
Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 11th Edition by Wayne McManus,Daniel Viele,David Marshall
Edition 11ISBN: 978-1259535314
Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 11th Edition by Wayne McManus,Daniel Viele,David Marshall
Edition 11ISBN: 978-1259535314 Exercise 2
Goodwill effect on ROI Assume that fast-food restaurants generally provide an ROI of 12%, but that such a restaurant near a college campus has an ROI of 15% because its relatively large volume of business generates an above-average turnover (sales/assets). The replacement value of the restaurant's plant and equipment is $600,000. If you were to invest that amount in a restaurant elsewhere in town, you could expect a 12% ROI.
Required:
a. Would you be willing to pay more than $600,000 for the restaurant near the campus? Explain your answer.
b. If you purchased the restaurant near the campus for $750,000 and the fair value of the assets you acquired was $600,000, what balance sheet accounts would be used to record the cost of the restaurant?
Required:
a. Would you be willing to pay more than $600,000 for the restaurant near the campus? Explain your answer.
b. If you purchased the restaurant near the campus for $750,000 and the fair value of the assets you acquired was $600,000, what balance sheet accounts would be used to record the cost of the restaurant?
Explanation
(a)The average ROI is 15%. Hence, it is ...
Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 11th Edition by Wayne McManus,Daniel Viele,David Marshall
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