Pasquale Company is a manufacturer of oil drilling equipment located in Canada. The company is 90% owned

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Pasquale Company is a manufacturer of oil drilling equipment located in Canada. The company is 90% owned by a U.S. parent company. The accounting department of Pasquale Company accumulated the following 2019 information for the company?s auditor.

Equipment:

1. The equipment account contained the following items:

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2. Pasquale Company depreciates assets by the straight-line method and assumes a zero residual value.

3. Its policy is to take a full year?s depreciation on all depreciable assets acquired before July 1 and no depreciation on all depreciable assets required after July 1.

Inventory:

1. The beginning inventory of 60,000 Canadian dollars was acquired during the last quarter of 2018.

2. Inventory purchases of 400,000 Canadian dollars were made uniformly during the year.

3. The ending inventory of 60,000 Canadian dollars was acquired during November and December, 2019.

Marketable Securities:

1. Marketable securities, carried at cost, were acquired for 30,000 Canadian dollars when the direct exchange rate was $.9320.

Direct Exchange Rates:Average for the last quarter of 2018, $.7322January 1, 2019, $.7080Average for November and December, 2019, $.6845Average for 2019, $.7140December 31, 2019, $.6960

Required:A. Compute the account balances that would be reported for equipment, inventory, and marketable securities in the December 31, 2019, balance sheet expressed in U.S. dollars, assuming that the temporal method was used to translate the accounts.

B. Compute the depreciation expense and cost of goods sold for 2019 in U.S. dollars, assuming that the temporal method was used to translate the accounts.

C. Repeat requirements A and B, assuming that the current rate method was used to translate the accounts.

D. Contrast the effects on income from using the current rate method and the temporal method to translate cost of goods sold and depreciation expense. Explain why net income is increased or decreased when the accounts were translated using the current rate method.

Ending Inventory
The ending inventory is the amount of inventory that a business is required to present on its balance sheet. It can be calculated using the ending inventory formula                Ending Inventory Formula =...
Balance Sheet
Balance sheet is a statement of the financial position of a business that list all the assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity and shareholder’s equity at a particular point of time. A balance sheet is also called as a “statement of financial...
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Related Book For  answer-question

Advanced Accounting

ISBN: 978-1119373209

7th edition

Authors: Debra C. Jeter, Paul K. Chaney

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