An analyst has gathered the following data pertaining to Hegel Company’s construction projects, which began during 2002:
|
Project 1 |
Project 2 |
Contract price |
$420,000 |
$300,000 |
Costs incurred in 2002 |
240,000 |
280,000 |
Estimated costs to complete |
120,000 |
40,000 |
Billed to customers during 2002 |
150,000 |
270,000 |
Received from customers during 2002 |
90,000 |
250,000 |
If Hengel used the completed contract method, what amount of gross profit (loss) would Hengel report in its 2002 income statement for:
No profit is recognized until the completion of the project, however losses are recognized. Project 2 has an expected loss of $20,000.
If Hengel used the percentage-of-completion method, what amount of gross profit (loss) would Hengel report in its 2002 income statement?
Under the percentage of completion method, $40,000 of profit is recognized for project 1. 120,000 + 240,000 = 360,000 total costs; 240,000 / 360,000 × 60,000 estimated profit = $40,000 profit.
Project 2 is running at a $20,000 loss. If the loss can be estimated the loss must be recognized at the time it is estimated. Total revenue for project 2 = 300,000 contract price ? 320,000 total costs = -$20,000 estimated loss
40,000 (project 1) ? 20,000 (project 2) = $20,000 gross profit in 2002
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