Accounting Chapter 7 PDF

Summary

This document is an accounting chapter that explains accounting concepts. It details practical accounting concepts for different financial transactions and uses different methods for businesses.

Full Transcript

CHAPTER 7 L ike we do at the start of every new week, what’s the first thing we do? Roll up the earnings from last week. We’re going to stick with LIFO, by the way, for the rest of the book because we want to save taxes. NOTE: In real life, LIFO records are difficult and expensive to maintain. On...

CHAPTER 7 L ike we do at the start of every new week, what’s the first thing we do? Roll up the earnings from last week. We’re going to stick with LIFO, by the way, for the rest of the book because we want to save taxes. NOTE: In real life, LIFO records are difficult and expensive to maintain. Only companies with large amounts of inventory would adopt this method. Consult a good accountant when making this decision. Enough of the legal warnings and mumbo-jumbo—let’s get rolling. Roll up the earnings from week three. 98 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E $59.00 $24.00 $25.00 $ 1 1 .00 $49.00 $1 0 $ 1 0 .00 $0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $82.00 What’s our Retained Earnings? Twenty-eight dollars. And, given the new week, week four, what’s our Earnings Week to Date? None, so far. First thing, though, you receive a phone call from one of your friends who bought some lemonade on account several weeks ago. He finally got his allowance and is ready to pay you five dollars. This is great! You collected on an account without having to call in the collection agency. Did we receive Cash? Yes. So what do we have to do to demonstrate this? Add $5 in cash and take away $5 in Accounts Receivable. Use the next Balance Sheet to demonstrate this transaction. 99 C H APTER 7 $24.00 $25.00 $49.00 $1 0 $ 1 0 .00 $0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 $33.00 $82.00 Did we account for that Accounts Receivable as a sale a few weeks back? Yes. Did it show up on our Income Statement as a sale back then? Yes. Are we going to account for it as a sale now? No. No, because we already accounted for it as a sale on our Income Statement when? Two weeks ago. That’s because we are using the Accrual Method of accounting. Is any part of this transaction going to show up on your Income Statement? No. But, we did get in some cash, didn’t we? Would it be helpful to keep track of our cash as it flows in and out of the business? Yes. We’re going to bring out our third financial statement. Why three? Think it of this way. At least, how many legs does a stool need to be stable? Three. If we think of our financial record-keeping as a stool, the Balance Sheet is one leg. The Income Statement is another leg. So, we need another leg for our financial stool to become stable. 100 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E And we’ve been managing our business with an income statement and a balance sheet. Both of which are on what method? The Accrual Method. The third financial statement is the Cash Flow Statement. Here’s a Cash Statement. We’re going to build it line by line. CASH STATEMENT COLLECTIONS WEEK ________ $ INVENTORY PAID FIXED ASSET INVESTMENT EXPENSES PAID CHANGE IN CASH $ ________ BEGINNING CASH + ________ ENDING CASH $ ________ We’re going to go through it line by line and, at the end of the week, we’ll put the whole Cash Statement together. Basically, the Cash Statement records only the cash that comes in and the cash that goes out in a given time period—in our case, each week. This bears repeating: The Cash Statement records only the cash that comes in and the cash that goes out. Did we start this week with some cash? Yes. How much was the beginning cash? $59.00. Record that on the Beginning Cash line. Now, did we collect five dollars on our account? Yes. Record the cash that comes in and the cash that goes out. We’ll put in a plus if cash comes in and a minus if cash goes out. On what line of our Cash Statement would this $5 go? Well, it was a collection, right? So add plus $5 to Collections. You can write A/R next to the $5 so you will know it was from collecting Accounts Receivable. Got that? C H APTER 7 The Change in Cash line is where you will total all the pluses and minuses at the end of the week, based on all the detail line items above. Given that you’re such an entrepreneur—and once an entrepreneur, always an entrepreneur—you decide to spruce up your place of business. A friend’s older brother has a great stand that he built a couple years ago when he had his own lemonade business. You decide to buy it. You negotiate a hard deal and get the stand for eight dollars. Another friend’s family has a tiny patch of land they’re willing to sell you for your new location. It’s part of an enormous vacant lot that, while locating near the corner of a busy street, is years away from serious development. You buy the lot and the new lemonade stand for $10 cash. You expect the stand will last about 10 years without major repairs. In the initial sales contract, you specify that $8 of the purchase is for the stand and $2 is for the land. (There is a reason for separating these which we’ll discuss later.) How do we demonstrate that on our Balance Sheet? We’re going to put our brand new stand in a corner lot for $10. What are we going to buy it with? Cash. Okay. Ten dollars goes out. What comes in? The new stand and lot. Is the stand and lot something we have? Yes. So, where are we going to show it? Is it an Asset? Yes. What are we going to call it? What does a business call something it has acquired which is property, plant, or equipment? A Fixed Asset. Why “fixed”? Because it’s things not normally intended for sale, which are used over and over again in the course of doing business. Go ahead and do another Balance Sheet, reflecting this transaction. 101 102 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E $24.00 $25.00 $ 6 .00 $49.00 $1 0 $ 1 0 .00 $0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 $33.00 $82.00 Besides a building or land, what other Fixed Assets can you think of? __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Maybe you wrote down things like office furniture, business vehicles, computers, tools, fax machines, telephones, book shelves, refrigerator—things like that. We just bought a Fixed Asset. Is it ours? Yes. How much? $10.00. Do you know what it’s called when you buy an asset and add it to the Balance Sheet? Capitalizing the asset. Now, does the purchase of the land or the stand show up on your Income Statement? No. Can we take the stand and the land as an expense? No. How come we can’t expense them? Because it is a major purchase of significant value with a long life. What’s the rule here? Generally, the purchase of major items of significant value increase your assets and are added to the Balance Sheet, that is, capitalized. One more time? C H APTER 7 Generally, the purchase of major items of significant value increase your assets and are added to the Balance Sheet (capitalized). Deciding whether to capitalize or expense an item is a pretty important decision that has some general guidelines. We will look at a few examples, then clarify the guidelines. We’ve just transferred cash into another kind of asset, and capitalized the asset. Do you see it? Did cash go out? Yes. We made a what? An investment. Go back to your Cash Statement and put minus $10 on the Cash Statement, on which line? Fixed Asset Investment. You like the new lemonade stand, but your friend’s older brother didn’t have great taste in paint. (Unless you call brown, purple, and hot pink an appealing combination.) The stand needs a paint job—and fast! It’s present condition won’t exactly attract many customers, so you decide to paint it yourself in bright colors. You know that the local hardware store often has odds and ends in its paint department that are priced way down. You call and, sure enough, you can get a couple cans of paint for two dollars. The paint dealer is a bit odd. He works at a hardware store, but he wears a French beret, a long white smock, and will only answer to the name, “Monsieur Claude.” You say, “Bon jour, Monsieur Claude. Here’s $2 for two cans. Merci!” One can is bright yellow. The other is a pretty shade of blue. You go back and paint your stand. To your eyes, it’s a masterpiece. Right up there with the Mona Lisa! How are we going to account for this paint? Did cash go out? Yep, you put that $2 in paint all over the stand. On which of our three financial statements do we record this transaction? We’ll get to this in a few moments. Before we do, let’s stop and consider whether we should take the paint as an improvement and capitalize it—or expense it. Do we want to add the paint to the Fixed Assets and, as a result, capitalize it? Does it increase the value of the stand? 103 104 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E Do we expense it? Do you think we could do either? Well, in fact, you could do either. If it is Super-Sticky, Weather-Bester Paint and lasts 10 years, we would do what? Capitalize it. Suppose it’s the cheap stuff that peels the first year. What should we do? Expense it. Say, it’s the cheap stuff—would you have to paint that stand every year? Yes. Would that be an on-going cost of doing business? Yes. A maintenance expense? Yes. Guess which paint we got for our hard-earned money? The cheap stuff. Okay, then. We take it as an expense which means we’re going to have to do what? Reduce earnings. Complete a new Balance Sheet that reflects the expensing of the paint. $24.00 $25.00 $ 6 .00 $49.00 $1 0 $ 1 0 .00 $0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 This might throw you into an interesting dilemma when you go to reduce earnings by $2. How much do you have in Earnings Week to Date? ZERO, ZIP, ZILCH! You could be tempted to subtract $2 from Retained Earnings—but those are past earnings and we do not want to change the past. In accounting, you are always working in the present or current accounting period. That means our earnings in this period are now C H APTER 7 minus $2. This is what is commonly referred to in business as being in the “red.” You might want to get a red marker to write this in, or put the amount in brackets to signify the loss. How did this happen? How did such a thriving, promising, expanding lemonade business suddenly plunge into the “red”? The explanation is simple. You’ve been so busy making improvements, buying fixed assets, scheming and dreaming, etc.—that you haven’t opened for business this week! For the Earnings Week to Date, we’re in the red! And by how much? $2.00. Did we pay cash for the paint? Does it also show up on the Cash Statement we started earlier in this chapter? Yes. Did cash come in or go out? Out. Cash for the paint went out. It’s minus 2 in expenses paid on our Cash Statement. Go back and write that in. Let’s review. All three financial statements get used in this transaction. On the Balance Sheet, cash goes out and we expense it, which reduces earnings. It gets recorded on our Income Statement as paint expense for $2. And it also gets recorded on the Cash Statement as minus $2 under expenses paid. Okay? Gee, the new lemonade stand looks great. It’s really solid and the shingle roof adds character. The color scheme is great, too. Which makes you wish you could add one more thing before really, really starting to sell some lemonade this week. It would make your life so much easier if you just had a sink. With a sink you could wash and re-use glasses on the spot, instead of having to cart them home every night. You make a few calls. New sinks are very expensive. But you find a place that sells used stuff that has a decent sink for only $2. Better still, because the owner doesn’t live that far away, he’ll deliver the sink for free on his way home! And, even better still, the owner is happy to let you charge the sink. The owner brings the sink over, as promised, and stays to help you hitch it on to your lemonade stand. How do we demonstrate this transaction? Accounts Payable goes up. By how much? $2.00. Will we have to replace the sink every year? No. Does it improve the stand? Yes. Being an improvement, how do we account for it? Capitalize it. So, do we want to set up another Fixed Asset for the sink? No. 105 106 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E What will we do? Add it to the stand. We’re going to hitch that sink right on to our stand, aren’t we? With a little help. yes. Are we increasing the value of our stand? Yes. By how much? $2.00. Demonstrate these transaction on the next Balance Sheet. $25.00 $ 6 .00 $1 0 $ 1 0 .00 $0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 But wait a minute! Why are we not expensing the sink? We expensed the paint. Here’s why. We said that we’ll be buying paint every year as an on-going cost of doing business. So it has a short life. But the sink will last for years. If we were to sell that stand, would the sink increase the value of our stand? Yes. If you add something that improves an asset, you capitalize it. So, if we increase the value of the stand we are making a capital improvement. Did cash get affected by buying the sink? No. Why? We charged it. Does it show up on the Cash Statement? No. Since we capitalized the asset, does that show up as an expense on the Income Statement? No. This transaction only shows up where? In which financial statement? The Balance Sheet. 107 C H APTER 7 You’re so busy, fixing the stand and climbing all over it that you crack a roof shingle. You want the stand to look perfect and figure it shouldn’t cost too much to replace a single shingle. You ask your friend’s brother and he says he’ll repair it for one dollar. He even allows you to charge it. Is the repair an expense? Yes. For how much? $1.00. Did you pay cash for it? No. You charged it, right? How do we demonstrate it? $25.00 $ 6 .00 $52.00 $1 0 $ 1 0 .00 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 $30.00 Add $1 to Accounts Payable and go in the red by another $1.00. Did we stay in balance? Yes. So, did this transaction only affect the right side of the Balance Sheet? Yes. Is that okay? Yes. As long as both sides still balance. What would make the roof repair a capital improvement? You’d have to add a whole new roof. Did we just return the roof to the way it originally was? Yes. 108 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E So, is this another on-going cost of doing business? Yes. A maintenance expense? Yes. Does this show up on our Income Statement? Yes. Did cash go out? No. Since no cash went out, was the Cash Statement affected in any way? No. The last four transactions involved the decision to capitalize or expense an item. Let’s take the time now to review. How does a business decide whether to expense or capitalize an item? There are two main criteria for the decision. What are they? 1. Time. How long the item lasts. You capitalize something that lasts longer than one year. Conversely, if it lasts less than a year you would expense it. 2. Cost. If you buy a trash can and it lasts longer than a year, would you capitalize it? No. Why not? It’s too insignificant of an item. The second criteria is how much it costs. Most companies have a set dollar amount. What are examples? $500, $1000, $1500. So, let’s pick $500—if your company’s policy is $500 and the item is less than $500 we automatically expense it. If it is $500 and above we capitalize it. Well, it’s finally, finally time to open for business. But, given all that has happened and the time it has taken, you forget to make time to buy some lemons and sugar and make more lemonade. Oh, my gosh! Now what?! Although it stands for everything you oppose, and you hope your customers understand that this one time they won’t be tasting your homemade-from-a-secretrecipe, world’s-greatest-tasting lemonade—you purchase some pre-made lemonade for $20 in cash. The carton says it contains a hundred glasses. What do you think of this—is it a good idea? No. Why not? Freshness and uniqueness of product are going down. But check this out. What kind of pre-made is it? Truman’s Own. Will the kids buy it? You bet! How did we pay for it? Cash. How much cash? $20.00. Let’s demonstrate on the Balance Sheet. 109 C H APTER 7 $27.00 $25.00 $52.00 $ 10 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 $ 1 2 .00 Are we in balance? Yes. Did cash go out? Yes. What we did was make a cash purchase. Record that on your Cash Statement under Inventory Period. To make life easier, here’s a fresh Cash Statement below. Transfer all of the previous cash transactions in this chapter. Then, record the purchase of the pre-made lemonade. What happened? Cash went down by $20.00. CASH STATEMENT COLLECTIONS WEEK ________ $ INVENTORY PAID FIXED ASSET INVESTMENT EXPENSES PAID CHANGE IN CASH $ ________ BEGINNING CASH + ________ ENDING CASH $ ________ 110 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E Does the purchase of pre-made lemonade show up on our Income Statement? Yes, under the purchases section of Cost of Goods Sold for $20.00. So, we’ve got this pre-made lemonade and guess what? Sales are great! You sell all the pre-made lemonade for $50. Forty dollars in cash and $10 on account. Other inventory remains the same. What goes out? Lemonade. We’ve still got the old lemons. Although they’re starting to look a little, well…old. What comes in? Cash. How much cash? $40.00. And how much on account? $10.00. Update the left side of the Balance Sheet. $25.00 $ 1 6 .00 $ 10 $ 10.00 $ 0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 $ 1 2 .00 Are we in balance? Not yet. So, we need to reflect what? Earnings week to date. Our sales were $50—and how much did it cost us in Inventory? $20.00. So, what are total earnings this week? $30.00. But what are the earnings on the Balance Sheet, before reflecting the day’s sales? Minus $3.00. 111 C H APTER 7 So $30 minus $3 equals how much? $27.00. Okay, update the right side of the Balance Sheet above. Now, are we in balance? Yes. Now, let’s go back for a minute to the last Cash Statement on the previous page. Did cash get affected? Yes. We collected $40. Record +40 on the Collections line. Now that we finally had some sales—and, more importantly, some cash came in, we want to keep our good relationship with Pappy Parker, our grocer. Our original account with the kind old gent is almost 30 days—or close to overdue. So, we decide to pay $4.00 on our account for sugar. We get on our bike and go down to the grocery store. “How’s the lemonade business?” Pappy asks. If he’s worried about getting paid he’s not showing it. “Today, things are definitely looking up,” you say. “So I want to pay you $4.00, in cash.” Pappy happily takes four dollars. In return, he gives you a free cookie. Doing business with some people is such fun! Okay, you pay the grocer with what? Cash. So, what comes out? Cash, for $4.00. Do the Balance Sheet below. $25.00 $ 1 6 .00 $ 10 $ 10.00 $ 0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 $27.00 $ 1 2 .00 $60.00 112 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E What gets reduced on the right side, to be balanced? Accounts Payable, BY $4.00. Now that $4 for sugar—has that shown up on our Income Statement before? Yes. Will it show up on the Income Statement this week? No. When did we account for that as a purchase? When it happened in Week 2. Right, on the Accrual Method we accounted for it then even though we didn’t pay any what? Cash. Here it is, two weeks later and we’re paying back in what? Cash. Do the Accounts Payable show up as part of cost of goods sold this week on our Income Statement? No. Nothing happens on the Income Statement. But did cash get affected? Yes. Cash goes down by how much? $4.00. We’ll put a minus 4 right by Inventory Paid—and note that we paid Pappy the grocer back. Please update the Cash Statement on page 109. Having paid Pappy some, you figure why not spread your good fortune around. You decide to pay back the bank $25 for loan, plus $2 for interest. The banker happily takes $27 from you. On the way out, the bank guard smiles at you and says, “Come back again soon. Hear?” How much goes out? $27.00. Right, $25 on the principal—and $2 in what? Interest. So, how much Cash goes out? $27.00. Show this transaction on the next Balance Sheet. $23.00 $ 1 6 .00 $ 10 $ 10.00 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $ 1 2 .00 $28.00 113 C H APTER 7 Are we in balance yet? No. What do we need to do on the right side? We need to take off what? Notes Payable by $25. Are we in balance now? Not yet. We also need to account for paying the interest expense, on the right side. So, what comes out of earnings?$2.00. Now, complete the right side of the Balance Sheet. Are you in balance now? Yes. The totals should be $81.00. That $2 is an interest expense. Our cost of doing business with the bank. Does any of the transaction regarding the loan pay back show up on the Income Statement? Yes, interest. Interest expense for how much? $2.00 Is the Cash Statement affected? Yes, because cash went out. Now, $27 went out. We didn’t borrow, but we paid back the bank $25 for what? The principal. So, on the next Cash Statement, record the pay back—$25 of the principal on borrow/payback (Bring forward the numbers from page 109.) In addition, put minus $2 on the Expenses Paid line. CASH STATEMENT COLLECTIONS WEEK ________ $ INVENTORY PAID FIXED ASSET INVESTMENT EXPENSES PAID CHANGE IN CASH $ ________ BEGINNING CASH + ________ ENDING CASH $ ________ Okay. We want to introduce one more thing before closing out this week. It’s how to treat the value of fixed assets over time. This concept is called “depreciation.” What is depreciation? It’s the decrease in value of fixed assets over time due to wear and tear and obsolescence. 114 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E Let’s look at our major fixed assets, the stand, the lot it sits on, and the sink we added to the stand. We bought the stand for $8 and the land for $2. What did we add to the stand that was capitalized? The sink. The building and sink are now $10 and the land is $2. Why separate the land? By law, you can’t depreciate land. Why not? Give some reasons why you think we can’t depreciate land. __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ How long does land last? Forever. Does land wear out? No. Therefore, can we depreciate land? No. But, can we depreciate the stand?Yes. And the sink?Yes. Can we depreciate the stand and improvement? Yes. How long did we say the stand is going to last? Ten years. And we can depreciate how much? $10.00. The method of depreciation we’re going to use is called Straight Line Depreciation. The way that straight line depreciation works is that you draw a straight line between the number of years (10 years) and the dollar amount…what did it cost you? $10.00. 115 C H APTER 7 Using straight line depreciation, each year represents an equal percentage, how much is each year worth of the total depreciation? 