Deck 6: Inventories and Cost of Sales

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Question
If obsolete or damaged goods can be sold, they will be included in inventory at their net realizable value.
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Question
The full disclosure principle requires that the notes to the financial statements report a change in accounting method for inventory.
Question
When taking a physical count of inventory, the use of prenumbered inventory tickets is an application of internal control.
Question
The cost of an inventory item includes its invoice cost minus any discount, and plus any added or incidental costs necessary to put it in a place and condition for sale.
Question
LIFO is preferred when purchase costs are rising and managers have incentives to report higher income for reasons such as bonus plans, job security, and reputation.
Question
The matching principle is used by some companies to avoid allocating incidental inventory costs to cost of goods sold.
Question
In a period of rising purchase costs, FIFO usually gives a lower taxable income and therefore, yields a tax advantage.
Question
An advantage of LIFO is that it assigns the most recent costs to cost of goods sold, and does a better job of matching current costs with revenues on the income statement.
Question
The LIFO method of inventory valuation can result in a company's ending inventory being valued at less than the inventory's replacement cost because LIFO inventory leaves the oldest costs in inventory.
Question
Few companies take a physical count of inventory each year, and rely on inventory records alone to determine the inventory value.
Question
An advantage of the weighted average inventory method is that it tends to smooth out erratic changes in costs.
Question
Whether purchase costs are rising or falling, FIFO always will yield the highest gross profit and net income.
Question
Incidental costs often added to the costs of inventory include import duties, freight, storage, and insurance.
Question
The Inventory account is a controlling account for the inventory subsidiary ledger that contains a separate record for each separate product.
Question
Net realizable value for damaged or obsolete goods is sales price plus the cost of making the sale.
Question
Goods on consignment are goods shipped by their owner, called the consignee, to another party called the consignor.
Question
The consistency concept prescribes that a company use the same accounting methods period after period, so that financial statements are comparable across periods.
Question
A company can change its inventory costing method without mentioning this change in its financial statements because it is an internal management decision.
Question
Goods in transit are automatically included in inventory.
Question
If the seller is responsible for paying freight charges, then ownership of inventory passes when goods arrive at their destination.
Question
An understatement of ending inventory will cause an understatement of assets and equity on the balance sheet.
Question
A company's cost of goods sold was $15,500 and its average merchandise inventory was $4,500. Its inventory turnover equals 3.4.
15,500/4,500 = 3.4
Question
It can be expected that companies selling perishable goods have a higher inventory turnover than companies selling nonperishable goods.
Question
When units are purchased at different costs over time, determining the cost per unit assigned to inventory items is simple.
Question
The inventory turnover ratio is computed by dividing average merchandise inventory by cost of goods sold.
Question
A merchandiser's ability to pay its short-term obligations depends on many factors including how quickly it sells its merchandise inventory.
Question
LIFO assumes that inventory costs flow in the order incurred.
Question
Errors in the period-end inventory balance only affect the current period's records and financial statements.
Question
The FIFO inventory method assumes that costs for the earliest units purchased are the first to be charged to the cost of goods sold.
Question
There is no simple rule for inventory turnover, except that a high ratio is preferable provided inventory is adequate to meet demand.
Question
An inventory error is sometimes said to be self-correcting because it causes an offsetting error in the next period.
Question
One of the most important decisions in accounting for inventory is determining the unit costs assigned to inventory items.
Question
Companies are allowed to use FIFO for financial reporting and LIFO for tax reporting, according to IRS requirements.
Question
An understatement of the ending inventory balance will understate cost of goods sold and overstate net income.
Question
The assignment of costs to cost of goods sold and inventory using weighted average usually yields different results depending on whether a perpetual or periodic system is used.
Question
Tops had cost of goods sold of $8,321 million and its ending inventory was $2,027 million. Therefore its days' sales in inventory equals 89 days.
2,027/8,321*365 = 89
Question
An overstatement of ending inventory will cause an overstatement of assets and an understatement of equity on the balance sheet.
Question
The days' sales in inventory ratio is computed by dividing ending inventory by cost of goods sold and multiplying the result by 365.
Question
An error in the period-end inventory balance will cause an error in the calculation of cost of goods sold.
Question
An understatement of the beginning inventory balance will understate cost of goods sold and overstate net income.
Question
In the retail inventory method of inventory valuation, the retail amount of inventory refers to its dollar amount measured using selling prices of inventory items.
Question
The reasoning behind the retail inventory method is that if we can get a good estimate of the cost-to-retail ratio, we can multiply ending inventory at retail by this ratio to estimate ending inventory at cost.
Question
The assignment of costs to the cost of goods sold and to ending inventory using FIFO is the same for both the perpetual and periodic inventory systems.
Question
Damaged and obsolete goods that can be sold:

A) Are never counted as inventory.
B) Are included in inventory at their full cost.
C) Are included in inventory at their net realizable value.
D) Should be disposed of immediately.
E) Are assigned a value of zero.
Question
The lower of cost or market rule for inventory valuation must be applied to each individual unit separately, and not to major categories of inventory or to the entire inventory.
Question
Under LIFO, the most recent costs are assigned to ending inventory.
Question
The retail inventory method estimates the cost of ending inventory by applying the gross profit ratio to net sales.
Question
In applying the lower of cost or market method to inventory valuation, market is defined as the current selling price.
Question
Merchandise inventory includes:

A) All goods owned by a company and held for sale.
B) All goods in transit.
C) All goods on consignment.
D) Only damaged goods.
E) Only non-damaged goods.
Question
Using the retail inventory method, if the cost to retail ratio is 60% and ending inventory at retail is $45,000, then estimated ending inventory at cost is $27,000.
$45,000 * .60 = $27,000
Question
The conservatism constraint requires that when more than one estimate of the amounts to be received or paid in the future exists and these estimates are about equally likely, then the less optimistic amount is used.
Question
The choice of an inventory valuation method can have a major impact on gross profit and cost of sales.
Question
In applying the lower of cost or market method to inventory valuation, market is defined as the current replacement cost.
Question
The costs of goods purchased will vary under the different inventory methods of specific identification, FIFO, LIFO, and weighted average.
Question
A company's total cost of inventory was $305,000 and its market value is $297,000. Under the lower cost or market, the amount reported should be $305,000.
Question
To avoid the time-consuming process of taking an inventory each year, most companies use the gross profit method to estimate ending inventory.
Question
A company has inventory with a market value of $217,000 and a cost of $241,000. According to the lower of cost or market, the inventory should be written down to $217,000.
Question
The reliability of the gross profit method depends on a good estimate of the gross profit ratio.
Question
When LIFO is used with the periodic inventory system, cost of goods sold is assigned costs from the most recent purchases at the point of each sale, rather than from the most recent purchases for the period.
Question
A company's cost of inventory was $317,500. Due to phenomenal demand the market value of its inventory increased to $323,000. This company should write up the value of its inventory according to the consistency principle.
Question
Goods on consignment:

A) Are goods shipped by the owner to the consignee who sells the goods for the owner.
B) Are reported in the consignee's books as inventory.
C) Are goods shipped to the consignor who sells the goods for the owner.
D) Are not reported in the consignor's inventory since they do not have possession of the inventory.
E) Are always paid for by the consignee when they take possession.
Question
Internal controls that should be applied when a business takes a physical count of inventory should include all of the following except:

A) Prenumbered inventory tickets.
B) A manager does not confirm that all inventories are ticketed once, and only once.
C) Counters must confirm the validity of inventory existence, amounts, and quality.
D) Second counts by a different counter.
E) Counters of inventory should not be those who are responsible for the inventory.
Question
If a period-end inventory amount is reported in error, it can cause a misstatement in all of the following except:

A) Cost of goods sold.
B) Gross profit.
C) Net sales.
D) Current assets.
E) Net income.
Question
The full disclosure principle:

A) Prescribes that when a change in inventory valuation method is made, the notes to the statements report the type of change, its justification and its effect on net income.
B) Requires that companies use the same accounting method for inventory valuation period after period.
C) Is not subject to the materiality principle.
D) Is only applied to retailers.
E) Is also called the consistency principle.
Question
The understatement of the ending inventory balance causes:

A) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be understated.
B) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be overstated.
C) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be understated.
D) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be overstated.
E) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be correct.
Question
Regardless of the inventory costing system used, cost of goods available for sale must be allocated between

A) beginning inventory and net purchases during the period.
B) ending inventory and beginning inventory.
C) net purchases during the period and ending inventory.
D) ending inventory and cost of goods sold.
E) beginning inventory and cost of goods sold.
Question
The inventory valuation method that has the advantages of assigning an amount to inventory on the balance sheet that approximates its current cost, and also mimics the actual flow of goods for most businesses is:

A) FIFO.
B) Weighted average.
C) LIFO.
D) Specific identification.
E) All of these.
Question
The inventory valuation method that tends to smooth out erratic changes in costs is:

A) FIFO.
B) Weighted average.
C) LIFO.
D) Specific identification.
E) WIFO.
Question
Gotham Company reported a December 31 ending inventory balance of $412,000. The following additional information is also available: The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included $72,000 of consigned inventory for which Gotham was the consignor.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included $22,000 of office supplies that were stored in the warehouse and were to be used by the company's supervisors and managers during the coming year.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 did not include goods costing $48,000 that were purchased by Gotham on December 28 and shipped FOB destination on that date. Gotham did not receive the goods until January 2 of the following year.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included damaged goods at their original cost of $38,000. The net realizable value of the damaged goods was $10,000.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included $43,000 of consigned inventory for which Gotham was the consignee.
Based on this information, the correct balance for ending inventory on December 31 is:

A) $247,000
B) $341,000
C) $362,000
D) $309,000
E) $319,000
Question
The understatement of the beginning inventory balance causes:

A) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be understated.
B) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be overstated.
C) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be overstated.
D) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be understated.
E) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be correct.
Question
Which of the following inventory costing methods will always result in the same values for ending inventory and cost of goods sold regardless of whether a perpetual or periodic inventory system is used?

A) FIFO and LIFO
B) LIFO and weighted-average cost
C) Specific identification and FIFO
D) FIFO and weighted-average cost
E) LIFO and specific identification
Question
The consistency concept:

A) Prescribes a company to consistently apply the same accounting method of inventory valuation, an exception being when a change from one method to another will improve its financial reporting.
B) Requires a company to use one method of inventory valuation exclusively.
C) Requires that all companies in the same industry use the same accounting methods of inventory valuation.
D) Is also called the full disclosure principle.
E) Is also called the matching principle.
Question
An error in the period-end inventory causes an offsetting error in the next period and therefore:

A) Managers can ignore the error.
B) It is sometimes said to be self-correcting.
C) It affects only income statement accounts.
D) If affects only balance sheet accounts.
E) Is immaterial for managerial decision making.
Question
Physical counts of inventory:

A) Are not necessary under the perpetual system.
B) Are necessary to adjust the Inventory account to the actual inventory available.
C) Must be taken at least once a month.
D) Requires the use of hand-held portable computers.
E) Are not necessary under the cost-to benefit constraint.
Question
Costs included in the Merchandise Inventory account can include all of the following except:

A) Invoice price minus any discount.
B) Transportation-in.
C) Storage.
D) Insurance.
E) Damaged inventory that cannot be sold.
Question
During a period of steadily rising costs, the inventory valuation method that yields the lowest reported net income is:

A) Specific identification method.
B) Average cost method.
C) Weighted-average method.
D) FIFO method.
E) LIFO method.
Question
Thelma Company reported cost of goods sold for Year 1 and Year 2 as follows: <strong>Thelma Company reported cost of goods sold for Year 1 and Year 2 as follows:   Thelma Company made two errors: 1) ending inventory at the end of Year 1 was understated by $15,000 and 2) ending inventory at the end of Year 2 was overstated by $6,000. Given this information, the correct cost of goods sold figure for Year 2 would be:</strong> A) $291,000 B) $276,000 C) $264,000 D) $285,000 E) $249,000 <div style=padding-top: 35px> Thelma Company made two errors: 1) ending inventory at the end of Year 1 was understated by $15,000 and 2) ending inventory at the end of Year 2 was overstated by $6,000. Given this information, the correct cost of goods sold figure for Year 2 would be:

A) $291,000
B) $276,000
C) $264,000
D) $285,000
E) $249,000
Question
The inventory valuation method that results in the lowest taxable income in a period of inflation is:

A) LIFO method.
B) FIFO method.
C) Weighted-average cost method.
D) Specific identification method.
E) Gross profit method.
Question
On December 31 of the current year, Hewett Company reported an ending inventory balance of $215,000. The following additional information is also available: Hewett sold goods costing $38,000 to Trump Enterprises on December 28 and shipped the goods on that date with shipping terms of FOB shipping point. The goods were not included in the ending inventory amount of $215,000 because they were not in Hewett's warehouse.
Hewett purchased goods costing $44,000 on December 29. The goods were shipped FOB destination and were received by Hewett on January 2 of the following year. The shipment was a rush order that was supposed to arrive by December 31. These goods were included in the ending inventory balance of $215,000.
Hewett's ending inventory balance of $215,000 included $15,000 of goods being held on consignment from Rumsfeld Company. (Hewett Company is the consignee.)
Hewett's ending inventory balance of $215,000 did not include goods costing $95,000 that were shipped to Hewett on December 27 with shipping terms of FOB destination and were still in transit at year-end.
Based on the above information, the correct balance for ending inventory on December 31 is:

A) $194,000
B) $209,000
C) $200,000
D) $171,000
E) $156,000
Question
Goods in transit are included in a purchaser's inventory:

A) At any time during transit.
B) When the purchaser is responsible for paying freight charges.
C) When the supplier is responsible for freight charges.
D) If the goods are shipped FOB destination.
E) After the half-way point between the buyer and seller.
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Deck 6: Inventories and Cost of Sales
1
If obsolete or damaged goods can be sold, they will be included in inventory at their net realizable value.
True
2
The full disclosure principle requires that the notes to the financial statements report a change in accounting method for inventory.
True
3
When taking a physical count of inventory, the use of prenumbered inventory tickets is an application of internal control.
True
4
The cost of an inventory item includes its invoice cost minus any discount, and plus any added or incidental costs necessary to put it in a place and condition for sale.
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5
LIFO is preferred when purchase costs are rising and managers have incentives to report higher income for reasons such as bonus plans, job security, and reputation.
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6
The matching principle is used by some companies to avoid allocating incidental inventory costs to cost of goods sold.
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7
In a period of rising purchase costs, FIFO usually gives a lower taxable income and therefore, yields a tax advantage.
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8
An advantage of LIFO is that it assigns the most recent costs to cost of goods sold, and does a better job of matching current costs with revenues on the income statement.
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9
The LIFO method of inventory valuation can result in a company's ending inventory being valued at less than the inventory's replacement cost because LIFO inventory leaves the oldest costs in inventory.
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10
Few companies take a physical count of inventory each year, and rely on inventory records alone to determine the inventory value.
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11
An advantage of the weighted average inventory method is that it tends to smooth out erratic changes in costs.
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12
Whether purchase costs are rising or falling, FIFO always will yield the highest gross profit and net income.
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13
Incidental costs often added to the costs of inventory include import duties, freight, storage, and insurance.
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14
The Inventory account is a controlling account for the inventory subsidiary ledger that contains a separate record for each separate product.
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15
Net realizable value for damaged or obsolete goods is sales price plus the cost of making the sale.
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16
Goods on consignment are goods shipped by their owner, called the consignee, to another party called the consignor.
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17
The consistency concept prescribes that a company use the same accounting methods period after period, so that financial statements are comparable across periods.
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18
A company can change its inventory costing method without mentioning this change in its financial statements because it is an internal management decision.
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19
Goods in transit are automatically included in inventory.
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20
If the seller is responsible for paying freight charges, then ownership of inventory passes when goods arrive at their destination.
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21
An understatement of ending inventory will cause an understatement of assets and equity on the balance sheet.
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22
A company's cost of goods sold was $15,500 and its average merchandise inventory was $4,500. Its inventory turnover equals 3.4.
15,500/4,500 = 3.4
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23
It can be expected that companies selling perishable goods have a higher inventory turnover than companies selling nonperishable goods.
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24
When units are purchased at different costs over time, determining the cost per unit assigned to inventory items is simple.
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25
The inventory turnover ratio is computed by dividing average merchandise inventory by cost of goods sold.
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26
A merchandiser's ability to pay its short-term obligations depends on many factors including how quickly it sells its merchandise inventory.
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27
LIFO assumes that inventory costs flow in the order incurred.
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28
Errors in the period-end inventory balance only affect the current period's records and financial statements.
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29
The FIFO inventory method assumes that costs for the earliest units purchased are the first to be charged to the cost of goods sold.
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30
There is no simple rule for inventory turnover, except that a high ratio is preferable provided inventory is adequate to meet demand.
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31
An inventory error is sometimes said to be self-correcting because it causes an offsetting error in the next period.
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32
One of the most important decisions in accounting for inventory is determining the unit costs assigned to inventory items.
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33
Companies are allowed to use FIFO for financial reporting and LIFO for tax reporting, according to IRS requirements.
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34
An understatement of the ending inventory balance will understate cost of goods sold and overstate net income.
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35
The assignment of costs to cost of goods sold and inventory using weighted average usually yields different results depending on whether a perpetual or periodic system is used.
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36
Tops had cost of goods sold of $8,321 million and its ending inventory was $2,027 million. Therefore its days' sales in inventory equals 89 days.
2,027/8,321*365 = 89
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37
An overstatement of ending inventory will cause an overstatement of assets and an understatement of equity on the balance sheet.
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38
The days' sales in inventory ratio is computed by dividing ending inventory by cost of goods sold and multiplying the result by 365.
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39
An error in the period-end inventory balance will cause an error in the calculation of cost of goods sold.
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40
An understatement of the beginning inventory balance will understate cost of goods sold and overstate net income.
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41
In the retail inventory method of inventory valuation, the retail amount of inventory refers to its dollar amount measured using selling prices of inventory items.
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42
The reasoning behind the retail inventory method is that if we can get a good estimate of the cost-to-retail ratio, we can multiply ending inventory at retail by this ratio to estimate ending inventory at cost.
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43
The assignment of costs to the cost of goods sold and to ending inventory using FIFO is the same for both the perpetual and periodic inventory systems.
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44
Damaged and obsolete goods that can be sold:

A) Are never counted as inventory.
B) Are included in inventory at their full cost.
C) Are included in inventory at their net realizable value.
D) Should be disposed of immediately.
E) Are assigned a value of zero.
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45
The lower of cost or market rule for inventory valuation must be applied to each individual unit separately, and not to major categories of inventory or to the entire inventory.
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46
Under LIFO, the most recent costs are assigned to ending inventory.
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47
The retail inventory method estimates the cost of ending inventory by applying the gross profit ratio to net sales.
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48
In applying the lower of cost or market method to inventory valuation, market is defined as the current selling price.
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49
Merchandise inventory includes:

A) All goods owned by a company and held for sale.
B) All goods in transit.
C) All goods on consignment.
D) Only damaged goods.
E) Only non-damaged goods.
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50
Using the retail inventory method, if the cost to retail ratio is 60% and ending inventory at retail is $45,000, then estimated ending inventory at cost is $27,000.
$45,000 * .60 = $27,000
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51
The conservatism constraint requires that when more than one estimate of the amounts to be received or paid in the future exists and these estimates are about equally likely, then the less optimistic amount is used.
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52
The choice of an inventory valuation method can have a major impact on gross profit and cost of sales.
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53
In applying the lower of cost or market method to inventory valuation, market is defined as the current replacement cost.
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54
The costs of goods purchased will vary under the different inventory methods of specific identification, FIFO, LIFO, and weighted average.
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55
A company's total cost of inventory was $305,000 and its market value is $297,000. Under the lower cost or market, the amount reported should be $305,000.
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56
To avoid the time-consuming process of taking an inventory each year, most companies use the gross profit method to estimate ending inventory.
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57
A company has inventory with a market value of $217,000 and a cost of $241,000. According to the lower of cost or market, the inventory should be written down to $217,000.
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58
The reliability of the gross profit method depends on a good estimate of the gross profit ratio.
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59
When LIFO is used with the periodic inventory system, cost of goods sold is assigned costs from the most recent purchases at the point of each sale, rather than from the most recent purchases for the period.
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60
A company's cost of inventory was $317,500. Due to phenomenal demand the market value of its inventory increased to $323,000. This company should write up the value of its inventory according to the consistency principle.
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61
Goods on consignment:

A) Are goods shipped by the owner to the consignee who sells the goods for the owner.
B) Are reported in the consignee's books as inventory.
C) Are goods shipped to the consignor who sells the goods for the owner.
D) Are not reported in the consignor's inventory since they do not have possession of the inventory.
E) Are always paid for by the consignee when they take possession.
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62
Internal controls that should be applied when a business takes a physical count of inventory should include all of the following except:

A) Prenumbered inventory tickets.
B) A manager does not confirm that all inventories are ticketed once, and only once.
C) Counters must confirm the validity of inventory existence, amounts, and quality.
D) Second counts by a different counter.
E) Counters of inventory should not be those who are responsible for the inventory.
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63
If a period-end inventory amount is reported in error, it can cause a misstatement in all of the following except:

A) Cost of goods sold.
B) Gross profit.
C) Net sales.
D) Current assets.
E) Net income.
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64
The full disclosure principle:

A) Prescribes that when a change in inventory valuation method is made, the notes to the statements report the type of change, its justification and its effect on net income.
B) Requires that companies use the same accounting method for inventory valuation period after period.
C) Is not subject to the materiality principle.
D) Is only applied to retailers.
E) Is also called the consistency principle.
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65
The understatement of the ending inventory balance causes:

A) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be understated.
B) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be overstated.
C) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be understated.
D) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be overstated.
E) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be correct.
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66
Regardless of the inventory costing system used, cost of goods available for sale must be allocated between

A) beginning inventory and net purchases during the period.
B) ending inventory and beginning inventory.
C) net purchases during the period and ending inventory.
D) ending inventory and cost of goods sold.
E) beginning inventory and cost of goods sold.
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67
The inventory valuation method that has the advantages of assigning an amount to inventory on the balance sheet that approximates its current cost, and also mimics the actual flow of goods for most businesses is:

A) FIFO.
B) Weighted average.
C) LIFO.
D) Specific identification.
E) All of these.
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68
The inventory valuation method that tends to smooth out erratic changes in costs is:

A) FIFO.
B) Weighted average.
C) LIFO.
D) Specific identification.
E) WIFO.
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69
Gotham Company reported a December 31 ending inventory balance of $412,000. The following additional information is also available: The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included $72,000 of consigned inventory for which Gotham was the consignor.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included $22,000 of office supplies that were stored in the warehouse and were to be used by the company's supervisors and managers during the coming year.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 did not include goods costing $48,000 that were purchased by Gotham on December 28 and shipped FOB destination on that date. Gotham did not receive the goods until January 2 of the following year.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included damaged goods at their original cost of $38,000. The net realizable value of the damaged goods was $10,000.
The ending inventory balance of $412,000 included $43,000 of consigned inventory for which Gotham was the consignee.
Based on this information, the correct balance for ending inventory on December 31 is:

A) $247,000
B) $341,000
C) $362,000
D) $309,000
E) $319,000
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70
The understatement of the beginning inventory balance causes:

A) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be understated.
B) Cost of goods sold to be understated and net income to be overstated.
C) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be overstated.
D) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be understated.
E) Cost of goods sold to be overstated and net income to be correct.
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71
Which of the following inventory costing methods will always result in the same values for ending inventory and cost of goods sold regardless of whether a perpetual or periodic inventory system is used?

