The Aging Method: The Smith Company Case

Option #1:

Option #1: The Aging Method: The Smith Company Case

The following was taken from the records of Smith Company in the year ending December 31, 2014. Journalize the following transactions in an Excel spreadsheet for year-end 2014 using the aging method. Assume that the allowance for doubtful accounts has a beginning credit balance of $18,000 on January 1, 2014.

Assignment Template

Label the events below as journal entries #1 to #4, along with the dates of the entries:

  1. February 20, 2014: Wrote off Jones account: $7,250.
  2. May 20, 2014: Received $4,050 as partial payment on the $8,000 account receivable due from Garcia.
  3. August 10, 2014: Received $7,250 from Jones on the account written off on February 20, 2014.
  4. September 15: Wrote off the individual account receivables for the following customers as payment not expected in future: Tang: $4,400; Mulaka: $2,210; Quan: $1,375.

December 31, 2014: Smith Company prepared the following aging schedule for it accounts receivables:

  • $160,000 of Accounts Receivable (A/R) are 0-30 days late: 3% probability of not being paid.
  • $40,000 of A/R are 31-60 days late: 10% probability of not being paid.
  • $18,000 of A/R are 61-90 days late: 20% probability of not being paid.
  • $1,500 of A/R are later than 90 days late: 50% probability of not being paid.

Instructions:

Submit the following items in an Excel spreadsheet, labeling each as 1, 2, 3, and 4:

  1. The four journal entries (1 to 4 above) with a one-sentence description for each
  2. The allowance for doubtful accounts T-account
  3. The journal entry to record bad debt expense
  4. The balance sheet presentation of net realizable value, including gross accounts receivables of $219,500

 

The following was taken from the records of Smith Company in the year ending December 31, 2014. Journalize the following transactions in an Excel spreadsheet for year-end 2014 using the aging method. Assume that the allowance for doubtful accounts has a beginning credit balance of $18,000 on January 1, 2014.

Assignment Template

Label the events below as journal entries #1 to #4, along with the dates of the entries:

  1. February 20, 2014: Wrote off Jones account: $7,250.
  2. May 20, 2014: Received $4,050 as partial payment on the $8,000 account receivable due from Garcia.
  3. August 10, 2014: Received $7,250 from Jones on the account written off on February 20, 2014.
  4. September 15: Wrote off the individual account receivables for the following customers as payment not expected in future: Tang: $4,400; Mulaka: $2,210; Quan: $1,375.

December 31, 2014: Smith Company prepared the following aging schedule for it accounts receivables:

  • $160,000 of Accounts Receivable (A/R) are 0-30 days late: 3% probability of not being paid.
  • $40,000 of A/R are 31-60 days late: 10% probability of not being paid.
  • $18,000 of A/R are 61-90 days late: 20% probability of not being paid.
  • $1,500 of A/R are later than 90 days late: 50% probability of not being paid.

Instructions:

Submit the following items in an Excel spreadsheet, labeling each as 1, 2, 3, and 4:

  1. The four journal entries (1 to 4 above) with a one-sentence description for each
  2. The allowance for doubtful accounts T-account
  3. The journal entry to record bad debt expense
  4. The balance sheet presentation of net realizable value, including gross accounts receivables of $219,500