Escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Leer en línea o como PDF ¿Documento equivocado? Cámbialo gratis 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Otro

Intermediate Accounting Volume 2 – 8th Edition Solution Manual

Puntuación
-
Vendido
-
Páginas
892
Subido en
18-07-2025
Escrito en
2024/2025

Complete solution manual for Intermediate Accounting Volume 2, 8th Edition by Thomas H. Beechy, Joan E. Conrod, Elizabeth Farrell, and Ingrid McLeod-Dick. Covers Chapters 12–22 with step-by-step answers to problems on financial liabilities, provisions, equity, leases, pensions, income taxes, and more. Ideal for CPA prep and Canadian ASPE/IFRS alignment.

Mostrar más Leer menos
Institución
Grado

Vista previa del contenido

Solution Manual for
Intermediate Accounting Volume 2 8 th Edition Thomas H. Beechy, Joan E.
Conrod, Elizabeth Farrell, Ingrid McLeod-Dick, Kayla Tomulka, Romi-Lee Sevel
Chapter 12-22

Chapter 12: Financial Liabilities and Provisions

Case 12-1 Winter Fun Incorporated
12-2 Prescriptions Depot Limited
12-3 Camani Corporation
Suggested Time
Technical Review
TR12-1 Financial liabilities and provisions (IFRS) ...... 10
TR12-2 Financial liabilities and provisions (ASPE) ..... 10
TR12-3 Provision, measurement ................................... 10
TR12-4 Guarantee ......................................................... 10
TR12-5 Provision, warranty .......................................... 5
TR12-6 Foreign currency .............................................. 5
TR12-7 Note payable .................................................... 5
TR12-8 Discounting, note payable ................................ 10
TR12-9 Discounting, provision ..................................... 10
TR12-10 Classification, liabilities................................... 10

Assignment A12-1 Financial versus non-financial liabilities……. 10
A12-2 Common financial liabilities………………… 10
A12-3 Common financial liabilities ............................ 10
A12-4 Common financial liabilities: taxes ................. 20
A12-5 Common financial liabilities: taxes ................ 20
A12-6 Foreign currency payables……………………. 10
A12-7 Foreign currency payables ............................... 10
A12-8 Common financial liabilities and foreign currency 25
A12-9 Provisions......................................................... 20
A12-10 Provisions ........................................................ 20
A12-11 Provisions......................................................... 20
A12-12 Provision measurement .................................... 15
A12-13 Provision measurement .................................... 15
A12-14 Provisions; compensated absences…………... 15
A12-15 Provisions; compensated absences .................. 15
A12-16 Provisions; warranty ........................................ 15
A12-17 Provisions; warranty ....................................... 20
A12-18 Provisions; warranty ....................................... 25
A12-19 Discounting; no-interest note ........................... 15
A12-20 Discounting; low-interest note ........................ 20

© 2022 McGraw Hill Ltd. All rights reserved.
Solutions Manual to accompany Intermediate Accounting, Volume 2, 8th edition 14-1

, A12-21 Discounting; low-interest note ......................... 20
A12-22 Discounting; provision ..................................... 15
A12-23 Discounting; provision ..................................... 25
A12-24 Discounting; provision ..................................... 25
A12-25 Classification and SCF..................................... 20
A12-26 SCF .................................................................. 20
A12-27 Liabilities – IFRS and ASPE .......................... 10
A12-28 Liabilities - ASPE ........................................... 20
A12-29 Liabilities - ASPE ............................................ 20
A12-30 Provisions/Contingencies – IFRS and ASPE…. 20
A12-31 DAIS – warranty provision trend……………... 15
A12-32 DAIS – provision for coupon refund………… 15




Cases

Case 12-1 (LO12.3, LO12.5, LO12.6)
Winter Fun Incorporated

To: Members of Board of Directors
From: Accounting Consultant
RE: Winter Fun Incorporated

Overview

Winter Fun Incorporated (WFI) uses IFRS for financial reporting. The bank loan has a
minimum current ratio so you will need to be careful and watch for any impacts on the
ratio. You have had a tough year this year and faced a loss so the bank financing is critical
to your operations.