A) FIFO and LIFO
B) LIFO and weighted-average cost
C) Specific identification and FIFO
D) FIFO and weighted-average cost
E) LIFO and specific identification
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72
The consistency concept:

A) Prescribes a company to consistently apply the same accounting method of inventory valuation, an exception being when a change from one method to another will improve its financial reporting.
B) Requires a company to use one method of inventory valuation exclusively.
C) Requires that all companies in the same industry use the same accounting methods of inventory valuation.
D) Is also called the full disclosure principle.
E) Is also called the matching principle.
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73
An error in the period-end inventory causes an offsetting error in the next period and therefore:

A) Managers can ignore the error.
B) It is sometimes said to be self-correcting.
C) It affects only income statement accounts.
D) If affects only balance sheet accounts.
E) Is immaterial for managerial decision making.
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74
Physical counts of inventory:

A) Are not necessary under the perpetual system.
B) Are necessary to adjust the Inventory account to the actual inventory available.
C) Must be taken at least once a month.
D) Requires the use of hand-held portable computers.
E) Are not necessary under the cost-to benefit constraint.
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75
Costs included in the Merchandise Inventory account can include all of the following except:

A) Invoice price minus any discount.
B) Transportation-in.
C) Storage.
D) Insurance.
E) Damaged inventory that cannot be sold.
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76
During a period of steadily rising costs, the inventory valuation method that yields the lowest reported net income is:

A) Specific identification method.
B) Average cost method.
C) Weighted-average method.
D) FIFO method.
E) LIFO method.
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77
Thelma Company reported cost of goods sold for Year 1 and Year 2 as follows: <strong>Thelma Company reported cost of goods sold for Year 1 and Year 2 as follows:   Thelma Company made two errors: 1) ending inventory at the end of Year 1 was understated by $15,000 and 2) ending inventory at the end of Year 2 was overstated by $6,000. Given this information, the correct cost of goods sold figure for Year 2 would be:</strong> A) $291,000 B) $276,000 C) $264,000 D) $285,000 E) $249,000 Thelma Company made two errors: 1) ending inventory at the end of Year 1 was understated by $15,000 and 2) ending inventory at the end of Year 2 was overstated by $6,000. Given this information, the correct cost of goods sold figure for Year 2 would be:

A) $291,000
B) $276,000
C) $264,000
D) $285,000
E) $249,000
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78
The inventory valuation method that results in the lowest taxable income in a period of inflation is:

A) LIFO method.
B) FIFO method.
C) Weighted-average cost method.
D) Specific identification method.
E) Gross profit method.
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79
On December 31 of the current year, Hewett Company reported an ending inventory balance of $215,000. The following additional information is also available: Hewett sold goods costing $38,000 to Trump Enterprises on December 28 and shipped the goods on that date with shipping terms of FOB shipping point. The goods were not included in the ending inventory amount of $215,000 because they were not in Hewett's warehouse.
Hewett purchased goods costing $44,000 on December 29. The goods were shipped FOB destination and were received by Hewett on January 2 of the following year. The shipment was a rush order that was supposed to arrive by December 31. These goods were included in the ending inventory balance of $215,000.
Hewett's ending inventory balance of $215,000 included $15,000 of goods being held on consignment from Rumsfeld Company. (Hewett Company is the consignee.)
Hewett's ending inventory balance of $215,000 did not include goods costing $95,000 that were shipped to Hewett on December 27 with shipping terms of FOB destination and were still in transit at year-end.
Based on the above information, the correct balance for ending inventory on December 31 is:

A) $194,000
B) $209,000
C) $200,000
D) $171,000
E) $156,000
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80
Goods in transit are included in a purchaser's inventory:

A) At any time during transit.
B) When the purchaser is responsible for paying freight charges.
C) When the supplier is responsible for freight charges.
D) If the goods are shipped FOB destination.
E) After the half-way point between the buyer and seller.
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Unlock Deck
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