014 2013

Net sales \(108,465 \)98,375 $96,619

Cost of sales (using LIFO) 85,512 78,138 76,726

Year-end inventories using FIFO 6,933 6,801 6,244

Year-end inventories using LIFO 5,688 5,651 5,146

Instructions

(a) Compute Krogerโ€™s inventory turnovers for fiscal years ending January 31, 2015, and February 1, 2014, using:

(1) Cost of sales and LIFO inventory.

(2) Cost of sales and FIFO inventory.

(b) Some firms calculate inventory turnover using sales rather than cost of goods sold in the numerator. Calculate Krogerโ€™s fiscal years ending January 31, 2015, and February 1, 2014, turnover, using:

(1) Sales and LIFO inventory.

(2) Sales and FIFO inventory.

(c) State which method you would choose to evaluate Krogerโ€™s performance. Justify your choice.

In an article that appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the phrases โ€œphantom (paper) profitsโ€ and โ€œhigh LIFO profitsโ€ through involuntary liquidation were used. Explain the sephrases.

The following is a record of Pervis Ellison Companyโ€™s transactions for Boston Teapots for the month of May 2017.

May 1 Balance 400 units @ \(20 May 10 Sale 300 units @ \)38

12 Purchase 600 units @ \(25 20 Sale 540 units @ \)38

28 Purchase 400 units @ $30

Instructions

(a) Assuming that perpetual inventories are not maintained and that a physical count at the end of the month shows 560units on hand, what is the cost of the ending inventory using (1) FIFO and (2) LIFO?

(b) Assuming that perpetual records are maintained and they tie into the general ledger, calculate the ending inventory using (1) FIFO and (2) LIFO.

Fong Sai-Yuk Company sells one product. Presented below is information for January for Fong Sai-Yuk Company.

Jan. 1 Inventory 100 units at \(5 each

4 Sale 80 units at \)8 each

11 Purchase 150 units at \(6 each

13 Sale 120 units at \)8.75 each

20 Purchase 160 units at \(7 each

27 Sale 100 units at \)9 each

Fong Sai-Yuk uses the FIFO cost flow assumption. All purchases and sales are on account.

Instructions

(a) Assume Fong Sai-Yuk uses a periodic system. Prepare all necessary journal entries, including the end-of-month closingentry to record cost of goods sold. A physical count indicates that the ending inventory for January is 110 units.

(b) Compute gross profit using the periodic system.

(c) Assume Fong Sai-Yuk uses a perpetual system. Prepare all necessary journal entries.

(d) Compute gross profit using the perpetual system.

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