10 percent if it is a ten-year life. Therefore, if the total amount we can depreciate is $10 and the length of time is ten years, we can take $1 per year. If we take $1 for the first few years, it’s going to lower the value of our fixed asset by that amount. Which means that our $12.00 fixed asset is now worth $11.00. Does that mean it’s really worth $11? No. It’s now worth $11 on paper. That’s called the net book value. When you hear the net book value of a fixed asset, it means purchase price minus depreciation. We will show this on our Balance Sheet using red (negative) for the depreciation. On paper, the value is going down. In reality, though, out in the world, the value might be going up. Now, on our Balance Sheet, if we reduce the value of the fixed asset by one dollar, are we in balance? No. What is depreciation? An expense. And expenses reduce what? Earnings. So what do you have to do here? Reduce earnings by $1.00. Show the depreciation transactions on the next Balance Sheet. $41.00 $23.00 $0.00 $ 1 6 .00 $23.00 $ 10 $ 10.00 $0 $ 5.00 $ 2.00 $28.00 116 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E Did depreciation affect our Cash? No. Right, it’s the first time we’ve had an expense that didn’t affect our Cash position at all. But, we get to take it as a what? An expense. Turning to our Income Statement, where would we write this down? As Depreciation Expense. Now, here’s another accounting rule for us to lock into our memory forever: Remember: Depreciation is a non-cash expense. Like our other rules, this bears repeating. This is different from the insurance policy. When we took the prepaid expenses for the first year’s insurance we used up $1. Could we get the whole $3 back for it? No. If we sold the stand and the sink, could we get $10 back for it? Maybe. Maybe even more. So depreciation is a non-cash expense and it’s happening where? On the Balance Sheet, on PAPER. Now, the government is saying you paid $10 for the sink and the stand, but we won’t let you expense the whole amount when you buy it; you have to capitalize it. But it’s going to start wearing out, in theory. So, we’ll let you take $1 as a non-cash expense. As a result, each year we would simply reduce the book value of the asset by the depreciation amount which obviously does not affect cash. This is why it is a non-cash expense. The advantage is that it reduces earnings and taxes without reducing cash. (Pretty nifty, huh?) Here is your final Balance Sheet for this week. Please complete it. 117 C H APTER 7 ENDING BALANCE SHEET FOR WEEK FOUR Now, complete the cash statement below. CASH STATEMENT COLLECTIONS WEEK ________ $ INVENTORY PAID FIXED ASSET INVESTMENT EXPENSES PAID CHANGE IN CASH $ ________ BEGINNING CASH + ________ ENDING CASH $ ________ 118 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E How much did we collect? $45.00. And how much did we spend? $63.00. So, +$45 and -$63. What is the change is cash? -$18.00 Now, before you go on, let’s look at this. If this says that our cash changed by -$18, then it went down by $18. If we started with $59, what should be our ending cash? $41.00 So, that means we started the week with $59 and ended the week with how much? $41.00. Look on your last Balance Sheet. How much Cash do we have? $41.00. And, this Cash Statement tells you exactly where your cash went. So, it’s a recording of your cash transactions and how much came in and how much went out. Wow! You’re doing great! In the matter of a few chapters, you’ve learned so much accounting—including the three financial statements and how to use them! Well done! Now, complete this week’s Income Statement. Because you’re working so hard and having fun doing it, we’re going to list the week’s transactions, so you don’t have to go back and find every last one. You’re welcome! TRANSACTIONS: You collect $5 cash from some of your friends. You buy a lot and a new lemonade stand for $10 cash. You pay $2 cash for paint and apply it to the stand. You buy a sink for $2 and charge it. You repair the roof for $1 and charge it. You pay $20 cash for pre-made lemonade. 119 C H APTER 7 Sales are good. You sell all the pre-made lemonade for $50—$40 cash and $10 on Account. You pay back your accounts payable for sugar for $4. You pay back the loan for $25 plus $2 in interest. You depreciate the building and improvements ($10 total) using straight line depreciation. Show this year’s depreciation expense for $1. Ph-eww! What a week! While I catch my breath, go ahead and complete this week’s Income Statement. INCOME STATEMENT SALES Begin: Monday A.M. End: Sunday P.M. Beginning Inventory + Purchases + Labor Total Available for Sale - Ending Inventory = C OST OF GO ODS SOLD $ $ $ GROSS PROFIT = EXPENSES • • = TOTAL EXPENSES NET PROFIT (Gross Profit - Expenses) $ 120 T H E AC C O U N T I N G GA M E Let’s check the Income Statement. Sales were $50. Beginning Inventory was $10. Purchases were $20. So, Total Available for Sale was $30. The Ending Inventory was $10. Which means the Cost of Goods Sold was $20. Leaving you with a Gross Profit of $30. The Expenses were: Paint, $2; roof repair, $1; Interest, $2; Depreciation, $1. For a Total Expenses of $6. Leaving you with a Net Profit of…drum roll please…$24! Well, that completes another week. Next, we round third base and head for home!

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