Merchant Company had the following foreign currency transactions: 1. On November 1, 20X6, Merchant sold goods...
Merchant Company had the following foreign currency transactions: 1. On November 1, 20X6, Merchant sold goods to a company located in Munich, Germany. The receivable was to be settled in European euros on February 1, 20X7, with the receipt of 230,000 by Merchant Company. 2. On November 1, 20x6, Merchant purchased machine parts from a company located in Berlin, Germany. Merchant is to pay 115,000 on February 1, 20X7 The direct exchange rates are as follows: November 1, 20x6 December...
Merchant Company had the following foreign currency transactions: On November 1, 20X6, Merchant sold goods to a company located in Munich, Germany. The receivable was to be settled in European euros on February 1, 20X7, with the receipt of €290,000 by Merchant Company. On November 1, 20X6, Merchant purchased machine parts from a company located in Berlin, Germany. Merchant is to pay €145,000 on February 1, 20X7. The direct exchange rates are as follows: November 1, 20X6 €1 = $...
Merchant Company had the following foreign currency transactions: On November 1, 20X6, Merchant sold goods to a company located in Munich, Germany. The receivable was to be settled in European euros on February 1, 20X7, with the receipt of €240,000 by Merchant Company. On November 1, 20X6, Merchant purchased machine parts from a company located in Berlin, Germany. Merchant is to pay €120,000 on February 1, 20X7. The direct exchange rates are as follows: November 1, 20X6 €1 = $...
Maple Company had the following export and import transactions during 20X5: On March 1, Maple sold goods to a Canadian company for C$49,000, receivable on May 30. The spot rates for Canadian dollars were C$1 = $0.65 on March 1 and C$1 = $0.68 on May 30. On July 1, Maple signed a contract to purchase equipment from a Japanese company for ¥440,000. The equipment was manufactured in Japan during August and was delivered to Maple on August 30 with...
M Company has the following export and import transactions during 20X5: On March 1, M sold goods to a Canadian Company for C$30,000, receivable on May 31. The spot rates for the C$ were C$1 = $0.65 on March 1 and C$1 = $0.68 on May 31. On July 1, M signed a contract to purchase equipment from a Japanese Company for ¥500,000. The equipment was manufactured in Japan during August and was delivered to M on August 31 with...
Part I Maple Company had the following export and import transactions during 20X5: On March 1, Maple sold goods to a Canadian company for C$30,000, receivable on May 30. The spot rates for Canadian dollars were C$1 = $0.65 on March 1 and C$1 = $0.68 on May 30. On July 1, Maple signed a contract to purchase equipment from a Japanese company for ¥500,000. The equipment was manufactured in Japan during August and was delivered to Maple on August...
1-What is the concept underlying the two-transaction perspective in accounting for foreign currency transactions? 2-A company makes an export sale denominated in a foreign currency and allows the customer one month to pay. Under the two-transaction perspective, accrual approach, how does the company account for fluctuations in the exchange rate for the foreign currency? 3-What factors create a foreign exchange gain on a foreign currency transaction? What factors create a foreign exchange loss? 4-What does the word hedging mean? Why...
Part I Maple Company had the following export and import transactions during 20X5: On March 1, Maple sold goods to a Canadian company for C$30,000, receivable on May 30. The spot rates for Canadian dollars were C$1 = $0.65 on March 1 and C$1 = $0.68 on May 30. On July 1, Maple signed a contract to purchase equipment from a Japanese company for ¥500,000. The equipment was manufactured in Japan during August and was delivered to Maple on August...
Grand Ltd. Is a Canadian company that had the following transactions in 20X7: a. Sold goods to a customer in Belgium on 25 November for 225,000 euros. b. Sold goods to a U.S. customer on 25 November for US$81,000. c. Sold goods on 1 December, to a British customer for 145,000 euros. d. On 15 December, the customer in transaction (a) paid. At year-end, the other two accounts receivable were still outstanding. EXCHANGE RATES Canadian Equivalencies 25 November 01 December...
Harris Inc. had the following transactions: 1. On May 1, Harris purchased parts from a Japanese company for a U.S. dollar equivalent value of $7,200 to be paid on June 20. The exchange rates were May 1 June 20 1 yen$0.0070 1 yen 0.0075 2. On July 1, Harris sold products to a Brazilian customer for a U.S. dollar equivalent of $10,200, to be received on August 10. Brazil's local currency unit is the real. The exchange rates were July...