ReSA - THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY CPA Review Batch 44 Oct 2022 CPALE 25 September 2022 11:45 AM - 02:45 PM FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING and REPORTING FINAL PRE-BOARD EXAMINATION 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. Multiple Choices – Theories: 1. Which of the following is not a purpose of the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting according to the Revised Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting? a. To assist regulatory agencies in enforcing compliance of companies to the requirements of the applicable IFRSs. b. To assist all parties to understand and interpret the Standards. c. To assist the International Accounting Standards Board (Board) to develop IFRS Standards (Standards) that are based on consistent concepts. d. To assist preparers to develop consistent accounting policies when no Standard applies to a particular transaction or other event, or when a Standard allows a choice of accounting policy. 2. The following statements concerning the qualitative characteristics of useful financial information: I.Verifiability, comparability, understandability and timeliness are qualitative characteristics that enhance the usefulness of information that both is relevant and provides a faithful representation of what it purports to represent. II.To be useful, financial information must not only represent relevant phenomena, but it must also faithfully represent the substance of the phenomena that it purports to represent. a. b. c. d. Only Only Both Both statement I is correct. statement II is correct. statements are correct. statements are incorrect. 3. Cash equivalents do not include: a. Two-month treasury bills b. Commercial papers purchased with three months of maturity c. Money market instrument (one month) d. Equity investments at FV through profit or loss (expected to be sold in two months) 4. Which of the following is recorded by a credit to accounts receivable but do not affect the net realizable value of the accounts receivable? a. estimated sales return at year-end. b. provisions for estimated bad debts. c. write-off of accounts receivable proven to be uncollectible. d. sale of merchandise on account with 2/10, n/30 credit terms. 5. Which of the following shall be included in the reported balance of inventory in the statement of financial position? a. cost of goods shipped out on consignment to another entity. b. cost of goods purchased with a buyback agreement. c. cost of goods sold in transit – CIF terms. d. cost of undelivered goods sold in bill and hold agreement. 6. Which of the following will not affect the investment income reported in profit or loss if the equity investment is considered having significant influence? a. share in excess representing increase in depreciation expense. b. cash dividend received. c. share in excess of inventories carrying value and fair value on acquisition date when these inventories were sold during the year. d. all of these affect the investment income. 7. What is the treatment of any gain on subsequent increase in fair value less cost of disposal of a noncurrent asset classified as held for sale? a. gain recognized directly in retained earnings. b. gain recognized in profit or loss in full amount. c. gain recognized in profit or loss limited to any previous cumulative impairment losses. d. gain shall not be recognized. Page 1 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 8. Bri-PH Company acquired machinery on January 1, 2017 which it depreciated under the straight-line method with an estimated life of fifteen years and no residual value. On January 1, 2022, Bri-PH estimated that the remaining life of this machinery was six years with no residual value. How should this change be accounted for by BriPH? a. as the cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle in 2022. b. by setting annual depreciation equal to one-sixth of the book value on January 1, 2022 starting 2022. c. by continuing to depreciate the machinery over the original fifteen-year life. d. as a prior-period adjustment. 9. Eduardo Company constructs a laboratory building to be used as a research and development facility, the cost of the laboratory building is matched against earnings as? a. depreciation reported as part of research and development cost at such time as productive research has been obtained from the facility. b. depreciation or immediate write-off depending on company policy. c. reduction in the reported research and development expense in the year of construction. d. research and development expense in the period of construction. 10. Accounting for product warranty costs under an assurance-type warranty: a. is required for income tax purposes. b. charges an expense account when the seller performs in compliance with the warranty. c. is frequently justified on the basis of expediency when warranty costs are immaterial. d. represents accepted practice and should be used whenever the warranty is an integral and inseparable part of the sale. 11. Elijah Company’s December 31, 2022 Statement of Financial Position is to be issued of April 15, 2023. A long-term obligation contracted in 2020 for settlement on January 15, 2023 was extinguished through cash payment on its due date. On January 1, 2023, a 5-year note was issued to replace the cash used up for the payment made on April 15, 2023. Which of the following statements is correct? a. There should be no liability to be reported in the 2022 statement of financial position since the original obligation was already extinguished before the date of the authorization for issuance. b. The new obligation entered into on January 2023 should be reported in the 2022 statement of financial position as a non-current liability because it is due to be settled beyond twelve months after the reporting period. c. The original obligation should be reported in the 2022 statement of financial position as a non-current liability because the entity has a right to defer settlement of the liability for at least twelve months after the reporting period. d. The original obligation should be reported in the 2022 Statement of Financial Position as a current liability because the entity does not have a right to defer settlement of the liability for at least twelve months after the reporting period. 12. Ivan Company had the following items of liability in its book as of December 31, 2022. Determine the correct classification of the following liabilities in the Statement of Financial Position of Ivan Company as of December 31, 2022: [1.] Liability with a due date which can be accelerated to within one year of the statement of financial position date; a reasonable probability exists that the due date will be accelerated. [2.] Liability due on demand by creditor, probability of the creditor calling the in the liability within one year of the statement of financial position date is remote. [3.] Liability due on demand by creditor, probability of the creditor calling the in the liability within one year of the statement of financial position date is reasonable but not likely. [4.] Bonds issued due in three years from date of issuance and currently maturing in 10 months after reporting period. a. b. c. d. Only numbers 1 and 4 are current. Only numbers 2 and 3 are current. All are non-current liabilities. All are current liabilities. Page 2 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam The bond was: 13. Laurence Company issued a P100,000, 10% bond at 99. a. sold for P100,000 less P1,000 of accrued interest. b. sold at a premium because the stated rate was higher than the yield rate. c. sold at a discount because the stated rate was lower than the market interest rate. d. sold at a premium because the P1,000 accrued interest is added to the P100,000 face amount. 14. Identify the missing component (X) in the equation: Retained Earnings, end = Net income to date + period-period adjustments – cash dividends to date – property dividends to date – X a. b. c. d. net unrealized loss on equity investmens at FV through OCI. Share dividends declared to date. Share split declared to date. All of them may be the missing component. 15. Which of the following treasury share transactions shareholder’s equity? [1.] Acquisition of treasury shares. [2.] Reissuance of treasury shares. [3.] Declaration of treasury shares as dividends. [4.] Retirement of treasury shares. a. b. c. d. do not affect the total Number 1 only Numbers 2 and 3 only Numbers 3 and 4 only Numbers 2, 3 and 4 only. 16. Danielle Company made the following journal entry on January 1, 2022 related to a lease contract: Lease receivable Cost of sales Sales Inventory Unearned interest income xx xx xx xx xx Danielle Company must have a (an)? a. sales-type lease b. direct finance lease c. operating lease d. sale-leaseback transaction 17. Which of the following is included in the cost of the right-of-use asset of the lessee? a. free rent on the first year of lease contract granted by the lessor. b. initial direct costs to effect the lease paid by the lessor. c. reimbursements by the lessor of the lessee’s initial direct costs. d. initial payment made by the lessee to the lessor at inception of the lease. 18. Sheen Company maintained a defined benefit plan for all employees. The service cost component of Sheen Company shall exclude: a. increase in the present value of a defined benefit obligation resulting from employee service in the current period. b. the change in the present value of the defined benefit obligation for employee service in prior periods as a result of plan amendments. c. decrease in the present value of defined benefit obligation due to effects of changes in actuarial assumptions. d. increase during a period in the present value of a defined benefit obligation which arises because the benefits are one period closer to settlement. 19. The current income tax expense (CITE) is: a. financial income multiplied by current year tax rate. b. financial income multiplied by future enacted tax rate. c. taxable income multiplied by future enacted tax rate. d. taxable income multiplied by current year tax rate. Page 3 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 20. Under PFRS 8, which of the following is not a criterion used to determine reportable segments? a. Segment b. Segment c. Segment d. Segment assets liabilities sales operating profit or loss Multiple Choices – Problems Situation 1 – The data relates to three different companies: On December 31, 2022, Villanueva Company reported cash and cash equivalents of P5,255,000 comprised of the following: Petty cash fund (imprest balance) P5,000 Undeposited collections 120,000 Cash in Bank - JPBank checking account 900,000 Cash in Bank – JPBank payroll fund 1,950,000 Cash in Bank - JPBank dividend fund 750,000 Cash in Bank - Binaluyo Bank of Asia (Foreign currency) 800,000 Cash in Bank - money market instrument, 60 days 250,000 Redeemable preference shares, due in 2 months as of 12/31/22 480,000 Total cash and cash equivalents P5,255,000 Additional information as of December 31, 2022: The petty cash fund includes unreplenished vouchers amounting to P2,350 and P2,550 of bills and coins. Included in the undeposited collections were: NSF check received from customer on December 29, 2022 for P15,000 and P20,000 of customers check received on December 30, 2022 dated January 4, 2023. Included in the checks drawn and recorded against JP Bank checking account were: P180,000 payable to Moira Company dated January 3, 2023 and P145,000 of check issued to Bellie Company dated June 15, 2022 (not encash as of 12/31/2022). The $16,000 cash in Binaluyo Bank of Asia is not restricted, closing rate on December 31, 2022 is P56 =$1. The redeemable preference shares were originally purchased by Villanueva Company last November 1, 2022. Tan Company had the following transaction in its accounts receivable during 2022: Accounts receivable, beginning balance Allowance for bad debts, beginning Sales on account made to customers Collection of accounts from credit customers Sales discounts granted Accounts written off as uncollectible P2,700,000 33,750 3,950,000 4,350,000 50,000 80,000 The following transactions were included in the recorded sales on account during 2022: [1.] Invoice dated December 28, 2022 for P420,000 was shipped and received by the buyer on December 31, 2022, terms FOB Destination point. [2.] Invoice dated and recorded on November 29, 2022 for P600,000 was received by another entity on December 1, 2022. The agreement of the parties is to remit the selling price less commission upon sale of the goods. None of the goods have been sold yet as of December 31, 2022. The following summary was prepared from an aging of accounts receivable outstanding on December 31, 2022: Number of days outs. % of the ending balance % uncollectible 0 - 30 days 50% 2% 31 - 60 days 30% 5% Over 60 days 20% 15% Pyrus Company conducted a physical count on December 31, 2022, which revealed inventory with a cost of P4,410,000. The following items were excluded from the physical count: Goods held by Pyrus on consignment Goods shipped by Pyrus FOB Destination to a customer on December 2022 and was received by the customer on January 3, 2023 Goods shipped by Pyrus FOB Shipping Point to a customer on December 2022 and was received by the customer on January 6, 2023 Goods shipped by a vendor FOB Destination on December 31, 2022 and received by Pyrus on January 10, 2023 Goods purchased FOB Shipping Point was shipped by the supplier December 31, 2022 and received by Pyrus on January 5, 2023 Page 4 of 22 P700,000 31, 400,000 31, 420,000 was 910,000 on 640,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 21. What amount should Villanueva Company report as cash and cash equivalents on December 31, 2022? a. P5,638,650 b. P5,542,650 c. P5,255,550 d. P5,158,550 22. What amount should Tan Company recognized as bad debt expense in profit or loss for period ending December 31, 2022? a. P132,600 c. P86,350 b. P120,100 d. P56,750 23. What amount should Pyrus Company report as inventory as of December 31, 2022? a. P2,160,000 c. P5,450,000 b. P4,350,000 d. P5,640,000 Situation 2 – Information relevant to three different companies follows: Thirdy Company had the following portfolio of financial instrument as of December 31, 2022. All securities were acquired at the end of 2021: Security Denomination Initial recorded value First shares 200,000 shares P11,000,000 Second shares 20,000 shares 900,000 [1.] First shares were acquired and designated as equity investment at fair value through profit or loss. The shares were acquired at P55 per share which included P1.00 per share transaction cost. Half of the First shares were sold at P62 per share on September 30, 2022. Each share is selling at P65 on December 31, 2022. [2.] Second shares were acquired and designated as equity investments at FV through other comprehensive income. The shares were purchased at P45 including P1.00 per share transaction cost. The FV of each share on December 31, 2022 was at P50. At the beginning of 2022, Tristan Co. purchased 250,000 ordinary shares of Daniella Co. at P45 per share, giving Tristan 40% ownership and a significant influence over Daniella. On this date, the book value Daniella’s net asset amounted to P23,125,000. On the date of acquisition, the carrying amount of Daniella’s identifiable assets and liabilities approximate their carrying amounts, except for the following: [1.]Aggregate fair value of Daniella’s depreciable property, plant, and equipment is P2,500,000 greater than its carrying value. Such item is depreciated over 8years remaining useful life on the date of acquisition. [2.]The fair value of Daniella’s inventories was P2,000,000 greater than its carrying amount. All of these inventories were sold in 2022. [3.]A land costing P1,000,000 had fair value of P1,500,000. During the year, the Daniella earned and reported net income of P10,200,000, and paid cash dividends of P1,800,000 to Tristan Company. Lance Company acquired on January 1, 2022 a 5 year, 8%, P5,000,000 face value bonds, for P4,445,615 dated January 1, 2022. The bonds which pay interest every December 31 had 11% prevailing interest rate on the date of acquisition. Lance’s business model is to collect contractual cash flows and the cash flows are solely payment of principal and interest and to sell the bonds when circumstances warrants. The prevailing interest rate on December 31, 2022 is 10%. 24. What amount should Thirdy Company report as unrealized gain (loss) in its Statement of Comprehensive Income for the period ending December 31, 2022? a. P100,000 c. P1,200,000 b. P1,000,000 d. P1,220,000 25. What amount should Tristan Company report its investment in the Statement of Financial Position as of December 31, 2022? a. P12,605,000 c. P14,300,000 b. P13,685,000 d. P14,315,000 26. What amount should Lance Company report its debt investment in the Statement of Financial Position as of December 31, 2022? a. P5,450,000 c. P4,683,013 b. P4,696,128 d. P4,534,633 Page 5 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam companies follows: Situation 3 – Information relevant to four different Love Company reported an impairment loss of P500,000 in its income statement for the year 2019. This impairment loss was related to an item of property, plant, and equipment (a building) which was acquired on January 1, 2011 with a cost of P4,000,000 (no salvage value). Depreciation on this building is computed on straight-line basis and annual depreciation on cost is P160,000. Depreciation for the years 2020 and onwards were computed based on the asset’s recoverable amount at December 31, 2019. On December 31, 2022, the fair value of the building is P3,240,000. Love Company uses revaluation model to account this class of property, plant and equipment. Thunder Company constructed its own building which qualifies for interest capitalization. Thunder incurred the following cost and had the following outstanding borrowings while the building is under construction. January 1, 2021 P3,000,000 June 30, 2021 2,500,000 November 30, 2021 2,000,000 April 1, 2022 1,500,000 October 1, 2022 1,000,000 Outstanding borrowings: Dated January 1, 2021 - 2,000,000; 8% (specific) Dated January 1, 2021 - 3,000,000; 9% (general) Dated January 1, 2022 - 3,875,000; 12% (general) The construction was completed on December 31, 2022 and ready for its intended use. Thor Company has a single investment property, which had original cost of P580,000 on January 1, 2021. At December 31, 2021, its fair value was P600,000 and at December 31, 2022, it had a fair value of P590,000. On acquisition, the property had a useful life of 40 years. Mjolnir Company was able to patent one of its new machines with the Intellectual Property Office of the Philippines on January 2, 2022. The cost of the patent recorded by the client included the following items: Purchase of special equipment for use in operations (5-year EUL) P1,500,000 Research salaries and fringe benefits for engineers and scientists 540,000 Cost of testing pre-production prototype 890,000 Legal cost of filing for patent 520,000 Fees paid to government patent office 260,000 Drawings required by patent office to be filed with patent application 145,000 The patent’s economic life is 10 years. 27. What amount should Love Company recognized in profit or loss as gain on recovery of impairment and the balance of revaluation surplus, respectively in year 2022? a. P93,750 and 1,566,250 c. P502,250 and P1,566,250 b. P406,250 and P1,160,000 d. P612,500 and P1,160,000 28. What is the capitalized interest, interest expense and cost of building should Thunder report in its Financial Statements for year 2022? a. P935,358 (capitalized interest); P11,312,858 (cost of building); P40,358 (interest expense) b. P935,358 (capitalized interest); P11,272,858 (cost of building); P25,358 (interest expense) c. P895,000 (capitalized interest); P11,312,500 (cost of building); P40,358 (interest expense) d. P895,000 (capitalized interest); P11,272,500 (cost of building); P0 (interest expense) 29. What should be the total expense recognized by Thor Company in the profit or loss for the year ended December 31, 2022 under fair value and cost model, respectively? a. P10,000 and P14,500, respectively. c. P14,500 and P10,000, respectively. b. P14,750 and P14,500, respectively. d. P10,000 and P14,750, respectively. 30. What amount should Mjolnir Company report as patent in its Statement of Financial Position as of December 31, 2022, and research and development expense in its 2022 profit or loss, respectively? a. P925,000 and P2,930,000 c. P693,750 and P2,040,000 b. P832,500 and P1,430,000 d. P693,750 and P1,730,000 Page 6 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam companies follows: Situation 4 – Information relevant to four different Candy Crush Company offers a coffee mug as a premium for every ten candy bar wrappers presented by customers. Each candy bar is sold at P5. The purchase price of each mug to the company is P1. Each mug can be sold for P3 if not use in premium promotional program. The results of the premium plan for the years 2021 and 2022 are as follows: All in units Coffee mugs purchased Candy bars sold Total wrappers redeemed in 2021 wrappers expected to redeem in 2022 2022 wrappers expected to redeem in 2023 2021 720,000 5,600,000 2,800,000 2,000,000 2022 800,000 6,750,000 4,200,000 2,700,000 A customer is suing Lock Heart Company for P550,000 in damages because her child was injured in November 2022 while riding an escalator that stopped suddenly in one of its state-of-the-art stores in Makati when he tripped and fell while walking down an escalator that was going up. Legal counsel that it is probable that the lawsuit will be settled for between P200,000 and P550,000, with the following likely outcome: 20% to be settled at P200,000; 30% to be settled at P370,000 and 50% to be settled at P550,000. Ludwig Company started its business in selling printers with three-year warranty. It estimates its warranty cost as a percentage of peso sales. Based on past experience, it is estimated that 3% will be repaired during the first year of warranty, 5% will be repaired during the second year of warranty and 7% will be repaired in the third year. The product warranty provides assurance based on agreed upon specification. In 2021 and 2022, the company was able to sell 12,000 units and 14,500 units, respectively at a total price of P7,000 per unit. The company also incurred actual repair costs of P6,500,000 and P12,500,000 in 2021 and 2022, respectively. The selling price of the warranty is P2,000 per unit. The printer is selling at P5,000 if without the warranty. Graceful Corp. has a three-year, 10%, long-term bond for P3,500,000 with a maturity date of November 1, 2025. On October 1, 2022, it breaches a covenant related to this debt and the loan becomes due on demand. Graceful reaches an agreement with the lender on January 2, 2023, to provide a waiver of the breach not to demand payment until December 31, 2023. The financial statements are authorized for issue on March 5, 2023. 31. What amount should Candy Crush Company report as unearned premium income in its December 31, 2021 and December 31, 2022 Statement of Financial Position, respectively? a. P460,623 and P748,678 c. P570,652 and P776,193 b. P520,772 and P727,281 d. P582,352 and P730,660 32. What amount should Lock Heart Company shall reflect the situation in its December 31, 2022 Financial Statements? a. P426,000 recognized as provision and P124,000 disclosed as contingent liability. b. P373,333 recognized as provision and P176,667 disclosed as contingent liability. c. P550,000 recognized as provision and no disclosure for contingent liability. d. P550,000 recognized as provision and P200,000 disclosed as contingent liability. 33. What amount should Ludwig Company shall report the balance of warranty liability as of December 31, 2022? a. P7,625,000 c. P9,125,000 b. P8,825,000 d. P9,375,000 34. How should Graceful Corp. shall report the situation in its Financial Position as of December 31, 2022? a. Graceful shall report the bond payable as non-current because a grace period was obtained related to the debt. b. Graceful shall report the bond payable as non-current because a grace period was not obtained related to the debt. c. Graceful shall report the bond payable as current because a grace period was obtained related to the debt regardless of the date of when the grace period was obtained. d. Graceful shall report the bond payable as current because a grace period was obtained related to the debt after the end of the reporting period. Page 7 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam companies follows: Situation 5 – Information relevant to three different On January 1, 2021 Matthew Company bought an equipment by paying cash of P2,000,000 and issued a 10% 4-year note payable in equal annual installment of P1,000,000 at the end of each year. Interest is payable at each year-end based on outstanding balance of the note. At issuance date, Matthew recorded the transaction by recognizing a discount on note payable of P160,442. On December 31, 2022, Matthew recorded a credit to discount on notes payable of P48,037 when required payment of principal and interest due on this date was made. At the end of 2023, the balance of unamortized discount is P17,857. Solaire Corporation issued P1,500,000 of 8% bonds on October 1, 2020 due on October 1, 2023 at 105. The interest is to be paid twice a year on April 1 and October 1. When the bonds was issued, the prevailing market rate was 10% without the conversion privilege. The corporation closes its books annually on December 31. Each P1,000 bond is convertible into 10 shares of P100 par value ordinary share. The bonds were retired on April 1, 2023 at 102 and on this date, the prevailing market rate was 9% without the conversion privilege. City of Dreams Company has an overdue note payable to ReSA Bank of P10,000,000 and recorded accrued interest of P1,000,000. On December 31, 2022, ReSA Bank agreed to the following restructuring agreement: • Reduce the principal obligation by P3,000,000 • Waive the P1,000,000 accrued interest • Extend the maturity date to December 31, 2025. • Annual interest of 8% of the new principal is to be paid on December 31, 2023, December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2025. • The prevailing market interest rate for similar debt instrument on the date of restructuring is 12% 35. What is the carrying value of the bonds payable reported in Matthew Company’s statement of financial position as of December 31, 2022? a. P2,003,281 c. P1,936,816 b. P1,948,342 d. P1,922,162 36. How much gain (loss) should Solaire record upon retirement of these bonds? a. P7,109 loss c. P37,177 loss b. P7,109 gain d. P37,177 gain 37. How much is the gain on debt restructuring should City of Dreams recognized in profit or loss? a. P4,348,169 c. P4,592,669 b. P4,469,372 d. P4,672,512 Situation 6 – Information relevant to three different companies follows: Presented below is the equity section of Coca-Cola Corporation at December 31, 2022: Share capital—ordinary, par value P20; authorized 75,000 shares; issued and outstanding 45,000 shares P 900,000 Share premium—ordinary 250,000 Retained earnings 500,000 Total Shareholder’s equity P1,650,000 During 2022, the following transactions occurred relating to equity: 3,000 shares were reacquired at P28 per share. 3,000 shares were reacquired at P35 per share. 1,800 shares of treasury shares were sold at P30 per share. For the year ended December 31, 2022, Coca-cola reported net income of P450,000. Blue Corporation has 50,000 shares of P10 par ordinary shares authorized. The following transactions took place during 2022, the first year of the corporation’s existence: Sold 5,000 ordinary shares for P18 per share. Issued 5,000 ordinary shares in exchange for a patent with fair value of P100,000. Page 8 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Malaki Corporation has an investment in 5,000 shares of Wallace Company ordinaryExam shares with a cost of P218,000. These shares are used in a property dividend to shareholders of Malaki. The property dividend is declared on May 25 and scheduled to be distributed on July 31 to shareholders of record on June 15. The market value per Wallace share is P63 on May 25, P66 on June 15, and P68 on July 31. 38. Assuming Coca-cola accounts for treasury under the cost method, what amount should it report as total equity on its December 31, 2022, statement of financial position? a. P1,965,000 c. P1,985,000 b. P1,975,000 d. P1,995,000 39. At the end of the Blue Corporation’s first year of operations, total contributed capital amounted to? a. P180,000 c. P200,000 b. P190,000 d. P210,000 40. The net effect of property dividend declaration on retained earnings of Malaki Corporation for year ended December 31, 2022 is a reduction of? a. P218,000 c. P330,000 b. P315,000 d. P340,000 Situation 7 – Information relevant to three different companies follows: On January 1, 2022, One Direction Corporation signed a ten-year noncancelable lease for certain equipment. The terms of the lease called for One Direction to make annual payments of P150,000 at the end of each year for ten years with title to pass to One Direction at the end of lease term. The equipment has an estimated useful life of 15 years and no residual value. One Direction uses the straight-line method of depreciation for all of its fixed assets. One Direction accordingly accounted for this lease transaction as a finance lease. The interest rate of 8% is implicit in the lease. One Direction has an option to purchase the asset at the end of lease term at P120,000 which is reasonably certain to exercise by One Direction. Estimated residual value at the end of 10 years is P100,000 and at the end of 15 years is P80,000. One Direction incurred a total of P350,000 direct cost to enter the lease. On January 1, 2022, Harry Styles Company enters into a seven-year lease of machinery. The machinery has estimated useful life of 10 years. Lease payments are P2,220,000 per year all payable at the beginning of each year. To obtain the lease, Harry Styles Company incurs initial direct cost of P500,000. Harry Styles guarantees a residual value of P400,000 at the end of lease term. The machine is expected to dismantle at a cost of P75,000 after the lease contract. Implicit rate in the lease contract Effective rate of interest (dismantling) 11% 12% On January 1, 2022, Zayn Corporation (lessor) enters into a ten-year lease of equipment to Malik Corporation (lessee). Malik Corporation do not have enough cash for an outright purchase of equipment. Zayn Corporation use the lease contract to sell the asset to Malik Corporation. The equipment has estimated useful life of 15 years. Lease payments are P380,000 per year all payable at the beginning of each year. The fair value of the leased asset on this date P3,132,161. The rate implicit in the lease is 6%. Mulak Corporation, a subsidiary of Malik Corporation guaranteed a residual value of P300,000. The cost of the asset in the book of Zayn Corporation was P2,500,000. 41. One Direction should record for 2022: a. lease expense of P150,000. b. interest expense of P85,681 and depreciation expense of P131,210. c. interest expense of P80,521 and depreciation expense of P85,101. d. interest expense of P84,968 and depreciation expense of P88,806. 42. How much should Harry Styles Company report the right-of-use asset as of December 31, 2023 and the amount of depreciation expense for year 2023, respectively? a. P8,257,132 and P1,075,483 c. P8,105,475 and P1,541,095 b. P8,927,417 and P1,705,483 d. P8,107,045 and P1,541,409 43. How much should Zayn Corporation report the balance of lease receivable – net as of December 31, 2022 and the gross profit recognized at inception of the lease? a. P2,917,291and P632,161 c. P2,686,921 and P799,681 b. P2,955,789 and P632,161 d. P2,739,722 and P799,681 Page 9 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam companies follows: Situation 8 – Information relevant to three different Liam Company reported pretax income of P6,400,000 for the year ended December 31, 2022. The company record shows the following differences: Tax depreciation in excess of book depreciation P200,000 Fines and penalties 60,000 Proceeds from life insurance policy upon death of an officer* 340,000 Interest revenue on bank deposits 125,000 Impairment loss on goodwill 34,000 Provision for litigation expected to settle in 2023 and 2024 in 140,000 equal amounts Installment sales recognized in the book to be collected 60% in 400,000 2023 and 40% in 2024 *The beneficiary of the insurance policy is Liam Company. Tax rate is 25% in 2022 and 30% in the future as enacted by the congress. Payments in previous quarters totaled P350,000. Niall Incorporated’s partial income statement after its first year of operation (2022) is as follows: Income tax expense: Current P1,050,000 Deferred 100,000 Total income tax expense P1,150,000 Niall Incorporated uses straight-line method of depreciation for financial reporting purposes and accelerated depreciation method for tax purposes. The amount charged to depreciation expenses on its book this year was P1,500,000. There were penalties paid by Niall amounting to P240,000 because of late filing in BIR in previous quarters. No other temporary differences existed between book income and taxable income except for the amount of depreciation. tax rate is 25%. On January 1, 2022, Tomlinson Company reported the fair value of plan assets at P8,000,000 and defined benefit obligation at P7,100,000. Transactions affecting the balances for the current year are as follows: Current service cost Past service cost Contribution to the plan Benefits paid to retirees on scheduled retirement date Benefits paid to retirees earlier scheduled retirement date Carrying value of benefit obligation of early retired employees Actual return on plan assets Actuarial loss on plan asset Increase in defined benefit obligation due to changes in actuarial assumption Rate of return on high-quality corporate bonds Rate of return on government bonds P1,410,000 730,000 2,880,000 2,000,000 650,000 600,000 ? 45,000 360,000 11% 11.5% 44. How much should Liam Company report the deferred tax asset and deferred tax liability as of December 31, 2022, respectively? a. P42,000 and P185,000 c. P42,000 and P180,000 b. P85,000 and P100,000 d. P80,900 and P93,600 45. What amount should Niall Incorporated’s report as net income after in its Income Statement for the year 2022? a. P2,890,000 c. P3,290,000 b. P3,450,000 d. P3,210,000 46. How much is the balance of the FV of plan asset and defined benefit obligation as of December 31, 2022 disclosed in Tomlinson’s Financial Statement? a. P9,115,000 and P7,781,000 c. P9,065,000 and P7,831,000 b. P9,065,000 and P7,781,000 d. P9,115,000 and P7,831,000 Page 10 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 47. Tomlinson Company: Statement 1: Total benefit expense for the year ending December 31, 2022 is P2,496,000. Statement 2: The amount presented in the statement of financial position as of December 31, 2022 is P1,334,000 net defined benefit asset. a. Only statement 1 is correct c. Both statements are correct b. Only statement 2 is correct d. Both statements are incorrect Situation 9 – Information relevant to two different companies follows: Mighty Thor Corporation’s December 31, 2022 balance sheet reports the following shareholders’ equity: 10% Cumulative Preference share capital, P100 par value per share, 30,000 shares issued and outstanding, liquidation value of P105 P3,000,000 Ordinary share capital, P100 par value, 60,000 shares issued 6,000,000 Share premium 500,000 Treasury shares, (ordinary) 5,000 shares at cost 600,000 Retained Earnings 4,000,000 Subscribed ordinary share (10,000 shares subscribed, net of P400,000 subscription receivable 1,000,000 Revaluation surplus 700,000 Preference dividends have not been paid since last year up to the end of 2022. 48. What is the book value per share on ordinary share? a. 173.08 c. P166.92 b. 163.04 d. P157.25 49. What is the book value per share on preference share? a. 105.00 c. P120.00 b. 115.00 d. P125.00 Groot Corp. had P500,000 net income in 2022. On January 1, 2022, there were 200,000 shares of ordinary outstanding. On April 1, 20,000 shares were issued and on September 1, bought 30,000 shares of treasury shares. There are 30,000 options to buy ordinary shares at P40 per share. The market price of the ordinary shares averaged P50 during 2022. The tax rate is 40%. During 2022, there were 40,000 shares of cumulative preference shares outstanding. The preference has P100 par, pays dividend of P3.50 per year, and is convertible into three shares of ordinary. Groot issued P2,000,000 of 8% convertible bonds at face value during 2021. Each P1,000 bond is convertible into 20 shares of ordinary. 50. How much is the basic earnings per share for 2022? a. P1.71 c. P1.60 b. P1.76 d. P1.17 51. How much is the diluted earnings per share for 2022? a. P1.71 c. P1.51 b. P1.68 d. P1.46 52. On January 2, 2021, Cleo Company receives a government loan of P2,000,000 paying a coupon interest of 1% per year. The loan is repayable at the end of year 6. Cleo Company’s borrowing cost is 7% per annum. The below-market interest is provided by the government to enable Cleo Company to bear cost of 1% per annum on the nominal value of the loan. Cleo Company should recognize income from government grant in 2022 amounting to? a. P85,558 c. P87,261 b. P86,625 d. P88,972 Use the following information for the next two questions: The shareholders' equity section of Peter Corporation as of December 31, 2021, contained the following accounts: Ordinary share capital, P20 par, 4,500,000 shares P4,500,000 authorized; 225,000 shares issued and outstanding Share premium 2,500,000 Retained earnings 7,200,000 Page 11 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam percent bonus issue on April 1, Peter Corporation’s board of directors declared a 10 2022, when the market value of the share was P24 per share. Accordingly, new shares were issued. Another P2.50 per cash dividends were declared on September 1, 2022 and the equipment with carrying value of P650,000 currently having fair value of P720,000 was declared as dividends on December 1, 2022. Peter Corporation sustained a net loss of P810,000 for the year ended December 31, 2022. 53. What amount should Peter Corporation report as retained earnings as of December 31, 2022? a. P4,657,500 c. P4,511,250 b. P4,567,500 d. P5,321,250 54. How much is the total shareholder’s equity should Peter Corporation in its December 31, 2022 Statement of Financial Position? a. P11,511,250 c. P13,151,250 b. P12,051,250 d. P13,671,250 Use the following information for the next two questions: John Corp.'s transactions for the year ended December 31, 2022 included the following: • Issued 500 of its 11% debenture bonds, due 2026, for P392,000 cash. • Purchased a patent for P220,000 cash. • Paid P120,000 bank loan to BDO. • Sold an equity investment at FVTOCI for P796,000. • Sold treasury shares with cost of P70,000 for P95,000. • Acquired 50% of Ford Corp.'s ordinary shares for P180,000 cash which was borrowed from a bank. • Issued 5,000 shares of its preference shares for land having a fair value of P320,000. • Sold an old equipment having carrying value of P210,000 receiving P100,000, 10% notes and P110,000 in cash. 55. John’s net cash provided by investing activities for 2022 was a. P826,000 c. P396,000 b. P506,000 d. P296,000 56. John’s net cash provided by financing activities for 2022 was a. P325,000 c. P445,000 b. P367,000 d. P547,000 Situation 10 – Information relevant to three different companies follows: 57. Juancho Company had a net income after tax of P3,500,000 for the year ended December 31, 2022 after giving effect to the following events which occurred during the year. The decision was made on May 31 to discontinue the bottles manufacturing segment. The bottle manufacturing segment was sold on June 30. Operating profit from January 1 to May 30 for the bottle manufacturing segment amounted to P950,000 before tax. Bottle manufacturing equipment with a book value of P1,900,000 was sold for P1,150,000. The tax rate was 30%. For the year ended December 31, 2022, how much was the company’s after-tax income from continuing operations? a. P3,300,000 c. P3,440,000 b. P3,360,000 d. P3,500,000 58. An equipment was purchased by Miguel Company on January 1, 2020 for P5,000,000 with estimated useful life of 10 years and no salvage value. On January 1, 2022, the entity classified the asset as held for sale in accordance with PFRS 5. As of this date the fair value of the asset is P3,300,000 and cost to sell is P100,000. As of December 31, 2022, the entity believes that the criteria for classification as held for sale can no longer be met. The fair value of the equipment is P3,800,000 and cost to sell is P200,000 as of December 31, 2022 while the value in use amounted to 3,200,000. At what amount should the asset be reported in its 2022 statement of financial position? a. P3,200,000 c. P3,700,000 b. P3,500,000 d. P3,800,000 59. Nikko Company has several manufacturing plants all over the country. On December 29, 2022, a super typhoon hit the province of Bicol where one of the entity’s large and major manufacturing plant is located. Because of the damages caused by the calamity, the entity decided to abandon the plant which constitute a major line of business. All work stops at the manufacturing plant during the year ended 2022. Page 12 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam plant amounted only to P2,000,000 The carrying amount of the entire manufacturing as of the end of the year. The operations of this manufacturing plant managed to generate P100,000 profit from operations before tax. The prevailing tax rate was at 30%. The fair value less cost to sell was P1,980,000 at the end of the year. How much should be reported as non-current asset held for sale as of December 31, 2022? a. P0 c. P2,000,000 b. P1,980,000 d. P3,980,000 60. How much should be the reported net income of Nikko Company for the year ending December 31, 2022? a. P100,000 c. P80,000 b. P70,000 d. P56,000 61. Richard Company and its divisions are engaged solely in manufacturing. The data pertain to the industries in which operations were conducted for the year ended December 31, 2022: Operating Segment A B C D E F Total Intersegment Sales P1,000,000 1,500,000 4,000,000 500,000 2,000,000 200,000 P9,200,000 External Revenues P5,000,000 3,000,000 8,000,000 1,300,000 2,800,000 900,000 P21,000,000 What is the minimum total external revenue of the reportable segments of Richard Company? a. P2,100,000 c. P15,750,000 b. P6,900,000 d. P22,650,000 62. Jonar Company operates a copper mine in Northern Mindanao. The entity paid P5,000,000 in 2022 for the mining site and spent an additional P3,000,000 to prepare the mine for extraction of the copper. After the copper is extracted in approximately four years, the entity is required to restore the land to its original condition after which the land can be sold for P1,000,000. The cash outflow possibility for the restoration cost is P2,000,000. The credit adjusted risk-free rate of interest is 10%. The present value of 1 at 10% for 4 periods is 0.6830. The entity expects to extract 4,000,000 tons of copper from the mine. Actual production was 500,000 tons in 2022 and 450,000 tons were sold in 2022. What amount of depletion should Jonar include in cost of goods sold in 2022? a. P1,005,250 c. P1,045,750 b. P1,105,175 d. P941,175 63. On April 1, 2022 Elizabeth Company entered into a cash-settled share-based transaction with a supplier whereby it acquired wood with a fair value of P2,000,000 in return for a cash payment based on the market value of Elizabeth’s shares. Payment will be made on August 31, 2022 and based on the fair value of 50,000 shares. The share price was P41.00 per share on April 1, 2022 and P48.00 at yearend of July 31, 2021. What amounts are reported in Victory Company’s financial statements at the year-end of July 31, 2022 in respect of the transaction? a. an expense of P2,050,000 and liability of P2,050,000 b. an expense of P2,400,000 and liability of P2,400,000 c. an expense of P2,000,000 and equity balance of P2,000,000 d. an expense of P2,050,000 and equity balance of P2,050,000 64. In the year ended December 31, 2022, William Company, a drinks manufacturer, sold a vat of maturing whisky to Harry Company for P4,600,000. Willian Company has signed a contract agreeing to repurchase the whiskey in eight years' time at P5,400,000. What amount of revenue from sale should William recognized on December 31, 2022? a. P5,400,000 c. P900,000 b. P4,600,000 d. P0 Page 13 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam bonds on June 1, 2022. Interest is 65. Megan Company issues P2,000,000 6% convertible payable annually. The conversion option can be exercised in a number of years’ time. The liability component is initially measured at P1,841,160 based on an 8% market rate of interest for a similar nonconvertible bond. What amounts are recognized in the statement of financial position at May 31, 2023? a. a liability of P1,813,867 and equity of P186,133 b. a liability of P1,868,453 and equity of P158,840 c. a liability of P1,961,160 and equity of P38,840 d. b a liability of P1,988,453 and equity of P11,547 66. Sun and Moon Inc. factors P2,000,000 of its accounts receivables without recourse for a finance charge of 5%. The finance company retains an amount equal to 10% of the accounts receivable for possible adjustments. What would be recorded by Sun and Moon as a gain (loss) on the transfer of receivables? a. P100,000 gain c. P200,000 loss b. P100,000 loss d. P300,000 loss 67. Mayka Company’s reporting period ends on June 30, 2022 and the financial statements are authorized for issue on August 31, 2022. On July 30, 2022 a major drop in the price of shares means that the value of the company’s investments has declined by P1,300,000 since the period end. The fall in value is material. How should this event be treated in the financial statements for the period ended June 30, 2022? a. An adjusting event without separate disclosure b. A non-adjusting event without separate disclosure c. An adjusting event with disclosure that a major fall in the price of shares has resulted in a loss of P1,300,000 d. A non-adjusting event with disclosure that a major fall in the price of shares has resulted in a loss of P1,300,000 68. Everlasting Corporation provided the following information regarding its Research JPB-04 included in the company’s Intangible account as of December 31, 2022: Research JPB-04 is for a research project which consists of the following charges: Salaries of research staff P18,000 Patent acquired solely for the use in the project 12,000 Special equipment acquired and useful for various Similar research activities 10,000 Patent acquired for use in several research Projects including JPB-04 16,000 The equipment and patents have been found to be useful for approximately four years. Both the patents and equipment were acquired at the beginning of 2022. How much should be recognized as research and development expense for the year 2022? a. P56,000 c. P35,200 b. P36,500 d. P26,000 69. If the month-end bank statement shows a balance of P36,000, outstanding checks are P12,000, a deposit of P4,000 was in transit at month end, and a check for P500 was erroneously charged by the bank against the account, the correct balance in the bank account at month end is? a. P27,500 c. P20,500. b. P28,500 d. P43,500 70. Rivera Company purchased a tooling machine on January 3, 2015 for P500,000. The machine was being depreciated on the straight-line method over an estimated useful life of 10 years, with no residual value. At the beginning of 2022, the company paid P125,000 to overhaul the machine. As a result of this improvement, the company estimated that the useful life of the machine would be extended an additional 5 years (15 years total). What should be the depreciation expense recorded for the machine in 2022? a. P34,375 c. P50,000 b. P41,667 d. P55,000 - END of EXAMINATION - Page 14 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board Exam ANSWERS & SOLUTIONS/CLARIFICATIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 21 22 A C D C A B C B A D D D C B C A D D D B D A C C A 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 C B D A B C A B D B A D A B A D B A C D B A A D B 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 C A C B B D B B A D C D B D B B D B B A PCF (remaining bills and coins only) Undeposited collections (120,000 - 15,000 - 20,000) Cash in Bank - Checking (900,000 + 180,000 + 145,000) Cash in Bank - JPB payroll fund Cash in Bank - JPB dividend fund Cash in Bank - Binaluyo Bank of Asia (16,000 x 56) Cash in Bank - money market instrument, 60 days 2,550 85,000 1,225,000 1,950,000 750,000 896,000 250,000 Total cash and cash equivalents 5,158,550 Accounts receivable, beginning Sales on accout (3,950,000 - 600,000) Collections from credit customers Sales discounts granted Accounts written off Accounts receivable, ending 2,700,000 3,350,000 (4,350,000) (50,000) (80,000) 1,570,000 0 - 30 days (1,570,000 x 50% x2%) 31 - 60 days (1,570,000 x 30% x 5%) over 60 days (1,570,000 x 20% x 15%) 15,700 23,550 47,100 Allowance for bad debts, end 86,350 Allowance for bad debts, end Accounts written off Allowance for bad debts, beginning Bad debt expense Page 15 of 22 86,350 80,000 (33,750) 132,600 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 23 Unadjusted balance FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 4,410,000 Goods held by Pyrus on consignment - Goods shipped by Pyrus FOB Destination to a customer on December 31, 2022 and was received by the customer on January 3, 2023 Goods shipped by Pyrus FOB Shipping Point to a customer on December 31, 2022 and was received by the customer on January 6, 2023 400,000 - Goods shipped by a vendor FOB Destination on December 31, 2022 and was received by Pyrus on January 10, 2023 Goods purchased FOB Shipping Point was shipped by the supplier on December 31, 2022 and received by Pyrus on January 5, 2023 640,000 Adjusted inventory balance 24 25 5,450,000 First Shares (FVTPL) {65 - 54 x 100,000} - UGOL - PL Second shares (FVTOCI) {(50 - 45) x 20,000} - UGOL - OCI 1,100,000 100,000 Total unrealized gain in comprehensive income 1,200,000 Initial cost (250,000 x 45) Share of profit in associate: Share in reported net income (10.2M x 40%) Share in increase in deprn (2.5M / 8 x 40%) Share in increase in cost of sales (2M x 40%) Dividends 11,250,000 4,080,000 (125,000) (800,000) 3,155,000 (1,800,000) CV of investment in associate as of 12/31/2022 26 27 FV of debt investment as of 12/31/2022: PV of principal (5M x 1.10^-4) PV of interest (5M x 8% x 3.169865) 3,415,067 1,267,946 FV of debt investment as of 12/31/2022 4,683,013 Impairment loss on 2019 Partial recovery (160,000 - 128,750) x 3 Limit on recovery Recoverable amount 12/31/22 CV of asset 12/31/2022 (2,060,000 x 13/16) Increase in value Gain on recovery (PL) Revaluation surplus 28 12,605,000 Weighted Average Accumulated Expenditures - 2021: 1/1/2021 3,000,000 x 12/12 = 6/30/2021 2,500,000 x 6/12 = 11/30/2021 2,000,000 x 1/12 = Total WAAE in 2021 less: Total specific borrowings WAAE for general borrowings Multiplied by WAR in 2021 Potential interest to general borrowings (lower) Actual interest on specific borrowing (2M x 8%) Total capitalized interest in 2021 Total actual expenditures in 2021 (3M + 2.5M + 2M) 500,000 (93,750) 406,250 3,240,000 (1,673,750) 1,566,250 (406,250) 1,160,000 3,000,000 1,250,000 166,667 4,416,667 (2,000,000) 2,416,667 9% 217,500 160,000 377,500 7,500,000 Total accumulated expenditures as of 12/31/2021 7,877,500 1/1/2022 7,877,500 x 12/12 = 7,877,500 Page 16 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 4/1/2022 1,500,000 x 9/12 = 10/1/2022 1,000,000 x 3/12 = Total WAAE in 2022 less: Total specific borrowings WAAE for general borrowings Multiplied by WAR in 2022 (735,000 / 6,875,000) FAR Final Pre-Board 1,125,000 Exam 250,000 9,252,500 (2,000,000) 7,252,500 10.69% Potential interest to general borrowings 775,358 Actual interest on general borrowings (lower) Actual interest on specific borrowing (2M x 8%) Total capitalized interest in 2022 Actual expenditures in 2022 (1.5M + 1M) Total accumulated expenditures as of 12/31/2021 735,000 160,000 895,000 2,500,000 7,877,500 Cost of asset constructed 11,272,500 No interest expense in 2022 since the capitalized interest for BG is the actual. 29 30 Under FV method (600,000 - 590,000) Under Cost method (580,000 / 40) 10,000 14,500 Legal cost of filing for patent Fees paid to government patent office Drawings required by patent office to be filed with patent application Total cost of patent X 520,000 260,000 145,000 925,000 9/10 CV as of 12/31/2022 832,500 Research salaries and fringe benefits for engineers and scientists Cost of testing pre-production prototype 540,000 890,000 Total R&D expense 1,430,000 31 2021 Total wrapper expected to redeem in 2021 (2.8M + 2M) / 10 Total wrapper expected to redeem in 2022 (4.2M - 2M + 2.7M)/10 Total FV of candy bars (5,600,000 x 5) / 6,750,000 x 5 Total FV of units (480,000 x 3)/ 490,000 x 3 Total FV Beginning balance Unearned premium liability - added Less: earned during the year 2021 - 1,369,565 x 280,000 / 480,000 480,000 490,000 28,000,000 1,440,000 33,750,000 1,470,000 29,440,000 35,220,000 1,369,565 570,652 1,408,646 (798,913) 2022 - 1,369,565 x 200,000 / 480,000 (570,652) 2022 - 1,408,646 x 220,000 / 490,000 (632,453) Balance of unearned premium as of 12/31 32 2022 570,652 200,000 x 20% = 370,000 x 30% = 550,000 x 50% = 40,000 111,000 275,000 Provision 426,000 Page 17 of 22 776,193 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 33 FAR Final Pre-Board Total warranty expense (12,000 + 14,500) x 7,000 x 15% 27,825,000 Exam Less: Total actual expenditures (6.5M + 12.5M) (19,000,000) Warranty liability as of 12/31/2022 8,825,000 34 The bond is reported as current because there is a breach of agreement and the grace period was obtained after the reporting period. 35 Date 1/1/21 12/31/21 12/31/22 12/31/23 12/31/24 36 Principal 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 NI (10%) 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 EI (12%) 460,747 348,037 233,801 117,857 60,747 48,037 33,801 17,857 PV of principal (1.5M x 1.05^-6) PV of interest (1.5M x 4% x 5.075692) 1,119,323 304,542 Total 1,423,865 Retirement price of bonds (at 9%) CV of bonds retired 1,492,823 1,485,715 Loss on retirement 37 Amort Total debt outstanding (10M + 1M) Less: PV of new cash flows Principal (7M x 1.10^-3) Interest (7M x 8% x 2.486852) Difference Divided by CV 3,839,558 2,900,305 1,948,342 982,143 (0) 7,109 11,000,000 5,259,204 1,392,637 6,651,841 4,348,159 11,000,000 % difference 39.53% Note: Substantial modification Total debt outstanding (10M + 1M) Principal (7M x 1.12^-3) Interest (7M x 8% x 2.401831) Total PV of new liability Gain on debt restructuring 38 39 40 11,000,000 4,982,462 1,345,026 6,327,488 4,672,512 Beginning SHE Acquisition of TS (3,000 x 28) Acquisition of TS (3,000 x 35) Sale of TS (1,800 x 30) Net income 1,650,000 (84,000) (105,000) 54,000 450,000 Ending balance of SHE 1,965,000 Issuance of shares (5,000 x 18) Issuance of shares 90,000 100,000 Total contributed capital 190,000 FV of property dividends declared (5,000 68) less: gain on distribution (340,000 218,000) Net effect on RE (decrease) Page 18 of 22 340,000 (122,000) 218,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 41 42 PV of periodic payment (150,000 x 6.710081) PV of CPO (120,000 x 1.08^-10) Total PV of lease liability Add: IDC Cost of ROUA Less: RV at the end of EUL Depreciable cost Divided by EUL 88,806 Interest expense (1,062,095 x 8%) 84,968 PV of periodic payment (2,220,000 x 5.230538) PV of guaranteed residual value (400,000 x 1.11^7) Total PV of lease liability Add: IDC Add: PV of dismantling cost (75,000 x 1.12^-7) CV of ROUA 12/31/2023 (12,338,384 - (1,705,483 x 2)) Depreciation expense (12.338,384 - 400,000) / 7 FV of asset (PV of lease payments) Less: Cost Gross profit Lease receivable net 12/31/22 (3,132,161 - 380,000 x 1.06) 44 192,663 11,804,457 500,000 33,926 12,338,384 8,927,417 1,705,483 3,132,161 (2,500,000) 632,161 2,917,291 200,000 400,000 600,000 x 30% DTL 180,000 Provision for litigation (FDA) Multiplied by future enacted tax rate 140,000 x 30% Taxable income (1,050,000 / 25%) Add: Future taxable amount (100,000 / 25%) Less: Penalties paid Pretax financial income Less: TITE (given) Net income after tax 46 11,611,794 Tax depreciation in excess of book depreciation Installment sales Total FTA Multiplied by future enacted tax rate DTA 45 55,583 1,062,095 350,000 1,412,095 (80,000) 1,332,095 15 Depreciation expense Initial cost of ROUA 43 FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 1,006,512 F A (8M x 11%) - 45,000 C B F D I (7.1M x 11%) S B D Page 19 of 22 42,000 4,200,000 400,000 (240,000) 4,360,000 (1,150,000) 3,210,000 8,000,000 835,000 2,880,000 (2,650,000) 9,065,000 7,100,000 781,000 2,500,000 (2,600,000) 7,781,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 47 FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 1,410,000 Current service cost Past service cost 730,000 Net interest cost (8M-7.1M) x 11% Loss on early settlement (650,000 - 600,000) Total benefit expense in PL Actuarial loss on PA Actuarial loss on DBO Total benefit expense in OCI (99,000) 50,000 2,091,000 45,000 360,000 405,000 Total benefit expense 2,496,000 Net defined benefit asset (9,065,000 - 7,781,000) 48 1,284,000 Total SHE Less; Attributable to PS 15,000,000 Liquidation value (3M x 1.05) (3,150,000) Dividends to PS (3M x 10% x 2) Attributable to ordinary Divided by ordinary shares outs(6M+1M)/100 = 70,000 5,000 (600,000) 11,250,000 65,000 Book value per share of OS 49 173.08 Attributable to preference Divided by preference shares outs 3,750,000 30,000 Book value per share of PS 50 125.00 1/1 200,000 12/12 200,000 4/1 20,000 9/12 15,000 9/1 (30,000) 4/12 (10,000) WANOS 205,000 Net income Preference dividends (40,000 x 3.50) Net income to ordinary Divided by WANOS 500,000 (140,000) 360,000 205,000 BEPS 51 1.76 Net income Interest expense (2M x 8% x 60%) 500,000 96,000 Adjusted net income WANOS + POS 596,000 395,000 DEPS 52 1.51 PV of principal (2M x 1.07^-6) PV of interest (2M x 1% x 4.766540) 1,332,684 95,331 Total PV of loan 1,428,015 Date 1/2/2021 NI (1%) EI (7%) Amort CV 1,428,015 12/31/2021 20,000 99,961 79,961 1,507,977 12/31/2022 20,000 105,558 85,558 1,593,535 12/31/2023 20,000 111,547 91,547 1,685,082 Income from government grant - 2022 Page 20 of 22 85,558 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM 53 Retained earnings, beginning Share dividends (225,000 x 10% x 24) Cash dividends (225,000 x 1.1) x 2.5 Property dividends Net loss Retained earnings, ending 54 55 58 59 60 Total SHE, end 12,051,250 Purchase patent Sold ei at FVTOCI Sold equipment Purchased ordinary shares Issued bonds Paid bank loan Sold treasury shares Borrowed from bank Net income after tax less: discontinued operations (900,000 - (1,150,000 - 1,900,000) = 200,000 x 70% 62 (220,000) 796,000 110,000 (180,000) 506,000 392,000 (120,000) 95,000 180,000 547,000 3,500,000 140,000 Net income from continuing operations 3,360,000 CV if not classified as NCAHFS (5M x 7/10) RA as of 12/31/2022 (3.8M - 200,000) 3,500,000 3,600,000 lower Abandoned asset only not NCAHFS or disposal group Profit from operations Less; Impairment loss (2M - 1,980,000) Profit before tax Less: Tax expense (80,000 x 30%) Profit after tax 61 4,511,250 14,200,000 (618,750) (720,000) (810,000) Net cash 57 (540,000) (618,750) (720,000) (810,000) Total SHE, beginning Share dividends Cash dividends (225,000 x 1.1) x 2.5 Property dividends Net loss Net cash 56 FAR Final Pre-Board Exam 7,200,000 75% of total external revenue (21M x 75%) Depletable Cost (5M +3M + (2M x 0.6830)1M Divided: Total estimated tons Cost per ton Multiplied by tons sold Cost of sales 100,000 (20,000) 80,000 (24,000) 56,000 15,750,000 8,366,000 4,000,000 2.09 450,000 941,175 63. The transaction is initially measured at the fair value of the amount payable 50,000 shares x P41 = P2,050,000. It is subsequently remeasured based on the year-end share price. As this is a cash-settled transaction a liability is recognized rather than equity. The year-end liability balance is calculated at P2,400,000 (50,000 shares x P48) Page 21 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM FAR Final Pre-Board followed by a repurchase at aExam later 64. The legal form of the transaction is a sale date. It is however, clear from the scenario that the economic reality is that William is using the maturing whisky as security for an eight-year loan with the bank. 65 1,841,160 x 1.08 - 120,000 Share premium (2M - 1,841,160) 1,868,453 158,840 66. 2,000,000 x 5% = 100,000 loss 67. D 68 Salaries Patent solely for RD Depreciation expense (10,000/4) Amortization (16,000/4) 18,000 12,000 2,500 4,000 Total RD 36,500 69. P36,000 – P12,000 + P4,000 + P500 = P28,500. 70. 500,000 x 3/10 = 150,000 + 125,000 = 275,000 / 8 = 34,375 Page 22 of 22 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ReSA - THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY CPA Review Batch 44 Oct 2022 CPALE 24 Sept 2022 8:00 - 11:00 AM MANAGEMENT SERVICES FINAL PRE-BOARD EXAMINATION 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. Set A B 1. In typical financial markets, money market instruments are mostly: a. Long-term debt securities b. Short-term debt securities c. Long-term equity securities d. Short-term equity securities 2. Naksu, Inc., a valued client, wants your advice on which of two alternatives it should choose. One alternative is to sell an investment now for P 10,000. Another alternative is to hold the investment for three days, after which it can sell it for a certain selling price based on the following probabilities: Selling Price Probability P 5,000 .4 P 8,000 .2 P 12,000 .3 P 30,000 .1 Using probability theory that ignores aversion to risks, which of the following is the most reasonable statement? B a. Naksu shall hold the investment three days because of the chance of getting P 30,000 for it. b. Naksu shall hold the investment three days because the expected value of holding exceeds the current selling price. c. Naksu shall sell the investment now because the current selling price exceeds the expected value of holding. d. Naksu shall sell the investment now because there is a 60% chance that the selling price will fall in three days. B 3. The presence of inventory units usually causes the difference between: a. Debt ratio and equity ratio b. Quick ratio and current ratio c. Normal operating cycle and cash conversion cycle d. Inventory conversion period and receivable collection period 4. If the first unit required 100 hours to complete, then how many hours are required to produce the second unit given a 75% learning curve? C a. 100 hours b. 75 hours c. 50 hours d. 25 hours C 5. Demand-pull inflation is induced by: a. Inward shift in the aggregate demand curve b. Inward shift in the aggregate supply curve c. Outward shift in the aggregate demand curve d. Outward shift in the aggregate supply curve 6. A world-class manufacturer considers to introduce a new product that requires a P 250,000 investment of capital. The necessary funds would be raised through a bank loan at an interest rate of 8%. The fixed operating costs associated with the product would be P 122,500, while the contribution margin percentage would be 42%. Assuming a selling price of P 15 per unit, determine the number of units (rounded to the nearest whole unit) the manufacturer would have to sell to generate earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) of 32% of the amount of capital invested in the new product. B a. 35,318 units b. 32,143 units c. 25,575 units d. 23,276 units 7. Which of the following specific budgets is the key driving force of the overall operational budget? A a. The sales budget b. The production budget c. The capital projects budget d. The pro forma income statement Page 1 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 8. Business Unit A produces a widget product that can be sold either to external customers or internally to Business Unit B. Business Unit B is currently purchasing 15,000 widgets from an external supplier for P 25 per unit. Both Business Unit A and Business Unit B are evaluated as profit centers. Production and sales data for Business Unit A are provided below. Assuming that no costs can be avoided if an internal transfer takes place, should Business Unit A transfer widgets to Business Unit B? If so, what should the transfer price be? Business Unit A Capacity in units 90,000 Number of units being sold to external customers 75,000 Selling price per unit to external customers P 29 Variable costs per widget P 26 Fixed costs per unit (based on capacity) P 2 A B a. b. c. d. No transfer should take place. A transfer should take place based on a price of P 25. A transfer should take place based on a price between P 26 and P 29. A transfer should take place based on a price between P 25 and P 29. 