During 2018 Luling Township engaged in the following transactions related to modernizing the bridge over the Luling

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During 2018 Luling Township engaged in the following transactions related to modernizing the bridge over the Luling River. The township accounts for long‐term construction projects in a capital projects fund.
• On July 1 it issued 10‐year, 4 percent bonds with a face value of $1 million. The bonds were sold for $1,016,510, an amount that provides an annual yield of 3.8 percent (semiannual rate of 1.9 percent). The city incurred $10,000 in issue costs.
• On August 1 it was awarded a state reimbursement grant of $800,000. During the year it incurred allowable costs of $600,000. Of these it paid $500,000 in cash to various contractors. It received $450,000 from the state, expecting to receive, early in 2019, the $150,000 difference between allowable costs incurred and cash received. Moreover, it expects to receive the balance of the grant later in 2019.
• It invested the bond proceeds in short‐term federal securities. During the year it received $8,000 in interest, and at year‐end the market value of the securities was $1,000 more than the township had paid for them.
• It transferred the bond premium (net of issue costs) to an appropriate fund.
• It transferred $20,000 from the general fund to an appropriate fund to cover the first payment of bond interest which was due, and paid, on December 31.
• On January 1, the township defeased in substance $400,000 of bonds that had been issued years earlier to construct the bridge. The bonds had been issued at par. To effect the transaction the township issued $405,000 of new bonds, at par, and placed the proceeds in a trust. The old bonds have a coupon rate of 5 percent; the new bonds have a coupon rate of 4 percent. What amount should Luling report in its December 31, 2018, financial statements as:
1. Nonreciprocal transfers‐in to its debt service fund
2. Interest expenditure in its debt service fund
3. Interest expense on its government‐wide statements (after taking into account amortization of the bond premium)
4. Investment revenue in its capital projects fund
5. Bonds payable in its capital projects fund
6. Total expenditures in its capital projects fund
7. Bond proceeds in its capital projects fund
8. Bond proceeds in its debt service fund
9. Deferred outflow of resources (loss on defeasance) in its debt service fund
10. Grant revenue in its capital projects fund
11. Grants receivable in its capital projects fund
12. Carrying value of bonds payable (on issue of July 1 only) in its government‐wide statements select each response from the amounts that follow. An amount may be selected once, more than once, or not at all.
a. $0
b. $8,000
c. $9,000
d. $16,510
e. $19,314
f. $20,000
g. $26,510
h. $38,627
i. $150,000
j. $200,000
k. $400,000
l. $405,000
m. $500,000
n. $600,000
o. $610,000
p. $1,000,000
q. $1,006,510
r. $1,016,510
s. $1,015,824
Financial Statements
Financial statements are the standardized formats to present the financial information related to a business or an organization for its users. Financial statements contain the historical information as well as current period’s financial...
Coupon
A coupon or coupon payment is the annual interest rate paid on a bond, expressed as a percentage of the face value and paid from issue date until maturity. Coupons are usually referred to in terms of the coupon rate (the sum of coupons paid in a...
Face Value
Face value is a financial term used to describe the nominal or dollar value of a security, as stated by its issuer. For stocks, the face value is the original cost of the stock, as listed on the certificate. For bonds, it is the amount paid to the...
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Government and Not for Profit Accounting Concepts and Practices

ISBN: 978-1118983270

7th edition

Authors: Michael Granof, Saleha Khumawala, Thad Calabrese, Daniel Smith

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