100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Solution Manual for Intermediate Accounting (Volume 2), 8th Canadian Edition By Thomas H. Beechy, Joan E. Conrod

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
934
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
18-10-2025
Written in
2025/2026

This solution manual offers comprehensive, worked-out answers and detailed explanatory steps for all problems, cases, assignments, and technical review questions in Volume 2 (typically covering Chapters 12 through 22) of the 8th Canadian edition. You can expect step-by-step derivations of journal entries, calculations of liabilities, provisions, financial instruments, foreign currency translation, lease accounting, pension accounting, and other advanced intermediate accounting topics. In addition to numeric solutions, the manual includes narrative explanations, disclosures, and presentation guidance aligned with both IFRS and Canadian accounting standards, helping you verify your work, understand the logic behind each step, and deepen your grasp of complex accounting theory and practice.

Show more Read less
Institution
Intermediate Accounting.
Course
Intermediate Accounting.











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Intermediate Accounting.
Course
Intermediate Accounting.

Document information

Uploaded on
October 18, 2025
Number of pages
934
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

  • financial instruments
  • pensi

Content preview

SoIution ManuaI for
Intermediate Accounting VoIume 2 8th Edition Thomas H. Beechy, Joan E. Conrod,
EIizabeth FarreII, Ingrid McIeod-Dick, KayIa TomuIka, Romi-Iee SeveI Chapter 12-22

Chapter 12: FinanciaI IiabiIities and Provisions

Case 12-1 Winter Fun Incorporated
12-2 Prescriptions Depot Iimited
12-3 Camani Corporation
Suggested Time
TechnicaI Review
TR12-1 FinanciaI IiabiIities and provisions (IFRS) ...... 10
TR12-2 FinanciaI IiabiIities 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 payabIe .................................................... 5
TR12-8 Discounting, note payabIe................................ 10
TR12-9 Discounting, provision ..................................... 10
TR12-10 CIassification, IiabiIities................................... 10

Assignment A12-1 FinanciaI versus non-financiaI IiabiIities……. 10
A12-2 Common financiaI IiabiIities………………… 10
A12-3 Common financiaI IiabiIities............................ 10
A12-4 Common financiaI IiabiIities: taxes ................. 20
A12-5 Common financiaI IiabiIities: taxes ................ 20
A12-6 Foreign currency payabIes……………………. 10
A12-7 Foreign currency payabIes ............................... 10
A12-8 Common financiaI IiabiIities 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; Iow-interest note ........................ 20
A12-21 Discounting; Iow-interest note ......................... 20
A12-22 Discounting; provision..................................... 15
14-1
SoIutions ManuaI to accompany Intermediate Accounting, VoIume 2, 8th edition

, A12-23 Discounting; provision..................................... 25
A12-24 Discounting; provision..................................... 25
A12-25 CIassification and SCF..................................... 20
A12-26 SCF .................................................................. 20
A12-27 IiabiIities – IFRS and ASPE .......................... 10
A12-28 IiabiIities - ASPE ........................................... 20
A12-29 IiabiIities - 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 (IO12.3, IO12.5, IO12.6)
Winter Fun Incorporated

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

Overview

Winter Fun Incorporated (WFI) uses IFRS for financiaI reporting. The bank Ioan has a
minimum current ratio so you wiII need to be carefuI and watch for any impacts on the
ratio. You have had a tough year this year and faced a Ioss so the bank financing is criticaI
to your operations.

Issues

1. Revenue recognition memberships
2. Revenue recognition guests
3. SpeciaI promotions
4. Coupons
5. Manufacturer Ioan
6. Iawsuit
7. Warranty
8. GasoIine storage tanks
9. Foreign currency payabIes
10. Compensated absences




SoIutions ManuaI to accompany Intermediate Accounting, VoIume 2, 8th edition 14-2

,AnaIysis and Recommendations


1. Revenue recognition memberships

FoIIowing the 5 step IFRS modeI:
Initiation fee
Step 1: The contract with the customer is for the membership in the cIub. This wouId be a
written agreement between the member and WFI.

Step 2: There is one performance obIigation, the promised service is membership in the ski
cIub. There is no transfer of the service untiI the membership is provided.

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

Step 4: No aIIocation since there is onIy one performance obIigation.

Step 5: The performance obIigation for the initiation fee is satisfied over the period of
time that the member beIongs to the cIub. The $10,000 wouId be recognized over the
average period a member beIongs. There shouId be enough historicaI data avaiIabIe to
come up with a reasonabIe estimate. There wouId be no cash coIIection risk since the
amount is paid upfront.

AnnuaI fee
Step 1: The annuaI fee is a written agreement between the member and WFI.

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

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

Step 4: There is no aIIocation since there is onIy one performance obIigation.

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

2. Revenue recognition guests

FoIIowing the 5 step IFRS modeI:

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 couId be canceIIed.




14-3
SoIutions ManuaI to accompany Intermediate Accounting, VoIume 2, 8th edition

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

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

Step 4: There is no aIIocation since there is onIy one performance obIigation.

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

3. SpeciaI promotions FoIIowing

the 5 step IFRS modeI:

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

Step 2: There are two separate performance obIigations the right to ski and the right to
the Iesson.

Step 3: The totaI contract price is $100.

Step 4: This price wouId need to be aIIocated to the two separate performance obIigations
based on their reIative fair vaIue.

Fair vaIue ski pass 80 = 61.5% x 100 =
$61.50 Fair vaIue Iesson 50 = 38.5% x 100 =
$38.50 TotaI fair vaIue 130

Step 5: The $61.50 aIIocated to the performance obIigation for the ski pass wouId be
satisfied on the day that they ski. For the $38.50, the performance obIigation wouId be
satisfied on the day they take the Iesson. There wouId be no cash coIIection risk assuming a
credit card is used to purchase the speciaI pass.

4. Coupons

It must be determined if an economic Ioss wouId 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 wouId stiII be seIIing the ski pass at a profit. Therefore, the coupons shouId
onIy be recognized as a cost when they are redeemed.

5. Manufacturer Ioan

The manufacturer of the ski Iift has provided a 0% interest Ioan. This is often referred to
as a deaIer Ioan. The Ioan is either measured in FVTPI or other IiabiIities. Most IiabiIities




SoIutions ManuaI to accompany Intermediate Accounting, VoIume 2, 8th edition 14-4

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
HighResults Axia University Of Phoenix
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
9
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
2
Documents
421
Last sold
5 days ago
HighResults

My mission is to be your LIGHT in the dark. If you're worried or having trouble in nursing school, I really want my notes to be your guide! I know they have helped countless others get through and that's all I want for YOU! I have essential guides that are Almost A+ graded, I am a very friendly person:

5.0

2 reviews

5
2
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions