Warnerwoods Company uses a perpetual inventory system. It entered into the following purchases and sales transactions for March. |
Date | Activities | Units Acquired at Cost | Units Sold at Retail | ||||||||||||||
Mar. | Beginning inventory | 100 | units | @ $51.00/unit | |||||||||||||
Purchase | 225 | @ $56.00/unit | |||||||||||||||
Sales | 260 | @ $86.00/unit | |||||||||||||||
@ $61.00/unit | |||||||||||||||||
150 | @ $63.00/unit | ||||||||||||||||
130 | @ $96.00/unit | ||||||||||||||||
Totals | 560 | 390 |
Required: |
Compute cost of goods available for sale and the number of units available for sale.
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Compute the number of units in ending inventory. |
Compute the cost assigned to ending inventory using (a) FIFO, (b) LIFO, (c) weighted average, and (d)specific identification. For specific identification, the March 9 sale consisted of 65 units from beginning inventory and 195 units from the March 5 purchase; the March 29 sale consisted of 45 units from the March 18 purchase and 85 units from the March 25 purchase. (Round your average cost per unit to 2 decimal places.) |
Compute gross profit earned by the company for each of the four costing methods. For specific identification, the March 9 sale consisted of 65 units from beginning inventory and 195 units from the March 5 purchase; the March 29 sale consisted of 45 units from the March 18 purchase and 85 units from the March 25 purchase. (Round average cost per unit to 2 decimal places.) |