FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (BAT4M) FINAL EXAMINATION

Similar documents
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (BAT4M) FINAL EXAMINATION

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (BAT4M) FINAL EXAMINATION

SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTING AND BUSINESS BSc. (APPLIED ACCOUNTING) GENERAL / SPECIAL DEGREE PROGRAMME

MANAGEMENT 2100Y - MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2013

Adjustments, Financial Statements and the Quality of Earnings

CHAPTER 3 THE ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM. MULTIPLE CHOICE Conceptual. Test Bank Chapter 3

Chapter 6 Accounting Adjustments and Working papers

York University AP/Adms Introduction to Financial Accounting Midterm Examination Test Form B

PRINCIPLES OF ACCOUNTING b.com part I

Intermediate Accounting IFRS Edition Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield. Slide 3-2

Contents: Interview Summary...2. Assignment Text excerpt for Assignment Syllabus...11

Full file at Chapter 2: Analyzing Business Transactions

Some deferred items for which adjusting entries would be made include: Prepaid insurance Prepaid rent Office supplies Depreciation Unearned revenue

Model Paper Principals of Accounting Objective

B.COM I ACCOUNTING REGULAR/ PRIVATE. S.Hussain

ACCT 5101 Pretest. The sample pretest follows this page.

XI ACCOUNTING REGULAR / PRIVATE. S.Hussain

Principles of Accounting II

Chapter 4 Question Review 1

2. Which of the following is an external user of accounting information? A) Labor unions. B) Finance directors. C) Company officers. D) Managers.

Chapter 3 Question Review 1

ACCOUNTING I. 1. The cash account is used to summarize information about the amount of money the business has available.

Postal Test Paper_P2_Foundation_Syllabus 2016_Set 2 Paper 2- Fundamentals of Accounting

Chapter 5. Control Accounts. Notes to teachers

BUSI Come to the PASS workshop with your mock exam complete. During the workshop you can work with other students to review your work.

Financial Accounting, 6Ce (Harrison) Chapter 2 Recording Business Transactions. 2.1 Describe common types of accounts

CHAPTER 3 Selected Solutions. The Accounting Information System. Brief Topics Questions Exercises Exercises Problems

Date of Homework assigned: 7 Apr 2014 Due date: 16 Apr 2014 Exercise book: Book 1

Accounting Basics, Part 1

Prof Albrecht s Notes Example of Complete Accounting Cycle Intermediate Accounting 1

Chapter 2 Review of the Accounting Process

XI - ACCOUNTING REGULAR / PRIVATE

Correction of Errors Principles of Accounting B.Com Part I Sameer Hussain

LIVE: FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (SOLE TRADER) 10 NOVEMBER 2014

ACCOUNTING 201. PRACTICE MIDTERM - (Covering Chapters 1-5)

S.5 BUSINESS, ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL STUDIES Accounting Module

ACCOUNTING. Written examination 2. Thursday 7 November 2002

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology Abbottabad

COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION A (Chapters 1 5)

CHAPTER 2 Solutions MEASUREMENT CONCEPTS: RECORDING BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

XI ACCOUNTING REGULAR / PRIVATE. S.Hussain

ACCOUNTING. Written examination 1

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS International General Certificate of Secondary Education

on the land. be treated as an expense of the business. company should credit an unearned revenues account for the amount charged to the customer.

2/10/2009. The accounting ACCOUNTING TRANSACTIONS AND EVENTS. Analysing transactions. Chapter 2

Do not turn this page until the start signal is given! W R I T E L E G I B L Y!

download from

T Accounts, Debits and Credits, Trial Balance, and Financial Statements

Accounting 1A Class Notes Chapter 3 The Adjusting Process

Grade 12 Accounting Review & Practice Questions

2013 ACCOUNTING ATTACH SACE REGISTRATION NUMBER LABEL TO THIS BOX

ECON 3A---FALL 2007 MIDTERM #2 ANSWER QUESTIONS #1-25 ON GREEN SCANTRON AND THE REST IN THE SPACE PROVIDED-PLEASE.

