On January 1, 2021, JPS Industries borrowed $300,000 from Austin Bank by issuing a three-year, floating rate

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On January 1, 2021, JPS Industries borrowed $300,000 from Austin Bank by issuing a three-year, floating rate note based on LIBOR, with interest payable semi-annually on June 30 and December of each year. JPS entered into a three-year interest rate swap agreement on January 1, 2021, and designated the swap as a cash flow hedge. The intent was to hedge the risk that interest rates will rise, increasing its semi-annual interest payments. The swap agreement called for the company to receive payment based on a floating interest rate on a notional amount of $300,000 and to pay a 6% fixed interest rate. The contract called for cash settlement of the net interest amount semi-annually, and the rate on each reset date (June 30 and December 31) determines the variable interest rate for the following six months.LIBOR rates in 2021 were 6% at January 1, 5.5% at June 30, and 7% at December 31. The fair values of the swap on those dates, obtained by dealer quotes, were as follows:

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Required:1. Calculate the net settlement on June 30, 2021.2. Prepare journal entries for the period January 1 to December 31, 2021, to record the note payable and hedging instrument, necessary adjustments for changes in fair value, and settlement of the swap contract.

Dealer
A dealer in the securities market is an individual or firm who stands ready and willing to buy a security for its own account (at its bid price) or sell from its own account (at its ask price). A dealer seeks to profit from the spread between the...
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Related Book For  answer-question

Intermediate Accounting

ISBN: 978-1260481952

10th edition

Authors: J. David Spiceland, James Sepe, Mark Nelson, Wayne Thomas

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