ReSA B48 AFAR Final PB Exam Questions, Answers and Solutions
ReSA B48 AFAR Final PB Exam Questions, Answers and Solutions
CPA Review Batch 48 October 2024 CPALE 06 October 2024 03:00 PM – 06:00 PM
INSTRUCTIONS: Select the correct answer for each of the questions. Mark only one answer
for each item by shading the box corresponding to the letter of your choice on the
answer sheet provided. STRICTLY NO ERASURES ALLOWED. Use pencil no. 2 only.
3. A vertical combination occurs when one entity acquires another entity which has the
following characteristic(s)?
a. The acquiree purchases the acquirer’s outputs
b. The acquiree is a competitor of the acquirer
c. The acquiree supplies raw materials to the acquirer
d. Either a. or c.
5. A parent buys 32 percent of a subsidiary in one year and then buys an additional 40
percent in the next year. In a step acquisition of this type, the original 32
percent acquisition should be
a. maintained at its initial value.
b. adjusted to its equity method balance at the date of the second
acquisition.
c. adjusted to fair value at the date of the second acquisition with a
resulting gain or loss recorded.
d. adjusted to fair value at the date of the second acquisition with a
resulting adjustment to additional paid-in capital.
6. CC, PP, and AA, accountants agree to form a partnership and to share profits in the
ratio of [Link]. They also agreed that AA is to be allowed a salary of P28,000, and
that PP is to be guaranteed P21,000 as his share of the profits. During the first
year of operation, income from fees are P180,000, while expenses total, P96,000.
What amount of net income should be credited to each partner’s capital account?
a. CC, P28,000; PP, P16,800; AA, P11,200
b. CC, P25,000; PP, P21,000; AA, P38,000
c. CC, P24,000; PP, P22,000; AA, P38,000
d. CC, P25,000; PP, P21,000; AA, P39,000
7. The capital accounts for the partnership of LL and MM at October 31, 20x5 are as
follows:
LL, capital ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 80,000
MM, capital ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 40,000
P 120,000
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ReSA Batch 48 – October 2024 CPALE Batch
06 October 2024 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam
The partners share profits and losses in the ratio of 3:2 respectively.
The partnership is in desperate need of cash, and the partners agree to admit NN as
a partner with one-third in the capital and profits and losses upon his investment
of P30,000. Immediately after NN’s admission, what should be the capital balances
of LL, MM and NN respectively, assuming bonus is to be recognized?
a. P50,000; P50,000; P50,000. c. P66,667; P33,333; P50,000.
b. P60,000; P60,000; P60,000. d. P68,000; P32,000; P50,000.
8. On June 30, 20x5, the condensed balance sheet for the partnership of DD, FF, and
GG, together with their respective profit and loss sharing percentages was as
follows:
Assets, net of liabilities ……………………………………………………………………… P320,000
DD, capital (50%) ……………………………………………………………………………………………… P160,000
FF, capital (30%) ……………………………………………………………………………………………… 96,000
GG, capital (20%) ……………………………………………………………………………………………… __64,000
P320,000
DD decided to retire from the partnership and by mutual agreement is to be paid
P180,000 out of partnership funds for his interest. Total goodwill or adjustment in
assets implicit in the agreement is to be recorded. After DD’s retirement, what are
the capital balances of the other partners?
FF GG FF GG
a. P 84,000 P56,000 c. P108,000 P72,000
b. 102,000 68,000 d. 120,000 80,000
9. A balance sheet for the partnership of KK, LL, and MM, who share profits [Link]
respectively, shows the following balances just before liquidation:
Cash Other Assets Liabilities KK, Capital LL, Capital MM, Capital
P48,000 P238,000 P80,000 P88,000 P62,000 P56,000
In the first month of liquidation, P128,000 was received on the sale of certain
assets. Liquidation expenses of P4,000 were paid, and additional liquidation
expenses of P3,200 are anticipated before liquidation is completed. Creditors were
paid P22,400. Available cash is distributed to the partners. The cash to be received
by each partner based on the above data:
a. KK, P56,600; LL, P28,300; MM, P28,300
b. KK, P86,000; LL, P61,000; MM, P55,000
c. KK, P29,400; LL, P32,700; MM, P26,700
d. KK, P88,000; LL, P62,000; MM, P56,000
10. Second City Bank holds a P50,000 note secured by a building owned by Desk Drawer
Software, which has filed for bankruptcy under the Insolvency Law. If the property
has a book value of P60,000 and a fair market value of P45,000, what is the best
way to describe the note held by Second City Bank? The bank has:
a. A secured claim of P50,000
b. An unsecured claim of P50,000
c. A secured claim of P45,000 and an unsecured claim of P5,000
d. A secured claim of P5,000 and an unsecured claim of P45,000
11. Which of the following describes the impact on consolidated financial statements
of upstream and downstream transfers?
