subject
Business, 31.07.2019 19:30 asianraisins66

Scott company sells merchandise with a one-year warranty. sales consisted of 2,500 units in year 1 and 2,000 units in year 2. it is estimated that warranty repairs will average $10 per unit sold, and 30% of the repairs will be made in year 1 and 70% in year 2 for the year 1 sales. similarly, 30% of repairs will be made in year 2 and 70% in year 3 for the year 2 sales. in the year 3 income statement, how much of the warranty expense shown will be due to year 1 sales?

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 15:00
In its first year of operations, crane company recognized $31,700 in service revenue, $7,700 of which was on account and still outstanding at year-end. the remaining $24,000 was received in cash from customers. the company incurred operating expenses of $16,600. of these expenses, $12,690 were paid in cash; $3,910 was still owed on account at year-end. in addition, crane prepaid $3,260 for insurance coverage that would not be used until the second year of operations.
Answers: 3
question
Business, 21.06.2019 21:40
Morgana company identifies three activities in its manufacturing process: machine setups, machining, and inspections. estimated annual overhead cost for each activity is $168,000, $315,900, an $97,200, respectively. the cost driver for each activity and the expected annual usage are number of setups 2,100, machine hours 24,300, and number of inspections 1,800. compute the overhead rate for each activity. machine setups $ per setup machining $ per machine hour inspections $ per inspection
Answers: 1
question
Business, 21.06.2019 22:30
An annuity that goes on indefinitely is called a perpetuity. the payments of a perpetuity constitute a/an series. the equation is: a stock with no maturity is an example of a perpetuity. quantitative problem: you own a security that provides an annual dividend of $170 forever. the security’s annual return is 9%. what is the present value of this security? round your answer to the nearest cent. $
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 19:00
The east asiatic company (eac), a danish company with subsidiaries throughout asia, has been funding its bangkok subsidiary primarily with u.s. dollar debt because of the cost and availability of dollar capital as opposed to thai baht-denominated (b) debt. the treasurer of eac-thailand is considering a 1-year bank loan for $247,000.the current spot rate is b32.03 /$, and the dollar-based interest is 6.78% for the 1-year period. 1-year loans are 12.04% in baht.a. assuming expected inflation rates of 4.3 % and 1.24% in thailand and the united states, respectively, for the coming year, according to purchase power parity, what would the effective cost of funds be in thai baht terms? b. if eac's foreign exchange advisers believe strongly that the thai government wants to push the value of the baht down against the dollar by5% over the coming year (to promote its export competitiveness in dollar markets), what might the effective cost of funds end up being in baht terms? c. if eac could borrow thai baht at 13% per annum, would this be cheaper than either part (a) or part (b) above?
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
Scott company sells merchandise with a one-year warranty. sales consisted of 2,500 units in year 1 a...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 02:01
question
Arts, 13.10.2020 02:01
question
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 02:01
question
Social Studies, 13.10.2020 02:01
question
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 02:01
question
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 02:01
question
Mathematics, 13.10.2020 02:01
Questions on the website: 13722360