Lily Coe started a new business on January 1, 2014, called Coe Consulting. She develops financial investment
Question:
a. Coe invested $120,000 cash and office equipment valued at $10,000 in the business.
b. Purchased a small building for $240,000 to be used as an office. Paid $50,000 in cash and signed a note payable promising to pay the balance over several years.
c. Purchased $18,000 of office equipment for cash.
d. Purchased $4,000 of office supplies and $6,400 of office equipment on credit.
e. Paid a local newspaper $4,500 for an announcement that the office had opened.
f. Completed a financial plan on credit and billed the client $6,000 for the service.
g. Designed a financial plan for another client and collected an $8,000 cash fee.
h. Coe withdrew $5,500 cash from the company bank account to pay personal expenses.
i. Coe signed a $20,000 contract for the office to be painted in February 2015. A deposit of $6,000 will be paid on January 15, 2015.
j. Received $4,000 from the client described in (f).
k. Paid for the equipment purchased in (d).
1. Paid $3,800 cash for the office secretary's wages.
Required
1. Create a table like the one presented in Exhibit 1.15, using the following headings for the columns: Cash; Accounts Receivable; Office Supplies; Office Equipment; Building; Accounts Payable; Notes Payable; and Lily Coe, Capital. Leave space for an Explanation of Equity Transaction column to the right of the Capital column. Identify revenues and expenses by name in the Explanation column.
2. Use additions and subtractions to show the effects of the above transactions on the elements of the equation. Do not determine new totals for the items of the equation after each transaction. Next to each change in equity, state whether the change was caused by an investment, a revenue, an expense, or a withdrawal. Determine the final total for each item and verify that the equation is in balance.
3. Prepare an income statement, a statement of changes in equity, and a balance sheet for 2014 using the formats provided. 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
Fundamental Accounting Principles
ISBN: 978-0071051507
Volume I, 14th Canadian Edition
Authors: Larson Kermit, Tilly Jensen
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