QUESTION 2 IAS 1 (CAF5 A15) Following is the summarised trial balance of Eagles Limited (EL) as at 30 June 2015: Debit Rs. in 000

ACCT-112 Final Exam Practice Solutions

Soft clean eraser Soft pencil (type B or HB is recommended)

Chapter 2 Review of the Accounting Process

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Seminar on Bookkeeping Basics

Exercises. 2) Owners Equity is ( ) (1). Occurs when Revenues exceed Expenses. (2) Debts owed by a business, (3). The excess of Assets over Liabilities

PANCHAKSHARI S PROFESSIONAL ACADEMY PVT LTD (Your Lifelong Knowledge Partner )


Accountancy. Blue Print. Part A

Chapter 2 Review of the Accounting Process

2000 Accounting II Page 1

ACCOUNTING. Written examination 1. Tuesday 9 June 2009

Chapter 2 MULTIPLE CHOICE

Examination Booklet Version 1. Bookkeeping

GRADE 11 NOVEMBER 2013 ACCOUNTING

Practice Multiple Choice Questions

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Composed & Solved Hafiz Salman Majeed

Name: Class: Date: 1 MULTIPLE CHOICE 4-2

INTRODUCTION TO FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING MGCR211 - All sections October 16 th, :00PM - 2:00PM SOLUTION

Bookkeeping (Explanation)

Bixby Public Schools Essential Elements Grade: 10-12

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS International General Certificate of Secondary Education

A U D I T I N G P R O B L E M S

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING 1

Section A: Multiple-Choice Questions (2 marks each; Total 30 marks)

AJE (1) Share donation 60,000 Treasury shares 35,000 Land 10,000 Building 15,000

Chapter 2: Measurement Concepts: Recording Business Transactions

Full file at

ACC 556 All Chapter Quizzes

ACCT 100 Intro to Acct. Chapter 12: Accruals, Deferrals, and the Worksheet Johnson

MIDTERM EXAMINATION Fall 2009 MGT101- Financial Accounting (Session - 2)

Accounting Glossary 1. an equation showing the relationship among assets, liabilities, and

Prepare the necessary journal entries to correct the above. Narrations are not required.

Financial Statements and Closing Entries for a Merchandising Business

REINFORCEMENT ACTIVITY 3, Part B, p. 715

Unit 3 Accounting. Practice Exam Question Booklet. A non-profit organisation supporting students to achieve their best.

INTRODUCTION TO FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING

SOLUTIONS Learning Goal 17

THE ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM

ACCT 550 Intermediate Accounting Complete Class

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Analyzing and Recording Transactions QUESTIONS

PE 3 1A Page 131 Indicate with a Yes or No whether or not each of the following accounts normally requires an adjusted entry.

Analyzing and Recording Transactions QUESTIONS

Week 3. Topic 3 Chapter 3. ACT102 Introduction to Accounting. Accounting for end of financial period adjustments 21/02/2018

ACCT1115. Review Package - Quiz 2. Fall 2013

Transcription:

Canadian International Matriculation Programme Sunway College FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (BAT4M) FINAL EXAMINATION Date : 5 December 2017 Time Length Lecturer : 8:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. : 2 hours : Ms Rehnu Marimuthu & Ms Dafne Miranda Student Name : Period : Please read the following instructions carefully before you begin the examination: 1. This exam paper has 17 printed pages including cover page. 2. The examination is worth 20% of your final mark. 3. The examination consists of three parts. PARTS CONTENT MARKS A Multiple Choice Questions 20 (Knowledge & Understanding) B Thinking & Application 40 C Communication 24 Total 84 4. All answers must be written in the space provided. 5. Answers must be written in standard English format for an academic audience. 6. Scientific or Graphing Calculator and only paper-based dictionaries are permitted. 7. Answers must be written in pen (black or blue only) or pencil. _ For office use only: K/U T/I C A TOTAL

PART A: MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS (K/U) ----------------------------------- Designate the best answer for each of the following questions. (20 Marks) 1. The assumption that the unit of measure remains sufficiently constant over time is part of the a. economic entity assumption. b. cost principle. c. historical cost principle. d. monetary unit assumption. 2. A basic assumption of accounting that requires activities of an entity be kept separate from the activities of its owner is referred to as the a. stand-alone concept. b. monetary unit assumption. c. corporate form of ownership. d. economic entity assumption. 3. Sam Ryo is the proprietor (owner) of Sam's, a retailer of golf apparel. When recording the financial transactions of Sam's, Sam does not record an entry for a car he purchased for personal use. Sam took out a personal loan to pay for the car. What accounting concept guides Sam's behavior in this situation? a. Pay back concept b. Economic entity assumption c. Cash basis concept d. Monetary unit assumption 4. The assumption that the unit of measure remains sufficiently constant over time is part of the a. economic entity assumption. b. cost principle. c. historical cost principle. d. monetary unit assumption.

5. A net loss will result during a time period when a. liabilities exceed assets. b. drawings exceed investments. c. expenses exceed revenues. d. revenues exceed expenses. 6. In recording an accounting transaction in a double-entry system a. the number of debit accounts must equal the number of credit accounts. b. there must always be entries made on both sides of the accounting equation. c. the amount of the debits must equal the amount of the credits. d. there must only be two accounts affected by any transaction. 7. Debits a. decrease both assets and liabilities. b. decrease liabilities and increase assets. c. increase both assets and liabilities. d. increase liabilities and decrease assets. 8. Which of the following is not true of the terms debit and credit? a. They can be abbreviated as Dr. and Cr. b. They can be interpreted to mean increase and decrease. c. They can be used to describe the balance of an account. d. They can be interpreted to mean left and right. 9. Which of the following statements is not true? a. Expenses increase owner s equity. b. Expenses have normal debit balances. c. Expenses decrease owner s equity. d. Expenses are a negative factor in the computation of net income. 10. A credit to a liability account a. indicates an increase in the amount owed to creditors. b. indicates a decrease in the amount owed to creditors. c. is an error. d. must be accompanied by a debit to an asset account.

11. A metal shop s employees work overtime to finish an order that is sold on 28 March. The office sends a statement to the customer in early April and payment is received by mid-april. The overtime wages should be expensed in a. March. b. April. c. the period when the workers receive their checks. d. either in March or April depending on when the pay period ends. 12. A law firm received $5,000 cash for legal services to be rendered in the future. The full amount was credited to the liability account Unearned Service Revenue. If the legal services have been rendered at the end of the accounting period and no adjusting entry is made, this would cause a. expenses to be overstated. b. net income to be overstated. c. liabilities to be understated. d. revenues to be understated. 13. Accumulated Depreciation is a. an expense account. b. an owner s equity account. c. a liability account. d. a contra asset account. 14. Adjusting entries are a. not necessary if the accounting system is operating properly. b. usually required before financial statements are prepared. c. made whenever management desires to change an account balance. d. made to balance sheet accounts only. 15. The cost of land does not include a. real estate brokers' commission. b. annual property taxes. c. accrued property taxes assumed by the purchaser. d. title fees.

16. When an account becomes uncollectible and must be written off, a. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts should be credited. b. Accounts Receivable should be credited. c. Bad Debt Expense should be credited. d. Sales Revenue should be debited. 17. A debit balance in the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts a. is the normal balance for that account. b. indicates that actual bad debt write-offs have exceeded previous allowance for doubtful accounts. c. indicates that actual bad debt write-offs have been less than what was estimated. d. cannot occur if the percentage of sales method of estimating bad debts is used. 18. Python Company sells merchandise on account for $5,000 to Monte Company with credit terms of 2/10, n/30. Monte Company returns $1,500 of merchandise that was damaged, along with a check to settle the account within the discount period. What is the amount of the check? a. $3,430 b. $4,000 c. $4,900 d. $4,430 19. If the total debit column exceeds the total credit column of the income statement columns on a worksheet, then the company has a. earned net income for the period. b. an error because debits do not equal credits. c. suffered a net loss for the period. d. to make an adjusting entry. 20. The custodian of a company asset should a. has access to the accounting records for that asset. b. be someone outside the company. c. not have access to the accounting records for that asset. d. be an accountant.

PART B: THINKING & APPLICATION ----------------------------------- Question 1 (40 marks) Journalise the following business transactions. If any of the transactions involve more than two accounts, journalise as a COMPOUND ENTRY. Explanations/narrations NOT required. For any of the following that is NOT a transaction, answer as No Entry and STATE the related accounting guideline. (11 marks) i. Owner invests $120,000 into the business. $115,000 was deposited into the business s bank account. The balance was placed in the business s cash register. ii. Hired an accounts clerk at a salary of $1,800 payable monthly. iii. Owner purchased supplies worth $3,500 using personal credit card. iv. Purchased equipment for $9,000, paying 70% of amount by standing order and the remaining 30% signed a 30-day, note payable. v. Billed clients for services provided amount to $4,000.

vi. Paid $2,800 for the current month s rent with business s debit card. vii. Received a bill for $600 for advertising for the current month. viii. Paid accounts clerk monthly salary via online transfer from owner s personal bank account. ix. Owner withdrew $2,000 from the business s cash register to pay for son s tuition fees. x. Received a check for $2,500 from a client in payment on account for commissions billed in transaction (v).

