subject
Business, 03.03.2020 01:55 molly7654

Dr. Frankenstein Inc. constructs laboratory equipment with an estimated life of 12 years and leases it to Dr. Jekyll Inc. for a period of 10 years beginning on January 1st, 2005. The normal selling price of this equipment is $343,734.34 and its value at the end of the lease term is estimated to be $15,000. Jekyll agrees to make annual payments at the beginning of each year for the equipment. They also agree to directly pay $5,000 in annual insurance costs (paid at the end of each year) and guarantees that the equipment will be worth at least $10,000 at the end of the lease. Frankenstein incurred costs of $210,000 to construct the equipment and $14,000 in negotiating and closing the lease. Frankenstein sets the annual payments based on the fair market value of the equipment and requires a 10% return on the lease. They have determined that collectibility of the lease payments is reasonably assured and that no additional costs will be incurred. Both companies have December 31st fiscal year ends and depreciate their assets using the straight-line method. Dr. Jekyll has an 11% borrowing rate, although it knows the implicit rate Frankenstein uses. The laboratory equipment has a fair market value of $7,000 at the end of the lease. Its salvage value is $2,000.
Required:
1. Compute the annual payments Frankenstein requires for the lease. Check all four Group I criteria to determine whether this is a capital lease for the lessee. Check all four Group I criteria and the Group II criteria to determine whether this is a capital lease for the lessor.
2. Prepare the 10-year lease amortization schedule for the lessee. Round all numbers to the nearest cent.
3. Prepare the 10-year lease amortization schedule for the lessor. Round all numbers to the nearest cent.
4. Prepare all the lessee and lessor journal entries through 1/1/06. These may be rounded to the nearest dollar.
5. Prepare the lessee and lessor journal entries for 12/31/14, the date when the lease ends. These may be rounded to the nearest dollar.

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 21:00
Sheldon has the following year-end account balances: accounts receivable, $5,000; supplies, $12,000; equipment, $18,000; accounts payable, $17,000; stockholdersโ€™ equity, $43,000. the cash account balance was not available at year-end. given the account balances listed, the balance in the cash account should be?
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 12:10
Compute the cost of not taking the following cash discounts. (use a 360-day year. do not round intermediate calculations. input your final answers as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places.)
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 21:10
This problem has been solved! see the answerthe xyz corporation is interested in possible differences in days worked by salaried employees in three departments in the financial area. a survey of 23 randomly chosen employees reveals the data shown below. because of the casual sampling methodology in this survey, the sample sizes are unequal. research question: are the mean annual attendance rates the same for employees in these three departments? days worked last year by 23 employees department days worked budgets (5 workers) 278 260 265 245 258 payables (10 workers) 205 270 220 240 255 217 266 239 240 228 pricing (8 workers) 240 258 233 256 233 242 244 249 picture click here for the excel data filefill in the missing data. (round your p-value to 4 decimal places, mean values to 1 decimal place and other answers to 2group mean n std. dev variancesbudgets payables pricing total one factor anova source ss df ms f p-value treatment error total
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 23:00
What is the purpose of the us international trade association?
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
Dr. Frankenstein Inc. constructs laboratory equipment with an estimated life of 12 years and leases...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 24.03.2021 18:00
question
Mathematics, 24.03.2021 18:00
question
Mathematics, 24.03.2021 18:00
question
Mathematics, 24.03.2021 18:00
Questions on the website: 13722363