please address the files

4.5. Presto Hospitality—Revenue Recognition Assume Presto concludes that its concession agreement with Stadium Co. is not a lease. In that case, apply the five-step revenue process in ASC 606 to this arrangement. Assume you are evaluating appropriate revenue recognition for the contract and for individual transactions that will arise within the scope of the contract (for example, a sale of a hot dog to a customer in the stadium). Assume a hot dog retails for $6, of which Presto retains 50%.

4.6 Baseball Suites—Lease Evaluation The New York Yankees offer multiyear luxury suite licenses to customers, including 3-, 5-, and 10-year licenses. Customers who sign these license agreements have the right to use a specified suite in the stadium (say, suite no. 25) for the dates specified in the license agreement. Alternatively, customers with a more limited interest or budget can sign up for a partial season (a 20- or 41-game plan) where the customer can specify which games it wishes to view from the suite. While the customer is enjoying the suite, a third-party concessionaire (similar to Presto’s role) will provide premium food and beverage service to guests in the suite. Evaluate—is a suite license a lease? Assume a customer signs a 20-game license for specified games to occur within a single Major League Baseball season

4.7 Sales Commissions, Writing an Email Assume the New York Yankees pay its sales staff a 2% sales commission on each luxury suite license contract signed (such as by a corporate customer). Research whether this commission payment should be reported as an asset or an expense by the New York Yankees. Craft your response in the form of an email, and assume you’re responding to a question asked to you by the accounting manager for the Yankee