a. No difference exists in consolidated financial statements between
upstream and downstream transfers.
b. Downstream transfers affect the computation of the non-controlling
interest’s share of the subsidiary’s income but upstream transfers
do not.
c. Upstream transfers affect the computation of the non-controlling
interest’s share of the subsidiary’s income but downstream transfers
do not.
d. Downstream transfers can be ignored because the parent company
makes them.
12. Any intercompany gain or loss on a downstream sale of land should be recognized in
consolidated net income:
I. In the year of the downstream sale.
II. Over the period of time the subsidiary uses the land.
III. In the year the subsidiary sells the land to an unrelated party.
a. I c. III
b. II d. I or II
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ReSA Batch 48 – October 2024 CPALE Batch
06 October 2024 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam
13. A joint arrangement is established by three parties in which A owns 50% voting
rights while B and C each own 25% voting rights of that arrangement. The terms of
the contract among A, B and C state that a minimum of 75% voting rights are needed
to exercise the control over the arrangement. This joint arrangement is:
a. Joint Control c. Business Combination
b. No Joint Control d. Statutory Consolidation
14. Trial balances for the home office and the branch of the Helen Company show the
following accounts on December 31, 20x7. The home office policy of billing the
branch for merchandise is 20% above cost.
Home Office Branch
Allowance for overvaluation of branch merchandise P 10,800
Shipments to branch 24,000
Purchases (outsiders) P 7,500
Shipments from home office 28,800
Merchandise inventory, January 1, 2012 45,000
What part of the branch inventory as of January 1, 20x7 represents purchases from
outsiders and what part represents goods acquired from the home office?
Outsiders Home Office Outsiders Home Office
a. P12,000 P33,000 c. P15,000 P30,000
b. P16,500 P28,500 d. P 9,000 P36,000
15. Charito Corporation retails merchandise through its home office store and through
a branch store in a distant city. Separate ledgers are maintained by the home office
and the branch. The branch store purchases merchandise from the home office (at
120% of home office cost), as well as from outside suppliers. Selected information
from the December 31, 20x9 trial balances of the home office and branch is as
follows:
Home Office Branch
Sales P 120,000 P 60,000
Shipments to branch 16,000 -
Purchases 70,000 11,000
Inventory, January 1, 20x9 40,000 30,000
Shipments from home office - 19,200
Expenses 28,000 12,000
Branch inventory allowance 7,200 -
Additional information:
• The entire difference between the shipment account is due to the practice of
billing the branch at cost plus 20%.
• The December 31, 20x9 inventories are P40,000 and P20,000 for the home office
and the branch, respectively. (The branch purchased 16% of its ending
inventory from outside suppliers.)
• Branch beginning and ending inventories include merchandise acquired from the
home office as well as from outside suppliers. Merchandise acquired from home
office is inventoried at 120% of home office cost.
Compute the:
Overvaluation of Adjusted
Cost of Goods Sold Branch Net Income
a. P 4,400 P 50,200
b. 2,800 10,600
c. 7,200 15,000
d. 4,400 12,200
16. The Boy George Company acquired the net assets of the Girl Conrad Company on January
1, 20x9, and made the following entry to record the purchase:
Current Asset……………………………………………………………………………… 100,000
Equipment ……………………………………………………………………………………… 150,000
Land …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 50,000
Buildings ……………………………………………………………………………………… 300,000
Goodwill ………………………………………………………………………………………… 100,000
Liabilities ……………………………………………………………… 80,000
Common stock, P 1 par …………………………………… 100,000
Paid-in capital in excess of par ………… 520,000
What is the additional number of shares issued on January 1, 20x9 to compensate for
any fall in the value of the stock?
a. 160,000 c. 60,000
b. 100,000 d. 10,000
17. Using the same information in No. 16, what is the amount of paid-in capital in
excess of par on January 1, 20x9 immediately after the additional shares were
issued?
a. P520,000 c. P420,000
b. P460,000 d. No effect.
18. Corin, a private limited company, has acquired 100% of Coal, a private limited
company, on January 1, 20x8. The fair value of the purchases consideration was 10
million ordinary shares of P1 of Corin, and the fair value of the net assets
acquired was P7 million. At the time of the acquisition, the value of the ordinary
shares of Corin and the net assets of Coal were only provisionally determined. The
value of the shares of Corin (P11 million) and the net assets of Coal (P7.5 million)
on January 1, 20x8, were finally determined on November 30, 20x8. However, the
directors of Corin have seen the value of the company decline since January 1,
20x8, and as of February 1, 20x9, wish to change the value of the purchase
consideration to P9 million. What value should be placed on the purchase
consideration and assets of Coal as at the date of acquisition?
a. Purchase consideration P10 million, net asset value P7 million.
b. Purchase consideration P11 million, net asset value P7.5 million.
c. Purchase consideration P9 million, net asset value P7.5 million.
d. Purchase consideration P11 million, net asset value P7 million.
19. The entry to amortize the amount of difference between implied and book value
allocated to an unspecified intangible is recorded
1. on the subsidiary's books.
2. on the parent's books.
3. on the consolidated statements workpaper.
a. 1 c. 3
b. 2 d. Both 2 and 3
20. Other not-for-profit entity" (ONPO) provide three financial statements. Which of
the following is NOT one among them?
a. A statement of functional expenses
b. A statement of financial position
c. A statement of activities
d. A statement of cash flows
Intercompany sales for 20x6 are upstream (from Seven to perfect) and total P100,000.
Perfect’s December 31, 20x5 and December 31, 20x6 inventories contain unrealized
profits of P5,000 and P10,000, respectively.
The only intercompany transaction between Proto and Silver during 20x5 and 20x6 was
the January 1, 20x5 of land. The land had a book value of P20,000 and was sold
intercompany for P30,000, its appraised value at the time of sale.
28. If the land was sold by proto to Silver (downstream sales) and that Silver still
owns the land at December 31, 20x6, compute the Profit Attributable to Equity
Holders of Parent or CNI Attributable to Controlling Interests for 20x5 and 20x6:
20x5 20x6 20x5 20x6
a. P363,000 P454,000 c. P372,000 P460,000
b. 362,000 454,000 d. 362,000 460,000
29. Except that the land was sold by Silver to Proto (upstream sales) and proto still
owns the land at December 31, 20x6, compute the Profit Attributable to Equity
Holders of Parent or CNI Attributable to Controlling Interests for 20x5 and 20x6:
20x5 20x6 20x5 20x6
a. P363,000 P454,000 c. P370,000 P460,000
b. 362,000 454,000 d. 363,000 460,000
30. LL Corporation owns a foreign subsidiary with 2,600,000 local currency units (LCU)
of property, plant, and equipment before accumulated depreciation on December 31,
20x4 of this amount. 1,700,000 LCU were acquired in 20x2 when the rate of exchange
was 1.5 LCU = P1, and 900,000 LCU were acquired in 20x3 when the rate of exchange
was 1.6 LCU = P1. The rate of exchange in effect on December 31, 20x4, was 1.9 LCU
= P1. The weighted average of exchange rates that were in effect during 20x4 was
1.8 LCU = P1. Assuming that the property, plant, and equipment are depreciated
using the straight-line method over a 10-year period with no salvage value. How
much depreciation expense relating to the foreign subsidiary’s property, plant,
and equipment should be charged in LL’s statement of income for 20x4?
Functional Currency – LCU Functional Currency is Peso
a. P144,444 P169,583
b. P144,444 P144,444
c. P169,583 P144,444
d. P169,583 P169,583
31. On January 1, 20x4, PP Company formed a foreign subsidiary. On February 15, 20x4,
PP’s subsidiary purchased 100,000 local currency units (LCU) of inventory. Of the
original inventory purchased on February 15, 20x4, 25,000 LCU made up the entire
inventory on December 31, 20x4. The exchange rates were 2.2 LCU= P1 from January
1, 20x4, to June 30, 20x4, and 2 LCU = P1 from July 1, 20x4, to December 31, 20x4.