9. In economics, scarcity refers to the situation of: a. Optimizing with the use of limited information b. Having more wants than the amount of available resources c. Rationing of available goods and services by the government d. Sellers setting the prices of their products too high for people to be able to afford them 10. 8 weeks of production data from a mobile Quarter Phones 1 2,331 2 2,657 3 1,987 4 2,412 5 2,583 6 2,497 7 2,285 8 2,645 phone manufacturer are presented below: Cost P 3,245,874 P 3,474,318 P 2,883,675 P 3,287,621 P 3,354,966 P 3,428,752 P 3,152,347 P 3,271,899 The regression analysis results on these data are displayed below. Coefficients Standard Error t Stat P-value Lower 95% Upper 95% Intercept P 1,473,119 P 356,978 4.13 0.01 P 599,625 P 2,346,614 Phones P 738 P 147 5.03 0.00 P 379 P 1,097 Regression Statistics Multiple R 0.90 R Square 0.81 Adjusted R Square 0.78 Standard Error P 87,127 Observations 8 D What is a. b. c. d. the regression equation (total cost equation) for the above information? Total costs = P 147(Phones) + P 356,978 Total costs = P 1,473,119 (Phones) + 738 Total costs = P 356,978 (Phones) + P 147 Total costs = P 738(Phones) + P 1,473,119 11. Which of the following correctly represents the management-by-exception concept in variance analysis? C a. Only favorable variances provide a signal to management indicating that something in the organization is out of compliance with budget standards or performance expectations. b. Only unfavorable variances provide a signal to management indicating that something in the organization is out of compliance with budget standards or budget performance. c. Both favorable and unfavorable variances provide a signal to management indicating that something in the organization is out of compliance with budget standards or performance expectations. d. Variances by themselves do not provide a signal to management that something in the organization is out of compliance with budget standards or performance expectations. Page 2 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 12. When calculating the weighted-average cost of capital (WACC), an adjustment is made for taxes because: D a. Equity is risky b. Preferred stock is used c. Equity earns higher return than debt d. The interest on debt is tax-deductible 13. Maidservant Kim, Inc. (MKI) provides contracted bookkeeping services. MKI has annual fixed costs of P 100,000 and variable costs of P 6 per hour. This year, the company budgeted 50,000 hours of bookkeeping services. MKI prices its services based on full cost and uses a cost-plus pricing approach. The company developed a billing price of P 9 per hour. The company’s markup level would be: A a. 12.5% b. 33.3% c. 50.0% d. 66.6% 14. The uncertainty in return on assets due to the nature of a firm’s operations is known as: A a. Business risk b. Tax efficiency c. Financial leverage d. Financial flexibility 15. Songrim Company’s data on direct labor costs are given below: Standard direct labor hours 30,000 Actual direct labor hours 29,000 Direct labor usage variance P 4,000 Favorable Direct labor rate variance P 5,800 Favorable Total payroll P 110,200 What was standard direct labor rate? D a. P 3.60 b. P 3.80 c. P 3.67 d. P 4.00 16. Which of the following is best described as unsecured (without collateral), short-term borrowing by very large, creditworthy firms? B a. Eurodollars b. Commercial papers c. Banker’s acceptances d. Repurchase agreements 17. Ice Stone Company applies overhead based on machine hours and reported the following data: Estimated annual overhead cost P 2,250,000 Actual annual overhead cost P 2,227,500 Estimated machine hours 300,000 Actual machine hours 295,000 The amount of overhead for the period is: C a. P 22,500 under-applied b. P 15,000 over-applied c. P 15,000 under-applied d. P 22,500 over-applied 18. When purchasing temporary investments, which of the following best describes the risk associated with the ability to sell the investment in a short time without significant price concessions? A a. Liquidity risk b. Investment risk c. Interest rate risk d. Purchasing power risk C 19. If the a. b. c. d. Page 3 of 12 consumer price index is 135 and was 122 a year ago, inflation rate was: 9.6% -9.6% 10.7% -10.7% 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 20. An investor owns stock and is concerned that prices may fall in the future. Which strategy could help the investor hedge against adverse market conditions? A a. Buy a put option b. Buy a call option c. Buy a futures contract d. Buy an over-the-counter forward 21. Jin Mu Company is considering a change in technology that would reduce fixed costs from P 800,000 to P 700,000. However, the ratio of variable costs to sales will increase from 68% to 80%. What will happened to breakeven level of revenues? A a. Increase by P 1,000,000 b. Decrease by P 1,812,500 c. Decrease by P 500,000 d. Decrease by P 301,471 22. Which ratio must be calculated using an amount external to a company’s financial statements? C a. Current ratio b. Inventory turnover c. Price-earnings ratio d. Times interest earned 23. Shaman Choi Company predicts sales of 40,000 units in Q1 at P 5.00 per unit. Shaman Choi predicts that unit sales will grow by 4% each quarter and that selling price will increase by 5% each quarter. Each unit costs P 3.00 to produce in Q1. Costs are expected to grow by 3% each quarter. Using a quarterly sales budget, sales revenue for the year will be closest to: A a. P 917,327 b. P 800,000 c. P 383,598 d. P 169,859 D 24. Most capital market transactions take place in a. Primary debt markets b. Primary stock markets c. Secondary debt markets d. Secondary stock markets 25. Crown Prince, Inc. produced and sold 5,000 units during its most recent fiscal year. Direct materials were P 9 per unit, direct labor costs were P 4 per unit, and variable overhead costs were 110% of direct labor costs. Fixed overhead was P 50,000, fixed selling and administrative expenses totaled P 50,000, and variable selling and administrative expenses were a combined P 8 per unit. Calculate inventory costs based on using the absorption (full) costing method. C a. P 87,000 b. P 127,000 c. P 137,000 d. P 227,000 A 26. Which holds true if the market for PCs is in equilibrium at a price of P 40,000? a. The quantity of PCs produced will equal the quantity of PCs bought. b. Sellers of PCs will have an incentive to charge a price higher than P 40,000. c. Buyers of PCs will want to buy fewer PCs than they are purchasing at equilibrium. d. If the cost of producing PCs falls below P 40,000 per unit, all seller will stop supplying PCs. 27. Master Lee issues a P 10 million bond with a 6% coupon rate, 4-year maturity, and annual interest payments when market interest rates are 7%. ➢ PV of P1 @ 7% for 4 years = 0.7629 ➢ PV ordinary annuity @ 7% for 4 years = 3.38721 Using the discounted cash flow technique for bond valuation, what is the initial carrying value of the bonds? A a. P 9,661,326 b. P 9,400,000 c. P 10,000,000 d. P 10,338,721 Page 4 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 28. Soul Shifter, Inc. (SSI) is an international manufacturer of stylish shoulder bags. SSI is split up into three regions: Europe Region, Asia Eastern Region, U.S. Region. The Europe Region is split into three operating units: England Operations, France Operations, Germany Operations. The France operating unit is split up into the Sales Division and Manufacturing Division. The France sales division is set up to focus exclusively on generating sales and revenue, without responsibility for cost. Which of the following most accurately identifies the responsibility center for the Sales Division, Manufacturing Division, and France Operations of SSI? B a. Sales Division: cost center; Manufacturing Division: revenue center; France Operations: profit center. b. Sales Division: revenue center; Manufacturing Division: cost center; France Operations: profit center. c. Sales Division: profit center; Manufacturing Division: cost center; France Operations: cost center. d. Sales Division: profit center; Manufacturing Division: revenue center; France Operations: revenue center. 29. Early in 2022, Petrify Company switched to a JIT (Just-In-Time) inventory system. Financial information for the two most recent years are listed here: 2021 2022 Net sales revenue P 2,000,000 P 1,800,000 Cost of goods sold 800,000 788,000 Beginning inventory 200,000 130,000 Ending inventory 130,000 30,000 How many times did inventory turnover increase as a result of the switch to the JIT system? C a. 2.1 times b. 3.8 times c. 5.0 times d. 20.1 times 30. A bank is considering building a branch on a piece of property it already owns. Which of the following cash flows should not be considered in the capital budgeting analysis? A a. Money spent when the property was originally purchased to determine whether there are any environmental issues regarding the property b. Cash the firm will forgo from the sale of the property if the company decides to build c. Cash flows resulting from several hundred new customers who will switch from local competitors to the new branch if the bank makes the investment d. Shipping and installation charges the bank must spend to get equipment in the new branch 31. Using the capital asset pricing model, what is the firm’s cost of equity (rounded to the nearest whole percentage)? • Risk-free rate of return: 0.05 • Market rate of return: 0.12 • Firm’s beta: 1.2 A a. 13% b. 15% c. 18% d. 19% B 32. Which of the following most accurately defines value chain analysis? a. An approach used by an organization to allocate capacity costs while tracking and reporting the fixed costs of idle capacity in the organization’s production process b. An approach used by an organization to evaluate its internal activities determine how essential each activity is strategically creating and capturing value for the organization’s customers c. A system based on the idea that inventory is not really an asset in the production process, but is often a barrier to achieving the organization’s main goals d. A system that supports a very specific and extremely short-term managerial view of an operation – the incremental value from a more effective employment of a constrained resource Page 5 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES MS Final Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM 33. Gone Wild Company incurs a cost of P 35 per unit, of which P 20 is variable, to make a product that normally sells for P 58. A foreign wholesaler offers to buy 6,000 units at P 30 each. Gone Wild has the capacity to take on this order, but will incur additional costs of P 4 per unit to imprint a logo and to pay for shipping. Compute the increase (decrease) in net income that will be realized by accepting the special order. D a. P 60,000 b. (P 54,000) c. (P 30,000) d. P 36,000 34. When evaluating financial risk, which ratios will be most beneficial to the analyst? C a. Gross profit margin and the operating profit margin b. Collection period and inventory turnover c. Total debt and interest coverage ratios d. Current and quick ratios 35. Jang-Uk (JU) Company is the leading textbook printer in the country. JU is starting a new line of Managerial Accounting textbooks this year and would like to calculate the budgeted total contribution margin for this line for 2023. JU plans to sell every textbook they manufacture within the year. The following information is available: Sales Budget Sales Volume Q1 1,300 Q2 1,600 Q3 1,900 Q4 1,500 Total 6,300 Budgeted Sales Price per Unit Sales Price P 200.00 Standard Production Costs per Unit Variable Production Costs P 47.00 per book Fixed Production Costs 19.00 per book Total Production Costs P 66.00 per book Standard Selling & Admin Costs per Variable Selling & Admin Costs P 25.00 Fixed Selling & Admin Costs 35.00 Total Selling & Admin Costs P 60.00 D Unit per book per book per book Using a contribution margin statement, calculate JU’s budgeted total contribution margin for the new line of Managerial Accounting textbooks for 2023. a. P 74.00 b. P 128.00 c. P 466,200 d. P 806,400 36. Based on economic principles, the problem of “free-riding” refers to the situation wherein some people (free-riders) do not contribute any but still benefit from the actions that others undertake. This often happens when people pursue their own private interests and do not contribute voluntarily to the public interest. Which of the following is an example of free-riding? B a. A housekeeper clearing a house b. A tax evader enjoying national security c. A consumer paying for pollution control d. An individual who buys a ticket for a basketball match 37. The following information relates to the production department of the Seo Yul Company for the first quarter: Actual variable overhead P 68,500 Variable overhead application rate P 0.50 per hour Total overhead application rate P 1.50 per hour Variable spending variance P 8,000 unfavorable Fixed volume variance P 5,000 favorable B What were the actual hours worked in this department during the quarter? a. 137,000 b. 121,000 c. 127,000 d. 119,000 Page 6 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 38. Financial managers who require an increase in return for a given increase in risk are said to be: C a. risk-indifferent b. risk-seeking c. risk-averse d. risk-free 39. King’s Star Corporation manufactures two products: X and Y. The company has 4,000 hours of machine time available and can sell no more than 800 units of Product X. Other pertinent data follow. Product X Product Y Selling price P 8.00 P 19.00 Variable cost 3.00 5.00 Fixed cost 3.50 6.25 Machine time per unit 2 hours 3 hours B Which of the following is the right objective function? a. Maximize Z = 8X + 19Y b. Maximize Z = 5X + 14Y c. Maximize Z = 1.50X + 7.75Y d. Minimize Z = 6.50X + 11.25Y 40. A company is experiencing a sharp increase in sales activity and a steady increase in production, so management has adopted an aggressive working capital policy. Therefore, the company’s current level of net working capital. B a. Would most likely be the same as in any other type of business condition as business cycles tend to balance out over time. b. Would most likely be lower than under other business conditions in order that the company can maximize profits while minimizing working capital investment. c. Would most likely be higher than under other business conditions so that there will be sufficient funds to replenish assets. d. Would most likely be higher than under other business conditions as the company’s profits are increasing. 41. Cho-Yeon Corporation is evaluating two mutually exclusive projects with the net cash flows shown here: Project X Project Z 0 (P 100,000) (P 100,000) 1 P 50,000 P 10,000 2 P 40,000 P 30,000 3 P 30,000 P 40,000 4 P 10,000 P 60,000 C If cost of capital is 15%, which project should be chosen? a. Project X should be chosen since it has a better internal rate of return (IRR). b. Project X should be chosen since it has a better net present value (NPV). c. Neither project should be chosen. d. Project Z should be chosen since it has the higher IRR. 42. All of the following describe key performance indicators (KPIs) in a balanced scorecard system, except: C a. A small set of critical data points b. A good way to get a quick sense of an organization’s strategy c. A term describing all the measures used in an organization in the process of running the business d. Measures that indicate to the executive team and other stakeholders whether the organization is on track to accomplishing its strategic objectives 43. At 40% capacity, overhead cost is computed to be P 1,450; at 75% capacity, overhead cost is P 2,150. The fixed overhead cost at 80% capacity will be: B a. P 20 b. P 650 c. P 1,600 d. P 2,250 Page 7 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM C MS Final Pre-Board Exam 44. A company is expected to have unsold units on its first year of operations, then: a. Sales must be below breakeven point b. Manufacturing variances are expected to be mostly unfavorable c. Profit under absorption costing must be higher than the profit under variable costing d. Decision to accept or reject a special order on the unsold units shall include an element of opportunity cost 45. Park Jin Co. has current assets of P 400,000 and current liabilities of P 500,000. Current ratio will be increased by A a. The purchase of P 100,000 of inventory on account b. The payment of P 100,000 of accounts payable c. The collection of P 100,000 of accounts receivable d. Refinancing a P 100,000 long-term loan with short-term debt 46. After investing in a new project, Lee Company discovered that its residual income remained unchanged. Which one of the following must be true about the new project? B a. The net present value of the new project must have been positive. b. The return on investment (ROI) of the new project must have been equal to the firm’s cost of capital. c. The net present value of the new project must have been negative. d. The return on investment (ROI) of the new project must have been less than the firm’s cost of capital. 47. What is the benefit for a firm with daily cash receipts of P 15,000 to be able to speed up collections by 2 days, assuming an 8% annual return on short-term investments and no cost to the company to speed up collections? B a. P 2,400 daily benefit b. P 2,400 annual benefit c. P 15,000 annual benefit d. P 30,000 annual benefit C 48. Which of the following correctly describes theoretical capacity? a. Theoretical capacity is the level of output that the organization actually achieves in a period. b. Theoretical capacity is the amount of capacity that management predicts the organization will produce in the period. c. Theoretical capacity represents the level of output if all policy constraints and scheduling limitations are removed. It also assumes that no productivity is lost due to breakdowns, errors, etc. d. Theoretical capacity represents the level of output that can be realistically achieved based on current management policies, as well as based on machine and labor scheduling expectations. 49. If a firm pays a constant dividend of P 10 and the required rate of return or discount rate is equal to 10%, what is the price of the stock using the zerogrowth dividend model? D a. P 1 b. P 10 c. P 50 d. P 100 C 50. Workers temporarily unemployed but who normally find jobs quickly are called: a. Cyclically unemployed b. Seasonally unemployed c. Frictionally unemployed d. Structurally unemployed 51. Jang Gang Company planned to produce 3,000 units of its single product, SEjector, during November. The standard specifications for one unit of S-Ejector include 6 pounds of materials at P 0.30 per pound. Actual production in November was 3,100 units of S-Ejector. The accountant computed a favorable direct materials purchase price variance of P 120. Based on these variances, one could conclude that: C a. More materials were purchased than were used b. More materials were used than were purchased c. The actual cost of materials was less than the standard cost d. The actual usage of materials was less than the standard allowed Page 8 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 52. Which of the following is likely to encourage a firm to increase the amount of debt in its capital structure? C a. The firm’s earnings become more volatile b. The firm’s assets become less liquid c. The corporate tax rate increases d. The personal tax rate increases 53. Park Dang Gu (PDG) Company plans to discontinue a department that currently provides a P 24,000 contribution margin and has allocated overhead of P 48,000, of which P 21,000 cannot be eliminated. PDG’s average income tax rate is 30%. The effect of this discontinuance on PDG’s after-tax profit would be a(n): A a. Increase of P 2,100 b. Increase of P 3,000 c. Decrease of P 24,000 d. Decrease of P 16,800 C 54. If a company’s cash conversion cycle increases, then the company: a. Becomes more profitable b. Incurs more shortage or stockout costs c. Increases its investment in working capital d. Reduces its payable deferral period (age of payable) 55. Jin Ho-Kyung’s Wholesale Flowers produces two types of flower bouquets that it distributes to retail shops: simple bouquets and upgraded bouquets. Total fixed costs for the firm are P 184,000. Variable costs and sales data for these bouquets are presented here. Simple Bouquets Upgraded Bouquets Selling price per unit P 24.00 P 40.00 Variable cost per unit P 20.00 P 32.00 Budgeted sales (units) 20,000 30,000 D If the simple a. b. c. d. product sales mix were to change to three upgraded bouquets sold for each bouquet sold, the breakeven volume for each of these products would be: 11,500 simple bouquets and 17,250 upgraded bouquets 15,333 simple bouquets and 15,333 upgraded bouquets 27,600 simple bouquets and 9,200 upgraded bouquets 6,571 simple bouquets and 19,714 upgraded bouquets 56. If a capital project has a hurdle rate higher than its internal rate, then its profitability index is: D a. Higher than the net present value b. Higher than the cost of capital c. Less than zero d. Less than one 57. If the investment turnover decreased by 20% and profit margin decreased by 30%, then return on investment would: C a. Increase by 30% b. Decrease by 20% c. Decrease by 44% d. Decrease by 50% B 58. Period a. b. c. d. costs under variable costing include: Variable manufacturing and non-manufacturing costs Fixed manufacturing and non-manufacturing costs Variable and fixed manufacturing costs Indirect materials and labor 59. The first order of 500 units incurred P 120,000 of labor costs; the next order of 500 units required an additional P 72,000 of labor costs. What percentage of learning occurred? A a. 80% b. 85% c. 90% d. 95% Page 9 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam 60. A well-known manufacturer paid more property tax on their manufacturing facility this year than they were expecting. This would most likely cause an: B a. Unfavorable fixed overhead volume variance b. Unfavorable fixed overhead spending variance c. Unfavorable variable overhead spending variance d. Unfavorable variable overhead efficiency variance 61. Short-term objectives, tactics for achieving these objectives, and operational planning (master budget) must be congruent with what? C a. The organization’s external environmental factors b. The organization’s internal environmental factors c. The organization’s strategic plan and long-term strategic goals d. The organization’s performance evaluation and incentive compensation factors 62. So-yi Company is considering a change in collection procedures that would result in an increase of the average collection period from 28 to 36 days. So-yi anticipates that next year’s sales to be P 9 million and that 80% of the sales will be on credit. So-yi estimates short-term interest rates at 6% and uses a 360-day year for decision making. What minimum savings in collection costs would the procedure change have to generate to offset the increased investment in accounts receivable? B a. P 1,200 b. P 9,600 c. P 12,000 d. P 33,600 B B 63. The cost-plus target pricing approach is generally in what formula? a. Unit cost ÷ Selling price = Markup percentage b. Unit cost x (1 + Markup % on unit cost) = Targeted selling price c. Variable cost + Fixed cost + Contribution margin = Targeted selling price d. Cost base + Gross margin = Targeted selling price 64. In which scenario would a horizontal analysis be the best choice? a. A bank wishes to compare progress among different companies. b. A company wishes to market its growth to potential stockholders. c. A vendor wishes to evaluate financial statement data in a given year. d. An investor wishes to evaluate financial statement data by expressing each item in a financial statement as a percentage of a base amount. Items 65 and 66 are based on the following information Bu-yeon Company provides the following information based on its accounting records: Current assets P 2,000,000 Noncurrent assets 7,000,000 Current liabilities 1,000,000 Noncurrent liabilities 4,000,000 Pretax operating profit 1,500,000 Pretax cost of equity 15% Pretax cost of debt 5% Tax rate 40% The carrying amounts significantly. and market values of above amounts do not differ 65. What is Bu-yeon Company’s weighted average cost of capital (WACC)? B a. 6% b. 9% c. 10% d. Cannot be determined from the given information 66. What is Bu-yeon Company’s economic value added (EVA)? A a. P 180,000 b. P 120,000 c. P 90,000 d. P 0 Page 10 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM MS Final Pre-Board Exam Items 67 and 68 are based on the following information Go Won buys toy guns at P 25 per dozen from its wholesaler. Go Won will sell 35,000 dozens of toy guns evenly throughout the year and it desires a 12% return on investment (cost of capital) on its inventory investment. In addition, rent, insurance and related taxes for each dozen toy guns in inventory amounts to P 0.50. The cost per order is P 8. Go Won uses a 350-day year. 67. What is the average number of toy guns does Go Won maintain? C a. 200 toy guns b. 400 toy guns c. 2,400 toy guns d. 4,800 toy guns 68. How often shall Go Won place the orders within a year? A a. Every 4 days b. Every 5 days c. Every 6 days d. Every week Items 69 to 70 are based on the following information Alchemy of Souls (AOS), Inc. is considering the purchase of a new machine that costs P 150,000 and saves P 85,000 per year in operating expenses. The machine has an estimated useful life of 3 years. Assume that 30% of the depreciable base will be depreciated in the first year, 40% in the second year, and 30% in the third year. At the end of its useful life, the new machine will have a P 10,000 resale value that is not to be considered in computing the depreciation. AOS uses a 40% estimated income tax rate and a 16% hurdle rate to evaluate capital investment projects. Discount rates for a 16% rate are as follows: Present Value of an Present Value of P 1 Ordinary Annuity of P 1 Year 1 0.862 0.862 Year 2 0.743 1.605 Year 3 0.641 2.246 B B 69. What is the net present value of this project? a. P 9,432 b. P 13,278 c. P 15,842 d. P 40,910 70. The payback a. 2.94 b. 2.09 c. 1.76 d. 1.14 period for this investment would be: years years years years - END of EXAMINATION - NOTE: Summary of answers as well as solutions and clarifications to selected items are found on page 12. Page 11 of 12 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com MANAGEMENT SERVICES ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM Page 12 of 12 MS Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ReSA - THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY CPA Review Batch 44 Oct 2022 CPALE 25 September 2022 8:00 - 11:00 AM TAXATION FINAL PRE-BOARD EXAMINATION 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. 1. The gross estate of a decedent is valued at P3,000,000 composed of registered and registrable properties. Total deductions are P4,000,000. Which of the following statements is/are correct? I - The estate of the decedent is required to submit notice of death. II - The estate of the decedent is required to file an estate tax return. III - The estate of the decedent is required to submit a statement certified by a CPA. a. Statements I, II and III b. Statements II and III c. Statement II d. None of the statements 2. Gross gifts of non-resident alien donor shall be composed of: a. real properties, personal properties and taxable transfers wherever situated. b. real properties and personal properties wherever situated. c. real properties, personal properties and taxable transfers situated in the Philippines. d. real properties and personal properties situated in the Philippines except intangible personal properties when there is reciprocity. 3. A VAT-registered taxpayer service provider has the following data taken from the books of account for the month of January 2021: Accounts receivable, January 1, 2021 Sales on account for the month of January Services paid in cash for the month of January Accounts receivable, January 31, 2021 Cash purchases for the month of January 2021 P 560,000 1,120,000 336,000 784,000 448,000 How much is the output tax for the month of January, 2021 using 12% rate? a. P201,600 c. P132,000 b. P147,840 d. P96,000 4. Who of the following individual taxpayer shall not be required to file an income tax return? a. Individuals deriving compensation from two or more employers concurrently or successively at any time during the taxable year; b. Individual taxpayer receiving purely compensation income, regardless of amount, from only one employer in the Philippines for the calendar year, the income tax of which has been withheld correctly by the said employer. c. Employees deriving compensation income, regardless of the amount, whether from a single or several employers during the calendar year, the income tax of which has not been withheld correctly (i.e., tax due is not equal to the tax withheld) resulting to collectible or refundable return. d. Individuals receiving purely compensation income from a single employer, although the income tax of which has been correctly withheld, but whose spouse is required to file income tax return 5. The books of account may be kept in: a. Native language. c. Chinese language. b. Korean language. d. Japanese language. 