FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING A Managerial Perspective R. Narayanaswamy Indian Institute of Management Bangalore Delhi-110092 2014 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING: A Managerial Perspective, Fifth Edition R. Narayanaswamy © 2014 by PHI Learning Private Limited, Delhi. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission in writing from the publisher. ISBN-978-81-203-4949-0 The export rights of this book are vested solely with the publisher. Twenty-second Printing (Fifth Edition)..........................…..........................…..........................April, 2014 Published by Asoke K. Ghosh, PHI Learning Private Limited, Rimjhim House, 111, Patparganj Industrial Estate, Delhi-110092 and Printed by Rajkamal Electric Press, Plot No. 2, Phase IV, HSIDC, Kundli-131028, Sonepat, Haryana. To My Family and My Students Introduction........1 Interview with Mr. N. R. Narayana Murthy, Infosys Limited........5 Part One THE BASIC ACCOUNTING MODEL 1. Accounting, Markets, and Governance Walking on Eggshells........11 The Chapter in a Nutshell........11 Understanding Business Organizations........12 What is Accounting........14 Users of Accounting Information........16 Financial and Management Accounting........22 Accounting Measurement Assumptions........22 Generally Accepted Accounting Principles and the Accounting Environment........25 Forms of Business Organization........29 Accounting, Capital Market, and Corporate Governance........33 The Accounting Equation........36 Financial Statements........42 What do Accountants Do?........45 Accounting as an Academic Discipline........50 Fraud and Ethical Issues in Accounting........50 Looking Back........52 Review Problem........53 Assignment Material........55 2. Processing Transactions Does Microsoft Tick all the Right Boxes?........63 The Chapter in a Nutshell........63 Accounts........64 Commonly Used Accounts........65 The Double-entry System: The Basis of Modern Accounting........68 Comprehensive Illustration: Fashion Concepts Company........71 Recording Transactions........80 Trial Balance........83 Looking Back........87 Review Problem........88 Assignment Material........91 3. Measuring Income How much does that Car Cost?........104 The Chapter in a Nutshell........104 Income Measurement........105 Accrual Accounting........107 The Adjustment Process: Converting Cash into Accrual........111 Adjusting Entries........112 Worksheet: The Accountant’s Invaluable Tool........120 Using the Worksheet........128 Overview of the Accounting Cycle........130 Closing Entries........132 Post-closing Trial Balance........137 Reversing Entries........138 Pro Forma Financial Measures ........141 Looking Back........142 Review Problem........142 Assignment Material........146 4. Accounting for Merchandising Transactions Phantom Sales........163 The Chapter in a Nutshell........163 Income Measurement for a Merchandising Organization........164 Revenue from Sales........165 Cost of Goods Sold........171 Operating Expenses........175 Worksheet for a Merchandising Organization........176 Financial Statements........180 Looking Back........184 Review Problem........185 Assignment Material........186 Comprehensive Case 1........199 Interview with Mr. Prabhakar Kalavacherla, International Accounting Standards Board........203 Part Two MEASURING AND REPORTING ASSETS, LIABILITIES, AND EQUITY 5. Internal Control Systems, Cash and Receivables Satyam’s Truth........207 The Chapter in a Nutshell........207 Internal Control Systems........208 Internal Control for Cash........214 Cash and Cash Equivalents........217 Bank Reconciliation........218 Trade Receivables........222 Bills Receivable........228 Revenue from Construction Contracts, Franchises, and Leases........233 Pledging, Assignment, and Factoring........235 Financial Analysis of Receivables........237 Looking Back........238 Review Problem........238 Assignment Material........240 6. Inventories And then the Music Stopped ........254 The Chapter in a Nutshell........254 Current Assets........255 Inventory Valuation and Income Measurement........255 Determining the Physical Inventory........258 Inventory Costs........259 Cost Formulas........259 Inventory Valuation........264 Conservatism, Neutrality, and Prudence........265 Comparability........266 Estimating Inventory Value........266 Perpetual Inventory System........269 Manufacturing Costs........271 Financial Analysis of Inventories........272 Managing the Operating Cycle........273 Looking Back........275 Review Problem........276 Assignment Material........277 7. Fixed Assets Depreciation and Cash ........286 The Chapter in a Nutshell........286 Fixed Assets in Perspective........287 Property, Plant and Equipment........287 Cost of Acquisition........288 Depreciation........291 Depreciation Methods........293 Capital and Revenue Expenditures........303 Depreciation for Income Tax Purposes........306 Disposal of Depreciable Assets........307 Myths About Depreciation........310 Revaluation of Property, Plant and Equipment........312 Intangible Assets........314 Natural Resources........318 Impairment of Assets........322 Financial Analysis of Fixed Assets........323 Looking Back........323 Review Problem........324 Assignment Material........325 8. Investments When the Party Ends… ........337 The Chapter in a Nutshell........337 Investments in Perspective........338 Financial Instruments and Financial Assets........338 Equity and Debt Instruments........338 Impairment of Financial Assets........345 Equity Investments for Business Purposes........347 Subsidiaries........348 Consolidated Financial Statements........349 Business Combination ........351 Consolidated Financial Statements and Business Combination Illustrated........353 Joint Ventures........358 Associates........363 Investments in Separate Financial Statements........366 Investment Property........367 Looking Back........368 Review Problem........369 Assignment Material........370 9. Liabilities OOPS! My Bond Prices have Gone Up ........381 The Chapter in a Nutshell........381 Liabilities in Perspective........382 Classification of Liabilities........382 Current Liabilities........383 Contingent Liabilities........386 Long-term Liabilities ........387 Income Taxes........403 Off-balance Sheet Financing........416 Looking Back........418 Review Problem........419 Assignment Material........420 10. Shareholders’ Equity Affluent Promoters and Sick Companies........435 The Chapter in a Nutshell........435 The Corporate Organization........436 Share Capital........438 Accounting for Share Capital........439 Preference Share Capital........442 Reserves and Surplus........443 Buy-back of Shares and Treasury Stock........445 Bonus Shares........447 Dividends........449 Share-based Payment........450 Statement of Changes in Equity ........453 Earnings Per Share........454 Looking Back........457 Review Problem........458 Assignment Material........459 Comprehensive Case 2........467 Interview with Mr. P. R. Ramesh, Deloitte India........471 Part Three ANALYZING AND INTERPRETING FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 11. Analyzing Financial Statements: Statement of Profit and Loss and Balance Sheet Till Debt do us Part ........477 The Chapter in a Nutshell........477 Objectives of Financial Statement Analysis........478 Sources of Information........479 Standards of Comparison........480 Earnings Quality........482 Techniques of Financial Statement Analysis........488 Profitability Analysis........493 Advanced Profitability Analysis: Focus on Operations........497 Liquidity Analysis ........500 Solvency Analysis........503 Capital Market Standing........506 Understanding Annual Reports and Earnings Releases........509 Corporate Disclosure Policy........510 Efficient Market Hypothesis and Financial Statement Analysis........511 Earnings Management........513 Looking Back........515 Review Problem........516 Assignment Material........517 12. Analyzing Financial Statements: Cash Flow Statement A Vulnerable King ........531 The Chapter in a Nutshell........531 Cash Flow Statement in Perspective........532 Uses and Structure of the Cash Flow Statement........533 Preparing the Cash Flow Statement........536 Determining Net Cash Flow from Operating Activities........538 Reporting Cash Flows........548 Interpreting the Cash Flow Statement........550 Free Cash Flow........552 Looking Back........553 Review Problem........553 Assignment Material........556 Comprehensive Case 3........573 13. Analyzing Financial Statements: Banks The Banker to Every Indian ........575 The Chapter in a Nutshell........575 Understanding Banks........576 Bank Regulation........576 Legal Framework for Financial Statements........578 Balance Sheet........579 Statement of Profit and Loss........585 The Drivers of a Bank’s Performance........586 Capital Adequacy ........593 Basel Accords ........594 Basel III Reforms........596 Off-balance Sheet Activities........602 Looking Back........603 Review Problem........604 Assignment Material........605 Comprehensive Case 4........613 Interview with Professor Shyam Sunder, Yale University........615 Appendix A: Hindustan Unilever Consolidated Financial Statements........619 Appendix B: Time Value of Money........622 Appendix C: Summary of Formulas........631 Glossary........635 Answer Check for Selected Problems........643 Index........645 v Financial Statements: Who Cares? Business and non-business organizations use financial statements to tell the world about their accomplishments and activities, successes and setbacks, opportunities and challenges, and prospects and problems. Investors, lenders, equity and bond analysts, managers, employees, alliance partners, competitors, suppliers, customers, government officers, regulators, politicians, activists, donors, lawyers, and judges use financial statements. v This Book It is designed as a first-level course offered in business schools, universities, and professional programmes. Its distinctive features are: Developing the accounting model from the basics of business. Stress on the why of accounting rather than the how of bookkeeping. Emphasis on financial analysis from the beginning. Attention to accounting regulations and legal requirements. Problems and cases that strengthen conceptual foundation and encourage practical application. Anyone who follows plain English and knows basic math (+, –, ×, ÷) can read this book. v New to This Edition Chapter 13 on Analyzing Financial Statements: Banks. Discussion on pro forma financial measures and statement of changes in equity. Comprehensive Cases 1 to 4. Interview with Mr. P. R. Ramesh, Chairman, Deloitte India. New pedagogical features: Chapter Vignette, Earnings Quality Analysis, Financial View, Learning Aid, In Practice, and Companies Act Impact. Revised and updated text and figures in almost all chapters. v Student Resources Interactive Study Guide available at www.phindia.com/narayanaswamy5e provides support in solving the problems in the assignment material. v Instructor Resources Instructor’s Manual is available to adopting instructors from the publisher. I welcome suggestions and feedback. My e-mail address is narayan@iimb.ernet.in R. Narayanaswamy v A tone-setting vignette at the start of every chapter motivates the student to think about the significance of the chapter. v Figures simplify ideas v Test Your Understanding helps the student try a short problem on a specific point. v Answers to Test Your Understanding v Review Problem covers the key points in a chapter in a numerical form. v Learning Objectives specify what the student can expect after studying a chapter. v Handhold reassures understanding. v Looking Back contains a crisp summary of the chapter for exam-eve revision. v Interview has insights from leading practitioners and thinkers. v In Practice Illustrates how investors, managers, regulators, and others use accounting information. v Companies Act Impact highlights the major changes in accounting, auditing, and corporate governance as a result of the Companies Act 2013. v Financial View presents the business implications of financial numbers and practices. v Earnings Quality Analysis examines the effect of business activities and accounting policies on the prediction of future profits. v Decision-making requires students to apply their learning in a specific setting. v Survey describes managers’ choices and opinions. v Learning Aid explains tricky ideas. v IFRS Impact describes how financial statements would change under IFRS. v Debate encourages the class to come up with alternative view on controversies. v Research Insight provides answers from academic research to managers’ questions. v Questions help revise the chapter quickly v Business Decision Cases involve working with unstructured information and encourage students to identify and think about questions that may not be obvious. v Financial Analysis has ideas that students can explore in projects and papers. v The Online Interactive Study Guide available at www.phindia.com/narayanaswamy5e has sheets for solving problems, besides a number of self-test questions. v Problems Sets have numerical problems that students can solve to master application of the principles. v Interpreting Financial Reports have cases based on published financial reports, press reports, and other sources that throw light on real-world accounting. v Comprehensive Cases develop the student’s ability to understand company annual reports. I thank my colleagues, students, friends, and other well-wishers for their critical observations and encouraging words on the Fourth Edition. I am grateful to the following eminent individuals for sharing their thoughts on accounting, auditing, governance, and related matters with me for the benefit of the readers of this book: N. R. Narayana Murthy Executive Chairman of the Board, Infosys Limited Kalavacherla Prabhakar Member, International Accounting Standards Board P. R. Ramesh Chairman of the Board of Deloitte India and Partner, Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP Shyam Sunder The James L. Frank Professor of Accounting, Economics and Finance at the Yale School of Management, Professor in the Department of Economics and Professor (Adjunct) at the Yale Law School I thank the following colleagues for their valuable feedback: Manoj Anand Vrishali Bhat Madhumita Chakraborty Dinesh Gupta Pankaj Gupta V. Hariprasad Bhawana Jain M. Kannadhasan Reena Kohli N. R. Parasuraman P. Padmanabha Pillai Nandan Prabhu Krishna Prasad M. Durga Prasad K. K. Ramesh Latha Ramesh Srinivasan Rangan Padmini Srinivasan Ullas Rao M. Ravisundar Rajiv Shah Manish Singh Rajesh, S. P. V. Sridevi Ashok Thampy Ashish Varma Sushma Vishnani Vandana Zachariah Indian Institute of Management Lucknow T. A. Pai Management Institute Manipal Indian Institute of Management Lucknow University Business School Chandigarh Jaipuria Institute of Management Noida Indian Institute of Management Indore Amrita School of Business Coimbatore Indian Institute of Management Raipur Indian Institute of Management Rohtak S. D. M. Institute for Management Development Mysore National Law School of India University Bangalore School of Management, Manipal University Justice K. S. Hegde Institute of Management Nitte T. A. Pai Management Institute Manipal Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode Christ University Bangalore Indian Institute of Management Bangalore Indian Institute of Management Bangalore S. D. M. Institute for Management Development Mysore ICICI Securities Mumbai T. A. Pai Management Institute Manipal L. M. Institute of Management Lucknow Chinmaya Institute of Technology Kannur IFIM Business School Bangalore Indian Institute of Management Bangalore Institute of Management Technology Ghaziabad Jaipuria Institute of Management Lucknow Loyola Institute of Business Administration Chennai Never the one to fail, my secretary, S. V. Subramanyam was a big source of support. As in the past, the Publishers, PHI Learning, and their editorial and production team, in particular, Shivani Garg and Ajai Kumar Lal Das had to live with my never-ending changes in the content and style of the manuscript. I cannot thank them enough. I owe a deep debt of gratitude to Indian Institute of Management Bangalore for the superior library, computing and other resources and the right ambience for the work. This book would not have been possible without the whole-hearted cooperation and support that I received at home. My wife, Geeta, and my daughter, Vasudha, showed understanding and patience whenever I was busy working on the manuscript. The usual disclaimer applies. R. Narayanaswamy A Fairy Tale Welcome to Utopia, the land where everyone is good. So the people there trust one another. There are two kinds of Utopians: the Investopians, frugal people who save money for which they have no immediate use; and the Corporatopians, industrious people who forever need money for doing business. The Investopians hand over their savings to the Corporatopians, who are smart businessmen and businesswomen. When the Corporatopians make a lot of money, they gladly give the Investopians much bigger amounts, greatly appreciating their generosity and good nature. The Investopians and the Corporatopians live happily and never fight. The spirit of comity and goodwill on display between them inspires a healing and oneness throughout Utopia. So the Utopians have nothing to do except frolic in fields of lilies where pixies dance in midair, the sound of a harp wafting from a hill… . Everyone else should know financial reporting. This book is about understanding, analyzing and interpreting financial statements and related reports: statement of profit and loss, balance sheet, cash flow statement, statement of changes in equity, accounting policies, explanatory notes, schedules, and auditors’ report. Let us see some examples from the real world to get a flavour of accounting. Disclosing Bad News On January 21, 2011, Wipro announced results for the December 2010 quarter. Its chairman, Azim Premji, said: “We have underperformed in the third quarter relative to the competition and in relation to our potential.… Our competitors have performed better in the fast-growing sectors of health care and financial services. They had the advantage of growing faster.” Such open admission of weakness in public is rare. Warren Buffett, the legendary investor, and chief of Berkshire Hathaway, confessed: “During 2008, I did some dumb things in investments.” He wrote: “I made at least one major mistake of commission and several lesser ones that also hurt.” He added in his characteristic style: “Furthermore, I made some errors of omission, sucking my thumb when new facts came in that should have caused me to re-examine my thinking and promptly take action.” Anyone would need extraordinary courage to say such a thing. Question: Why did the heads of Wipro and Berkshire Hathaway talk ill of themselves and volunteer to disclose bad news? Hollywood Fantasies The Warner Bros’ blockbuster Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007) made a $167 million loss. This may sound strange for a movie that grossed $938 million worldwide. But that is what an accounting statement available on the Internet says.1 Hollywood accounting practices have been a source of continuing disagreement between the studios that release movies and “the talent” – the actors, directors and writers – that make them. The core of the dispute is the definition of ‘net profit’. Attorneys for the talent argue that the studio will include an array of costs in profit statement sent to the talent. Michael Moore, who made Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004), alleged in a suit that the producer Harvey Weinstein improperly deducted expenses from Moore’s share of the film’s profits – including the cost of a private jet to fly Weinstein from the US to Europe. A leading lawyer says, “Hollywood accounting is an oxymoron, like airline food.” Question: Are Hollywood’s profits a fantasy, like some of its movies? The Smoke-and-Mirrors Company On January 7, 2009, Ramalinga Raju, the then chairman and managing director of Satyam Computers Services Limited stunned the world by disclosing that he had manipulated the company’s financial statements for several years. The total size of the manipulation was `70 billion. Raju confessed to having overstated revenue and cash. Satyam was audited by a member of a Big Four accounting firm and it had an impressive board of directors. Question: How did a fraud of this size go undetected? Accounting for the Bizarre Suppose that a borrower takes a loan of `10,000 and the interest rate is 12 per cent per annum. After a year, the borrower’s financial condition worsens, so the cost of borrowing goes up to 15 per cent. Therefore, the borrower gains. You read it right. This is what fair-value accounting would say. In 2008, Barclays reported a £1.66 billion gain it booked from the reduced value of its own debt. Question: Does it make sense that a firm would gain by moving towards bankruptcy? An Airline is Grounded Kingfisher Airlines, a venture of Vijay Mallya that was flying high (in more than one sense of the word), was arguably among the best airlines ever: good food, excellent in-flight entertainment, and courteous crew. It stopped flying in 2012, because it could not repay its bank loans. It never made a profit since it was set up in 2005. Question: Why did Kingfisher fail? The Environment of Financial Reporting Many economic forces operate on firms that produce financial reports. These forces determine the amount of information that a firm provides and how the firm measures and presents the information. The following figure illustrates the major economic forces. The economic forces – capital markets, product markets, labour and other markets, and regulation – vary in magnitude and direction. For example, investors often want more information about a firm, whereas the firm’s managers would argue for providing less information because of the presence of competitors. Thus, financial statements are the product of the interplay of the forces that drive firms. The Road Ahead The above examples will give you a glimpse of the nature and purpose of financial reporting. Let us see what lies ahead. This book has three parts. Part One, consisting of Chapters 1 to 4, describes the basic accounting model of analyzing and processing transactions and presenting the information from transactions in the form of financial statements. After completing this part, you can find out for yourself whether Hollywood’s profits are unreal. Part Two, made up of Chapters 6 to 10, introduces the reader to the principles and standards that underlie a firm’s accounting policies and the managerial and other considerations that shape the policies. When you have understood the material in this part, you should be able to explain why Barclays’ accounting makes sense. Part Three, containing Chapters 11 to 13, explains the tools and techniques that are useful in analyzing financial statements. With the help of these you should be in a position to understand why Kingfisher Airlines failed despite its excellent food and entertainment. You will learn about firms’ motivations for providing voluntary disclosures and the types of voluntary disclosures provided by them, and will be able to explain why some firms such as Wipro and Berkshire Hathaway disclose ‘bad news’. 1 http://m.deadline.com/2010/07/studio-shame-even-harry-potter-pic-loses-money-because-of-warner-bros-phonybaloney-accounting/ “I want our shareholders to treat us first as trustworthy people and then as smart people. Our desire is to deliver whatever we promise”. Question: How important is financial reporting to a technology company like Infosys? Answer: First of all, the raison d’être of a corporation is to maximize the shareholder value on a sustainable basis, while ensuring fairness, transparency and accountability to every one of the stakeholders: customers, investors, employees, vendor-partners, the government of the land, and the society. The annual report and the quarterly report that Infosys produces are definitive instruments for the investor community to understand our strategy, performance, compliance with the generally accepted accounting principles, revenue recognition policies, risk mitigation procedures, systems and controls, human resources policies, and segmentation of revenue. In other words, it is a single window for our investors to look into our operations and our aspirations. It is our view and not the view of the analysts. It is a statutory document. Obviously, companies will have to ensure that it is truthful and it does not communicate any false hope. Also, when you deal with customers, they want to know your strategy, your position in the market, financial strength; who your directors are; your stock movement; and your segmentation of revenue. In other words, even though prospective customers do not buy your shares, they want to ensure that they have good understanding of your financial strength because they are hinging their future on you to some extent. So, the financial reporting document is very important. Question: What is the disclosure philosophy of Infosys? Answer: Well, our philosophy has been When in doubt, disclose and Under-promise and over-deliver, throughout the 20 years of our listed existence. However, we missed our targets during 2011–2013. In other words, in the last 80 quarters, we have taken the view that we will get market data on what the future is likely to be, we will assess our strengths, weaknesses and our readiness to take advantage of market opportunities, and then we will come out with a view of the future that every member of the board has agreed with. We want to make sure that we can deliver whatever we have agreed upon. We do not make our decisions based on what the analysts say or the public expects. Question: How can financial reporting become a part of a company’s business strategy? Answer: The annual report covers the major aspects of our business operations. Our prospects and our customers use this document as the definitive instrument to assess our viability in the future because of our strategy, our operation and our financial strength. Quite often, our success in selling to our customers and prospects depends on their perception of our strength. This document is very helpful in our investors’ and customers’ understanding of our strategy. I have seen many of our customers refer to specific pages of the document and ask us to detail out what we have said about the company’s plans. Question: Does the practice of earnings guidance result in excessive pressure on managers’ performance? Answer: Yes and no. My view has been that management is all about our ability to make considered judgments under a situation of competing pressures, and competing priorities. So, we, managers, must accept that there will be pressures. There are different opinions on whether the earnings guidance should be quarterly, six-monthly or yearly, and whether it should be only for the top line or both the top and the bottom line. I am not sure whether the quarterly guidance for both top line and bottom line is any worse than other guidance schemes. My one belief is that it is all about the mindset of the management. Because of globalization, there is tremendous growth and competition in the marketplace. Companies are growing much faster today than they were growing 15 years ago. So, I am not a great believer in the perception that quarterly guidance leads to any extra pressure on the management. What kind of a CEO are you if you do not have a plan to achieve a certain revenue and a certain profit in the next three months? But, if you know what your future is likely to be in the next three months and if you do not share it with your investors at large, then you are creating asymmetry of information, particularly in a company where there are several owner-managers. That is not fair to the investors at large. I will give an example. In 2001, we announced that we would grow by 30 per cent. The previous year, we had grown by 100 per cent. So, I stood up and said, “There is considerable fog on the windshield and we can only promise 30 per cent.” Our stock price came down from `5,000 + to `1,500 or `1,600. I did not lose my sleep. Our view was that we had a fairly good system of collection of data, and we had people in the trenches with a very good view of what was likely to happen. Our forecasting, analytics and tools confirmed that the only sales growth figure we could give our investors was 30 per cent. We told our investors that Infosys was not the company to invest in if they were looking for higher than 30 per cent sales growth. Many of them left. Our share price came down to `1,500 or `1,600. So, the problem does not lie in giving quarterly guidance. The challenge lies in dealing with the short-term mindset of investors. Question: Does providing voluntary financial disclosures result in competitive disadvantage to companies like yours? Answer: Providing voluntary disclosures, transparency and following principles of good governance have always created goodwill for the company. We were the first Indian company to give revenue segmentation details, details of our attrition, hiring and many other performance data. I am not sure how much such a focus on transparency adds to our market capitalization. This is particularly so because of hedge funds and the tendency of people to move quickly from stock to stock. I have always believed and acted according to the adage: When in doubt, disclose. Question: Many technology companies have argued against expensing stock options. What is your view? Answer: I personally believe that there should be some norm for allocating stock. That is, the regulator should fix a certain cap on the number of options as a percentage of the total number of outstanding stocks. There should be no other restrictions including expensing of options. If we can incentivize our employees to perform better, then our earnings per share will likely be better. So, even though we dilute the total number of shares by a percentage, the overall benefit to the investors is likely to be much more than that percentage. I have found that stock ownership by employees brings better focus on cost control in the company. For example, right from the beginning, people at Infosys understood that every rupee saved went to the bottom line and that translated to something like `25 in market capitalization. So, options do create an incentive for employees to control cost. Question: How do the shareholders of a company benefit from the presence of independent directors on the board? Answer: The shareholders benefit in many ways. Good corporate governance is minimization of agency costs. The role of the independent directors, if exercised properly, is to ensure that agency costs are minimized. Second, the independent directors ensure that the owner-managers do not benefit from the asymmetry of information through insider trading. They are expected to prevent any related party transactions. They review the strategy of the company and suggest changes. They would be the ombudsmen and ombudswomen for risk mitigation. After all, risk mitigation is extremely important to protect your shareholders. Independent directors also ensure that there are proper procedures and controls. But whether this happens in practice depends on how cooperative the owner-managers are. Question: Given that many retail investors do not have any formal accounting training, would it not be better for them to have a summary annual report? Answer: This is a question that we have debated often. Determining the level of detail to disclose is not easy. At the end of the day, shareholder democracy is like democracy in a nation. Every vote is as important whether the voter is rich or poor, educated or illiterate, powerful or weak, and urban or rural. Therefore, it is best to provide as detailed information as possible to every shareholder. If a shareholder is not as conversant in accounting as he would like to be, let him take the report to an expert and get the expert’s opinion on critical issues. The only disadvantage of providing a detailed report is the cost of paper and cost of printing. Let the shareholders decide what they want. Who am I to decide? After all, we are spending their own money for printing the annual report. Question: Does quarterly reporting discourage risk-taking as the horizon is very short? Answer: No. There will be activities that are going to take a long time. It is important for the management of a corporation to tell the investors that they would be taking up a major initiative, that it would bring down the profits by x percentage in the ensuing n1 years, and that the profits would likely be increasing by a multiple of x percentage in the ensuing n2 years following the period of reduced profits. This is what investing for a better future is all about and the shareholders will accept it. The problem is that, in most cases, most CEOs are not certain whether their investments will indeed bear fruit. So, they want to make investment in a clandestine manner, so that they mask their failures and they look great if they succeed. Consequently, they do not even want to report such investments. Question: Has globalization raised the standards of corporate governance in India? Answer: Corporate governance is all about maximizing shareholder value on a sustainable basis, while ensuring fairness, transparency and accountability to customers, investors, employees, vendor-partners, the government of the land, and the society. Today, international investors have multiple choices of countries for investing – US, Europe, China, Australia, South East Asia, Africa and South America. Therefore, they compare us with the rest of the world before they take any decision to invest in us. Therefore, we must benchmark ourselves on a global basis. Thanks to globalization and opening up of our borders, we have multinational corporations operating in India. In general, these multinational corporations have better corporate governance practices. Therefore, Indian companies are also forced to adopt those practices. Today, our employees have global skills, aspirations and opportunities. Therefore, they seek opportunities in the best companies. If we want to retain them, we have to adopt such global best practices and perhaps improve upon them. So, because of globalization, I believe that our benchmarking in terms of how we handle our employees, customers and investors has improved. Most importantly, the importance of the price-earnings ratio has dawned on Indian businessmen. They realize that every rupee they save translates to multiple rupees in market capitalization. So, they realize that it is much better not to blur the distinction between corporate resources and personal resources. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Understand the working of business organizations. Define accounting and explain its role in making economic and business decisions. Identify the major users of accounting information. Distinguish between financial and management accounting. Discuss the assumptions underlying accounting measurement and explain their significance. Explain the meaning of GAAP and identify the institutions that influence Indian GAAP. Describe and evaluate the common forms of business organization. Explain the role that accounting plays in capital market and corporate governance. Explain the accounting equation and analyze the effects of typical transactions on the equation. Describe the five major financial statements and explain how they are interrelated. Describe the career opportunities for accountants. Appreciate accounting as an academic discipline. Understand the importance of ethics in accounting. WALKING ON EGGSHELLS Financial statements are frequently regarded as epitomizing all that is right and wrong with an organization. For example, when Air India loses big money, critics pull up the airline (often justifiably). Equally, a business that makes a lot of money is castigated, a response that may look unfair and contrary to the spirit of enterprise. The Rolling Stone writer, Matt Taibbi, described Goldman Sachs as “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity”, when the bank’s profitability made it a symbol of Wall Street greed and excess in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Thus, you can either like or dislike good or bad financial performance but cannot ignore it. If, as a manager, you understand how accounting works, you will be able to formulate an informed response to criticism. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL Accounting is an efficient system that expresses the numerous activities of organizations in a concise manner. The purpose of accounting is to measure and report the performance of organizations. Financial statements are useful to investors, lenders, analysts, managers, governments and many others. Accounting principles and accounting standards enhance the usefulness of information in the financial statements for making economic and business decisions. Capital market channels savings into investment. High-quality accounting reports are a must for orderly markets and good governance. Accounting can be complex. Yet, the simple relation between resources and claims, presented in this chapter, captures its essence. Understanding Business Organizations Peter Drucker, the great management philosopher, said: “With respect to the definition of business purpose and business mission, there is only one focus, one starting point. It is the customer. The customer delivers the business.” Business organizations bring together materials, technology, people, and money in order to satisfy their customers’ needs and thereby seek to earn a profit. Business organizations provide products and services. They convert inputs into outputs by applying processes. The conventional view is that a product has form and substance and the seller transfers it physically to the buyer. Soaps, pens, cars, computers, and medicines are examples of products that we use in our everyday life. Merchandising (or trading) organizations such as Pantaloons, Wal-Mart, and Amazon.com buy and sell products; they do not make them. These organizations connect producers with consumers. Manufacturing organizations make products that vary greatly in complexity: Amul makes butter and cheese; Sony’s equipment have intricate electronics; Boeing aircraft requires complex engineering. Services are work done by one person that benefits another. Unlike products, services do not have form or substance. The recipient of a service can experience it personally but cannot transfer it to another person. Repairing cars, hairstyling, writing computer programs, performing cardiac surgery, providing legal advice, managing hotels, and transporting passengers are familiar examples of services. Service organizations such as the State Bank of India, Goldman Sachs, and Lakme Beauty Salon provide professional or personal services. Increasingly, the line between products and services is disappearing. Is the iPod, the iPad, or the Sony PlayStation a product or service? These would seem to be more of a service packaged as a product. A significant portion of the cost of a car – commonly considered a product – is the cost of embedded software that controls fuel mix, brakes and air conditioning. Business organizations perform complex operations. Yet, in essence they are cash generating-cum-dispensing machines: they receive cash from customers for providing goods and services and pay suppliers for materials, equipment, labour, electricity and transportation. To illustrate this idea, let us think of a biotechnology firm – Nzyme Company – that produces fermentation agents for food and beverages. It hires buildings and equipment and employs scientists and other professionals. The company receives cash from its customers in three ways: (a) for sales made in the past collected in the current period, (b) for sales made in the current period; and (c) for sales to be made in the future for which it receives advance payments from its customers. The company pays its scientists and other employees salaries and other benefits and its suppliers for materials, office and factory space, electricity, and laboratory equipment and supplies. It pays income tax and other taxes to the government. It distributes a part of the surplus cash to its owners in the form of dividends. Figure 1.1 presents the activities of this business. As you can imagine, business operations are far more involved. We will add more details as we proceed. What is Accounting Accounting is one of the fastest-growing professions and ranks among the most popular fields of study in colleges, universities, and business schools. It offers interesting, challenging, and rewarding careers. Business enterprises, government agencies, charities, and individuals need information to make sound decisions. The accounting system provides relevant and reliable financial information to interested parties. Accounting is often called the language of business. The function of a language is to facilitate communication among individuals in a society. Accounting is the common language used to communicate financial information in the world of business. Clearly, individuals who aspire to be professional accountants should be experts in accounting. Many others, such as investors, managers, employees, civil servants, police investigators, lawyers, judges, and regulators, have to constantly deal with business organizations. All of them should have good knowledge of accounting terms, principles and techniques. Here are some typical responses of MBA students on why they think they need to study accounting (besides the predictable one, “Accounting is in the curriculum, so I have no choice.”): “Since a company’s financial statements affect stock prices, a manager should know accounting.” “Accounting will help me in understanding what the accountant is trying to say.” “The accountant is good at numbers and, as a manager, I have to be good at interpreting the numbers.” “I want to be an investment banker. Accounting information will help me to value firms.” “I would like to learn about indicators that would help me evaluate the financial health of a business.” “A manager has to analyze financial reports and make critical business decisions based on them.” “Start-up entrepreneurs should know financial accounting, so that they can manage the accounting and finance function of their business.” “With a consulting career in mind, I am interested in finding out how to use the financial statements to evaluate the performance of business enterprises.” “The law requires the chief executive officer (CEO), along with the chief financial officer (CFO), to certify the financial statements. At the least, the CEO should know the meaning of the various items appearing in the statements.” Managers have a responsibility to provide truthful, relevant and timely information. The MBA Oath initiated by the students of Harvard Business School has this to say on reporting: I will report the performance and risks of my enterprise accurately and honestly. After what happened in the technology bubble of the 1990s and the global financial crisis in 2008, managers need to reassure everyone that their enterprises’ financial reports are trustworthy. For this, they should have a sound understanding of financial statements. Accounting provides “information that is useful in making business and economic decisions – for making reasoned choices among alternative uses of scarce resources in the conduct of business and economic activities.”1 It is a principal means of communicating financial information to owners, lenders, managers, and any others who have an interest in an enterprise. Accounting is not an end in itself. Indeed, this book presents accounting as an information development and communication function that supports economic decision-making. The Accounting Information System An oft-quoted publication of the American Accounting Association states, “essentially, accounting is an information system.”2 A system converts inputs into outputs using processes. The accounting system processes business transactions to provide information to various interested parties. There are external and internal users of the information thus produced. The external users are those who are outside the firm and include investors and lenders. Managing directors, marketing managers, production managers, materials managers, human resource managers, and financial controllers are examples of the internal users of accounting information. Figure 1.2 depicts the accounting information system. Accounting Information and Economic Decisions Accounting information is useful in making a number of decisions that affect the income or wealth of individuals and organizations. Accounting reports are designed to meet the common information needs of most decision-makers. Examples of decisions that are based on accounting information include the following:3 (a) Decide when to buy, hold or sell an equity investment. (b) Assess the stewardship or accountability of management. (c) Assess the ability of the enterprise to pay and provide other benefits to its employees. (d) Assess the security for amounts lent to the enterprise. (e) Determine taxation policies. (f) Determine distributable profits and dividends. (g) Prepare and use national income statistics. (h) Regulate the activities of enterprises. The information given in a language can be useful only to persons who understand that language. For example, if a restaurant’s menu is in Italian, a customer should know enough Italian to be able to make sense of the items and their ingredients. In the same way, a decision-maker who intends to use accounting information should have a fair understanding of business and economic activities and be willing to study the information with reasonable diligence. Decision-makers should know the intricacies of accounting; it is an indispensable part of their toolkit. Users of Accounting Information Investors and lenders are the most obvious users of accounting information. Other users include analysts, advisers, managers, employees, trade unions, suppliers, customers, governments, regulatory agencies, and the public. Business enterprises and managers increasingly emphasize the interests of co-workers, customers and the society in which they operate and the need to create sustainable economic, social, and environmental prosperity worldwide. It is further evidence of the broader constituency for financial reporting. Investors Investors are the major recipients of the financial statements of business enterprises. They may be retail investors with small shareholdings or large mutual funds, hedge funds or private equity firms. As chief providers of risk capital, investors are keen to understand both the profit from their investments and the associated risk, i.e. the likelihood of loss or low profit. Accounting information enables investors to identify promising investment opportunities. Investors need information to decide which investments to buy, retain, or sell, as well as the timing of the purchases or sales of those investments. They also require information to monitor management performance and to assess the ability of the enterprise to pay dividends. In recent years, investors have started questioning executive compensation in light of the performance reported in the financial statements. For example, in 2012, the shareholders of WPP, an advertising company, rebuked their top management for asking for outsize pay when the company’s performance was not considered outstanding. While present investors have a legal right to receive periodic financial reports, potential investors too are interested in financial information. Private equity funds are on the lookout for investing in ailing businesses that they can restructure and sell at a substantial profit. Hedge funds use accounting and other information to earn high profits. Activist investors seek to force managers to act in the interests of shareholders. Lenders Lenders such as banks and debentureholders want to know about the financial stability of a business that approaches them for funds. They are interested in information that would enable them to determine whether their borrowers will be able to repay the loans and pay the related interest on time. Banks use credit evaluation benchmarks based on information derived from financial statements when deciding on the amount of the loan, interest rate, repayment period, and security. They also use the information for monitoring the financial condition of borrowers. Thus, many lenders stipulate dos and don’ts, or covenants, for borrowers that often require the use of accounting information. For example, a loan agreement may impose an upper limit on a borrower’s total debt from all sources or compel the borrower to keep a minimum level of cash. If a borrower fails to comply with the stipulations, the lender may raise the interest rate, ask for additional security, and even demand repayment of the loan. Analysts and Advisers Investors and creditors seek the assistance of information specialists in assessing prospective returns. Equity analysts, bond analysts, stockbrokers, and credit rating agencies offer a wide array of information services. These information specialists serve the needs of investors by providing them with skilled analyses and interpretation of financial reports. Equity analysts collect information about firms also through other means such as face-to-face meetings and conference calls with company executives and field visits. Sell-side analysts work for brokerages, banks and research firms who use their reports to recommend to their clients whether to buy, sell or hold certain investments. In contrast, buy-side analysts are employed in mutual funds and other investment firms ad produce research reports for in-house use by their employers. Proxy advisory firms recommend to shareholders whether they should support or oppose resolutions proposed by the board of directors. Managers Managers both produce financial information for use by others and use it in many of their decisions. They need information for planning and controlling operations, for making special decisions, and for formulating major plans and policies. Some of this information is available from the accounting system which they use to evaluate potential investment projects. Since managers are responsible for reporting enterprise performance to owners and others, they monitor the key financial indicators that appear in the financial reports. Besides, they compare their firm’s performance with that of their competitors. Sometimes, the managers of a business may be interested in acquiring other firms. Increasingly, managers receive a commission or bonus related to profit or other accounting measures, and they have a natural interest in understanding how those numbers are computed. Further, when faced with a hostile takeover attempt, managers communicate additional firm-related financial information with a view to boosting the firm’s stock price. As you can imagine, managerial motives in financial reporting can vary depending on the context of the business, and can conflict with those of investors and other users of financial statements. Employees and Trade Unions Employees are keen to know about their employer’s general operations, stability and profitability. Current employees have a natural interest in the financial condition of the enterprise because their jobs and salaries depend on the financial performance of the firm. A noteworthy instance is the strong support from the Railway employee unions to the 2012 Railway Budget proposal to raise passenger fares to restore the financial performance of the Indian Railways.4 Potential employees may use financial information in order to gauge the enterprise’s prospects. Past employees, who depend on their former employer for their postretirement benefits, such as pensions and health care, have a continuing interest in the enterprise’s performance and prospects. Trade unions use financial reports for negotiating enhancements in wages, bonus and other benefits. Suppliers and Trade Financiers Suppliers regard the enterprise as an outlet for their products or services. They use financial information to assess the likelihood of the enterprise continuing to buy from them, especially if it is a major customer. Suppliers plan their production and capacity expansion on the basis of the expected demand from their customers. Trade financiers provide short-term financial support. Both suppliers and trade financiers want information that enables them to determine whether the enterprise will pay them on the dot. While lenders take a long-term view, suppliers and trade financiers usually focus on the enterprise’s near-term financial condition. Customers Present, prospective and past customers use information about the financial affairs of an enterprise in deciding whether and how much business to do with it. Customers would like to be certain that they can count on their suppliers for future purchases and after-sales support. This is particularly important for products and services that are proprietary. For example, car owners depend on the manufacturer for warranty repairs and continued supply of spare parts. The users of a computer software look to the software firm for periodic upgrade of the product. When an airline keeps incurring losses, customers become anxious about higher ticket prices, flight cancellations, mileage points accumulated under frequent flyer programmes and even aircraft safety. When Satyam Computer Services was hit by an accounting scandal, some of its important clients were concerned and began to review their contracts and look at other suppliers. Insurance policyholders need confidence that their insurer will have the financial resources to pay their claims. In all these cases, the supplier’s financial reports can be useful to the customers. At the same time, when suppliers make large profits, customers may suspect that they are being overcharged. For example, if your mobile phone company makes huge profits, you would like the company to cut call charges. Sometimes companies have to respond to customers’ perceptions of profiteering by behaving in morally acceptable ways. In 2012 Starbucks, the coffee shop, offered to pay the UK government $16 million more in income tax than what was legally payable because its customers were furious about how little tax the firm paid in their country. Government and Regulatory Authorities The three levels of government in India – Central, state and local – allocate resources and are concerned with the activities of enterprises. They require information in order to regulate the business practices of enterprises, determine taxation policies, investigate crime, and provide a basis for national income and similar statistics. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) is among those in the Government of India that take a keen interest in the financial affairs of business enterprises. The Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) attached to the MCA investigates corporate fraud. The Ministry of Finance is concerned with tax administration and the working of the economy. A number of regulatory agencies are government or quasi-government bodies, such as the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA), the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), and the Competition Commission of India (CCI). These agencies use financial reports in order to identify abuses and violations and to protect the interests of investors and consumers. SEBI stipulates extensive disclosures in the financial statements and offer documents. IRDA requires life and non-life insurance companies to provide public disclosures of accounting practices, valuation of investments, and pension and post-retirement obligations, so that policyholders and investors can understand the financial health of their insurer. Others such as stock exchanges have a legitimate interest in financial reports of publicly held enterprises to ensure efficient operation of capital markets. The Public The activities of business enterprises affect the members of the public in a variety of ways. For example, businesses employ people from the local community and patronize local suppliers; so the prosperity of the local community depends on their success. It is said that, whenever the software industry slows down, business in upmarket restaurants and pubs in Bangalore falls. Financial statements assist the public by providing information about the trends and recent developments in the prosperity of the enterprise and the range of its activities. Political parties, public affairs groups, consumer groups, newspapers and magazines, television channels, anti-globalization and anti-business activists, and environment protection groups have a general interest in the affairs of business enterprises. The nature and extent of their interest often vary considerably. They use the information in the financial statements to put forward their point of view. For example, when there was a blowout in the Deep Horizon well in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, the profits of BP and other large oil companies came under public scrutiny. Extractive industries such as oil, gas and mining are frequent targets of attack on the basis of their profits that activist groups argue are ill-gotten. Of course, investment banks are always under attack for a variety of reasons. Exhibit 1.1 summarizes the major users of accounting information and some typical questions for which they look for answers in accounting reports. Whether someone is a legitimate user of accounting information differs from one country to another. For example, in the US and the UK, financial statements are meant primarily for shareholders and lenders. But countries in Continental Europe, such as Germany, France and Sweden, explicitly recognize employees and trade unions as having a stake in financial reports. EXHIBIT 1.1 Users of Accounting Information Investors, lenders and many others use accounting information to make important economic decisions. Users Investors, analysts, advisers Examples Queries/Concerns Retail investors Mutual funds, private equity funds, hedge funds Equity analysts and bond analysts Credit rating agencies Investment banks Shareholder activists Proxy advisory firms v Should I buy, hold or sell the company’s shares? v Will the investment yield good dividends regularly? v Is the enterprise in which I have invested, or thinking of investing, performing well? v Are there governance problems in the company? v Are the shares a good medium- to long-term investment? Banks Bank depositors v Can my borrower pay the principal and interest on time? Lenders Debentureholders Leasing companies v What should be the security and interest rate for a loan? Managers Chief executive officers Chief finance officers Marketing managers Production managers Profit centre heads v How is my business performing relative to my competitors? v Which projects should I invest in? v Do the financial reports communicate my firm’s true value? v Will it be profitable for me to buy out my business? Employees, trade unions Factory and office workers Trade unions Trade union federations v How much increase in wages and bonus can my employer afford? v Can my employer continue to be in business? v Can my employer honour its future obligations for pension, health and other postretirement benefits? Suppliers, trade financiers Suppliers of materials, services and utilities Short-term financiers v Will my customer be a major source of business? v Can my customer pay for its purchases on time? v Can my borrower repay on time? Customers Present, past and prospective customers v Is my supplier a reliable and competitive source? v Can I count on my supplier to provide spare parts for equipment? v Does my supplier have the financial resources to honour its warranty obligations? Government, regulatory authorities Income tax officers Excise and service tax officers Commercial tax officers Ministry of Finance Ministry of Corporate Affairs Securities and Exchange Board of India Reserve Bank of India Competition Commission of India Stock exchanges Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority v Is a business evading income tax, excise duty, service tax, sales tax or other government levies? v Should the government subsidize an industry, increase taxes, or give it protection from dumping? v Does a bank follow prudent financial norms? v Does a business make required disclosures of its financial affairs? v Does a business make abnormal profits by stifling competition in its industry? v Does an insurance company follow prudential norms? The public Local community Political parties Public affairs groups Consumer groups Environmental activists v Does a business exploit local suppliers, small businesses or labour? v Does a business earn profits by compromising on product safety or damaging the environment? v Is a business abusing its monopoly by overcharging its customers? Financial and Management Accounting The accounting system provides information to persons inside and outside the enterprise. Financial accounting is the preparation and communication of financial information for use primarily by those outside the enterprise. Its chief purpose is to provide information about the performance of the enterprise’s management to its owners. Management accounting is the preparation and communication of financial and other information to the management, which helps it carry out its responsibilities in planning and controlling operations. Management accounting information is more detailed and timely than what is available to external users. Accounting Measurement Assumptions The purpose of accounting is to measure and communicate an enterprise’s economic activities. Numerous events affect a business. Examples include receiving cash from customers, paying income tax, using office supplies, and buying equipment on credit. Business transactions are events that result in the transfer or exchange of value between two or more parties, e.g. buying goods, collecting cash, and repaying a loan. Transactions may involve monetary exchanges, such as buying a computer for cash, or non-monetary exchanges such as swapping a building for a piece of land. Also, there may be one-way transfers, e.g. donations and thefts. Certain external events do not involve a transfer or exchange, for example, a flood or an earthquake. Accounting also records internal events such as consumption of materials and use of equipment, which take place within the enterprise. Accounting measures events only if they affect the financial position of the enterprise. As a result, important events affecting a business, such as the launching of new brands by its competitors, will not find a place in accounting records. The concept of business transaction defines the activities that find a place in the financial statements and, therefore, limits the kind of information the users of the statements can reasonably look for. Appointing talented managers, launching new products, and identifying profitable business opportunities are important developments for a business, but accounting does not have the tools to measure and report on them. Four major assumptions underlie all accounting measurement: 1. 2. 3. 4. Reporting entity Going concern Periodicity Money measurement. We now examine these assumptions. Reporting Entity Accountants treat a business as a reporting entity which is distinct and separate from its owners and other firms. The reporting entity defines the scope of the activities to be included in the financial statements. At a minimum, the reporting entity assumption requires that the financial statements deal with only the business enterprise’s transactions and exclude the owner’s personal financial affairs. Suppose that Seema owns a boutique, a grocery store, and a travel agency. If she wants to know how each business is doing, she should keep separate accounting records for the transactions of each of them in order to prepare separate financial reports for them. Her personal possessions such as her car, jewellery, and house, and any personal loans she has taken will not find a place in the records of any of her three businesses. Without the reporting entity assumption, the personal financial affairs of the owners and the activities of other enterprises would be mingled with the transactions of a business that we are interested in, and hence no meaningful financial information about the business can be produced. A reporting entity may be a separate legal entity distinct from other enterprises, a combination of enterprises, or a segment of an enterprise. For example, Hindustan Unilever Limited and its subsidiary, Pond’s Exports Limited are separate legal entities. The company prepares its ‘separate’ or ‘standalone’ financial statements, and its subsidiaries too prepare their own financial statements. A reporting entity can also be a group of interconnected enterprises. Thus, the Hindustan Unilever group prepares consolidated financial statements for the group by combining the separate financial statements of the individual companies. Hindustan Unilever is, in turn, a part of the Unilever group that prepares consolidated financial statements for the group’s worldwide activities. Business or geographical segments of an enterprise too can be reporting entities. For example, Hindustan Unilever views its business segments, such as soaps and detergents, personal products, and beverages, as separate reporting entities and reports their performance. Tata Consultancy Services reports on the performance of its business segments such as services for banking, financial services and insurance, manufacturing, retail and distribution, and telecom as separate reporting entities. IBM provides information on a geographical basis for the Americas, Europe/Middle East/Africa and Asia Pacific. Thus, the definition of reporting entity depends on the purpose and context of financial reporting. This book often uses terms such as ‘business’ and ‘enterprise’ to mean a reporting entity. Going Concern Unless there is substantial evidence to the contrary, accountants assume that the business is a continuing enterprise or a going concern. The assumption makes sense because many business enterprises survive difficult economic circumstances. The going concern assumption is critical to the users of an enterprise’s financial statements. In 2009, the auditors of General Motors, the automobile company, warned about the company’s viability to continue as a going concern without more US government loans, making it difficult for the company to negotiate with its lenders. GM’s shares fell by 15 per cent as a result. The going concern assumption justifies an accounting system based on cost, typically the amount of cash paid to acquire an asset. If we were to assume imminent liquidation of a business, cost would become irrelevant and we need to record assets at their likely sale prices. In recent years, accounting regulators have been gradually moving away from historical cost to other measures (e.g. fair value) on the ground that historical cost is uninformative, especially for assets for which dependable market prices are available. Fair value is “the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction.”5 Fair value is not the same as a fire sale price, or distress selling price. Determining fair value for assets that do not have a ready market (e.g. customized mortgage products) is tricky. For this reason, fairvalue accounting along with the conduct of banks has become the lightning rod for criticism in the recent economic crisis. When preparing financial statements, management shall review the going concern assumption. It should disclose any material uncertainties related to events or conditions that may cast significant doubt on the ability of the business to continue as a going concern. Suppose that an enterprise has to repay a `100 million loan in the next three months but does not have that much cash and will not be able to raise the amount by the payment date. The management hopes that the lender will renew the loan for a two-year period. If the renewal is in doubt, there is a going concern uncertainty that must be disclosed. Persistent losses may call for a going concern rethink. When an entity does not prepare its financial statements on a going concern basis, it should disclose that fact, the basis used, and the reason why it is not regarded as a going concern. Going concern exceptions are rare in India, though there are always reports of a few companies in serious trouble. Periodicity We assume a long life for a business. But investors, creditors, government, and others cannot wait indefinitely for information for making decisions. The periodicity assumption requires that the activities of an enterprise be divided into artificial time periods, usually as long as a year, but sometimes as short as a quarter. The periodicity assumption creates numerous difficulties and is the root cause of many accounting controversies. For example, it is necessary to estimate the useful life of equipment that spans several years. Such estimates are based on the management’s assumptions and judgment, and these are often subjective. Money Measurement Under the money measurement assumption, we express and record all business transactions in terms of money. Therefore, if we cannot measure something in terms of money, it will have no place in accounting. Money is the only common denominator for all businesses. The use of money as the unit of measurement enables us to compare financial information of different enterprises. As we know, in India, the rupee is the monetary unit. Accountants assume that money is a stable unit of measure in the same way as the metre is a stable measure of distance. However, money is an unstable measure, since it loses or gains value depending on movements in the general price level. Thus, a 2014 rupee is much lower in value than a 1945 rupee because of sustained inflation in the last six decades in this country. Nevertheless, accountants generally assume that money is a stable measurement unit. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles and the Accounting Environment The information contained in financial reports should be reliable and intelligible. Besides, we should be able to make meaningful comparisons between a firm’s past financial history and the financial information of other enterprises. Therefore, we need a body of broad concepts and detailed practices to guide business enterprises in preparing financial reports. The set of conventions, rules, and procedures, which define accepted accounting practice, constitute generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). GAAP represents the fundamental positions that have been generally agreed upon, often tacitly, by accountants and encompasses contemporary permissible accounting practice. Unlike the laws of physics or chemistry, accounting principles and practices are not the product of any laboratory research. GAAP includes accounting measurement assumptions – reporting entity, going concern, periodicity and money measurement. It has evolved in response to the economic circumstances of users of information. The sources of Indian GAAP (IGAAP) include Indian accounting standards, the Companies Act 2013, and the accounting profession’s pronouncements. You will learn more about GAAP throughout this book. Institutions that Influence Indian GAAP Many Indian and international institutions influence the accounting practices followed in preparation and presentation of financial reports by business enterprises in India. There are also international bodies that take a keen interest in accounting and reporting. Figure 1.3 presents the major institutions that influence and shape IGAAP. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), Government of India, is charged with the administration of the Companies Act 2013 (that replaced the Companies Act 1956), a comprehensive legal code on companies. The Act lays down the form and content of financial reports of companies. The MCA articulates the government’s view on financial reporting and accounting requirements. Under the Companies Act, the government prescribes accounting and auditing standards in consultation with the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA). The fifteen-member NFRA recommends accounting and auditing standards monitors and enforces compliance with the standards. In December 2006, the government laid down accounting standards (AS) under the Companies (Accounting Standards) Rules. In February 2011, the government issued another set of standards (Ind AS) that are closer to international standards. This book discusses AS, Ind AS and corresponding international standards. Parliament established the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) in 1992 “to protect the interests of investors in securities and to promote the development of, and to regulate, the securities market.” SEBI regulates companies listed in stock exchanges in India. It has successfully overhauled the type and amount of information provided in the prospectus at the time of public issue of securities. It has an interest in ensuring adequate, true and fair disclosure of financial information and has stated that it would work with the accounting profession and others on improving the standards of financial reporting. SEBI plays an active role in expanding corporate accounting and disclosure, and has taken a number of major initiatives such as requiring listed companies to publish cash flow statements, quarterly financial results, quarterly segment reports, and consolidated financial statements. The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI), constituted under the Chartered Accountants Act 1949, is responsible for regulating the profession of CAs and functions under the regulatory supervision of the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. It has played a leading role in developing accounting and auditing practices. The ICAI has issued many recommendations dealing with a variety of accounting and auditing matters. Its views on accounting have the weight of professional opinion and a significant persuasive influence on accounting practice. The ICAI provides the technical resources for developing accounting and auditing standards. The Income Tax Authorities, including the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), commissioners of income tax, and income tax officers, enforce the Income Tax Act which authorizes the levy and collection of income tax. The law contains detailed provisions for determining taxable income. The income tax authorities interpret and administer these provisions. Income tax is an important outgo for many business enterprises and they attempt to minimize it by taking advantage of loopholes in tax rules and regulations. A business enterprise may choose to follow an accounting practice that is specified in the tax law so as to reduce its tax expense. In a few cases, businesses must follow the accounting practices specified by the tax law. You will see later why good tax accounting is not necessarily good financial accounting. Nevertheless, tax rules constitute one of the strongest influences on accounting practice. The CBDT has constituted an Accounting Standards Committee. In October 2012, the Committee issued 14 draft tax accounting standards (TAS) for public comment. The minimum alternative tax (MAT) is a levy based on accounting profit. This contrasts with normal tax that is based on taxable income. A company must pay MAT if it reports an accounting profit even if it does not have taxable income. MAT has arguably increased the influence of tax in accounting decisions. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), as the central bank of the country, regulates the functioning of the financial sector in India. It has an interest in financial reporting by financial institutions. The RBI specifies accounting and reporting requirements for banks and finance companies. It has laid down detailed rules for income recognition and provisioning for bad debts broadly in line with international practices and issued guidelines for accounting for hedging transactions by banks. The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) regulates the functioning of the insurance business in India. It has laid down accounting and disclosure rules and financial statement formats for insurance companies. Under the Constitution of India, the President appoints the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India (CAG) to audit the accounts of the Government of India, State governments and government organizations. The CAG’s office reviews the financial statements of government departments and public sector enterprises and sends its observations to Parliament. Cross-border investment and trade requires financial information that is comparable for businesses around the world. The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) develops a single set of accounting standards that will eventually be acceptable worldwide as the basis for listing of securities. The IASB’s standards are known as International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) or International Accounting Standards (IAS). For convenience, we will refer to these as IFRS. The IASB works with national accounting standard-setters to achieve convergence in accounting standards around the world. It consists of 14 individuals (12 full-time and two part-time members) appointed by the Trustees of the International Accounting Standards Committee Foundation. The International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) is primarily concerned with bringing about greater international harmony in matters such as education, ethics, and auditing practices. The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) is an association of securities regulators, such as SEBI and the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). IOSCO plays an influential role in improving accounting and disclosure regulation in securities markets around the world. Accounting Standards and Policies As we noted earlier, GAAP is the collection of conventions and rules that accountants have accepted over a period of time. An accounting standard specifies the acceptable methods from the wide array of accounting choices. Accounting policies comprise the principles, bases, conventions, rules, and procedures that enterprises adopt in preparing and presenting financial statements. Business enterprises select a variety of accounting policies from those regarded as permissible by the accounting profession. Interpretation of financial information is complicated by the adoption of diverse policies in many areas of accounting. At a minimum, companies should disclose their accounting policies.6 The institutional arrangements for establishing accounting standards differ from one country to another. For example, in India, the government prescribes the accounting standards. In the US, the private sector Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) sets the accounting standards. FASB’s standards have the support of the SEC. Converging IGAAP with IFRS India has committed that its national accounting standards will converge with IFRS. Convergence would enable Indian authorities to carve out exceptions to IFRS when they are applied in India. In contrast, adoption would require accepting IFRS without changes. The government’s notification issued in February 2011 contains some “carve-outs” from international standards. The term ‘Ind AS’ refers to Indian standards converged with IFRS. The MCA had proposed adoption of Ind AS beginning April 1, 2011 in phases. However, as of January 1, 2014, the government has not notified the effective date for Ind AS. Convergence with IFRS is likely to bring about major changes in Indian financial reporting. IFRS follows the fair value measurement basis, whereas Indian standards largely follow historical cost. Indian companies may face significant problems in their transition to IFRS because of the absence of active markets for some assets in India. Also, companies must improve their documentation of management decisions and judgments on financial reporting. Throughout this book, you will learn about issues in transition from IGAAP to IFRS. IFRS and US GAAP are the two accounting systems competing for international acceptance. These differ in terms of the amount of detail, quality of application and acceptability across nations. US GAAP is more detailed and applied more consistently. Because the IASB is an international standard-setter, IFRS has more worldwide acceptability. Fortunately, the IASB and FASB are working on joint projects with a view to narrowing down the differences between their standards. In 2007, the SEC agreed to allow non-US companies that raise capital in the US to follow IFRS instead of having to comply with US GAAP. A common set of accounting standards around the world will reduce accounting and auditing costs for businesses and make international financial comparisons easier. IFRS became mandatory in the European Union effective January 1, 2005. As of January 1, 2014, there were 40 standards (IFRSs/IASs) and 26 Interpretations. Principles or Rules? Principles-based standards place greater reliance on substance and lay down the broad principles that govern the accounting and disclosure requirements. In contrast, rules-based standards prescribe detailed conditions and stipulations and place greater reliance on bright lines, industry-specific guidelines, and exceptions. As one commentator put it, “If you tell your child to be at home at a reasonable hour, you are using a principles-based guideline. But if you tell your child to be home by 11 p.m. and then provide for 15 different contingencies that might justify a different time, you are using rules-based guidelines.” Many consider US GAAP to be rulesbased and IFRS to be principles-based. It would be fair to say that in the continuum from details to principles, US GAAP is closer to details. A crude measure of the level of detail is the number of pages of the standards and associated literature: US GAAP runs into more than 25,000 pages and IFRS comes to about 3,500 pages. Because of the US legal environment, American managers and auditors face a much greater risk of shareholder lawsuits and the prescriptive nature of US standards makes it easier for them to defend their assumptions and judgments. Business organizations attempt to measure economic performance by applying accounting principles and rules and management’s assumptions and estimates. The following equation sums up this position: Accounting performance = Economic performance + Measurement error + Bias Forms of Business Organization From commercial and legal angles, business may be organized in many ways. The common forms of organizing business are sole proprietorship, partnership, limited company, and limited liability partnership. Sole Proprietorship In sole proprietorship, a single individual carries on a business. He keeps all the profits the business earns. The sole proprietor’s liability is unlimited, i.e. if the business does not do well, he is personally liable for paying off the debts. He could even lose his shirt. The sole proprietary form is often most appropriate when the business is very small and is not expected to grow much. There is no specific law to regulate sole proprietorship businesses. Partnership A partnership has a minimum of two and a maximum of 100 persons trading together as one firm. The partners share the firm’s profits and losses equally, unless they agree otherwise. Each partner has unlimited liability for all the debts and obligations of the firm and is responsible for the liabilities in the firm of his fellow partner or partners as well as his own. The Indian Partnership Act regulates partnership businesses, but the regulation is minimal. Professional practices, such as those of architects, lawyers, and accountants, are usually partnership firms. Limited Company A limited company, or commonly company, is a legal entity unlike a sole proprietorship or partnership. Under the law, it has most of the rights of a natural person. The Companies Act 2013 governs the functioning of companies. Companies must, among other things, prepare periodical financial statements and get them audited. The financial statements are available for inspection on a public register. Companies can be either public or private. The shares of a public company are available to the general public and they may be listed for trading on a stock exchange. The company will have the word “Limited” after its name. In contrast, the shares of private companies (that form the bulk of the number of companies) are not for sale to the public, and these companies have “Private Limited” suffixed to their names. The members of companies undertake to contribute an agreed amount to the company’s capital. This limits the liability of the members to pay the company’s debts. Even if the company cannot meet its debts, it cannot ask for an amount above the agreed amount. In the company form of organization, total strangers come together, whereas a partnership business is formed by individuals (sometimes family members) who have often known each other intimately over a long period of time. Limited liability is so common that business would be unthinkable without it. Limited Liability Partnership A limited liability partnership (LLP), created by the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008, is a hybrid between a company and a partnership. It is a separate legal entity with perpetual existence, similar to a company. Only individuals can be partners in a partnership, but an LLP can have individuals or corporate bodies as partners. Except in the case of fraud, the liability of the partners is limited to their shareholdings and the partners are not personally liable. An LLP must have at least two partners; there is no upper limit. Every partner of an LLP is an agent of the LLP, but is generally not bound by anything done by the other partners. An LLP may designate one or more partners as managing or executive partner for compliance with legal requirements. The LLP form is especially suitable for professional services firms. In order to meet competition from international firms, Indian firms should become bigger, and that means they should be able to have more than 100 partners (the limit for a partnership). Also, the partners of an LLP will have protection from professional negligence litigation. An LLP combines the flexibility of a partnership with limited liability for its partners. LLP is yet to become popular in India. Exhibit 1.2 summarizes the major features of sole proprietorship, partnership and limited company that are the more common forms of organization. Other forms of business organization include statutory corporations, mutual funds, and cooperative societies. This book deals mainly with public companies, though the accounting principles that we discuss apply to all forms of organization. Legal Formalities for a Limited Company Forming a limited company is more complicated than forming a sole proprietorship or a partnership business. The founders or promoters of a proposed company must register it with the Registrar of Companies in the state in which the company’s registered office is to be located. They must submit the memorandum of association which should include the name of the company, its objects, a statement of the limited liability of its members, the amount of share capital, and how the share capital is divided into shares. The company must also submit the articles of association which cover internal matters, such as meetings, voting, and issue of new shares. Once the legal formalities for formation of a company have been complied with, the Registrar issues a certificate of incorporation, bringing the company into existence as a separate legal entity. Although limited companies are fewer in number than proprietary or partnership concerns, they carry on a large part of the economic activity, especially large-scale trading, manufacturing and services. The main advantages of the company form of business over sole proprietary and partnership forms are limited liability of shareholders, free transferability of ownership, perpetual existence, professional management, and ease of raising capital. The Corporate Organization The corporate organization structure consists of the shareholders, board of directors, and corporate officers. The shareholders appoint the board of directors to manage the company. Corporate officers assist the board of directors in carrying out its responsibilities to the shareholders. Figure 1.4 shows the typical organization structure of a company. At the apex of the corporate organization are its shareholders who are the owners of a company. The capital of a company is divided into units of ownership called shares. The shares of a public company are freely transferable from one person to another. Individual shareholders generally own small numbers of shares, while institutional shareholders, such as banks, insurance companies, and mutual funds, may hold a substantial portion of the share capital. The shareholders appoint the company’s directors and determine their remuneration. They delegate the authority to manage the company to the board of directors. The shareholders appoint an individual auditor or a firm of auditors as the external auditor. The primary duties of the board of directors are to conduct the business of the company and to protect the interests of the shareholders. The directors are mainly concerned with formulating policies and monitoring the performance of the officers. Specific duties of the board include approving major contracts, recommending dividends for approval by shareholders, and fixing the salaries of officers. Typically, the board consists of company officers and outsiders. The board of directors appoints officers to conduct the company’s everyday business. Executives usually included in this group are the chief executive officer (president or managing director), several vice-presidents, a treasurer, a controller, and a company secretary. The chief financial officer (or vice-president, finance and accounting) has overall responsibility for financial management and accounting and auditing matters. The controller is the chief accounting officer of the company and is responsible for the maintenance of accounting records and preparation of financial statements, budgets, and tax returns. The treasurer is the custodian of the company’s funds and is responsible for planning and controlling the company’s cash position. The company secretary maintains minutes for meetings of directors and shareholders, represents the company in many legal and contractual matters, and ensures compliance with laws. The internal auditor reviews the company’s financial and other decisions and reports his findings to the board. The designations of the officers differ from company to company. The separation of ownership and management in the corporate form increases the chances of managers pursuing their goals and interests, rather than those of the shareholders. This results in agency costs, a term for the ill-effects of the disconnect between managers’ and shareholders’ interests. The following quote from Adam Smith’s classic sums up this point: The directors of such [public] companies, however, being the managers rather of other people’s money than of their own, it cannot well be expected that they should watch over it with the same anxious vigilance with which the partners in a private co-partnership frequently watch over their own. Like the stewards of a rich man, they are apt to consider attention to small matters as not for their master’s honour, and very easily give themselves a dispensation from having it. Negligence and profusion, therefore, must always prevail, more or less, in the management of the affairs of such a company.7 We will now see how accounting can help in moderating agency problems. Accounting, Capital Market, and Corporate Governance Let us do a thought experiment. Suppose that you have identified a highly cost-effective technology for generating solar power. This project requires an initial investment of `100 million. Your own savings and even generous support from your relatives and friends is not anywhere near that amount. You know that many individuals are interested in clean energy projects. You approach them with your detailed project proposal, colourful promotional material, and superb multimedia presentation. Many of them tell you about how they invested in ventures relying on entrepreneurs’ promises of wonderful returns but finally did not get back even their initial investment. “Of course, we do not mean to question your intentions or competence,” they add politely, as they lead you to the door. “Just that we don’t know whom to trust.” You have a good project but you cannot find the money for it. What will you do? While you may have been spared a similar experience, the anecdote would sound familiar to many entrepreneurs. But as we will see shortly, the story does not necessarily have to end this way. The Lemons Principle and the Problem of Adverse Selection The inability of an entrepreneur to find funds is a classic case of the working of the lemons principle: the presence of people in the market offering inferior goods tends to drive the market out of existence if it is difficult to separate good quality from bad. The principle was first formally stated by George A. Akerlof, Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley in one of the most cited economics papers – the paper won him the Nobel Prize.8 To understand how the lemons principle works, think of the market for used cars. Potential buyers know less about the quality of used cars than the sellers, a condition referred to as information asymmetry. If we assume that half the used cars are of good quality and the rest are bad (known as ‘lemons’ in the used-car market), buyers have a 50:50 chance of getting a good car or a lemon. Assume that the worth of a good car is `80,000 and that of a lemon is `30,000. The price the buyers would be willing to pay would be roughly equal to the weighted average of the prices for good cars and lemons. In our example, this would be `55,000, calculated as follows: `80,000 × 0.5 + `30,000 × 0.5. As this average price is less than the true worth of good cars, some sellers of good cars will leave the market. However, sellers of lemons will remain because the price is attractive: After all, their cars are worth `30,000, but they stand a chance of getting `55,000. The market now has a larger proportion of lemons, say 60 per cent. As a result, the average price will fall below the previous average. In our example, the average price will now become `50,000. Some more sellers of good cars will now leave the market. This process repeats until the market has only lemons. When this happens, buyers refuse to buy used cars. The lemons principle is at work in adverse selection, a process by which ‘undesirable’ buyers or sellers are more likely to participate in a market. It can be applied to a variety of settings including the capital market. The capital market consists of entrepreneurs (sellers of business ideas) and savers or potential investors (buyers of those ideas). An entrepreneur may be either good or bad. As savers are unable to spot good entrepreneurs, they offer a weighted average price for the investments. That price would be too low for good entrepreneurs and they will leave the market, as a result of which there is a larger proportion of bad entrepreneurs in the market. In the end, there are only bad entrepreneurs, but savers refuse to part with their funds and the capital market breaks down. In a corporate setting, firms and managers substitute for entrepreneurs. Signalling Quality All of us know that vibrant capital markets exist in Mumbai, London, New York and in many other financial centres of the world. So, what makes these markets work despite the lemons principle? We find the answer in a well-known paper by Michael Spence, Professor of Economics at Stanford University – he was awarded the Nobel Prize for this research.9 Professor Spence argued that job applicants with superior skills or abilities would invest time and resources in acquiring superior educational qualifications in order to distinguish themselves from less skilled applicants. This is signalling. Signals should be costly in order to be effective. If signals are costless, everyone can send them; so the signal is of no use. For example, if you want to become a successful academic, you will invest time and resources in getting admission to the PhD programme of a good university and complete the programme. This is a costly signal because a less competent person has a low chance of completing a doctorate from such an institution. In the used-car example, a seller of a good car could give a performance warranty for a certain period of time. Signalling mitigates information asymmetry. Going back to cars, manufacturers utilize warranties to address quality concerns. For example, in August 2010, General Motors offered a “lifetime” warranty (defined as 160,000 km) on all its new Open and Vauxhall cars in Europe saying that it was making the offer as a “strong statement of confidence” in the quality of its cars. Earlier in that year, Toyota Motor Corp. and Kia offered variants of lifetime warranty. Extending Professor Spence’s idea of educational signalling to the capital market, good entrepreneurs and managers can differentiate themselves in a number of ways, such as consistently paying higher dividends, giving credible guarantees of higher returns, appointing reputable accounting firms to audit their financial statements, having respectable outsiders as independent directors, and conforming to superior standards of accounting and disclosure. All these are costly signals because incompetent or dishonest managers cannot mimic these signals in much the same way that an unintelligent person cannot complete PhD from a top school. Going back to the Wipro example in the Introduction, the company was signalling its superior standards of transparency and concern for investors by promptly reporting its weaker performance and prospects, even though it was painful to do so. High-quality financial reporting mitigates the problem of adverse selection by reducing information asymmetry and thus facilitates orderly functioning of the capital market, making it possible for entrepreneurs to raise funds at reasonable rates and investors to earn fair returns. Accounting standards, managerial behaviour, and audit quality determine the quality of accounting information. A well-organized capital market guided by reliable public information encourages people to save and invest, leading to greater production of goods and services and higher employment, and thus contributes significantly to the economic advancement of people. On the contrary, when markets are driven by manipulated financial numbers or wild expectations, they are prone to frequent speculative bubbles that inevitably burst and cause enormous damage to investor wealth and confidence. Enron has become the byword for accounting manipulation. India has Satyam. The Internet stock bubble of the 1990s is an example of investors going by hopes of incredible growth prospects rather than sound business and financial information. When Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme failed, the investors lost $20 billion. Ponzi schemes that have been reported in India include emu farms in Tamil Nadu, the potato investment scheme in West Bengal, the cattle-and-ghee scheme in Uttar Pradesh, and the usual chit fund investment scams in many states. Moral Hazard and Corporate Governance Moral hazard describes a situation where a decision-maker takes unwarranted risks or puts in inadequate effort because he or she has been provided with some kind of safety net. For example, individuals may not park their cars securely when their cars are insured; financial traders often gamble to earn large bonuses, because the penalty for losing money is mild. Suppose that you have invested in a business using high-quality accounting information. With your cash now firmly in their pockets, the managers may not only stop exerting themselves to the point of being indifferent to selection of projects but may even give themselves an executive jet, high managerial pay and generous perquisites, and huge separation benefits. This is an example of moral hazard. Accounting plays an important role in dealing with this problem by disciplining managerial actions. Executive compensation contracts specify performance standards in accounting terms, such as net profit and return on investment. If a minimum level of profitability is specified, managers would select only projects that are at or above that level and reject ‘bad’ projects. As a result, accounting becomes a key instrument for motivating, directing, monitoring and evaluating managerial performance and, thus, ensuring good corporate governance. Financial markets exist to transfer capital from investors to entities that need funding and to provide liquidity. By providing high-quality information in a timely manner, accounting aids in reducing agency costs and thereby enables business organizations to raise capital on fair terms and makes them utilize the capital efficiently. The Accounting Equation The accounting equation shows the relationship between the economic resources of a business and the claims against those resources. At all times, the following relationship holds: Economic resources = Claims Economic resources are assets. The claims consist of creditors’ claims or liabilities, and owners’ claims or equity. (Recall that a business is separate from its owner for accounting purposes. So the owner too has a claim on the business.) The accounting equation may now be modified as follows: Assets = Liabilities + Equity We can analyze any business transaction in terms of its effect on the accounting equation, regardless of its size and complexity. The balance sheet shows the position of assets, liabilities and equity. Assets An asset is a resource “controlled by the entity as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity.”10 An enterprise should consider a resource its asset if (a) it controls the resource, and (b) the resource is expected to provide future benefits. You enjoy going to a public park that has trees, plants, flowers and a jogging track (benefits), but since you cannot prevent anyone else from using it (no control), you should not regard the park as your asset. You are the unquestioned master of your broken iPod (control), but since you are not going to use it (no benefits), you will not count it among your assets. Cash is possibly the ideal asset because it can buy other assets. Amounts receivable from customers are a major part of a bank’s assets. Inventories that will become cash on being sold are a retailer’s assets. A manufacturer’s land, buildings, plant and equipment are its assets, because it uses them to provide goods to its customers and gets cash. Some assets, such as land, buildings, plant, and inventories, have physical form. Assets such as patents and copyrights confer exclusive rights but have no physical form. Other assets, such as amounts receivable from customers and investments in bonds, are legally enforceable claims on others. What is common to all assets is that they have the capacity to provide benefits to their owners. To sum up, an asset is what an enterprise ‘owns’. Think of assets as receivable. As an exercise, list the chief assets of Biocon, Dell, ICICI Bank, Microsoft, and Wipro. Liabilities A liability is “a present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits.”11 A liability is the mirror image of an asset in that it usually requires payment of cash. Some liabilities, such as loans payable and salaries payable, are in precise amounts. Other liabilities, such as warranties payable, income tax payable, and pensions payable, must be estimated. Most liabilities result from contracts e.g. amount payable for using electricity, or statutory requirements e.g. amount payable for employer’s contribution to provident fund. A liability may also arise from a constructive obligation that an enterprise regards as payable even without a legally enforceable claim. For instance, an enterprise may follow a policy of full refund for goods returned even after the contractual period in order to foster customer goodwill; this may give rise to a liability. In sum, a liability is what an enterprise ‘owes’. Think of liabilities as payable. Can you list the chief liabilities of BHEL, Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, SBI, Siemens, Sony, and TCS? Equity Equity is “the residual interest in the assets of the entity after deducting all its liabilities.”12 Thus, it is the difference between the enterprise’s assets and its liabilities. The equity of a business enterprise is increased through investments of assets by owners and profits from operations and is decreased through distributions of assets to owners from the enterprise and losses from operations. Think of equity as residual. The equity of a company is called shareholders’ equity. Its components include share capital, share premium, and retained profit. Share capital is the amount contributed by the shareholders towards the company’s capital and is entered in the company’s share capital account. Share premium is the excess of shareholders’ contribution over share capital. The activities of a business result in revenues and expenses. Revenues are amounts charged to customers for goods and services provided. For example, airlines earn revenue by transporting passengers and cargo. Expenses are generally the costs of earning revenues. The expenses of running an airline include aircraft lease rent, fuel, salaries of crew and ground staff, interest on borrowings, and income tax. Net profit is the excess of revenues over expenses, and net loss is the excess of expenses over revenues. Dividends are distributions of assets by a company to its shareholders. Net profits increase equity, and net losses and dividends decrease equity. Retained earnings represent the amount of net profit kept in the business. You will learn more about the components of equity as you progress. Can you name the chief revenues and expenses of Arvind Mills, Goldman Sachs, Google, Jet Airways, SAIL, and Vodafone? Analyzing the Effect of Business Transactions On March 1, 20XX, Suresh starts Softomation as a proprietary business for providing customized computer software. Softomation has the following transactions in March: Owner invests On March 1, 20XX, Suresh invests `50,000 in cash. The first balance sheet of the new business will show cash of `50,000 and equity of `50,000. (The items affected by the transaction appear in italics): The Indian convention is to show liabilities and equity on the left of the balance sheet and assets on the right. Takes a loan On March 2, Suresh takes a loan of `20,000 from Manish for Softomation. This transaction increases both assets (cash) and liabilities (loan payable): Buys equipment for cash On March 3, Softomation buys for cash a computer costing `58,000. This transaction decreases one asset (cash) and increases another asset (equipment), but the total assets do not change: Buys supplies on credit On March 4, Softomation purchases supplies for `6,000 on credit. The effect is that both assets (supplies) and liabilities (trade payables) increase: 13 Provides services for cash On March 19, Softomation completes its maiden software for a retail store and receives a fee of `12,000. Revenue increases the owner’s claim on the business. So the receipt of revenue increases both assets (cash) and equity: Pays supplier On March 21, Softomation pays its creditor for supplies, `2,000. As a result, both assets (cash) and liabilities (trade payables) decrease: Pays expense On March 29, Softomation pays employees’ salaries, `4,000, and office rent, `1,200. Expenses reduce the owner’s claim on the business. This transaction decreases both assets (cash) and equity: Provides services on credit On March 30, Softomation completes a software for a shoe store. The customer agrees to pay the agreed fee of `8,000 a week later. In this case, Softomation has earned the revenue but has not received it in cash. So we count it as revenue.14 The effect of this transaction is that both assets (trade receivables) and equity increase: 15 Owner withdraws cash from business On March 31, Suresh withdraws `3,500 for personal use. In accordance with the reporting entity assumption, we should treat this payment by the business as a withdrawal of capital by the owner, and not as a business expense.16 There is a decrease in both assets (cash) and equity: Here is the list of the above transactions. Exhibit 1.3 presents the effect of these transactions on the accounting equation. Change in balance is in italics. Revenues increase equity, and expenses, drawings (or dividends) decrease equity. Therefore, we can rewrite the accounting equation, Assets = Liabilities + Equity, as follows: Assets = Liabilities + Capital + Revenues – Expenses – Drawings (or Dividends) Financial Statements Financial statements provide information about an enterprise’s financial performance and financial position. Financial statements present the financial effects of transactions and other events by grouping them into broad classes, or elements. Revenues and expenses are the elements related to the measurement of performance; assets, liabilities, and equity are the elements related to the measurement of financial position. A complete set of financial statements normally consists of the statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, balance sheet, cash flow statement, statement of changes in equity, and explanatory notes. Financial statements are a central feature of accounting because they are the principal means of communicating accounting information to those outside an enterprise. Business enterprises publish five major financial statements: 1. The statement of profit and loss reports the financial performance of an enterprise during a period. 2. The statement of retained earnings explains what the enterprise did with its earnings, i.e. how much it distributed and how much it retained. 