The December 31, 20x4, inventory balance for PP’s foreign subsidiary should be
restated in pesos in the amount of:
Functional Currency – LCU Functional Currency is Peso
a. P12,500 P11,364
b. P12,500 P12,500
c. P11,364 P12,500
d. P11,364 P11,364
January 1 P.0086
May 1 P.0088
December 31 P.0085
Average January 1 - May 1 P.0089
Average May 1 - December 31 P.0083
Average January 1 - December 31 P.0084
What is the peso amount of (i) depreciation expense and (ii) accumulated depreciation
on the Philippine peso trial balance if the temporal method is applied?
a. (i) P615,700; (ii) P1,776,700 c. (i) P615,700; (ii) P1,772,250
b. (i) P616,800; (ii) P1,766,700 d. (i) P616,800; (ii) P1,772,250
Final inspection of Job 403 disclosed 50 defective units and 100 spoiled units. The
defective drills were reworked at a total cost of P500 and the spoiled drills were
sold for P1,500. What would be the unit cost of the good units produced on Job 403?
a. P33 c. P30
b. P32 d. P29
43. Bagley Company has two service departments and two producing departments. Square
footage of space occupied by each department follows:
44. Lucille Inc. manufactures a product that gives rise to a by-product called "Robon."
The only costs associated with Robon are additional processing costs of P1.00 for
each unit. Lucille accounts for "Robon" sales first by deducting its separable
costs from such sales and then by deducting this net amount from the cost of sales
of the major product. For the past year 2,000 units of Robon were produced which
were sold for P3.00 each.
Sales revenue and cost of goods sold from the main product were P500,000 and
P400,000 respectively. Compute the gross margin after considering the by-product
sales and costs.
a. P 96,000 c. P104,000
b. P100,000 d. P106,000
45. Using the same information in No. 44, if Lucille changes its method of accounting
for Robon sales by showing the net amount as "Other Income," the effect on the
gross margin would be:
a. P 0 c. P4,000
b. P2,000 d. P6,000
46. Using the same information in No. 44, if the accounting method were changed by
showing the net amount as "Other Income," the effect on net income for the period
would be
a. P6,000 increase c. P6,000 decrease
b. P4,000 decrease d. None
48. In the year end general ledger closing procedures, which accounts are closed in
arriving at Cost of Sales?
Purchases Sent to Branch Purchases from Home Office
a. Yes Yes
b. No Yes
c. No No
d. Yes No
49. Before prorating the manufacturing overhead costs at the end of 2019, the Cost of
Goods Sold and Finished Goods Inventory had applied overhead costs of P57,500 and
P20,000 in them, respectively. There was no work in process at the beginning or end
of 2019. During the year, manufacturing overhead costs of P74,000 were actually
incurred. The balance in the Applied Manufacturing Overhead was P77,500 at the end
of 2008. If the under-or overapplied overhead is prorated between Cost of Goods
Sold and the inventory accounts, how much will be the Cost of Goods Sold after the
proration?
a. P54,903 c. P58,403
b. P56,597 d. P60,197
50. Under a costing system that allocates overhead on the basis of direct labor hours,
the materials handling costs allocated to one unit of wall mirrors would be:
a. P1,000 c. P2,000
b. P 500 d. P5,000
51. The materials handling costs allocated to one unit of wall mirrors under Activity-
Based Costing (ABC) would be:
a. P1,000 c. P1,500
b. P 500 d. P2,500
52. Meyer & Smith is a full-service technology company. They provide equipment, and
installation services as well as training. Customers can purchase any product or
service separately or as a bundled package. Container Corporation purchased computer
equipment, installation and training for a total cost of P120,000 on March 15,
20x9. Estimated standalone fair values of the equipment, installation, and training
are P75,000, P50,000, and P25,000 respectively. The transaction price allocated to
equipment, installation and training is
a. P75,000, P50,000, P25,000 respectively
b. P40,000, P40,000, P40,000 respectively
c. P120,000 for the entire bundle.
d. P60,000, P40,000 and P20,000 respectively.
55. The Pampanga Manufacturing Company uses and in process (RIP) inventory account and
expenses all conversion costs to the cost of goods sold account. At the end of each
month, all inventories are counted, their conversion cost components are estimated,
and inventory account balances are adjusted accordingly. Raw material cost is
backflushed from RIP to Finished Goods. The following information is for the month
of April:
56. Wuson Company operates three producing departments – Cutting, Sewing and Finishing.
In February, Sewing Department transferred 6,200 units to Finishing Department, and
had 400 units in process at the end of the month. Sewing Department work-in-process
inventories as of January 31, were 1,200 units. These units were still (1/4) one-
fourth incomplete as of that date, with a cost of P 13,312. The units started in
Sewing Department in February were received from the preceeding department at a
cost of P47,595.60.
During February, Sewing Department incurred the following costs:
Materials………………………………………………………………………………… P11,772.00
Labor ………………………………………………………………………………………… 15,660.00
Factory overhead …………………………………………………………… 2,268.00
As of February 28, Sewing Department has done one quarter of the work required to
complete the process inventories.
