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Cupola Awning Corporation introduced a new line of commercial awnings in 2016 that carry a two-year warranty against manufacturers defects. Based on their experience, warranty costs are expected to be 5% of sales. Sales and actual warranty expenditures for the first year of selling the product were:

sales = 5,000,000 and actual warranty expenditures = 37,500.

Required:

1) Does this situation represent a loss contingency? how should Cupola account for it?

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

Yes this is a loss contingency.

when it is still an estimate then Debit warranty Expense and Credit provision for warrant liability and when it actually incurs; Debit the Provision for warranty liability and credit Bank.

estimate ; Debit warrant loss 250,000, Credit provision for warranty 250000

actual ; Debit provision for warranty loss 37500, Credit bank

Step-by-step explanation:

this situation gives rise to a loss contingency because it is a provision for a adverse future event.

The first entry to the estimation is a creation of the liability and the second entry is the actual payment

5000000*0.05= 250000

User Gabriel Pumple
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4.3k points
5 votes

Answer:

warranty expense 250,000 debit

waranty liability 250,000 credit

warranty liaiblity 37,500 debit

cash 37,500 credit

Step-by-step explanation:

The warranty expense will be 5% of sales

5,000,000 x 5% = 250,000

We will create a liability to represent the future expenses and when they occur we decrease the warrant liability.

As we already declare the associate warranty expense based on sale the expenditures o ot generate an expense.

User Hossein Moradinia
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4.2k points