Topic 4

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A lessee with a finance lease containing a bargain purchase option should depreciate the leased asset over the a. asset's remaining economic life. b. term of the lease. c. life of the asset or the term of the lease, whichever is shorter. d. life of the asset or the term of the lease, whichever is longer.

A

If the residual value of a leased asset is guaranteed by a third party a. it is treated by the lessee as no residual value. b. the third party is also liable for any lease payments not paid by the lessee. c. the net investment to be recovered by the lessor is reduced. d. it is treated by the lessee as an additional payment and by the lessor as realized at the end of the lease term.

A

In a lease that is appropriately recorded as a direct-financing lease by the lessor, unearned income a. should be amortized over the period of the lease using the effective interest method. b. should be amortized over the period of the lease using the straight-line method. c. does not arise. d. should be recognized at the lease's expiration.

A

In computing depreciation of a leased asset, the lessee should subtract a. a guaranteed residual value and depreciate over the term of the lease. b. an unguaranteed residual value and depreciate over the term of the lease. c. a guaranteed residual value and depreciate over the life of the asset. d. an unguaranteed residual value and depreciate over the life of the asset.

A

The methods of accounting for a lease by the lessee are a. operating and finance lease methods. b. operating, sales, and finance lease methods. c. operating and leveraged lease methods. d. None of these answer choices are correct.

A

If companies want to disqualify a lease as a finance lease to the lessee, while having the same lease qualify as a finance (sales or financing) lease to the lessor, which of the following are true? a. It cannot be done b. They must make information about the implicit rate unavailable to the lessee and use of the incremental borrowing rate by the lessee when it is higher than the implicit interest rate of the lessor. c. They must include a bargain purchase option. d. They must specify the transfer of the property to the lessee.

B

In a sale-leaseback transaction where none of the four leasing criteria are satisfied, which of the following is false? a. The seller-lessee removes the asset from its books. b. The purchaser-lessor records a gain. c. The seller-lessee records the lease as an operating lease. d. All of these answers are false statements.

B

In the earlier years of a lease, from the lessee's perspective, the use of the a. finance method will enable the lessee to report higher income, compared to the operating method. b. finance method will cause debt to increase, compared to the operating method. c. operating method will cause income to decrease, compared to the finance method. d. operating method will cause debt to increase, compared to the finance method.

B

The amount to be recorded as the cost of an asset under a finance lease is equal to the a. present value of the minimum lease payments. b. present value of the minimum lease payments or the fair value of the asset, whichever is lower. c. present value of the minimum lease payments plus the present value of any unguaranteed residual value. d. carrying value of the asset on the lessor's book

B

When lessors account for residual values related to leased assets, they a. always include the residual value because they always assume the residual value will be realized. b. include the unguaranteed residual value in sales revenue. c. recognize more gross profit on a sales-type lease with a guaranteed residual value than on a sales-type lease with an unguaranteed residual value. d. All of these answer choices are true with regard to lessors and residual values.

A

A lessor with a sales-type lease involving an unguaranteed residual value available to the lessor at the end of the lease term will report sales revenue in the period of inception of the lease at which of the following amounts? a. The minimum lease payments plus the unguaranteed residual value. b. The present value of the minimum lease payments. c. The cost of the asset to the lessor, less the present value of any unguaranteed residual value. d. The present value of the minimum lease payments less the present value of the unguaranteed residual value

D

All of the following statements are true regarding the circumvention of accounting rules for leases when determining whether a lease qualifies as an operating or capital lease except a. the residual value guarantee is a device used by lessees and lessors by transferring some of the risk to a third party to convert financing leases to operating leases. b. the lessee who does not know exactly the lessor`s implicit interest rate might use a different (higher) incremental borrowing rate. c. lessors typically try to avoid having lease arrangement classified as operating leases. d. lessors typically try to avoid having lease arrangement classified as finance leases.

D

When a company sells property and then leases it back, any gain on the sale should usually be a. recognized in the current year. b. recognized as a prior period adjustment. c. recognized at the end of the lease. d. deferred and recognized as income over the term of the lease.

D

Which of the following is not an advantage of leasing? a. Off-balance-sheet financing b. Less costly financing c. 100% financing at fixed rates d. All of these answer choices are advantages.

D

Which of the following is true regarding footnote disclosure of operating lease payments under IFRS and U.S. GAAP? a. U.S. GAAP does not require as much detail as IFRS. b. It is more difficult to estimate the impact of the off-balance sheet liabilities for companies that use U.S. GAAP, as compared with IFRS companies. c. Extensive disclosure of future noncancelable lease payment is required for the next five years and the years thereafter under IFRS. d. IFRS typically has no detail on the year-by-year breakout of lease payment due.