Question 2 The bookkeeper for Darrel Johnston Auto Repair made a number of errors in journalizing and posting, as described below. Prepare the necessary correcting entries. (14 marks) i. A debit posting of $600 to Accounts Payable was omitted. ii. A debit posting of $700 for Prepaid Insurance was debited to Insurance Expense. iii. A collection from a customer of $150 in payment of its account owed was journalized and posted as a debit to Cash $150 and a credit to Owner s Capital $150. iv. A credit posting of $530 to Accounts Payable was made twice.

v. A cash purchase of supplies for $350 was journalized and posted as a debit to Supplies $35 and a credit to Cash $35. vi. A debit of $658 to Rent Expense was credited to Rent Expense as $568. vii. An account receivable in the amount of $3,000 was collected in full. The collection was recorded by a debit to Cash for $3,000 and a debit to Accounts Payable for $3,000. viii. An account payable was paid by issuing a check for $600. The payment was recorded by debiting Accounts Payable $600 and crediting Accounts Receivable $600.

Question 3 Bali Company is a manufacturing company. Bali Company ventured into the market on 1 January 2014. At 31 December 2017, Bali Company reported the following as plant assets. Land $14,400,000 Buildings $40,000,000 Less: Accumulated Depreciation-Buildings ($9,900,000) $30,100,000 Equipment $340,000 Less: Accumulated Depreciation-Equipment ($165,920) $174,080 Total Plant Assets $44,674,080 The company uses straight-line method for buildings and equipment. The buildings are estimated to have a 50-year useful life and no salvage value. The equipment is estimated to have a 10-year useful life and no salvage value. (a) Journalise the following selected cash transactions that occurred: Feb. 1 Purchased land for $210,000. (10 marks) May 31 Sold equipment that cost $75,000 when purchased on 1 January 2014. The equipment was sold for $45,000.

Sept. 1 Sold land purchased on 31 December 2008 for $2,000,000. The land cost $780,000. Nov. 30 Purchased equipment for $90,000. Dec. 31 Retired equipment that cost $150,000 when purchased on 1 January 2009. No salvage value was received.

(b) Record the adjusting entries for depreciation for 2018 for the following non-current assets: (5 marks) i. Buildings ii. Equipment

PART C: COMMUNICATION Question 1 ----------------------------------- (24 marks) The trial balance before adjustment of Pan Company contained the following information: Pan Company Trial Balance as at 31 December 2014 Debit Credit Equipment $ 120,000 Cash 3,300 Accounts Receivable 20,000 Allowance for Doubtful Debts 4,500 Merchandise Inventory 2,850 Cost of Goods Sold 302,000 Accounts Payable 1,400 Notes Payable 60,000 Owner s Capital 50,000 Owner s Drawings 23,000 Sales 492,750 Sales Discount 7,500 Sales Return & Allowances 20,000 Supplies 11,500 Freight-out 2,300 Advertising Expense 15,000 Interest Expense 19,200 Salaries and Wages Expense 53,000 Utilities Expense 18,000 Interest Revenue 18,000 Total 622,150 622,150 a) Using the adjusting information given for each question, journalize the appropriate annual adjusting entries at 31 December 2014, assuming no adjusting entry has been made until year end. i. The balance of the Notes Payable consists of a note for 6 months at an annual interest rate of 9%, dated 1 September 2014. (1.5 marks)

ii. The equipment was purchased on 31 March 2014, for $120,000. It has an estimated life of 5 years and an estimated salvage value of $24,000. The equipment is depreciated using the declining-balance method. Under the declining-balance method, Pan Company uses the double-declining rate. (1.5 marks) iii. Pan Company began the year with a $3,000 balance in the Supplies account. During the year, $8,500 worth of additional office supplies were purchased. A physical count of office supplies on hand at the end of the year revealed that $6,400 worth of supplies had been used during the year. (1.5 marks)

iv. Pan Company uses the allowance method to estimate uncollectible accounts receivable. The company produced the following aging of the accounts receivable at year-end. (2 marks) Number of Days Past Due Customer Total ($) 0-30 31-60 61-90 91-120 Over 120 Accounts Receivable 20,000 7,700 4,600 3,900 2,300 1,500 Estimated Percentage Uncollectible 1% 4% 5% 8% Total Estimated Bad Debts 20% b) Using the following other additional information and taking into consideration the adjustments made in (a), prepare the required financial statements. Other additional information: 1. Equipment is used 20% by Selling Department and 80% by Administrative Department. 2. Pan Company uses a perpetual inventory system.

(i) Prepare a multiple-step income statement for the year ended December 31, 2014. (11 marks)

(ii) Prepare a classified balance sheet as at December 31, 2014. (6.5 marks)