Compute the cost of the:
Units Work-in-process Units Work-in-process
transferred February 28 transferred February 28
a. P86,532.00 P3,525.60 c. P71,750.00 P3,525.60
b. 84,882.00 4,075.60 d. 86,532.00 4,075.60
57. In preparing the financial statements of the home office and its various branches:
a. Nonreciprocal accounts are eliminated but reciprocal accounts are
combined
b. Both reciprocal and nonreciprocal accounts are eliminated
c. Both reciprocal and nonreciprocal accounts are combined
d. Reciprocal accounts are eliminated and nonreciprocal accounts are
combined
58. How are anticipated administrative expenses reported on a statement of financial
affairs?
a. As a footnote until actually incurred.
b. As a liability with priority
c. As a partially secured liability.
d. As an unsecured liability
59. What is the basis of accounting used in accounting for not-for-profit universities?
a. fund accounting c. modified accrual basis
b. accrual basis d. cash basis
Also on 8/3/x6, Buyox entered into a 180-day FX forward to buy 100,000 FCUs and assume
that any balance of firm commitment is closed to the asset purchased.
62. What should be the capitalized cost of the equipment?
a. P160,000 c. P167,000
b. P164,000 d. P170,000
63. What is the FX gain or loss recognized in earnings for 20x6 on the foreign currency
commitment?
a. P0 d. P7,000 gain
b. P4,000 gain e. P7,000 loss
c. P4,000 loss
[Link] January 1, 20x8 SME A and B each acquired 30 per cent of the ordinary shares
that carry voting rights at a general meeting of shareholders of entity Z for
P300,000. Entities A and B immediately agreed to share control over entity Z. For
the year ended December 31, 20x8 entity Z recognized a profit of P400,000.
On January 2, 20x8 entity Z also declared a dividend of P100,000 for the year 20x7.
On December 30, 20x8 entity Z declared and paid a dividend of P150,000 for the year
20x8. At December 31, 20x8 the fair value of each venturers’ investment in entity
Z is P400,000. However, there is no published price quotation for entity Z.
SME A and B must each recognize dividend income for the year 20x8 amounted to:
Cost Model Fair Value Model Cost Model Fair value Model
a. P 45,000 P75,000 c. P 75,000 P75,000
b. P 75,000 P45,000 d. None
[Link] Company distributes the service department overhead costs to producing
departments and the following information for the month of January is presented as
follows:
Maintenance Utilities
Overhead costs incurred P18,700 P 9,000
Services provided to:
Maintenance department - 10%
Utilities department 20% -
Producing department A 40% 30%
Producing department B 40% 60%
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ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING
ReSA Batch 48 – October 2024 CPALE Batch
06 October 2024 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam
Hartwell Company distributes service department overhead costs based on the
reciprocal method, what would be the formula to determine the total maintenance
costs?
a. M = P18,700 + .10U c. M = P18,700 + .30U +.40A + .40B
b. M = P 9,000 + .20U d. M = P27,700 + .40A + .40B
66. Property was purchased on December 31, 2019 for 20 million baht. The general price
index in the country was 60.1 on that date. On December 31, 2021, the general price
index had risen to 240.4. If the entity operates in a hyperinflationary economy,
what would be the carrying amount in the financial statements of the property after
restatement?
a. 20 million baht c. 80 million baht
b. 1,200.2 million baht d. 4.808 million baht
67. Agency 007 received a request for replenishment of petty cash fund for the following
expenses:
Office supplies P 500
Transportation fares 100
Repair of aircon 200
JRS mail 160
The following manufacturing activity occurred during the month of June 20x2:
Purchased direct materials costing P 60,000
Direct labor worked 9,900 hours at P 5 per hour
Factory overhead of P 2.50 per direct labor hour was applied to production.
At the end of June 20x2, the following information was gathered in connection with
the inventories:
Inventory of work-in-process:
Direct materials used……………………………………………………………………………… P 12,960
Direct labor (1,500 hours)………………………………………………………………… 7,500
Factory overhead applied……………………………………………………………………… 3,750
P 24,210
Inventory of direct materials…………………………………………………………………… P 51,000
Compute the cost of goods manufactured:
a. P 142,560 c. P 131,850
b. P 118,350 d. P 108,600
The rework cost was attributable to exacting specifications required by the job
and was charged to the specific order. The units cost of Job Order No. 369 is:
a. P266 c. P292
b. P280 d. P316
[Link] Moon Company acquired a 70% interest in The Swan Company for P1,420,000 when
the fair value of Swan's identifiable assets and liabilities was P1,200,000. Moon
acquired a 65% interest in The Homer Company for P300,000 when the fair value of
Homer's identifiable assets and liabilities was P640,000. Moon measures non-
controlling interests at the relevant share of the identifiable net assets at the
acquisition date. Neither Swan nor Homer had any contingent liabilities at the
acquisition date and the above fair values were the same as the carrying amounts in
their financial statements. Annual impairment reviews have not resulted in any
impairment losses being recognized.
