Pascale Corp. has the following securities (all purchased in 2017) in its investment portfolio on December 31,
Question:
Pascale Corp. has the following securities (all purchased in 2017) in its investment portfolio on December 31, 2017: 2,500 Anderson Corp. common shares, which cost $48,750; 10,000 Munter Ltd. common shares, which cost $580,000; and 6,000 King Corp. preferred shares, which cost $255,000. Their fair values at the end of 2017 were as follows: Anderson Corp. $49,580; Munter Ltd. $569,500; and King Corp. $254,400.
In 2018, Pascale complete the following transactions:
1. On January 15, sold 2,500 Anderson common shares at $21 per share less fees of $2,150.
2. On April 17, purchased 1,000 Castle Ltd. common shares at $33.50 per share plus fees of $1,980.
The company adds transaction costs to the cost of acquired investments and deducts them from cash received on the sale of investments. On December 31, 2018, the fair values per share of the securities were as follows: have fair values that can be Munter $61; King $40; and Castle $29. Pascale's accounting supervisor tells you that all these securities have fair values that can be readily determined, but the company is not likely to actively trade them. Management accounts for them using the FV-OCI method without recycling. Ignore income taxes.
Instructions:
a) Prepare the entries for the sale of the Anderson Corp. Investment on January 15, 2018.
b) Prepare the entry to record the Castle Ltd. share purchase on April 17, 2018.
c) Calculate the unrealized gains or losses and prepare any required adjusting entry(ies) for Pascale Corp. On December 31, 2018.
d) Indicate how all amounts will be reported on Pascale's statement of financial position and statement of comprehensive income, and the changes in the accumulated other comprehensive income portion of the statement of changes in shareholders' equity for 2018.
e) Pascale Corp.'s shareholders carefully watch the company's reported earnings per share (EPS). If Pascale used an accounting policy of FV-OCI with recycling (as allowed under IAS 39) and the company had 10,000 shares outstanding, would this make the EPS any different than it would be with the policy indicated above (that is, without recycling)? If not, why not? If so, by what amount per share?
PortfolioA portfolio is a grouping of financial assets such as stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies and cash equivalents, as well as their fund counterparts, including mutual, exchange-traded and closed funds. A portfolio can also consist of non-publicly...
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Intermediate Accounting
ISBN: 978-1119048534
11th Canadian edition Volume 1
Authors: Donald E. Kieso, Jerry J. Weygandt, Terry D. Warfield, Nicola M. Young, Irene M. Wiecek, Bruce J. McConomy