6. The filing of the withholding tax returns (BIR Form No. 1601EQ) for creditable withholding tax and Form Nos. 1602 for final tax on interest on bank deposits, 1603Q for final tax withheld on fringe benefits, and 1601FQ for all other final withholding taxes and payment of the taxes withheld at source shall be made: a. not later than the last day of the month following the close of the quarter during which the withholding was made. b. not later than the 20th day of the month following the close of the quarter during which the withholding was made. c. not later than the 25th day of the month following the close of the quarter during which the withholding was made. d. not later than the first day of the month following the close of the quarter during which the withholding was made. Page 1 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 7. Which of the following is not an effect of failure to affix the required DST? a. An instrument, document or paper which is required by law to be stamped and which has been signed, issued, accepted or transferred without being duly stamped, shall not be recorded. b. An instrument, document or paper or any copy thereof or any record of transfer of the same which is required by law to be stamped shall not be admitted or used in evidence in any court until the requisite stamp or stamps are affixed thereto and cancelled. c. No notary public or other officer authorized to administer oaths shall add his jurat or acknowledgment to any document subject to documentary stamp tax unless the proper documentary stamps are affixed thereto and cancelled. d. An instrument, document or paper which is required by law to be stamped and which has been signed, issued, accepted or transferred without being duly stamped, shall make the transaction void. 8. The Commissioner may compromise the payment of any internal revenue tax, when: I - there is a reasonable doubt as to the validity of the claim against the taxpayer II - the tax or any portion thereof appears to be unjustly or excessively assessed. a. Both I and II are correct c. Only I is correct b. Both I and II are incorrect d. Only II is correct 9. Who has the power to lift the order of distraint? a. Secretary of Finance b. Commissioner of Internal Revenue exclusively c. Commissioner of Internal Revenue or his duly authorized representative d. Revenue District Officer 10. A taxpayer paid excessive tax on April 15, 2000. On December 20, 2001, she filed a written claim for refund. Her claim was denied by the BIR and she received the denial on March 16, 2002. She filed a motion for reconsideration with the BIR on March 31, 2002. On April 18, 2002, she received the final denial of the BIR. What will be the taxpayer’s remedy? a. File another motion for reconsideration with the BIR within 30 days after the receipt of the final denial b. File an appeal with the Court of Tax Appeals within 30 days after the receipt of the final denial c. File an appeal with the Court of Tax Appeals within 15 days after the receipt of the final denial d. The taxpayer has no more remedy against the final denial 11. The following are common to the inherent power of taxation, power of eminent domain and police power, except for which of the following? a. They are necessary attributes of sovereignty. b. They interfere with private rights and property. c. They affect all persons or the public. d. They are legislative in implementation. 12. Which statement is wrong? A revenue bill: a. must originate from the House of Representative and on the same bill the Senate may propose amendments. b. may originate from the Senate and on which same bill the House of Representative may propose amendments. c. may have a House version and a Senate version approved separately. d. may be recommended by the President to Congress. 13. One of the a. It is b. It is c. It is d. It is following is not a characteristic or an element of tax: levied by the legislature. payable in money or in kind. proportionate in character. an enforced contribution. 14. The power to interpret the provision of the Tax Code and other tax laws shall be under the exclusive and original jurisdiction of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue subject to review by: a. Secretary of Finance. c. Court of Appeals. b. Court of Tax Appeals. d. Municipal Courts. Page 2 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 15. Unless otherwise provided in Local Government Code, charges shall be paid: a. within the first twenty (20) days of January or as the case may be. b. within the first fifteen (15) days of January or as the case may be. c. within the first ten (10) days of January or of the case may be. d. within the first five (5) days of January or of the case may be. all local taxes, fees, and of each subsequent quarter, of each subsequent quarter, each subsequent quarter, as each subsequent quarter, as 16. A senior citizen is engaged in the sale of VATable goods. His gross annual sales, however, do not exceed the VAT threshold and he is not VAT-registered. During the first quarter of the current year, his gross sales amounted to P250,000. How much is the business tax due, if any? a. P7,500 b. P5,000 c. P2,500 d. None, senior citizens are exempt from business taxes 17. An individual is operating a trading business enterprise. He is asking you to assist him to register his business under the Barangay Micro Business Enterprise (BMBE) so he can avail of the incentives granted under it. His total assets including the cash of P300,000 he loaned from a bank amounted to P3,500,000. The total assets also include P500,000 value of the land on which the particular business entity's office, plant and equipment are situated. Is the individual qualified? a. No. Because he is engaged in a trading business which is specifically excluded from those who can register under BMBE. b. Yes. Because his total assets excluding the land on which the particular business entity's office, plant and equipment are situated do not exceed P3,000,000. c. No. Because only juridical persons are qualified to register under BMBE. d. Yes. Because trading business is automatically qualified regardless of the total assets. 18. This model generally favors retention of greater so called “source country” taxing rights under a tax treaty—the taxation rights of the host country of investment—as compared to those of the “residence country” of the investor. a. OECD Model Tax Convention b. UN Model Double Taxation Convention c. United States Model Income Tax Convention d. None of the choices 19. If the goods or services are used in both the registered project or activity and administration purposes and the proper allocation could not be determined, the purchase of such goods and services shall be: a. subject to 12% VAT. c. exempt from VAT. b. subject to 0% VAT. d. disregarded. 20. First statement: Registered Business Enterprises (RBEs) which are categorized as Domestic Market Enterprises (DME) are not entitled to VAT zero-rating on local purchases. Second statement: Sale of goods or services to a registered domestic market enterprise shall be exempt VAT. a. Both statements are correct c. Only the first statement is correct b. Both statements are incorrect d. Only the second statement is correct SITUATIONAL X Company has been assessed deficiency income tax of P1,000,000, exclusive of interest and surcharge, for taxable year 2015. The tax liability has remained unpaid despite the lapse of June 30, 2017, the deadline for payment stated in the notice and demand issued by the Commissioner. Payment was made by the taxpayer only on February 10, 2018. How much is the total amount due on February 10, 2018? 21. How much is the interest on deficiency from April 16, 2016 to June 30, 2017 (441 days)? a. P302,054.79 c. P181,232.87 b. P241,643.83 d. P144,986.30 Page 3 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 22. How much is the additional interest on deficiency from July 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017 (184 days)? a. P126,027.39 c. P75,616.43 b. P100,821.91 d. P60,493.50 23. How much is the interest on delinquency from July 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017 (184 days)? a. P151,232.87 c. P90,234.23 b. P150,390.39 d. P75,616.43 24. How much is the interest on delinquency from January 1, 2018 to February 10, 2018 (41 days)? a. P33,698.63 c. P22,465.75 b. P33,510.90 d. P20,106.54 25. How much is the total amount due on February 10,2018? a. P2,012,962.67 c. P1,512,962.67 b. P1,762,962,67 d. P1,262,962.67 SITUATIONAL On July 1, 2021, Ms. Cris Cruz sold shares of stock for P200,000. The shares, acquired on June 1, 2018 at a par value of P150,000, were held as investment, and were sold directly to a buyer under the following terms: Down payment, July 1, 2021 P 30,000 Installment due, October 10, 2021 30,000 Installment due, October 10, 2022 75,000 Installment due, October 10, 2023 75,000 26. How much was the capital tax due in July 1, 2021? a. P7,500 c. P1,125 b. P1,875 d. None 27. When should the capital gains tax return be filed? a. August 1, 2021 c. July 16, 2021 b. July 31, 2021 d. July 30, 2021 28. How much was the documentary stamp tax due? a. P1,500 c. P563 b. P1,125 d. None SITUATIONAL The following were taken from the Statement of Income and Expenses of ABC Corporation for the taxable year 2021: Gross profits from sales P800,000 Less: Business expenses 440,000 Provision for bad debts 80,000 Write-off of inventories lost due to spoilage 20,000 540,000 Net income from operation 260,000 Add: Other income Dividend income from a domestic corporation 50,000 Interest on Philippine bank peso deposit 30,000 80,000 Net income P340,000 Additional information: 1) Accounts written off during the year and charged to allowance for bad debts, P50,000; 2) Recoveries on accounts receivable previously written off in 2020 and credited to allowance for bad debts: Allowed as deduction by BIR, P30,000; Disallowed as deduction by BIR, P20,000. 29. How much is the total non-deductible expenses/taxable other income? a. P410,000 c. P110,000 b. P130,000 d. P100,000 30. How much is the non-taxable income and income subject to final tax? a. P130,000 c. P80,000 b. P100,000 d. P30,000 Page 4 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 31. How much was the taxable net income using Reconciliation Net Income Per Books Against Taxable Income? a. P340,000 c. P390,000 b. P370,000 d. P440,000 32. LAB Corporation, a domestic manufacturing corporation, had a gross sales of P100,000,000.00 for fiscal year ending June 30, 2021. It incurred cost of sales of P60,000,000.00 which includes Direct Labor Wage of P20,000,000.00 and operating expenses of P17,500,000.00 which include training expenses amounting to P3,000,000.00. The corporation complied with all the prescribed requirements (e.g. Apprenticeship Agreement, Certification from DepED or TESDA or CHED, whichever is applicable). How much is the corporation’s net taxable income for the taxable year? a. P22,500,000 c. P20,500,000 b. P21,000,000 d. None of the choices 33. CPL Corporation secured in 2018 a bank loan for its business expansion, and incurred interest expense of P2,000,000.00 in calendar year 2020 on the said bank loan. In the same year, it likewise earned interest income of P300,000.00 subjected to final tax of 20% and royalties of P100,000 subjected to 20% final tax. For calendar year 2020, its gross income amounted to P20,000,000.00. Its gross assets, including the P20,000,000 value of the land where its building and plant are situated, is P120,000,000.00. Its operating expenses amounted to P15,000,000.00, inclusive of the interest expense of P2,000,000.00. How much is the allowable interest expense? a. P1,894,000 c. P1,920,500 b. P1,934,000 d. P1,950,500 34. GCC Corporation, a domestic corporation, owns 20% of the outstanding shares of BTS Corporation, a non-resident foreign corporation (NRFC), since August 1, 2015. On May 1, 2021, it received dividends amounting to P1,000,000 from the said NRFC. On September 1, 2022, GCC Corporation utilized P800,000 for its dividend payments. On January 1, 2023, it utilized the remaining P200,000 for its working capital. How much is tax-exempt dividend, if any? a. P1,000,000 c. P200,000 b. P 800,000 d. None of the choices 35. In 2021, Taprolani Corporation purchased a residential house and lot for P2,300,000. The property was sold to the President of the corporation for P2,500,000. The fair market value per BIR and per Assessor's Office were P3,500,000 and P3,000,000 respectively. How much was fringe benefits tax, if any? a. P1,884,615 c. P538,462 b. P1,615,385 d. None 36. KLM Corporation, a manufacturer, has gross sales of P190,000,000 for CY 2021, its fourth year of operation. Its total assets amounted to P150,000,000, net of the value of the land of P6,000,0000 where its manufacturing plant and business operations are situated. Its cost of sales and allowable operating expenses amounted to P100,000,000 and P89,000,000, respectively. How much is the income tax due? a. P1,800,000 b. P 250,000 c. P200,000 d. None of the choices 37. Using the same data in preceding number and it is the corporation’s fifth year of operation. How much is the income tax due? a. P1,800,000 c. P250,000 b. P 900,000 d. P200,000 38. Mr. Julian Cruz procured a life insurance upon his own life. He designated his estate’s executor as an irrevocable beneficiary. For estate tax purposes, the proceeds of life insurance are: a. included in the gross estate of Mr. Julian Cruz because when the executor of the estate is a beneficiary the proceeds are included in the gross estate regardless of the designation. b. not included in the gross estate of Mr. Julian Cruz because the designation of the beneficiary is irrevocable. c. included in the gross estate of Mr. Julian Cruz because proceeds of life insurance are always subject to estate tax. d. not included in the gross estate because, as a rule, proceeds of life insurance are generally not subject to estate tax. Page 5 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 39. Mr. Rigoberto Collado, a citizen and resident of Puerto Rico, dies during the year. Puerto Rico does not impose transfer taxes on properties of decedent not residing therein. He left the following properties among others: Shares of stock, San Miguel Corporation, Manila House and lot, Puerto Rico Leasehold on a condominium unit, Philippines Contract for public works, Philippines The executor of his estate in Philippines asked you what properties are to be included in his Philippine gross estate. What answer will you give him? a. Include all the properties. b. Include contract for public works only c. Include all properties except shares of stock and house and lot d. Include all properties except house and lot in Puerto Rico. 40. How much discount is granted to senior citizens on his purchase of basic and prime commodities, subject to limitations? a. 20% c. 10% b. 15% d. 5% SITUATIONAL Mr. Pat Tayna, a single and a non-resident alien, died of a heart attack in 2018, leaving the following properties in favor of his heirs: Gross estate within the Philippines (including P8,000,000 family home) P 30,000,000 Gross estate outside of the Philippines P 20,000,000 Funeral expense P 500,000 Judicial and administrative expenses P 2,000,000 Claims against the estate P 5,000,000 Unpaid taxes accrued before death P 300,000 Losses due to robbery P 200,000 Medical expenses P 500,000 41. How much is the taxable gross estate of the Estate of Pat Tayna? a. P50,000,000 c. P35,000,000 b. P45,000,000 d. P30,000,000 42. How much is the deductible ordinary deductions of the Estate of Pat Tayna? a. P8,000,000 c. P4,800,000 b. P5,500,000 d. P3,300,000 43. How much is the deductible special deductions of the Estate of Pat Tayna? a. P8,500,000 c. P500,000 b. P5,000,000 d. None 44. How much is the estate tax due of the Estate of Pat Tayna? a. P2,070,000 c. P1,782,000 b. P2,010,000 d. P1,572,000 SITUATIONAL The following data are taken from the books of a dealer in securities: Selling price, shares held as inventory P3,000,000 Selling price, shares held as investment 2,000,000 Acquisition cost, shares held as inventory 1,000,000 Acquisition cost, shares held as investment 1,500,000 Other income, shares held as inventory 200,000 45. How much is the output tax using 12% rate? a. P360,000 c. P240,000 b. P264,000 d. P220,000 46. How much is the capital gains tax assuming that the shares held as investment are sold not through the local stock exchange? a. P300,000 c. P45,000 b. P 75,000 d. Not subject capital gains tax. Page 6 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 47. How much is the percentage tax on the shares held as investment assuming that the shares are listed and traded in the local stock exchange? a. P12,000 c. P3,060 b. P10,000 d. Not subject percentage tax. 48. How much is the percentage tax on the shares held as investment and are from a closely held corporation and were sold in the secondary offering where the ratio of the shares sold over the outstanding shares is 25%? a. P80,000 c. P20,000 b. P40,000 d. Not subject to percentage tax 49. Which of the following has an option to register under the VAT system? a. Common carriers by land transporting passengers the gross receipts of which exceed P3,000,000 during the year b. VAT-registered seller with mixed transactions as far as his VAT-exempt sales are concerned c. Operator of cockpit the receipts of which do not exceed P3,000,000 during the year d. Seller of VAT-subject services the gross receipts of which exceed P3,000,000 during the year 50. A keeper of garage whose gross receipts for the year exceed P3,000,000 is subject to: a. value-added tax. c. garage sales tax. b. common carrier’s tax. d. franchise tax. 51. As a general rule, proceeds of insurance are not taxable because they only constitute a return of what was lost (return of capital). Which of the following are taxable proceeds? a. Proceeds of life insurance c. Proceeds of property insurance b. Proceeds of accident or health insurance d. Proceeds of crop insurance. 52. Which of the following statements in INCORRECT? a. No uniform method of accounting can be prescribed for all taxpayers. b. Each taxpayer is required by law to make a return on his true income. c. The taxpayer has to adopt accrual method of accounting because it is in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. d. Where purchase or sale of merchandise is an income-producing factor; inventories on hand shall be taken at the beginning and at the end of year. 53. Papable Aljon Lee sold a painting (capital asset) which he purchased in 2018 at a cost of P30,000. He sold the painting to Mamable Tonee Dee, on the following terms: June 1, 2021 down payment P10,000 August 1, 2021 installment due 10,000 October 1, 2021 installment due 20,000 October 1, 2022 installment due 40,000 October 1, 2023 installment due 40,000 For the year 2021, Papable Aljon will report a gross income of: a. P90,000 c. P30,000 b. P45,000 d. P15,000 54. Using the same data in the preceding number, assuming Papable Aljon is a dealer in paintings, how much will he report as gross income for 2021? a. P15,000 c. P45,000 b. P30,000 d. P90,000 55. The results of operation of Yummy Convenient Store, not VAT-registered sole proprietorship, owned by Ms. Alicia, for the first three (3) quarters of 2021 are as follows: Gross income Deductions First quarter P300,000 P150,000 Second quarter 350,000 200,000 Third quarter 250,000 150,000 How much is taxable income for the third quarter assuming Ms. Alicia is married and has five (5) qualified dependent children? a. P400,000 c. P250,000 b. P300,000 d. P100,000 Page 7 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 56. One of the following individuals is not subject to income tax in the Philippines. a. An American engineer who makes the Philippines his residence because of the nature of his work b. A Japanese visiting professor who occasionally teaches at one of the leading universities in the Philippines, and stays here for an aggregate of 185 days c. A Taiwanese singer who performs in one of the hotels in the Philippines for one (1) week, and then leaves after he is through with his performances d. A Filipino residing and working in America who comes to the Philippines to visit his relatives 57. A domestic corporation has the following data for three (3) years: Normal income tax MCIT 2019 P 50,000 P 75,000 2020 P 60,000 P100,000 2021 P100,000 P 60,000 How much is the tax payable in 2021? a. P100,000 c. P35,000 b. P 60,000 d. Zero 58. A VAT-registered seller sold goods to Asian Development Bank. It did not get permission from the BIR to zero-rate the sale. As a consequence of the failure to get the permission, the sale: a. should be exempt from VAT. b. should be subject to 12% VAT. c. should be subject to 0% VAT. d. should not be subject to any business tax. 59. Which of the following is allowed to claim presumptive input tax? a. Processor of canned fruits b. Miller of refined sugar not for his account c. Miller of refined sugar for his own account d. Public works contractor 60. Tax laws, being imposition of burden, are construed: a. strictly against the taxpayer. b. strictly against the government. c. by filing a case before a regular court. d. by strict adherence to opinions of tax expert. 61. On August 11, 2018, an individual taxpayer not engaged in real estate business acquired a parcel of land which would be used as a site for office building for P3,000,000. Unfortunately, the planned office building was not built due to financial problem that hounded the taxpayer. The land was idle up to August 11, 2022. The taxpayer presented a proof to the BIR that the land had not been used in business since its acquisition. Subsequently, the land was sold by the taxpayer for P5,000,000 on September 5, 2022. What was the tax consequence of the sale? a. There was taxable gain of P2,000,000 which would be subject to Section 24 (A). b. The sale would be subject to 6% capital gains tax based on the selling price. c. The sale would be exempt from tax because the property was not used for business. d. The gain of P2,000,000 will be subject to 6% capital gains tax. 62. One of the following is deductible from the gross income even if not business related. a. Rent expense c. Bad debts b. Travel expenses d. Charitable contributions 63. An operator of an illegal horse-betting business, single, has the following data: Receipts from illegal bets P 500,000 Rent of space where bets are received, gross of 5% withholding tax 20,000 Salaries of assistants, gross of creditable withholding tax 100,000 Bribe money to obtain protection from arrest and prosecution 50,000 How much is the income tax due? a. P66,000 b. P26,000 Page 8 of 14 c. P25,000 d. Not subject income tax 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 64. Maris bought from Pretty Corporation ten (10) shares of stock. Sixty (60) days thereafter, the corporation was adjudged bankrupt and its stock as worthless. The loss of Maris to be reported for income tax purposes is classified as: a. a wagering loss. b. non-deductible loss for income tax purposes. c. short-term capital loss. d. casualty loss. 65. Fly Me to the Moon, a resident international carrier, has the following data for the current year: Gross income of P700,000 and expenses of P200,000 from the Philippines; Gross income of P500,000 and expenses of P100,000 from Hongkong. How much is the Philippine income tax payable of the corporation? a. P288,000 c. P30,000 b. P160,000 d. P17,500 66. The imposition of this tax will require payment of corporate income tax even if the result of operation is a net loss. a. Optional corporate income b. Minimum corporate income tax c. Regular corporate income tax d. Improperly accumulated earnings tax 67. The following data are presented to you by the administrator of the Estate of Mr. X: Gross sales P500,000 Cost of sales 200,000 Business expenses 50,000 Distribution of year’s income to the heirs 30,000 How much is the taxable income using optional standard deduction? a. P300,000 c. P180,000 b. P270,000 d. P150,000 68. There is no taxable income until such income is recognized. Taxable income is recognized when the: a. taxpayer fails to include the income in his income tax return. b. income has been actually received in money or its equivalent. c. income has been received, either actually or constructively. d. transaction that is the source of the income is consummated. 69. With the following data, how much is the deductible pension/retirement plan contribution for 2022? Pension/retirement plan contribution (2020) P500,000 Pension/retirement plan contribution (2021) P500,000 Pension/retirement plan contribution (2022) P500,000 The breakdown of the P500,000 per actuarial valuation: Normal cost Past service cost Total a. P500,000 c. P420,000 b. P430,000 d. P400,000 P400,000 100,000 P500,000 70. A system of taxation that places emphasis on direct rather than indirect taxation, with ability to pay as the principal criterion. a. Regressive tax system c. Global tax system b. Progressive tax system d. Schedular tax system - END of EXAMINATION - Page 9 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION TAX Final Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM ANSWERS & SOLUTIONS/CLARIFICATIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 C D C B A A D C C D C B B A A C B B A C B B B D B 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 A B B B C A B D B D D Bonus A B D D D C D B B A D B B 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 D C B B A D C C C B B D B C D B A C B B 3. Services paid in cash for the month (336,000/1.12 Account receivable beginning (560,000/1.12) Add: Sales on account (1,120,000/1,12) Total Less: Accounts receivable, ending (784,000/1.12) Collections Total Tax rate Output tax P 300,000 500,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 700,000 800,000 1,100,000 12% P 132,000 9. The Commissioner or his duly authorized representative shall, subject to rules and regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Finance, upon recommendation of the Commissioner, have the power to lift such order of distraint: Provided, further, That a consolidated report by the Revenue Regional Director may be required by the Commissioner as often as necessary. 10. The last day to appeal to the Court of Tax Appeals is April 15, 2002 which is within two (2) yeas from the date of payment of tax. Claims for refund must be elevated to the CTA before the expiration of the two-year period because the prescriptive period will not be suspended regardless of any supervening event. 11. Similarities among the three inherent powers: 1) They are inherent in the State; 2) They exist independently of the Constitution; 3) They constitute the three methods by which the State interferes with private rights and property; 4) They are legislative in nature and character; 5) Each presupposes an equivalent compensation. 12. All appropriation, revenue or tariff bills authorizing increase of the public debt, bills of application, and private bills shall originate exclusively in the House of Representatives, but the Senate may propose or concur with amendments (Art. VI, Sec. 24). Page 10 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 13. Essential Characteristics of Tax 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) It is an enforced contribution; It is levied pursuant to legislative authority; It is proportionate in character; It is payable in money; It is levied on persons and property within the jurisdiction of the State; It is levied and collected for the purpose of raising revenue to be used for public purpose; 7) It is commonly required to be paid at regular intervals (not all taxes). 16. Gross sales Tax rate Percentage tax P250,000 1% P 2,500 17. BMBE refers to any business entity or enterprise engaged in the production, processing or manufacturing of products or commodities, including agro-processing, trading and services, whose total assets including those arising from loans but exclusive of the land on which the particular business entity's office, plant and equipment are situated, shall not be more than Three Million Pesos (P3,000,000.00). “Services" shall exclude those rendered by any one, who is duly licensed by the government after having passed a government licensure examination, in connection with the exercise of one's profession. 20. RBEs which are categorized as Domestic Market Enterprises (DME) are not entitled to VAT zero-rating on local purchases. Sale of goods or services to a registered domestic market enterprise shall be subject to VAT at 12%. 21. Interest on deficiency from April 16, 2016 to June 30, 2017 (1,000,000 x 20% x 441/365 days)= P241,643.83 22. 20% interest on deficiency from July 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017 (1,000,000 x 20% x 184/365 days) = P100,821.91 23. 20% interest on delinquency from July 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017 (1,491,643.83 x 20% x 184/365 days) = P150,390.39 24. 12% interest on delinquency from January 1, 2018 to February 10, 2018 (1,491,643.83 x 12% x 41/365 days) = P20,106.54 25. Basic tax due (income tax) Add: 25% surcharge for late payment (25% x 1,000,000) Interest on deficiency from April 16, 2016 to June 30, 2017 (1,000,000 x 20% x 441/365 days) Total amount due, June 30, 2017 Add: 20% interest on deficiency from July 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017 (1,000,000 x 20% x 184/365 days) 20% interest on delinquency from July 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017 (1,491,643.83 x 20% x 184/365 days) 12% interest on delinquency from January 1, 2018 to February 10, 2018 (1,491,643.83 x 12% x 41/365 days) Total amount due, February 10, 2018 P1,000,000.00 250,000.00 241,643.83 491,643.83 1,491,643.83 100,821.91 150,390.39 20,106.54 271,318.84 P1,762,962.67 26. Selling price P200,000 Less: Acquisition cost 150,000 Capital gain 50,000 Tax rate 15% Capital gains tax P 7,500 Initial payments are P60,000 (30,000 + 30,000). Initial payments over selling price 60,000/200,000 is 30%. Capital gains tax cannot be paid in installment because initial payments exceed 25% over the selling price. Page 11 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION TAX Final Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM 28. 150,000/200 x 1.50 = P1,125 29-30 Using Reconciliation of Net Income Per Books Against Taxable Income Net income per books Add: Non-Deductible Expenses/Taxable Other Income Provision for bad debts Write-off of inventories lost due to spoilage Bad debts recovery Total Less: A) Non-Taxable Income and Income Subject to Final Tax Dividend income Interest income B) Special/Other Allowable Deductions Accounts written-off Total Net Taxable Income (Loss) 32. Gross sales Less: Cost of sales Gross income Less: Operating expenses (before the additional deduction) Additional deduction from training expenses 1/2 x 3,000,000.00) (lower) 10% x 20,000,000.00 Net taxable income P340,000 80,000 20,000 30,000 470,000 50,000 30,000 50,000 130,000 P340,000 P100,000,000.00 60,000,000.00 40,000,000.00 17,500,000.00 1,500,000.00 2,000,000.00 33. Interest expense before interest arbitrage Less: Interest arbitrage January 1 to June 30, 2020 (300,000.00 x 33% x 6/12) July 1, to December 31, 2020) (300,000.00 x 0% x 6/12) Allowable interest expense 1,500,000.00 19,000,000 P21,000,000.00 P2,000,000.00 49,500.00 0.00 49,500.00 P1,950,500.00 34. The P800,000.00 shall be treated as tax-exempt since it was properly utilized within 2022. On the other hand, the P200,000.00 shall be declared as taxable income for the calendar year 2021, subject to surcharge, interest and penalty, since the utilization in not within the following taxable year, which is in 2022. 36. Gross sales Less: Cost of sales Gross income Less: Allowable deductions Net taxable income Normal/regular corporate income tax (1,000,000 x 25%) Minimum corporate income tax (not yet subject) Tax due (higher) P190,000,000.00 100,000,000.00 90,000,000.00 89,000,000.00 P 1,000,000.00 P 250,000.00 P 250,000.00 37. BONUS Gross sales Less: Cost of sales Gross income Less: Allowable deductions Net taxable income Normal/regular corporate income tax (1,000,000 x 25%) Minimum corporate income tax (90,000,000 x 1%) Tax due (higher) P190,000,000.00 100,000,000.00 90,000,000.00 89,000,000.00 P 1,000,000.00 P 250,000.00 P 900,000.00 P 900,000.00 MCIT rate: 2% - Up to June 30, 2020; 1% - July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2023; 2% - July 1, 2023 Page 12 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM TAX Final Pre-Board Exam 42. 30,000,000/50,000,000 x 5,500,000 = 3,300,000 43. Standard deduction – P500,000 44. Gross estate Less: Ordinary deductions Net estate before special deductions Less: Standard deduction Net taxable estate Tax rate Estate tax due P30,000,000 3,300,000 26,700,000 500,000 26,200,000 6% P 1,572,000 45. Selling price, shares held as inventory Less: Acquisition cost, shares held as inventory Gross income Add: Other income, shares held as inventory Gross receipts Tax rate Output tax P3,000,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 200,000 2,200,000 12% P 264,000 46. Selling price, held as investment Less: Acquisition cost, shares held as investment Capital gain Tax rate Capital gains tax P2,000,000 1,500,000 500,000 15% P 75,000 47. Selling price, held as investment Tax rate Stock transactions tax P2,000,000 .006 P 12,000 48. Repealed under Sec. 6 RA No. 11494 (Bayanihan to Recover as One Act) See Sec. 2 RR No. 23-2020 53. Selling price Less: Cost Capital gain (long-term) Income to be recognized (50%) P120,000 30,000 P 90,000 P 45,000 Initial payments over selling price = 40,000/120,000 = 33% 54. Selling price Less: Cost Ordinary gain P120,000 30,000 P 90,000 Income to be reported in 2021 (90,000/120,000 x 40,000 = 30,000) 55. Gross income Less: Deductions Taxable income this quarter Add: Taxable income, previous quarters (150,000 + 150,000) Taxable income to date 57. Tax due (higher) Less: Unexpired excess MCIT (25,000 + 40,000) Tax payable Page 13 of 14 P250,000 150,000 100,000 300,000 P400,000 P100,000 65,000 P 35,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com TAXATION ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM 63. Gross receipts Less: Rent expense Salaries expense Taxable net income Tax due under Section 24 (A)250,000 130,000 x 20% TAX Final Pre-Board Exam P500,000 20,000 100,000 0 26,000 120,000 P380,000 P 26,000 65. Gross Philippines Billings Rate Tax payable P700,000 2.5% P 17,500 67. Gross sales Less: OSD (40% x 500,000) Taxable net income P500,000 200,000 P300,000 69. Normal cost for 2022 Add: 1/10 x 100,000 (2020) 1/10 x 100,000 (2021) 1/10 x 100,000 (2022) Total P400,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 P430,000 Page 14 of 14 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ReSA - THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY CPA Review Batch 44 Oct 2022 CPALE 25 September 2022 03:00 PM – 06:00 PM ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING and REPORTING FINAL PRE-BOARD EXAMINATION 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. Set A 1. On October 2, 2028, Tamayao, Inc. ordered a custom-built passenger van from a Japanese firm. The purchase order is noncancelable. The purchase price is 1,000,000 yens with delivery and payment to be made on March 31, 2029. On October 2, 2028, Tamayao, Inc. entered into a forward contract to buy 1,000,000 yens on March 31, 2029 for P.57. On March 31, 2029, the custom-built passenger van was delivered. 10/2/28 P .50 .53 Spot rate (yen) Forward rate (yen) 12/31/28 P .56 .58 3/31/29 P .57 .57 The December 31, 2028 profit and loss statement, foreign exchange gain or loss (on hedged item / commitment) amounted to: Fair Value Cash Flow Fair Value Cash Flow Hedge Hedge Hedge Hedge a. P60,000 loss P50,000 loss c. P50,000 loss P 0 b. P 0 P50,000 loss d. P50,000 gain P 0 2. Using the same information in No. 1. compute the December 31, 2028, foreign exchange gain on forward contract amounted to (income statement or equity): Fair Value Cash Flow Fair Value Cash Flow Hedge Hedge Hedge Hedge a. P50,000 I/S P50,000 equity c. P50,000 I/S Not applicable b. P50,000 equity P50,000 I/S d. Not applicable P50,000 equity 3. Certain balance sheet accounts of a foreign subsidiary of Rose Company have been stated in Philippine pesos as follows: Accounts receivable, current Accounts receivable, long-term Prepaid insurance Goodwill Stated Current Rates Historical Rates P 200,000 P 220,000 100,000 110,000 50,000 55,000 80,000 85,000 P 430,000 P 470,000 I. The subsidiary’s functional currency is the local currency unit. What amount should Rose’s balance sheet include for the preceding items? a. P430,000 b. P435,000 c. P440,000 d. P450,000 II. The subsidiary’s functional currency is peso. What total amount Rose’s balance sheet include for the preceding items? a. P430,000 b. P435,000 c. P440,000 d. P450,000 a. b. I – c; II – a I – a; II – d c. d. I – a; II – c None of the above 4. The following are information regarding partnership business: I. A partnership has the following capital balances: Allen, capital Burns, capital Costello, capital P60,000 30,000 90,000 Profits and losses are split as follows: Allen (20%), Burns (30%), and Costello (50%). Costello wants to leave the partnership and is paid P100,000 from the business based on provisions in the articles of partnership. If the partnership uses the bonus method, what is the balance of Burns’s capital account after Costello withdraws? a. P24,000 b. P27,000 c. P33,000 d. P36,000 Page 1 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM II. At year-end, the Cisco partnership AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam has the following capital balances: Montana, capital Rice, capital Craig, capital Taylor, capital P130,000 110,000 80,000 70,000 Profits and losses are split on a 3:3:2:2 basis, respectively. Craig decides to leave the partnership and is paid P90,000 from the business based on the original contractual agreement. If the goodwill method is to be applied, what is the balance of Montana’s capital account after Craig withdraws? a. P133,000 b. P137,500 c. P140,000 d. P145,000 a. b. I – a; II – d I – b; II – c c. d. I – b; II – d None of the above 5. The following are information regarding a partnership undergoing liquidation: I. A local partnership is liquidating and is currently reporting the following capital balances: Angela, capital (50% share of all profits and losses) P 19,000 Woodrow, capital (30%) 18,000 Cassidy, capital (20%) (12,000) Cassidy has indicated that a forthcoming contribution will cover the P12,000 deficit. However, the two remaining partners have asked to receive the P25,000 in cash that is presently available. How much of this money should each of the partners be given? a. Angela, P13,000; Woodrow, P12,000 b. Angela, P11,500; Woodrow, P13,500 c. Angela, P12,000; Woodrow, P13,000 d. Angela, P12,500; Woodrow, P12,500 II. A partnership has the following balance sheet just before the final liquidation is to begin: Cash P26,000 Liabilities P 50,000 Inventory 31,000 Art, capital (40%) 18,000 Other assets 62,000 Raymond, capital (30%) 25,000 Darby, capital (30%) 26,000 Total P119,000 Total P119,000 Liquidation expenses are estimated to be P12,000. The other assets are sold for P40,000. What distribution can be made to the partners? a. P-0- to Art, P1,500 to Raymond, P2,500 to Darby. b. P1,333 to Art, P1,333 to Raymond, P1,334 to Darby. c. P-0- to Art, P1,200 to Raymond, P2,800 to Darby. d. P600 to Art, P1,200 to Raymond, P2,200 to Darby. a. b. I – b; II – b I – c; II – a c. d. I – b; II – a None of the above 6. Components of the December 17, 2028, statement of affairs of Liquo Company, which was undergoing liquidation, included the following: Assets pledged to fully secured creditors, at current fair value…………………………………………………………………………………… Assets pledged to partially secured creditors, at current fair value…………………………………………………………………………………… Free assets, at current fair value…………………………………………………………… Fully secured liabilities…………………………………………………………………………………… Partially secured liabilities………………………………………………………………………… Unsecured liabilities with priority………………………………………………………… Unsecured liabilities without priority…………………………………………………… P150,000 104,000 80,000 60,000 120,000 14,000 224,000 Determine the estimated payment to partially secured liabilities? a. b. P 78,000 P114,400 Page 2 of 28 c. d. P115,333 P115,143 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM 7. Agency NNN paid the final billing for as follows: AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam the construction of a building was computed Final billings: 30% x P10,000,000……………………………………………………… Less: Liquidated damages……………………………………………………………………………… Net cost………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Less: Recoupment of advances…………………………………………………………………… Accounts payable balance……………………………………………………………………………… Less: Withholding tax (10% x P2,990,000) ………………………………… Net amount………………………………………………………………………………… P 3,000,000 10,000 P 2,990,000 450,000 P 2,540,000 299,000 P 2,241,000 The entry to record the final payment of billings would be: a. Accounts payable………………………………………………………………………… 2,540,000 Due to BIR………………………………………………………………………… Cash-disbursing officer……………………………………… b. Accounts payable………………………………………………………………………… 2,540,000 Due to BIR………………………………………………………………………… Cash-MDS, Regular……………………………………………………… c. Accounts payable………………………………………………………………………… 2,241,000 Cash-MDS, Regular …………………………………………………… d. Buildings…………………………………………………………………………………………… 2,241,000 Cash-MDS, Regular …………………………………………………… 299,000 2,241,000 299,000 2,241,000 2,241,000 2,241,000 8. A chemical company manufactures joint products Pep and Vim, and a by-product. Zest. Costs are assigned to the joint products by the market value method, which considers further processing costs in subsequent operations. For allocating joint costs to the by-product, the market value or reversal cost method is used. The total manufacturing costs for 10,000 units were P172,000 during the quarter. Production and cost data follow: Units produced Sales price per unit Further processing cost per unit Selling and administrative expense per unit Operating profit per unit Pep 5,000 P50 10 Vim 4,000 P40 5 Zest 1,000 P 5 2 1 I. The value of Zest to be deducted from the joint costs is: a. P5,000 b. P3,000 c. P2,000 d. Zero II. Compute the gross profit for Pep: a. P 0 b. P70,000 a. b. I – c; II – a I – d; II – d c. P 80,000 c. d. d. P100,000 I – c; II – d None of the above 9. The following are information regarding parent and subsidiary: I. Clark Company had the following transactions with affiliated parties during 2028: • Sales of P60,000 to Dean, with P20,000 gross profit. Dean had P15,000 of this inventory on hand at year-end. Clark owns a 15% interest in Dean and does not exert significant influence. • Purchases of raw materials totaling P240,000 from Kent Corporation, a whollyowned subsidiary. Kent’s gross profit on the sale was P48,000. Clark had P60,000 of this inventory remaining on December 31, 2028. Before eliminating entries, Clark had consolidated current assets of P320,000. What amount should Clark report in its December 31, 2028, consolidated balance sheet for current assets? a. P320,000 b. P317,000 c. P308,000 d. P303,000 II. Par Company owns 60% of Sub Corp.’s outstanding capital stock. On May 1, 2028, Par advanced Sub P70,000 in cash, which was still outstanding at December 31, 2028. What portion of this advance should be eliminated in the preparation of the December 31, 2028 consolidated balance sheet? a. P70,000 b. P42,000 c. P28,000 d. P 0 a. b. I – c; II – a I – d; II – d Page 3 of 28 c. d. I – c; II – d None of the above 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM 10. AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam On December 1, 20x8, a Philippine firm, Aldrin Inc. estimates that at leastExam 5,000 units of inventory will be purchased from a company in Taiwan during January of 20x9 for 500,000 Nt dollars. The transaction is probable, and it is to be denominated in Nt dollar. Sales of the inventory are expected to occur in the six months following the purchase. The company enters into a forward contract to purchase 500,000 Nt dollars on January 31, 20x9 for P1.01. Spot rates and forward rates at the January 31, 20x9, settlement were as follows (pesos per Nt dollar): Forward Rate Spot Rate for 1/31/x9 December 1, 20x8 P 1.03 P 1.01 December 31, 20x8 1.00 .99 January 31, 20x9 .98 The December 31, 20x8, foreign exchange loss on forward contract amounted to (indicate whether income statement or equity section): a. P30,000 separate component of equity/OCI b. P30,000 current earnings c. P10,000 current earnings d. P10,000 separate component of equity/OCI 11. Using the same information in No. 10, the foreign exchange gain or loss on forward contract on January 31, 20x9 amounted to (indicate whether income statement or equity section) a. P15,000 separate component of equity/OCI (debit balance) b. P10,000 separate component of equity/OCI (debit balance) c. P 5,000 separate component of equity/OCI (debit balance) d. P15,000 current earnings 12. A company has identified the following overhead costs and cost drivers for the coming year: Overhead Item Cost Driver Budgeted Cost Budgeted Activity Level Machine Setup Number of setups P 20,000 200 Inspection Number of Inspections P 130,000 6,500 Material Number of Material moves handling P 80,000 8,000 Engineering Engineering Hours P 50,000 1,000 P 280,000 The following information was allocated on three jobs that were completed during the year: Job 101 Job 102 Job 103 Direct materials P 5,000 P12,000 P 8,000 Direct labor P 2,000 P 2,000 P 4,000 Units completed 100 50 200 Number of setups 1 2 4 Number of inspections 20 10 30 Number of material moves 30 10 50 Engineering hours 10 50 10 Budgeted direct labor cost was P100,000 and budgeted direct material cost was P280,000. Compute the cost of each unit of Job 102 using Activity-Based Costing: a. P340 c. P440 b. P392 d. P520 13. 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. Page 4 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam from the main product were P500,000 and Sales revenue and cost of goods sold P400,000 respectively. Compute the gross margin after considering the by-product sales and costs. 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 14. On July 1, 20x4, Andres, Bantug, and Carlos formed a joint operation for the sale of merchandise. Andres was designated as the managing operator. Profits or losses are to be divided as follows: Andres, 50%; Bantug, 25%; and Carlos, 25%. On October 1, 20x4, though the joint operation was still uncompleted, the operators agreed to recognize profit or loss on the operation to date. The cost of inventory on hand was determined at P25,000. The joint operation account has a debit balance of P15,000 before distribution of profit and loss. No separate books is maintained for the joint operation and the operators record in their individual books all operation transactions. The joint operation profit or loss on October 1, 20x4 is: a. P10,000 profit c. P15,000 loss b. P25,000 profit d. No profit or loss. 15. On December 20, 20x8, United Appeal, a voluntary health and welfare organization, received a donation of computer equipment valued at P25,000 from a local computer retailer. The equipment is expected to have a useful life of 3 years. The donor placed no restrictions how long the computer equipment was to be used and United has an accounting policy which does not imply a time restriction on gifts of longlived assets. On United’s statement of activities prepared for the year ended December 31, 20x8, the donation of computer equipment should be reported: a. As an increase in temporary restricted net assets b. Only in the notes to the financial statements c. As an increase in unrestricted net assets d. As either an increase in temporary restricted net assets or as an increase in unrestricted net assets. 16. Falcon Corporation sold equipment to its 80%-owned subsidiary, Rodent Corp., on January 1, 20x4. Falcon sold the equipment for P110,000 when its book value was P85,000 and it had a 5-year remaining useful life with no expected salvage value. Separate balance sheets for Falcon and Rodent included the following equipment and accumulated depreciation amounts on December 31, 20x4: Falcon Rodent Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . P 750,000 P 300,000 Less: Accumulated depreciation . . . . . . ( 200,000) ( 50,000) Equipment-net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . P 550,000 P 250,000 Consolidated amounts for equipment and accumulated depreciation at December 31, 20x4 were respectively, a. P1,025,000 and P245,000 c. P1,050,000 and P245,000 b. P1,025,000 and P250,000 d. P1,050,000 and P250,000 17.On March 1, 20x8, Evan and Helen decide to combine their business and form a partnership. The balance sheets of Evan and Helen on March 1, 20x8 before adjustments show the following: Evan Helen Cash P 9,000 P 3,750 Accounts receivable 18,500 13,500 Inventories 30,000 19,500 Furniture and fixtures (net) 30,000 9,000 Office equipment (net) 11,500 2,750 Prepaid expenses 6,375 3,000 P105,375 P 51,500 Accounts payable P 45,750 P 18,000 Evan, capital 59,625 Helen, capital ________ 33,500 P105,375 P 51,500 Page 5 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam doubtful accounts of their accounts They agreed to provide 3% for receivables and found Helen’s furniture and fixtures to be under-depreciated by P900. If each partner’s share in equity is to be equal to the net assets invested, the capital accounts of Evan and Helen would be: a. P58,170 and P33,095, respectively c. P 59,070 and P32,195, respectively b. P58,320 and P32,495, respectively d. P104,820 and P50,195, respectively 18. The Pinoy Company acquired a foreign subsidiary on August 15, 20x4. Goodwill arising on the acquisition was Nt Dollar 175,000. Consolidated financial statements are prepared at the year end of December 31, 20x4 requiring the translation of all foreign operations' results into the presentation currency of peso. The following rates of exchange have been identified: Rate at August 15, 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.321: P1 Rate at December 31, 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.298: P1 Average rate for the year ended December 31, 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.302: P1 Average rate for the period from August 15 to December 31, 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.292: P1 According to PAS 21 (The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates), at what amount should the goodwill be measured in the consolidated statement of financial position? a. P134,409 c. P134,823 b. P135,449 d. P312,449 19. The Pinay Company acquired The Kanchengjunga Company, a foreign subsidiary, on September 10, 20x4. The fair value of the assets of Kanchengjunga was the same as their carrying amount except for land where the fair value was Nt dollar 50,000 greater than carrying amount. This fair value adjustment has not been recognized in the separate financial statements of Kanchengjunga. Consolidated financial statements are prepared at the year end of December 31, 20x4 requiring the translation of all foreign operations' results into the presentation currency of peso. The following rates of exchange have been identified: Rate at 10 September 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.62: P1 Rate at 31 December 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.56: P1 Average rate for the year ended December 31, 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.60: P1 Average rate for the period from 10 September to December 31, 20x4 Nt Dollar 1.58: P1 According to PAS 21 (The effects of changes in foreign exchange rates), what fair value adjustment is required to the carrying amount of land in the consolidated statement of financial position? a. P30,864 c. P31,250 b. P32,051 d. P31,646 20. The Witley Company has the peso as its functional currency. On October 16, 20x4 Witley ordered some inventory from a foreign supplier and agreed a purchase price of 160,000 yens. The inventory was received on November 15, 20x4. On December 31, 20x4 the inventory remained on hand and the trade payable balance for the inventory purchase remained outstanding. The supplier was paid on January 27, 20x5 and the inventory was sold on January 31, 20x5. The following information about exchange rates is available: October 16, 20x4 P1 = 2.60 yens November 15, 20x4 P1 = 2.50 yens December 31, 20x4 P1 = 2.40 yens January 27, 20x5 P1= 2.25 yens According to PAS 21 (The effect of changes in foreign exchange rates), at what amount should the trade payable balance due to the supplier be presented in the statement of financial position of Witley on December 31, 20x4? a. P61,538 c. P66,667 b. P64,000 d. P71,111 Page 6 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam products, R, S, and T, in a joint process. For 21. Comely Company manufactures three every 10 kilos of raw material input, the output is 5 kilos of R, 3 kilos of S and 2 kilos of T. During August, 50,000 kilos of raw material costing P120,000 were processed and completed, with joint conversion costs of P200,000. Conversion costs shall be allocated to the production on the basis of market values. To make the product salable, however, further processing which does not require additional material was done at the following costs: R, P30,000; S, P20,000 and T, P30,000. Unit selling prices are R, P10; S, P12; and T, P15. The unit cost of Product R is: a. P7.12 c. P10.00 b. P8.00 d. P25.32 22. Kuchen Manufacturing uses backflush costing to account for an electronic meter it makes. During August 2014, the firm produced 16,000 meters of which it sold 15,800. The standard cost for each meter is: Direct material P 20 Conversion costs 44 Total P 64 Assume that the company had no inventory on August 1. The following event took place in August: 1. Purchased P320,000 of direct materials. 2. Incurred P708,000 of conversion costs. 3. Applied P704,000 of conversion costs to Raw and In Process Inventory. 4. Finished 16,000 meters. 5. Sold 15,800 meters for P100 each. Compute the Finished Goods, ending and the amount of Cost of Goods Sold after the adjustment of over-under applied conversion cost: Finished Goods, ending P -012,800 -012,800 a. b. c. d. Cost of Goods Sold as adjusted P 1,015,200 1,011,200 1,024,000 1,015,200 23. Hartwell 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% 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 24. Cobb Company’s current receivables from affiliated companies at December 31, 20x9 are: (1) a P75,000 cash advance to Hill Corporation (Cobb owns 30% of the voting stock of Hill and accounts for the investment by the equity method), (2) a receivable of P260,000 from Vick Corporation for administrative and selling services (Vick is 100% owned by Cobb and included in Cobb’s consolidated financial statements), and (3) a receivable of P200,000 from Ward Corporation for merchandise sales on credit (Ward is 90%-owned unconsolidated subsidiary of Cobb accounted for the equity method). In the current assets section of its December 31, 20x9 consolidated balance sheet, Cobb should report accounts receivable from investees in the amount of: a. b. P180,000 P255,000 Page 7 of 28 c. d. P275,000 P535,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam for KC Company for the month of June: 25. The following information is available Started this month………………………………………………………………… Beginning, WIP (40% complete)…………………………………… Normal spoilage (discrete)…………………………………………… Abnormal Spoilage (discrete)……………………………………… Ending WIP (70% complete) …………………………………………… Transferred –out……………………………………………………………………… Beginning Work-in-Process costs: Materials…………………………………………………………………………… Conversion costs………………………………………………………… Current Costs: (added) Materials…………………………………………………………………………… Conversion costs………………………………………………………… 80,000 7,500 1,100 900 13,000 72,500 P units units units units units units 10,400 13,800 P 120,000 350,000 All materials are added at the start of the production. equivalent unit for materials: FIFO Average FIFO a. P1.50 P1.49 c. P1.49 b. P1.50 P1.50 d. P1.49 Compute the cost per Average P1.50 P1.49 26. Manila Sales Company established a branch in Baguio City early last year to which it shipped merchandise before the branch opening with a billing price of P300,000. During the year, the home office billed the branch a total of P120,000 for additional shipments of merchandise. Some defective merchandise was shipped back by the branch and was given credit for P7,500 on the return. The branch also made purchases of merchandise totaling P72,500 from outside suppliers. At the end of the year, a physical count disclosed a branch ending inventory of P185,000 which included P20,000 of merchandise acquired from outside suppliers. If merchandise shipments from the home office were billed at 20% above cost, what was the total cost of merchandise available for sale, net of returns, at the branch during the year? a. b. P300,000 P343,750 c. d. P412,500 P416,250 Items 27 and 28 are based on the following information: The following information is available for K Co. for June: Started this month 80,000 Beginning WIP (40% complete) 7,500 Normal spoilage (discrete) 1,100 Abnormal spoilage 900 Ending WIP (70% complete) 13,000 Transferred out 72,500 Beginning Work in Process Costs: Material Conversion Current Costs: Material Conversion Units Units Units Units Units Units P 10,400 13,800 P120,000 350,000 All materials are added at the start of production and the inspection point is at the end of the process. 27. What is the cost assigned to ending inventory using FIFO? a. P75,920 c. P56,420 b. P58,994 d. P53,144 28. What is the cost assigned to normal spoilage and how is it classified using weighted average? a. P6,193 allocated between WIP and Transferred Out b. P6,424 assigned to units WIP c. P6,193 assigned to loss account d. P6,424 assigned to units Transferred Out Page 8 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam interest in Shelly Corporation acquired several 29. Parcon Corporation owns an 80% years ago. Shelly Corporation regularly sells merchandise to its parent at 125% of Shelly’s cost. Gross profit data of Parcon and Shelly for the year 20x8 are as follows: Sales Cost of goods sold Gross profit Parcon P1,000,000 800,000 P 200,000 Shelly P 800,000 640,000 P 160,000 During 20x8, Parcon purchased inventory items from Shelly at a transfer price of P400,000. Parcon’s December 31, 20x7 and 20x8 inventories included goods acquired from Shelly of P100,000 and P125,000, respectively. Consolidated cost of goods sold of Parcon Corporation and Subsidiary for 20x8 was: a. P1,024,000 c. P1,052,800 b. P1,045,000 d. P1,056,000 30. Splat Company filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition, and the statement of affairs reflected the following amounts: Estimated Assets Book Value Current Value Assets pledged with fully secured creditors… P 900,000 P 1,110,000 Assets pledged partially secured creditors………… 540,000 360,000 Free assets…………………………………………………………………………………………… 1,260,00 960,000 Liabilities Liabilities with priority……………………………………………………… 210,000 Fully secured creditors…………………………………………………………… 780,000 Partially secured creditors………………………………………………… 600,000 Unsecured creditors……………………………………………………………………… 1,620,000 Assume the assets are converted to cash at their estimated current values. What amount of cash will be available to pay unsecured non-priority claims? a. P720,000 c. P 960,000 b. P840,000 d. P1,080,000 31. Mt. Carmel Hospital, a not profit hospital affiliated with a religious group, reported the following information for the year ended December 31, 20x8: Gross patient service revenue at the hospital’s full established rates……………………………………………………………………………………… Bad debts expenses………………………………………………………………………………………………… Contractual adjustments with third-party payors…………………… Allowance for discounts to hospital employees………………………… P 980,000 10,000 100,000 15,000 On the hospital’s statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 20x8, what amount should be reported as net patient service revenue? a. P865,000 c. P855,000 b. P880,000 d. P955,000 32. Some units of output failed to pass final inspection at the end of the manufacturing process. The production and inspection supervisors determined that the incremental revenue from reworking the units exceeded the cost of rework. The rework of the defective units was authorized, and the following costs were incurred in reworking the units: Materials requisitioned from stores: Direct materials………………………………………………………………… Miscellaneous supplies………………………………………………… Direct labor…………………………………………………………………………………… P 5,000 300 14,000 The manufacturing overhead budget includes an allowance for rework. predetermined manufacturing overhead rate is 150% of direct labor cost. account(s) to be charged and the appropriate charges for the rework cost would a. Work-in-process inventory control for P19,000. b. Work-in-process inventory control for P5,000 and factory overhead control P35,300. c. Factory overhead control for P19,300. d. Factory overhead control for P40,300. Page 9 of 28 The The be: for 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam 33. The Porthos Manufacturing Company has a cycle of 3 days, uses a raw and in process (RIP) account, and charges all conversion costs to Costs of Good Sold. At the end month, all inventories are counted, their conversion cost components are estimated and inventory account balances are adjusted. Raw material cost is back flushed from RIP to Finished Goods. The following information is for June: Beginning balance of RIP account, including P2,000 of conversion cost… Beginning balance of finished goods account, including P3,000 of conversion cost…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Raw materials credit on credit…………………………………………………………………………………………………… Ending RIP inventory per physical count, including P2,500 conversion cost estimate………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Ending finished good inventory per physical count, including P1,000 conversion cost estimate…………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 15,000 23,000 500,000 22,500 16,000 Compute the amount of materials to be backflushed from Finished Goods to Cost of Goods Sold: a. P499,500 c. P498,000 b. P493,000 d. P500,000 34. Aguilar Sweets Factory manufactures a coconut candy, Coco, which is sold for P5.00 a box. The manufacturing process also results in a by-product Soloc. Without further processing, Soloc sells for P1.00 per pack, with further processing, it sells for P3.00 per pack. During the month of April, the total joint manufacturing costs up to the point of separation consisted of the following charges to work-n-process: Raw materials…………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct labor……………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Factory overhead…………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 225,000 100,000 45,000 During the month, the production for the two products was as follows: Coco. 591,000 boxes; Soloc, 45,000 packs. The following additional costs are necessary for further processing to complete Soloc, in order to obtain a selling price of P3.00 per pack, during the month of April: Raw materials………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct labor…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Factory overhead………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 30,000 22,500 7,500 Assuming that the by-product Soloc, is further processed and then transferred to the stockroom at net realizable value with a corresponding reduction of Coco’s manufacturing costs, the journal entry would be: A. By-product inventory – Soloc………………………………………………………… 45,000 Work-in-Process – Coco………………………………………………………………… 45,000 B. By-product inventory – Soloc………………………………………………………… 135,000 Raw materials………………………………………………………………………………………… 30,000 Direct labor…………………………………………………………………………………………… 22,500 Factory overhead………………………………………………………………………………… 7,500 Work-in-Process – Coco………………………………………………………………… 75,000 C. Work-in-Process – Soloc……………………………………………………………………… Work-in-Process – Coco………………………………………………………………… 6,750 D. Work-in-Process – Soloc……………………………………………………………………… Raw materials………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct labor…………………………………………………………………………………………… Factory overhead………………………………………………………………………………… 60,000 6,750 30,000 22,500 7,500 35. Following are situations regarding business combinations: I. On June 1, 20x8, Cline Company paid P800,000 cash for all of the issued and outstanding common stock Renn Corp. The carrying values for Renn’s assets and liabilities on June 1, 20x8 follow: Page 10 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam Cash……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P150,000 Accounts receivable……………………………………………………………………………………………… Capitalized software costs…………………………………………………………………………… Goodwill…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Liabilities…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Net assets……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 180,000 320,000 100,000 (130,000) P 620,000 On June 1, 20x8, Renn’s accounts receivable had a fair value of P140,000. Additionally, Renn’s in-process and development costs was estimated to have a fair value of P200,000. All other items were stated at their fair values. On Cline’s June 1 balance sheet. How much is reported for goodwill? a. P320,000 b. P120,000 c. P80,000 d. P20,000 II. Prior to being united in a business combination, Atkins, Inc. and Waterson Corporation had the following stockholders’ equity figures: Atkins P180,000 90,000 300,000 Common stock, P1 par value Additional paid-in capital Retained earnings Waterson P 45,000 20,000 110,000 Atkins issues 51,000 new shares of its common stock valued at P3 per share for all of the outstanding stock of Waterson. Assume that Atkins acquires Waterson. Immediately afterward, what are consolidated Additional Paid-In Capital and Retained Earnings, respectively? a. P104,000 and P300,000 b. P110,000 and P410,000 a. b. I – b; II – a I – b; II – c c. P192,000 and P300,000 d. P212,000 and P410,000 c. d. I – c; II - d None of the above 36. For Job Order No. 369, Escalera Company incurred the following costs for the manufacture of 200 units of a novelty gadget: Original cost accumulation: Direct materials……………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct labor………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Factory overhead (150% of direct labor)………………………………… Total…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct costs of ten reworked units: Direct materials……………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct labor………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Total…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 13,200 16,000 24,000 P 53,200 P P 2,000 3,200 5,200 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 37. The following are information regarding a non-profit organization: I. On December 30, 20x8, Leigh Museum, a not-for-profit organization received a P7,000,000 donation of Day Company shares with donor-stipulated requirements as follows: • Shares valued at P5,000,000 are to be sold, with the proceeds used to erect a public viewing building. • Shares valued at P2,000,000 are to be retained (invested indefinitely), with the dividends used to support current operations. As a consequence of the receipt of the Day shares, how much should Leigh report as temporarily restricted net assets on its 20x8 statement of financial position (balance sheet)? a. P 0 b. P2,000,000 c. P5,000,000 d. P7,000,000 Page 11 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam seniors performs a volunteer services for II. An organization of high school patients at a nearby nursing home. The nursing home would not otherwise provide these services, such as wheeling patients in the park and reading to them. At the minimum wage rate, these services would amount to P21,320, but their actual value is estimated to be P27,400. In the nursing home’s statement of revenues and expenses, what amount should be reported in public support? a. P 27,400 b. P 21,320 c. P 6,080 d. P 0 a. b. I – b; II – b I – d; II – d c. d. I – c; II – d None of the above Items 38 and 39 are based on the following information: The income statement submitted by the Pampanga Branch to the Home Office for the month of December 2020 is shown below. After effecting the necessary adjustments, the true net income of the Branch was ascertained to be P156,000. Sales ………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 600,000 Cost of sales: Inventory, December 1…………………………………………………… P 80,000 Shipments from Home Office……………………………………… 350,000 Local purchases…………………………………………………………………… 30,000 Total available for sale…………………………………………… P460,000 Inventory, December 31………………………………………………… 100,000 360,000 Gross margin ……………………………………………………………………………… P240,000 Operating expenses ……………………………………………………………… 180,000 Net income P 60,000 The branch inventories were: 12/01/2020 12/31/2020 Merchandise from home office……………………………………… P 70,000 P 84,000 Local purchases………………………………………………………………………… 10,000 16,000 Total ………………………………………………………………………………………………… P 80,000 P100,000 38. The billing price based on cost imposed by the home office to the branch; a. 140% c. 40% b. 100% d. 29% 39. The balance of allowance for overvaluation of branch December 31, 2020 after adjustment. a. P10,000 c. P16,000 b. P24,000 d. None of the above 40. Pasig Garment Company operates a branch in Cabanatuan City. At the end of the year, the Branch account in the books of the home office at Manila shows a balance of P150,000. The following information are ascertained: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. The home office has billed the branch the amount of P37,500 for the merchandise, which was in transit on December 31. A home office accounts receivable for P10,500 was collected by the branch. Said collection was not reported to the home office by the branch. Supplies of P4,500 was returned by the branch to the home office but the home office has not yet reflected in its records the receipt of the supplies. The branch made profit of P10,100 for the month of December but the home office erroneously recorded it as P11,180. The branch has not received the cash in the amount of P25,000 sent by home office on December 31. This was charged to General Expense account. All transactions are presumed to have been properly recorded. What is the balance of the Home Office account on the books of the branch as of December 31, before adjustments? a. P121,920 c. P117,420 b. P123,000 d. P106,920 41. On May 1, RR Products Company ships five (5) of its appliances to SZ Company on consignment. The cost of the appliances shipped is P155 per unit. The consignor paid shipping costs totaling P50. Each unit is to be sold at P250 payable P50 in the month of purchase and P10 per month thereafter. The consignee is entitled to 20% of all amounts collected on consignment sales. Page 12 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam appliances in May and 1 in June. Regular monthly SZ Company was able to sell 3 collections by the consignee, and appropriate cash remittances have been made to the consignor at the end of each month. The profit on consignment is: a. P294 c. P150 b. P160 d. P140 42. The Carly Company owns 75% of The Halley Company. The following figures are from their separate financial statements: Carly: Trade receivables P1,040,000, including P30,000 due from Halley. Halley: Trade receivables P215,000, including P40,000 due from Carly. According to PAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements, what figure should appear for trade receivables in Carly's consolidated statement of financial position? a. P1,215,000 c. P1,255,000 b. P1,225,000 d. P1,185,000 43. The White Company acquired an 80% interest in The Pulley Company when Pulley's equity comprised share capital of P100,000 and retained earnings of P500,000. Pulley's current statement of financial position shows share capital of P100,000, a revaluation reserve of P400,000 and retained earnings of P1,400,000. Under PAS 27 Consolidated and separate financial statements, what figure in respect of Pulley's retained earnings should be included in the consolidated statement of financial position? a. P 720,000 c. P1,040,000 b. P1,440,000 d. P1,520,000 44. The Snipes Company owns 65% of The Genie Company. On the last day of the accounting period Genie sold to Snipes a non-current asset for P200,000. The asset originally cost P500,000 and at the end of the reporting period, its carrying amount in Genie's books was P160,000. The group's consolidated statement of financial position has been drafted without any adjustments in relation to this non-current asset. Under PAS27 Consolidated and separate financial statements, what adjustments should be made to the consolidated statement of financial position figures for non-current assets and retained earnings? Non-current assets Retained earnings a. Increase by P300,000 Increase by P195,000 b. Reduce by P40,000 Reduce by P26,000 c. Reduce by P40,000 Reduce by P40,000 d. Increase by P300,000 Increase by P300,000 45. Wynn, Inc. has a contract to construct a large hotel for P12,000,000. The contract was signed on January 2, 20x4 and it was expected that the hotel would be complete on December 31, 20x7. At the date the contract was signed, Wynn, Inc. anticipated the costs of construction would total P11,000,000. At the end of 20x5 the total cost estimate rose to P11,870,000 and at the end of 20x6 the total cost estimate rose to P12,400,000. Due to certain circumstances, Wynn, Inc. believes there are inherent hazards in the contract beyond the normal, recurring business risks. Wynn, Inc. expects to recover all its costs under the contract. Under these conditions, what amount of loss, if any, should Wynn, Inc. recognize in each of the following years? 20x5 20x6 20x5 20x6 a. P870,000 P400,000 c. P870,000 P530,000 b. P -0P400,000 d. P -0P -046. Wynn, Inc. has a contract to construct a large hotel for P12,000,000. The contract was signed on January 2, 20x4 and it was expected that the hotel would be complete on December 31, 20x7. At the date the contract was signed, Wynn, Inc. anticipated the costs of construction would total P11,000,000. At the end of 20x5 the costs incurred were P3,490,000 and its estimate of total contract costs rose to P11,870,000. During 20x6, the company incurred costs of P4,020,000 and by the end of 20x6 the total cost estimate rose to P12,400,000. Due to certain circumstances, Wynn, Inc. believes there are inherent hazards in the contract beyond the normal, recurring business risks. Wynn, Inc. expects to recover all its costs under the contract. Under these conditions, what amount of revenue should Wynn, Inc. recognize in each of the following years? Page 13 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM 20x5 P3,490,000 P -0- a. b. 20x6 P4,020,000 P 400,000 AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam 20x5 20x6 Exam c. d. P3,528,222 P8,380,000 P3,890,323 P4,890,000 47. An entity purchases plant from a foreign supplier for 3 million baht on January 31, 20x6, when the exchange rate was 2 baht = P1. At the entity’s year-end of March 31, 20x6, the amount has not been paid. The closing rate was 1.5 baht = P1. The entity’s functional currency is the peso. Which of the following statements is correct? a. b. c. d. Cost of plant, P2 million, exchange loss P0.5 million, trade payable P1.5 million. Cost of plant P1.5 million, exchange loss P0.6 million, trade payable P2 million. Cost of plant P1.5 million, exchange loss P0.5 million, trade payable P2 million. Cost of plant P2 million, exchange loss P0.5 million, trade payable P2 million. 48. An entity acquired all the share capital of a foreign entity at a consideration of 9 million baht on June 30, 20x9. The fair value of the net assets of the foreign entity at that date was 6 million baht. The functional currency of the entity is the peso. The financial year-end of the entity is December 31, 20x9. The exchange rates at June 30, 20x9, and December 31, 20x9, were 1.5 baht = P1 and 2 baht = P1 respectively. What figure for goodwill should be included in the financial statements for the year ended December 31, 20x9? a. b. P2 million 3 million baht c. d. P1.5 million P3 million 49. An entity acquired 60% of the share capital of a foreign entity on June 30, 20x2. The fair value of the net assets of the foreign entity at that date was 6 million baht. This value was 1.2 million higher than the carrying amount of the net assets of the foreign entity. The excess was due to the increase in value of non-depreciable land. The functional currency of the entity is the peso. The financial year-end of the entity is December 31, 20x2. The exchange rates at June 30, 20x2, and December 31, 20x2, were .5 baht = P1 and 2 baht = P1, respectively. What figure for the fair value adjustments should be included in the group financial statements for the year ended December 31, 20x2? a. b. P600,000 P800,000 c. d. P2 million P3 million 50. 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. b. 20 million baht 1,200.2 million baht c. d. 80 million baht 4.808 million baht 51. Agency 007 received a request for replenishment of petty cash fund for the following expenses: Office supplies Transportation fares Repair of aircon JRS mail Page 14 of 28 P 500 100 200 160 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam be: The entry for this transaction would a. No entry b. Memorandum entry to the RAOD-MOOE c. Office supplies expense…………………………………………………… Travelling expense………………………………………………………………… Repairs and maintenance…………………………………………………… Other maintenance and operating expenses………… Cash – National Treasury, MDS…………………… d. Office supplies expense……………………………………………………… Travelling expense…………………………………………………………………… Repairs and maintenance……………………………………………………… Other maintenance and operating expenses………… Petty Cash Fund………………………………………………… 52. 500 100 200 160 960 500 100 200 160 960 Agency AAA has the following allotment for year 20x8: Capital Outlay (CO) Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE) Personal Services (PS) Financial Expenses (FE) P 70,000,000 14,000,000 7,000,000 ____140,000 P91,140,000 The entry to record the receipt of allotment from DBM would be: a. b. c. d. e. 53. No entry Memorandum entry/Posting in Registry of Allotments and Obligations National Clearing Account 91,140,000 Appropriations Allotted 91,140,000 Cash-Modified Disb. System 91,140,000 Subsidy from National Government 91,140,000 None of the above On January 1, 2021 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, 2021 entity Z recognized a profit of P400,000. On January 2, 2021 entity Z also declared a dividend of P100,000 for the year 2020. On December 30, 2021 entity Z declared and paid a dividend of P150,000 for the year 2021. At December 31, 2021 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 2021 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 54. In activity-based costing, preliminary cost allocations assign costs to: a. departments. c. products. b. processes. d. activities. 55. Which of the following costing methods of valuation are acceptable in a job order costing system? Actual Standard Actual Predetermined Material Material Labor Overhead Cost Cost Cost Cost a. yes yes no yes b. yes no yes no c. no yes yes yes d. yes yes yes yes Page 15 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam 56. Job order costing and process costing have which of the following characteristics? a. b. c. d. Job Order Costing homogeneous products and large quantities homogeneous products and small quantities heterogeneous products and large quantities heterogeneous products and small quantities Process Costing heterogeneous products and small quantities heterogeneous products and large quantities homogeneous products and small quantities homogeneous products and large quantities 57. A hybrid costing system combines characteristics of a. job order and standard costing systems. b. job order and process costing systems. c. process and standard costing systems. d. job order and normal costing systems. 58. Averaging the total cost of completed beginning inventory and units started and completed over all units transferred out is known as a. strict FIFO. b. modified FIFO. c. weighted average costing. d. normal costing. 59. The primary difference between the FIFO and weighted average methods of process costing is a. in the treatment of beginning Work in Process Inventory. b. in the treatment of current period production costs. c. in the treatment of spoiled units. d. none of the above. 60. Which of the following has sales value? By-products a. no b. yes c. yes d. no Waste no no yes yes 61. Company B acquired the net assets of Company S in exchange for cash. The acquisition price exceeds the fair value of the net assets acquired. How should Company B determine the amounts to be reported for the plant and equipment, and for longterm debt of the acquired Company S? Plant and Equipment Long-Term Debt a. Fair value S’s carrying amount b. Fair value Fair value c. S’s carrying amount Fair value d. S’s carrying amount S’s carrying amount 62. In 2025, Palex sold inventory costing P45,000 to its 100%-owned subsidiary, Salex, for P70,000. By 12/31/25, Salex had resold all this inventory for P100,000. Which of the following accounts would have to be eliminated in consolidation at 12/31/25? Intercompany Sales Intercompany Cost of Sales a. Yes Yes b. No No c. Yes No d. No Yes 63. P Corp. owns 90% of the outstanding common stock of S Company. On December 31, 2024, S sold equipment to P for an amount greater than the equipment’s book value but less than its original cost. The equipment should be reported on the December 31, 2024 consolidated balance sheet at a. P’s original cost less 90% of S’s recorded gain. b. P’s original cost less S’s recorded gain. c. S’s original cost. d. P’s original cost. Page 16 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam 64. Philippine based Corporation X has a number of importing transactions with companies based in UK. Importing activities result in payables. If the settlement currency is the British Pound, which of the following will happen by changes in the direct or indirect exchange rates? Direct Exchange Rate Indirect Exchange Rate Increases Decreases Increases Decreases a. NA NA NA NA b. Loss Gain Gain Loss c. Loss Gain NA NA d. Gain Loss Loss Gain 65. Hedging a forecasted transaction is a a. Cash flow hedge. b. Fair value hedge. c. Net investment hedge. d. e. Undesignated hedge. None of the above 66. FX (foreign currency) forwards are valued using a. The change in the forward rate. b. The change in the spot rate. c. The change in the forward rate or the spot rate, depending on whether the hedge is a fair value hedge or cash flow hedge. d. The change in the intrinsic value. e. None of the above. 67. In accordance with PAS 21 (generally accepted accounting principles), which translation combination is appropriate for a foreign operation whose functional currency is the U.S. dollar? Method Treatment of Translation adjustment a. Temporal Other comprehensive income b. Temporal Gain or loss in net income c. Current rate Other comprehensive income d. Current rate Gain or loss in net income 68. At what rates should the following balance sheet accounts in foreign statements be translated (rather than remeasured) into pesos? Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment Equipment a. Current Current b. Current Average for year c. Historical Current d. Historical Historical 69. Which a. b. c. 70. of the following accounts is not a monetary item? Accounts Receivable d. Accrued liabilities Inventory e. None of the above Accounts payable Which of the following statements is not correct? a. Joint arrangements may be entered into to manage risks involved in a project. b. Joint arrangements may be entered into to provide the parties with access to new technology or new markets. c. Joint arrangements require investors to have equal interests in the joint arrangement. d. The key feature of a joint arrangement is that the parties involved have joint control over the decision making in relation to the joint arrangement. End of Examination Goodluck and GOD BLESS!!! *When GOD measures a man, He puts the tape around the heart instead of the head.* *Until you make peace with who you are, you’ll never be content with what you have.* *Only passions, great passions, can elevate the soul to great things.* *Most of the things worth doing in the world had been declared impossible before they were done.* *The world belongs to the man who is wise enough to change his mind in the presence of facts.* *There are only two things in the world to worry over; the things you can control, and the things you can’t control. Fix the first forget the second.* *No act of kindness, no matter how small is ever wasted. * *One individual plus courage is a majority. * *There is no great and no small to the Soul that makes it all: And where it comes, all things are equal; And it comes everywhere.* ***Ask not for a larger garden, but for a finer seeds*** ***Ask not for a lighter burden, but for a broader shoulder*** ***There are divine things more beautiful than words can tell*** *The only thing that stands between a man and what he wants from life is often merely the will to try it and the faith to believe that it is possible* *In every trial, there’s a treasure waiting to be unearthed* *Never take direction from a crowd for your personal life. And never choose to quit just because somebody disagrees with you* *Opportunities are usually disguised as hardwork, so most people don’t recognize them Page 17 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam ANSWERS & SOLUTIONS/CLARIFICATIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 C A C A C B B C A D A A C A C A C C B C A D A C A 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 D B D B D A D C B B D C A B C D D A B B A C C A C 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 B B C D D D B B A B B A B B A A C A B C 1. (C) Fair value hedge 10/02/2028: Original forward rate (180 days)……………………………………P .53 12/31/2028: Current (remaining) forward rate (90 days)……………… .58 Forex loss per unit.......…………………………………………………………………………………P .05 Multiplied by: Number of foreign currencies……………………………………………… 1,000,000 Foreign exchange loss due to hedged item/commitment……………………… P 50,000 (C) The forward rate generally differs from the spot rate, but as one moves closer to the expiration date (or settlement date), the difference between the spot rate and the forward rate for the remaining period of the contract becomes smaller and smaller so that at the expiration date, the forward rate will have converged with the spot rate. Protecting against an adverse change in the exchange rate between the order date (commitment date) and the transaction date is hedging a firm foreign-currencydenominated commitment. Cash Flow Hedge - Not applicable [No entry yet on October 02, 2028 and December 31, 2028]. 2. (A) Fair value hedge – Income Statement 10/02/2028: Original forward rate (180 days……………………………………P 12/31/2028: Current (remaining) forward rate (90 days……… Forex gain per unit.......…………………………………………………………………………………P Multiplied by: Number of foreign currencies……………………………………………… Foreign exchange gain due to forward contract – I/S……………… P Cash flow hedge - Equity 10/02/2028: Original forward rate (180 days)..……………………………….P 12/31/2028: Current (remaining) forward rate (90 days)………… Forex gain per unit.......………………………………………………………………………………………P Multiplied by: Number of foreign currencies…………………………………………... Foreign exchange gain due to forward contract – OCI (Equity)P Page 18 of 28 .53 .58 .05 1,000,000 50,000 (A) .53 .58 .05 1,000,000 50,000 (A) 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam for the exchange of two currenciesExam at a The forward rate is the rate quoted specified future date. It differs from the spot rate because of the difference in interest rates in the international financial markets. A premium exists on an foreign exchange forward when a party buys or sells forward at more than the spot rate. A discount exists on an foreign exchange forward when a party buys or sells forward at less than the spot rate. For recording purposes, premiums or discounts have no bearing at all meaning there is no need to set-up such account. However, for option contracts wherein the writer assumes the responsibility of incurring a potential loss, the writer charges a fee called a premium. Thus, the premium is the price paid to acquire the option. The forward rate generally differs from the spot rate, but as one moves closer to the expiration date (or settlement date), the difference between the spot rate and the forward rate for the remaining period of the contract becomes smaller and smaller so that at the expiration date, the forward rate will have converged with the spot rate. To determine if a gain or loss on forward contracts occurred during any two dates, always view: (1) the forward rate at the inception date as the buying rate (when buying forward), or the selling rate (if selling forward), and (2) all subsequent forward rates as the opposite rate. Because the forward rate at inception is fixed, merely ask: “Did the opposite rate mover favorably or unfavorably?” An increase in the selling rate is favorable, whereas an increase in the buying rate is unfavorable. It should be noted that on the settlement date, the spot rate will be used since the spot rate on that date is simply the same with the forward rate also on the same date. . 3. (C) I. - a The foreign currency is the functional currency, so a translation method or closing rate method is appropriate. All assets are translated at the current exchange rate of P430,000. II – c Because the peso is the functional currency, a remeasurement (temporal method) is required. All receivables are remeasured at current rates. Assets carried at historical cost, such as prepaid insurance and goodwill, are remeasured at historical rates. 4. (A) I. - a A P10,000 bonus is paid to Costello (P100,000 is paid rather than the P90,000 capital balance). This bonus is deducted from the two remaining partners according to their profit and loss ratio (2:3). A reduction of 60 percent (3/5) is assigned to Burns or a decrease of P6,000 which drops that partner’s capital balance from P30,000 to P24,000. Or, Amount paid…………………………………………………………………………………………………P100,000 Less: Book value of interest of Costello (50%)…… 90,000 Bonus to retiring partners…………………………………………………………P 10,000 Burns, capital: P30,000 - (P10,000 x 3/5)…………………P 24,000 I. - d Craig receives an additional $10,000. Since Craig is assigned 20 percent of all profits and losses, this allocation indicates total goodwill of P50,000. 20% of Goodwill = P10,000 .20 G = P10,000 G = P10,000/.20 G = P50,000 Montana is assigned 30% of all profits and losses and would, therefore, record P15,000 of this goodwill, an entry that raises this partner's capital balance from P130,000 to P145,000. Or, Page 19 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam paid…………………………………………………………………………………………………P 90,000 Amount Less: Book value of interest of Craig (20%)…………… 80,000 Excess………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P 10,000 Divided by…………………………………………………………………………………………………… 20% Goodwill – total implied………………………………………………P 50,000 Montana, capital: P130,000 + (P50,000 x 30%)…………P145,000 5. (C) I. - b Reported balances Potential loss from Cassidy deficit (split 5/8:3/8) Cash distributions Angela P19,000 Woodrow P18,000 Cassidy P(12,000) ( 7,500) P11,500 (4,500) P13,500 12,000 P -0- II. - a Art P18,000 (26,000) P(8,000) Possible insolvency (3:3) 8,000 Payment to Partners Reported balances Possible loss Raymond P25,000 (19,500) P 5,500 ( 4,000) P 1,500 Darby P26,000 (19,500) P 6,500 ( 4,000) P 2,500 Total P69,000 (65,000) P 4,000 -0P 4,000 6. (B) Free Assets: Assets pledged to fully secured liabilities (P150,000 – P60,000)…P 90,000 Free Assets…………………………………………………………………………..……………………………………………………….. 80,000 Total Free Assets…………………………………………..…………………………………………………………………………………P170,000 Less: Unsecured liabilities with priority………………………………………………………….. 14,000 Net Free Assets………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..…………………P156,000 Divided by: Unsecured Liabilities without priority: Partially secured liabilities (P120,000 – P104,000)P16,000 Add: Unsecured liabilities without priority……….……. 224,000 240,000 Expected Recovery % of Unsecured Liabilities: P156,000/P240,000…………………………65% Estimated payment to Partially Secured Creditors: P104,000 + 65%(P16,000)=P114,400 7. (B) 8. (C) I. - c MV of By-product Zest…………………………………………………………………………………………P Less: Selling and administrative expense……………………………………… Operating profit………………………………………………………………………………… Share in Joint Cost per unit………………………………………………………………………P x: Units produced…………………………………………………………………………………………………… Share in joint cost………………………………………………………………………………………………P 5 2 1 2 1,000 2,000 II. - d Hyp. MV Pep: Vim: Jt. Costs 5,000 x (P50-P10) = P200,000 x 50% = P100,000 4,000 x (P40-P 5) = 140,000 P340,000 P170,000* Joint Costs……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P172,000 Less: Joint costs allocated to By-product…………………………………… 2,000 Joint costs to joint products……………………………………………………………………P170,000 Sales of Pep: (P50 x 5,000)………………………………………………………………P 250,000 Less: Cost of Sales: Joint costs…………………………………………………………………………P100,000 Further processing cost………………………………………… 50,000 150,000 Gross profit……………………………………………………………………………… P 100,000 9. (A) I. - c Current Assets before eliminating entries…………………………………P Less: Unrealized profit in ending inventory Upstream sales: P60,000 x P48,000/P240,000………__ Consolidated Current Assets………………………………………………………………………P Page 20 of 28 320,000 12,000 308,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam The relationship between Clark and Dean does not give rise to any consolidation entries, since there is no parent-subsidiary relationship (Clark only owns 15% of Dean) II. - a In a consolidated balance sheet, reciprocal balances, such as receivables and payables, between a parent and a consolidated subsidiary should be eliminated in its entire amount regardless of the portion of the subsidiary’s stock held by the parent. Thus, the entire P70,000 advance should be eliminated in the preparation of the year-end consolidated balance sheet. 10. (D) 12/01/20x8: Original forward rate (2 months)………………………………….P 12/31/20x8: Current (remaining) forward rate (1month)……… . Forex loss per unit.......………………………………………………………………………………. P Multiplied by: Number of foreign currencies…………………………………….. Foreign exchange loss – equity/OCI…………………………………………………………..P 1.01 _.99 .02 500,000 10,000 (D) 11. (A) January 1, 20x9 beginning balance of foreign exchange loss – equity (No. 10)…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P 10,000 Settlement date of forward contract: 12/31/20x8: Current (remaining) forward rate (1 month)P .99 1/31/20x9: Spot rate……………………………………………………………………….. .98 Forex loss per unit………………………………………………………………………………. P .01 Multiplied by: Number of foreign currencies…………….…… 500,000 Foreign exchange loss – equity/OCI……………………….. 5,000 January 31, 20x9 balance – equity/OCI-loss debit balance… P 15,000 (A) 12. (A) Job 102: Direct materials……………………………………………………………………………. Direct labor………………………………………………………………………………….. Overhead: Machine Setup: P20,000/200 = P100 x 2……………P Inspection: P130,000/6,500 = P20 x 10…………………. Material Moves: P80,000/8,000 = P10 x 10…………. Engineering: P50,000/1,000 = P50 x 50…………………… Production/Manufacturing Costs………………………………….. Divided by: Units completed………………………………….. Cost per unit under ABC…………………………………………………… 13. (C) - 2,000 x (P3.00 P 200 200 100 2,500 P P 12,000 2,000 3,000 17,000 50 340 P1.00) = P4,000 14. (A) before net income or loss Joint Operations 15,000 25,000 ending inventory 10,000 net income 15. (C) – Gift of long-lived assets should be reported as unrestricted support if the organization has an accounting policy which does not apply a time restriction on such gifts. 16. (A) Combined equipment amounts Less: gain on sale Consolidated equipment balance Combined Accumulated Depreciation Less: Depreciation on gain Consolidated Accumulated Depreciation Page 21 of 28 P1,050,000 25,000 P1,025,000 P P 250,000 5,000 245,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam 17. (C) Unadjusted capital Add (deduct): adjustments Doubtful accounts (3% of A/R) Understatement of depreciation Adjusted capital Evan P59,625 Helen P33,500 (555) _______ P59,070 (405) (900) P32,195 18. (C) – Nt Dollar 175,000 / Nt Dollar 1.298 = P134,823 Goodwill is translated at the closing (current rate). 19. (B) – Nt 50,000 x P1 / Nt 1.56 = P32,051 PAS 21 par. 47 requires fair value adjustments to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities arising on the acquisition of a foreign operation to be treated as assets and liabilities of the foreign operation. Therefore, they are translated at the closing rate of exchange. 20. (C) – 160,000 yens x P1 / 2.40 yens = P66,667 PAS 21 par. 23 (a) requires the foreign currency monetary items, such as trade payables, of an entity to be retranslated at the closing rate at the end of a reporting period. 21. (A) Materials Product R S T Unit Produced 25,000* 15,000 10,000 50,000 *50,000 x 5/10 Ratio 5/10 3/10 2/10 Conversion Costs Product Unit Produced R S T 25,000* 15,000 10,000 50,000 Total Cost Product R S T Materials Costs P 60,000 36,000 24,000 P120,000 22. (D) Raw and In Process 320,000 320,000 704,000 Actual Conversion Cost 1,024,000 708,000 704,000 Materials Costs P 60,000 36,000 24,000 P120,000 Final SP P10 12 15 Total Ult. MV P250,000 180,000 150,000 FPC Conv. Costs P30,000 20,000 30,000 P88,000 Finished Goods FPC HyMV/NRV % P30,000 P220,000 40% 20,000 160,000 40% 30,000 120,000 40% P500,000 Total Costs P178,000 Units Prod. 25,000 Conv. Costs P88,000 Unit Cost P7.12 Cost of Goods Sold 320,000 1,011,200 4,000 1,011,200 1,015,200 * 12,800 4,000 4,000 Applied Conversion Cost 704,000 Unit Cost : P1,024,000 / 16,000 = P64 * P64 x (16,000 – 15,800) = P12,800 704,000 23. (A) – under the reciprocal method, simultaneous equations are developed to determine the total costs of each service department, taking into account the interactive effect of other service departments providing service to other departments. For maintenance, the cost is P18,700 plus 10% of the utilities cost, 40% of this will be applied to A and 40% to B. The 20% that has already been assigned to the utilities department is reflected in the set of simultaneous equations. Page 22 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam 24. (C) Consolidated financial statements should not include intercompany payables and receivables. Therefore, the P260,000 receivable from Vick Corp. will be eliminated during the consolidation procedures. The P75,000 advances to Hill is not a subsidiary of Cobb. Ward Corp. is an unconsolidated subsidiary, and so the P200,000 receivable from Ward will also be included in Cobb’s balance sheet. 25. (A) In process, beginning…7,500 Started in Process………80,000 87,500 FIFO IP, beg., F and T Started, F and T IP, end NL AL Actual 7,500 65,000 13,000 1,100 900 87,500 WD 0 100% 100% 100% 100% EP 0 65,000 13,000 1,100 900 80,000 Average F and T IP, end NL AL Actual 72,500 13,000 1,100 900 87,500 WD 100% 100% 100% 100% EP 72,500 13,000 1,100 900 87,500 FIFO: P120,000 / 80,000 = P1.50 AVERAGE : (P120,000 + P10,400) / 87,500 = P1.49 26. (D) Merchandise: From HO Available for Sale, at cost (P300,000 +P120,000 – P7,500)/1.2………………………………………………P 343,750 Purchases from Outsiders, at cost…………………………………………………………… 72,500 Merchandise available for sale at cost (net of returns)… P 416,250 The requirement of the problem is vague, but since there is no other answer available, cost of goods available for sale is assumed to be at cost. 27. (B) IP, beginning Started in Process Actual 7,500 80,000 87,500 FIFO IP, beginning Started, Fin. and Transf IP, ending NL AL Cost per EUP Actual 7,500 65,000 13,000 1,100 ___900 87,500 WD 0 100% 100% 100% 100% EUP- M 0 65,000 13,000 1,100 ___900 80,000 P120,000 80,000 P1.50 WD 60% 100% 70% 100% 100% EUP-CC 4,500 65,000 9,100 1,100 ___900 80,600 P350,000 80,600 P4.34 Cost of IP, ending: CPD:………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P -0CTD: (Current) Materials: 13,000 x P1.50……………………………………………………………………………………… 19,500 Conversion cost: 9,100 x P4.34………………………………………………………………………… 39,494 P 58,994 28. (D) Actual IP, beginning 7,500 Started in Process 80,000 87,500 FIFO Actual WD EUP- M WD EUP-CC Finished and Transferred 72,500 100% 72,500 100% 72,500 IP, ending 13,000 100% 13,000 70% 9,100 NL 1,100 100% 1,100 100% 1,100 AL ___900 100% ___900 100% ___900 87,500 87,500 83,600 Cost per EUP (P10,400 + P120,000) (P13,800+P350,000) 87,500 83,600 = P1.49 = P4.35 Page 23 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam x P1.49) + (1,100 x P4.35) Cost of NL Units: (1,100 x P0) + (1,100 = P6,424 assigned to units transferred out Note: No NL lost units allocated to EI since it did not pass through the inspection point (which happens at the end of the production) 29. (B) Consolidated Cost of Sales: Cost of Sales before consolidation: Parcon……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..P 800,000 Shelly………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 640,000 Combined Cost of Sales…………………………………………………………………………………………………..P1,440,000 Less: Intercompany Cost of Sales (or Purch) to be eliminated… 400,000 Eliminating entry for 100% RPBI of P** (EI of 20x7)……………. 20,000 Add: Eliminating entry for 100% UPEI of P*** (EI of 20x8)…………. 25,000 Consolidated Cost of Sales………………………………………………………………………………………..P 1,045,000 Further, the additional eliminating entries are as follows: (Cost Method) **100% RPBI of P: Retained Earnings – P, beginning (Cost Model)/ Investment in S Company(Equity Method)…………………………………16,000 Retained Earnings – S, beginning………………………………………… 4,000 Cost of Sales (Beginning Inventory in Income Statement)… 20,000 ***100% UPEI of P: Cost of Sales (Ending Inventory in Income Statement) 25,000 Inventory (Ending Inventory in Balance Sheet)…………………… 25,000 30. (D) – [(P1,110,000 – P780,000) + P960,000] – P210,000 = P1,080,000 31. (A) Gross patient service revenue………………………………………………………………………..P 980,000 Less: Contractual adjustments………………………………………………………………………. 100,000 Allowance for discounts to hospital employee……………. 15,000 Net Patient Service Revenue…………………………………………………………………………..P 865,000 Bad debts expense is classified as expenses. (refer to AFAR-19 page 9) 32. (D) Materials: P5,000 + P300……………………………………………………………………………………P 5,300 Direct labor……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 14,000 Applied factory overhead (150% x P14,000)…………………………………… 21,000 P 40,300 Since, the allowance for rework was included in the manufacturing overhead budget, therefore, the rework cost should be charged to factory overhead control. 33. (C) Raw and In Process 13,000 500,000 493,000 20,000 Finished Goods 20,000 493,000 498,000 Cost of Goods Sold 498,000 15,000 34. (B) Incidentally, the entry to record the transactions related to by-product would be as follows: Share in Joint Costs (corresponding reduction in Coco, main product as stated in the problem) Work in Process – Soloc (by-product)……………… Work in Process – Coco (main product)… MV of by-product (P3 x 45,000)… Less: FPC of by-product (P30,000 + P22,500 + P7,500)… Net Revenue – reduction in Coco’s costs… Page 24 of 28 75,000 75,000 P 135,000 P 60,000 75,000 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam Further Processing Costs: Work in Process – Soloc (by-product)……………………………… Raw materials……………………………………………………………………… Direct labor or Payroll…………………………………………… Factory Overhead – applied…………………………………… Transferred to Warehouse/Stockroom: By-product Inventory – Soloc………………………………………………… Work in Process – Soloc………………………………………… 60,000 30,000 22,500 7,500 135,000 135,000 Or, alternatively the following compound entry would be made: By-product Inventory – Soloc……………………………………………………………………………… Raw Materials…………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Direct labor or Payroll………………………………………………………………………………… Factory Overhead – applied………………………………………………………………………… Work in Process – Coco…………………………………………………………………………………… 135,000 30,000 22,500 7,500 7,500 35. (B) I. - b Consideration transferred (fair value)……………………………………… P800,000 Less: Fair value of net identifiable assets acquired: Cash……………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P150,000 Accounts receivable……………………………………………………………………… 140,000 Software…………………………………………………………………………………………………… 320,000 In-process R&D…………………………………………………………………………………… 200,000 Liabilities…………………………………………………………………………………………… (130,000) 680,000 Goodwill……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P120,000 The application of recognition measurements in business combination means that an acquirer must, in recognizing separately the acquirer’s intangible assets, recognize intangible assets that the acquiree has not recognized in its records, such as in-process research and development that cannot be recognize under PAS 38 as internally generated assets. As noted in par 34, recognition by an acquirer of an acquiree’s in-process research and development project only depends whether the project meets the definition of an intangible asset. It can be seen that intangible assets in a business combination will be able, and in fact are required, to recognize intangible assets that are not separately recognizable when acquired by other means. The costs on individual assets acquired are measured but reference to the fair value of those assets. Therefore, In-Process Research and Development is capitalized as an asset of the combination and reported as intangible assets with indefinite lives subject to impairment reviews. II. - c Atkins records new shares at fair value Value of shares issued (51,000 × P3) Par value of shares issued (51,000 × P1) Additional paid-in capital (new shares) Additional paid-in capital (existing shares) Consolidated additional paid-in capital P153,000 51,000 P102,000 90,000 P192,000 At the date of acquisition, the parent makes no change to retained earnings. 36. (D) Original costs charged to Work-in-Process Add: Rework Costs Direct Materials Direct Labor Applied Overhead (150% of P3,200) Total Costs of Job No. 369 Divided by: Good Units P 53,200 P 2,000 3,200 4,800 10,000 P 63,200 _____200 P 316 37. (C) I. - c The P5,000,000 are considered temporary restricted since it has a purpose which have not yet been fulfilled. Page 25 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam to be retained (meaning to be held in The P2,000,000 principal which had perpetuity – permanent) is classified as permanently restricted, while the dividends is classified as temporary restricted because of purpose restriction, but to no avail, amount is not given. II. - d These services do not meet the criteria for donated services that are recognized. 38.(A) True Branch Net Income ………………………………………………………………… Less: Branch Net Income as reported (by the Branch) ………………… Overvaluation of Cost of goods sold ……………………………………………… Less: Cost of goods sold from home office at billed price: Inventory, December 1 ……………………………………… P 70,000 Shipments from home office ………………………………. 350,000 Cost of goods from home office available for sale P420,000 Less: Inventory, December 31 ……………………………… 84,000 Cost of goods sold from home office, at cost ………………………………… P156,000 60,000 P 96,000 336,000 P240,000 Billed Price: (P336,000/P240,000) ……………………………………… 140% 39.(B) Allowance for overvaluation after adjustment: P84,000 x 40/140 ………………………………………………………… 40.(C)- use T-accounts for your comfortability, Home Office Books (Branch CurrentDr. balance) Unadjusted balance P150,000 Add (deduct) adjustments: In transit HO A/R collected by br. 10,500 Supplies returned ( 4,500) Error in recording Br. NI ( 1,080) Cash sent to branch to General Expense by HO 25,000 Adjusted balance P 179,920 P 24,000 Branch Books (Home Office Current – Cr. balance) P117,420 37,500 25,000 P 179,920 41. (D) Charges Related to Total Charges (5) Consignor’s charges: Cost Freight Consignee’s charges: Commission Total Sales price (4 units x P250/unit) Profit on Consignment P 775 50 200 P1,025 Consignment Sales (4) P Inventory on Consignment (1) 620 40 P 155 10 P _ 200 860 1,000 ____ P165 P 140 42. (D) - refer to PAS 27 par. 20-21. Carly’s trade receivables……………………………………………………………….P1,040,000 Halley’s trade receivables…………………………………………………………… 215,000 Total………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… P1,255,000 Less: Intercompany receivable (due from Halley)… 30,000 Intercompany receivable (due from Carly)…… 40,000 Consolidated trade receivables………………………………………… P1,185,000 43. (A) – refer to PAS 27 par. 26. This is the parent company's share of the post-acquisition retained earnings of the subsidiary. This is determined by deducting (i) the parent company's share of the retained earnings of the subsidiary at the date of acquisition from (ii) the parent company's share of the retained earnings of the subsidiary at the end of the current reporting period. Page 26 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam Pulley’s retained earnings, date of acquisition………………… P 500,000 Less: Pulley’s retained earnings, end of the current 1,400,000 P 900,000 X: Controlling interest %...................... _ 80% Pulley’s RE included in the consolidated SFP P 720,000 44. (B) Upstream sales: Selling price of non-current asset…………………………………………………….P 200,000 Less: Book/carrying value, date of sale……………………………………… 160,000 Gain on intercompany sale …………………………………………………………………… P 40,000 Incidentally, the eliminating entry (assuming books are already closed) would be as follows: Retained earnings – Parent (65% x P40,000)…………………… ………………26,000 Non-controlling interest (35% x P40,000)………………………………………… 14,000 Non-current asset………………………………………. 40,000 PAS 27 pars. 20-21 require the profit on intragroup assets to be eliminated in full. Only the group share of the profits of the subsidiary are taken to group retained earnings. This is because the subsidiary sold the asset to the parent. This gain is not realized from a group perspective per PAS 27 par. 21 and must be removed in full. It is then allocated between the shareholders of the subsidiary, in the form of retained earnings (group share of the gain) and the non-controlling interest. 45. (B) 20x5: P12,000,000 > P11,870,000, No loss; 20x6: P12,000,000 – P12,400,000 = P400,000 loss. 46. (A)- revenue recognized to the extent of costs incurred 47. (C) Date of purchase: 3 million baht / 2 baht per peso…………………P 1.5 million Balance sheet date: 3 million baht / 1.5 baht per peso……… 2.0 million Exchange loss……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P 0.5 million 48. (C) Consideration Transferred…………………………………………………………………………………… Less: Fair value of net assets acquired……………………………………………… Goodwill………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Divided by: CURRENT RATE on the balance sheet for purposes of translation on the date of acquisition.……………………………………………………………………………………… Goodwill in the Consolidated Balance Sheet (date of Acquisition)…………………………………………………………………………………………………………P 9.0 million 6.0 million 3.0 million 2.0 baht per peso 1.5 million Examinees may be misled that since the functional currency is peso, the temporal method (applied only in case of subsequent to date of acquisition) should then be applied wherein goodwill or any fair value adjustments is considered as a nonmonetary asset carried at historical cost be remeasured (or translated) using historical rate (which in this problem is 1.5 baht = P1). But the problem do not fall under this category – the temporal method, instead it is a classical example of a goodwill and fair value adjustments arising from acquisition of subsidiaries. Goodwill arising from the Acquisition of Subsidiaries (Date of Acquisition) When a company acquires a controlling interest in another company, the excess of the purchase price over the acquirer’s interest in the fair value of the identifiable net assets of the acquired company is recognized as goodwill on consolidation. In the context of a foreign company, the issue arises as to whether goodwill is an asset of the acquired company or an asset in the acquirer’s books. If it is an asset of the acquired subsidiary, the goodwill is a foreign asset which should be translated in the same manner as any other asset of the acquired subsidiary, which may give rise to a translation difference. However, if it is treated as an asset in the acquirer’s books, there is no need for translation. Page 27 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ADVANCED FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING & REPORTING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 25 September 2022 03:00 PM to 06:00 PM AFAR Final Pre-Board Exam Exam Pas 21 par. 47 states that: “Any goodwill arising on the acquisition of a foreign operation and any fair value adjustments to the carrying amount of assets and liabilities arising on the acquisition of that foreign operation shall be treated as assets and liabilities of the foreign operations. Thus they shall be expressed in the functional currency of the foreign operation and shall be translated at the closing rate…” Subsequent to date of acquisition, accordingly goodwill has to be measured in the functional currency of the foreign operation. If the functional currency of the foreign operation is the local currency, the goodwill on acquisition is to be translated at the closing rate. On the other hand, if the functional currency of the foreign operation is the parent’s currency (or the presentation currency), goodwill on acquisition is treated as a non-monetary asset and remeasured at the exchange rate of the acquisition of the foreign operation. 49. (A) Allocated Excess arising from consolidation…………………………… 1.2 million baht Divided by: CURRENT RATE on the balance sheet for purposes of translation the date of acquisition….…………………………………………………………………………… 2.0 baht per peso Allocated Excess (over/under valuation)………………………………………P600,000 Refer to No. 48 for further discussion of using closing/current rate on the acquisition of a foreign operation resulting in fair value adjustments. Again, the same with No. 48, the functional currency of peso is somewhat misleading; it does not refer to the use of temporal method on the date of acquisition. 50. (C) – 20 million x 240.4/60.4 = 80 million 51. (B) 52. (B) 53. (C) Dividends declared in 2021 (P100,000 + P150,000)…………………………………P 250,000 X: ownership percentage…………………………………………………………………………………………………… 30% Dividend income…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………P 75,000 Page 28 of 28 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com ReSA - THE REVIEW SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTANCY CPA Review Batch 44 Oct 2022 CPALE 24 September 2022 11:45 AM - 02:45 PM AUDITING FINAL PRE-BOARD EXAMINATION 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. 1. A number of factors influence the sample size for a substantive test of details of account balance. All other factors being equal, which of the following would lead to a larger sample size? a. Greater reliance on internal control. b. Greater reliance on analytical procedures. c. Smaller expected frequency of errors. d. Smaller measure of tolerable misstatement 2. Eli CPA, has been asked to audit and report on the statement of financial position of Jane Co., but not on the statement of comprehensive income, changes on equity, or cash flows. This audit will not be performed in conjunction with audit of the complete set of financial statements. Under these circumstances, Eli may: a. Not accept the engagement because it would constitute a violation of the profession’s ethical standards. b. Not accept the engagement because it would be tantamount to rendering a piecemeal opinion. c. Accept the engagement because such engagements merely involve special considerations in the application of PSA. d. Accept the engagement but should disclaim an opinion because the complete set of financial statements was not audited. 3. Which of the following circumstances most likely would cause an auditor to suspect that there are material misstatements in an entity’s financial statements? a. The entity’s management strictly enforces its integrity and ethical value. b. Monthly bank reconciliation ordinarily includes several outstanding checks. c. Management outsources the internal audit function to another CPA firm. d. The auditor identifies an inappropriate valuation method that is widely applied by the entity. 4. Which of the following auditing procedures most likely would assist an auditor in identifying related party transactions? a. Inspecting correspondence with lawyers for evidence of unreported contingent liabilities. b. Vouching accounting records for recurring transactions recorded just after the balance sheet date. c. Reviewing confirmations of loans receivable and payable for indications of guarantees. d. Performing analytical procedures for indications of possible financial difficulties. 5. In assessing control risk for purchases, an auditor vouches a sample of entries in the voucher register to the supporting documents. Which assertion would this test of controls most likely support? a. Completeness b. Occurrence c. Allocation and valuation d. Rights and obligations 6. An auditor wishes to test the completeness assertion for sales. Which of the following audit tests would most likely accomplish this objective? a. Select a sample of shipments occurring during the year and trace each one to inclusion in the sales journal. b. Compare accounts receivable turnover (net credit sales/average gross receivables) in the current year to that achieved in the prior year. c. Use common size analysis to compare recorded sales to sales recorded by other companies in the same industry. d. Select large individual sales recorded during the year and review supporting documentation. Page 1 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 7. Which of the following is not true regarding fraud risk factors? a. They include incentives/pressures, opportunity, and rationalization. b. Lack of observation of the three fraud risk factors implies that there is no fraud risk. c. The existence of all three fraud risk factors is not an absolute indication that fraud has occurred. d. Fraud risk factors are often present in circumstances where fraud has occurred. 8. Under which of the following circumstances would a disclaimer of opinion not be appropriate? a. The auditor is unable to determine the amounts associated with an employee fraud scheme. b. Management does not provide reasonable justification for a change in accounting principle. c. The client refuses to permit the auditor to confirm certain accounts receivable or apply alternative procedures to verify their balances. d. The chief executive officer is unwilling to sign the management representation letter. 9. Which of the following is not an example of the application of professional skepticism? a. Design additional auditing procedures to obtain more reliable evidence in support of a particular financial statement assertion. b. Obtaining corroboration of management’s explanations through consultation with a specialist. c. Inquiring or prior year engagement personnel regarding their assessment of management’s honesty and integrity. d. Using third-party confirmations to provide support for management’s representations. 10. An auditor suspects that certain client employees are ordering merchandise themselves over the internet without recording the purchase or receipt of merchandise. When vendors’ invoices arrive, one of the employees approves invoices for payment. After the invoices are paid, the employee destroys invoices and the related vouchers. In gathering evidence regarding the fraud, auditor most likely would select items for testing from the file of all: a. Cash disbursements b. Approved vouchers c. Receiving reports d. Vendors’ invoices for the the the the 11. An auditor is confirming accounts receivable using positive confirmation. The auditor decides to leave the accounts receivable amount blank rather than stating the amount owed. The auditor should be aware that the blank form may be less efficient because: a. Subsequent cash receipts need to be verified. b. Statistical sampling may not be used. c. A higher assessed level of detection risk is required. d. More nonresponses are likely to occur. 12. In statistical sampling methods used in substantive testing, an auditor most likely would stratify a population into meaningful groups if: a. Probability-proportional-to-size (PPS) sampling is used. b. The population has highly variable recorded amounts. c. The auditor’s estimated tolerable misstatement is extremely small. d. The standard deviation of recorded amounts is relatively small. 13. In determining whether transactions have been recorded, the direction of the audit testing should be from the: a. General ledger balances. b. Adjusted trial balances. c. Original source documents. d. General journal entries. Page 2 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 14. Before accepting an engagement to report on summary of financial statements, the auditor shall perform the following, except: a. Determine whether the applied criteria are acceptable. b. Obtain the agreement from management that it acknowledges and understand its responsibility c. Evaluate whether the summary financial statements adequately disclose their summarized nature and identify the audited financial statements. d. Agree with management the form of opinion to be expressed on the summary financial statements. 15. IT specific controls include IT general controls and IT application controls. Which of the following is an IT application controls? a. Controls over interfaces, integrations, and e-commerce. b. Controls over data center and network operations c. System software acquisition, change and maintenance controls. d. Access security controls 16. When financial statements contain a departure from PFRS because, due to unusual circumstances, the statements would otherwise be misleading, the auditor should express an opinion that is: a. Unmodified. b. Qualified. c. Adverse. d. Qualified or adverse, depending on pervasiveness. 17. Which of the following types of audit evidence is the most persuasive? a. Prenumbered client purchase order forms. b. Client work sheets supporting cost allocations. c. Bank statements obtained from the client. d. Client representation letter. 18. An auditor’s letter issued on significant deficiencies relating to internal control observed during a financial statement audit should: a. Include a brief description of the tests of controls performed in searching for significant deficiencies and material weaknesses. b. Indicate that the significant deficiencies should be disclosed in the annual report to the entity’s shareholders. c. Include a paragraph describing management’s assessment concerning the effectiveness of internal control. d. Indicate that the audit’s purpose was to report on the financial statements and not to provide an opinion on internal control. 19. During the audit of a new client, the auditor determined that management had given illegal bribes to City officials during the year under audit and for several prior years. The auditor notified the client’s board of this act of noncompliance with laws and regulations, but the board decided to take no action because the amounts involved were immaterial to the financial statements. Under these circumstances, the auditor should: a. Add an explanatory paragraph emphasizing that certain matters, while not affecting the unmodified opinion, require disclosure. b. Report the illegal bribes to the City official at least one level above those persons who received the bribes. c. Consider withdrawing from the audit engagement and disassociating from future relationships with the client. d. Issue and “except for” qualified opinion or an adverse opinion with a separate paragraph that explains the circumstances. 20. A CPA’s report on agreed-upon procedures relating to management’s assertion about an entity’s compliance with specified requirements should contain: a. A statement of limitations on the use of the report. b. An opinion about whether management’s assertions is fairly stated. c. Negative assurance that control risk has not been assessed. d. An acknowledgement of responsibility for the sufficiency of the procedures. Page 3 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 21. Which of the following statements is not correct about materiality? a. The concept of materiality recognizes that some matters are important for fair presentation of financial statements in conformity with PFRS, while other mattes are not important. b. An auditor considers materiality for the financial statements as a whole in terms of the largest aggregate level of misstatements that could be material to any one of the financial statements. c. Materiality judgments are made in light of surrounding circumstances and necessarily involve both quantitative and qualitative judgments. d. An auditor’s consideration of materiality is influenced by the auditor’s perception of the needs of a reasonable person who will rely on the financial statements. 22. After performing risk assessment procedures, an auditor decided not to perform tests of controls. The auditor most likely decided that: a. The available evidence obtained through tests of controls would not support an increased level of control risk. b. A reduction in the assessed level of control risk is justified for certain financial statement assertions. c. It would be inefficient to perform tests of controls that would result in a reduction in planned substantive tests. d. The assessed level of inherent risk exceeded the assessed level of control risk. 23. To gain assurance that all inventory items in a client’s inventory listing schedule are valid, an auditor most likely would trace: a. Inventory tags noted during the auditor’s observation to items listed in the inventory-listing schedule. b. Inventory tags noted during the auditor’s observation to items listed in receiving report and vendors’ invoices. c. Items listed in the inventory-listing schedule to inventory tags and auditor’s recorded count sheets. d. Items listed in receiving reports and vendor’s invoices to the inventory-listing schedule. 24. Which of the following would an auditor least likely consider with respect to fair values? a. Segregation of duties between those committing the entity to certain transactions and those responsible for undertaking the valuations related to those transactions. b. The effect on fair value measurement and disclosures of information available subsequent to the audit. c. The role of information technology in determining fair value measurements and disclosures. d. Whether the valuation methods used are appropriate in relation to the industry in which the entity operates. 25. An auditor finds several errors in the financial statements that the client prefers not to correct. The auditor determines that the errors are not material in the aggregate. Which of the following actions by the auditor is most appropriate? a. Document the errors in the summary of uncorrected errors and document the conclusion that the errors do not cause the financial statements to be misstated. b. Document the conclusion that the errors do not cause the financial statements to be misstated, but do not summarize uncorrected errors in the working papers. c. Summarize the uncorrected errors in the working papers, but do not document whether the errors cause the financial statements to be misstated. d. Do not summarize the uncorrected errors in the working papers, and do not document a conclusion about whether the uncorrected errors cause the financial statements to be misstated. 