Under PFRS 3 Business combinations, what figures in respect of goodwill and of gains
on bargain purchases should be included in Moon's consolidated statement of
financial position?
a. Goodwill: P580,000; Gains on the bargain purchases: P116,000
b. Goodwill: Nil or zero; Gains on the bargain purchases: P116,000
c. Goodwill: Nil or zero; Gains on the bargain purchases: Nil or zero
d. Goodwill: P580,000; Gains on the bargain purchases: Nil or zero
2. (c) – P17,687
Unadjusted capital of CC……………………………………………………………………… P 33,000
Add (deduct): adjustments-
Allowance for doubtful accounts (3% x P14,200)………………………. ( 426)
Increase in merchandise inventory (P23,000 – P20,000)…………… 3,000
Prepaid salary……………………………………………………………………………….. 600
Accrued rent expense…………………………………………………………………… ( 800)
Adjusted capital balance of CC…………………………………………………………….. P 35,374
Divided by: Capital interest of CC………………………………………………………. 2/3
Total capital of the partnership…………………………………………………………… P 53,061
Less: Adjusted capital balance of CC………………………………………………….. 35,374
Capital balance of DD…………………………………………………………………………… P 17,687
3. (d)
4. (b)
5. (c) - An equity interest previously held and qualified as a financial asset under PFRS 9 is being
remeasured to its-acquisition-date fair value and any difference is recognize in
profit/gain or loss if FVTPL or OCI if the financial assets is a FVTOCI. Refer to AFAR-09
problem III Requirement No. 5 and 6 for illustration.
6. (b)
CC PP AA Total
Salary……………………………………………………............ P28,000 P28,000
Balance (P84,000 –P28,000), .[Link]………………… P28,000 P16,800 11,200 56,000
Additional profit to PP (P21,000-P16,800) (3,000) 4,200 (1,200) -
P25,000 P21,000 P38,000 P84,000* (b)
The interest and profit loss ratio are assumed to be the same.
When a partner withdraws, the partnership agreement should be consulted to determine if any
guidelines have been established that would influence the procedure. The withdrawal of a partner
requires a determination of the fair market value of the partnership entity and a measurement of
partnership income to the date of withdrawal.
Also in many cases, the equity of the retiring partner may not be equal to the partner’s capital balance
as a result of (1) the existence of accounting errors, (2) differences between the fair market value
and the recorded book value of assets, and/or (3) unrecorded assets such as goodwill.
If accounting errors are discovered, they should be treated as prior-period adjustments and corrected
by adjusting the capital balances of the partners. Theoretically, an error should be allocated to
partner’s capital balances according to the profit and loss ratio that existed when the error was
committed.
Therefore, it is necessary to identify the period to which the error is traceable. This practice can
become complicated, and a well – designed partnership agreement should include procedures for
dealing with the correction of errors.
9. (c)
KK LL MM Total
Capital Interests 88,000 62,000 56,000 206,000
Total Reduction in Interests ( 58,600) ( 29,300) ( 29,300) ( 117,200)**
Payment to Partners 29,400 32,700 26,700 88,800 *
*Payment to partners:
Cash, beginning balance…………………………………………………………….. P 48,000
Add: Proceeds from sale…………………………………………………………….. 128,000
Less: Payment of liquidation expenses………………………………………. 4,000
Cash withheld for anticipated liquidation expenses…………………… 3,200
Actual payment of liabilities (note)…….……………………………………… 22,400
Assumed payment of unpaid liabilities (P80,000 – P22,400)
- refer also to note…………………………………..……………………………. 57,600
P 88,800
Note: This may be treated by deducting the liabilities in full amount regardless of partial or full
payment.
10. (c)- partially secured creditor
11. (c)
12. (c)
13. (b) - In this case, although A can obstruct the decision-making process but it cannot control the
arrangement because it needs the consent of either B or C. In such a situation the terms of the
contract among the parties should specify that which combination or group of parties is needed
to independently exercise the control over the arrangement, i.e. either (A & B) or (A & C).