3. The balance sheet shows the financial position of the enterprise at a point in time. 4. The cash flow statement summarizes the cash inflows and outflows of the enterprise resulting from its operating, investing, and financing activities during a period. 5. The statement of changes in equity explains how equity changed as a result of net profit, dividends, return of capital and other transactions. Exhibit 1.4 shows Softomation’s financial statements. We now briefly analyze these statements. Statement of Profit and Loss The statement of profit and loss (or profit and loss account or income statement) summarizes the activities of an enterprise in a period by disclosing the revenues earned and the expenses incurred. By measuring the net profit earned by a business, it indicates its degree of operating success. From Exhibit 1.4, we note that in March 20XX Softomation earned a revenue of `20,000 from services, and incurred expenses totalling `5,200, consisting of salaries expense of `4,000 and rent expense of `1,200. Thus, it reported a net profit of `14,800 for the period. You might have noticed that the statement of profit and loss is a summary of the revenues and expenses that appear in the ‘Equity’ column in Exhibit 1.3. We note that Softomation’s revenues are from its business activities. What do you think of Softomation’s performance? Statement of Retained Earnings The statement of retained earnings explains what Softomation did with its net profit. This statement is a bridge between the statement of profit and loss and the equity section of the balance sheet. A business may distribute its earnings to the owners, retain the earnings, or distribute a portion of the earnings and retain the rest. Suresh withdrew `3,500 of Softomation’s March earnings of `14,800 and retained `11,300. The payout, the ratio of distribution to net profit, is over 23 per cent. Since distribution of profit is not an expense, it appears in the statement of retained earnings, and not in the statement of profit and loss. It is a “below the line” item. The retention indicates the extent of the owner’s ploughing back the earnings into the business. As a result of the retention, Suresh’s stake in Softomation has gone up, and this should be reassuring to the firm’s present and potential creditors. Do you think Suresh was right in withdrawing a part of Softomation’s profit? Balance Sheet The balance sheet presents an enterprise’s assets, liabilities and equity at a point in time. It summarizes the resources, and the claims to those resources by owners and creditors, of the enterprise on a certain date. As shown in Exhibit 1.4, at the end of March 20XX, Softomation has assets totalling `85,300 equal to the total of liabilities of `24,000 and equity of `61,300. Do you think Softomation is a financially sound business? Cash Flow Statement The cash flow statement describes the investments in assets made during the period and how those investments are financed and how much the owners took from the business. It reports the cash effects of not only the enterprise’s operations but also its investing (i.e. buying assets) and financing (i.e. cash received from or paid to owners and lenders) activities. The cash flow statement in Exhibit 1.4 describes how Softomation managed to end the month with a cash balance of `13,300. Current operations resulted in net cash increase of `4,800. Investment in equipment resulted in cash outflow of `58,000. Owner’s investment, net of withdrawal, and loan provided net cash of `66,500. What does the statement tell us about Softomation’s cash flow? Statement of Changes in Equity The statement of changes in equity (or statement of shareholders’ equity) describes the changes in the components of equity, such as share capital and retained earnings. Changes in share capital result from introduction or withdrawal of capital by the owners. Changes in retained earnings result from net profit and distributions to the owners. What can we learn from the changes in Softomation’s equity? At this stage, our aim is to get a glimpse of financial statements. You will study the principles and procedures followed in the preparation, analysis and interpretation of financial statements in later chapters. You will find it greatly useful to keep referring to company annual reports as you progress through the book. Appendix A has the 2013 financial statements of Hindustan Unilever. How are the Financial Statements Interrelated? The statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, balance sheet, cash flow statement, and the statement of changes in equity are related to each other. Take, for example, the transaction on March 1: Suresh began business with cash, `50,000. This transaction affects cash and equity, both balance sheet items. Since it results in cash inflow, it appears also in the cash flow statement. Look at the transaction on March 21: Paid creditor for supplies, `2,000. It reduces liabilities and cash, both balance sheet items. Since it results in cash outflow, it is also an item in the cash flow statement. The effect of some transactions may be confined to one of the statements. Consider the transaction on March 4: Bought supplies on credit, `6,000. It affects the balance sheet because supplies is an asset and the credit purchase creates a liability for a payable. When Softomation pays the supplier on March 21, cash decreases, affecting the balance sheet (cash and payables) and the cash flow statement – operating cash outflow. The owner’s withdrawal of `3,500 on March 31 affects the statement of retained earnings – drawings, the cash flow statement – financing cash outflow, and the statement of changes in equity. Preview of Financial Statement Analysis Softomation earned a net profit of `14,800 on revenue of `20,000 and assets of `85,300. The company’s profit margin, the ratio of profit to revenue, is 74 per cent. The company’s return on assets, the ratio of net profit to assets, is 17.35 per cent. The company’s asset turnover, the ratio of revenue to assets, is 0.24. The margin looks impressive considering that this is the first month of the business. The return on assets also looks good. The asset turnover is quite low for a service enterprise but then it is too early to expect full utilization of assets. Hopefully, the sales will pick up and the asset turnover will improve over time. The large payout of profits is unusual at the early stages of a business. A significant portion of the assets is of a long-term nature and needs to be financed by long-term capital. Receivables are 80 per cent of sales and it could be a matter of concern if the trend continues. Current operations produced net cash of `4,800 as against a profit of `14,800. That could mean the profits are mostly stuck in receivables. What do Accountants Do? Many think that the work of accountants is bookkeeping – the process of recording transactions. However, bookkeeping forms only a small part of accounting and is possibly the simplest. Accounting, on the other hand, includes the design of efficient information systems, budgeting, cost analysis, tax planning, auditing, and the analysis and interpretation of information. Accountants play an important role in society and offer a wide range of services to business as well as the government. For the purposes of our discussion, the area of accounting may be divided into the following broad fields: Public accounting; Private accounting; Government accounting; and Not-for-profit accounting Public Accounting Accounting firms engaged in public accounting provide a variety of accounting services to the public for a fee. They vary in size from large national or international accounting firms employing thousands of persons to numerous one-person practices. CAs are, similar to doctors and lawyers, licensed to practise their profession to ensure that the public gets services of an acceptable standard. To become a CA, it is necessary to pass a rigorous and comprehensive examination conducted by the ICAI and undergo at least three years of practical training in accounting, auditing, tax and other related areas. On successful completion of the examination and training, the individual can apply for a certificate of practice which is the licence to practise as a CA. CAs can practise individually or in partnership with other CAs Accounting firms provide a wide variety of services. The principal services offered include (a) auditing, (b) forensic accounting and risk management, (c) tax services, (d) advisory services, (d) bankruptcy, and (e) small business services. These are described below. Auditing (or assurance) It involves the examination of financial statements and generally forms an important part of the work of a CA. Companies must have their financial statements audited by an outside CA. The major duties of a company’s auditor are examining and verifying the company’s financial statements; appraising the company’s procedures for collecting, recording, and reporting financial information; testing the controls by which the company protects its financial systems from frauds and errors; and publishing an opinion as to whether the company’s financial statements give a “true and fair view” of its financial affairs. Auditing enhances the credibility of financial reports prepared by an enterprise. By ensuring that the financial statements are correct and complete, auditing increases their reliability and usefulness for making economic decisions by investors, creditors, analysts, and others. Credible financial reports are essential for society to have trust in public companies. The following comment in The Wall Street Journal sums up the importance of auditing: Accountants, more specifically, auditors, are charged with making sure corporations properly report their financial condition. They are, when everything is working right, the truth police, a check on a corporation’s darker thoughts.17 Auditors must be both technically competent in their work and independent of the enterprise whose financial statements they audit. A rigorous system of training and examination certifies that auditors possess the requisite technical skills. But it is not always easy for auditors to be independent of the enterprise that engages and pays them. At a minimum, auditors should scrupulously avoid transactions and client relationships that could compromise their ability to express an independent professional opinion on its financial statements. Forensic accounting and risk management Growing financial fraud has led to the emergence of forensic accounting, a field that specializes in uncovering fraud in organizations. More often than not, there is likely to be some kind of employee involvement in fraud. Forensic accountants spend a lot of time interviewing suspects and witnesses. These days a lot of information handling is automated. So forensic accountants require high-level computer skills. The very nature of the work of forensic accountants makes their world mysterious. Even so, there have been occasional reports of the work done by them, such as tracking down assets held in Swiss banks and investigating ghost payroll. Risk management, an allied field, aims at identifying potential weakness and failures in financial systems in order to design robust controls. With the rise of white-collar crime, such as tax evasion, money laundering and bribery, the demand for forensic accountants and risk management specialists is growing. Tax services Business enterprises have to consider the tax consequences of alternative courses of action. Tax services include not only the preparation of tax returns and compliance with tax laws but also planning business activities with a view to minimizing taxes. It is often possible to effect considerable savings in tax expense by appropriately arranging one’s business affairs. While evasion of taxes is definitely unlawful, it is perfectly legitimate for everyone to reduce their tax expense. To be successful in tax practice, an accountant should be up-to-date with changes in tax statutes, rules, notifications and circulars, and court decisions. Advisory services An important part of the revenues of large accounting firms comes from advisory services, an omnibus term for a wide variety of consulting activities. These services go beyond the traditional boundaries of accounting and auditing. Examples of consulting assignments include rethinking business strategy, designing organizations, recruiting personnel, reviewing costs, designing information systems, improving inventory control, helping companies go public, and advising on restructuring. Specialists such as actuaries, computer consultants, MBAs, engineers, and economists are employed in consulting. Although auditing continues to be the mainstay for most accounting practices, its relative importance is declining as the demand for advisory services grows. Large accounting firms are now “professional services firms”. Nearly one-fourth of the amounts the companies in the CNX S&P 500 companies paid their auditors in 2013 was for non-audit services. Bankruptcy Bankruptcy is the inability of a business to pay all of its obligations. When a business files for bankruptcy, its assets are sold and the amounts due to its creditors are paid out of those sale proceeds. Bankruptcy administrators do not have the glamour of investment bankers. But when the music stops and an investment bank is wound up, its bankruptcy administrators stand to gain. For example, fees paid to lawyers and accountants for unwinding Lehman Brothers in the US and Europe were estimated to surpass $2 billion.18 The operation involved settling derivative contracts, selling off the bank’s subsidiaries and real estate, and dealing with litigation by and against the bank. Small business services Many accounting firms provide a variety of services for small businesses. Setting up an accounting system, compiling financial statements, preparing budgets and forecasts, and assisting the client in obtaining a bank loan are examples of small business services. Private Accounting An accountant is said to be in private accounting when she is employed by a business enterprise. Private accountants are employed by organizations in such diverse businesses as steel making, manganese mining, banking, airlines, software, real estate, and hotels. Typical designations of these accountants are financial vicepresident, financial controller, works accountant, and management accountant. In recent years, individuals with backgrounds in finance and accounting have become chief executives in a number of companies. Among the areas in which private accountants specialize are management accounting, internal auditing, and information systems. Management accounting Accountants in management accounting provide information to management for making business decisions and formulating longterm policies. Management accounting information has use in several areas including cost control, product costing, capital investment appraisal, profitability analysis, corporate planning, budgeting, pricing policies, and cash flow and liquidity management. Members of the Institute of Cost Accountants of India, known as cost accountants, specialize in management accounting. A large number of CAs employed in business enterprises too perform management accounting functions. Internal auditing In addition to the audit by outside accounting firms, most large corporations have their own internal audit departments. Internal auditors are concerned with reviewing internal controls, assessing compliance with established policies, ascertaining the extent to which company’s assets are safeguarded, and recommending improvements to operations. External auditors are primarily concerned with the fairness of the financial statements of a business. The Companies Act 2013 requires companies to appoint an internal auditor, who shall be a CA or a cost accountant. Information systems A rapidly growing field for accountants is the design and development of information systems for processing accounting data. Since large corporations make extensive use of technology for processing transactions, a good working knowledge of computer hardware and software is indispensable for specialization in this field. Information system auditors examine the adequacy of security in computerized accounting systems. Government Accounting Government departments and agencies receive and pay huge sums of money. We are familiar with government organizations such as the Indian Railways, India Post, the Income Tax Department, the Police, and the Defence Services. Unlike business enterprises, the sole objective of government is not to make a profit from its operations. Still, it is essential that the sums due to the government are collected when due, and payments are properly authorized and result in expected benefits. The government should be cost effective in its operations, so that taxes and other levies can be kept low. Sources of government revenues include income tax, excise and customs duties, value added tax, and various types of fees and cesses. Examples of payments made by government include salaries and allowances of personnel in civil and defence services, pensions of retired government employees, costs of goods and services procured for projects, and benefits under various welfare programmes for the poor. Efficient and proper handling of revenues and expenses requires extensive systems for checking and recording documents and preparation of financial reports for internal use and for Parliament. Government accounting systems are mostly run by members of central services such as the Indian Audit and Accounts Service, the Indian Civil Accounts Service, the Indian Railway Accounts Service, and the Indian Defence Accounts Service. The Controller-General of Accounts is the head of the Central government’s accounting function and is part of the Ministry of Finance. The Comptroller and Auditor-General of India (CAG), an independent authority under the Constitution of India, audits the transactions and accounts of government and public sector undertakings. The CAG communicates its major observations and recommendations to Parliament. The CAG’s audit reports are discussed in committees of Parliament, such as the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) and the Committee on Public Undertakings. In this way, Parliament is able to exercise control over the government’s financial management. The CAG is more concerned with the propriety and efficiency of the actions of officers of the government, unlike company auditors who are mainly concerned with the fair presentation of information in financial statements in compliance with accounting standards. In recent times, the CAG’s reports on defence purchases and award of mobile telephone licences have attracted a lot of attention. Proper accounting and independent auditing are instrumental in ensuring government’s accountability. The CAG occasionally audits non-government companies at the request of the government. In 2014, the Delhi government asked the CAG to conduct a special audit of electricity distribution companies in Delhi in response to complaints that they were profiteering at the expense of consumers. In 2010, the Department of Telecommunication asked the CAG to audit the records of some telecommunication companies when there were doubts whether the companies under-reported to avoid paying the government’s share of licence fee and spectrum charges. In 2009, the Ministry of Petroleum asked the CAG to audit the expenditure that Reliance Industries incurred in developing the Krishna- Godavari basin gas field D6 because of allegations of inflating gas field costs. Not-for-Profit Accounting Religious and charitable institutions are established for providing certain types of services to the public. Unlike business enterprises, these organizations are not profit-oriented. Donations and endowments made by philanthropic individuals are the major sources of revenues for non-business organizations. These organizations need financial reports for assuring present and potential donors that the funds are utilized efficiently, effectively and properly for the stated purposes. Accounting as an Academic Discipline Accounting is not only a profession but also a field of intellectual enquiry, similar to medicine, law, architecture and engineering. Accounting academics publish their research in scholarly journals such as The Accounting Review, the Journal of Accounting and Economics, and the Journal of Accounting Research. Accounting researchers apply economic and behavioural theories to financial reporting and disclosure, and other areas of accounting. Examples of problems that researchers have examined include: (a) How does accounting influence stock prices? (b) How do firms benefit from improving their disclosure? (c) Under what conditions is accrual accounting more informative than cash accounting? (d) Why do accountants take note of losses quicker than gains? (e) What are the major factors in selecting accounting methods and disclosure levels? (f) Is it possible to predict future profits from past profits? (g) Does disclosure affect managerial behaviour? (h) Is executive pay related to financial performance? You can get an idea of the research questions that academic accountants investigate by looking at academic accounting journals. 19 Fraud and Ethical Issues in Accounting With more managers trying to cut ethical corners to accomplish enterprise objectives, ethical standards in business are declining and this has serious implications for the accounting profession. Fraudulent accounting and weak internal control systems have been the principal causes of many recent corporate scandals, including the ones that affected Satyam, Enron, WorldCom, Tyco, and Xerox. Falling ethical standards often, but not always, result from high pressure to show results that most managers face in business organizations. Increasingly, managerial compensation is linked to profit and other accounting measures of performance. Hence, the temptation to manipulate the accounting reports is at times irresistible. A KPMG survey reported that the pressure to perform and exceed market expectations has increased the risk of fraud.20 Stock-based incentive methods such as stock options have the unintended effect of inducing managers to boost their company’s stock prices by unethical methods. Further, analysts and fund managers generally expect companies to produce instant results forcing managers to tweak the quarterly or annual earnings numbers rather than focus on the long-term growth of the business. Booking incomplete or fictitious sales as revenues, improperly deferring current expenses to future periods, and making unwarranted changes in accounting policies are examples of accounting tricks that have been used often to manipulate the earnings. Keep an eye on the possibility of manipulation and fraud while you examine the financial statements. Professional accountants frequently encounter ethical dilemmas. For example, a controller may find a conflict between professional standards and the expectations of a superior. An external auditor may be caught in a conflict between the wishes of a company being audited and the application of accounting standards. In the face of sudden decreases in revenue or market share, unrealistic budget pressures, particularly for short-term results, or financial pressure resulting from bonus plans that depend on short-term economic performance, managers are often tempted to bend the accounting rules. Unfortunately, many ethical questions that arise in practice cannot be answered by adhering to GAAP or following the rules of the profession. The accountant must decide on the basis of the facts and circumstances of each case whether it is necessary “to blow the whistle” or not. In deciding on the appropriate course of action, the accountant should consider the potential legal, economic, social, and psychological consequences of each alternative course. Ethical questions often involve conflicting considerations, and balancing these pressures is far from easy. For example, though the accountant may be ethically obliged to inform an external agency of a wrongful act committed by the client, the code of ethical conduct for accountants prohibits the accountant from revealing confidential information about a client. Nevertheless, it is important for the accountant to recognize an ethical dilemma, identify and evaluate the various alternatives available for resolving the dilemma, and select the most ethical alternative considering all the circumstances and consequences. In case you are still unconvinced, note that the punishment for accounting and financial fraud is too severe. Jeff Skilling, Enron’s former chief executive, was sentenced to 24 years, while Bernie Ebbers of WoldCom got 25 years of imprisonment. Bernard Madoff, the fraudster who ran a Ponzi scheme, was sentenced to 150 years in jail. Closer home, Satyam’s directors and auditors, who have been charged with serious offences under the Indian Penal Code and the Companies Act, are standing trial for fraudulent accounting. Accountants and managers would be tempting fate if they engage in fraudulent reporting. Looking Back Italicized words indicate key ideas, concepts and terms from this chapter. Understand the working of business organizations Business organizations offer products and services in order to satisfy customer needs and thereby earn a profit. Receiving and paying cash is central to the activities of business organizations. Define accounting and explain its role in making economic and business decisions The accounting information system processes business transactions to provide financial reports. Accounting develops and communicates information that is useful in making sound decisions about the use of scarce resources. Identify the major users of accounting information Investors, creditors, analysts, employees, management, governments, and regulatory agencies are the major users of accounting information. Distinguish between financial and management accounting Financial accounting makes available financial information mainly to an enterprise’s outsiders. Management accounting provides financial and other information to an enterprise’s management. Discuss the assumptions underlying accounting measurement and explain their significance Accounting measures business transactions and other economic events which affect a firm. Reporting entity, going concern, periodicity, and money measurement make it possible to summarize in money terms the results of business transactions for a period separately for each business. Explain the meaning of GAAP and identify the institutions that influence the development of Indian GAAP Generally accepted accounting principles consist of conventions, rules and procedures that define accepted accounting practice. The accounting profession, government, and tax authorities have a major influence on GAAP. Accounting standards specify the acceptable methods from the wide variety of accounting choices. Accounting policies define the application of GAAP by an enterprise in preparing financial statements. Describe and evaluate the common forms of business organization A business may be organized as a sole proprietorship, partnership, or a company. The corporate form of organization is considered particularly appropriate for a large-scale business. Explain the role that accounting plays in capital market and corporate governance The operation of the lemons principle makes it difficult to access markets. High-quality financial reporting reduces information asymmetry and thus enables entrepreneurs to raise funds at reasonable rates and investors to earn fair returns. Accounting addresses the twin agency problems of adverse selection and moral hazard. Explain the accounting equation and analyze the effects of typical transactions on the equation The accounting equation states that at a given time, the sum of assets must equal the sum of liabilities and equity: Assets = Liabilities + Equity. The equation helps us understand the effect of transactions. Describe the five major financial statements and explain how they are inter-related The statement of profit and loss condenses an enterprise’s revenues and expenses. The statement of retained earnings gives the distribution and retention of earnings. The balance sheet presents an enterprise’s assets, liabilities and equity. The cash flow statement sums up the major sources of cash receipts and cash payments. The statement of changes in equity describes the changes in the components of equity. Describe the career opportunities for accountants Accountants provide auditing, tax and advisory services. They are employed in business organizations, government and not-for-profit organizations. Appreciate accounting as an academic discipline Accounting involves theory and practice. Academic accountants study the role of accounting in economic and behavioural contexts. Understand the importance of ethics in accounting Accountants should recognize ethical dilemmas and select the most ethical alternative after considering all consequences. Review Problem On January 1, 20XX, Manohar started QualPhoto Company. The following transactions took place during the first month: Required 1. Analyze the effect of these transactions on the accounting equation. 2. Prepare a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, a balance sheet, a cash flow statement, and a statement of changes in equity. Solution to the Review Problem 2. Financial Statements21 ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. What is the purpose of a business? What are the common types of business organizations? Why should a manager know accounting? Give five examples of economic decisions that are based on accounting information. Identify typical users of financial reports. How does financial accounting differ from management accounting? Do you think the money measurement assumption is realistic? Do you think historical cost information is useful? Who issues International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)? How does limited liability encourage risk-taking? Is it a good practice for a company’s chief financial officer to be also its company secretary? Give five examples of costly signals that well-managed companies can give. State the accounting equation. What is the function of financial statements? What can we learn from the cash flow statement about a business enterprise? How is auditing useful to investors and creditors? Can the external auditors be certain that there are no instances of frauds or errors in a company? Do you think accounting firms should be prohibited from providing nonaudit services? How does internal auditing differ from external auditing? How might an accountant go about resolving an ethical dilemma? Problem Set A The transactions of Kamat Travel Services during a month are as follows: (a) Bought furniture for cash. (b) Received amount due from a customer. (c) Bought a car on credit. (d) Paid amount due to a supplier. (e) Appointed office assistant. (f) Cash withdrawn by the proprietor for personal purposes. (g) Received cash for services to be provided next month. (h) Provided services on credit. (i) Received interest on bank deposit. (j) Sold unused equipment at purchase price. (k) Owner invested cash in the business. Using the format given below, state whether each transaction resulted in increase or decrease or had no effect on the company’s assets, liabilities and equity. Consider the total effect on assets, liabilities, and equity. The following items appeared in the March 31, 20XX balance sheet of Roshni Company. Prepare the March 31, 20XX balance sheet. On January 1, 20XX, Darshan set up Instant Dry Cleaning Enterprise investing `60,000. The activities of the business resulted in the following revenues and expenses for 20XX: revenue from services, `103,000; rent expense, `11,200; electricity expense, `42,000; salaries expense, `16,600; and delivery expense, `2,500. The assets and liabilities of the business on December 31, 20XX consisted of the following items: building, `66,700; equipment, `25,000; supplies, `2,300; trade receivables, `17,800; cash, `25,000; loan payable, `34,000; expenses payable, `6,600. During the year, Darshan withdrew `4,500 in cash for personal use and made a further investment of `10,000 in the business. Prepare the 20XX statement of profit and loss and balance sheet. Problem Set B The following table shows the effect of six transactions of Gopal Company on the accounting equation. The amounts are in rupees. Required Write a brief explanation for each of the transactions. If several explanations are possible, write all of them. On March 1, 20XX, Rina Motawala established an audit practice as a sole proprietorship and concluded the following transactions in the first month: (a) Rina brought in to the business her personal laptop costing `50,000. (b) Provided services for cash, `23,000. (c) Bought office equipment on credit, `25,000. (d) Billed clients for services, `16,000. (e) Paid rent deposit for office, `10,000. (f) Collected payments from clients in (d), `12,300. (g) Withdrew cash for personal use, `9,000. (h) Paid electricity expense, `1,700. (i) Paid salary to office assistant, `2,000. Required Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. On August 1, 20XX, Sriram set up Medi Labs Company. The following transactions took place during the first month: (a) Sriram invested `50,000 cash in the company’s share capital. (b) Bought equipment on credit, `40,000. (c) Took a bank loan, `30,000. (d) Invoiced customers for services, `15,000. (e) Provided services for cash, `18,000. (f) Bought supplies for cash, `3,000. (g) Paid staff salary, `10,000. (h) Paid electricity charges, `6,000. (i) Bought equipment for cash, `5,000. (j) Repaid a part of the bank loan, `10,000. (k) Paid dividends, `5,000. Required Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. Prasanna set up practice as an architect. After one month, the business had the following balances: Cash, `20,000; Trade Receivables, `7,000; Office Supplies, `10,000; Office Equipment, `30,000; Trade Payables, `9,000; Equity, Prasanna’s Capital, `58,000. The following transactions took place in the second month: (a) Billed clients for services, `29,000. (b) Paid assistant’s salary, `2,500. (c) Provided services and received cash, `14,000. (d) Collected payments due from clients, `26,000. (e) Bought equipment on credit, `11,000. (f) Paid equipment supplier, `3,000. (g) Paid electricity expense, `1,300. (h) Bought office supplies on credit, `2,800. (i) Took a bank loan, `15,000. (j) Bought office equipment for cash, `16,000. (k) Withdrew cash for personal use, `12,000. Required Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. First enter the beginning balances. On September 1, 20XX, Meera Kumar started Instaprogram Company to provide computer programming services. On September 30, the company had the following balances: Cash, `10,000; Trade Receivables, `5,000; Computer Supplies, `1,000; Office Equipment, `35,000; Trade Payables, `13,300; Share Capital, `24,500; Retained Earnings, `13,200. The following transactions took place in October 20XX: (a) Bought computer supplies for cash, `1,800. (b) Billed clients for professional services, `59,900. (c) Purchased office equipment for cash `3,000. (d) Provided services for cash, `20,000. (e) Paid suppliers, `11,000. (f) Paid office rent, `1,100. (g) Collected from clients billed in September, `4,000. (h) Bought equipment on credit, `20,000. (i) Collected from clients in (b), `56,400. (j) Paid programmers’ salaries, `28,000. (k) Paid dividends, `6,750. Required 1. Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. First enter the beginning balances. 2. Prepare the company’s October 20XX statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, balance sheet, cash flow statement and statement of changes in equity. Problem Set C The following table shows the effect of six transactions of Hrishikesh Company on the accounting equation. The amounts are in rupees. Required Write a brief explanation for each of the transactions. If several explanations are possible, write all of them. On September 1, 20XX, Rashmi Sinha established Lovely Beauty Salon. The business engaged in the following transactions in the first month: (a) Rashmi Sinha invested `50,000 cash in the business. (b) Bought equipment for cash, `15,000. (c) Took a bank loan, `25,000. (d) Bought supplies on credit, `3,000. (e) Paid rent, `12,500. (f) Withdrew cash for personal use, `5,000. (g) Paid suppliers for the purchase in (d), `1,500. (h) Received fee for services provided, `29,000. (i) Returned supplies costing `500. Required Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. On January 1, 20XX, Pramod Krishnan set up Interior Decor Company. The following transactions took place during the first month: (a) Pramod Krishnan invested `50,000 cash in the company’s share capital. (b) Took a bank loan, `25,000. (c) Billed customers for services, `14,000. (d) Paid assistants’ salary, `5,000. (e) Bought furniture for cash, `20,000. (f) Bought office supplies on credit, `3,000. (g) Received cash for services provided, `38,000. (h) Paid fuel expense, `8,000. (i) Paid office rent, `4,000. (j) Paid for the purchase in (f), `3,000. (k) Received cash from customers billed, `11,000. Required Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. Farouk set up a recruitment agency. After two months, he had the following account balances: Cash, `23,000; Trade Receivables, `15,000; Office Supplies, `6,000; Office Equipment, `20,000; Trade Payables, `24,000; Farouk’s Capital, `40,000. The following transactions took place later: (a) Bought a computer on credit, `15,000. (b) Received agency commission, `25,000. (c) Paid office rent, `4,000. (d) Billed clients for professional services, `35,000. (e) Collected payments from clients billed earlier, `38,000. (f) Took a bank loan, `10,000. (g) Bought office supplies for cash, `7,500. (h) Paid staff salary, `12,000. (i) Withdrew cash for personal use, `7,000. (j) Paid the computer supplier, `13,000. (k) Repaid a part of bank loan, `8,000. Required Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. First enter the beginning balances. After four months of operations, Channel Video Company had the following account balances on August 31, 20XX: Cash, `5,000; Trade Receivables, `10,000; Equipment, `11,700; DVDs, `36,000; Trade Payables, `7,000; Share Capital, `25,000; Retained Earnings, `30,700. The following transactions took place in September: (a) Collected from customers billed in August, `4,000. (b) Paid amounts due on August 31. (c) Took a bank loan, `10,000. (d) Paid assistant’s salary, `600. (e) Bought DVDs for cash, `5,000. (f) Bought equipment on credit, `20,000. (g) Received DVD hire charges, `15,000. (h) Paid store rent, `2,000. (i) Paid suppliers, `3,000. (j) Billed customers for DVD hire charges, `3,500. (k) Paid dividends, `2,500. Required 1. Analyze the effect of the transactions on the accounting equation. First enter the beginning balances. 2. Prepare the company’s September statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, balance sheet, cash flow statement and statement of changes in equity. Business Decision Cases On August 1, 20XX, Ajay and Jeevan quit as senior executives in a mutual fund to set up MoneyCare Company, an investment advisory service. Each of them deposited `50,000 in MoneyCare’s bank account in exchange for 5,000 shares. Also, they raised an interest-free loan of `20,000 for the company from their friend. They rented an office for the company in the city, costing `5,000 per month payable on the last day of the month. At the landlord’s insistence, they paid a deposit of `70,000, refundable on MoneyCare vacating the place. They leased two computers for one year on a monthly rental of `6,000 per computer and subscribed to a financial database for a fee of `11,000 per month. Computer rental and database fee were payable at the beginning of the month. They appointed a secretary on a monthly salary of `9,000 and an assistant on a monthly salary of `5,000. Depending on their credit rating, MoneyCare’s customers paid in one of the following ways: 1. Before receiving service. 2. Immediately on receiving service. 3. Within one month after receiving service. During August, MoneyCare provided services for `70,800 and raised invoices with the following payment terms: Fifteen customers with invoices totalling `62,100 could pay until end of September. Two customers with invoices totalling `8,700 had to pay immediately. MoneyCare’s other transactions in August were as follows: Paid computer rental, database fee, office rent and salaries as agreed. Received from customers amounts totalling `24,100 including `15,400 from customers who chose to pay early. Paid for office supplies costing `1,800 but did not use them. Received `9,000 from a customer for service to be provided in September. Earned interest income of `460 on the bank account. Required 1. Prepare MoneyCare’s financial statements for August. 2. What do you think of the company’s financial performance? Interpreting Financial Reports Jet Airways (India) Ltd. is a major airline in India. The following items are taken from the recent financial statements of the company: 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 1. Aircraft fuel consumed Employees’ remuneration and benefits Deferred tax liability Travel agents’ commission Purchase of investments Provision for gratuity Proceeds from sale of fixed assets Net cash from operating activities Share capital Repayment of term loans and subordinated debt Interest and finance charges Frequent flyer points not availed of Inventories Aircraft lease rental Wealth tax paid Capital expenditure – aircraft and others Dividend paid Short-term borrowings Unpaid dividend Deposit with service tax department Required 1. Identify the financial statement – statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, balance sheet, or cash flow statement – in which you would expect to see each of the items and indicate whether it is a revenue, expense, asset, liability, equity, operating cash flow, investing cash flow, or financing cash flow. 2. Give any five items that do not appear in the above list but you would expect to see in the complete set of financial statements of Jet Airways. Infosys is a leading information technology services company listed in Indian stock exchanges and in NASDAQ in the US. The company’s 2013 annual report contains the following statement: The financial statements are prepared in accordance with the accounting standards issued by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India and the requirements of the Companies Act 1956, to the extent applicable to us, and guidelines issued by SEBI on the historical cost convention, as a going concern and on the accrual basis. There are no material departures from prescribed accounting standards in the adoption of the accounting standards. The Board of Directors accepts responsibility for the integrity and objectivity of these financial statements. The accounting policies used in the preparation of the financial statements have been consistently applied except as otherwise stated in the notes accompanying the respective tables. The estimates and judgments related to the financial statements have been made on a prudent and reasonable basis, in order that the financial statements reflect in a true and fair manner the form and substance of transactions, and reasonably present our state of affairs and profits for the year. We have taken sufficient care to maintain adequate accounting records in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act 1956, to safeguard the assets of the Company and to prevent and detect fraud and other irregularities. Required Briefly describe the responsibility of the various agencies or parties in relation to the company’s financial reporting and allied matters and how the above statement benefits them. Financial Analysis Search the Internet for reports about the accounting scandal in Satyam. Required 1. Explain the essential elements of the scandal based on your understanding of accounting at this stage. 2. Prepare a report comparing the Satyam scandal with accounting scandals in the US highlighting any similarities and differences between them. An article titled “Are sugar mills doing really badly?” in Business Line, October 24, 2013 argued that the Indian sugar industry was understating its profits in order to extract benefits from the government and banks. In a rejoinder the industry association refuted the charges (“Baseless charges against sugar industry”, in Business Line, October 29, 2013). Read these reports. Required 1. Examine the arguments in the two articles. Do you agree with them? Explain why or why not. 2. Prepare an analysis of the financial statements of a sample of sugar companies and comment on your results. 3. What are the conflicting pressures on sugar companies’ financial reporting? How should they resolve them? The job of an investment adviser is to recommend profitable investment opportunities. These include stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities, and art. The adviser should maximize the return, or profit, from an investment keeping in view the related risks, or the chances of loss or a low profit. Your friend is looking at options for investing a large fortune she has inherited from her uncle. She has heard that lately the stock market has been doing well and the stock prices of many companies have zoomed. She wants you, a financial wizard in the making (or so she thinks!), to tell her how to invest. Required 1. Prepare a report setting out the information an individual should have in order to decide on investing in stocks and where the information will be available. 2. List the advantages and disadvantages of alternative investment opportunities and explain how studying the information in the financial statements would be useful in making an informed decision. Answers to Test Your Understanding 1.1 (a) Furniture; (b) Online messaging (in case you didn’t know!); (c) Online auction and shopping; (d) Sports goods; (e) Luxury; (f) Electronics; (g) Air conditioners, ATMs, semi-conductors, chemicals; (h) Mobile telephony. 1.2 (a) Are there any unusual, one-time or non-recurring items that contributed to the net profit in Q2FY14 i.e. second quarter of 2013–14?; (b) Does the net profit in Q2FY14 indicate a turnaround in performance?; (c) Why was profit growth out of step with revenue growth? (d) How risky is the company’s dependence on its top five customers?; (e) What is the company’s policy for management of foreign exchange risk?; (f) What was the profit margin? What does any change in the margin imply?; (g) What is the outlook for Q3FY14? 1.3 (a) The reporting entity assumption requires that the transactions of the business be separated from the personal affairs of the owner. Hence, electricity charges for the owner’s home cannot be recorded as a business expense; (b) The going concern assumption coupled with the historical cost principle requires assets to be recorded at their cost of purchase, regardless of their subsequent market value; (c) The reporting entity assumption requires that the transactions of the business be separated from the personal affairs of the owner. Hence, the smartphone bought for the owner’s personal use cannot be recorded as an asset of the business. 1.4 (a) Bought a building on credit; (b) Collected payments from customers for past sales; (c) Owner invested capital in cash; (d) Paid suppliers for past purchases; (e) Owner withdrew cash from business for private use. 1.5 Net profit = EquityDec. 31, 20X2 – EquityDec. 31, 20X1 – Investments20X2 + Drawings20X2 = (`99,000 – `71,000) – (`85,000 – `67,000) – `35,000 + `24,500 = Net loss, `500. 1.6 The report talks about several things. The headline mentions growth in net profit. The next quote referring to growth in revenues talks of “inflows”, normally a term used for cash inflows. But that was probably not intended. The growth in balance sheet usually means the size of a bank’s loans and investments. It is possible to have different growth rates for net profit, revenues and assets. The statements do not appear to be inconsistent with the headline. 1.7 (a) Statement of profit and loss: revenue increases by `13,000; (b) Balance sheet: cash increases by `4,000, trade receivables increase by `9,000, and equity increases by `13,000; (c) Cash flow statement: cash inflow from operations increases by `4,000. 1 Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts No. 1, Objectives of Financial Reporting by Business Enterprises, Financial Accounting Standards Board, 1978. 2 A Statement of Basic Accounting Theory (Sarasota, Florida: American Accounting Association, 1966), p. 64. Professors John A. Christensen and Joel S. Demski provide an analytical study of accounting as an information system in Accounting Theory: An Information Content Perspective, New York: Irwin/McGraw-Hill, 2003. 3 The Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting, International Accounting Standards Board, September 2010. 4 Railmen threaten agitation against any rollback of fare hike, The Hindu, March 18, 2012. 5 IAS 2:6/Ind AS 2:6 6 IAS 1:117/Ind AS 1:117. 7 Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, Edwin Cannan (Ed.), Bantam Dell, New York, 2003, p. 941. 8 George A. Akerlof, The market for ‘lemons’: Quality uncertainty and the market mechanism, Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1970. Interestingly, one of the illustrations of the lemons principle in the paper relates to the practice of adulterating rice with stones by Indian shopkeepers and the resultant costs of dishonesty to the buyer and to honest business. 9 Michael Spence, Job market signalling, Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1973. 10 IASB F.49(a) 11 IASB F.49(b). 12 IASB F.49(c). 13Commonly used alternative terms for trade payables are creditors and accounts payable. 14 We are getting ahead of the story. In Chapter 3, you will see why we reckoned the revenue though cash was not received. 15 Commonly used alternative terms for trade receivables are debtors and accounts receivable. 16 If we mistakenly treat the withdrawal as an expense, the amount of equity would be the same. But profit would be lower by `3,500, and that would be incorrect. 17 Tracy Byrnes, Besmirched auditors remain vital to the investment world, The Wall Street Journal, April 12, 2002. 18 Jennifer Hughes, Tellis Demos and Nicole Bullock, Lehman unwinding fees to pass $2 billion, Financial Times, September 14, 2010. 19 Ray Ball and Philip Brown, An empirical evaluation of accounting income numbers, Journal of Accounting Research, Autumn, 1968. 20 KPMG, India Fraud Survey Report, 2012. 21 The financial statements broadly follow the format specified in the Companies Act 2013. Chapter 4 discusses the classification and presentation requirements of the Act. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Describe an account and a ledger. Recognize commonly used accounts. Describe the double-entry system and apply the rules for debit and credit. Analyze the effect of business transactions using debits and credits. Record transactions in the journal. Post entries from the journal to the ledger. Prepare a trial balance and know its limitations. DOES MICROSOFT TICK ALL THE RIGHT BOXES? Xbox is a popular video gaming product. By June 2013, Microsoft had sold 75 million units and its subscription service at $50 a year had 46 million subscribers and was growing fast. Is Xbox profitable? Microsoft’s Entertainment and Devices division, which includes the Windows phone and Surface tablet businesses, generated $10 billion in sales and $700 million in profit in the previous one year and contributed 7 per cent of Microsoft’s profits. Since 2003, when Microsoft began reporting profits by segments, E&D has $71 billion in revenues but an operating loss of $2.6 billion. How much has been the return on Xbox? It is hard to know because of the other businesses rolled into E&D. A good accounting system should help Microsoft find out the profitability of Xbox. Whether Microsoft will disclose that information is a different matter. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL Many business organizations have to process thousands of transactions. They have to record transactions systematically so that they can prepare financial and other statements. They use formal records to keep track of the multitude of transactions that affect them. Accountants use special procedures to record the effects of any type of business transactions, regardless of the size and complexity of the business. The wonderful double-entry system of debits and credits is the accountant’s ‘robot’ that processes transactions with amazing efficiency. Metaphorically, in Chapter 1, we walked into the drawing room of the organization, looking at financial statements, information asymmetry, markets, and governance – all highlevel matter. In this chapter, we review the ‘wiring and plumbing’ of accounting, something that is not quite aesthetic but makes the house (including the drawing room) safe and healthy. Accounts Companies host earnings calls to discuss their quarterly performance and share the management’s outlook. Analysts following a company participate in the call and the company’s senior managers respond to their queries. Given below are some questions that analysts asked at some of Apple’s earnings calls: “Can you just talk a little bit about gross margins?” “How much of the sequential decline in gross margin is related to the iPhone in the September quarter?” “You now have more than $50 billion in cash. You’re generating more than $20 billion a year in cash; it rests very comfortably on your balance sheet, earning less than 1 per cent interest. What is your aspiration for that cash? And why are you not more open to returning some of that cash to shareholders in the form of buybacks or dividend?” “Could you discuss the impact of air freight on your gross margins in the third calendar quarter if it was material, and whether you expect that to continue into December?” “What percentage of sales came from Apple online stores?” Ideally, the accounting department should work to provide instantaneous answers to such questions. Designing accounting systems that respond effectively to the ever-rising demand for information from management, investors, lenders, government, regulators, and others is a major challenge that the accountant faces. An accounting system classifies transactions into meaningful categories in order to prepare financial statements and other reports. To facilitate quick and easy retrieval of data, the company records transactions in accounts. An account is an individual record of increases and decreases in an item, which is likely to be of interest or importance. An accounting system has separate accounts for revenue, expenses, asset, liability, and equity items. Regardless of whether a company keeps manual or electronic records, it is essential to have a proper system of classification of transactions into various accounts. The way an enterprise records its activities is how it will appear to the world. Writer and Nobel laureate, Garcia Gabriel Marquez says, “What matters in life is not what happens to you but what you remember and how you remember it.” The accounting system determines what transactions and other events an organization ‘remembers’ and ‘how’ it remembers them. The Ledger In a manual accounting system, each account appears on a separate page or card. A file or loose-leaf binder holds these pages or cards together. A ledger is the file or binder that contains the entire group of accounts of a business. The accounting principles for maintaining accounts in electronic form are the same as the ones for writing in the manual ledger. Accounts in the ledger are usually arranged in the following order: assets, liabilities, equity, revenues, and expenses. A chart of accounts is a complete listing of the account titles used in an organization. Exhibit 2.1 presents an illustrative chart of accounts. Accounts also have codes. In fact, the accounting department usually refers to accounts in terms of their codes rather than their titles. In the chart below, the first digit tells us whether an account is an asset, liability, or equity item and the next two digits identify the specific account. Thus, all asset accounts begin with 1, liability accounts begin with 2, and so on. Every organization should develop a chart of accounts that is most appropriate for its purposes. For example, a large company may use a 10-digit system in order to identify the division or business unit, plant, product line, and so on. The codes in Exhibit 2.1 are for illustrative purposes only; this book does not use codes. A chart of accounts is much more detailed than the line items that appear in published financial statements. Commonly Used Accounts The number of accounts and specific account titles used by an enterprise depend on the nature and complexity of the enterprise’s business. For example, an automobile company will keep detailed accounts for its plant and equipment, whereas a bank will need meticulous information about its various deposits, investments and loans, and its cash kept in various forms. Again, a small bakery that sells for cash can possibly manage with a few accounts, while a large multinational company will have thousands of accounts. In deciding on the level of detail in the accounts, a firm should consider relevant requirements in the Companies Act, the Income Tax Act, and other laws. For example, the Companies Act requires disclosure of directors’ remuneration; the Income Tax Act disallows many kinds of entertainment expenses. It is necessary to keep separate accounts of all such items. We will now consider some of the accounts commonly used by most businesses. Asset Accounts Assets are what an enterprise owns. Most enterprises keep separate accounts for recording increases and decreases in each major asset. The following are some of the usual asset accounts: Land The land account shows land owned by the enterprise and kept for use in its business. Buildings The buildings account records acquisition and disposal of buildings used by an enterprise to carry out its operations. An enterprise records its building and the land on which it stands in separate accounts. (Do you know why?) Also, there are separate accounts for different types of buildings such as factory buildings, warehouses, and office buildings. Equipment A business often owns different types of equipment and records each major type of equipment in a separate account. Thus, the plant and machinery account shows various kinds of factory equipment. The office equipment account records photocopiers, fax machines and computers. The furniture and fittings account records chairs, tables and cupboards. Prepaid expenses Sometimes, a business pays for services before they have been received or used. Usually, it is not possible to get a refund of the amount for the benefits not received. When you buy a prepaid phone service, you pay first and use the service later. Any unused portion of the service can be used later, but there will be no refund. Rent, insurance, magazine subscriptions, and property taxes are other examples of prepayments. The prepaid expenses account records all such amounts, to the extent the related benefits have not expired. If a refund for the unused portion of a service is possible, the amount may appear in the advances to suppliers account. Trade receivables Business enterprises often sell goods and services on credit so that customers can pay after the specified period of credit. The trade receivables account records the amounts receivable from customers for sales of goods or services on credit. In addition, there are separate accounts for individual customers’ accounts. Bills receivable A bill receivable is a legal document containing a right to receive a certain sum of money at a specified date. It is a more formal means of extending credit than an open account. The bills receivable account contains the amounts due from a firm’s customers on bills accepted by them. Cash The cash account shows receipts and payments of cash. Cash includes coins, currency, cheques, and amounts deposited in banks in various types of accounts. Separate accounts exist for each bank with whom a business has transactions. Firms that have major overseas operations keep accounts with banks abroad in the currency of the country. Liability Accounts Liabilities are what an enterprise owes. Liabilities can be short-term or long-term. The following are some of the usual liability accounts: Bills payable A bill payable is a legal document signifying an obligation to pay a certain sum of money at a specified date. It is the mirror image of a bill receivable. The bills payable account contains the amounts due to a firm’s suppliers on bills accepted by the firm.1 Trade payables The trade payables account shows increases and decreases in amounts owed to suppliers for purchases of goods or services on credit. There are separate accounts for individual suppliers’ accounts. Unearned revenue This is the supplier’s version of prepaid expenses. Amounts received from customers for services to be provided represent liabilities because the supplier has an obligation to provide the services. The unearned revenue account records these amounts. In case the enterprise has the option of refunding the amounts, it can use advances from customers as the account title. Other short-term liabilities Wages payable, income tax payable, interest payable, and dividends payable are examples of other liability accounts. Long-term liabilities These include a wide variety of debentures, loans from banks and other financial institutions, and long-term deposits. Equity Accounts Equity is the difference between a firm’s assets and liabilities. Transactions that affect equity include investment and withdrawal of assets by owners, earning of revenues, incurring of expenses, and payment of dividends. Firms keep separate accounts for each of these categories for the purpose of reporting to shareholders, preparing tax returns, and providing information to management for planning and controlling business operations. Share capital Proprietary and partnership firms use an owner’s capital account for the proprietor or separate capital for each of the partners. Companies record shareholders’ contributions towards capital in the share capital account. Retained earnings The profit earned by a company less dividends paid belongs to the company’s shareholders. It appears in the retained earnings account. Retained earnings represent the claims of the shareholders against the general assets of the company. These should not be confused with the assets themselves. Retained earnings increase when the company earns a net profit and decrease as a result of unprofitable operations or payment of dividends. A company records revenues, expenses, and dividends in separate accounts and later summarizes them in retained earnings. Revenues and expenses Revenues increase equity and expenses decrease it. When revenues exceed expenses, the business earns a net profit. When expenses exceed revenues, the business incurs a net loss. Firms keep separate accounts for each major revenue and expense item, so that the users of financial statements can identify the sources of revenues and the nature of expenses. Some of the commonly used revenue accounts are revenue from services, sales, commission income, interest income, and professional fees. Commonly used expense accounts include salaries expense, rent expense, insurance expense, consumables expense, and supplies expense. In practice, enterprises may use different account titles. Relatively insignificant amounts are recorded in a miscellaneous revenue account or a miscellaneous expense account. Drawings The owner of a sole proprietorship or a partner of a partnership business may withdraw cash or other assets from the business. A withdrawal results in a decrease in both assets and equity. A drawing account records all withdrawals. You can think of this account as a negative capital account. The shareholders cannot withdraw assets from the company except when the company pays dividends or buys back the share capital. Dividends Dividends are distributions of assets that reduce the retained profits of a company. The board of directors recommends dividends and the shareholders declare them as payable. Note that dividends are not an expense. Recognition is the process of incorporating an item that meets the definition of an element (revenue, expense, asset, liability, or equity). Derecognition is the process of removing an item that no longer meets the definition of an element. The Double-entry System: The Basis of Modern Accounting In Chapter 1, we analyzed the effect of a transaction on the accounting equation. Recall that each transaction affects two columns. For example, receiving cash from customers for past invoices increases cash and decreases trade receivables. Thus, we record each transaction in two accounts so that the accounting equation, Assets = Liabilities + Equity, is always in balance. This balancing is as important to the accountant as safe landing is to an airline pilot: the number of times an aircraft takes off must equal the number of times it lands. This principle of duality is valid regardless of the complexity of a transaction. The double-entry system records every transaction with equal debits and credits. As a result, the total of debits must equal the total of credits. Luca Pacioli (pronounced pot-chee-ohlee), an Italian monk, first articulated the double-entry system in 1494 in his book titled Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et Proportionalita (which means “Everything about Arithmetic, Geometry, and Proportions”).2 The T Account The common form of an account has three parts: 1. A title that describes the name of the asset, liability, or equity account; 2. A left side, or the debit side; and 3. A right side, or the credit side. This form of account is called a T account because it looks like the letter T, as shown below. Debits and credits Accountants use the terms debit and credit, respectively, to refer to the left side and right side of an account. To debit an account is to enter an amount on the left side of the account and to credit an account is to enter an amount on the right side of the account. It must be noted that, in accounting, debit and credit do not have any value connotations such as bad or good and unfavourable or favourable. They are simply the accountant’s terms for left and right – and nothing more. The T Account explained In Chapter 1, Softomation had several transactions involving receipt or payment of cash. When we record these transactions in the cash account, the cash receipts appear on the left or debit side of the account and the cash payments on the right or credit side, as shown below: The totals–cash receipts `82,000, and cash payments, `68,700 – are in bold so as to distinguish them from the transaction entries. The debit and credit totals, or footings in accounting lingo, are merely an intermediate step in determining the cash on hand at the end of the month. The difference in amounts between the total debits and the total credits in an account is the balance. If the total debits exceed the total credits, the account has a debit balance. If the total credits exceed the total debits, the account has a credit balance. The cash account of Softomation has a debit balance of `13,300 (`82,000 – `68,700). This balance represents the cash available with Softomation on March 31. Standard Form of Account The T account described earlier is, no doubt, a convenient way to explain the effects of transactions on individual accounts. In practice, accountants draw up accounts in a form known as the standard form, similar to the one in Exhibit 2.2. The standard form shows the balance after every transaction and is, therefore, even more useful and efficient to use than the T account. Your bank statement is an everyday example of the standard form. You would have observed that the cash account has the same information as that in the cash column in Exhibit 1.4. It is just that receipts and payments appear on separate columns. Debit and Credit Rules Under the double-entry system, we enter increases in assets on the debit side of the account, and increases in liabilities and equity on the credit side. Figure 2.1 describes the recording procedure in terms of the accounting equation: The rules for debit and credit for assets, liabilities, and equity are as follows: 1. Assets Debit increase in asset to asset account. Credit decrease in asset to asset account. 2. Liabilities and equity Credit increase in liability or equity to liability or equity account. Debit decrease in liability or equity to liability or equity account. From Chapter 1, you know the expanded form of the accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Capital + Revenues – Expenses – Drawings (or Dividends) We can rewrite this equation as follows: Assets + Expenses + Drawings (or Dividends) = Liabilities + Capital + Revenues We can now extend the rules for recording increase and decrease in equity to revenues, expenses, drawings, and dividends. Thus, we credit revenues to increase them; we debit expenses, drawings, and dividends to increase them. Exhibit 2.3 summarizes the rules for debit and credit. The double-entry system is the workhorse of accounting. Shortly, you will be able to appreciate its great value in organizing and processing information. However, the significance of the double-entry system goes far beyond its usefulness as a system of accounting mechanics. The German economic historian, Werner Sombart, praised accounting and its bookkeeping tool saying:3 One can scarcely conceive of capitalism without double-entry bookkeeping; they are related as are form and content. It is difficult to decide, however, whether in double-entry bookkeeping, capitalism provided itself with a tool to make it more effective, or whether capitalism derives from the ‘spirit’ of double-entry bookkeeping. Remember that knowing debits and credits is a big help in communicating with accounting professionals. Comprehensive Illustration: Fashion Concepts Company To illustrate the procedure for recording transactions, let us take up a company that we call Fashion Concepts Company, a business that supplies new designs for dresses. In this illustration, you will learn how to record a transaction in terms of debits and credits. We have the following four steps for each transaction: Analyze the transaction in terms of increase and decrease in asset, liability and equity items, and specify the relevant accounts. View the transaction from the standpoint of the business enterprise as the reporting entity. State the debit and credit rules relevant to the transaction. Exhibit 2.3 has the rules. Record the transaction entry showing the accounts to debit and credit. Present the related accounts after recording the transaction entry. Conventionally, the unit of currency is not entered in the accounting records. June 1 Rakesh invested `50,000 cash in Fashion Concepts Company and received 5,000 shares of `10 each in the share capital of the company. June 2 Bought office supplies for cash, `2,000. June 3 Paid office rent for June, `1,500. June 4 Bought equipment from Agrawal Company for `9,000 with a down payment of `3,000 and agreed to pay the balance in six equal instalments on the last day of the month beginning June. June 5 Signed an agreement with EthnicWear for developing a special design. The agreement provided for payment of a fee of `2,000 by EthnicWear on completion of the work. June 6 Paid for a one-year fire insurance policy that will expire May 31, next year, `720. June 7 Received fee for designs supplied, `2,000. June 8 Collected from Kidswear, a customer, for services to be provided later, `1,500 June 9 Bought office supplies on credit from Mohan Company, `3,500. June 10 Billed Shah Company for designs completed, `9,000. June 14 Paid Mohan Company on account, `1,000.4 June 18 Collected from Shah Company, `4,000. June 21 Appointed an office manager on a monthly salary of `1,500. June 27 Paid telephone bill, `200. June 28 Paid office assistant’s June salary, `800. June 29 Received (but did not pay) electricity bill, `150. 5 June 30 Paid Agrawal Company, `1,000. June 30 Paid a dividend, `2,200. The balance of an account is the result of recording more increase than decrease. We debit asset, expense, drawing, and dividend accounts to record increase, and credit to record decrease in those accounts. As a result, asset and expense accounts usually have debit balances. Since we credit liability, share capital and revenue accounts to record increase and debit to record decrease, these accounts usually have credit balances. The usual balance for an account is its normal balance. The following table summarizes the normal balances for the various types of accounts: Exhibit 2.4 presents the ledger of Fashion Concepts at the end of June. The accounts are grouped into asset, liability and equity categories. Liabilities = 9,150 Verification of the Accounting Equation Recording Transactions The Journal The journal is a chronological record of an enterprise’s transactions. The word ‘journal’ derives from the Latin word diurnalis meaning “diurnal” which implies “of or during the day time”. The journal is called the book of original entry or primary book because this is the accounting record where we first record transactions. It provides in one place a complete record of all transactions with necessary explanations. A journal entry has the transaction date, the individual accounts and the related debit and credit amounts, and a brief explanation of the transaction. Journalizing is the process of recording transactions in the journal. The General Journal Companies usually maintain several kinds of journals. The nature of operations and the frequency of a particular type of transaction in a company determine the number and design of journals. In this chapter, we use the general journal, the most commonly used type of journal. It has separate columns to record the following information about each transaction: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Date; Individual accounts; Debit and credit amounts; Brief explanation of the transaction; and Posting reference. Exhibit 2.5 illustrates the general journal using two transactions of Fashion Concepts Company. The procedure for recording transactions in the general journal is as follows: 1. Enter the year, month, and date of the transaction in the Date column. v There is no need to repeat the year and month for subsequent entries until the start of a new page, or a new month. 2. Write the account titles under the Description column. v Enter the account to debit on the first line of the entry next to the left margin. If there are several accounts to debit, enter them one after the other. v Enter the account to credit on the line below the account(s) to debit and indent it to set the account apart from the account(s) to debit. If there are several accounts to credit, enter them one after the other. v Use the account titles from the company’s chart of accounts. v A compound entry is a journal entry that has more than one debit and/or credit items. 3. Enter the amount of the debit in the Debit column alongside the account to debit and the amount of the credit in the Credit column alongside the account to credit. 4. Write a brief explanation of the transaction. 5. The Post. Ref. (Posting Reference) is left blank at the time of making the journal entry. Transferring Information to the Ledger Posting is the process of transferring information from the journal to the ledger. We enter each amount in the Debit column in the journal on the debit side of the appropriate account and each amount on the Credit column on the credit side of the appropriate account. The frequency of posting could be daily, weekly, or monthly, depending on the number of transactions. Posting has the following steps: 1. Locate in the ledger the account(s) debited in the journal entry. 2. Enter the date of the transaction in the account. 3. Enter the relevant journal page number in the Post. Ref. column of the account. 4. Enter the debit amount appearing in the journal in the Debit column of the account. 5. Enter the account code or the ledger page number in the Post. Ref. column of the journal. 6. Repeat steps 1 to 5 for the account(s) credited in the journal entry. Exhibit 2.6 illustrates these steps separately for the debit and credit parts of a journal entry. Entering the account code in the “Post. Ref.” column of the journal is the last step in posting. It indicates that the accountant has transferred all the information in the journal entry to the ledger. In addition, the account codes in this column are a convenient means for locating any additional information about an amount appearing in an account. Since this book does not use account codes, you do not have to complete this column. The next step in the recording process is the preparation of a trial balance. Trial Balance Under the double-entry system, the debit and credit amounts must be equal. The trial balance is a device for verifying the equality of debits and credits. Pacioli is said to have advised that a person should not go to sleep at night until the debits equalled the credits. Exhibit 2.7 shows a trial balance for Fashion Concepts Company. The trial balance lists each account in the ledger that appears in Exhibit 2.4, with the debit balances in the left column, and the credit balances in the right column. Each column has a total, and the two totals must be equal. When this happens, the trial balance is said to be “in balance.” The equality of the debit and credit totals of the trial balance proves that we have recorded equal debits and credits in the accounts. Further, it verifies that we have computed account balances correctly. However, we could have made errors that do not affect the equality of debits and credits: Errors of principle Posting a journal entry to a wrong account will not affect the trial balance. For example, suppose that for payment of office rent we debited Equipment instead of Rent Expense. The trial balance will still balance. Errors of omission and repetition The trial balance will not reveal either the complete omission of a transaction from the ledger, or the recording of the same transaction more than once. Compensatory errors The recording of the same erroneous amount for both the debit and credit of a transaction will not show up in the trial balance. Locating Errors If the debit and credit totals of the trial balance do not agree, the following types of errors are possible: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Recording different amounts for debit and credit in the journal; Posting a debit as a credit and/or a credit as a debit; Computing an account balance incorrectly; Copying the amount of an account balance to the trial balance incorrectly; Copying a debit balance in an account as a credit balance, or a credit balance in an account as a debit balance, to the trial balance; 6. Omitting an account balance from the trial balance; and 7. Totalling the trial balance incorrectly. Sometimes, you may find that your trial balance does not balance. Usually, the difference in the trial balance arises from a combination of errors rather than a single error. Unfortunately, there exists no sure-fire method of locating a difference. You must often proceed patiently, checking journal entries, postings, and the balancing of each account. At times, knowing a few short cuts such as the following may help: If the amount of trial balance difference is divisible by 9 without remainder, it could indicate transposition of digits in an amount (e.g. recording 4,921 as 4,291). If the amount of difference is divisible by 2 without remainder, look in the trial balance for an amount equal to the quotient. The existence of such a number in the trial balance, or in the journal may indicate taking a debit as a credit or vice versa. Rather than having to locate a trial balance difference, especially in an examination, it would be better to follow the quality manager’s mantra: Do it right the first time. Your aim should be to avoid errors altogether by being careful in transaction processing. Correcting Errors The accountant must correct an error when he locates it. If he discovers an error in a journal entry before posting, he can cross out the wrong amount and insert the correct amount immediately above. Erasing errors may give the impression of a cover-up. Correcting entries rectify incorrect journal entries or wrong postings of journal entries. A useful way to determine the correcting entry is to compare the incorrect entry with the correct entry and then make a correcting entry in the journal. For example, assume that the accountant made the following journal entry to record the payment of electricity expense of `4,300 and posted it to the ledger: This entry is incorrect because it debits Rent Expense instead of Electricity Expense. The correct entry is as follows: The following is the correcting entry: Note that the credit to Cash is proper and does not need correction. When the trial balance is not “in balance”, the normal practice is to place the difference initially in a Suspense account. Then, the accounting records are to be scrutinized to locate the errors. Finally, the correcting entries are to be recorded by debiting or crediting Suspense and the relevant accounts. Suppose that an accountant has a trial balance that shows the following totals: Debits...............................69,000 Credits..............................77,730 The accountant opens a Suspense account with a debit of 8,730 representing the difference in trial balance: We now post the correcting entries to the related accounts including the Suspense account. The Suspense account will appear as follows: Note that, after all the errors have been corrected, the Suspense account will not have any balance. Looking Back Describe an account and a ledger An account records increases and decreases in specific asset, liability, and equity items. The ledger is a file or binder containing all the accounts, of an enterprise usually arranged according to a chart of accounts. Recognize commonly used accounts You will often come across accounts for the following items: Assets: land; buildings; equipment; prepaid expenses; trade receivables; bills receivable; cash. Liabilities: bills payable; trade payables; unearned revenue; wages payable; debentures. Equity: capital; revenue from services; salaries expense; rent expense; drawings; dividends. Describe the double-entry system and apply the rules for debit and credit The double-entry system records each business transaction with equal debits and credits. Debit is on left side and credit is on right side. The rules for debit and credit are: (a) debit increases and credit decreases assets; and (b) debit decreases and credit increases liabilities and equity. Analyze the effect of business transactions using debits and credits The three-step procedure for analyzing transactions is: (i) analyze the effect of a transaction in terms of increases and decreases in assets, liabilities, and equity; (ii) apply the rules for debit and credit; and (iii) record the entry. Record transactions in the journal The journal is a chronological record of transactions. The journal entry for a transaction has the date of the transaction, the individual accounts and the related debit and credit amounts, and a brief explanation of the transaction. Post entries from the journal to the ledger Posting consists of entering each amount on the debit column of the journal on the debit side of the appropriate account and each amount on the credit column on the credit side of the appropriate account. Prepare a trial balance and know its limitations When the total of debit balances equals the total of credit balances, the trial balance is “in balance.” The trial balance cannot detect some kind of errors. Review Problem Ganesh quit his job and started Woodcraft Company. The transactions of the business for September are as follows: 20XX Sep. 1 Began business by investing cash `10,000 in company’s share capital. 4 Paid two months’ rent in advance for a shop, `2,000. 5 Bought equipment for cash, `1,200. 7 Bought supplies on credit, `700. 10 Received payment for remodelling a kitchen, `8,600. 14 Paid for an advertisement that appeared in the local newspaper, `1,400. 17 Received payment for furnishing office room, `11,200. 23 Billed customers for work done other than on cash terms, `13,100. 25 Paid assistant’s wages, `1,500. 28 Paid electricity charges, `240. 29 Received part payment from customers billed on September 23, `4,800. 30 Paid a dividend, `2,500. Required 1. Prepare journal entries for the above transactions. 2. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 3. Prepare a trial balance. Solution 1. Journal entries 2. Ledger 3. Trial balance ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Define account and ledger. What determines the number and types of accounts for a business? “Debits = Credits.” Explain. Why do we enter transactions first in the journal and then post them to the ledger? State the rules of debit and credit for (a) assets, (b) liabilities, and (c) equity. What is the meaning of a debit balance and a credit balance? Is a debit balance always favourable and a credit balance always unfavourable? “Debit means increase and credit means decrease.” Comment. Why are the rules of debit and credit the same for liabilities and equity? What is the normal balance of the trade receivables account? When can it have an abnormal balance? What is a chart of accounts? What is a compound entry? State whether each of the following is an asset account, a liability account, or an equity account: (a) Salaries expense (b) Bills payable (c) Supplies (d) Dividends (e) Cash (f) Trade receivables (g) Prepaid insurance (h) Interest income (i) Interest expense payable Why do we prepare a trial balance? Name the types of errors it cannot detect. When do we open a suspense account? How do we clear it? What is XBRL? How is it useful? What is cloud computing? How will it change accounting? Problem Set A Rakesh set up Mechanotronics Ltd. Record the following transactions by entering debits and credits directly in the company’s accounts using the transaction letters as the key. (a) Rakesh invested cash in the company’s share capital, `10,000. (b) Paid rent deposit for office premises, `5,000. (c) Provided services for cash, `3,500. (d) Purchased office equipment on credit, `2,500 (e) Paid office rent for the month, `750. (f) Billed customers for services provided, `3,300. (g) Paid for office equipment in (d), `1,500. (h) Paid assistant’s wages, `250. (i) Paid dividends, `1,000. Shalini Arora set up Ace Marketing Ltd. to provide consultancy. During a short period, the company completed the following transactions: (a) Shalini invested cash in Ace’s share capital, `20,000. (b) Billed customers for services provided, `5,600. (c) Paid assistant’s salary, `600. (d) Bought computer on credit, `4,400. (e) Received cash from customers billed earlier, `1,350. (f) Took a bank loan, `5,000. (g) Paid for computer in (d), `2,000. (h) Received fee for professional services, `8,250. (i) Paid dividends, `1,100. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. Time Value Company provides training on time management. The following are the account balances of the company on September 30, 20XX: Prepare a trial balance. The trial balance of your company does not balance. Your review of the records reveals the following errors: (a) A cash payment of `900 for salaries expense was recorded as a debit of `600 to Salaries Expense and a credit of `900 to Cash. (b) Supplies Expense with a balance of `750 was listed in the trial balance as `7,500. (c) A purchase of supplies for `500 on account was posted as a debit to Supplies and a credit to Cash. (d) Rent Expense of `4,000 was posted as a debit to Cash and a credit to Rent Expense. (e) A cash payment of `3,800 to Trade Payables was recorded as a debit to Trade Payables of `3,800 and a credit to Cash of `3,300. (f) A cash receipt of `1,200 from customers was posted twice to Trade Receivables and Cash. (g) Electricity Expense with a balance of `800 was omitted from the trial balance. Using the format given below, for each error indicate whether the trial balance will balance (Yes) or will not balance (No). If it will not balance, specify the amount of the difference and the trial balance column (Debit, Credit) that will have a larger total. The errors are independent of each other. State the effect of the following errors on the trial balance and prepare journal entries, where needed, to correct them. Use the format given. (a) A cash receipt of `1,900 for services yet to be provided was debited to Cash and credited to Revenue from Services. (b) A purchase of supplies of `4,400 on credit was recorded as a debit to Supplies of `4,400 and a credit to Cash of `4,400. (c) An interest payment of `1,000 was debited to Bank Loan Payable and credited to Cash. (d) Cash payment of `3,600 to suppliers was recorded as a debit to Trade Payables of `6,300 and credit to Cash of `3,600. Format: (a) Effect: The trial balance will balance. Revenue from Services is overstated by `1,900 and Unearned Revenue is understated by `1,900. Problem Set B Kannan started Vogue Garments. The following transactions took place in the first month: (a) Kannan invested cash in the company’s share capital, `25,000. (b) Paid rent deposit for premises, `5,000. (c) Appointed an assistant on a monthly salary of `1,000. (d) Bought supplies on credit, `4,000. (e) Took a bank loan, `15,000. (f) Bought equipment for cash, `18,000. (g) Provided services for cash, `7,800. (h) Received cash for services to be provided later `3,500. (i) Paid electricity expense, `1,050. (j) Paid for supplies in (d), `3,000. (k) Billed customers for services provided, `8,000. (l) Paid salary for the month, `1,600. (m) Paid rent for the month, `500. (n) Collected amounts due from customers, `5,500. Required 1. Record the transactions by entering debits and credits directly in the accounts using the transaction letters as the key. 2. Prepare a trial balance at the month end. On August 1, 20XX, Santanu Bhattacharya established Access Marketing Ltd. to provide research services. The following transactions were concluded in August: Aug. 1 Bhattacharya invested cash in the company’s share capital, `50,000. 2 Bought office equipment on credit, `16,000. 3 Bought office supplies for `3,000 on part payment of `2,000. 4 Took office premises on rent at a monthly rent of `3,500 payable on the fifth of each month. 5 Paid office rent for the month. 7 Provided services for cash, `12,000. 10 Billed customers for services provided, `5,900. 13 Paid on account for the equipment bought on August 2, `8,000. 17 Paid insurance premium for the next month, `750. 19 Received but not paid electricity bill for the month, `550. 22 Paid telephone expense, `800. 24 Bought office supplies for cash, `1,000. 27 Received cash for services to be provided in the next month, `6,700. 29 Paid salaries expense, `4,000 31 Paid a dividend, `5,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 3. Prepare a trial balance on August 31, 20XX. Amrapali Ltd. provides haircare services. The account balances of Amrapali at the end of February are as follows: During March, the company carried out the following transactions: Mar. 1 Paid salaries payable for February, `500. 2 Paid rent for the month, `300. 3 Received payment from customers billed earlier, `1,010. 4 Bought supplies for cash, `320. 5 Appointed an assistant on a monthly salary of `100. 7 Paid insurance premium for the period April to December 20XX, `540. 8 Received cash for services to be provided, `715. 9 Bought equipment on credit, `1,900. 13 Paid for supplies bought on credit last month, `635. 16 Bought supplies on credit, `500. 18 Returned some of the supplies bought on March 16 as these were defective, `100. 20 Billed customers for services provided, `430. 27 Paid electricity expense for the month, `125. 29 Provided part service for cash received on March 8, `600. 30 Paid on account for equipment purchased on March 9, `950. 31 Paid a dividend, `1,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Enter the February 28 balances in the appropriate accounts from the trial balance. Write Balance in the explanation space of the account. 3. Post the journal entries to the ledger. Open additional accounts as may be necessary. 4. Prepare a trial balance on March 31, 20XX. Keshav Menon, after completing a PhD in Geology, established Terrafiles Ltd. to provide geological data analysis services to mining enterprises. PART 1 The company engaged in the following transactions in May: May 1 Menon invested cash in the company’s share capital, `25,000. 2 Paid insurance premium for May to July, `300. 3 Hired an office assistant on a monthly salary of `1,000. 4 Ordered a computer, `15,000. 5 Paid rent for the month, `400. 15 Provided services for cash, `17,800. 18 Received cash from a customer for services to be provided later, `11,250. 23 Received the computer ordered and made a part payment of `8,000. 28 Paid telephone expense for the month, `450. 29 Paid office assistant’s salary for May. 30 Bought supplies on credit, `635. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 3. Prepare a trial balance on May 31. PART 2 The company carried out the following transactions in June: June 1 Billed customers for services provided, `16,350. 2 Paid electricity expense, `1250 and rent expense, `400. 6 Bought supplies for cash, `250. 10 Provided services for `10,500 to the customer who had paid an advance on May 18 and refunded the balance. 13 Returned defective supplies bought on June 6 and received refund, `150. 18 Provided services for cash, `3,250. 20 Paid the balance amount due in respect of the computer received on May 23. 27 Paid for supplies bought on May 30. 28 Paid office assistant’s salary for June. 29 Received part payment from customers billed on June 1, `12,750. 30 Paid dividend, `750. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Enter the May 31 balances in the appropriate accounts. Write Balance in the explanation space of each account. 3. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 4. Prepare a trial balance on June 30. The balance sheet of Faunus Catering Services Ltd. on April 30, 20XX is as follows: During May, the company completed the following transactions: May 1 Billed customers for services provided, `12,100. 2 Paid cleaning expense for the month, `1,800. 3 Ordered supplies on one month credit, `240. 7 Purchased equipment on credit, `8,000. 12 Provided services for `7,000 to a customer who had paid advance in April. 17 Received supplies ordered on May 3. 21 Received cash from customers billed in April, `3,200. 28 Paid salaries for May, `2,000. 29 Took a bank loan, `10,000. 30 Paid for equipment bought on May 7. 31 Provided services for cash, `5,400. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. The inventory of supplies on May 31 was `2,110. Record the difference between this amount and the May 31 balance of the Supplies account as the supplies expense for May. 2. Enter the April 30 balances in the appropriate accounts. Write Balance in the explanation space of each account. 3. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 4. Prepare the May statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. Problem Set C Lakshman Singh set up WideAwake Security Company in January 20XX to provide security services. The following transactions took place in the first month: (a) Singh invested cash in the company’s share capital, `50,000. (b) Appointed five security guards on a monthly salary of `500 each. (c) Rented office space and paid a deposit of `10,000. (d) Paid advertisement charges, `1,800. (e) Received cash from customers for services to be provided, `11,000. (f) Purchased supplies for cash, `5,000. (g) Purchased equipment on credit, `25,000. (h) Paid rent for the first three months, `3,000. (i) Billed customers for services provided, `7,300. (j) Paid telephone expense, `775. (k) Provided services for cash, `5,450. (l) Paid security guards’ salaries. (m) Paid for equipment in (g), `6,000. (n) Returned defective supplies and received refund, `1,000. Required 1. Record the transactions by entering debits and credits directly in the accounts using the transaction letters as the key. 2. Prepare a trial balance at the month end. On July 1, 20XX, Uma Rao established GreenThumb Ltd. to provide gardening services. During the first month of operations of her business, the following transactions were done: July 1 Uma Rao invested cash in the company’s share capital, `25,000. 2 Entered into contract with a customer to provide services, `5,100. 3 Bought gardening supplies for cash, `3,000. 4 Bought gardening equipment on credit, `15,700. 6 Took office space on rent and paid current month’s rent, `1,500. 7 Appointed an assistant on a salary of `850 per month. 9 Billed customers for services provided, `6,200. 12 Paid for an advertisement placed in the local newsletter, `540. 14 Paid for equipment bought on July 4, `7,500. 15 Bill customers for services provided under the contract signed on July 2, `2,700. 18 Received payments from customers billed on July 9, `2,400. 26 Provided services for cash, `3,900. 28 Paid assistant’s salary. 29 Paid electricity expense, `710. 31 Paid insurance premium in advance, `1,050. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 3. Prepare a trial balance on July 31, 20XX. Reliance Tennis Ltd. offers lessons to amateur players. The company’s account balances at the end of October are as follows: During November, Reliance Tennis was engaged in the following transactions: Nov. 1 Provided services for cash, `3,600. 2 Paid salaries for the month, `2,500. 3 Repaid part of bank loan, `2,000. 5 Provided services to a customer who had paid an advance in October, `2,400. 6 Purchased supplies for cash, `700. 8 Paid tennis court maintenance charges, `900. 9 Received a bill for advertisement placed during the month, `300. 12 Received cash for services to be provided later, `1,400. 14 Paid electricity bill for the month, `650. 17 Billed customers for services provided, `1,180. 19 Returned defective supplies bought on credit in October, `200. 26 Received payments from customers billed previously, `2,900. 28 Paid suppliers for past purchases of supplies, `440. 29 Paid insurance premium for December, `830. 30 Paid dividend, `1,100. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Enter the October 31 balances in the appropriate accounts from the trial balance. Write Balance in the explanation space of the account. 3. Post the journal entries to the ledger. Open additional accounts as may be necessary. 4. Prepare a trial balance on November 30, 20XX. Zeenat Bukhari, after completing a Master’s degree in computer science, established Computer Care Ltd. to provide maintenance services. PART 1 During August, she completed the following transactions: Aug. 1 She invested cash in the company’s share capital, `50,000. 2 Appointed two programmers on a monthly salary of `3,000 each. 3 Provided services for cash, `4,700. 4 Placed order for equipment, `15,000. 7 Paid rent for August, `1,500. 13 Purchased supplies on credit, `2,200. 16 Paid salary advance to the programmers, `500 each. 19 Paid insurance premium for the next year, `4,000. 20 Received equipment ordered on August 4 and agreed to pay for it on September 9. 28 Billed customers for services provided, `10,250. 29 Paid the balance of programmers’ salaries for August. 30 Received electricity bill, `1,600 and telephone bill, `650 for August payable on September 3. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 3. Prepare a trial balance on August 31. PART 2 During September, she completed the following transactions: Sep. 1 Received cash for services to be provided later, `3,900. 3 Paid electricity charges and telephone charges for August. 4 Purchased supplies for cash, `1,300. 7 Paid rent for September and October, `3,000. 9 Paid for equipment received on August 20. 15 Received on account cash from customers billed on August 28, `6,700. 16 Provided services for cash, `11,800. 18 Paid for supplies bought on credit on August 13. 21 Purchased equipment on credit, `10,000. 24 Returned a part of the supplies bought on September 4 and received refund, `500. 27 Provided services to customers who had paid advance on September 1, `4,500. 28 Paid programmers’ salary for the month. 29 Paid annual maintenance charges for equipment, `770. 30 Paid dividend, `2,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. 2. Enter the August 31 balances in the appropriate accounts. Write Balance in the explanation space of each account. 3. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 4. Prepare a trial balance on September 30. The balance sheet of Phoenix Drycleaners Ltd. on July 31, 20XX is as follows: During August, the company completed the following transactions: Aug. 1 Provided services for cash, `4,800. 2 Paid electricity expense for the month, `170. 7 Paid rent for the month, `1000. 14 Provided services to customers who had paid advance and refunded `200. 15 Bought supplies for cash, `900. 24 Received cash on account from customers billed earlier, `4,150. 27 Paid fuel charges, `630. 28 Paid salaries for the month, `1,600. 29 Paid suppliers on account, `1,390. 30 Paid dividend, `1,100. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions in the general journal. The inventory of supplies on August 31 was `1,120. Record the difference between this amount and the August 31 balance of the Supplies account as the supplies expense for August. 2. Enter the July 31 balances in the appropriate accounts. Write Balance in the explanation space of each account. 3. Post the journal entries to the ledger. 4. Prepare the August statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. Business Decision Cases After working for over a decade in a leading software company, Vinay and Sheela Kapoor decided to set up their own software firm, Kapoor Software Ltd. on June 1. Each of them deposited `30,000 in the company’s bank account in exchange for 3,000 shares of `10 each. Amit Lal, an old friend of the Kapoors, joined the company as office manager on a monthly salary of `7,000, no matter how many days he showed up at work. Amit paid into the bank all customer receipts and made all payments by cheque. Although Amit had no knowledge of accounting, he carefully filed the company’s letters, invoices and other papers. Also, he noted down details of cheques received and issued in his diary. The following information is available from Amit’s file and diary. June 1: Borrowed `25,000 from Canara Bank. Sheela ordered a computer costing `40,000. June 2: Hired an office room on a monthly rental of `2,500 payable on the first day of the month and paid the rent for June. June 3: Vinay appointed two programmers on a salary of `250 per day each for the number of days they worked. June 6: Received the computer and paid `15,000. The balance amount is payable in three equal instalments on the fifth of every month beginning July. Ordered on Gupta & Co. supplies for `7,300. June 8: Received supplies costing `3,900. June 10: Raised invoices on customers, `29,200, for providing services. June 16: One box of CDs costing `710 varied slightly from the purchase specification, and Gupta & Co. was informed of the rejection; all other items were as ordered and were paid for. June 19: Received cheques for `14,100 from customers in payment of bills. June 20: Raised invoices on customers for `19,400 for providing services. June 23: Received a cheque for `9,800 from a customer as payment for services to be provided in July. June 27: Gupta & Co. requested me to accept the rejected supplies and said that they would be willing to give a discount of `90 on the CDs to make up for the deviation. I checked with Vinay and he told me to accept the supplies. I accepted the supplies and paid Gupta & Co. June 28: Received cheques for `7,100 in payment of bills. June 29: Vinay asked me to repay the bank loan. I paid `14,000 of the loan with interest of `340. June 30: During the month, the company had 21 working days. One of the assistants reported for work on all working days and the other worked for only 17 days. I paid the June salaries. The inventory of supplies is worth about `2,400. Received the June electricity bill for `450, but could not pay it. July 1: Paid office rent for July. Paid the June electricity bill. July 3: Received the remaining supplies. July 4: Paid for the supplies. July 5: Paid the first instalment for the computer. Required 1. Prepare the June financial statements of Kapoor Software Ltd. 2. The Kapoors propose to pay themselves a dividend of `10 per share. Comment on their proposal. Interpreting Financial Reports Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. is a leading information technology services company listed in Indian stock exchanges. The following is the company’s 2013 consolidated balance sheet, suitably modified for use in this case: Required 1. Determine the missing amounts indicated by the letters. 2. For the year ended March 31, 2013, TCS reported a net profit of `139,173 million and paid dividends of `43,249 and dividend-distribution tax of `7,273 million. Compute the amount of (a) retained earnings for the year and (b) other equity items on the balance sheet. Financial Analysis Study the financial statements of an Indian health care services company. Required 1. Develop a chart of accounts that would satisfy the information needs of the typical users of the financial statements of the company. 2. Discuss the factors that you had in mind while developing the chart. The XBRL technology will have a major effect on the financial reporting supply chain. The website of XBRL International says: XBRL is a language for the electronic communication of business and financial data which is revolutionising business reporting around the world. It provides major benefits in the preparation, analysis, and communication of business information. It offers cost savings, greater efficiency, and improved accuracy and reliability to all those involved in supplying or using financial data. Required 1. Prepare a report explaining the benefits and costs of XBRL to the stakeholders in financial reporting. 2. Develop a basic taxonomy for a typical set of financial statements of an Indian road transport company. Cloud computing has significant implications for the way business is managed. It is said to be one of the major technological advancements in the recent past. Required Prepare a report on how cloud computing would change accounting systems. Answers to Test Your Understanding 2.1 Assets: (c), (d) and (g). Liabilities: (h), (j) and (m). Equity: (a), (b), (e), (f), (i), (k) and (l). 2.2 (a) Mahesh Pherwani invested cash, `3,100 and photography equipment, `9,000 in Pherwani Photoshop Ltd.’s share capital. (b) Bought photography supplies on credit, `1,400. (c) Paid rent in advance, `1,600. (d) Received cash for services provided, `4,700. (e) Bought photography equipment on credit, `2,000. (f) Paid suppliers on account, `550. (g) Billed customers for services provided, `8,100. (h) Paid salaries, `1,700. 2.3 (b) Asset (Equipment) increased. Debit asset to record increase. Debit Equipment, 13,000. Asset (Cash) decreased. Credit asset to record decrease. Credit Cash, 13,000. (c) Asset (Cash) increased. Debit asset to record increase. Debit Cash, 6,000. Revenue (Revenue from Services) increased. Credit revenue to record increase. Credit Revenue from Services, 6,000. (d) Asset (Prepaid Rent) increased. Debit asset to record increase. Debit Prepaid Rent, 1,200. Asset (Cash) decreased. Credit asset to record decrease. Credit Cash, 1,200. (e) Asset (Trade Receivables) increased. Debit asset to record increase. Debit Trade Receivables, 3,500. Revenue (Revenue from Services) increased. Credit revenue to record increase. Credit Revenue from Services, 3,500. (f) Asset (Supplies) increased. Debit asset to record increase. Debit Supplies, 4,600. Liability (Trade Payables) increased. Credit liability to record increase. Credit Trade payables, 4,600. (g) Asset (Cash) increased. Debit asset to record increase. Debit Cash, 1,700. Asset (Trade Receivables) decreased. Credit asset to record decrease. Credit Trade Receivables, 1,700. (h) Expense (Electricity Expense) increased. Debit expense to record decrease. Debit Electricity Expense, 120. Asset (Cash) decreased. Credit asset to record decrease. Credit Cash, 120. (i) Liability (Trade Payables) decreased. Debit liability to record decrease. Debit Trade Payables, 4,600. Asset (Cash) decreased. Credit asset to record decrease. Credit Cash, 4,600. (j) Dividends increased. Debit dividends to record increase. Debit Dividends, 500. Asset (Cash) decreased. Credit asset to record decrease. Credit Cash, 500. 2.4 Debit: (a), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), (i), and (k). Credit: (b), (h), (j), (l), and (m). 2.5 2.6 (a) The trial balance will not balance. Salaries Expense is understated by `800. (b) The trial balance will not balance. Cash is overstated by `1,260. (c) The trial balance will balance. Insurance Expense is understated, and Equipment overstated, by `180. (d) The trial balance will balance. Both Supplies and Trade Payables are understated by `2,900. 1 For the present, for credit sales and credit purchases, we will use trade receivables and trade payables, and not bills receivable and bills payable. 2 Luca Pacioli was the best friend and a teacher of Leonardo da Vinci, the renowned painter, scientist and inventor, and taught him mathematics and geometry. Pacioli is believed to have helped the artist with the painting of The Last Supper. Interestingly, Pacioli also penned the world’s oldest magic text, De Viribus Quantitatis (On the Powers of Numbers). It would appear that accounting skill and sleight of hand have had something in common for a long time. 3 Quoted in Joel Demski, John Fellingham, Yuji Ijiri, and Shyam Sunder, Some thoughts on the intellectual foundations of accounting, Accounting Horizons, June 2003, pp. 157–168. 4 ‘On account payment’ is a part payment. 5 We are getting of the story here. In Chapter 3, you will see why we reckoned the expense even though cash was not paid. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Define and explain net profit, revenue, and expense. Define accrual accounting and distinguish between the accrual system and the cash system. Explain the realization principle and its effect on recording revenue. Elucidate the matching principle and its effect on recording expenses. Define deferrals and accruals and explain the need for adjustments. Prepare adjusting entries. Develop a worksheet. Prepare financial statements from a worksheet. Record adjusting entries from a worksheet. Describe the accounting cycle. Record closing entries. Prepare a post-closing trial balance and explain its purpose. Prepare reversing entries. Explain pro forma financial measures. HOW MUCH DOES THAT CAR COST? Read this news item: Audi has launched an integrated finance, service, insurance and extended warranty package in India for customers of the A4, A6 sedans and the Q5 SUV. Called ‘Audi CarLife-Advance’, this initiative aims to provide the benefits of a leasing service, while still letting the customer have ownership of the vehicle. The services are available bundled under a single monthly payment. Audi cars come with a two-year (unlimited kilometre) manufacturer’s warranty that covers manufacturing or material defects*. The buyer can avail of a three-year warranty against any paintwork defects*. As further reassurance, every car is protected by an anti-corrosion perforation warranty that can extend up to 12 years**. It’s not the end of the road when your car’s warranty expires. You can continue to enjoy your peace of mind by extending the warranty period for another two years or 100,000 km at a nominal cost*. The company gives a one-year comprehensive insurance and “depreciation shield” (i.e. the company will bear the cost difference between the actual repair costs and the damage claim). The company’s finance subsidiary provides an interest-free loan for the purchase. The company provides roadside assistance free of cost* (24 x 7, 365 days, two dedicated toll numbers, multilingual services, replacement car, on-site minor repairs, despatch of spare keys in case of loss, etc.). * Conditions apply. ** Period of warranty depends on the make of the car. Now it is clear that the automobile company is selling not just a car but a package of products and services. The customer is paying for all of them. The price of the car is to be allocated to the various items: car, warranty, extended warranty, interest-free loan, insurance and roadside assistance. Not all the revenue is earned when the car is sold. Interest income would be earned over a period of time. It is not possible to say precisely how much warranty, extended warranty and roadside assistance the car would need; so the likelihood of these services has to be estimated. Oblivious of these complexities the buyer steers his gleaming car out of the showroom. The company’s accountants start work on how to split the price between the car and the other items that form part of the deal. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL Profits are the lifeblood of a business. Owners, lenders, and managers frequently use profit as a measure of success of a business. An important function of accounting is to measure and report the income of a business as a basis for evaluating its achievement of this objective. In this chapter, you will learn how accountants define and measure income. You will appreciate the difficulties in relating revenues and expenses to specific reporting periods and understand their implications for analyzing financial statements. Further, you will understand the need for adjusting entries and their effect on income measurement. You will also be acquainted with accrual, the core of the accounting model. Finally, you will learn how to prepare financial statements. Income Measurement Business enterprises carry out a continuous stream of production, marketing, and other commercial activities aimed at earning profits. These activities often span two or more time periods and do not lend themselves to tidy separation into equal time periods. In these circumstances, the most accurate measure of the success or failure of a firm would be available when it winds up its operations and goes out of business. However, in today’s business environment, firms find it necessary to communicate their income frequently. Shareholders are provided with annual financial reports, dividends are distributed based on periodical profit, and income tax is computed on annual income. Listed companies must publish quarterly financial reports. For internal purposes, income is measured even more often. Responding to these needs, accountants seek to measure the income of a period by assigning the results of the activities of enterprises to specific time periods. GAAP provides the framework of periodic income measurement. Users of financial reports, who grasp these principles, recognize the merits as well as the limitations of the accountant’s definition of income. Despite a great deal of effort, a clear definition of income remains elusive. Economists speak of income as the amount by which an entity becomes better off at the end as against the beginning of a period. Unfortunately, the degree of “betteroffness” of an entity is largely a matter of personal opinion and can seldom be objectively measured. The term ‘income’ has different meanings in different contexts and no single definition is likely to fit all the contexts satisfactorily. Accountants prefer to use the more explicit term ‘net profit’ instead of income. Net Profit Net profit is the increase in equity from the operations of the business. Changes in equity because of further investments by, and distributions to, owners affect the equity of a business but do not form part of net profit. Accountants generally measure net profit as the excess of revenues over expenses. If expenses exceed revenues, the difference is net loss. The period for which a company reports net profit is its reporting period, financial year, or fiscal year. Under the income tax law, companies must compute and pay tax on their income for the Government’s fiscal year, April 1 to March 31. Revenues Revenue is “the gross inflow of economic benefits during the period arising in the course of the ordinary activities of an entity when those inflows result in increases in equity, other than increases relating to contributions from equity participants.”1 Business enterprises earn revenues by selling products or performing services. In return, they usually receive either cash or accept promises to pay in the future. Revenue is measured at the fair value of the consideration received or receivable. However, when the inflow is deferred, the fair value of the consideration may be less than the nominal amount receivable. Suppose that a consulting firm bills two clients `15 million each for services provided in a year. Customer A pays the amount immediately. The consulting firm will recognize a revenue of `15 million. Customer B will pay the amount in three annual instalments of `5 million. The fair value of the revenue from Customer B is the discounted value of the future receipts and it will be less than the nominal amount of `15 million. Sometimes, a business may receive some other assets (e.g. a customer’s products) or services, or settle its liabilities, in payment for goods or services provided. In that event, the amount of revenue recorded is the fair value of the asset or service received, or liability settled. Thus, for a given reporting period, revenue earned is the sum of cash, receivables, and the value of other assets and services received from customers or liabilities reduced for the sale of goods or performance of services during that period. Revenues come from an enterprise’s ongoing major or central operations. Revenues increase equity, but not all increase in equity arises from revenues. For example, investment by shareholders increases equity, but it is not revenue. Again, though revenues typically increase assets, some transactions may increase assets without increasing revenues. For example, the purchase of office supplies on credit increases assets and liabilities, but does not result in revenue. Further, revenues may decrease liabilities. For example, when a business provides services for which it has already received payment, unearned revenue – a liability – decreases and equity increases. Business organizations use various names to describe their revenues, such as sales, fees, interest, dividends, royalties, rent, and guarantee commission. Expenses Expenses are “decreases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of outflows or depletions of assets or incurrences of liabilities that result in decreases in equity, other than relating to distributions to equity participants.”2 Businesses incur expenses to generate revenues. Expenses usually involve either immediate payments (e.g. current month’s salaries) or promises to pay in the future for services received (e.g. salaries payable) that have not yet been paid for. Typical expenses include cost of sales, depreciation, interest, rent, and income tax. Expenses relate to an enterprise’s ongoing major or central operations. Expenses decrease equity and either decrease assets or increase liabilities. But not all decrease in equity or increase in liabilities results from expenses. For example, dividends decrease equity, but they are not expenses. As we shall see just now, expenses are not the same as payments although many expenses entail payments. For example, payment to a supplier for goods bought in the past involves a payment, but it does not represent an expense. In some cases, cash may be paid out before the expense is incurred, such as payment for next month’s rent or for equipment. These payments represent assets in the balance sheet until they are used and are expensed as their usefulness expires in the course of business. Enterprises use various account titles to describe their major categories of expenses to describe the nature of the expense. Typical account titles used in most businesses include raw materials consumed, salaries expense, interest expense, advertising expense, rent expense, and depreciation expense. Gains and Losses Gains are increases in equity from peripheral or incidental transactions and events. Losses are the opposite of gains in that they are decreases in equity from peripheral or incidental transactions and events. Gains and losses frequently result from change in value of investments, disposal of used equipment, fines and damages, theft, and natural disasters. Distinctions between revenues, gains, expenses, and losses in a particular business depend largely on its major activities. For example, investments in securities are sources of revenues and expenses for banks and venture capital companies, but sources of gains and losses for manufacturing or trading companies. Distinguishing gains from revenues and losses from expenses is important in understanding how much of an enterprise’s profit is derived from activities that are related to its main business. Earnings quality refers to the probability of earnings trends continuing and the extent to which earnings could represent distributable cash. Earnings are said to be of high quality if, among others, they are derived primarily from continuing operations that are not volatile from year to year. Therefore, high quality earnings are more predictable than low quality earnings. Accrual Accounting Accrual accounting “depicts the effects of transactions and other events and circumstances on a reporting entity’s economic resources and claims in the periods in which those effects occur even if the resulting cash receipts and payments occur in a different period.”3 In other words, the accrual system recognizes revenues when a business sells goods or performs services regardless of when it receives cash. It recognizes expenses when it incurs them, that is, when it uses goods or consumes services, no matter when it pays for them. Net profit equals the revenues earned less expenses incurred during a period. An alternative to accrual accounting is the cash system of accounting. The cash system reports revenues on receiving cash and expenses on paying cash. It does not consider rights to receive revenues and obligations to pay expenses. In this system, net profit is the difference between revenue receipts and expense payments. The cash system distorts financial performance by not matching revenues earned and expenses incurred. In establishing the objectives of financial reporting, the IASB concluded:4 [Accrual] is important because information about a reporting entity’s economic resources and claims and changes in its economic resources and claims during a period provides a better basis for assessing the entity’s past and future performance than information solely about cash receipts and payments during that period. Information about a reporting entity’s financial performance during a period, reflected by changes in its economic resources and claims …, is useful in assessing the entity’s past and future ability to generate net cash inflows. That information indicates the extent to which the reporting entity has increased its available economic resources, and thus its capacity for generating net cash inflows through its operations rather than by obtaining additional resources directly from investors and creditors. Information about a reporting entity’s financial performance during a period may also indicate the extent to which events such as changes in market prices or interest rates have increased or decreased the entity’s economic resources and claims, thereby affecting the entity’s ability to generate net cash inflows. The Companies Act 2013 requires companies to follow accrual accounting. The income tax law allows (and in some cases requires) the cash system under certain circumstances. Traditionally, governments have followed the cash system for their own accounting, but are moving to accrual. According to the International Monetary Fund, 12 countries prepare full accrual financial statements, 52 countries are on partial accrual and 120 countries follow the cash system.5 The countries that follow accrual include Australia, New Zealand, and the UK. The Government of India has decided to move to the accrual system and has issued four Indian Government Financial Reporting Standards (IGFRS). So far, 21 State governments have agreed in principle to introduce accrual accounting. Realization Principle Revenue recognition is the process of formally recording revenue in a reporting period. The realization principle, or the revenue recognition principle, requires that revenue be recognized at the time it is earned. This differs significantly from the view of some managers that a business earns revenue when they have performed their part. For example, marketing managers almost always claim that they have earned revenue the moment they get a customer order. (The more sanguine among them may even take a customer’s smile as a confirmed order.) As an example, this is what an effusive estate agent said about earning revenue: I know people don’t change. I am, and always will be, optimistic. Invariably things work out. In business, this means that in my head I’ve banked deals as soon as parties accept offers instead of waiting till the point of exchange, which is customarily when the parties involved breathe a sigh of relief. By waiting until the parties “breathe a sigh of relief”, the accountant is sure to spoil the estate agent’s party. Recall the proverb, “Don’t count your chickens before they are hatched.” Not all the eggs will hatch to become chickens. Of course, not all the chickens may survive until they are meant to be sold, especially in these days of bird flu. Accountants understand that earning revenue from sales or services is a continuous process since an organization’s activities that give rise to revenue take place all the time. For example, the earning process for a manufacturing firm involves various activities, such as acquiring raw materials and services, producing finished products, selling the products, and collecting payment from customers. But it is difficult to determine how much revenue an organization earns at each step in the earning process. A business recognizes revenue when the earning process is complete or virtually complete and an exchange has taken place. For most businesses, this occurs at the time they provide services or sell goods to their customers. When the outcome of a transaction involving the rendering of services can be estimated reliably, revenue is recognized by reference to the stage of completion of the transaction at the end of the reporting period. The outcome of a transaction can be estimated reliably when all the following conditions are satisfied: 1. The amount of revenue can be measured reliably. 2. It is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the entity. 3. The stage of completion of the transaction at the end of the reporting period can be measured reliably. 4. The costs incurred for the transaction and the costs to complete the transaction can be measured reliably.6 When the outcome of a transaction cannot be estimated reliably, revenue should be recognized only to the extent of the expenses recognized that are recoverable. When the outcome of a transaction cannot be estimated reliably and it is not probable that the costs will be recovered, the costs incurred are recognized as an expense. Let us now see how to apply conditions 1 and 2. We will see the application of conditions 3 and 4 in Chapters 4 and 5. Reliable measurement of revenue The contract should state the price or may lay down a method of determining the price. For example, the loan contract between a bank and a borrower may state that the interest rate shall be 12 per cent. Alternatively, the contract may specify that the interest rate will be the LIBOR (London interbank offered rate) at the start of each year during the period of the loan plus two per cent. Thus, the price should be certain or ascertainable. If the price is not clear, revenue recognition will not be possible. In our example, the contract should also specify whether the LIBOR is for one month, three months, six months, and so on. In the case of goods, the sale contract should specify the price or a method of determining the price. For example, the contract may provide that the parties shall trade crude oil at the price prevailing on the New York Mercantile Exchange on the date of sale. If the price is not clear, revenue recognition will not be possible. In our example, the contract should also specify the type of crude, such as Abu Dhabi Umm Shaif, Iran Light, Nigeria Light, and US Alaska. Flow of economic benefits The buyer should have paid the price or it should be certain that the buyer will pay. If collection of the revenue is not certain at the time of sale, the seller should postpone revenue recognition until collection becomes certain. However, when an uncertainty about collection arises after revenue is recognized, the estimated uncollectible amount is recognized as an expense; the revenue originally recognized is not adjusted. But why this insistence on “completion of the earning process”? Managers have incentives to take an optimistic, rather than a realistic, view of their firm’s revenue. Reporting revenue sooner would result in higher sales and profit. Good growth in sales and profit will give managers a higher remuneration, advance their career prospects in the firm, and enhance their professional reputation in the job market. Understandably, managers often wish to recognize revenue prematurely. By insisting on completion of the earning process and exchange of goods and services, the realization principle keeps in check the managers’ tendency to be aggressive in recognizing revenue. Another way to think about revenue recognition is to look at the balance sheet effect of earning revenue. In this view, revenue recognition is simultaneous with an increase in an asset or a decrease in a liability. For example, a business that provides services in exchange for immediate or future payment records an asset – cash or receivable – and a revenue. If it had received advance payment, it records a decrease in a liability – unearned revenue. Thus, revenue recognition and its balance sheet effect are two ways of looking at the same transaction. Further, the transaction needs to be identified based on the substance of the contract. Sometimes a transaction may have separately identifiable components (“multiple service elements”), such as a contract to develop an information system and maintain it for a certain period. The contract revenue should be allocated to the development and the maintenance components on the basis of their fair value and recognized in the periods over which these services are provided. The sale of the Audi car discussed at the beginning of this chapter is another example. In contrast, two or more transactions may be linked in such a way that they actually constitute a single transaction (“bundled offers”). For example, a mobile phone customer enters into a contract with a phone company for a package that may include a handset, talktime, SMS, and so on. On the face of it, these are separate transactions. However, the handset is often sold at a discount and the provider expects to recover it in the form of subsequent services. In this case, the amounts paid for the handset and other services do not represent their respective fair value; so they cannot be treated as a measure of the revenue. The transactions have to be treated as a single transaction and revenue should be recognized based on the fair value of the components. In short, revenue recognition can get complicated when a business performs services in several stages, spread over several periods. You will learn more about revenue recognition in Chapters 4 and 5. The Matching Principle The matching principle requires recording expenses in the same reporting period in which the revenues were earned as a result of the expenses. The matching exercise is essentially an attempt at comparing accomplishment with effort. Expense recognition is relatively straightforward when there is a cause-and-effect relationship between effort and accomplishment. For example, an enterprise recognizes cost of goods sold and sales commissions in the same period in which it recognizes the related sales revenue. It is not possible to associate some expenses that have future benefits with revenue-producing transactions. Accountants associate such expenses with specific reporting periods and allocate them by a “systematic and rational” procedure. For instance, depreciation allocates the costs of assets (e.g. buildings, plant, and vehicles) to the periods which are expected to benefit from their use. However, many expenses have no discernible future benefits, but are incurred to obtain benefits that are exhausted in the period in which the expenses are incurred. Salesmen’s salaries and office rent fit this description and are usually recognized as expenses in the period in which they are incurred. Finally, there are expenses on activities that have uncertain outcomes, such as research and development and brand building. Accountants expense them, because the benefits are uncertain and are difficult to measure reliably. Expense recognition, similar to revenue recognition, has a balance sheet effect. Expense recognition is simultaneous with a decrease in an asset or an increase in a liability. For instance, a business that pays rent for its office premises records a rent expense and a decrease in cash, an asset. If the rent has not been paid, a liability will be recorded. Thus, expense recognition and its balance sheet effect are two ways of looking at the same transaction. The Adjustment Process: Converting Cash Into Accrual Accounting adjustments help in achieving the goals of accrual accounting: allocating revenues and expenses to appropriate periods. Deferral is the lag in the recognition of an expense already paid or a revenue already received. It relates to past cash receipts and payments. Deferral is needed for expenses and revenues that must be apportioned between two or more reporting periods. Examples of deferral are prepaid insurance, supplies, equipment, and unearned revenue. Accrual is the recognition of an expense incurred but not paid or a revenue earned but not received. It relates to expected future cash receipts and payments. Accrual is required for unrecorded expenses and revenues. Examples of accrual are salaries payable, accrued interest expense, accrued interest income, and unbilled revenue.7 Figure 3.1 illustrates the adjustment process. Adjusting Entries Adjusting entries are journal entries prepared at the end of the reporting period to ensure that revenues are recorded in the period in which they are earned, and expenses are recognized in the period in which they are incurred. They have two distinctive characteristics that you will find useful to remember: 1. An adjusting entry affects both a balance sheet item (asset or liability) and a statement of profit and loss item (revenue or expense). For example, recording a revenue (a statement of profit and loss item) that has been earned, but not received, creates a receivable (a balance sheet item) for the revenue. Again, recording an expense (a statement of profit and loss item) that has been incurred, but not paid, creates a payable (a balance sheet) item. 2. An adjusting entry does not affect cash. This should be obvious. After all, if cash is received or paid in the same period in which the expense is incurred or revenue is earned, there would be no need for an adjusting entry in the first place. Adjusting entries result in deferrals and accruals. To illustrate typical adjusting entries, we shall continue with the example of Fashion Concepts Company, introduced in Chapter 2. Apportioning Recorded Expenses A business often pays for benefits that last more than one reporting period. Under the accrual system of accounting, payment of cash does not necessarily result in an expense. Accountants usually record these expenditures by debiting an asset account to show the service or benefit that a business will receive in the future. At the end of the reporting period, the accountant transfers the portion of the asset that has been used during the period from the asset account to an expense account. Adjustments for prepaid expenses, office supplies, and depreciation involve apportionment of asset costs between reporting periods. An adjusting entry to apportion a recorded cost consists of a debit to an expense account and a credit to an asset account. Prepaid expenses These are the costs of services that a business has bought and paid for, but has not used at the end of the reporting period. Insurance and rent are often paid in advance. By the end of a reporting period, that portion of the services which was used during the period has become an expense and the unused portion of these items represents an asset. Without adjustments for prepaid expenses, both the statement of profit and loss and balance sheet will be incorrect. In this case, the financial statements will understate the expenses and overstate the assets and the equity. Fashion Concepts Company has a prepaid expense for insurance. On June 6, the company paid `720 for a one-year fire insurance policy that will expire on May 31 next year. We recorded it by debiting an asset, prepaid insurance. The expenditure of `720 will protect the company against fire loss for one year. At the end of June, 1/12th of the protection expired and we record it as insurance expense. We analyze the adjustment as follows: Prepaid Insurance, an asset, now has a balance of `660, which represents the unexpired cost relating to the remaining 11 months of insurance cover. The balance in Insurance Expense is equal to the insurance cost that expired in June. As you may have inferred, without this adjustment, Fashion Concepts would have understated June expenses by `60 and overstated assets and equity by `60 on June 30. Office supplies Recall from Chapter 2 that in June, Fashion Concepts bought office supplies costing `5,500. Surely, the company was gradually using the supplies as work progressed. But we did not record a journal entry during the period to record the cost of consumption of supplies, because there is no need for this information on a day-to-day basis. Suppose that a physical count of the supplies at the close of business on June 30 shows that `3,400 of supplies are still on hand. Thus, the cost of supplies used is `2,100 (`5,500 – `3,400). We analyze and record the adjustment as follows: The asset account, Office Supplies, now has a balance of `3,400, which is equal to the cost of supplies on hand at the end of the reporting period. The expense account, Office Supplies Expense, has a balance of `2,100, which equals the cost of supplies used in June. Without this adjusting entry, June expenses will be less and the net profit will be more by `2,100. Besides, both assets and equity will be more by `2,100 on the June 30 balance sheet. Depreciation A business enterprise usually owns a number of assets, such as buildings, equipment, computers, and vehicles. These assets provide service for a number of years. We can think of the cost of an asset as a long-term prepayment for the benefits from the asset. Therefore, accountants allocate the cost of an asset to expense in the current and future periods as the asset is used up. Depreciation is the portion of the asset’s cost allocated to a reporting period. Buildings and some equipment have long useful lives, sometimes up to 30 years or even longer. It is often impossible to know exactly the useful life of such assets. Accountants use a number of methods to estimate the depreciation expense for a period. A simple approach is to assume that the asset yields equal benefits in each year of its life. To illustrate, assume that Fashion Concepts Company’s equipment has a useful life of five years, without any value at the end. The monthly depreciation expense is `150 (`9,000/60 months). The company debits this amount to Depreciation Expense. It credits a separate account called Accumulated Depreciation for the amount allocated to the period instead of making a direct credit to the asset account. You will see in a moment why the company credits accumulated depreciation instead of the asset itself. The accumulated depreciation is a contra-asset account. A contra account is an account that appears as an offset or deduction from a related account in the balance sheet. The adjusting entry to record depreciation is as follows: Depreciation expense will appear as expense in the statement of profit and loss. Besides, the June 30 balance sheet will now report the office equipment as follows: As you can see, the use of the contra account permits disclosure of both the original cost of the asset and the total cost expired to date. The difference between the original cost of the asset and its accumulated depreciation is called the book value or carrying amount. It represents the unexpired cost of the asset. Without the adjustment for depreciation, June expenses will be less and net profit will be more by `150. Besides, both assets and equity will be more by `150 on the June 30 balance sheet. Apportioning Unearned Revenues Many kinds of businesses receive advance payments from their customers. For example, property owners collect rent in advance, airlines receive fares ahead of travel, media companies accept magazine subscriptions for future periods, and insurance companies insist on advance payment of premium. When an enterprise collects revenue in advance, it is obliged to provide goods or services in the future. Therefore, unearned revenue is a liability. It is the service provider’s mirror image of a prepaid expense. For example, a customer would record a prepaid expense for insurance premium paid in advance, while the insurance company would show it as unearned revenue. Unearned revenue becomes revenue earned through providing goods or services. At the end of the reporting period, an adjusting entry transfers an appropriate amount to revenue. From Chapter 2, recall that Fashion Concepts collected a sum of `1,500 from Kidswear for services to be provided later. Suppose that later in the month the company supplied a design for `900 and the customer accepted it. The adjustment for the conversion of unearned revenue into revenue earned is as follows: As a result of the adjusting entry, the Revenue from Services account now shows a revenue earned of `11,900. The balance of `600 in the Unearned Revenue account represents the liability for services still to be provided. Recording Accrued Expenses Businesses record most expenses when they pay them. At the end of a reporting period, they may have incurred but not recorded some expenses, because payment is not due. Expenses incurred but not paid or recorded are known as accrued expenses. An adjusting entry is needed to recognize these obligations. Salaries, interest, and income tax are examples of expenses that normally need an accrual adjustment. Recall that on June 21, Fashion Concepts Company appointed an office manager on a monthly salary of `1,500. The manager’s salary for the ten days in June is an expense of that month. Therefore, it is necessary to recognize a proportionate salary expense of `500 although it was not paid. We analyze the adjusting entry for accrued salaries as follows: The Salaries Expense account now has a balance of `1,300 representing the salaries expense for the month. The Salaries Payable account shows the salaries payable but not yet paid, `500. Without this adjustment, June expenses will be less and net profit will be more by `500. Besides, liabilities will be less and equity will be more by `500 on the June 30 balance sheet. Recording Accrued Revenues Usually, a business records revenue at the time it sells goods or services on credit. However, at the end of a reporting period, some revenue may remain unrecorded although it may have been earned. Earned revenue that is unrecorded is called accrued revenue or unbilled revenue. For example, suppose that interest is payable on a bank deposit on January 1 and July 1 for the preceding half-year. The interest income of the depositor for three months (January 1 to March 31) is accrued revenue on March 31. Accrued revenue is an asset, because it represents cash to be received from the customer after billing. We will now see how to recognize accrued revenue. Assume that Fashion Concepts had completed work on a design to be supplied to a customer for a fee of `700 by June 30. The company will bill the customer when it supplies him with the design. Nevertheless, the company has virtually completed the earning process and will recognize the fee by the following adjusting entry: Unbilled Revenue, an asset, has a balance of `700 which represents revenue earned but neither billed nor received. The balance in Revenue from Services is equal to the fee income the company earned in June, representing the company’s accomplishment regardless of when, or indeed whether or not, the company received cash. If this adjustment is not made, Fashion Concepts’ June revenue and net profit will be less by `700 and assets and equity will be less by `700 on the June 30 balance sheet. Unbilled revenue is common in services. Billing is done after completion of project milestones. Work done between two billing dates is unbilled revenue. Accrued revenue is the mirror image of accrued expense. Figure 3.2 shows the effect of the adjustment process on revenues, expenses, assets, and liabilities. 8 Worksheet: The Accountant’s Invaluable Tool In order to prepare the financial statements, accountants must collect data on deferrals and accruals. Examples are inventory of supplies, estimated useful lives of assets, salaries payable, and unbilled revenue. Working papers consist of these collections of data, computations, memoranda, preliminary drafts of financial statements, and other useful analyses and informal papers prepared by accountants. These assist accountants in organizing the information that goes into the formal financial statements so that no important information is omitted. They also provide evidence of supporting computations which are useful in explaining to auditors the numbers appearing in the financial statements. A type of working paper commonly used by accountants is the worksheet. A worksheet is a columnar sheet of paper used to summarize information needed to prepare financial statements and to record adjusting and closing entries. It is also an informal device for assembling the required information in one place. It is not part of the formal accounting records. The accountant prepares it for his use and keeps it with himself. It is not meant for use by the owners or managers of the business and is, therefore, not made public. Completing the worksheet assures the accountant that potential errors will be discovered. However, it is not designed to replace the financial statements or to dispense with the need to journalize and post year-end entries, or make up for the absence of good internal controls. The worksheet is particularly useful when there are numerous accounts and adjusting entries. These days, accountants use computers and spreadsheet software to prepare worksheets. The standard form of the worksheet appears in Exhibit 3.1. The heading consists of the name of the organization and the date. The worksheet can cover any period, such as a year, half-year, quarter, or even a month. The date is the balance sheet date. The worksheet has a column for account title. Then there are six more pairs of columns for the following: 1. Trial Balance: This is the trial balance before making adjustments. 2. Adjustments: These show the adjustments to the accounts for deferrals and accruals. 3. Adjusted Trial Balance: This shows the account balances after considering the effect of the adjustments. 4. Statement of Profit and Loss: These columns are for revenue and expense items that will appear in the statement of profit and loss. 5. Statement of Retained Earnings: These columns are for beginning and ending balances, net profit, and dividends. 6. Balance Sheet: These columns are for asset, liability, and equity items that will appear in the balance sheet. Each pair of columns consists of a debit and a credit column making a total of 12 columns for entering amounts. To prepare a worksheet, the accountant carries out following five steps: 1. Enter the account balances in the Trial Balance columns. 2. Enter the adjustments in the Adjustments columns. 3. Enter the account balances after adjustment in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns. 4. Extend each account balance in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns to the Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings, or the Balance Sheet columns. 5. Total the Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings, and the Balance Sheet columns. We will now explain these steps using the Fashion Concepts Company illustration that we have developed from Chapter 2 onwards. Step 1: Enter the account balances in the Trial Balance columns To begin with, you should copy the account titles and balances from the ledger into the Trial Balance columns. Exhibit 3.1 shows this step. You should now total the Trial Balance columns and enter the totals. For the sake of convenience, the sequence of accounts generally follows the chart of accounts. You should proceed to the next step only if the Trial Balance column totals agree. The account titles and balances are the same as those in Exhibit 2.7, except for Accumulated Depreciation, Equipment. Step 2: Enter the adjustments in the Adjustments columns Earlier in this chapter, you saw the required adjustments for Fashion Concepts Company. Here is a summary of these adjustments: Adjustment (a) : Expiration of prepaid insurance, `60. Adjustment (b) : Consumption of office supplies, `2,100. Adjustment (c) : Depreciation expense, `150. Adjustment (d) : Revenue earned out of unearned revenue, `900. Adjustment (e) : Salaries expense accrued, `500. Adjustment (f) : Unbilled revenue, `700. You should now enter these in the Adjustments columns of the worksheet. Exhibit 3.2 explains this step. Note that each adjustment has a separate letter identification, so that you can cross-reference the debit part of the entry to the credit part. You should enter the adjusting amount on the line on which the account appears in the trial balance. If an account title does not appear in the trial balance, you should add it on the line immediately below the trial balance. For example, Insurance Expense does not have an amount in the trial balance; so it appears below the last trial balance item in Exhibit 3.2. After you have entered all the adjustments, you should total the Adjustments columns and enter the totals. You should proceed to the next step only if the Adjustments column totals agree. Step 3: Enter the account balances after adjustment in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns In this step, you should combine each account balance in the trial balance with the corresponding adjustment(s)9 in the Adjustments columns and enter the resulting balance on the same line in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns. Exhibit 3.3 illustrates this step. The combined amounts entered in the Adjustments columns will be identical to the ledger account balances after posting the entries to the ledger. Accountants call adding or subtracting numbers on a row crossfooting. Let us see how crossfooting works. — Equipment has a debit balance of `9,000 in the Trial Balance. Since there are no adjustments to Equipment, you should enter the amount of `9,000 in the debit column of the Adjusted Trial Balance. — The next line is Accumulated Depreciation, Equipment, which has no balance in the Trial Balance. Hence, you should enter the credit of `150 appearing in the Adjustments in the credit column of the Adjusted Trial Balance. — The next item, Office Supplies, shows a debit balance of `5,500 in the Trial Balance and a credit of `2,100 in the Adjustments. Combining the two amounts results in a debit balance of `3,400 and you should enter it in the debit column of the Adjusted Trial Balance. — You should process each account balance in a similar manner. — After you have entered all account balances, you should total the Adjusted Trial Balance columns to check the correctness of the crossfooting. — You should proceed to the next step only if the Adjusted Trial Balance column totals agree. Step 4: Extend each account balance in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns to the Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings or the Balance sheet columns. You should extend revenue and expense accounts to the Statement of Profit and Loss columns, and asset, liability, and equity accounts to the Balance Sheet columns. Exhibit 3.4 explains this step. You should extend the accounts one by one, starting from the first one, to avoid leaving out any account. For instance, you should first extend the debit balance of the Equipment account to the debit column of Balance Sheet, because assets appear on the balance sheet. Next, extend the credit balance of the Accumulated Depreciation, Equipment to the credit column of the Balance Sheet, because it is a contra asset. Repeat the procedure for the remaining entries. Most items are straightforward and not much difficult. The item, Dividends, is tricky. Remember that dividend is not an expense, but is a reduction of equity, because of distribution of assets to the shareholders. Therefore, Dividends forms part of the Statement of Retained Earnings. Step 5: Total the Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings and the Balance Sheet columns. Net profit or loss is the difference between the totals of the Statement of Profit and Loss columns. If the credit total is more, it is a net profit. If the debit total is more, it is a net loss. Exhibit 3.5 explains this step. You should enter the difference in the Statement of Profit and Loss column that has a smaller total. With the difference included, the Statement of Profit and Loss totals will now match: You should enter the amount of net profit in the Statement of Retained Earnings credit column. (Do you know why?) If it is a net loss, enter the amount in the Statement of Retained Earnings debit column: You should enter the amount of retained earnings in the Balance Sheet credit column. (Do you know why?) If it is accumulated net loss, enter the amount in the Balance Sheet debit column. With the amount of net profit (or net loss) included, the Balance Sheet totals will now match. This makes sense. After all, you extended the amounts from the Adjusted Trial Balance to the Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings, or the Balance Sheet columns, totalled the columns, and entered their amounts at the foot of each column. If the debit and credit totals do not match, then there is an error in extending the amounts from the Adjusted Trial Balance columns. However, there may be errors even if the column totals matched. For example, if you had entered the balance of Cash in the Statement of Profit and Loss debit column instead of the Balance Sheet debit column, the Balance Sheet column totals would be equal. But the net profit, assets, and equity would be understated. Using the Worksheet After completing the worksheet, the accountant uses it to prepare the financial statements and record adjusting and closing entries in the general journal. Preparing the Financial Statements Once the worksheet is ready, preparation of the formal financial statements is a relatively easy step. The account balances in the Statement of Profit and Loss columns provide the information necessary to prepare the formal statement of profit and loss. The Balance Sheet columns contain the information needed to prepare the statement of retained earnings and the balance sheet. Exhibit 3.6 presents these statements for Fashion Concepts Company. Recording Adjusting Entries Recall that the worksheet is not part of the formal accounting records. Therefore, after completing the worksheet, the accountant enters the adjusting entries in the general journal and posts them to the ledger accounts. The necessary information is available from the Adjustments columns of the worksheet. Exhibit 3.7 presents the adjusting entries for Fashion Concepts Company. Note that these entries are the same as the ones described earlier in this chapter. The entries are dated on the last day of the reporting period. The Adjustments columns of the worksheet have the information needed to prepare the adjusting entries. Overview of the Accounting Cycle The accounting cycle comprises the sequence of accounting processes. It begins with analyzing transactions and ends with carrying forward the balances in balance sheet accounts to the next reporting period. The accounting cycle produces numerous records, entries, documents, reports, and statements. By far the most important output of the accounting cycle is an enterprise’s financial statements. Figure 3.3 summarizes the steps in the accounting cycle and identifies the chapters in which they figure. The accountant performs the steps in the accounting cycle one after the other and repeats them in each reporting period. Temporary and Permanent Accounts Revenue and expense accounts are temporary accounts (or nominal accounts), because their balances relate only to the current reporting period. The accountant closes these accounts at the end of the reporting period by transferring their balances through statement of profit and loss to retained earnings in equity. In Exhibit 3.5, revenue from services, salaries expense, office supplies expense, and depreciation expense are examples of temporary accounts. Note that dividends is also a temporary account. By contrast, accounts that appear in the balance sheet are permanent accounts (or real accounts). The accountant carries forward the ending balances of these accounts to the next period as their beginning balances to the next period. These accounts exist as long as the specific asset, liability, or equity items recorded in the accounts exist. In Exhibit 3.5, equipment, accumulated depreciation, office supplies, and salaries payable are examples of permanent accounts. Note particularly that, whereas depreciation expense is a temporary account, accumulated depreciation is a permanent account since the equipment continues to exist. Closing Entries Closing entries are journal entries that transfer the balances in temporary accounts at the end of a reporting period to a balance sheet equity account. As you know revenue, expense, and dividend accounts are temporary accounts. After preparing the statement of profit and loss and statement of retained earnings for the current period, we no longer require the balances in the revenue, expense, and dividend accounts. These amounts pertain to the current period and they should not be carried forward to the next period. Therefore, at the end of a reporting period, we should reset the balances in these accounts to zero. We do this by transferring their balances to the statement of profit and loss. The balance of the statement of profit and loss equals the net profit or net loss for the period. Preparing Closing Entries The steps in the preparation of closing entries are as follows: Step 1. Transfer the balances in revenue accounts to the Statement of Profit and Loss. Step 2. Transfer the balances in expense accounts to the Statement of Profit and Loss. Step 3. Transfer the balance in the Statement of Profit and Loss to the Retained Earnings account. Step 4. Transfer the balance in the Dividends account to the Retained Earnings account. Typically, a proprietary business transfers the balances in the Statement of Profit and Loss and the Drawings account to the Capital account, since it is not necessary to make a distinction between capital introduced by the owner and the accumulated profits of the business. For the same reason, when the business is a partnership firm, these balances are transferred to the Partners’ Capital accounts. Closing Revenue Accounts Before posting the closing entries, revenue accounts have credit balances. Therefore, each revenue account must receive a debit for an amount equal to its balance to close the account. The Statement of Profit and Loss receives the credit to complete the double entry. The following journal entry closes Revenue from Services, the only revenue account of Fashion Concepts Company: Exhibit 3.8 shows the effect of closing the revenue account. Note that the closing entry clears the revenue account by transferring its balance as a credit to the Statement of Profit and Loss. By doing so, it resets the balance in the revenue account to zero, thus causing that account to begin the next reporting period anew. Closing Expense Accounts As you know, expense accounts have debit balances. Therefore, each expense account must receive a credit for an amount equal to its balance to close the account. The Statement of Profit and Loss receives the corresponding debit. The following compound entry closes the expense accounts of Fashion Concepts Company: Exhibit 3.9 shows the effect of closing the expense accounts. Note that the closing entry clears the expense accounts by transferring their balances as a debit to the Statement of Profit and Loss. Thus, it resets the balances in the expense accounts to zero, thus causing those accounts to begin the next reporting period anew. Closing the Statement of Profit and Loss After closing the revenue and expense accounts, the Statement of Profit and Loss now summarizes balances formerly reported in the individual revenue and expense accounts. The balance of the Statement of Profit and Loss is equal to the net profit or net loss for the period. When revenues exceed expenses, there is a net profit and the Statement of Profit and Loss has a credit balance. On the other hand, when expenses exceed revenues, there is a net loss and the account has a debit balance. In either case, we must close the Statement of Profit and Loss to the Retained Earnings account. For Fashion Concepts Company, the entry is as follows: Exhibit 3.10 presents the effect of this entry. Note that, as a result of the entry, the balance in the Statement of Profit and Loss becomes zero by transferring it to Retained Earnings. Closing the Dividends Account The Dividends account shows the amount of profit distributed during the period. We transfer the debit balance in Dividends to Retained Earnings, as follows: Exhibit 3.11 describes the effect of this entry. As a result of the entry, the balance in Dividends becomes zero and the balance in Retained Earnings is reduced by the amount of dividends paid during the period. Prepare a statement of retained earnings. The Accounts after Closing Exhibit 3.12 presents the accounts of Fashion Concepts Company after posting the adjusting and closing entries. Note that the revenue, expense, and dividend accounts (temporary accounts) now have zero balances and are ready for use when transactions are recorded in the next period. The company carries the balances in the asset, liability, and equity accounts (permanent accounts) to the next period. Post-closing Trial Balance After all closing entries have been posted, it is useful to prepare a post-closing trial balance to verify the equality of the debits and credits in the ledger. Since all temporary accounts should have zero balances at this point, the post-closing trial balance will contain only balance sheet accounts that are carried forward to the next reporting period, i.e. asset, liability, share capital, and retained earnings accounts. Recall that these are permanent accounts. Exhibit 3.13 presents the postclosing trial balance for Fashion Concepts Company. Note that the balances are the same as those reported in the company’s balance sheet in Exhibit 3.6. Reversing Entries In accounting for accrual items, accountants use some optional entries, called reversing entries. They simplify the recording of a subsequent transaction related to an adjusting entry. A reversing entry, as the name implies, is the exact reverse of the adjusting entry to which it relates. The amounts and the accounts are the same; the debits and credits are just reversed. Note the following important points on reversing entries: You can reverse adjusting entries only for accruals, such as salaries payable and unbilled revenue. You should not reverse adjusting entries for deferrals, such as prepaid insurance, supplies, depreciation, and unearned revenue. Earlier in this chapter, we recorded the following adjusting entry for Fashion Concepts Company’s salaries payable, `500: Again, on June 30, we closed Salaries Expense and transferred the balance to Statement of Profit and Loss. Salaries Payable appears on the June 30 balance sheet and we will carry it forward to July. We will first see the accounting procedure without reversing entries and then see the position with adjusting entries. Without Reversing Entry Transaction entry Suppose that Fashion Concepts pays its manager on the 21st of every month. The company records the transaction as follows: Ledger in July After posting this entry, the Salaries Expense account and the Salaries payable account would look as follows: The balance of `1,000 on July 21 in Salaries Expense represents the salaries for the first 20 days of July. Since the accrued salaries for June have been paid, Salaries Payable does not show any balance. With Reversing Entry Reversing entry The reversing entry is made as of the first day of the next reporting period. The reversing entry for the salaries accrued in June is as follows: Transaction entry On July 21, Fashion Concepts records the following entry when it pays salaries: As you can see, this entry is just like any transaction and there is no need to look into the records to find out the accrued salaries component. Ledger in July After posting this entry, the Salaries Expense account and the Salaries Payable account would look as follows: The balance of `1,000 in the Salaries Expense account equals the expense of the current period. (Just after posting the reversing entry, Salaries Expense shows a credit balance of `500, shown in brackets to indicate that it is an abnormal balance.) Since the accrued salaries for June have been paid, Salaries Payable does not show any balance. As you can see, the reversing entry makes it easier to record the payment. The final effect on the accounts is the same, with or without reversing entries. Pro Forma Financial Measures Pro forma literally means “as a matter of form”. A pro forma financial measure (or non-GAAP financial measure) is a measure of past or future financial performance, financial position, or cash flows that excludes items that are a part of the comparable measure in the GAAP financial statements. Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) and earnings before interest tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) are examples of commonly used pro forma measures. EBIT, or operating profit, differs from the GAAP measure, because it excludes interest income and interest expense, non-recurring or exceptional items and income tax. EBITDA excludes the effect of interest income and interest expense, income tax, depreciation, and amortization, all of which are included in the GAAP measure of net profit. Depreciation is as much a cost of doing business as the cost of raw materials. So it is not proper to exclude depreciation for reporting performance. Pro forma measures can be thought of as “as ifs” or “what ifs”. Pro forma financial information can be useful in explaining the components of earnings. For example, the exclusion of non-recurring gains and losses can help investors focus on earnings from normal or regular operations. However, pro forma measures can become misleading if they are computed differently from one period to another. This is not difficult, because there are no standard definitions of pro forma measures. Also, they may be used to distract the investor from GAAP numbers when the latter are likely to give an unfavourable impression. For instance, a loss may be cast as a profit by exclusion of some types of losses. Companies should avoid the temptation of using pro forma numbers to report “EBS” (everything but bad stuff), as Lynn Turner, a former chief accountant of the US Securities and Exchange Commission put it. Pro forma reporting became widespread during the 1990s Internet boom years. Many Internet firms could not report a GAAP profit, but were under enormous pressure from the equity market to report some profit to justify their high stock prices. So they came up with performance measures of dubious value such as EBITDA. Some companies were egregious, even by the lenient ways of pro forma reporting. For example, Amazon.com, the well-known Internet retailer, while discussing its 2000 fourth quarter results in its January 2001 press release, first described its revenue and then cited its narrowing quarterly “U.S. pro forma operating loss” of $16 million. That figure excluded interest expense, losses on equity investments, stock-based compensation expense, amortization of intangible assets, and write-downs for impaired assets. This gave rise to a new pro forma measure: EBITDAM (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortization, and marketing expenses); the only major item not added back was the cost of goods sold. Even though the Internet bubble burst in 2001, the pro forma habit remains. In fact, we are seeing new acronyms. Kingfisher used EBITDAR (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortization, and aircraft lease rentals) in attempt to come up with some positive measure of earnings. In the quarter ended June 30, 2010, Goldman Sachs, the investment bank, added back $550 million in fine imposed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission; the measure came to be known as EBITDAF: earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortization, and fine. The Companies Act 2013 makes it possible to disclose additional line items, sub-line items, and sub-totals. Many companies have taken advantage of this provision and have started disclosing EBITDA and other pro forma measures, even though they do not correctly portray the performance in accordance with GAAP. Looking Back Define and explain net profit, revenue, and expense Net profit is the increase in equity from the operations of the business. It is the excess of revenues over expenses. Revenues and expenses result from selling goods or providing services. Define accrual accounting and distinguish between the accrual system and the cash system The accrual system of accounting recognizes revenues when a business provides goods or services and expenses when it incurs them, regardless of when it receives or pays cash. The cash system reports cash receipts and cash payments. Explain the realization principle and its effect on recording revenue The realization principle requires revenue to be recognized at the time it is earned. Elucidate the matching principle and its effect on recording expenses The matching principle requires recording expenses in the period in which the revenue is earned. Matching is an attempt at comparing accomplishment with effort. Define deferrals and accruals and explain the need for adjustments A deferral is the delay of the recognition of an expense already paid or a revenue already received. An accrual is the recognition of an expense that has not been paid or a revenue that has not been received. Adjusting entries ensure recognition of revenues and expenses in the period to which they relate. Prepare adjusting entries An adjusting entry for an expense consists of (a) a debit to an expense and (b) a credit to a liability, an asset, or a contra asset. An adjusting entry for a revenue consists of (a) a debit to either an asset or a liability and (b) a credit to a revenue. Develop a worksheet The accountant adds information on adjustments to the trial balance information in the worksheet. The result is an adjusted trial balance that becomes the basis for preparing the statement of profit and loss and the balance sheet. Prepare financial statements from a worksheet The Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings, and the Balance Sheet columns of the worksheet have the information needed for preparing the financial statements. Record adjusting entries from a worksheet The Adjustments columns of the worksheet provide the information needed for recording adjusting entries. Describe the accounting cycle The accounting cycle comprises the sequence of accounting processes. It begins with analyzing transactions and ends by carrying forward the balances to the next reporting period. Record closing entries The Statement of Profit and Loss columns of the worksheet contain the information needed for preparing closing entries. Prepare a post-closing trial balance and explain its purpose A post-closing trial balance contains all balance sheet account balances. It helps us in verifying the equality of the debits and credits in the ledger after closing the temporary accounts. Prepare reversing entries A reversing entry is the exact reverse of an adjusting entry for an accrual. Explain pro forma financial measures Pro forma, or non-GAAP measures, exclude items that are a part of the comparable GAAP measure. EBITDA is an example of a pro forma measure. Pro forma measures have their place, but they can be sometimes misleading. Review Problem Backbay Company provides local mail delivery service in the financial district of Mumbai. The trial balance of the company is as follows: Additional information: (a) Prepaid rent represents rent for February to April. (b) The inventory of office supplies at the end of February was `3,200. (c) Revenue earned for services performed but not yet billed at the end of February was `1,600. (d) Revenue earned for services performed, paid for in advance, was `210. (e) Depreciation on office equipment for February was `250. (f) Accrued salaries at the end of February were `540. Required 1. Prepare adjusting entries and post them directly to the T accounts. 2. Prepare an adjusted trial balance. 3. Prepare the February statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. Solution 1. Preparing and posting adjusting entries to T accounts 2. Preparing adjusted trial balance 3. Preparing financial statements ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. Define the terms: net profit, revenue, and expense. 2. Why is periodic income measurement necessary? 3. What is accrual accounting? How does it differ from the cash system of accounting? 4. Pillai Travel Company provides conducted tours to Jaipur, Agra, and Delhi. It receives full payments from its customers in advance. Can the amounts be treated as revenue immediately on receipt? 5. “The matching principle poses major challenges to the accountant.” Do you agree? 6. Why are adjusting entries necessary? 7. What do you understand by deferrals and accruals? Give two examples for each of them. 8. “Expenses are used-up assets.” Explain. 9. What is a contra account? Give an example of a contra account used in the adjusting process. 10. Harish Company follows the practice of expensing insurance premiums when paid. What entry should it record at the end of the period to reflect the amount of prepaid insurance? 11. What is an accrued expense? Give two examples. 12. Why is an adjusted trial balance prepared? 13. Differentiate between temporary accounts and permanent accounts. Give two examples of each. 14. What are the benefits of preparing a worksheet? 15. Is it possible to prepare the financial statements without preparing a worksheet? 16. How does the accountant determine the amounts in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns of a worksheet? 17. In which column or columns of the worksheet would the net profit amount appear? 18. What are the objectives of the closing process? 19. Why is a post-closing trial balance prepared? 20. How does a post-closing trial balance differ from an adjusted trial balance? 21. What is a reversing entry? How do reversing entries make the bookkeeping process easier? 22. Is it possible to find out from an entity’s financial statements whether the entity uses reversing entries? 23. Adjustments are recorded for the following items: (a) services provided but not billed; (b) depreciation expense; (c) services provided for amounts received earlier; (d) interest expense payable; (e) supplies expense. Which of these can be reversed? Problem Set A Compute the following for 20X1: (a) Fee revenue; (b) Interest income; (c) Rent expense; (d) Salaries expense; and (e) Interest expense. Prepare the December 31 adjusting entries from the following information: (a) The company’s inventory of office supplies on November 30 was `2,850. The company bought supplies costing `4,710 in December. The inventory of office supplies on December 31 totalled `1,930. (b) The company paid rent for six months at `2,500 per month in advance on December 1 and charged it to Prepaid Rent. (c) The company had not paid the December salary of `4,900 at the month-end. (d) On December 9, a customer paid an advance of `9,300 for future services. The company provided services worth `7,100 to the customer in December. (e) The company made a three-year bank deposit of `20,000 on December 1. The deposit carried interest at 12 per cent per annum. (f) The company bought equipment costing `13,000 on November 1. The equipment had an estimated useful life of 10 years, at the end of which it was expected to fetch `1,000. (g) Income tax payable for the year is estimated at `2,100. Prepare the 20X8 statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet from the following adjusted trial balance of Quick Car Service Limited: The worksheet of Sheetal Company Limited is as follows: Required Complete the worksheet. The Statement of Profit and Loss, the Statement of Retained Earnings and the Balance Sheet columns of the worksheet of Manoj Company Limited are as follows: Required Prepare closing entries on December 31, 20XX. Required Prepare the adjusting entries on July 31, 20XX from the information. Problem Set B A review of the accounting records of Jeet Company on March 31, 20X4 reveals the following information relevant to the preparation of year-end adjusting entries: (a) There are five salaried employees. The company pays salaries on the first day of the following month. Three of the employees receive a salary of `2,500 per month and the other two `2,200 per month. (b) The company owns a car and a computer. The car was bought on June 1, 20X2 for `70,000 and was estimated to be useful for ten years. The computer was acquired on February 1, 20X4 for `12,000 and was estimated to be useful for five years. Neither asset has any salvage value at the end of its useful life. (c) There are two bills receivable: (i) The six-month bill for `20,000, dated December 1, 20X3 carries interest at 15 per cent per annum. (ii) The nine-month bill for `30,000, dated January 1, 20X4 carries interest at 16 per cent per annum. Interest is receivable at the time of maturity of the bills. (d) On October 23, 20X3, the company paid `20,000 for advertisement campaigns in two magazines and debited Prepaid advertisement. One of these is a monthly which was paid `12,000 to carry the advertisement in the following 12 issues published on the second day of every month. The other is a fortnightly that was paid `8,000, and it agreed to carry the advertisement in the following 20 issues published on the fifth and 20th day every month. (e) The company pays sales commission of 2 per cent on sales on the fifth day of the month following the sales. From April 20X3 to March 31, 20X4 the company paid sales commission of `17,000. The sales for the year were `875,000. March 20X3 sales were `45,000. (f) On January 12, 20X4, the company received `28,000 for future services. The company provided services for `11,000 on February 17, 20X4, but did not record it. Required Prepare adjusting entries on March 31, 20X4. Jain Real Estate Company began operations on April 1, 20X2. The following transactions took place in the first month of the company’s operations: Apr. 1 Began business by depositing `20,000 in bank in the company’s bank account in exchange for 2,000 shares. 5 Paid three months’ office rent in advance, `3,600. 7 Bought office supplies for cash, `610. 9 Received fees for services provided, `9,200. 16 Paid assistant’s salary for the first fortnight, `1,600. 19 Billed customers for services provided, `9,700. 24 Paid telephone bill for the month, `470. 28 Received advance payments from customers, `2,600. 30 Received but not paid electricity bill, `130. Required 1. Prepare journal entries for the transactions according to the cash system. 2. Prepare journal entries for the transactions according to the accrual system. Prepare adjusting entries for the following items: (a) The inventory of supplies on April 30 was `180 (b) The salary for the second fortnight was `1,600. 3. Compute the net profit under the cash system and the accrual system. The following additional information is available: (a) The swimming pool has an estimated life of five years and the tennis court has an estimated life of eight years. Neither has any scrap value. (b) The inventory of supplies on July 31 is `1,190. (c) Subscription revenue of `1,200 is due from members who have been admitted on a provisional basis. (d) Unearned subscription includes an amount of `300 for July. (e) Staff salaries for the last week totalling `1,290 have not been paid. (f) The local electricity company sent a bill for `280 for July after the close of the month’s transactions. (g) Insurance premium of `1,200 was paid on a one-year policy effective from July 1. Required 1. Prepare adjusting entries and post them to the T accounts. 2. Prepare an adjusted trial balance, a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, and a balance sheet. Computer Corner Ltd. was set up on April 1, 20X8 to teach word processing, spreadsheet, and database packages. The trial balance of the company at the end of the first year of operation is as follows: The following additional information is available: (a) The building was acquired on April 1, 20X8 and has an estimated life of 10 years. Two computers were bought on May 1, 20X8 at a cost of `9,000 each and are expected to be useful for three years. (b) The inventory of supplies on March 31 is `650. (c) Fee revenue of `3,100 is due from students for March. (d) Unearned revenue includes fees of `1,600 for March (e) Salaries of instructors for March totalling `1,100 have not been paid. (f) The telephone bill for March has not been received and is estimated to be `80. (g) Insurance premium of `4,800 was paid on October 1, 20X8 for a one-year policy effective from that date. (h) The Bills Payable account represents a three-month bill for `2,600 given to a supplier on February 1, 20X9. The bill carries interest at 12 per cent per annum. Required 1. Prepare adjusting entries and post them to T accounts. 2. Prepare an adjusted trial balance, a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, and a balance sheet. 3. Discuss how the figure of revenue from services might differ if the company were to follow the cash system instead of the accrual system. Required 1. Enter the trial balance amounts on a worksheet and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Estimated depreciation on office equipment, `1,000. (b) Inventory of office supplies, `930. (c) Services provided to clients paid for in advance but not taken as revenue, `460. (d) Services provided but not yet billed, `370. (e) Unpaid salaries, `490. (f) Unpaid cleaning expense, `240. (g) Estimated income tax expense, `300. 2. Prepare a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, and a balance sheet. 3. Prepare adjusting and closing entries. In 20XX, Anil Mathew started Mathew Adwaves Ltd. to provide advertising services and completed the following transactions during the first two months: July 1 Began business by depositing `20,000 in the company’s bank account in exchange for 2,000 shares of `10 each. 1 Paid three months’ rent in advance, `3,000. 1 Paid the premium on a one-year insurance policy, `900. 5 Bought office equipment on credit from Kiran Company, `6,000, payable in two equal instalments on July 31 and August 31. 7 Bought office supplies for cash, `2,390. 8 Bought art supplies on credit from Fairdeal Company, `4,510. 9 Billed customers for services provided, `6,800. 18 Received cash for services to be provided later, `1,800. 27 Received cash from customers billed on July 9, `4,900. 29 Paid salaries for July, `2,100. 31 Paid Kiran Company, `3,000. Aug. 1 Billed customers for services provided, `7,400. 3 Received cash from customers billed on July 9, `1,900. 5 Provided services for cash received on July 18. 9 Paid suppliers for art supplies, `2,100. 13 Bought art supplies on credit, `4,200. 17 Received cash from customers billed on August 1. 24 Bought office supplies for cash, `1,300. 29 Paid salaries for August, `2,300. 30 Paid dividend, `120. 31 Paid Kiran Company, `3,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the July transactions. 2. Open the necessary ledger accounts and post the July journal entries. 3. Prepare a trial balance for July on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) One month’s rent has expired, `1,000. (b) One month’s insurance has expired, `75. (c) Inventory of unused office supplies, `1,790. (d) Inventory of unused art supplies, `1,830. (e) Estimated depreciation on office equipment, `100. (f) Estimated income tax, `120. 4. Prepare the July statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. 5. Prepare and post the July adjusting and closing entries. 6. Prepare the July post-closing trial balance. 7. Prepare and post journal entries to record the August transactions. 8. Prepare a trial balance for August on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) One month’s rent has expired, `1,000. (b) One month’s insurance has expired, `75. (c) Inventory of unused office supplies, `1,990. (d) Inventory of unused art supplies, `3,240. (e) Estimated depreciation on office equipment, `100. (f) Estimated income tax, `915. 9. Prepare the August statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. 10. Prepare and post the August adjusting and closing entries. 11. Prepare the August post-closing trial balance. On April 1, 20X6, Manish Mukherjee set up Realtime Consultancy Ltd. with a share capital of `30,000. He did not maintain proper accounts of the company’s transactions although he barely noted some details in his personal diary. Mukherjee’s secretary has kept files containing invoices raised on customers and cash memos and invoices for purchases of office supplies. With great difficulty you have assembled the following information from Mukherjee’s diary, the files kept by his secretary, and the company’s bank statements: Required 1. Prepare the March trial balance on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet. 2. Prepare the 20X7 statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. 3. Prepare the March post-closing trial balance. Problem Set C A review of the accounting records of Suresh Company on July 31, 20X7 reveals the following information relevant to the preparation of year- end adjusting entries: (a) There are two bills payable: (i) The three-month bill for `10,000 signed on July 1, 20X7 carries interest at 12 per cent per annum. (ii) The eight-month bill for `15,000 dated January 1, 20X7 carries interest at 14 per cent per annum. Interest is payable at the time of maturity of the bills. (b) The company has two insurance policies. Policy No. F154 covers fire risk for two years and was taken on September 1, 20X6 by paying a premium of `12,000. Burglary risk is covered by Policy No. B113 taken on February 1, 20X7 for one year on payment of premium of `4,800. (c) The Unearned Revenue account shows a balance of `6,000. It represents retainer fee received on March 1, 20X7 from a client for an annual maintenance contract effective from that date. (d) There are eight salaried employees. Salaries are disbursed on the third day of the following month. Five employees receive a salary of `3,200 per month and the others `2,800 per month. (e) Sales commissions are 3 per cent of sales, payable on the seventh day of the month following the sales. During the year ended July 31, 20X7, the company paid sales commissions totalling `18,400. Sales for the year were `670,000. July 20X6 net sales were `60,000. (f) The company owns a van and a computer. The van was bought on March 1, 20X5 for `80,000 and was estimated to be useful for eight years. The computer was bought on March 1, 20X7 for `18,000 and was estimated to be useful for three years. Neither asset has any salvage value at the end of its useful life. Required Prepare adjusting entries on July 31, 20X7. Sandur Furniture Company was set up on November 1, 20X7 to repair home furniture. The following transactions took place in the first month of the company’s operations: Nov. 1 Began business by depositing `15,000 in the company’s bank account in exchange for 1,500 shares. 2 Paid premium on an insurance policy for one year, `1,800. 4 Paid for advertisements in a local monthly magazine to be carried in the three issues beginning current month, `4,800. 6 Bought office supplies for cash, `890. 10 Billed customers for services provided, `9,700. 16 Paid assistant’s salary for the first fortnight, `900. 17 Received payment from customers billed on November 10, `4,100. 27 Received fees for services provided, `6,500. 28 Received advance payments from customers, `1,400. 29 Paid electricity bill for the month, `120. 30 Received but not paid property tax demand, `250. Required 1. Prepare journal entries for the transactions according to the cash system. 2. Prepare journal entries for the transactions according to the accrual system. Prepare adjusting entries for the following items: (a) The inventory of supplies on November 30 was `210. (b) The salary for the second fortnight was `900. 3. Compute the net profit under the cash system and the accrual system. The following additional information is available: (a) The building is expected to be useful for 10 years and the office equipment has an estimated useful life of four years. None of these assets are expected to have any salvage value. (b) The inventory of office supplies on January 31 is `970. (c) Services for `900 were provided to customers in January although no bills have been raised. (d) Services for `720 were provided to customers who had made full advance payments. (e) Salaries of staff for the second fortnight totalling `3,100 have not been paid. (f) The telephone company sent a bill for `480 for January after the close of the month’s transactions. (g) The company paid six months’ rent as advance on January 1. Required 1. Prepare adjusting entries and post them to the T accounts. 2. Prepare an adjusted trial balance, a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, and a balance sheet. The following additional information is available: (a) The computer bought on March 1, 20X4 is expected to be useful for 3 years. The office equipment bought on May 1, 20X4 has an estimated useful life of 10 years. (b) The inventory of supplies on November 30 is `1,240. (c) Fee revenue of `6,200 is due from customers. (d) Unearned revenue includes fees of `2,100 earned in November. (e) Salaries of architects for November totalling `2,600 have not been paid. (f) The company paid 12 months’ rent in advance on January 1, 20X4 at `1,000 per month. (g) The Bills Receivable account represents a six-month bill for `3,400 given by a customer on August 1, 20X4. The bill carries interest at 15 per cent per annum. (h) Income tax of `2,500 is payable on November 30. Required 1. Prepare adjusting entries and post them to the T accounts. 2. Prepare adjusted trial balance, statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and the balance sheet. 3. Discuss how the figure of revenue from services might differ if the company were to follow the cash system instead of the accrual system. Required 1. Enter the trial balance amounts on a worksheet and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Estimated depreciation on packaging equipment, `3,000. (b) Estimated depreciation on office equipment, `1,000. (c) Inventory of packaging supplies, `2,360. (d) Inventory of office supplies, `1,190. (e) Prepaid rent includes rent for January to March, 20X6 at `840 per month. (f) Accrued interest on the bill payable at 15 per cent per annum from September 1, 20X5. (g) Services provided to clients that had been paid for in advance but not taken as revenue as revenue, `1,040. (h) Unbilled revenue, `1,390. (i) Unpaid salaries, `970. (j) Prepaid advertisement, `400. (k) Unpaid telephone expense, `200. (l) Estimated income tax expense, `1,600. 2. Prepare a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, and a balance sheet. 3. Prepare adjusting and closing entries. In 20XX, Raju Designs Ltd. completed the following transactions during the first two months: Nov. 1 Deposited `50,000 in the bank in the company’s bank account in exchange for 5,000 shares. 1 Paid one month’s rent, `2,000. 1 Paid the premium on a one-year insurance policy, `2,400. 3 Bought office equipment for cash, `3,000. 5 Bought office supplies on credit, `3,460. 9 Received cash for services provided, `4,900. 15 Paid assistant’s salary for the first fortnight, `700. 18 Billed customers for services provided, `4,300. 20 Paid for office supplies bought on November 5, `2,300. 28 Paid electricity bill for the month, `270. 29 Received cash from customers billed on November 18, `3,100. 29 Paid assistant’s salary for the second fortnight, `700. 30 Paid dividend, `1,000. Dec. 1 Paid the monthly rent, `2,000. 7 Bought office supplies on credit, `1,900. 9 Billed customers for services provided, `7,800. 10 Received cash from customers billed on November 18, `1,200. 15 Paid assistant’s salary for the first fortnight, `700. 18 Paid suppliers for office supplies bought on December 7, `1,500. 29 Paid electricity bill for the month, `310. 30 Paid assistant’s salary for the second fortnight, `700. 31 Paid dividend, `1,200. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the November transactions. 2. Open the necessary ledger accounts and post the November journal entries. 3. Prepare a trial balance for November on a worksheet form, and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) One month’s insurance has expired, `200. (b) Inventory of unused office supplies, `2,910. (c) Estimated depreciation on office equipment, `50. (d) Estimated income tax, `1,500. 4. Prepare the November statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. 5. Prepare and post the November adjusting and closing entries. 6. Prepare the November post-closing trial balance. 7. Prepare and post journal entries to record the December transactions. 8. Prepare a trial balance for December on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) One month’s insurance has expired, `200. (b) Inventory of unused office supplies, `4,050. (c) Estimated depreciation on office equipment, `50. (d) Estimated income tax, `1,400. 9. Prepare the December statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. 10. Prepare and post the December adjusting and closing entries. 11. Prepare the December post-closing trial balance. On January 1, 20X3, Veena and Mohan established VM Interior Decor Ltd. with a share capital of `20,000. In early January 20X4, just a few days before the accounting records were to be sent to the CA, there was a major fire in the office, which practically destroyed all the books and vouchers. Their office assistant, however, managed to pull out a few things including some files and scribbling pads. After poring over the documents for several hours, they have been able to put together the following information: Required 1. Prepare the December trial balance on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet. 2. Prepare the 20X3 statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet. 3. Prepare the December 20X3 post-closing trial balance. Business Decision Cases Sudipto Bhattacharyya is a professor of accounting in a leading business school. He has received the following message from a former student: Dear Professor Bhattacharyya, I belong to the MBA Class of 1997 and was your student in the financial accounting course. Currently, I am Vice President, Sales and Operations in the India office of findomega.com, the well-known Internet search engine listed in the National Stock Exchange of India. I need your advice on how to get out of a mess in my workplace. As you would know, findomega.com provides targeted advertising as part of its search services. It works as follows. When a user searches the Internet using our engine, findomega.com provides the requested information. In addition, it gives the names and related web links of five advertisers (who are our customers) for the products or services that the user may be potentially interested in. If the user clicks on any of those web links, we charge the customer concerned. Otherwise, we do not charge our customers. Of course, we never charge the Internet search user anything. Lately, we have localized the search and have made it possible to get information based on postal code and street name. This is generating a lot of additional revenue for us. My job is to contact potential customers and sell the idea of targeted advertising. Initially, businesses were not much enthusiastic, but the rising Internet penetration in India is making our service more attractive. When I get a customer to sign up with my company, I ask for clearance from my immediate boss who is the company’s Director of Sales and Marketing, whom I report to. (My boss reports to the company’s Managing Director in India, who in turn reports to the company’s regional office in Hong Kong.) Once my boss approves the deal by e-mail, I sign a contract with the customer. The contract is in a standard form that has been cleared by the Legal Department. The signed contract goes to Accounting for billing the customer based on the number of clicks, and the customer pays within one week. My boss is very happy with my work and he thinks that I am an asset to the company. Even in this recession, I have been able to get new business though it is not always easy, and I have always met my tight performance targets. In early December I received an interesting proposal. The prospective customer, an online travel agency, offered an innovative arrangement under which findomega.com will carry their advertisement 500 times that month. In return, the customer will carry an advertisement of our service the same number of times that month on their website at no charge. Since the company is cutting on payment for advertising and promotion, the proposal looked attractive to me. In addition, I would benefit from the additional business that would count towards my target and bonus. I e-mailed my boss and he promptly asked me to go ahead with the deal. I signed the contract. I had to make minor changes to the contract for the peculiarities of the arrangement since there was no precedent. The main change was that the contract required mutual billing by the two parties at the rates that my company typically charged for similar advertisements with cash payment arrangement. In order to settle the transaction, my company would record an equal amount of advertising and promotion expense. This morning I received a memo from the Managing Director asking me to explain my signing the deal without previous approval from anyone. What has upset me is the insinuation that I have done something improper and, much worse, I have potentially benefited from the deal. The fact is that my boss knows that I got nothing from the deal. I understand that he too has received a similar memo. I would like to add that findomega.com was set up by a group of computer programmers. It is one of the most innovative services and is the best in its league. My boss who has been with the company from its early days feels that these days the company is excessively concerned with procedures, more so after it went public a few years ago. It appears that in the past the atmosphere in the company used to be informal and that is what encouraged the employees to innovate and take big risks. I remember that in your classes you would stress that ethical conduct is not negotiable. Do you think what I did was wrong? Best regards, Amit Memo From: Managing Director March 2, 20XX To: Vice President, Sales and Operations In December you signed a contract for barter advertising. The contract is not in the standard form. According to the Compliance Department, this violates company policy. The company’s auditors have questioned recognizing revenue from the contract in the fourth quarter ended December 31. The Internal Audit Department has pointed out that if the contract were excluded, you would have fallen short of the quarterly target by 15 per cent. I question your motivation and sense of judgment. Please send your written explanation in three days. Required 1. Evaluate Amit’s action. 2. What is, in your opinion, the Managing Director’s point about revenue recognition? 3. Do you agree with Amit that the company’s procedures could stifle innovation and risk-taking? 4. Draft a response from Professor Bhattacharyya to Amit. Interpreting Financial Reports Established in 1976, Computer Associates grew from a three-person start-up into the world’s fourth largest independent software company. The company had 18,000 employees and was the dominant supplier of mainframe utility software. In the fiscal year ended March 2000, the company reported profits of $696 million on sales of $6.1 billion, five times the sales and profits it posted a decade earlier. It has a market value of $20.3 billion. 11 Adapted from two reports by Alex Berenson in The New York Times: A Software Company Runs Out of Tricks, April 29, 2001; Computer Associates Officials Defend Accounting Methods, May 1, 2001. On April 16, 2001, Computer Associates reported another successful quarter in spite of the slowdown in technology spending that had hurt other big software companies like Oracle. It said that on a “pro forma, pro rata” basis, its revenue had risen to $1.44 billion for the quarter, from $1.39 billion in the period a year earlier. Profits were 47 cents a share, it said, up from 39 cents a share. During a conference call later, Mr. Sanjay Kumar, the Chief Executive, and Ira Zar, the Chief Financial Officer, accepted analysts’ congratulations. “Today really is a great day for us at Computer Associates,” Mr. Kumar said. He attributed the company’s strong pro forma results to a new software licensing model that it unveiled on October 25, 2000. The company promised that its “new business model” would allow it to offer customers more flexible contract terms, including month-tomonth licenses. In addition, the new model would help the company by giving it a more predictable revenue stream. “The new business model turned out to be a competitive advantage for us,” Mr. Kumar said in the conference call. Over the next three days, the company’s stock soared $7.41 to $37, a gain of 25 per cent. After falling steeply from its January 2000 high of $75 to $18.13 in December, the stock rebounded strongly in 2001. According to generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), the company’s revenue fell almost 60 per cent, to $732 million, from $1.91 billion. After earning a profit of $1.13 a share, or about $700 million, in 2000, the company lost 29 cents a share, or about $175 million, in 2001. The divergence followed an equally big gap in the company’s quarter ended December 31, 2000. For that period, it reported pro forma revenue of $1.4 billion and profits of $247 million, while by the stricter standards it had revenue of $783 million and a loss of $342 million. The company said that its pro forma numbers more accurately reflected its results, after the change in its licensing terms. Big software companies usually offer clients software for a large initial fee that enables them to use it for a year, followed by annual fees to continue using it and receive product upgrades and technical support. The annual fees are usually 15–20 per cent of the first year’s fee. Customers can also sign a long-term contract and spread the initial fee, plus the annual fees, over the term of the contract. The fees increase along with the power of the computers used to run the software. Required 1. What do you understand by the term ‘pro forma’ results? How do they differ from GAAP results? 2. How is the company’s accounting related to its “business model”? 3. What is the major criticism of the accounting policy of Computer Associates? What would be your response if you were to speak in defence of the company? Financial Analysis Companies use pro forma measures in their earnings releases, financial statements, and management discussion and analysis. Study the use of these measures by the CNX S&P 500 companies for the last five years. Required 1. List the pro forma measures used by the companies. 2. Explain why companies use pro forma measures. 3. Compare the pro forma numbers with GAAP numbers. Do you see any patterns? 4. Are there any changes in the choice of the measures over time? Do you agree with the reasons? 5. How is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Study the financial statements of a sample of airlines. Required 1. List the major items of accrual and deferral. Explain for each item why an accrual or deferral is necessary. 2. Compare the levels of accrual and deferral over a two-year period. What did you learn from the comparison? 3. Accrual accounting requires the board of directors and the management to make a number of estimates and judgments relating to the financial statements on a prudent and reasonable basis. As an analyst, how can you assure yourself that the companies that you track meet this condition? 4. How is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Study the financial statements of a sample of telecommunication companies. Required 1. Formulate a set of critical issues in revenue recognition and matching in this business. 2. Examine the accounting policies of these companies. Are you satisfied with them? Why or why not? 3. Accrual accounting requires the board of directors and the management to make a number of estimates and judgments relating to the financial statements on a prudent and reasonable basis. As an analyst, how can you assure yourself that the companies that you track meet this condition? 4. How is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Answers to Test Your Understanding 1 IAS 18:7/Ind AS 18:7. IASB’s Exposure Draft Revenue from Contracts with Customers issued in 2012 will replace IAS 18. The draft defines income as “increases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of inflows or enhancements of assets or decreases of liabilities that result in increases in equity, other than those relating to contributions from equity participants.” It defines revenue as “income arising in the course of an entity’s ordinary activities.” Taken together, there is no substantial change in the definition of revenue for our purposes. 2 IASB F. 70(b). 3 IASB Conceptual Framework OB 17. 4 IASB Conceptual Framework OB17, OB18, OB19. 5 International Monetary Fund, Fiscal Transparency, Accountability, and Risk, August 2, 2012. 6 IAS 18:20/Ind AS 18:20. 7 You would have noted that from Chapter 1 onwards we have been considering revenue billed but not collected to be revenue at the transaction stage itself. It is also an accrual item. However, since firms routinely record it as a transaction item, we are not including it again. In this chapter, we pay particular attention to accrual items that are normally not considered in transaction processing, but are recorded at the end of the fiscal year. 8 Patricia M. Dechow, Accounting earnings and cash flows as measures of firm performance: The role of accounting accruals, Journal of Accounting and Economics, July 1994. 9 Some accounts may have more than one adjustment. For example, Revenue from Services has two adjustments in this illustration. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Identify the components of the statement of profit and loss of a merchandising organization. Record transactions related to sales of merchandise. Explain how to determine substance over form in sales transactions. Calculate the cost of goods sold using the periodic inventory system. Record transactions related to purchases of merchandise. Describe the common freight terms and record transportation costs. Understand operating expenses. Prepare a worksheet and closing entries for a merchandising organization. Prepare financial statements. PHANTOM SALES On April 30, 2012, Adidas announced that the company would be taking a €125 million writeoff for commercial irregularities in its India operations and a further restructuring charge of €70 million. On May 23, Reebok India, owned by Adidas, filed a complaint with Gurgaon Police accusing its former managing director, Subhinder Singh Prem, and chief operating officer, Vishnu Bhagat of commercial irregularities that had cost the company over `8.7 billion. The charges included “channel stuffing”, the practice of pushing stocks to retailers usually on credit in order to show high sales growth targets. As a result, inventories would go down and receivables would go up. Reebok India charged Prem and Bhagat with inflating sales figures to get the maximum bonus, increment, and incentives. The case was also investigated by the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) of the Ministry of Corporate Affairs. The accounting firm, Ernst & Young, submitted a forensic analysis of the case to the police. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL In Chapters 1–3, you learned how to record transactions and prepare the financial statements of service organizations. In this chapter, you will see a more complex type of business that links producers and consumers: The merchandising organization. These organizations buy goods for resale. The principle of income measurement for a merchandising organization is the same as that for a service organization: net profit results from matching expenses with revenues. The statement of profit and loss of a merchandising organization has three components: Revenue from sales; Cost of goods sold; and Operating expenses.1 In common parlance, revenue is top line, costs and expenses are middle line, and net profit is bottom line. For the sake of simplicity, at this stage we do not consider one-time and non-recurring items, such as gains and losses on disposal of investments and fixed assets. The primary source of revenue for a merchandising organization is the sale of goods, often referred to as revenue from sales or, simply, sales. The cost of goods sold is the total cost of merchandise sold during the period. This expense is directly related to the sales. The cost of goods sold is deducted from sales to arrive at an intermediate income amount called gross profit. Gross profit, expressed as a percentage of sales, is the gross profit ratio (or gross margin). Thus, a gross profit of 20 per cent on sales of `200,000 would mean that a business earned `40,000 after meeting the cost of goods sold. From Exhibit 4.1, we learn that Vijay Electronics earned a net sales revenue of `439,120 and incurred `298,700 for the goods that were sold, thus earning a gross profit of `140,420. The gross profit ratio is nearly 32 per cent. Operating expenses are expenses incurred in running the business. They are normally separated by function. Selling expenses arise from activities connected with selling and distributing the goods and include storage charges, salaries for the sales staff and commissions, and the cost of delivering goods to customers. Administrative expenses are those associated with general services, such as accounting, personnel, corporate office, and general administration. After calculating gross profit, we deduct operating expenses to arrive at profit before interest and tax (PBIT), or operating profit. Interest expense for borrowing and interest income from lending money are nonoperating items. For a business to be profitable, its sales should cover not only the cost of goods sold but also its operating and interest expenses. Net profit, or profit after tax (PAT), equals operating profit adjusted for non-operating items less income tax. Revenue from Sales Management, investors, and analysts monitor sales trends. An increasing trend indicates not only sales growth but also a probability of an increase in earnings. On the other hand, a falling trend might portend a downturn in a company’s fortunes. Sales are compared with the previous year’s sales (year on year, or “YoY”). Quarterly sales are compared with sales in the previous quarter (quarter on quarter, or “QoQ”) and the year-ago quarter. Besides, sales are compared with competitors’ sales. These comparisons help to spot major trends in sales. Sales are a better indicator of the future than profits. For example, Microsoft continues to report good profits from its established personal computer products but future growth will be in mobile devices. Sales Sales consist of cash sales and credit sales. Under accrual accounting, revenue is considered to be earned in the reporting period in which the ownership of the goods passes from the seller to the buyer. As a result, a business recognizes revenue at the time of the sale even though it may collect the payment later. Revenue from the sale of goods is recognized when all the following conditions are satisfied: 1. The entity has transferred to the buyer the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the goods. 2. The entity retains neither continuing managerial involvement to the degree usually associated with ownership nor effective control over the goods sold. 3. The amount of revenue can be measured reliably. 4. It is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the entity. 