Issues

1. Revenue recognition memberships
2. Revenue recognition guests
3. Special promotions
4. Coupons
5. Manufacturer Loan
6. Lawsuit
7. Warranty
8. Gasoline storage tanks
9. Foreign currency payables
10. Compensated absences


© 2022 McGraw Hill Ltd. All rights reserved.
Solutions Manual to accompany Intermediate Accounting, Volume 2, 8th edition 14-2

,Analysis and Recommendations


1. Revenue recognition memberships

Following the 5 step IFRS model:
Initiation fee
Step 1: The contract with the customer is for the membership in the club. This would be a
written agreement between the member and WFI.

Step 2: There is one performance obligation, the promised service is membership in the
ski club. There is no transfer of the service until the membership is provided.

Step 3: The contract price is $10,000. The non-refundable deposit is an advance payment
towards this initiation fee and is part of the overall transaction price.

Step 4: No allocation since there is only one performance obligation.

Step 5: The performance obligation for the initiation fee is satisfied over the period of
time that the member belongs to the club. The $10,000 would be recognized over the
average period a member belongs. There should be enough historical data available to
come up with a reasonable estimate. There would be no cash collection risk since the
amount is paid upfront.

Annual fee
Step 1: The annual fee is a written agreement between the member and WFI.

Step 2: There is again one performance obligation, the service for this year.

Step 3: The fee of $2,000 is the total contract price and is received in 20X5 for the 20X6
ski season. This would be unearned revenue when received.

Step 4: There is no allocation since there is only one performance obligation.

Step 5: Assuming the ski season goes from Dec 1 until March 31 $500 would be
recognized in 20X5 and the remainder in 20X6 which would be the period in which the
service is performed. There would be no cash collection risk since the amount is paid
upfront.

2. Revenue recognition guests

Following the 5 step IFRS model:

Step 1: The contract with the guest is the written contract when they receive the ticket to
ski, not when the reservation is made since this reservation could be cancelled.


© 2022 McGraw Hill Ltd. All rights reserved.
Solutions Manual to accompany Intermediate Accounting, Volume 2, 8th edition 14-3

, Step 2: The performance obligation is the right to ski that day.

Step 3: The overall contract price is the price of the ski ticket.

Step 4: There is no allocation since there is only one performance obligation.

Step 5: The performance would be the right to ski on that day. There is no cash collection
risk since the guest pays by credit card when they purchase the ticket.

3. Special promotions

Following the 5 step IFRS model:

Step 1: The contract with the customer is the written contract when they receive the ticket
and the right to a future lesson.

Step 2: There are two separate performance obligations the right to ski and the right to the
lesson.

Step 3: The total contract price is $100.

Step 4: This price would need to be allocated to the two separate performance obligations
based on their relative fair value.

Fair value ski pass 80 = 61.5% x 100 = $61.50
Fair value lesson 50 = 38.5% x 100 = $38.50
Total fair value 130

Step 5: The $61.50 allocated to the performance obligation for the ski pass would be
satisfied on the day that they ski. For the $38.50, the performance obligation would be
satisfied on the day they take the lesson. There would be no cash collection risk assuming
a credit card is used to purchase the special pass.

4. Coupons

It must be determined if an economic loss would occur for the coupons. The coupons are
for $5 and the price of a ski pass is $80. This is a minor amount compared to the price of
the ski pass so WFI would still be selling the ski pass at a profit. Therefore, the coupons
should only be recognized as a cost when they are redeemed.

5. Manufacturer Loan

The manufacturer of the ski lift has provided a 0% interest loan. This is often referred to
as a dealer loan. The loan is either measured in FVTPL or other liabilities. Most liabilities

© 2022 McGraw Hill Ltd. All rights reserved.
Solutions Manual to accompany Intermediate Accounting, Volume 2, 8th edition 14-4

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
Estudio
Grado

Información del documento

Subido en
18 de julio de 2025
Número de páginas
892
Escrito en
2024/2025
Tipo
OTRO
Personaje
Desconocido

Temas

$26.70
Accede al documento completo:

¿Documento equivocado? Cámbialo gratis Dentro de los 14 días posteriores a la compra y antes de descargarlo, puedes elegir otro documento. Puedes gastar el importe de nuevo.
Escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Leer en línea o como PDF

Conoce al vendedor
Seller avatar
cazorlasam
5.0
(1)

Documento también disponible en un lote

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
cazorlasam Gateshead College
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
4
Miembro desde
11 meses
Número de seguidores
3
Documentos
358
Última venta
1 mes hace

5.0

1 reseñas

5
1
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Documentos populares

Recientemente visto por ti

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes