Income recognition for various business arrangements. Refer to the conceptual revenue recognition guidance given in Appendix 7.1.

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Income recognition for various business arrangements. Refer to the conceptual revenue recognition guidance given in Appendix 7.1. Applying this conceptual guidance, discuss the timing of revenue recognition and any related measurement issues.
a. Company A develops software and sells it to customers for an up-front fee. Company A provides these customers with password-protected access to its Web site for two years after delivery of the software. With this access, customers can download certain data and other software. Company A has an obligation to provide updates on its Web site.
b. Company B develops software and sells it to newly formed storage application service providers (SAPs), who promise to pay for the software over the next two years. These SAPs in turn place the software on their Web sites and sell rights to access the software to their customers.
c. Company C develops software that it places on its Web site. It sells rights to its customers to access this software online for a period of two years. Customers pay an up-front fee for the right to access the software.
d. Company D maintains an auction site on the Web. It charges customers an up-front fee to list products for sale and a transaction fee when a sale takes place. The transaction fee is refundable if the auction winner fails to honor its commitment to purchase the product.
e. Company E sells products of various supplier companies on its Web site. Company E transmits customers’ purchase requests to the supplier companies, who fill the orders. Customers pay for their purchases using third-party credit cards. Company E receives a fee from the supplier companies for each item sold.
f. Company F sells products of various supplier companies on its Web site. It promises to the supplier companies to sell a minimum number of items each month and pays storage and insurance costs for that minimum number of units. Actual storage of these units takes place at the supplier companies’ warehouses. The supplier companies also handle shipments to customers. Customers pay for their purchases using third- party credit cards.
g. Company G manufactures and sells personal computers (PCs). Customers receive a $400 rebate on the purchase of the computer if they will purchase Internet access services for three years after the purchase of the computer. Customers mail their rebate coupons to the Internet service provider, called an ISP Examples are AOL and AT&T. The ISP bears 90% of the initial cost of the rebate, and the PC manufacturer bears the other 10%. If customers do not subscribe for the full three-year period, the parties reallocate the cost of the rebate, $360 (= 0.90 X $400)) initially borne by the ISP and $40 (= 0.10 X $400) by the manufacturer, resulting in the PC manufacturer’s paying the ISP to reduce the ISP’s share of the rebate’s cost from $360 to a smaller amount.
h. Company H sells advertising space on its Web site to other companies. For an up-front fee, Company H guarantees to the other companies a certain minimum number of hits, viewings, or click-throughs each month of the one-year contract period. It must return a pro rata portion of the fee if the hits and click-throughs fall short of the guarantee.
i. Company I sells advertising space on its Web site to other companies. It recently received 10,000 shares of common stock of Upstart Company in payment for certain advertising space. Upstart Company intends to make an initial public offering of its common stock in six months. At the most recent financing round, venture capitalists paid $10 per share for the common stock.
j. Company J and Company K both maintain Web sites. Each company sells advertising space to the other company for an agreed-on period, with no funds changing hands.

Common Stock
Common stock is an equity component that represents the worth of stock owned by the shareholders of the company. The common stock represents the par value of the shares outstanding at a balance sheet date. Public companies can trade their stocks on...
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Financial Accounting an introduction to concepts, methods and uses

ISBN: 978-0324789003

13th Edition

Authors: Clyde P. Stickney, Roman L. Weil, Katherine Schipper, Jennifer Francis

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