subject
Business, 13.01.2021 17:20 ivanlopez9852

Sunland Company purchased a heavy-duty truck on July 1, 2017, for $29,400. It was estimated that it would have a useful life of 10 years and then would have a trade-in value of $5,880. The company uses the straight-line method. It was traded on August 1, 2021, for a similar truck costing $41,160; $15,680 was allowed as trade-in value (also fair value) on the old truck and $25,480 was paid in cash. A comparison of expected cash flows for the trucks indicates the exchange lacks commercial substance. What is the entry to record the trade-in

ansver
Answers: 3

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 21.06.2019 21:10, BABA3724
Auniversity spent $1.8 million to install solar panels atop a parking garage. these panels will have a capacity of 400 kilowatts (kw) and have a life expectancy of 20 years. suppose that the discount rate is 20%, that electricity can be purchased at $0.10 per kilowatt-hour (kwh), and that the marginal cost of electricity production using the solar panels is zero. hint: it may be easier to think of the present value of operating the solar panels for 1 hour per year first. approximately how many hours per year will the solar panels need to operate to enable this project to break even? a. a.3,696.48 b.14,785.92 c.9,241.20 if the solar panels can operate only for 8,317 hours a year at maximum, the project (would/would not)break even?
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 05:50, marjae188jackson
Acompany that makes shopping carts for supermarkets and other stores recently purchased some new equipment that reduces the labor content of the jobs needed to produce the shopping carts. prior to buying the new equipment, the company used 6 workers, who produced an average of 79 carts per hour. workers receive $16 per hour, and machine coast was $49 per hour. with the new equipment, it was possible to transfer one of the workers to another department, and equipment cost increased by $11 per hour while output increased by four carts per hour. a) compute the multifactor productivity (mfp) (labor plus equipment) under the prior to buying the new equipment. the mfp (carts/$) = (round to 4 decimal places). b) compute the productivity changes between the prior to and after buying the new equipment. the productivity growth = % (round to 2 decimal places)
Answers: 3
image
Business, 22.06.2019 09:30, tankddd
Which of these is not a result of regular exercise
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 14:20, dieguezisabel
In canada, the reference base period for the cpi is 2002. by 2012, prices had risen by 21.6 percent since the base period. the inflation rate in canada in 2013 was 1.1 percent. calculate the cpi in canada in 2013. hint: use the information that “prices had risen by 21.6 percent since the base period” to find the cpi in 2012. use the inflation rate formula (inflation is the growth rate of the cpi) to find cpi in 2013, knowing the cpi in 2012 and the inflation rate. the cpi in canada in 2013 is round up your answer to the first decimal. 122.9 130.7 119.6 110.5
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Sunland Company purchased a heavy-duty truck on July 1, 2017, for $29,400. It was estimated that it...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
English, 16.04.2020 20:25