Solve this simple math problem (you may not get it right :D)

Nov 14, 2006 at 7:51 PM Post #18 of 159
Quote:

Originally Posted by chesebert
haven't seen a correct answer yet


It looks like choariwap answered correctly...

-80
+100
-10
-100
------
-90
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 7:54 PM Post #19 of 159
Quote:

Originally Posted by philodox
It looks like choariwap answered correctly...

-80
+100
-10
-100
------
-90



cheesebert said he hasnt seen any correct answers after my first post, though

p.s. cool, +3 post count already
eggosmile.gif
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 7:57 PM Post #20 of 159
2nd attempt then...

Basically your neighbour has given you $100 and you've given her $100 so that evens out.
The customer has basically taken the headphone (that you brought for $80) and $10 as well.

So either your down $90 (the $80 for the headphone plus their $10 "change")
Or maybe $100 (the $90 you were selling it for plus their $10 "change")
Or maybe (as a headphone dealer) you totally write off the costs of the headphone in amongst normal day to day running costs so your only $10 out of pocket.

Or (alternatively) your not down anything as you've got the $100 "fake" and you can claim the actual cash back from somewhere or other ???
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 8:09 PM Post #24 of 159
Doesn't it depend on whether or not you knew that you had a fake $100?

If you know that you've got a fake $100, then you start out $100 in the green, technically. If you didn't know it, then you got screwed somewhere earlier, and you're $100 in the red to begin with.
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 8:16 PM Post #26 of 159
Quote:

Originally Posted by ilovesocks
Doesn't it depend on whether or not you knew that you had a fake $100?

If you know that you've got a fake $100, then you start out $100 in the green, technically. If you didn't know it, then you got screwed somewhere earlier, and you're $100 in the red to begin with.



The $100 the customer gave you was fake.
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 8:33 PM Post #27 of 159
Quote:

Originally Posted by chesebert
You are a headphone seller.
You bought a headphone for $80 and plans to sell it for $90
A customer bought the headphone, and gave you $100.
You don't have any changes so you went to the neighbor store to change $100 for 20s and 10s
You gave $10 change to the customer.
Later that day, the neighbor told you that the $100 you gave them was fake, so you gave them another $100.

How much are you in the red? (please give a short explanation)

HAVE FUN
600smile.gif


NOTE: the $100 you gave the neighbor store to get changes was the $100 you received from the customer. Seems like some one was confused about this. (I thought this wasn't an issue as its a general practice
smily_headphones1.gif


EDIT: Please make a note that you are a headphone dealer (say headroom for example) not a individual seller. I hope the hint helps.



  1. Pay $80 for Player: Total -80
  2. Receive $100: +20
  3. Give $100 to Neighbor: -80
  4. Receive 100 From Neighbor: +20
  5. Give $10 to Customer: +10
  6. Give $100 to Neighbor: -90
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 8:51 PM Post #28 of 159
Quote:

Originally Posted by chesebert
You are a headphone seller.
You bought a headphone for $80 and plans to sell it for $90
A customer bought the headphone, and gave you $100.
You don't have any changes so you went to the neighbor store to change $100 for 20s and 10s
You gave $10 change to the customer.
Later that day, the neighbor told you that the $100 you gave them was fake, so you gave them another $100.

How much are you in the red? (please give a short explanation)

HAVE FUN
600smile.gif


NOTE: the $100 you gave the neighbor store to get changes was the $100 you received from the customer. Seems like some one was confused about this. (I thought this wasn't an issue as its a general practice
smily_headphones1.gif


EDIT: Please make a note that you are a headphone dealer (say headroom for example) not a individual seller. I hope the hint helps.



The two statements in bold above don't make sense. The neighbor gave you $100, not the reverse. You gave the neighbor $10 change. Sounds like a scam to me
blink.gif
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 8:52 PM Post #29 of 159
Looking at where actual money changes hands. You give out 80 for the phones. You get $90 of headphone stock. You get 100 from your neighbour. You give 10 to the customer/conman. You lose 90 in stock. You lose 100 in cash to your neighbour

-80
+90
+100
-10
-90
-100

All adds up to you being $90 in the red.

Did you think this up yourself?
 
Nov 14, 2006 at 8:57 PM Post #30 of 159
Hmm. So then what's the trick?

Assuming no taxes, or that you don't have operating profits or can't otherwise utilize the net operating losses, I agree with the others that you're out 90 (as a net loss). Otherwise, a simple tax impact would be you're out 90 * (1-t), with t being the tax rate. This all assumes that you need to write off the $100 as a fraud expense.

But if this is the trick you're looking for, this isn't a simple math question. It's a simple accounting/tax question.

Best regards,

-Jason
 

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