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The Restor-It is a company specializing in the restoration of old homes. To showcase its work, the company purchased an old Victorian home in downtown Pittsburg, Kansas. The original home was purchased for $125,000. A new heating and air-conditioning system was added for $30,000. The house was completely rewired and re-plumbed at a cost of $50,000. Custom cabinets were added, and the floors and trim were refurbished to their original condition, at a cost of $75,000.
The project was such a success, that Restor-It decided to purchase another very large home, this time in nearby Joplin, Missouri. A realtor offered to purchase the home in Pittsburg for $175,000. He plans to lease it as luxury short-term apartments for visiting dignitaries. Restor-It decided that a modest return was all that was required, and so they agreed to sell. Only afterward did they learn that they had a $10,000 loss on the sale. The president of the company, Dan Carlin, does not believe that a loss is possible. "We sold that house for more than we paid for it," he said. "I know we put some money in it, but we had depreciated it for three years. How in the world can we have a loss?"
Required:
Write a short memo to Mr. Carlin explaining how it would be possible to have a loss. Do not try to use specific numbers for cost or depreciation.
Personality
The combination of characteristics or qualities that form an individual's distinctive character.
Cognitive Psychologists
Scientists who study mental processes such as perception, memory, thought, and problem-solving.
Hopeless
A state of despair in which an individual perceives little or no possibility of overcoming a situation, often associated with depression.
Rumination
The compulsive focused attention on the symptoms of one's distress, and on its possible causes and consequences, as opposed to its solutions.
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