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As of December 31, Year 1, Moss Company had total cash of $148,000, notes payable of $84,800, and common stock of $51,600. During Year 2, Moss earned $28,000 of cash revenue, paid $16,000 for cash expenses, and paid a $2,200 cash dividend to the stockholders. Required a. Determine the amount of retained earnings as of December 31, Year 1. b. & c. Create an accounting equation and record the beginning account balances, revenue, expense, and dividend events under the appropriate elements of the accounting equation. d. Complete the equality of the accounting equation as of December 31, Year 2.

User Tirno
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Final answer:

a. The amount of retained earnings as of December 31, Year 1 is $11,600. b. & c. The accounting equation is Assets = Liabilities + Equity. d. The completed equality of the accounting equation as of December 31, Year 2 is Assets: Total cash = $148,000, Liabilities: Notes payable = $84,800, Equity: Common stock + Retained earnings = $51,600 + $21,400 = $73,000.

Step-by-step explanation:

a. The amount of retained earnings as of December 31, Year 1 can be calculated by subtracting the total of common stock and notes payable from the total cash. Retained earnings = Total cash - Common stock - Notes payable = $148,000 - $51,600 - $84,800 = $11,600.

b. & c. The accounting equation is Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Based on the given information, the accounting equation as of December 31, Year 1 would be:

  • Assets: Total cash = $148,000
  • Liabilities: Notes payable = $84,800
  • Equity: Common stock + Retained earnings = $51,600 + $11,600 = $63,200

d. To complete the equality of the accounting equation as of December 31, Year 2, we need to consider the revenue, expense, and dividend events. Revenue increases retained earnings, expenses decrease retained earnings, and dividends also decrease retained earnings. Let's calculate the new retained earnings:

  • New retained earnings = Old retained earnings + Revenue - Expenses - Dividends
  • New retained earnings = $11,600 + $28,000 - $16,000 - $2,200 = $21,400

Therefore, the completed equality of the accounting equation as of December 31, Year 2 would be:

  • Assets: Total cash = $148,000
  • Liabilities: Notes payable = $84,800
  • Equity: Common stock + Retained earnings = $51,600 + $21,400 = $73,000

User Gmadar
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Answer:

a. Retained earnings is: $11,600

as Asset = Liabilities + Owner Equity, we applying to the presented questions: Cash = Notes payable + common stock + retained earnings <=> 148,000 = 84,800 + 51,600 + retained earnings <=> retained earnings = 148,000 - 84,800 - 51,600 = 11,600

b. Begining balance:

- Asset:

Cash: $148,000

- Liabilities and owner equity:

+ Liabilities:

Notes payable $84,800

+ Owner's equity:

Common stock: 51,600

Retained earning 11,600

or in general Asset = Liabilities + Owner's Equity = 148,000

Accounting entries entered during the Year 1:

Dr Cash $28,000

Cr Revenue $28,000

Dr Expenses $16,000

Cr Cash $16,000

( to record cash income and cash expenses during the year)

Dr Retained Earnings $2,200

Cr Cash $2,200

( to record cash dividen payment)

Dr Revenue $28,000

Cr Expenses $16,000

Cr Income summary $12,000

(to record closing entry of revenue and expenses during the year by using income summary as an offset account)

Dr Income summary $12,000

Cr Retained Earning $12,000

(to close income summary account and to decide the increase in retained earning at year end)

d. The equality of accounting equation as below:

- Asset:

Cash: $157,800

- Liabilities and owner equity:

+ Liabilities:

Notes payable $84,800

+ Owner's equity:

Common stock: 51,600

Retained earning 21,400

or in general Asset = Liabilities + Owner's Equity = 157,800

Step-by-step explanation:

The explanations have been given by listing down each entries need to be recorded during year 2 whose combined effect causes changes in the Balances of Items on the Balance Sheet as summarized in the answer.

The accounting method applying here is cash account, that is, incomes/expenses are recorded when they are received/paid rather than earned/incurred as the presented question hardly remind us to accrual accounting when incomes/expenses are recorded when they are earned/incurred.

User Sampat Badhe
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