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book Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 9th Edition by Wayne W McManus, Daniel F Viele, David H Marshall cover

Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 9th Edition by Wayne W McManus, Daniel F Viele, David H Marshall

Edition 9ISBN: 0073527068
book Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 9th Edition by Wayne W McManus, Daniel F Viele, David H Marshall cover

Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 9th Edition by Wayne W McManus, Daniel F Viele, David H Marshall

Edition 9ISBN: 0073527068
Exercise 92

LIFO versus FIFO — impact on ROI Natco, Inc., uses the FIFO inventory cost- flow assumption. In a year of rising costs and prices, the firm reported net income of $480,000 and average assets of $3,000,000. If Natco had used the LIFO cost-flow assumption in the same year, its cost of goods sold would have been $80,000 more than under FIFO, and its average assets would have been $80,000 less than under FIFO.

Required:

a. Calculate the firm’s ROI under each cost-flow assumption.


b. Suppose that two years later costs and prices were falling. Under FIFO, net income and average assets were $576,000 and $3,600,000, respectively. If LIFO had been used through the years, inventory values would have been $100,000 less than under FIFO, and current year cost of goods sold would have been $40,000 less than under FIFO. Calculate the firm’s ROI under each cost-flow assumption.

Step-by-step solution
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Step 1 of 6

LIFO versus FIFO – Impact on ROI

FIFO: It stands for first-in, first-out. This explains that the oldest stock items are sold first then the recent purchased or produced stocks.


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Accounting: What the Numbers Mean 9th Edition by Wayne W McManus, Daniel F Viele, David H Marshall
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