26. Which of the following matters would an auditor most likely include in a management representation letter? a. Communications with those charged with governance concerning weakness in internal control. b. The reasonableness of significant assumptions used in making accounting estimates. c. Plans to acquire or merge with other entities in the subsequent year. d. Management’s acknowledgement of its responsibilities for the detection of employee fraud. Page 4 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 27. CJ, CPA, was engaged by a group of royalty recipients to apply agreed-upon procedures to financial data supplied by Flong Co. regarding Flong’s written assertion about its compliance with contractual requirements to pay royalties. CJ’s report on these agreed-upon procedures should contain a(an): a. Disclaimer of opinion about the fair presentation of Flong’s financial statements. b. List of the procedures performed (or reference thereto) and CJ’s findings. c. Opinion about the effectiveness of Flong’s internal control activities concerning royalty payments. d. Acknowledgement that the sufficiency of the procedures is solely CJ’s responsibility. 28. Financial statements compiled by an accountant should be accompanied by a report stating that: a. The scope of the accountant’s procedures has not been restricted in testing the financial information that is the representation of management. b. The accountant evaluated the appropriateness of the accounting principle used and the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by management. c. The accountant has not audited or reviewed the financial statements. d. A compilation primarily includes applying analytical procedures to management’s financial data and making inquiries of company management. 29. Which of the following actions by a CPA most likely violates the profession’s ethical standards? a. Using a records-retention agency to store confidential client records. b. Retaining client records after the client has demanded their return. c. Arranging with a financial institution to collect notes issued by a client in payment of fees dues. d. Compiling the financial statements of a client that employed the CPA’s spouse as a bookkeeper. 30. Which of the following auditor concerns most likely would be so serious that the auditor would conclude that a financial statement audit cannot be performed. a. The CPA lacks experience in the client’s operations and industry. b. A portion of supporting evidence stored at an offsite storage facility was destroyed by a hurricane. c. Management has imposed a restriction that the auditor believes will result in a qualified opinion. d. There is a substantial risk of management intentionally manipulating accounting records. 31. An auditor’s engagement letter most likely would include a statement regarding: a. The advantages of statistical sampling. b. The inherent limitations of an audit. c. Billings to be paid in the form of stock of the entity. d. The assessment of risk of material misstatement. 32. As of August 31, A CPA had obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence with respect to fieldwork on an engagement to audit financial statements for the year ended June 30. On August 27, an event came to the CPA’s attention that should be disclosed in the notes to the financial statements. The event was properly disclosed by the entity, but the CPA decided not to dual date the auditor’s report and dated the report August 27. Under these circumstances, the CPA was taking responsibility for: a. All subsequent events that occurred through August 27. b. Only the specific subsequent event disclosed by the entity. c. All subsequent events that occurred through August 13 and the specific subsequent event disclosed by the entity. d. Only the subsequent events that occurred through August 13. Page 5 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 33. In a probability-proportional-to-size sample with a sampling interval of P1,000,000, an auditor discovered that a selected account receivable with a recorded amount of P500,000 had an audited amount of P400,000. If this were the only misstatement discovered by the auditor, the projected misstatement of this sample would be: a. P100,000 b. P200,000 c. P500,000 d. P1,000,000 34. Which of the following procedures would an accountant least likely perform during an engagement to review the financial statements of a client? a. Observing the safeguards over access to and use of assets and records. b. Comparing the financial statements with anticipated results in budgets and forecast. c. Inquiring of management about actions taken at the board of directors’ meetings. d. Studying the relationships of financial statement elements expected to conform to predictable patterns. 35. Comparative financial statements include the prior year’s statements that were audited by a predecessor auditor whose report is not presented. If the predecessor’s report was unmodified, the successor should: a. Add an emphasis-of-matter paragraph that expresses only limited assurance concerning the fair presentation of the prior year’s financial statements. b. Express an opinion only on the current year’s financial statements and make no reference to the prior year’s financial statements. c. Indicate in an other-matter paragraph that the predecessor auditor expressed an unmodified opinion on the prior year’s financial statements. d. Obtain a letter of representation from the predecessor auditor concerning any matters that might affect the successor’s opinion. 36. Which of the following is generally appropriate in relation to the timing of the substantive test procedures in auditing the cash account of a client? a. Schedule the cash count in advance of the balance sheet date in order to discover any kiting operations at year-end. b. Correlate the count of cash with the cut-off of accounts payable. c. Correlate the count of cash with the count of marketable securities and other negotiable assets. d. Schedule the cash count immediately upon the return of the confirmation letters from the banks. 37. Which of the following cash transfers indicates kiting which overstatement of cash balance per books at December 31, 2021? a. b. c. d. results in an Bank Transfer Schedule Disbursement Receipt Recorded in Paid by Recorded in Received books Bank A books by bank B 1/2/22 1/2/22 12/31/21 12/31/21 12/31/21 1/2/22 12/31/21 12/31/21 12/31/21 1/5/22 1/3/22 1/4/22 1/4/22 1/11/22 1/4/22 1/4/22 PROBLEM 1: The following information were made available to you, in line with your audit of the cash accounts of your client, Snow Corp. for the period ended December 31, 2021: Below is the bank reconciliation statement for the month of November as furnished by the client’s accountant: Page 6 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam Cash per bank statement, November 30 Add: Deposit-in-transit Erroneous November bank charge Unrecorded November bank service charge Unrecorded November NSF check Total Less: Outstanding checks Unrecorded bank credit, Note collection Unrecorded bank credit, Note interest collection Cash per General Ledger • • • • • • • 125,000 61,200 5,500 1,500 54,000 P247,200 (95,600) (100,000) (10,000) P41,600 All November reconciling items have cleared in December in both the bank records and in the general ledger. The bank statement for December showed total debits amounting to P1,980,000 and total credits amounting to P2,097,000. December books showed total debits at P2,120,000 and total credits at P2,005,000. Bank loan proceeds for the month of December amounting to P120,000 and December bank service charge amounting to P2,100 did not appear in the client’s December cash records yet. An NSF check amounting to P28,000 was returned by the bank to the client in December. The check was redeposited also in December. The records revealed that the client did not record both the receipt and redeposit of the NSF check. A P35,000 disbursement was recorded in the books at P53,000 in December. Investigation revealed that it was detected and was corrected in January of the following year. Another P25,000 disbursement was recorded in the books at P52,000, investigation revealed that this error was detected and was already corrected by the end of December Required: 38. What is the correct deposit-in-transit as of December 31? a. 127,700 c. 100,700 b. 72,700 d. 95,200 39. What is the correct outstanding check as of December 31? a. 50,200 c. 86,200 b. 77,200 d. 44,700 40. What is the adjusted balance of cash as of December 31? a. 287,000 c. 294,600 b. 292,500 d. 256,500 41. In line with your audit of a manufacturing client’s financial statements, you were assigned to audit the trade receivables. In preparing your audit program, which of the following control objectives would be the least concern? a. Ensuring that all shipments made have been billed b. No shipment has been billed more than once c. Each shipment has been billed for the proper amount d. All billings corresponds to actual shipments of goods 42. Which of the following alternative audit procedures is necessary in instances where replies on positive confirmation requests are not received even after sending a second set of confirmation requests? a. Examining subsequent receipts of year-end accounts receivable. b. Reviewing accounts receivable aging schedule prepared at the balance sheet date and at a subsequent date. c. Requesting that management increases the allowance for uncollectible accounts by an amount equal to a certain percentage of the balances in those accounts that cannot be confirmed d. Performing an overall analytical review of accounts receivable and sales on a year-to-year basis. PROBLEM 2: In line with your audit of Sand Corp.’s trade receivables for the period ended December 31, 2021, the client furnished you with the following SL and GL reconciliation: Page 7 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam Balance per Subsidiary Ledger Sales invoice dated December 29 for goods delivered on the same date but were still in transit as of December 31. Goods were shipped FOB Shipping point, freight prepaid. The amount included the freight cost of P2,000. Sales invoice dated December 30 for goods delivered on January 2, 2022. Sales invoice dated December 30 for goods delivered on December 30 on sale with a repurchase agreement. The right to resell rests with the customer and the customer has a significant economic incentive to resell. Sales invoice dated December 31 for goods delivered on January 2 under a Bill and Hold agreement with the customer, which was executed in December. Credit balance in one of the customer accounts resulting from overcollection Credit balance in one of the customer accounts resulting from a collection of a previously written off account. This amount was deducted from the “Current” accounts in preparing the aging schedule (see information below) Customer check dated January 2, 2022. The collection was for a customer invoice dated October 20, 2021 Customer collection check dated December 1, 202, but was returned by the bank with the December bank statement because of insufficiency of fund. The check was for the payment of a customer invoice dated August 5, 2021 Customer collection check dated December 30, 2021 in payment of an October 25 invoice Subscriptions receivable on ordinary shares, due March 31, 2023 Balance per General Ledger P2,590,000 (27,000) (30,000) 22,000 18,000 (6,000) 5,000 20,000 41,000 (28,000) 90,000 P2,695,000 Additional information: An aging schedule and the company’s policy of providing bad debt allowance is shown below: Age Amount % uncollectible Current 1,040,000 1-60 days past due 1,200,000 5% More than 60 days past due 350,000 20% The company’s sales term is 5/30, n/60. It was determined that based on past experience, 40% of accounts which are considered current will probably pay within the discount period and that from the accounts that is more than 60 days past due, P120,000 is definitely uncollectible and therefore must be written off. Required: 43. What is the correct carrying value of the accounts receivable, trade as of December 31, 2021? a. 2,351,740 c. 2,382,200 b. 2,389,540 d. 2,361,540 44. Assuming that the allowance for bad debts had a January 1, 2021 balance at P127,000, what is the bad debt expense per audit for 2021? a. 111,800 c. 106,800 b. 103,200 d. 101,800 PROBLEM 3: Rivers Inc. extended a 4-year loan with a principal amount of P2.5M to Elaria Corp. on January 1, 2021. The loan has a nominal interest of 12%, payable every December 31. The company incurred direct origination costs which resulted to an effective interest rate on the loan of 10%. Based on the company’s best estimate of 12-months expected credit loss the present value of the credit loss at 10% was at P50,000 with the probability of default estimated at 40%. Interest was collected at the end of 2021. There was no change in the expected credit loss. Page 8 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam While interest at the end of 2022 was collected, it was ascertained that there was a significant increase in credit loss. The company decided to shift from a 12-month ECL to a Life-time ECL. The present value of the life-time ECL was at P500,0000 with the probability of default estimated at 50%. No interest was collected at the end of 2023, it was ascertained based on the current financial difficulties of the Elaria Corp. that certain concessions have to be agreed upon if only to optimize recovery of the loan. The concessions included an extension of the original maturity date to December 31, 2025 and a reduction in the principal amount to P2.2M. Furthermore, the company agreed to forgive any current and future interests on the loan. Required: 45. What is the initial carrying value of the loans receivable on January 1, 2021? a. 2,638,493 c. 2,689,539 b. 2,658,493 d. 2,624,343 46. What is the bad debt/credit loss/impairment loss on the loan to be recognized in 2022? a. 250,000 c. 225,800 b. 230,000 d. 226,000 47. What is the bad debt/credit loss/impairment loss on the loan to be recognized in 2023? a. 1,027,273 c. 777,273 b. 827,273 d. 752,273 48. The primary objective of a CPA’s observation of a client’s physical inventory count is to: a. Discover whether a client has counted a particular inventory item or group of items b. Provide an appraisal of the quality of the merchandise on hand on the day of the physical count c. Allow the auditor to supervise the conduct of the count in order to obtain assurance that inventory quantities are reasonably accurate. d. Ascertain that the physical count has been properly conducted in accordance with the client’s internal control policies and procedures and obtain direct knowledge that the inventory exists. PROBLEM 4: The following is a summary of your audit staff’s sales and purchases cut-off in line with your firm’s audit of Flowers Corp. financial statements for the period ended December 31, 2021. All sales were made at 30% gross profit based on sales. Commission on consignment sales was agreed upon at 10%. Physical count of goods was conducted on December 29. (All goods delivered on or before December 29 were excluded from the count and all goods received on or before December 29 were include in the count) SALES CUT-OFF December Sales Journal Entries SI Number Delivery Date Amount Remarks 1235 December 26 P60,000 FOB Destination 1236 December 27 89,000 FOB Shipping Point, in transit as of 12/31 1237 December 27 60,000 Shipped on consignment; 60% sold as of 12/31 according to consignee 1238 December 28 90,000 FOB Buyer 1239 December 29 50,000 FOB Buyer, in transit as of 12/31 1240 December 30 20,000 FOB Seller, in transit as of 12/31 January Sales Journal Entries SI Number Delivery Date Amount 1241 December 31 P35,000 1242 1243 January 2 January 3 45,000 25,000 1244 January 3 90,000 Page 9 of 21 Remarks FOB Seller’s Warehouse, in transit as of 12/31 FOB Shipping Point Bill and Hold agreement executed in Dec. FOB Seller 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam PURCHASE CUT-OFF December Purchase Journal Entries RR Number Receipt Date Amount Remarks 2309 December 28 P30,000 FOB Destination 2310 December 29 45,000 FOB Shipping point 2311 December 29 30,000 Received on consignment 2312 December 30 14,000 Purchased with resale agreement. Resale price is higher than the purchase price. 2313 December 30 21,000 FOB Destination January Purchase Journal Entries RR Number Receipt Date Amount 2314 December 31 P26,000 2315 January 2 16,000 2316 January 4 20,000 Remarks FOB Destination FOB Shipping point, In transit as of 12/31 FOB Seller’s Warehouse Required: 49. What is the net adjustment to accounts receivable? a. 17,600 credit c. 32,400 debit b. 14,000 credit d. 37,600 credit 50. What is the net adjustment to accounts payable? a. 2,000 debit c. 28,000 debit b. 12,000 credit d. 18,000 debit 51. What is the net adjustment to inventories? a. 7,800 debit c. 12,000 debit b. 28,800 debit d. 46,300 debit PROBLEM 5: Storm Corporation provided the following analysis of its Merchandise Inventory Item AS234 in line with your audit of its financial statements for the period ended December 31, 2021: Date January 1, balance February Purchase March Sale April Sale May Purchase June Purchase July Sale August Purchase September Purchase October Sale November Sale December Purchase December Sale # of Units 20,000 30,000 25,000 10,000 40,000 20,000 45,000 25,000 15,000 30,000 20,000 24,000 15,000 Cost P100 120 Sales Price P300 290 125 140 325 150 180 300 280 200 260 Your review of subsequent events revealed that the sales price based on the latest transaction was at P260. Cost to sell was estimated at P65. Assuming that the company uses the allowance method to account for inventory write-down and that the allowance at the beginning of the year was zero. Required: 52. What is the correct carrying value of the inventories at year end assuming the company uses periodic method of recording and FIFO cost formula? a. 5,700,000 c. 5,800,000 b. 5,655,000 d. 5,556,000 53. What is the correct carrying value of the inventories at year end assuming the company uses perpetual method of inventory recording and Average cost formula? a. 5,655,000 c. 5,556,000 b. 5,292,225 d. 5,092,325 Page 10 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 54. In your audit of a manufacturing client’s property, plant and equipment, you are suspecting that there is a high likelihood of significant missing permanent assets that are still recorded on the accounting records, an appropriate procedure is to ___________, this is necessary to support the financial statement assertion of ____________ over PPE. a. Select sample from the asset master file and vouch to the documents verifying the acquisition; existence b. Select sample from the asset master file and vouch to the physical assets; existence c. Tracing the physical asset noted during the ocular inspection to the asset master file; completeness d. Tracing the acquisition documents to the asset master file; completeness PROBLEM 6: You are auditing the property, plant and equipment accounts of your continuing client, Pyke Inc. in line with your audit of its financial statements for the period ended December 31, 2021. The following schedule was lifted from your prior-year working papers: December 31, 2020 Land Cost P2,000,000 Building Office Equipment Factory Equipment 5,000,000 3,000,000 4,000,000 Accumulated Depreciation 1,614,065 1,963,636 1,800,000 Depreciation Method; Useful Lives 150% Declining Balance, 20 years SYD, 10 years Straight-line, 10 years All assets were acquired upon the company’s formation at the beginning of 2016. Assets were estimated to have a salvage value of 10% of their original costs. In line with your current year audit, the accountant furnished you the following schedules of property additions and repairs and maintenance expense for the current period: SCHEDULE OF PROPERTY ADDITIONS Additions to Buildings: Repainting costs incurred at the beginning of the year P125,000 Installation of elevator system at the beginning of the year Additions to Office Equipment Overhaul work necessary to bring a unit to its original working condition incurred on March 31, 2021 Installment price of a replacement equipment acquired on June 30, 2021 to replace an old unit which had an original cost of P1.2M. The old unit had to be retired due to an explosion totally damaging the unit on March 30, 2021. The installment price of the new equipment was payable in 3 annual payments starting June 30, 2022. This was supported by a noninterest bearing note issued on June 30, 2021. Market rate for similar debt security was at 6%. Additions to Factory Equipment Routinary repairs on factory equipment incurred at the end of the year Cash paid on August 31, 2021 to acquire a new factory equipment through a trade-in of an old unit with an original cost of P1.8M. The trade-in allowance provided to the old unit was at P750,000. 800,000 90,000 1,500,000 110,000 1,200,000 SCHEDULE OF REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE EXPENSE Periodic annual repairs on building Installation and commission costs incurred in relation to the replacement office equipment Installation of a smoke filtering device on the building at the beginning of the year 150,236 283,494 540,000 Required: 55. What is the correct depreciation expense on the buildings for 2021, assuming that any building improvements will have no estimated salvage value? a. 333,945 c. 296,445 b. 346,445 d. 387,945 Page 11 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 56. What is the correct depreciation expense on the office equipment for 2021? a. 304,364 c. 321,818 b. 326,864 d. 307,091 57. What is the correct depreciation expense on the factory equipment for 2021? a. 371,000 c. 342,000 b. 364,500 d. 376,500 58. The auditor’s audit program for substantive test procedures for auditing intangibles include an examination of the schedule of current year charges to the research and development expense account. Which of the following is correct? a. The auditor shall test the propriety of the charges to the research and development expense to support the existence assertion over intangible assets. b. The auditor shall trace the charges to the research and development expense account to the supporting documents in support to the valuation assertion over intangible assets. c. Examining the entries to the research and development expense account is necessary to ascertain whether no capitalizable costs to the intangible asset account had been erroneously charged by the client to the research and development expense account which is necessary to support the completeness assertion over intangible assets. d. Examining the entries to the research and development expense account is necessary to evaluate whether these transactions have been authorized to support the accuracy assertion of the recorded expense. PROBLEM 7: Hill Company reported patent at P1,760,000 as of December 31, 2021 before amortization. Your audit investigation revealed the following: • The patents were all acquired at the beginning of 2012 and are being amortized over legal life. • Legal fees in the successful defense of the patent amounting to P240,000 was charged to the asset account on January 1, 2017 and was amortized over the patents’ remaining life as of the said date. • A patent with an original cost of P680,000 was ascertained to have a remaining economic life of 4 years at the beginning of the current year. • Another patent with an original cost of P720,000 has to be tested for possible impairment at the end of the year. Estimates placed annual net cash flows from the said patent at P52,079 over its remaining legal life. Market rate of interest as at the end of the year was at 10%. Required: 59. What is the amortization expense on patents in 2021? a. 280,000 c. 203,500 b. 214,500 d. 204,955 60. What is the correct carrying value of patents as of December 31, 2021? a. 1,340,500 c. 1,516,500 b. 1,380,500 d. 1,556,500 PROBLEM 8: Waters Inc. reported the following portfolio of securities as of December 31, 2021, in line with your audit of its financial statements: FMV Investment in equity securities: Cost (12/31/21) Snow Corp. shares, 20,000 ordinary shares 1,200,000 1,400,000 Sand Inc. shares, 40,000 ordinary shares 2,500,000 2,800,000 Rivers Co. shares, 50,000 preference shares 6,100,000 6,400,000 Investment in debt securities Pyke Corp. bonds, P2M face, 12%, due Dec. 11% 10% 31, 2024 effective rate effective rate *all investments were acquired at the beginning of 2021 Additional information: Outstanding Net Income Dividends Shares for 2021 Declared in 2021 Snow Corp. 200,000 2,500,000 500,000 Sand Inc. 200,000 3,000,000 1,200,000 Rivers Co. 100,000 1,200,000 None Pyke Corp. 250,000 4,340,000 2,000,000 Page 12 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM AUD Final Pre-Board Exam Required: 61. Assuming that Waters Inc. has a business model which has an objective of collecting contractual cash flows from its debt security investments, what is the correct carrying value of all its investments as of December 31, 2021? a. 12,648,874 c. 12,708,874 b. 12,759,474 d. 12,699,474 62. Assuming that Waters Inc. has a business model which has no objective of collecting cash flows form its debt security investments and that, where applicable, gains or losses on securities are reported in the profit or loss, what is the total amount to be reported in the profit or loss for 2021 in relation to the investments? a. 537,425 c. 1,414,251 b. 1,377,425 d. 1,427,425 63. You are preparing your audit program to audit a merchandising client’s trade payables and other liabilities. Which of the following should not be ordinarily included in your audit objective: a. Detect accounts payable that are substantially past due b. Verify that accounts payable were properly authorized c. Ascertain the reasonableness of recorded liabilities d. Determine that all existing liabilities at the balance sheet date have been recorded. 64. Which of the following is the best audit procedure for determining existence of unrecorded liabilities? a. Examine confirmation requests returned by creditors whose accounts appear on a subsidiary trial balance of accounts payable. b. Examining entries before the balance sheet date in the purchases journal or voucher register by tracing them to the supporting documents ascertaining propriety of the recorded entries. c. Sending blank confirmation letters to a sample of selected supplier accounts with significant account balances as of the balance sheet date. d. Examine selected cash disbursements in the period subsequent to year-end. PROBLEM 9: Stone Corp. reported the following liability balances as of December 31, 2021 in line with your audit of its financial statements as of December 31, 2021: Estimated liability for warranties Salaries payable for compensated absences Salaries payable for profit sharing bonus 800,000 720,000 167,442 Audit notes: a. The estimated liability for warranties was the accrual made by the company at the end of the year in relation to a 2-year “service-type” warranty attached to each unit of the company’s product sold. Total sales recorded for the year related to the said warranty was at P30M which corresponds to 5,000 units sold. As a result of your investigation, you ascertained that each 2-year warranty service would have been sold separately at P400. The company estimates that only 40% of the product sold will be returned for repairs in the first year and another 60% will be returned for repairs the following year after sale. Estimated cost to repair per unit was P250. Actual repair cost charged to expense during the current year was at P450,000 b. The salaries for compensated absences was the accrual made at the end of the previous year. The amount corresponds to 900 days of compensated absences (600 earned in 2020, 300 earned in 2019). Each employee is entitled 10 day-vacation leave and 10 day-sick leave for every year of service. The company had 30 employees employed throughout the current year. Unused leaves can be carried over 2 years thereafter shall expire. During the current year, 550 days were exercised by the employees (320 days earned in 2020). Salary rate increased by 10% during the current year. Page 13 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD Final Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM c. The salaries payable for profit sharing bonus was computed by the company based on 10% of the unadjusted net income after bonus and after 25% income tax. Required: 65. What is the correct liability for warranties as of December 31, 2021 assuming sales were made evenly throughout the year? a. 1,500,000 c. 1,125,000 b. 800,000 d. 937,500 66. What is the correct salaries payable for compensated absences as of December 31, 2021? a. 836,000 c. 704,000 b. 774,400 d. 720,000 67. What is the correct salaries payable for profit-sharing bonus as of December 31, 2021? a. 110,512 c. 119,721 b. 114,809 d. 118,605 PROBLEM 10: On January, 2019 GOT Corp. grants each of its 100 employees in the sales department share options. The share options will vest at the end of 2021, provided that the employees remain in the entity’s employ and provided that the sales increase by at least 100% by 2021. Actual sales in 2018 (base year) is 2M units. If the sales volume increase by an average of 100% to 120% by 2021, each employee will receive 200 options each. If sales volume increase by 121%-150% by 2021, each employee will receive 300 options each. If sales volume increase by more than 150% by 2021, each employee will receive 400 options each. Five options plus P120 shall entitle the holder to acquire one ordinary shares (P100 par) at any time up to December 31, 2023. On the grant date, the company estimates that the share options have a fair value of P21 per option. There has been a 30% average increase in annual sales for the past three years and that the company expects the same pattern during the vesting period. The following information are deemed relevant for your analysis: Year 2019 2020 2021 Actual employees leaving the company 4 2 9 Estimated additional employees who will leave by the end 2021 5 4 - Requirements: 68. What is the compensation expense in 2019? a. 127,400 c. b. 254,800 d. 191,100 134,400 69. What is the compensation expense in 2021? a. 378,000 c. b. 238,000 d. 363,000 336,000 Actual Sales (Units) 2,500,000 3,500,000 5,100,000 70. Assuming that 40% of the options granted to employees were exercised, the entry to record the exercise shall require a credit share premium at: a. 320,000 c. 280,000 b. 340,000 d. 312,000 - END of EXAMINATION - Page 14 of 21 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING AUD Final Pre-Board Exam ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM ANSWERS & SOLUTIONS/CLARIFICATIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Page 15 of 21 D C D C B A B B C A D B C C A A C D C A B C C B A 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 B B C B D B A B A C C A C A B A A D D A C D D A A 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 B B D B D A B C C A C D A D A B B A D B 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Page 16 of 21 AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Page 17 of 21 AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Page 18 of 21 AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Page 19 of 21 AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Page 20 of 21 AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com AUDITING ReSA Batch 44 – October 2022 CPALE Batch 24 September 2022 11:45 AM to 02:45 PM Page 21 of 21 AUD Final Pre-Board Exam 0915-2303213 resacpareview@gmail.com