17. Which of the following events would not require an end-of-year adjusting entry for a company...
Which of the following events would not require an end-of-year adjusting entry? (I know the answer is A, but can you give me an explanation on why it is A) Thank you! A) Providing services on account B) Paying for one year's rent on July 1 C) Purchasing supplies for cash D) Each of these answer choices would require an end-of-year adjustment
Each of the following independent events requires a year-end adjusting entry. Paid $9,900 cash in advance on July 1 for a one-year lease on office space. Purchased $3,400 of supplies on account on April 15. At year-end, $270 of supplies remained on hand. Received a $8,800 cash advance on July 1 for a contract to provide services for one year beginning immediately. Paid $3,800 cash in advance on February 1 for a one-year insurance policy. Required Record each event and...
Each of the following independent events requires a year-end adjusting entry. Paid $9,400 cash in advance on July 1 for a one-year lease on office space. Purchased $2,700 of supplies on account on April 15. At year-end, $250 of supplies remained on hand. Received a $10,300 cash advance on July 1 for a contract to provide services for one year beginning immediately. Paid $4,400 cash in advance on February 1 for a one-year insurance policy. Required Record each event and...
Each of the following independent events requires a year-end adjusting entry. Paid $9,100 cash in advance on July 1 for a one-year lease on office space. Purchased $3,300 of supplies on account on April 15. At year-end, $330 of supplies remained on hand. Received a $10,400 cash advance on July 1 for a contract to provide services for one year beginning immediately. Paid $3,100 cash in advance on February 1 for a one-year insurance policy. Required Record each event and...
Required Each of the following independent events requires a year-end adjusting entry. Show how each event and its related adjusting entry affect the accounting equation. Assume a December 31 closing date. The first event is recorded as an example. (Do not round intermediate calculations & Round your final answer to nearest whole dollar.) a. Paid $6,200 cash in advance on October 1 for a one-year insurance policy. b. Received an $5,000 cash advance for a contract to provide services in...
Required Each of the following independent events requires a year-end adjusting entry. Show how each event and its related adjusting entry affect the accounting equation. Assume a December 31 closing date. The first event is recorded as an example. (Do not round intermediate calculations & Round your final answer to nearest whole dollar.) a. Paid $6,200 cash in advance on October 1 for a one-year insurance policy. b. Received an $5,000 cash advance for a contract to provide services in...
00 3aveu Required Each of the following independent events requires a year-end adjusting entry. Show how each event and its relates affect the accounting equation. Assume a December 31 closing date. The first event is recorded as an example. (D intermediate calculations & Round your final answer to nearest whole dollar.) a. Paid $5,100 cash in advance on October 1 for a one-year insurance policy. b. Received an $3,900 cash advance for a contract to provide services in the future....
Journalize the adjusting entry needed at December 31, the fiscal year-end, for each of the following independent situations. No other adjusting entries have been made for the year. (Record debits first, then credits. Exclude explanations from any journal entries.) On October 1, $4,500 rent was collected in advance. Cash was debited and Unearned rent revenue was credited. The tenant was paying six months' rent in advance. The business holds a $25,000 note receivable. Interest revenue of $875 has been earned on the...
Colton Enterprises experienced the following events for Year 1, the first year of operation: Acquired $50,000 cash from the issue of common stock. Paid $13,500 cash in advance for rent. The payment was for the period April 1, Year 1, to March 31, Year 2. Performed services for customers on account for $102,000. Incurred operating expenses on account of $42,500. Collected $78,000 cash from accounts receivable. Paid $36,000 cash for salary expense. Paid $34,000 cash as a partial payment on...
Explain how each of the following events or series of events and the related adjusting entry will affect the amount of net income and the amount of cash flow from operating activities reported on the year-end financial statements. Identify the direction of change (increase, decrease, or NA) and the amount of the change. Organize your answers according to the following table. The first event is recorded as an example. If an event does not have a related adjusting entry, record...