14. (d)
16. (c)
Deficiency: (P16 – P10) x 100,000 shares issued to acquire…………………….P 600,000
Divided by: Fair value of share……………………………………………………………………P 10
Added number of shares to issue………………………………….......................... 60,000
An example of contingencies is where the acquirer issues to the acquiree and the acquiree is
concerned that the issue of these shares may make the market price of the acquirer’s shares
decline over time. Therefore, the acquirer may offer additional cash or shares if the market price
falls below a specified amount over a specific period of time.
17.(b) – (P520,000 – P60,000 = P460,000), refer to No. 16 for further discussion if market price falls
below a specified amount.
Changes resulting from events after (post-combination changes) the acquisition date (e.g. meeting
an earnings target, reaching a specified chare or reaching a milestone on research and
development project) are not measurement period adjustments. Such changes are therefore
accounted for separately from the business combination.
The acquirer accounts for changes in the fair value of contingent consideration that are not
measurement period adjustments as follows:
1. contingent consideration classified as equity is not remeasured and its subsequent
settlement is accounted for within equity; and
2. contingent consideration classified as an asset or liability…
The problem on hand falls under No. 1, so no adjustment would be required to goodwill but
accounted for within the equity section. Incidentally, the entry would be:
Paid-in capital in excess of par………………………… 60,000
Common stock, P1 par…………………………………………………60,000
18. (b)
One of the problems that may arise in measuring the assets and liabilities of the acquiree is that
the initial accounting for the business combination may be incomplete by the end of the reporting
period. For example, the acquisition date may be August 18 and the end of the reporting period
may be August 31. In this situation, in accordance with PFRS 3 par. 45, the acquirer must report
provisional amounts in its financial statements. The provisional amounts will be best estimates
and will need to be adjusted to fair values when those amounts can be determined after the end
of the reporting period. The measurement period in which the adjustments can be made cannot
exceed one year after the acquisition date.
19. (c)
20. (a)
21. (a)
22. (c)
24. (a)
RE-P Co. (DA of Acq.)/Consolidated Retained Earnings, 1/1/2020…………………………… P 255,000
Add: CI-CNI………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 43,000
Less: Dividends – P Co…………………………………………………………………………………………………. 5,000
RE-P Company (Equity)/Cons. Retained Earnings,12/31/2020…………………………………. P 293,000
*CNI:
Or, alternatively: (Note: Controlling NI and Consolidated NI are not the same)
Combined revenues (P210,000 + P40,000)…………P 250,000
Less: Combined CGS (P120,000 + P35,000)………. 155,000
Combined expenses (P45,000 + P10,000)…. 55,000
Combined Net Income……………………………………………P 40,000
Less: Amortization of allocated excess……………………( 3,000)
Consolidated Net Income……………………………………….P 43,000
26. (c): Note – Combined and Consolidated are not the same.
Combined Cost of Sales (P400,000 + P250,000)……………………………. P650,000
Less: Intercompany purchases……………………………………………………….. 100,000
Add: Unrealized Profit in ending inventory ……………………………………… 10,000
Less: Unrealized Profit in beginning inventory ……………………………… 5,000
Consolidated Cost of Sales …………………………………………………………….. P555,000
27. (a)
Profit attributable to Equity Holders of Parent – 20x6
Net Income from own operations:
Perfect…………………………………………………………………….. P250,000
Seven …………………………………………………………………….. 50,000
P300,000
Add: Realized Profit in beginning inventory of Perfect………. 5,000
Less: Unrealized Profit in ending inventory of Perfect………… 10,000
P295,000
Less: Amortization of allocated excess…………………………….. 0
*Non- controlling interests in net income………………… 18,000
Profit attributable to Equity Holders of Parent – 20x6 ………. P277,000 (a)
*(P50,000 + P5,000 – P10,000) x 40% = P18,000.
Peso - expense related to nonmonetary asset such as depreciation should be remeasured using
the historical exchange rate (exchange rate when the equipment was acquired), i.e.,:
20x2: (1,700,000 LCU – 0)/10 years = 170,000 LCU /1.5 LCU per peso.P113,333
20x3: (900,000 LCU – 0)/10 years = 90,000 LCU /1.6 LCU per peso…… 56,250
Total…………………………………………………………………………………………………………. P169,583
32. (c)
33. (b)- Wages expenses is for average rate, while the wages payable is translated at the current
(exchange) rate.
34. (d)
35. (c)
36. (d) - Tele Performance would allocate the initial franchise fee to three separate performance
obligations based on their relative stand-alone prices:
1. the right to operate a Teletech,
2. equipment, and
3. training.
37. (a) - Tele Performance would recognize revenue for the right to operate a Teletech over
the five-year license period; because Tele Performance’s ongoing activities over the license
period affect the value of the right to run a Teletech.