5. The costs incurred or to be incurred in respect of the transaction can be measured reliably.2 Chapter 3 discusses conditions 3 and 4. We will see condition 5 in Chapter 5. Let us now see how to apply conditions 1 and 2. Transfer of the risks and rewards of ownership The buyer should be the economic owner of the goods, even if there is no transfer of legal ownership. The litmus test of ownership is who will get to keep the profit if the price of the goods goes up or bear the loss if the price goes down. If the answer is ‘buyer’, it is a sale. Usually, the transfer of the risks and rewards of ownership occurs with physical delivery of the goods or transfer of legal title. Thus, in a vast majority of transactions (e.g. retail sales) delivery indicates sale. The Indian Sale of Goods Act lays down the principles for determining when legal title is transferred. If the seller retains an insignificant risk of ownership, the transaction is a sale. For example, many supermarkets offer terms such as “money back if not completely satisfied.” Here the seller recognizes the revenue and a liability for returns based on past experience and other relevant factors. No continuing involvement or control of the goods The spirit of a sale is that the buyer can decide what to do with the goods once the sale is over. For example, the seller of a piece of equipment cannot tell the buyer how much to produce, at what price to sell the output, whom to sell it to, or what to do with the used equipment. Exceptions include compliance with safety regulations or prevention of resale for illegal use or to specified parties for legitimate reasons such as export ban by the government. Invoice is a document that contains the details of a sale, such as the name of the product, number of units sold, unit price, total price, taxes and duties, total amount billed, and the payment and shipping terms. The seller prepares the invoice at the time of sale and sends it to the buyer. A retailer prepares the invoice at the point of sale. A wholesaler who supplies goods to retailers prepares the invoice after the shipping department notifies the accounting department that it has shipped the goods to the customer. Figure 4.2 shows a wholesaler’s invoice. Vijay Electronics records the sale transaction in Figure 4.2 as follows: The balance in the Sales account shows the total amount of cash and credit sales made during the reporting period. Since the seller may collect amounts due on credit sales in a subsequent period, there may be a significant difference between cash collections from sales and the amount of sales. Sales Returns and Allowances Most wholesalers and retailers allow their customers to return goods which are found to be unsatisfactory or defective. Companies following a policy of “satisfaction guaranteed” allow goods to be returned if the customer does not like them. A sales return is a merchandise returned by a buyer. Sometimes, the customer may find after the sale that the goods have minor defects and may agree to keep the goods if the seller allows a reduction of the sales price, called sales allowance. A seller may grant sales allowances for a number of reasons, including inferior quality, damage, deterioration in transit, or variation in specifications. In all cases of sales returns and allowances, the seller sends the buyer a document called credit note, which indicates that the balance in the customer’s account is being reduced. We could record sales returns and allowances as debits, because they cancel a portion of the sales revenue. However, information about the amount of sales returns and allowances is useful to management and is, therefore, shown separately. High returns could be an indication of the low quality of the goods or of high pressure selling. Besides, handling returned goods is a costly and timeconsuming affair. For these reasons, we debit Sales Returns and Allowances, a contra-revenue account. Suppose that on May 23 Vijay Electronics issues a credit note for `145 for the May 19 transaction. The following entry records this transaction: Trade Discounts A trade discount is a percentage reduction granted to a customer from the specified list price or catalogue price. Trade discounts serve several purposes. Trade discounts enable firms to quote different prices to different types of customers and grant quantity discounts. Also, the cost of printing catalogues is reduced, since a seller can use a catalogue for a longer period of time and announce discounts whenever prices change. Normally, the seller does not record trade discounts in the accounts. For example, suppose that the list price of a CD is `10, but the seller gives a discount of 10 per cent for buying a box of 10 CDs. If you buy a box, the seller would record a revenue of `90. Sales Discounts When a company sells goods on credit, it specifies the terms of payment on the invoice. These terms vary from industry to industry. For example, the invoice in Figure 4.2 shows the terms of payment as “net 45”. This is sometimes shortened as “n/45”. The term “n/45” means that the entire amount of invoice is due 45 days after May 19, 20X8 (invoice date), which is not later than July 3, 20X8. If the invoice is due 10 days after the end of the month, the terms will be “n/10/eom”. Sometimes, credit terms include discounts for early payment, called cash discounts. By offering an incentive for payment before the due date, the seller is able to speed up its cash inflows. Cash discount is different from trade discount. While the former is a deduction from the invoice price for prompt payment, the latter is a deduction from the catalogue price to determine the invoice price. A cash discount is called a sales discount by the seller and a purchase discount by the buyer. Credit terms of “2/10, n/45” mean that the buyer will get a 2 per cent discount of the invoice amount for paying within 10 days of the invoice date; alternatively, he may take 45 days and pay the full invoice amount without discount. The seller records the sales discounts at the time the customer pays since he does not know at the time of sale when the customer will pay. The Sales Discounts account shows the amount of sales discounts. Managers can examine the amount of sales discounts to evaluate the company’s credit and collection policy. The Sales Discounts account appears in the statement of profit and loss as an expense. Suppose that a sale for `1,000 on June 12 is on terms of “2/10, n/30”. On June 22, the buyer pays `980. The seller records the following entries: The sales discount is calculated on the invoice amount less any sales returns and allowances. For presentation in the statement of profit and loss, the seller deducts sales returns and allowances, trade discounts, and taxes and duties (e.g. value added tax, sales tax, and goods and services tax), and reports only the net sales. Sales discounts are not deducted. Exhibit 4.2 shows Vijay Electronics’ presentation of revenue, assuming sales of `461,020 and sales returns and allowances of `21,900. Substance over Form in Revenue Recognition Accountants recognize revenue from sale of goods on the basis of the intention of the contracting parties and the legal provisions for transfer of title to the goods. They have to go beyond the legal form of a transaction and find out whether it meets the conditions for revenue recognition. Sales transactions are structured in complex ways for business, tax, and regulatory reasons. Revenue recognition should be based on the economic substance of a transaction. That means determining whether the significant risks and rewards of ownership have been transferred to the buyer, the price is certain and the buyer will pay. We will now consider some special terms of sales to decide when to recognize revenue. Bill and hold sales In ‘bill and hold’ sales delivery is delayed at the buyer’s request, but the buyer takes title and accepts billing. Revenue is generally recognized when the buyer takes title, if it is probable that (a) delivery will be made, (b) the item is on hand, identified, and ready for delivery to the buyer, (c) the buyer acknowledges the deferred delivery instructions, and (d) the usual payment terms apply. Conditional sales Goods may be shipped subject to conditions to be fulfilled by the seller or the buyer, such as those described below: Installation and inspection If the contract requires installation by the seller and inspection by the buyer, the seller normally recognizes revenue when the buyer accepts delivery and installation and inspection are complete. On approval In a sale on approval, the buyer has to communicate his acceptance or rejection of the goods within a specified time period. If there is uncertainty about the possibility of return, revenue is recognized when the buyer accepts the goods or the specified time period for rejection has elapsed without any communication from the buyer. Consignment In a consignment “sale”, the recipient undertakes to sell the goods on behalf of the shipper. The shipper is the owner of the goods and the recipient is the shipper’s agent. The shipper recognizes revenue when the recipient sells the goods to a third party. Cash on delivery Revenue is recognized when the goods are delivered and cash is received by the seller or its agent. Lay away sales In a lay away sale, goods will be delivered when the buyer makes the final payment in a series of instalments. Revenue from such sales is recognized when the goods are delivered. However, when past experience indicates that most such sales are consummated, revenue may be recognized when a significant deposit is received provided the goods are on hand, identified, and ready for delivery to the buyer. Sale and repurchase agreements In a sale and repurchase agreement, the seller concurrently agrees to repurchase the same goods at a later date, or the seller has an option to repurchase the goods, or the buyer has an option to require the repurchase of the goods by the seller. Even though legal title may have been transferred, the seller retains the risks and rewards of ownership. Sale and repurchase agreements are usually product financing arrangements in which the seller raises a loan with the goods being given as collateral. The cash inflow to the buyer is a loan receipt and not a revenue. The difference between repurchase and sale prices represents the finance charge for the loan. The transaction does not give rise to revenue. Sales to distributors, dealers, or others for resale Revenue from such sales is generally recognized when the risks and rewards of ownership have passed. However, when the buyer is acting, in substance, as an agent, the sale is treated as a consignment “sale”. Instalment sales Revenue from instalment sale of goods has two parts: (1) the cash price or the price for immediate payment, and (2) interest on future instalments. The revenue representing the cash price should be recognized at the date of sale. This is just like recognizing revenue from a normal cash or credit sale. The interest element should be recognized as revenue as it is earned, using the effective interest method.3 Subscription to publications When the items are of similar value in each time period, revenue is recognized on a straight-line basis over the period in which the items are despatched. When the items vary in value from period to period, revenue is recognized on the basis of the sales value of the item despatched in relation to the total estimated sales value of all items covered by the subscription. Cost of Goods Solds The second most important part of a statement of profit and loss of a merchandising organization is the cost of goods sold. Merchandise inventory, or inventory, is the quantity of goods on hand and available for sale at a given time. The inventory on hand at the beginning of the reporting period is called the beginning inventory, or opening inventory. The inventory at the end of the period is called the ending inventory, or closing inventory. The ending inventory appears on the balance sheet as an asset. It will become a part of cost of goods sold in a later period when it is sold. This year’s beginning inventory was last year’s ending inventory. Cost of goods available for sale is the sum of the beginning inventory and the net cost of purchases. Cost of goods sold is the cost to the seller of goods sold to customers and it is the largest item of expense for merchandising companies. It is determined by computing the cost of (a) the beginning inventory, (b) the net purchases, and (c) the ending inventory. For presentation in the statement of profit and loss, the buyer deducts the amount of purchase returns and allowances as well as purchase discounts, and reports only the net purchases. Exhibit 4.3 shows the cost of goods sold section of Vijay Electronics’ statement of profit and loss. The merchandise inventory on January 1, 20X2 was `47,300. Assume purchases of `326,900, purchase returns and allowances of `13,200 and purchase discounts of `1,400. So the amount of net purchases is `312,300. Freight paid on purchases is `28,100. The net cost of purchases consisting of net purchases and freight is `340,400. Vijay Electronics could have sold merchandise of `387,700 during 20X2. This is the cost of goods available for sale. On December 31, 20X2, the merchandise inventory was `89,000. This is the unsold inventory. Subtracting the ending inventory from the cost of goods available for sale, we get the cost of goods sold of `298,700. Figure 4.3 illustrates the flow of goods during a reporting period. Beginning inventory and net cost of purchases, when combined, make up cost of goods available for sale. The latter is explained by cost of goods sold and ending inventory. The Periodic Inventory System The amount of merchandise inventory is determined by using either the periodic inventory system or the perpetual inventory system. Under the periodic inventory system, the Merchandise Inventory account is updated only periodically after a physical count has been made. Hence the name. Usually, the physical count takes place at the end of the reporting period. Some stores, particularly smaller ones, use periodic inventory. Net Cost of Purchases The term net cost of purchases means purchases less discounts and purchase returns and allowances plus transport and handling costs on the purchases. Government levies, such as import duties, purchase taxes, value added tax (VAT), goods and services tax (GST), and octroi, also form a part of the cost of purchases if they are not recoverable by the buyer when he sells the goods. The term net purchases refers to purchases less discounts, returns, and allowances. Purchases Under the periodic inventory system, a merchandising company debits the Purchases account to record the cost of merchandise bought for resale during the reporting period. Suppose that Vijay Electronics purchased merchandise costing `50,000 on September 9. The required journal entry is: Think of the Purchases account as a combination of an expense account and a temporary asset account. The balance of the account does not indicate how much of the goods has been sold. The Purchases account is used only for goods acquired for resale (after processing in the case of manufacturing organizations). Other assets such as office equipment, office supplies, and vehicles acquired for use in the business are recorded in the appropriate asset accounts. Purchase Returns and Allowances When a buyer finds merchandise purchased to be unsatisfactory, he may return the goods or accept an allowance on the price. The buyer sends a debit note to notify the seller that the latter’s balance is being reduced. Depending on the terms of purchase and trade practice, the buyer may either debit the seller’s account immediately or wait for the seller’s acceptance of the debit note before recording the debit. Purchase returns and allowances are recorded by crediting the Purchase Returns and Allowances account, as illustrated below: As illustrated in Exhibit 4.3, the statement of profit and loss presents the purchases net of purchase returns. The use of a separate account for returns provides information for monitoring the efficiency of the purchase function and the quality and reliability of the suppliers. High rates of purchase returns could indicate the need for reviewing purchasing practices and eliminating certain vendors. Purchase Discounts Often, the credit terms for purchase permit the buyer to deduct a stated cash discount if the buyer pays the invoice within a specified time period. Under the gross price method, discounts taken are recorded in the Purchase Discounts account. Suppose that the terms for a purchase of `1,000 of goods on January 3 are 2/10, n/30. If the buyer pays the invoice latest by January 13, he can take a 2 per cent discount. Thus, the buyer must pay only `980 to settle the invoice. The following entry records the transactions: Well-managed companies take advantage of the discounts allowed by their suppliers. If a buyer avails purchase discounts as a matter of policy, purchases can be recorded at the invoice price less discounts. This procedure is known as the net price method. If the invoice is paid after the discount period, the amount of discount is debited to Discounts Lost account. Under the net price method, the January 3 purchase is recorded as follows: The purchase discount is calculated on the invoice amount less any purchase return and allowances. Deciding on discounts How does a buyer decide whether to take advantage of discounts by using cash or borrowing? Suppose that a company buys goods for `1,000 with terms 2/10, n/30. It must pay `980 in 10 days or `1,000 in 30 days. By advancing payment by 20 days, the buyer earns a discount of `20. This is equivalent to investing `980 and earning an interest income of `20 for a period of 20 days. On an annual basis, the equivalent interest rate works out to 36.73 per cent, as computed below: If the interest rate on borrowing is less than 36.73 per cent per year, the buyer should borrow and pay within the discount period, since it is beneficial to take the discount. Freight on Purchases Transportation costs are often an important part of the cost of merchandise purchased. The cost of merchandise includes any transportation charges necessary to bring the goods to the buyer’s place of business. A separate Freight In account is used to record inward freight charges incurred on merchandise purchased. The following entry records a freight of `150 paid on a purchase: The normal balance of the Freight In account is debit. As illustrated in Exhibit 4.3, freight paid on purchases is added to net purchases to get the net cost of purchases. Freight In is an adjunct account, an account whose balance is added to the balance of another account. An adjunct account is the opposite of a contra account (e.g. accumulated depreciation), the balance of which is deducted from another account. Transit insurance on purchases is treated similar to freight in. The invoice normally indicates whether the seller or the buyer is to pay the freight. FOB shipping point means “free on board at shipping point”, i.e. the buyer incurs all transportation costs after the merchandise has been loaded on a train or truck. FOB destination means “free on board to destination”, i.e. the seller ships the goods to their destination without charge to the buyer. Thus, if the terms are FOB shipping point, the buyer pays the freight; if the terms are FOB destination, the seller pays the freight. The freight terms in the invoice in Figure 4.2 are FOB destination and, therefore, Vijay Electronics must pay the freight. Freight terms are also significant for another reason. Ownership of goods generally passes to the buyer at the FOB point. Therefore, if the terms are FOB shipping point, the buyer should include goods in transit at the year end in its ending inventory. If the terms are FOB destination, the seller should include goods in transit at the year end in its ending inventory. Inventory Losses Merchandise inventory is lost in a variety of ways, such as spoilage, employee theft, and shoplifting. Under the periodic inventory system, inventory losses are automatically included in the cost of goods sold. To illustrate this point, let us assume the following: cost of goods available for sale, `100,000; spoilage, `2,000; ending inventory, `17,000. Thus, the cost of goods sold is `83,000 (cost of goods available for sale, `100,000 – ending inventory, `17,000). Had there been no spoilage, the ending inventory would have been `19,000, and the cost of goods sold would have been `81,000 (`100,000 – `19,000), or `2,000 lower than that calculated earlier. Despite their best efforts, businesses suffer inventory losses. Under the periodic inventory system, the loss is tucked away in the cost of goods sold and a measure of the loss is not available. A rough-and-ready method of computing inventory loss under the periodic inventory system is explained later in this chapter. In Chapter 6, you will see another system – the perpetual inventory system – that provides better information about inventory loss. Operating Expenses The third most important part of a statement of profit and loss of a merchandising organization is operating expenses (also known as selling, general and administrative expenses or SGA). These are expenses other than cost of goods sold, interest, and income tax and are incurred in running the normal business of a company. These expenses are often grouped into useful categories such as selling and administrative expenses. Selling expenses include expenses of storing and preparing goods for sale, promoting sales, actually making sales, and delivering goods to customers. Examples include salaries, sales commissions, sales staff travel, advertising, store rent, depreciation on store equipment, and delivery expense. (Freight charges paid on purchases are a part of cost of goods sold.) Administrative expenses are incurred in the overall management of a business and include expenses relating to office salaries, office rent, office telephone, board meeting, depreciation on office equipment, and research and development. Worksheet for a Merchandising Organization The procedures for preparing the worksheet for a service organization described in Chapter 3 apply to a merchandising organization. In addition to the usual asset, liability, equity, revenue, and expense items for a service organization, the worksheet for a merchandising business has other items, such as sales, sales returns and allowances, sales discounts, purchases, purchase returns and allowances, purchase discounts, and merchandise inventory. Exhibit 4.4 presents the worksheet for Vijay Electronics. Trial Balance The amounts in the Trial Balance columns are the account balances on December 31, 20X2. The inventory of `47,300 that appears in the Trial Balance columns is the company’s inventory on December 31, 20X1. Adjustments We make the following adjustments: (a) Depreciation expense, office equipment, `4,000 (b) Depreciation expense, store equipment, `6,000 (c) Expiration of prepaid insurance, `1,200 (d) Unpaid sales salaries, `2,430 (e) Unpaid office salaries, `1,800 (f) Unpaid store rent, `200 (g) Income tax payable, `26,000. Account titles affected by adjustments appear in italics. Adjusted Trial Balance We combine each account balance in the trial balance with the corresponding adjustments in the Adjustments columns and enter the resulting balance on the same line in the Adjusted Trial Balance columns. This procedure is similar to that followed in Chapter 3. Statement of Profit and Loss, Statement of Retained Earnings, and Balance Sheet We extend each account balance appearing in the Adjusted Trial Balance to either the Statement of Profit and Loss columns or the Balance Sheet columns. As in Chapter 3, we extend revenue and expense items to the Statement of Profit and Loss columns, and assets, liabilities, and equity items to the Balance Sheet columns. Retained earnings and dividends go to the Statement of Retained Earnings column. Recall from Chapter 3 that dividends is not an expense item. Inventory We enter the beginning inventory amount of `47,300 in the Statement of Profit and Loss debit column to indicate that it has been used up during the year. Under the periodic inventory system, the business takes physical inventory on December 31, 20X2 to determine the ending inventory. The amount is `89,000. After extending all adjusted account balances to the proper worksheet columns, the next step is to insert the ending inventory amount in the Statement of Profit and Loss credit column. The effect of this procedure is to reduce the amount of cost of goods sold. Next, we enter the ending inventory amount in the Balance Sheet debit column so that the inventory balance of `89,000 will appear on the balance sheet as an asset. Determining Net Profit Net profit is the difference between the totals of the Statement of Profit and Loss columns. We enter the amount in the Balance Sheet credit column to balance the two columns. Purposely, we do not use the labels, revenue, and expense to describe the Statement of Profit and Loss column totals. This contrasts with our understanding in Chapter 3. The item, Sales returns and allowances, is not an expense though it appears in the Statement of Profit and Loss debit column. It merely offsets revenue from sales. Again, the Statement of Profit and Loss credit column has ending inventory, purchase return and allowances, and purchase discounts. These are not part of the revenue of the business; they are offsetting items for cost of goods sold. Closing Entries The closing entries for Vijay Electronics are as follows: Calculating cost of goods sold The following accounts are relevant to the calculation of cost of goods sold: Statement of Profit and Loss debit column Beginning inventory Purchases Freight in Statement of Profit and Loss credit column Ending inventory Purchase returns and allowances Purchase discounts The sum of the debits minus the sum of the credits equals cost of goods sold, `298,700: Financial Statements Accountants group items that appear on the financial statements into meaningful categories so that users can understand the information with relative ease. Schedule III to the Companies Act 2013 (earlier Schedule VI to the Companies Act 1956) lays down the form and content of the balance sheet and the statement of profit and loss. In this chapter, we will see the statement of profit and loss, the balance sheet, and the statement of retained earnings.4 We will see the statement of changes in equity in Chapter 10 and the cash flow statement in Chapter 12. Statement of Profit and Loss There are two ways of grouping items in the statement of profit and loss: (1) functional and (2) natural. In the functional classification, items are grouped according to the different activities of a business, such as manufacturing, trading, marketing, and administration. Cost of goods sold is subtracted from sales to get gross profit, and operating expenses are subtracted from gross profit to get operating profit. In the natural classification, purchases and expenses are added and their total is subtracted from sales to get profit. Here, it is not possible to find out the amount of gross profit. Exhibit 4.5 presents the statement of profit and loss of Vijay Electronics Limited in functional and natural forms. Functional classification is more informative than natural classification, because it contains performance measures such as gross profit and operating profit that are useful for analyzing the financial statements. The form for the statement of profit and loss specified in Schedule III is based on natural classification. However, companies are free to provide additional information based on functional classification. Key relationships Besides looking at overall business profitability, it is also necessary to compute intermediate profit figures. For example, a company may earn a high gross margin on sales. However, because of heavy advertising and sales commission, the final profit realized may be relatively small. The statement of profit and loss allows a user of financial statements to look at both the big picture and how net profit was derived. Statement of Retained Earnings Schedule III does not require a statement of retained earnings. It is a requirement in many countries. Exhibit 4.6 presents the statement of retained earnings of Vijay Electronics. Balance Sheet The balance sheet of Vijay Electronics appears in Exhibit 4.7. Balance sheet items are grouped into meaningful categories, such as shareholders’ funds, non-current liabilities, current liabilities, non-current assets, and current assets. Here is a quick look at the major groupings of balance sheet items (you will learn more about these items in the chapters mentioned): Shareholders’ funds consist of share capital and reserves and surplus. These represent the residual interest of the shareholders (Chapter 10). Non-current liabilities are liabilities that are not classified as current liabilities. Current liabilities are payable within a company’s normal operating cycle or twelve months after the reporting date. Typical items are trade payables and income tax payable (Chapter 9). Non-current assets are assets that are not classified as current assets. Fixed assets are assets held for use in the business and not for sale. Land, building, plant and machinery, furniture and fittings, and vehicles are examples of fixed assets (Chapter 7). Non-current investments are investments in financial assets, such as government securities and shares, that are not classified as current investments (Chapter 8). Current assets are realizable within a company’s normal operating cycle or 12 months after the reporting date. Typical items are inventories (Chapter 6), trade receivables and cash and bank balances (Chapter 5), and current investments (Chapter 8). Materiality Threshold The materiality threshold (also known as the materiality principle) saves us from having to make tedious calculations or disclosing needless detail, not warranted in most cases. An item is material if it is sufficiently large or important for users of the information to be influenced by it. The following quote summarizes the idea of materiality. Information is material if its omission or misstatement could influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial statements. Materiality depends on the size of the item or error judged in the particular circumstances of its omission or misstatement.5 The materiality threshold helps in balancing the costs and benefits of disclosures and accounting methods. Materiality is an important consideration in making financial reporting decisions. It provides answers to questions such as these: Should an enterprise physically verify every inventory or property, plant, and equipment item, or can it be selective? How should it select business segments for disclosure of their performance? How many items of expenses should it disclose? There are no clear answers to such questions. For example, while a payment of `10,000 is most probably not material for a business that reports a profit of `250 million, the item would be material if the payment was made in contravention of a law. Schedule III requires disclosure of any item of income or expenditure which exceeds 1 per cent of the revenue from operations or `100,000, whichever is higher. Judgment is required in applying the materiality test. Looking Back Identify the components of the statement of profit and loss of a merchandising organization These are (i) revenue from sales, (ii) cost of goods sold, and (iii) operating expenses. Record transactions related to sales of merchandise The Sales account records cash sales and credit sales of merchandise. Separate accounts record sales returns and allowances and sales discounts. Explain how to determine substance over form in sales transactions Revenue recognition should be based on the economic substance of a transaction and not its mere legal form. The test is whether the significant risks and rewards of ownership have been transferred to the buyer, the price is certain and the buyer will pay. Calculate the cost of goods sold using the periodic inventory system Cost of goods sold = Beginning inventory + Net cost of purchases – Ending inventory; Net cost of purchases = Net purchases + Freight on purchases; Net purchases = Purchases – Purchase returns and allowances – Purchase discounts. Under the periodic system, a business takes physical inventory at the end of each year. Record transactions related to purchases of merchandise A business that uses the periodic inventory system debits the Purchases account for purchases of merchandise. Separate accounts record purchase returns and allowances and purchase discounts. Describe the common freight terms and record transportation costs In FOB shipping point, the buyer pays the freight. In FOB destination, the seller pays the freight. Ownership of the goods generally passes at the FOB point. Understand operating expenses Operating expenses are expenses other than cost of goods sold, interest, and tax. Prepare a worksheet and closing entries for a merchandising organization Beginning inventory is entered in the Statement of Profit and Loss debit column, and ending inventory in the Statement of Profit and Loss credit column as well as in the Balance Sheet debit column. All expense accounts, beginning inventory, and revenue accounts are closed by transferring their balances to the statement of profit and loss. Prepare financial statements Financial statements present items in meaningful categories. The statement of profit and loss presents revenue from sales, cost of goods sold, and operating expenses. The balance sheet shows asset, liability and equity items under meaningful groups. Schedule III to the Companies Act 2013 lays down the form and content of the financial statements. Review Problem Pravin Trading Company had the following transactions with Uday Store during May: May 13 Sold merchandise with list price of `60,000 at a discount of 30 per cent; terms 1/10, n/60, FOB destination. 15 Paid freight, `700. 18 Accepted merchandise (sold on May 13) returned due to inferior quality, `2,000. 19 Sold merchandise with list price of `80,000 at a discount of 30 per cent; terms 1/10, n/60, FOB destination. 20 Paid freight, `400. 21 Received payment for the May 13 sale. 30 Received payment for the May 19 sale. Required 1. Prepare journal entries in Pravin Trading’s records. 2. Prepare journal entries in Uday Store’s records using (a) the gross price method and (b) the net price method. Solution ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. Name five characteristic account titles that you would expect to see in a retailer’s financial statements. 2. Explain the difference between trade discount and cash discount. 3. Explain why the amount of collections from customers during a period may differ from the net sales appearing on the statement of profit and loss. 4. How is the cost of goods sold determined under the periodic inventory system? 5. Give two examples of contra accounts in a merchandising organization. 6. What is an adjunct account? Give an example of an adjunct account for a wholesaler. 7. Kiran Company sells goods at prices exceeding purchase prices. Can it report a net loss? 8. Is the Sales Returns and Allowances account an expense account? Explain. 9. Complete the following relationships: (a) Cost of goods sold + Gross profit = ? (b) Operating profit + Operating expenses = ? (c) Cost of goods available for sale – Net cost of purchases = ? (d) Ending inventory + Cost of goods sold = ? (e) Net cost of purchases – Net purchases = ? Chen Company had the following transactions with Chang Company during April: Apr 3 Purchased `2,000 of merchandise; terms 2/10, n/30. 9 Purchased `9,000 of merchandise; terms 2/10, n/30. 14 Paid the invoice for the April 3 purchase. 19 Paid the invoice for the April 9 purchase. The beginning and ending merchandise inventories were `3,900 and `4200, respectively. Required Extend the account balances to their proper columns after entering the inventory amounts in the worksheet. From the data given in Problem 4A.4, prepare the closing entries. Problem Set B Harcharan Company completed the following transactions during June. June 1 Purchased merchandise on credit from Gurpreet Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB destination, `4,800. 2 Sold merchandise on credit to Manpreet Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB destination, `7,100. 2 Paid Inderjeet Company freight charges on merchandise sold, `150. 4 Purchased office supplies on credit from Inderbir Company, terms n/30, `180. 5 Issued a credit note to Manpreet Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `300. 6 Sold merchandise for cash, `1,900. 8 Purchased merchandise on credit from Krishan Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, `6,300. 9 Paid Inderjeet Company freight charges on merchandise purchased, `170. 10 Sold merchandise on credit to Kartar Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, `9,800. 11 Paid Gurpreet Company for the purchase on June 1. 12 Received a cheque from Manpreet Company for June 2 sales after allowing for the merchandise returned on June 5. 13 Issued a credit note to Kartar Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `800. 14 Paid Inderbir Company for the purchase on June 4. 15 Issued a debit note to Krishan Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `600. 18 Paid Krishan Company for the purchase on June 8 after allowing for the merchandise returned on June 15. 24 Purchased merchandise on credit from Gurpreet Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, `7,200. 29 Purchased a computer for office use on credit from Maninder Company, terms n/30, `2,400. 30 Received a cheque from Kartar Company for June 10 sales after allowing for the merchandise returned on June 13. Required Prepare general journal entries to record the transactions. Assume that Harcharan Company follows the periodic inventory system and records purchases initially at gross purchase price. The following is a partial list of account balances of Vision Opticals for the year ended June 30, 20X6: The beginning and ending merchandise inventories were `47,000 and `69,000, respectively. Required 1. Prepare a statement of profit and loss in functional form for the year ended June 30, 20X6. 2. Comment on the performance of the business, pointing out possible areas for improvement. Required 1. Copy the trial balance into the Trial Balance columns of a worksheet and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Estimated depreciation on store furniture, `1,500. (b) Ending office supplies inventory, `1,640. (c) Store rent at `600 per month paid on February 1, 20X2 for 24 months. (d) The current insurance policy was taken for one year from August 1, 20X2. (e) Office salaries accrued, `400. (f) Estimated income tax, `14,000. (g) Ending merchandise inventory, `36,400. 2. Prepare a statement of profit and loss in functional form for the year ended January 31, 20X3. The following are to be considered selling expenses: sales discounts; sales salaries expense; advertising expense; delivery expense; store rent; and depreciation expense, store furniture. 3. Prepare the closing entries. Required 1. Copy the trial balance into the Trial Balance columns of a worksheet and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Estimated depreciation on store equipment, `500. (b) Estimated depreciation on office furniture, `300. (c) Ending office supplies inventory, `590 (d) The current insurance policy was taken for one year from April 1, 20X3. (e) Advertisement expired, `1,300. (f) Office salaries accrued, `200. (g) Sales commissions accrued, `400. (h) Unpaid store rent, `300. (i) Unpaid office rent, `200. (j) Estimated income tax, `4,000. (k) Ending merchandise inventory, `38,710. 2. Prepare the March 20X4 statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet for the store. 3. Prepare the closing entries. In 20X2, Kiran set up Venus Trading Ltd. to deal in spices and engaged in the following transactions during the first month: Oct. 1 Began business by investing cash in the company’s share capital, `25,000. 1 Paid two months’ store rent in advance, `2,000. 1 Paid premium on a one-year insurance policy, `600. 2 Purchased store equipment for cash, `3,000. 2 Purchased office supplies for cash, `4,100. 5 Purchased merchandise on credit from Jai Hind Traders, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB destination, `7,000. 6 Sold merchandise on credit to Vijay Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB destination, `14,000. 10 Paid Hari Carriers freight charges on merchandise sold, `400. 14 Issued credit note to Vijay Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `1,000. 15 Paid Jai Hind Traders for the purchase on October 5. 16 Received a cheque from Vijay Company for October 6 sales after allowing for the merchandise returned on October 14. 20 Sold merchandise for cash, `4,300. 24 Purchased merchandise on credit from Nav Bharat Traders, terms 2/10, n/30, `8,600. 27 Paid telephone bill for the month, `460. 30 Paid store salaries, `800, office salaries, `250. 31 Paid dividend, `5,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions using the gross price method. 2. Open the necessary ledger accounts and post the July journal entries. 3. Prepare a trial balance for October on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Ending merchandise inventory, `8,720. (b) Inventory of unused office supplies, `3,580. (c) One month’s store rent expired, `1,000. (d) One month’s insurance expired, `50. (e) Estimated depreciation on store equipment, `50. (f) Estimated income tax, `1,000. 4. Prepare the October statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and the balance sheet. 5. Prepare and post the adjusting and closing entries for October. 6. Prepare the October post-closing trial balance. Problem Set C Bijoy Company completed the following transactions during September: Sep. 1 Purchased merchandise on credit from Jyotirmoy Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB destination, `7,900. 3 Sold merchandise on credit to Mrinal Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB destination, `9,300. 3 Paid Subhas Company freight charges on merchandise sold, `210. 4 Purchased office supplies on credit from Joy Company, terms n/60, `510. 5 Sold merchandise for cash, `700. 7 Issued credit note to Mrinal Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `500. 8 Purchased merchandise on credit from Shameek Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, `4,200. 9 Paid Subhas Company freight charges on merchandise purchased, `310. 10 Sold merchandise on credit to Jayant Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, `8,600. 11 Paid Jyotirmoy Company for the purchase on September 1. 13 Received a cheque from Mrinal Company for September 3 sales after allowing for the merchandise returned on September 7. 13 Issued credit note to Jayant Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `200. 14 Paid Joy Company for the purchase on September 4. 15 Issued debit note to Shameek Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `100. 18 Paid Shameek Company for the purchase on September 8 after allowing for the merchandise returned on September 15. 27 Purchased merchandise on credit from Jyotirmoy Company, terms 2/10, n/30, FOB shipping point, `6,100. 29 Purchased a delivery van for office use on credit from Anand Company, terms n/30, `11,000. 30 Received a cheque from Jayant Company for September 10 sales after allowing for the merchandise returned on September 13. Required Prepare general journal entries to record the transactions. Assume that Bijoy Company follows the periodic inventory system and records purchases initially at gross purchase price. The beginning and ending merchandise inventories were `23,100 and `46,900, respectively. Required 1. Prepare a statement of profit and loss in functional form for the year ended March 31, 20X8. 2. Comment on the performance of the business, pointing out the areas that might have to be examined closely. Required 1. Copy the trial balance into the Trial Balance columns of a worksheet and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Estimated depreciation on store equipment, `1,000. (b) Ending office supplies inventory, `390. (c) Store rent from April 1, 20X6 to September 30, 20X6 was paid at `900 per month and rent for the following 12-month period was paid at `1,000 per month in October 20X6. (d) The current insurance policy was taken for one year from April 1, 20X6. (e) Sales salaries accrued, `900. (f) Estimated income tax, `5,000. (g) Ending merchandise inventory, `23,100. 2. Prepare a statement of profit and loss in functional form for the company for the year ended March 31, 20X7. The following expenses are to be considered selling expenses: sales discounts; sales salaries expense; advertising expense; delivery expense; store rent expense; and depreciation expense, store equipment. 3. Prepare the closing entries. Required 1. Copy the trial balance into the Trial Balance columns of a worksheet and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Estimated depreciation on store furniture, `1,000. (b) Ending office supplies inventory, `730. (c) Store rent at `300 per month paid on August 1, 20X5 for the following twelve- month period. (d) The current insurance policy was taken for one year from September 1, 20X4. (e) Office salaries accrued, `100. (f) Sales salaries accrued, 500. (g) Unpaid advertisement, `900. (h) Estimated income tax, `9,000. (i) Ending merchandise inventory, `23,180. 2. Prepare a statement of profit and loss, a statement of retained earnings, and a balance sheet for the store for the year ended August 31, 20X5. 3. Prepare the closing entries. Raj established Alpha Trading Limited to deal in food grains and engaged in the following transactions during the first month: Feb. 1 Began business by investing cash in the company’s share capital, `40,000. 1 Paid six months’ store rent in advance, `12,000. 1 Paid premium on a one-year insurance policy, `3,600. 2 Purchased store equipment for cash, `18,000. 3 Purchased office supplies for cash, `3,700. 4 Purchased merchandise on credit from Shamlal Traders, terms 1/10, n/60, FOB shipping point, `9,000. 5 Paid Ibrahim Company freight on merchandise purchased, `860. 9 Sold merchandise on credit to Manoj Company, terms 1/10, n/60, FOB shipping point, `18,000. 10 Sold merchandise for cash, `11,600. 11 Issued debit note to Shamlal Traders for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `300. 14 Paid Shamlal Traders for the purchase on February 4 after allowing for the merchandise returned on February 11. 17 Issued credit note to Manoj Company for unsatisfactory merchandise returned, `1,000. 19 Received cheque from Manoj Company for February 9 sales after allowing for unsatisfactory merchandise returned on February 17. 24 Purchased merchandise on credit from Nav Bharat Traders, terms 1/10, n/60, `19,000. 26 Paid electricity bill for the month, `240. 27 Paid store salaries, `1,200; office salaries, `500. 28 Paid dividend, `8,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions using the gross price method. 2. Open the necessary ledger accounts and post the February journal entries. 3. Prepare a trial balance for February on a worksheet form and complete the worksheet using the following information: (a) Ending merchandise inventory, `18,400. (b) Inventory of unused office supplies, `2,300. (c) One month’s store rent has expired, `2,000. (d) One month’s insurance has expired, `300. (e) Estimated depreciation on store equipment, `150. (f) Estimated income tax, `4,000. 4. Prepare the February statement of profit and loss, statement of retained earnings, and balance sheet for February. 5. Prepare and post adjusting and closing entries for February. 6. Prepare a post-closing trial balance for February. Business Decision Cases Platinum Trends is a leader in branded jewellery. It started operations in 20X3. It sells its products to dealers in major cities in the country. Jewellery is subject to changes in fashion trends. The company bills the dealers on delivery of the products and recognizes revenue immediately. Payment terms are “2/10, n/30”. All invoices are paid within the credit period and 15 per cent of the payments are received within the discount period. The dealers manage to sell a significant portion of their purchases and return the unsold products to the company. Sales return in the industry have ranged between 19 per cent and 26 per cent in the past five years. The following table gives the company’s sales and returns for the past three years (March 31 fiscal year): The dealers are allowed to return any unsold products throughout year. Over 70 per cent of the sales happen in the festival season (September to January) and the remaining sales are spread almost evenly through the year. The company accounts for sales returns during the year. In June 20X8, Samir Jain, an analyst with Altus Securities, a reputable brokerage, questioned the company’s accounting for sales returns in an equity research report titled “A Lacklustre Jewel: Dubious Accounting by Platinum Trends”. Relevant extracts from the report are as follows: Platinum Trends has consistently outperformed its industry peers. The company’s sales growth of over 18 per cent and margins of 50 per cent are significantly superior to the industry median of 12 per cent and 32 per cent, respectively. The company’s management is focused on the upper end of the market. Almost all of the new products introduced in the last year have done well. We believe the company’s biggest strengths are its strong brand, ingenious design, and a committed dealer network. Even so, we have an issue with Platinum Trends’ accounting for sales returns. While the company accounts for all actual returns, it does not account for returns that are probable as of the balance sheet date. What this means is that products sold in a year may be returned in the following year, because they are no longer the flavour of the season. This would increase the revenue in the year, of sale and reduce the revenue in the year of return. Industry trends suggest that sales returns exceed 20 per cent. Our view is that the company’s delay in recognition of returns could result in overstatement of revenue and, what is worse, allow the company to move its revenue from one period to another. In view of the above, we recommend SELL on Platinum Trends’ shares. The company has issued the following press release in response to the research report: Platinum Trends is the industry leader in design, innovation, and branding and has received a number of awards competing with international jewellers including Bulgari, Cartier, and Pomellato. Sales growth and margins are consistently above the industry peers. The company’s shares have returned over 70 per cent over the past three years (as against the NSE 500 return of 34 per cent) and are now a matter of pride for its investors, much the same its products are for its customers. We are deeply disappointed by the negative research report of Altus Securities. The company recognizes revenue in accordance with the two major conditions in the accounting standards: 1. The seller of goods has transferred to the buyer the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the goods and the seller retains no effective control of the goods transferred to a degree usually associated with ownership; and 2. No significant uncertainty exists regarding the amount of the consideration that will be derived from the sale of the goods. The company has complied with both these conditions. While there is some probability that the goods may be returned by our dealers, the amount of consideration is certain. Once the company sells the products, the ownership passes to the dealers and the company has no control over the goods. Therefore, the company cannot record return of such products. The company accounts for returns from its dealers immediately and refunds the amounts promptly. In our view, accounting for expected returns, as contrasted with actual returns, is fraught with risk. That kind of accounting would be based on estimation and not on facts. Required 1. Evaluate the analyst’s comment and the company’s response on the company’s accounting for sales returns. 2. Develop an accounting policy for revenue recognition including sales returns. Interpreting Financial Reports Biocon Limited was founded by Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw in 1978 to manufacture enzymes. Over the years, it has evolved into a high-profile biopharmaceutical enterprise. The company went public in 2004. In 2012, the company reported revenue of `20.87 billion and net profit of `3.38 billion (2011: sales `18,576; net profit `3.40). In its 2011 annual report, the chairman’s review talked about its “strategic partnership” with Pfizer as follows: The Biocon–Pfizer partnership is indeed a significant inflection point in our growth path. Our companies bring together a winning combination of marketing, manufacturing, and research excellence which will build a formidable global footprint in diabetes care. Spurred by the success of our insulins, we entered into an exciting agreement with Pfizer to address a large and lucrative global biosimilar insulin opportunity. The most visible and high profile partnership that we recently announced was with the world’s leading pharmaceutical company, Pfizer, to commercialize our insulins portfolio. Pfizer will have exclusive and a few co-exclusive rights to commercialize these products globally, while Biocon will be responsible for the clinical development, manufacture, and supply of these biosimilar insulin products. We firmly believe this landmark partnership will drive considerable growth in the foreseeable future. The Highlights section of the report described the terms of the agreement with Pfizer: In October 2010, Biocon signed a definitive global agreement with Pfizer Inc., the world’s leading biopharmaceutical company, for the worldwide commercialization of Biocon’s biosimilar versions of insulin and insulin analog products. Pfizer will have exclusive rights to commercialize these products globally, with certain exceptions, including co-exclusive rights for all of the products with Biocon in certain other markets. Pfizer will also have coexclusive rights with existing Biocon licensees, with respect to some of the products, primarily in a number of developing markets. Biocon will remain responsible for the clinical development, manufacture, and supply of these biosimilar insulin products, as well as for regulatory activities to secure their approval in various geographies. Biocon’s recombinant human insulin formulations are approved in 27 countries in developing markets, and commercialized in 23, while glargine has been launched in its first market, India. Under the terms of the agreement, Pfizer will make upfront payments totaling $200 million. Biocon is also eligible to receive development and regulatory milestone payments of up to $150 million and will receive additional payments linked to Pfizer’s sales of its four insulin biosimilar products across global markets. In March 2012, Biocon and Pfizer terminated the agreement. This is what the company’s chairman’s review had to say in 2012: The year under review also saw the dissolution of our global partnership for Biosimilar Insulin and Insulin Analogs with pharma major, Pfizer. A change in priority within Pfizer’s biosimilars division led to a preference for in house biosimilar programs that were perceived to deliver higher returns. This led the two companies to reach an agreement for amicable parting of ways which was believed to be in best mutual interest. In terms of business continuity, there will be minimal impact as Biocon will continue to develop its programs for global registrations as per plan, utilizing the retained payments received from Pfizer. We remain committed to our commercialization endeavour, albeit on a different path that will shift from a single global partner to multiple regional alliances. The benefit of licensing income to our PAT was sharply down to `390 million this fiscal from the exceptional levels recorded last fiscal of `990 million. However, improvements elsewhere maintained total PAT at near last year’s level. Going forward, our development expenses for Insulins program will be set off against the retained payments we have received from Pfizer. Note 41 to the 2012 financial statements described the accounting for the termination of the agreement as follows: In October 2010, Biocon and Pfizer entered into a global commercialization and supply agreement. Biocon was responsible for the clinical development, clinical trials and other activities to secure regulatory approval in various geographies. Pfizer had exclusive rights to commercialize Biocon’s biosimilar insulin portfolio. Pursuant to this agreement, Biocon received upfront payment and few milestone payments. Biocon had significant obligations relating to clinical development and regulatory activities. Consequently amounts received under the global commercialization and supply agreement were being recognized in the statement of profit and loss under percentage completion method. In March 2012, Biocon and Pfizer terminated the global commercialization and supply agreement due to their individual priorities for their respective biosimilars businesses. Pursuant to the termination and transition agreement, the exclusive rights to commercialize reverted to Biocon and Pfizer has no further obligations to Biocon. Biocon is committed to the biosimilar insulins program and is continuing the development/clinical trial activities on a global scale. Biocon has evaluated the prevalent regulatory framework, industry practices, and ethics/governance requirements relating to clinical trials/regulatory submissions already initiated under the global commercialization agreement and has determined that it has continuing obligations to complete the aforesaid clinical development and regulatory activities for the global markets. Accordingly, Biocon will recognize the balance amount of `4,929 million (net of amounts incurred towards costs of fulfilling contractual obligations) [included in Deferred revenue] received from Pfizer, in the consolidated statement of profit and loss in future periods in line with costs to be incurred towards such clinical trial and development activities. The auditors, S.R. Batliboi Associates made the following comment on the company’s accounting for the termination of the contract: Without qualifying our opinion, (a) we draw attention to note 41 in the consolidated financial statements regarding management’s decision to defer recognition of amounts in the consolidated statement of profit and loss, pertaining to payments received pursuant to the Termination and Transition Agreement entered into with a customer for reasons as more fully discussed in the aforesaid note. Espirito Santo Securities, a brokerage, questioned the company’s accounting and argued that the company should have taken the amount of upfront fee as an exceptional item instead of deferring it to future periods commenting that the accounting policy was “aggressive”. But Biocon refuted the charges stating that “the accounting method followed in the case of fees received from Pfizer is in compliance with GAAP and appropriate disclosures have been provided.” It mentioned that “the licensing agreement with Pfizer was not an outright licensing deal, but a development licensing deal that mandated Biocon to incur development costs for obtaining regulatory approvals.”6 Required 1. 2. Evaluate Biocon’s accounting for the fee received from Pfizer. What do you think of the brokerage’s view of the company’s accounting? Specifically, is Biocon’s accounting “aggressive”? 3. Comment on the auditor’s position on the matter. Financial Analysis Study the statement of profit and loss and balance sheet of a sample of BSE 500 companies. Required 1. 2. Analyze the components of these statements and classify them into categories. List any items in the balance sheet that do not appear in the format specified in the Companies Act. What do you think of the location of these items? 3. Prepare a list of items and related amounts that appear in “other income” and “exceptional items”. What do you learn from this information? Study the statement of profit and loss and balance sheet of a sample of BSE 500 companies. Required 1. From the data available, attempt to determine the cost of goods sold, gross profit, operating expenses, and net profit of the companies. List the problems in this exercise. State the assumptions you make with reasons. 2. Some Indian companies disclose the cost of goods sold, gross profit, operating expenses, and net profit in their US GAAP or IFRS statements. Compare your results with these numbers and comment on any differences. 3. Prepare a report on your study explaining the relevance of what you learnt for the purpose of analyzing and interpreting financial statements. Answers to Test Your Understanding 4.1 With cash discount: 1. May 23; 2. February 10; 3. October 31; 4. August 10; 5. February 22. Without cash discount: 1. June 12; 2. March 16; 3. December 29; 4. September 14; 5. April 13. 4.2 (a) Sold merchandise on credit, `12,000. (b) Accepted merchandise returned by customer, `600. (c) Collected amount due on invoice, `11,400. (d) Sold merchandise on credit, `9,000. (e) Collected amount due on invoice, `8,910, after allowing cash discount of `90. 4.3 This is a sale and repurchase transaction. In substance, there is no sale. Manohar Company should treat the amount received as a loan and the difference of `1,800 between the sale and repurchase prices as interest on the loan. 4.4 Equivalent annual rate of interest = {360/20} {1/(100 – 1)} = 18.18 per cent. It is not attractive to borrow at 26 per cent and “invest” at 18.18 per cent. So the discount should not be availed. 