D

Which of the following statements is correct? a. In a direct-financing lease, initial direct costs are added to the net investment in the lease. b. In a sales-type lease, initial direct costs are expensed in the year of incurrence. c. For operating leases, initial direct costs are deferred and allocated over the lease term. d. All of these answer choices are correct.

D

Which of the following would not be included in the Lease Receivable account? a. Guaranteed residual value b. Unguaranteed residual value c. A bargain purchase option d. All of these answer choices would be included

D

All of the followings are ways in which companies avoid leased assets capitalization in devising lease agreements, except: a. Ensure that the lease does not specify the transfer of title of the property to the lessee. b. Do not write in a bargain-purchase option. c. Arrange for the present value of the minimum lease payments to be sufficiently more than the fair value of the leased property. d. Set the lease term sufficiently below the estimated economic life of the leased property such that the economic life test is not met.

C

For a sales-type lease, a. the sales price includes the present value of the unguaranteed residual value. b. the present value of the guaranteed residual value is deducted to determine the cost of goods sold. c. the gross profit will be the same whether the residual value is guaranteed or unguaranteed. d. None of these answer choices are correct.

C

In computing the present value of the minimum lease payments, the lessee should a. use its incremental borrowing rate in all cases. b. use either its incremental borrowing rate or the implicit rate of the lessor, whichever is higher, assuming that the implicit rate is known to the lessee. c. use either its incremental borrowing rate or the implicit rate of the lessor, whichever is lower, assuming that the implicit rate is known to the lessee. d. None of these answer choices are correct.

C

In order to properly record a direct-financing lease, the lessor needs to know how to calculate the lease receivable. The lease receivable in a direct-financing lease is best defined as a. the amount of funds the lessor has tied up in the asset which is the subject of the direct-financing lease. b. the difference between the lease payments receivable and the fair value of the leased property. c. the present value of minimum lease payments. d. the total book value of the asset less any accumulated depreciation recorded by the lessor prior to the lease agreement.

C

The Lease Liability account should be disclosed as a. all current liabilities. b. all non-current liabilities. c. current portions in current liabilities and the remainder in non-current liabilities. d. deferred credits.

C

The initial direct costs of leasing a. are generally borne by the lessee. b. include internal direct and indirect costs. c. are expensed in the period of the sale under a sales-type lease. d. All of these answer choices are true with regard to the initial direct costs of leasing.

C

The primary difference between a direct-financing lease and a sales-type lease is the a. manner in which rental receipts are recorded as rental income. b. amount of the depreciation recorded each year by the lessor. c. recognition of the manufacturer's or dealer's profit at the inception of the lease. d. allocation of initial direct costs by the lessor to periods benefited by the lease arrangements.

C

To avoid leased asset capitalization, companies can devise lease agreements that fail to satisfy any of the four leasing criteria. Which of the following is not one of the ways to accomplish this goal? a. Lessee uses a higher interest rate than that used by lessor. b. Set the lease term at something less than 75% of the estimated useful life of the property. c. Write in a bargain purchase option. d. Use a third party to guarantee the asset's residual value.

C

Which of the following is a correct statement of one of the capitalization criteria? a. The lease transfers ownership of the property to the lessor. b. The lease contains a purchase option. c. The lease term is equal to or more than 75% of the estimated economic life of the leased property. d. The minimum lease payments (excluding executory costs) equal or exceed 90% of the fair value of the leased property.

C

(T/F) From the lessee's viewpoint, an unguaranteed residual value is the same as no residual value in terms of computing the minimum lease payments.

TRUE

(T/F) Leasing equipment reduces the risk of obsolescence to the lessee, and passes the risk of residual value to the lessor.

TRUE

(T/F) Lessors classify and account for all leases that do not qualify as direct-financing or sales-type leases as operating leases.

TRUE

(T/F) The IASB requires lessees and lessors to disclose certain information about leases in their financial statements or in the notes.

TRUE

(T/F) The use of an unrealistically low discount rate could lead to a lessee recording a leased asset at an amount exceeding the fair value of the equipment, which is generally prohibited in IFRS.

TRUE

(T/F) Together the FASB and IASB hope to craft a new lease accounting standard that will eliminate the notion of the operating lease.

TRUE

(T/F) When the lessee agrees to make up any deficiency below a stated amount that the lessor realizes in residual value, that stated amount is the guaranteed residual value.

TRUE

(T/F) The gross profit amount in a sales-type lease is greater when a guaranteed residual value exists.

FALSE

(T/F) The lessor will recover a greater net investment if the residual value is guaranteed instead of unguaranteed.

FALSE

(T/F) Under the operating method, the lessor records each rental receipt as part interest revenue and part rental revenue.