38. (b) - Tele Performance would recognize revenue for the equipment at the time the
equipment is delivered to the franchisee
39. (a) Would recognize revenue for the training over the two-year period that the training
is provided.
Additional Notes for Nos. 37-40: What if Tele Performance also charges franchisees an
additional fee for ongoing services provided by Tele Performance. In that case, Tele
Performance would recognize revenue associated with that fee over time as it provides
the ongoing services.
40. (a)
(i) [(675,000,000 - 135,000,000)/8] x P.0086 + (60,000,000/10) (8/12) x P.0088 = P 615,700
(ii) Beginning balance 135,000,000 x P.0086 P1,161,000
Current period depreciation expense
[(675,000,000 - 135,000,000)/8]x P.0086 + (60,000,000/10) (8/12) x P.0088 __615,700
Ending balance P1,776,700
41.(a) - Because of the time restriction, the amount spent for playground equipment remains in
temporarily restricted net assets until depreciated. The equipment was bought at the end of the
year so that no depreciation was recorded and no reclassification was made. While, the P80,000
since it was already spend (meaning released), then it is a deduction to temporary restricted
net assets, increase in unrestricted net assets and decreased in unrestricted net assets since it
was already spend.
42. (b)
The original production of 1,100 drills cost P33,000 (1,100 drills x P30 per drill). The reworking of
the defective drills (i.e. P500) increased the cost total to P33,500. The P1,500 received from the
sale of the 100 defective units should be subtracted from the total cost incurred in producing the
1,100 drills. Therefore, the total cost for producing 1,000 good drills equals P32,000 (P33,000 +
P500 – P1,500). Yielding unit cost of good drills of P32.
43. (d) - P0. There are no allocations between service departments when using the direct method.
47. (b)
48. (a)
49. (a)
P77,500 74,000 = P3,500 over-applied overhead
[P57,500/(57,500 + 20,000)] x P3,500 = P2,597
P57,500 - 2,597…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P 54,903
50. (a) – traditional / conventional method:
P50,000 / (200 DLH + 200 DLH) = P125 per DLH x 200 DLH
= P25,000/25 units of Wall Mirror = P1,000 per unit
51. (b) – ABC costing: P50,000 / (5 + 15 materials move) = P2,500 per materials move x 5 materials
move of wall mirrors = P12,500 / units produced = P500 per unit
62. (a)
December 1, 20x6: Spot rate – P1.64 x 100,000....………………. P164,000
Less: Firm Commitment – liability (credit balance)
8/3/20x6: Original (120-day) forward rate………………………P 1.60
12/1/20x6: Remaining (60-day) forward rate…………………. 1.64
Loss on Firm Commitment……………………………………….........P 0.04
Multiplied by: No. of FCs…………………………………………………… 100,000 4,000
Value of machine...........................……………………………………….. P160,000
63. (c) - refer to No. 62 (Note: There is no more commitment after the date of transaction which is
12/1/20x6)
64. (c)
Dividends declared in 20x8 (P100,000 + P150,000)……………………………………. P 250,000
x: ownership percentage……………………………………………………………………………..… 30%
Dividend income……………………………………………………………………………................ P 75,000
65. (a) - the total maintenance cost is determined by adding overhead costs incurred in the
Maintenance Department plus any share in the Utilities Department because of services provided
to the Utilities Department. Note: Service provided to (not “by”).
66. (c) – 20 million x 240.4/60.4 = 80 million
67. (b)
68. (b)
Direct materials inventory, June 1, 20x2............................................. P 48,600
Add: Purchases............................................................................... 60,000
Direct materials available for use....................................................... P 108,600
Less: Direct materials inventory, June 30, 20x2................................... 51,000
Direct materials used....................................................................... P 57,600
Direct labor (9,900 hours x P5/hour).................................................. 49,500
Applied factory overhead (9,900 hours x P2.5/hour)............................. 24,750
Manufacturing cost.......................................................................... P 131,850
Add: Work-in-process, June 1,20x2................................................... 10,710
Total work placed in process............................................................. P 142,560
Less: Work-in-process, June 30, 20x2................................................ 24,210
Cost of goods manufactured............................................................. P 118,350
Gain on a bargain purchase is recognized in profit or loss not on the statement of financial
position.
Notes:
1. Moon measures non-controlling interests at the relevant share of the identifiable net assets
at the acquisition date; therefore partial goodwill is in effect.
2. Fair value is assumed to be the same with the carrying/book value.