Finance Exam Prep

Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 36, Gross Receipts and Cost of Goods Sold

3 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 36, Gross Receipts and Cost of Goods Sold

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This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Gross Receipts represents the total sales revenue a business receives from all sources before any expenses are subtracted. - The Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) formula is: Beginning Inventory + Purchases & Other Direct Costs - Ending Inventory. - Only direct costs, such as raw materials and direct labor, are included in COGS; indirect expenses like marketing or administrative salaries are deducted separately. - Businesses must account for inventory and calculate COGS if the production, purchase, or sale of merchandise is a significant income-producing factor. - On Schedule C for a sole proprietorship, COGS is calculated in Part III and then used in Part I to determine the business's gross profit. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

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136 episodios

episode Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 36, Gross Receipts and Cost of Goods Sold artwork

Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 36, Gross Receipts and Cost of Goods Sold

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Gross Receipts represents the total sales revenue a business receives from all sources before any expenses are subtracted. - The Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) formula is: Beginning Inventory + Purchases & Other Direct Costs - Ending Inventory. - Only direct costs, such as raw materials and direct labor, are included in COGS; indirect expenses like marketing or administrative salaries are deducted separately. - Businesses must account for inventory and calculate COGS if the production, purchase, or sale of merchandise is a significant income-producing factor. - On Schedule C for a sole proprietorship, COGS is calculated in Part III and then used in Part I to determine the business's gross profit. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

Ayer3 min
episode Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 35, Related-Party Transactions and §267 artwork

Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 35, Related-Party Transactions and §267

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Losses on sales between related parties as defined under §267 are disallowed for the seller. - A related party buyer can use the seller's previously disallowed loss to offset a future gain on the sale of that same property. - An accrual-basis taxpayer must defer deducting an expense owed to a related cash-basis taxpayer until the recipient includes the amount in income. - Related parties include immediate family (spouses, ancestors, lineal descendants, siblings) and entities where a taxpayer has more than 50% direct or constructive ownership. - Constructive ownership rules attribute stock ownership from one family member to another, which can trigger the related-party transaction rules. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

1 de jun de 20263 min
episode Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 34, Tax Year Changes — Form 1128 artwork

Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 34, Tax Year Changes — Form 1128

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Why IRS approval, requested via Form 1128, is generally required to change a tax year. - That a change in tax year creates a short-period return for the months between the old and new year-ends. - How to perform the three-step calculation to annualize income and determine the tax for a short period. - That certain corporations can receive automatic approval for a tax year change under Rev. Proc. 2006-45. - To recognize the common exam trap of forgetting to prorate the annualized tax back to the short period. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

31 de may de 20263 min
episode Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 33, Form 7004 — Business Tax Extensions artwork

Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 33, Form 7004 — Business Tax Extensions

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Form 7004 provides an automatic 6-month extension to *file* for partnerships, corporations, and trusts, not an extension to *pay*. - The form must be filed by the original due date of the tax return (e.g., March 15 for S-corps/partnerships, April 15 for C-corps/trusts for calendar-year entities). - A proper, good-faith estimate of the tax liability must be paid with the extension to avoid penalties and potential invalidation of the extension. - The exam frequently tests the distinction between filing deadlines and payment deadlines, often assessing penalties from the original due date. - The mnemonic "7004 opens the filing door, but you still pay on the original floor" helps recall the core rule. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

30 de may de 20263 min
episode Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 32, Accounting Period Election — Calendar vs Fiscal artwork

Enrolled Agent Exam [Part 2] 32, Accounting Period Election — Calendar vs Fiscal

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - The default tax year for most entities is the calendar year. - Personal Service Corporations (PSCs), S Corporations, and Partnerships are generally required to use a calendar year. - A fiscal year is permissible if there is a valid business purpose, such as meeting the 25% gross receipts test for a natural business year. - A Section 444 election allows for a fiscal year with up to a three-month deferral, but requires the entity to make 'required payments' to the IRS. - Partnerships have a specific hierarchy for determining their required tax year: majority interest, principal partners, and then the least aggregate deferral method. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

29 de may de 20263 min