FALSE

Which of the following is true regarding the deferral of sale profits on a sale-leaseback using IFRS? a. Both profits and losses on a sale followed by an operating lease leaseback are recognized immediately if the transaction is established at fair value b. Profit from the sale should be amortized in proportion to the rental payments it an operating lease results from the sale-leaseback. c. Any profit on a sale-leaseback resulting in an operating lease is deferred and recognized over the subsequent lease period, whereas any loss is recognized immediately. d. Profit from the sale should be deferred and amortized in proportion to the amortization of the leased asset if a capital lease results from the sale-leaseback.

A

What impact does a bargain purchase option have on the present value of the minimum lease payments computed by the lessee? a. No impact as the option does not enter into the transaction until the end of the lease term. b. The lessee must increase the present value of the minimum lease payments by the present value of the option price. c. The lessee must decrease the present value of the minimum lease payments by the present value of the option price. d. The minimum lease payments would be increased by the present value of the option price if, at the time of the lease agreement, it appeared certain that the lessee would exercise the option at the end of the lease and purchase the asset at the option price.

B

Which of the following best describes current practice in accounting for leases? a. Leases are not capitalized. b. Leases similar to installment purchases are capitalized. c. All long-term leases are capitalized. d. All leases are capitalized.

B

(T/F) A benefit of leasing to the lessor is the return of the leased property at the end of the lease term.

TRUE

Mika company leases telecommunication equipment. Assume the following data for equipment leased from Phlash Company. The lease term is 5 years and requires equal rental payments of ¥3,150,000 at the beginning of each year. The present value of the payments was ¥13,135,059.The equipment has a fair value at the inception of the lease of ¥13,900,000, an estimated useful life of 8 years, and no residual value. Mika pays all executory costs directly to third parties. Phlash set the annual rental to earn a rate of return of 10%, and this fact is known to Mika. The lease does not transfer title or contain a bargain-purchase option. Based on this information, which of the following statement is true? a. The lease should be classified as an operating lease. b. The lease meets the economic life test to be classified as a finance lease. c. The lease should be classified as a finance lease based on passing the recovery of investment test. d. The lease is classified as an operating lease for Mika and a finance lease for Phlash.

C

All of the following statements are true with regard to how the statement of financial position will be similarly affected by leasing the assets as opposed to issuing bonds and purchasing the assets, except which statement? a. Since a long-term, non-cancelable lease which is used as a financing device generally results in the capitalization of the leased assets and recognition of the lease commitment in the statement of financial position, the comparative effect is not very different from purchase and ownership. b. Assets leased under finance leases would be capitalized at the present value of the future lease payment, which is somewhat equivalent to the purchase price of the assets. c. Bonds sold at par would be nearly equivalent to the present value of the future lease payments. d. The specific accounts affected by the transactions would be the same.

D

Executory costs include a. maintenance. b. property taxes. c. insurance. d. All of these answer choices are correct.

D

If the lease in a sale-leaseback transaction meets one of the four leasing criteria and is therefore accounted for as a finance lease, who records the asset on its books and which party records interest expense during the lease period? Party recording the asset on its books/Party recording interest expense a. Seller-lessee/Purchaser-lessor b. Purchaser-lessor/Seller-lessee c. Purchaser-lessor/Purchaser-lessor d. Seller-lessee/Seller-lessee

D

Minimum lease payments may include a a. penalty for failure to renew. b. bargain purchase option. c. guaranteed residual value. d. any of these answer choices

D

(T/F) A common method of measuring the current liability portion in ordinary annuity leases is the change-in-the-present-value method.

TRUE

(T/F) Direct-financing leases are in substance the financing of an asset purchase by the lessee.

TRUE

(T/F) A capitalized leased asset is always depreciated over the term of the lease by the lessee.

FALSE

(T/F) A lease that contains a purchase option must be capitalized by the lessee.

FALSE

(T/F) A lessee records interest expense in both a finance lease and an operating lease.

FALSE

(T/F) Both a guaranteed and an unguaranteed residual value affect the lessee's computation of amounts capitalized as a leased asset.

FALSE

(T/F) IFRS requires that lessees use the incremental rate to record a lease, unless it is impractical to determine it.

FALSE

(T/F) In accounting for the inItial direct costs for a sales-type lease, the lessor adds initial direct costs to the net investment in the lease and amortizes them over the life of the lease as a yield adjustment.

FALSE

(T/F) Lessors classify and account for all leases that don't qualify as sales-type leases as operating leases.

FALSE

(T/F) The IASB agrees with the capitalization approach and requires companies to capitalize all long-term leases.

FALSE

(T/F) The distinction between a direct-financing lease and a sales-type lease is the presence or absence of a transfer of title.

FALSE

(T/F) Executory costs should be excluded by the lessee in computing the present value of the minimum lease payments.

TRUE


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