4.5 Cost of goods sold = `11,000 + `210,000 – `7,000 – `3,000 + `18,000 – `17,000 = `212,000. 1 Published financial statements of Indian companies do not usually disclose the cost of goods sold and operating expenses. As a result, it is not possible to calculate some of the measures described in this chapter. 2 IAS 18:14/Ind AS 18:14/AS 9:10 and 9:11. 3 Chapters 8 and 9 explain the effective interest method. 4 The Companies Act 2013 uses the term profit and loss account, while Schedule III uses the term statement of profit and loss. 5 IASB F.30. 6 Biocon looks for life beyond Pfizer, Business Line July 9, 2012. Being able to read company annual reports is possibly the best reality check on your accounting. Comprehensive Cases help you find out how well you have understood the contents of annual reports. Solving the Comprehensive Cases involve finding answers to a set of questions that cover the basics. Answering the questions will increase your comfort with the annual report. There are three Comprehensive Cases in this book that are based on the annual report of Hindustan Unilever Limited, the consumer goods company. These Cases help you understand the contents of the annual report in easy steps. Having completed Chapters 1 to 4, you should be able to answer the following questions: What is accounting? Who uses accounting information? What does he or she do with it? How can we process transactions efficiently? Why do we have accrual? What are the main sections of the annual report? Who are the individuals or agencies responsible for them? What accounting principles do we apply to the items in the financial statements? STEP 1: Basics of Business, Financial Statements, and Accounting Systems Business: 1. What is the company’s business? 2. What are its main products and services. Name some of the company’s brands. 3. Who are likely to be the company’s major suppliers? Does the company have suppliers from abroad? 4. Who are likely to be the company’s major customers? Does the company export its products? To which countries? 5. How many employees does it have? Why is this information important? Annual Report: 6. Read the “Contents” page. Mark the items that relate to financial statements as “FS” and the rest as “NFS”. 7. What information does the company provide in items that you have marked as “NFS”? Is the information useful? How? Who is the intended audience? Will they be able to understand the information? 8. When was the annual general meeting to be held? What were the items to be discussed? Financial Statements: 9. Identify the company’s reporting entities. 10. Locate the following financial statements: the statement of profit and loss, the statement of retained earnings, the balance sheet, the cash flow statement, and the statement of changes in equity. 11. List the company’s asset, liability, and equity items. 12. Verify that the financial statements satisfy the accounting equation. 13. How is the information in the notes to the financial statements useful? Give five examples of how the notes explain the items in the financial statements. 14. Identify the matters covered by the accounting policies. 15. Where are the accounting measurement assumptions stated? 16. Who is responsible for the information in the financial statements? 17. Think of information that you think would be useful but not disclosed in the financial statements. Why do you think the information is not disclosed? 18. Think of information not reported in the financial statements but would be available internally. Auditors: 19. Who are the company’s auditors? 20. Are they a member of a Big Four firm? If yes, which one? 21. Who appoints the auditors? 22. To whom is the auditors’ report addressed? Why? 23. List the main items on which the auditors report. 24. What is the auditors’ opinion on the financial statements? 25. Does the auditors’ report contain any recommendation to present and potential investors? 26. How much was the auditors’ remuneration? 27. Did the auditors provide any non-audit services to the company? If yes, how much was the payment for those services? Why is this information important? Accounting Systems and Records: 28. What are the company’s major items of revenue? Where will the information about revenues come from for preparing the financial statements? 29. What are its major items of expenses? Where will the information about expenses come from for preparing the financial statements? 30. How would you assure yourself that the accounting system is reliable? 31. Prepare journal entries to record changes in the following items in the balance sheet, assuming that the changes represent cash receipt or payment: (a) Security deposits from distributors; (b) Trade payables; (c) Advances from customers; (d) Purchase of buildings; (e) Security deposits with government authorities; and (f) Computer software. 32. Prepare journal entries to record the following items in the cash flow statement: (a) Income tax paid; (b) Interest paid; (c) Interest received; (d) Dividend received; (e) Purchase of current investments; and (f) Dividend paid. 33. The company’s trial balance certainly balanced. Think of some errors that could have occurred and how these might have been corrected. STEP 2: Income Measurement General: 1. The statement of profit and loss has more than one “profit” number. Why? 2. Give five examples each of accruals and deferrals in the financial statements. 3. Give five examples each of temporary accounts and permanent accounts in the financial statements. 4. Give an example of an item that would qualify for reversing and illustrate how it would be reversed using the information in the financial statements. 5. Prepare a diagram showing the flow of merchandise from the company to the consumer. 6. Compare the company’s presentation of revenue, expenses, and profit with the statement of profit and loss in Exhibit 4.1. How do they differ? 7. Identify the beginning and ending inventories. Revenue: 8. Is the classification of revenue informative? Why or why not? 9. When does the company recognize sales revenue? 10. Identify the company’s gains and other non-operating income. 11. Locate any references to accounting principles related to revenues in the financial statements and related information. 12. When does the company recognize revenue from services? Why? 13. When does the company recognize dividend income? Why? 14. How does the company treat trade discounts? Expenses: 15. Is the classification of expenses informative? Explain. 16. When does the company recognize expenses? 17. Identify the company’s losses and other non-operating expenses. 18. Locate any references to accounting principles related to expenses in the financial statements and related information. 19. Is it possible to calculate the cost of goods sold? What additional information would you need? 20. How much was the freight on purchases? 21. What was the amount of purchases? 22. What was the total amount spent on employees? 23. How much did the company spend on advertising? As a percentage of revenue? “Neutrality is important. There should be no attempt to tilt financial information one way or the other.” Question: In India, proprietorships, partnerships, and other traditional forms of business organization are more pervasive in production, consumption, employment, channelling savings, and capital formation than listed companies are. Many listed companies are also family-managed and/or family-controlled. How would India benefit from adopting the IASB’s standards? What are the costs? Answer: It is not just in India that non-corporate organizations play an important role. In the US, 80 per cent of the employment is in small and medium enterprises (SMEs). The situation is similar in much of Asia, Brazil, and elsewhere. I think there are benefits to IFRS adoption for India, such as a lower cost of capital. Question: India is planning to converge its national accounting standards with, rather than adopt, IFRS. As a result, there may be carve-outs of accounting treatments in some standards, some standards may be implemented with a lag, and a few standards may not be implemented at all. What is the IASB’s experience with convergence in other countries? Answer: Convergence rather than adoption would mean all the hard work that goes with adoption, perhaps not all the benefits. If there are concerns, these could be addressed by active participation at the front end of standard-setting. Early discussions would bring up the issues in time. The Board values healthy dialogues with constituents. Much of the world has fully adopted IFRS. That includes Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. Some countries, such as France, India, and Malaysia, have issues with the agriculture standard, because of the fair value accounting requirement. India, Korea, and possibly others have problems with foreign currency gains and losses. As for Europe, in practice, it is adoption despite the carve-out on macrohedging. Question: Fair value accounting that is the bedrock of IFRS came in for a lot of criticism during the recent financial crisis. Some even argued that being pro-cyclical, fair value accounting aggravated the crisis. What is your view? Answer: Fair value is one of the tools. We should not ignore it. It appears that fair value did not cause or aggravate the crisis. For example, a study of large banks by Sanders Shaffers at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston does not reveal a clear link between fair value accounting, regulatory capital rules, pro-cyclicality, and financial contagion. It appears to me that loan loss accounting based on incurred loss was the problem, not fair value accounting. Question: How successful has the IASB been in persuading the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to move to IFRS? What are the major problem areas? Answer: We are bridging the gaps between the two. There are some lingering differences. Take, for example, revenue. The 150 or so pronouncements in US GAAP may be too many and the IASB’s two standards may be too few. There are differences in leases and insurance. But we are progressing. The US authorities are worried for losing control over standard-setting. Question: There is a view in the accounting community in India that conservatism in financial reporting coupled with the Reserve Bank of India’s prudential regulations protected the country’s financial institutions from the financial crisis. For example, a Bear Stearns or Lehman did not happen in India. But conservatism does not have a place in IFRS. How would the IASB address Indian accountants’ concerns about moving to neutrality from conservatism? Answer: India does not have financial institutions or products similar to what the West has. If you do not have Lehman-like financial institutions, there can be no Lehman-like failures. Neutrality is most important, because different people have different needs. So there should be no attempt to tilt financial information one way or the other. Question: During the financial crisis the IASB modified its fair value accounting requirements in response to pressure from national governments in Europe. Does it mean that accounting standard-setting cannot be an entirely technical activity? Answer: It is inevitable for policymakers to ask whether the accounting standards are good for them. It also happened in the US. As long as we live in a society, we are not immune to the influence of larger forces. We need to strengthen the governance of institutions. The IASB has learnt its lessons from the financial crisis. Question: Auditors monitor compliance with IFRS and governments and securities regulators are responsible for enforcement of financial reporting regulations. Given the wide variation in the quality of auditing and enforcement across countries, how does the IASB plan to improve comparability in the way the standards are applied? Answer: We are not a regulatory body. Regulation is left to auditors and securities regulators. We do not hold the silver bullet. Standards are building blocks. Will you miss a building block? We expect everyone who comes to the party to behave in a socially acceptable way. For the orchestra to perform, everyone has to play their part well. IOSCO (International Organization of Securities Commissions) can do something. Question: Financial statements are getting longer and more difficult to read. Would it be a good idea to ask companies to produce a simplified set of financial statements for use by non-professional users? Answer: Is the human body becoming more complex or is the science of medicine exploring more conditions? It is not possible to reduce business to one or two lines. That said, disclosure overload is an issue and is being addressed. The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) have taken up disclosure norms. The New Zealand Institute of Accountants has also taken up this issue. It is fascinating that in the financial crisis the view was that disclosure was inadequate. It is important to make financial statements more accessible to users. Some answers are being talked about. Can standard notes be put on the company website? Can there be abbreviated financial statements? There is a lot of activity. I do not know when it will come to fruition. Of late, FASB and the IASB are talking of disclosure objectives. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. Define internal control and explain the need for internal control systems. Describe the features of a good internal control system. Explain internal control procedures for cash receipts and payments. Explain the importance of cash management. Prepare a bank reconciliation and explain its purpose. Define trade receivables and explain accounting for uncollectible accounts. Estimate uncollectible accounts. Record transactions in bills receivable. Explain revenue recognition for construction contracts, franchises, and leases. Describe pledging, assignment, and factoring of receivables. Analyze the quality of receivables. SATYAM’S TRUTH One of Eric and Bill’s Bottom Liners comic strip says: “Remember, past performance is no guarantee that there was actually any past performance.” On January 7, 2009, Ramalinga Raju, the then chairman and managing director of Satyam Computer Services Limited stunned the world by disclosing that he had manipulated the company’s financial statements for several years. On that day, Satyam’s stock plunged to `40.25 at the National Stock Exchange, after opening at `179, and touched a low of `6.30 on January 9, 2009, the next trading day. The Sensex crashed seven per cent. As a news report put it, it was “a unique case of upheavals at a single company pulling down the Indian stock market.”1 The total size of the manipulation was initially put at `70 billion. In the quarter ended September 30, 2008, Satyam reported a revenue of `27 billion and an operating margin of `6.5 billion (24 per cent of revenue), as against the actual revenue of `21 billion and an operating margin of `0.61 billion (3 per cent of revenue). This resulted in reporting fictitious cash of nearly `6 billion in that quarter alone. Significantly, the company was listed in the New York Stock Exchange (besides in India) and was audited by a member of PricewaterhouseCoopers, a Big Four accounting firm. It had an impressive board of directors: its outside directors were eminent individuals, including a retired Cabinet Secretary, the inventor of the Pentium chip, a professor of accounting at an iconic US business school, a dean of a leading business school in India, and a retired director of a top engineering school in India. Satyam had received accolades and awards for corporate governance. Raju had appeared many times on magazine covers and television programmes. In a widely circulated statement, Raju said: “It was like riding a tiger, not knowing how to get off without being eaten.” This is the key point about any accounting fraud: it is easy to start a fraud but impossible to exit without being caught. A fraud often unravels in the wake of an industry downturn, a family dispute, a disgruntled employee blowing the whistle, or a problem with the political establishment. News reports and government documents suggest that there were fictitious invoices and these were later shown as realized and represented by fictitious bank balances. The Satyam trial is on. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL Financial accounting performs a custodial function by prescribing and monitoring systems for control over an enterprise’s assets. In this chapter, you will appreciate the need for internal control systems and identify the features of good systems. You will learn about devices organizations use to maintain strict control over cash. Business organizations extend credit to their customers. You will study the problem of accounting for uncollectible accounts and learn how to estimate bad debts. You will learn about bills receivable, a widely used means for extending credit. Finally, you will learn how to analyze the quality of a company’s trade receivables from the information available in the financial statements. Internal Control Systems Assets such as cash and receivables are highly vulnerable to theft and embezzlement. Sound internal control systems are necessary to ensure protection of an enterprise’s assets. Effective control systems have become critical for business success, given the rise in white collar crime. Definition Internal control is “a process effected by an entity’s board of directors, management, and other personnel, designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of objectives in the following categories: 1. Effectiveness and efficiency of operations; 2. Reliability of financial reporting; and 3. Compliance with applicable laws and regulations.”2 We note from the definition that internal control is a process, effected by people at every level of an organization, can provide reasonable assurance, not absolute assurance, to an entity’s management and board, and is geared to the achievement of objectives in one or more separate but overlapping categories. An internal control system extends beyond matters that relate directly to the functions of the accounting system. Internal controls comprise accounting controls and administrative controls, as illustrated in Exhibit 5.1. In many cases, an administrative control is the starting point for establishing accounting control. For example, a requirement that every employee must submit a report describing the purpose and result of an official travel is related to the accounting control for payment of official travel expense. In practice, some controls may be meant for both managerial decision-making and custody of property. For instance, a product cost classification may be used for recording the value of inventories (an accounting matter), as also for product pricing (an administrative matter). Administrative controls span different functional areas and are dealt with in courses in management accounting, production management, and marketing management. Since the accountant is responsible for establishing systems for the safeguarding of assets and the reliability of records, a study of the elements of accounting controls is an important part of a course in financial accounting. Features of a Good Internal Control System A good internal control system is essential for prevention and early detection of fraud. We will now see the features of a good internal control system. Separation of duties The organizational structure should provide for the segregation of functional responsibilities. No individual should be responsible for all phases of a transaction. Segregation of operations, custody, and accounting significantly reduce the chances of fraud, since fraud would become more difficult if two or more individuals have to collude. In a sale transaction, one employee may enter the quantity of the item sold, a second employee may input its price, and a third may post the invoice to the customer’s ledger. Authorizing and recording transactions A competent official in the organization must authorize transactions, preferably by signing or initialling a document. Then the accounting department must record the transactions, by first classifying them on the basis of a carefully devised scheme and then summarizing them according to the classification. There are several mechanisms to verify the correctness of the recording process. For example, preparation of a trial balance is a check on the proper recording of debits and credits. Sound administrative practices All major instructions and procedures should be in writing. Many organizations have manuals that describe the procedures to be followed by employees in carrying out their duties. They lay down the standards of work and specify the responsibilities of individual managers. Also, they prepare budgets and circulate them to key managers. Sound personnel policies Reliable and competent personnel are fundamental to the success of a control system. The organization should verify past experience cited in job applications and investigate significant gaps in experience. At times, it may turn out that a candidate was serving a jail sentence during an unexplained gap in employment. Mass recruitment is risky, because it does not allow for proper preemployment screening. Wherever necessary, an organization should engage the services of specialist investigation agencies. (In fact, some organizations employ detectives to verify the background of selected candidates.) There should be periodical rotation of employees on different jobs and regular supervision of their work. Many organizations require employees in key positions to take vacation every year in order to let them have a well-deserved break as well as to find out what they were doing. Fidelity bonds insure the company against employee theft. Internal audit Human ingenuity is inexhaustible. Dishonest employees find out ways of defrauding the organization despite the existence of many controls. The organization should always be alert to possibilities of embezzlements, frauds, and errors. Managers should regularly investigate the systems they are working with. Internal auditors are not directly involved in operations and they should perform regular reviews of internal control systems. They can evaluate both the overall efficiency of operations and the effectiveness of the internal control system. According to an Ernst & Young survey, 41 per cent of respondents said that they employed internal audit to detect fraud.3 The Companies Act 2013 requires companies to appoint an internal auditor, who shall be a CA or a cost accountant. Code of conduct and ethics policy Well-managed companies have a written code of conduct and ethics policy manual that every employee must strictly follow. These deal with a number of financial and non-financial matters. A Deloitte survey of banks suggests that 73 per cent of respondents have implemented an employee code of conduct.4 A few companies, e.g. Tata Steel, have appointed ethics counsellors to implement the code of conduct throughout the organization. Whistle-blowing A whistle-blower is a person who informs on person or organization engaged in illegal activities. Increasingly, whistle-blowing is recognized as an important method of fraud detection. The existence of a strong whistle-blowing mechanism is also useful in deterring fraud. In a survey of Indian managers by PricewaterhouseCoopers, 71 per cent of respondents confirmed having a formal whistle-blowing mechanism in place and 97 per cent of the respondents’ organizations allowed anonymity of the complainant.5 In some countries including the US and the UK, whistle-blowers get legal protection and financial rewards. For example, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act provides for payments in some cases to whistle-blowers. The Stock Exchange Listing Agreement in India requires listed companies to have a whistle-blower policy to report concerns about unethical behaviour, actual or suspected fraud or violation of the company’s code of conduct or ethics policy and to protect whistleblowers against victimization. Whistle-blowers may also have direct access to the chairman of the audit committee in exceptional cases. The company’s senior management sets the standards of ethical conduct. An Ernst & Young survey of Indian managers suggests that “weak tone at the top” is a major factor facilitating bribery and corruption.6 Ethical conduct has become an important consideration in investment evaluation after the Satyam scandal. Besides, there are specific laws in some countries prohibiting payment of bribes. For example, the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act 1977 prohibits all US persons and US-listed foreign companies from payment of bribes (variously known as “kickbacks”, “facilitation payments” and “speed money”). The UK Bribery Act 2010 has made the following criminal offences: bribing another, being bribed, bribing a foreign official, and, for commercial organizations, failing to prevent bribery. The UK Act prohibits bribery in both the public and the private sectors. In comparison, the Indian Prevention of Corruption Act 1988 is narrow in scope (it applies only to bribing a “public servant”, i.e. someone who holds a position in government) and even more weak in enforcement. Certainly, it has not prevented bribery in the country. India’s corruption rank (least corrupt = 1, most corrupt = 194) is 94, according to a report.7 Another report states that in India political parties scored highest on the perceived level of corruption among a set of 12 major institutions.8 Internal Control in a Computer Environment Business organizations use computers in their operations including controlling production, managing inventory levels, maintaining accounting records, and generating financial reports. They can perform complex operations at great speed with an extremely high degree of accuracy. From a control standpoint, the computer brings with it a host of problems and questions. The accountant should be fully aware of them. Frauds that would have necessitated the collusion of several employees can be perpetrated in a computer environment by a couple of employees without much difficulty. There are numerous horror stories of computer frauds. According to the KPMG India Fraud Survey 2012, 53 of respondents identified cyber crime as the top fraud concern for the future. Given its tremendous capabilities, as also its considerable potential for fraud, it is not difficult to understand why the computer looks like an angel and a devil at the same time. The features of a good internal control system described earlier are equally relevant in a computer environment. In addition, periodic audit of a company’s information systems by a qualified information systems auditor, such as a Certified Information Systems Auditor (CISA) from the Information System Audit and Control Association, is necessary. Internal Control and the External Auditor The external auditor has a keen interest in a company’s internal control system. He has no personal knowledge of the transactions recorded in the company’s books. So he has to rely on the soundness of the internal control system in carrying out the audit to be able to assure the users of financial statements that the statements are free from material errors and frauds. The quality of a company’s internal control would have a bearing on the auditor’s selection of audit procedures as well as his deciding on the extent of testing. Some organizations explicitly recognize the external auditors’ interest in the internal control system and involve them actively while initiating new procedures or changing existing procedures. The Companies Act 2013 requires external auditors to report whether the company has adequate internal financial controls in place and whether the controls are effective in operation. Board of Directors, Independent Directors, and Audit Committee The board of directors approves the company’s financial statements. The report of the board to the shareholders must include a directors’ responsibility statement (DRS). The DRS shall state that: (a) the applicable accounting standards have been followed along with proper explanation relating to material departures; (b) the directors have selected such accounting policies and applied them consistently and made judgments and estimates that are reasonable and prudent; (c) the directors have taken proper and sufficient care for the maintenance of adequate accounting records for safeguarding the assets of the company and for preventing and detecting fraud and other irregularities; (d) the directors have prepared the financial statements on a going concern basis; (e) the directors, in the case of a listed company, have laid down internal financial controls to be followed by the company and that such internal financial controls are adequate and were operating effectively; and (f) the directors have devised proper systems to ensure compliance with the provisions of all applicable laws and that such systems were adequate and were operating effectively. Independent directors and audit committee are important mechanisms to monitor the functioning of the board of directors. Independent directors are part-time directors who do not have any business or financial relationship with the company. The purpose of the audit committee, a committee of the board of directors, is to ensure that the directors act in the interests of the shareholders. The responsibilities of the audit committee are, among others, to monitor the integrity of the financial statements of the company and review the company’s internal financial control and risk management systems. The audit committee recommends the appointment and remuneration of auditors and reviews and monitors the auditor’s independence and the performance and effectiveness of the audit process. Internal Control for Cash The amount of cash is often small relative to the size of a business. Even so, most organizations pay greater attention to control of cash than to items such as inventories and property, plant, and equipment items. The reason is that cash, being the most liquid asset, is susceptible to embezzlement, theft, fraud, and defalcation than other assets. An employee can walk away with the company’s cash, but taking away physical items is not that easy. In fact, handling cash can prove to be the severest test of integrity for employees experiencing financial troubles. The organization should maintain strict control over cash receipts and payments. A system of internal control for cash should provide for protection of both cash receipts and cash disbursements. Wherever possible, duties involving the control of cash should be separated so that cash cannot be stolen without the collusion of two or more employees. Control over Cash Receipts Cash receipts consist of cash over-the-counter for sales and cash in the form of cheques, bank drafts, and bank transfers. All cash receipts should be recorded immediately upon receipt to prevent errors and frauds. An official receipt is issued for every remittance received by a business. Control over Cash Disbursements Most large embezzlements are effected through payment of fictitious invoices. Cash should be paid only on the basis of specific authorization supported by documents evidencing the validity and amount of the claim. All the relevant documents supporting the claim are put together in a voucher and the procedure for control of disbursements is, therefore, referred to as the voucher system. In addition, maximum possible use should be made of the principle of separation of duties in the purchase of goods and services and the payments made for them. The internal control plan requires the involvement of seven agencies in a purchase transaction. These are the user department, the purchase department, the accounting department, the receiving department, the cash office, the supplier, and the bank. Besides, every action is documented and subject to verification by another department. We will use a simple illustration to explain the voucher system. Suppose that Vinay Motor Company needs 200 car tyres. The manager of the company’s service department prepares a purchase requisition (Exhibit 5.2) for 200 car tyres and sends it to the purchasing department. Thereafter, the purchasing department places a purchase order (Exhibit 5.3) on a supplier. The purchase order describes the items ordered and specifies the price, shipping instructions, packing, and payment terms. Copies of the purchase order go simultaneously to the accounting department, with a copy of the purchase requisition, for arranging payment. The supplier ships the tyres to Vinay Motor Company and sends an invoice. The form of the invoice is similar to that in Figure 4.2. The supplier sends the invoice directly to the accounting department of Vinay Motor Company requesting payment. The goods are delivered to the receiving department of Vinay Motor Company. When the shipment arrives, the receiving department counts the goods and checks them for damage and agreement with the purchase order. Then, it prepares a receiving report and sends a copy of this report to the accounting department for arranging payment. After the receiving report arrives, the accounting department compares the invoice with the purchase order. If everything is in order, it approves the invoice for payment and prepares a voucher that contains the three supporting documents. The payment voucher (Exhibit 5.4) specifies the account to be debited and the net amount payable to the supplier. The accounting department sends the voucher to the cash office for payment shortly before it is due. In some systems, another person (sometimes called auditor) reviews the voucher once again. The cash office prepares the cheque for the amount shown on the voucher and forwards it to the supplier with a remittance advice showing details of the payment and a pre-printed acknowledgement to be completed by the supplier. Figure 5.1 summarizes the general internal control plan for payment of supplier invoices. The procedure described above is also followed in the case of other bills, such as those relating to office supplies, stores supplies, and services, with minor modifications. Cash and Cash Equivalents Cash consists of coins and currency, cheques, money orders, and money on deposit in bank, including deposits in current or savings accounts and time deposits. Cash includes any item that banks will accept for immediate deposit; thus, post-dated cheques are not cash. Cash equivalents are “short-term, highly liquid investments, that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash and which are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value.”9 Generally, an investment qualifies as a cash equivalent only when it has a short maturity of, say, three months or less from the date of acquisition. Treasury bills, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, and money market deposits are examples of cash equivalents. The objectives of cash management are as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. Ensuring that cash needs are well planned; Establishing independent accountability for cash collections; Ensuring recording of all payments; and Protecting cash resources from theft and embezzlement. Liquidity refers to the ease with which an asset can be converted into other assets, or used to buy services or satisfy obligations. Clearly, cash is the most liquid asset. Every business must own some cash so that bills for purchases and operating expenses can be paid on time and emergency needs can be met. We note that there is an insignificant amount kept in the form of cash (i.e. notes and coins) for making certain kinds of payments. HUL can withdraw the balance in a current account any time, but can withdraw the balance in a deposit account only after the term of the deposit. Banks pay interest on deposit accounts, but not on current accounts. In 2013, HUL held the bulk of its surplus cash in deposits (91 per cent). Relative to 2012, HUL appeared to prefer deposits to short-term investments, probably because of the better returns from deposits. Deposits for terms exceeding three months constituted a major portion of the deposits, because they offer higher interest rates than very short-term (three months or less) deposits. So you can see how the company tries to balance the conflicting demands of liquidity and profitability: keep some money in current accounts and very short-term deposits for paying employees, suppliers, and taxes but the bulk in short-term deposits for earning some return. Business must often make relatively small payments for items such as postage, local travel, minor repairs, and cleaning of premises. If such payments are made by cheque, numerous cheques would have to be written. Besides, cash payments are required when some parties would not accept cheques. Under the imprest system, a fixed cash advance is given and is periodically replenished for expenses incurred during a period. To enable such payments most companies establish a petty cash fund for disbursing small cash amounts. Bank Reconciliation The extensive use of banking arrangements is an important step in controlling cash transactions. Most organizations require each day’s cash receipts to be deposited intact into a bank account and all disbursements to be made by cheque or bank transfer. The bank’s records of deposits received and cheques paid provide a check on the internal cash records of the business. Almost every business has one or more current accounts. The bank sends the customer a monthly statement detailing the activity that has taken place in the account. The bank statement shows the beginning balance, deposits, cheques paid, and other transactions during the month, and the ending balance. Exhibit 5.5 shows a bank statement. Preparing a Bank Reconciliation The balance on a bank statement, or balance per bank, rarely agrees with the balance in the customer’s records, or balance per book. This happens, because the bank has not carried out some transactions of the customer, or the customer has not recorded some items appearing in the bank statement, or both. The constituent, banking term for customer, prepares a bank reconciliation to explain the difference between the two balances. The following are the most common reasons for the difference: The steps to be followed in preparing a bank reconciliation are: Step 1. Compare the deposits listed on the bank statement with the deposits shown in the customer’s records. Add any deposits not recorded by the bank to the balance per bank. Step 2. Compare the paid cheques listed on the bank statement with the cheques shown in the customer’s records. Deduct cheques issued but not yet presented to the bank from the balance per bank. Step 3. Add any credit advices for bills receivable collected, interest, and other items to the balance per book. Step 4. Deduct any debit advices for service charges, interest, and other items from the balance per book. Step 5. Identify any errors in the bank statement and/or customer’s records and add or deduct the related amounts to the balance per bank or per book, as appropriate. Step 6. Confirm that the adjusted book balance is equal to the adjusted bank balance. Illustration Suppose that Vinay Motor Company’s records show a balance of `7,699 on June 30. Suppose further that by applying the procedures described above we find the following differences: (a) Cheque # 5483 for `1,900 dated June 27 deposited on June 30 has not been collected. (b) Cheques issued and recorded by Vinay Motor but not yet presented to the bank for payment are as follows: (c) A credit advice states that the bank collected a bill receivable for `900 together with interest of `12. (d) Cheque # 2112 was recorded in the company’s records incorrectly as `5,481. (e) A credit advice states that the bank credited interest of `87. (f) A debit advice states that the bank levied quarterly service charge of `130. Exhibit 5.6 presents the bank reconciliation for Vinay Motor on June 30, 20XX. We use the serial numbers above as reference. Note that the adjusted balance of `8,631 is different from both the balance per bank and the balance per book. Adjusting and correcting the accounting records after reconciliation After the bank records the cheque under collection and pays the outstanding cheques, its records will show `8,631. However, Vinay Motor must record journal entries for certain items in order to reconcile the cash balance to the correct amount. The required entries are as follows: Bank reconciliation when the bank balance is overdrawn When a customer has issued cheques on the bank for more amount than the balance in its account and the bank pays these cheques, it is a case of overdraft. Either the customer’s records or the bank statement or both may indicate an overdraft. In that event, follow the above procedure for preparing bank reconciliation, but show the overdraft amount with a minus sign. Trade Receivables Trade receivables are short-term assets that arise from the sale of merchandise or services on credit. Manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers allow their customers some time to pay after the date of sale. Economic growth depends, in part, on the availability of credit for purchases by individuals as well as business enterprises. Advanced and sophisticated economies are characterized by a high percentage of credit sales. At the retail level, there has been a major increase in credit. With the rise of consumerism, many Indians are shedding their traditional debt shyness. “Buy now, pay later” seems to be the new slogan of consumerist India. The use of credit cards, also called plastic money, is on the rise. Consumer finance is available for buying a wide range of goods. Besides, home loans are quite common. The rapid rise in consumer credit has overshadowed the even greater use of credit by manufacturers and wholesalers. Experience has shown that extending credit can increase revenue and net profit significantly for many businesses. Of course, the additional profit generated from credit sales should exceed the additional expenses incurred in extending credit. These expenses include interest, credit investigation and rating of customers, additional record-keeping, and uncollectible amounts. Inadequate control over receivables is often a major cause of business failure. Therefore, business enterprises are keen to ensure that they sell to customers who will pay on time. The credit department investigates customers’ credit standing. It asks for information on customers’ financial resources (including audited financial statements, where appropriate) and other information to determine whether they will be willing and able to pay. In addition, the credit department often obtains a report from a reputable credit rating agency. In this chapter, we consider short-term receivables, i.e. amounts receivable in not more than one year. We discuss accounting for amounts receivable over longer periods, e.g. a five-year loan, in Chapter 8. Uncollectible Accounts Regardless of how diligently the credit department investigates customers, some customers will not pay. These are known as uncollectible accounts, or bad debts. Uncollectible accounts may arise due to several factors, such as errors in judgment of credit department personnel, unexpected financial problems of customers, and a downturn in general economic conditions resulting in an increase in business failures. Some amount of uncollectible accounts is an inevitable cost of doing business on credit, since not giving credit may result in loss of business in a competitive market. A basic rule of measuring business income is the matching principle that requires expenses to be matched with the revenue earned during a period. Bad debt losses are a part of the costs of doing business on credit and must be recognized in the period in which the revenue from credit sales is recognized. These differ from other expenses in that it is difficult to determine the time at which a receivable actually becomes uncollectible. A customer may not pay an invoice on the due date, but it does not mean that he will not pay. He may be experiencing a temporary cash problem or, as it happens sometimes, may have simply forgotten to pay. Bad debts pertaining to a reporting period may not be known until later. Since business organizations must prepare periodic financial statements, they must estimate the bad debt expense. To illustrate, let us assume that Sanjay Company made credit sales in the amount of `20,000 in the first year of operation and collected `14,000 during the year. The trade receivables at the end of the year amounted to `6,000. Suppose the company estimates that accounts totalling `900 may become uncollectible. It would record the following adjusting entry at the end of that year: Estimating Bad Debt Expense Accountants estimate uncollectible accounts on the basis of the company’s past experience, general economic conditions, and current payment trends. The aim is to produce a reasonable estimate of the amount of trade receivables expected to be eventually realized. Since the process of estimation involves considerable personal judgment, it is possible to produce a number of estimates that range from “highly pessimistic” to “highly optimistic”. As a matter of prudence, accountants frequently tend to estimate the amount at the upper end of the reasonable range so as to produce a relatively low value for trade receivables and a conservative net profit figure. The relevant adjusting entry is recorded after the company’s management approves the accountant’s estimate. Two methods are used to develop the estimates: the percentage of receivables method and the percentage of sales method. Percentage of receivables method Here, the enterprise estimates uncollectible accounts as a percentage of trade receivables appearing on its balance sheet. It may prepare an estimate based on a flat percentage of trade receivables at the year end. It is more common to prepare an ageing schedule that classifies trade receivables by age of the invoices that remain unpaid after the expiry of the credit period. For example, an invoice that remains unpaid 26 days after the credit period would appear in the column titled 1–30 days. Exhibit 5.7 presents a standard ageing analysis. As a receivable gets older, the probability that it will be uncollectible increases (“out of sight, out of mind”). An analysis of the past accounting records will generally show the approximate percentage of trade receivables in each age category that will become uncollectible. The enterprise reviews these percentages periodically and revises them, when appropriate. Exhibit 5.8 gives the percentages of uncollectible accounts in the various age categories derived from past records. We apply these percentages to the amounts of trade receivables in Exhibit 5.7. The last column of Exhibit 5.8 shows the estimated amount of uncollectible accounts for each age category and the total estimated uncollectible accounts. The required balance in the Provision for Doubtful Debts as on March 31, 20X8 is `10,231. Suppose that a provision of `2,812 is available. We must recognize bad debt expense of `7,419, as follows: After posting the adjusting entry, the general ledger accounts would appear as follows: By focusing on the amount of receivables, the percentage of receivables method takes a balance sheet approach to the problem of estimation of uncollectible accounts. Ageing of trade receivables is useful in many ways apart from aiding in calculation of required provision for uncollectible accounts. For example, credit controllers find the ageing analysis of trade receivables handy in identifying customers who have delayed payments and in deciding on the line of action to be taken. Auditors use the ageing analysis to see if the provision for uncollectible accounts is adequate. Percentage of sales method In this method, the enterprise estimates uncollectible accounts as a percentage of the “net credit sales” of a reporting period.10 In this method we ask: How much of this year’s net credit sales is expected to be not collected? It is appropriate if there is a predictable percentage relationship between the amount of bad debts and the amount of net credit sales. To illustrate, assume that Sanjay Company had the following net credit sales and uncollectible accounts relating to those sales in the last three years: The average rate of uncollectible accounts to net credit sales over the three-year period is: 1,400/70,000 = 0.02. Suppose Sanjay Company’s net credit sales for Year 4 are `32,000. The amount of provision for doubtful debts for the year would be `640, i.e. 0.02 `32,000. The company would record the following adjusting entry at the end of Year 4: By focusing on the amount of sales, the percentage of sales method takes an income statement approach to the problem of estimation of uncollectible accounts. The enterprise should review the estimate periodically and revise the percentage in light of changes in collection trends. Some would argue that the percentage of sales method leads to a better matching of revenues and expenses by recognizing estimated uncollectible accounts in the same period in which the credit sales are recognized. A bad debt loss is an impairment in the value of a receivable. Under current rules, an incurred loss is recognized, but an expected loss is not to be recognized. Taking a ‘haircut’ of sales or receivables (“day-one credit loss”) goes against the prohibition of recognizing an impairment loss on initial recognition of a financial asset.11 The percentage of sales method follows an expected loss approach and is, therefore, not acceptable.12 Writing off Uncollectible Accounts When it is clear that a specific customer account is uncollectible, the enterprise writes off the account balance by debiting Provision for Doubtful Debts and crediting Trade Receivables. The specific customer account in the trade receivables ledger also gets a credit. For example, suppose that Bala (one of the customers appearing in Exhibit 5.7) becomes insolvent on July 3, 20X8 and Sanjay Company determines that the receivable of `480 is uncollectible. The following entry records the write-off: Note that we record the write-off in Provision for Doubtful Debts, not in Bad Debt Expense. This is because we have already recognized an estimated bad debt expense. After posting the write-off entry, the general ledger accounts would appear as follows: The entry reduces the balances in the asset account (trade receivables) and the contra-asset account (provision for doubtful debts) accounts by the same amount. As a result, the estimated realizable value of trade receivables after the write-off is the same as that before the write-off: Recovery of Uncollectible Accounts Sometimes, a customer may pay after a write-off. We record the payment by preparing two entries. The first entry reverses the write-off to the extent of the payment, and the second entry is the usual entry to record receipt of cash from customer. To illustrate, assume that on May 12, 20X9 Sanjay Company receives a cheque for `200 from Bala’s insolvency administrator. The following pair of entries records this transaction: Some enterprises credit bad debt recoveries to Miscellaneous Income. Such a procedure is not appropriate since it omits information on subsequent payment by the customer. The information is useful in making future credit-granting decisions about the customer. However, under the direct write-off method (explained below), recovery of a write-off is treated as miscellaneous income. The Direct Write-off Method Some companies use the direct write-off method under which they charge an account to expense at the time of determining it to be uncollectible. The journal entry involves a debit to Bad Debt Expense and a credit to Trade Receivables. Since the direct write-off method does not result in proper matching of revenues and expenses, it is not generally accepted. It may be used when credit sales are insignificant and occasional. In such a case, any uncollectible accounts will be small and, therefore, immaterial in relation to total revenue and net profit. For example, assume that Minu Company determines that an amount of `520 to be uncollectible on September 23. The following adjusting entry records the write-off: Bills Receivable A bill of exchange, or simply a bill, is an instrument in writing containing an unconditional order in writing signed by the maker directing a certain person to pay on demand, or at a fixed or determinable future time, a certain sum of money to, or to the order of, a certain person, or to the bearer of the instrument. Businesses use bills in credit sales to facilitate smooth flow of money. Bills can be transferred with ease and the law provides simpler rules of evidence for bills in a dispute. Consequently, it is easier to realize bills than trade receivables. Also, bills are self-liquidating in that, once a bill falls due for payment, the payment procedure is almost automatic and the buyer’s bank pays the bill routinely. That is why businessmen prefer bills to open customer accounts. The Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 lays down the law on bills, cheques, and promissory notes.13 A bill involves the following transactions: Drawing The drawer (seller) draws up the bill, signs it, and addresses it to the drawee (buyer) for acceptance.14 Interest may or may not be payable. Acceptance The drawee conveys his assent to the bill and becomes the acceptor. He should pay the holder of the bill. Presentation for payment by drawer The drawer can retain the bill. On the due date, the drawer presents the bill to the acceptor for payment. If the acceptor pays, he honours the bill. If not he dishonours the bill. In the latter case, the drawer gets a certificate from a notary public noting and protesting the dishonour. The acceptor is legally bound to pay the amount due, i.e. the amount of the bill, any interest, and noting and protesting fee. Discounting Before the due date, the drawer (endorser) can transfer the bill to another person (endorsee). This is discounting the bill. Before the due date, an endorsee can further endorse the bill. Presentation for payment by endorsee On the due date, the last endorsee – the holder – presents the bill to the acceptor for payment. If the acceptor does not pay, the holder gets a certificate from a notary public noting and protesting the dishonour. The endorsee collects the amount due from its endorser. In a similar fashion, every endorsee collects the amount due from its endorser and the bill traces its way back to the drawer who pays its endorsee and collects the amount due from the acceptor. Figure 5.2 illustrates these transactions. Receiving a Bill To illustrate the recording of transactions in bills receivable, suppose that on September 3, Vibha Company sells goods on credit to S. Krishna for `10,000 and draws a 12 per cent, 90-day bill on him for `10,000. S. Krishna accepts and returns the bill the same day. Vibha Company is the drawer as well as the payee. S. Krishna is the acceptor. It is a bill receivable to Vibha Company and a bill payable to S. Krishna. Figure 5.3 shows the bill. On receipt of the accepted bill, Vibha Company records the following entry: Computing Interest The amount printed on the bill is its face value or the principal and the amount due is the maturity value. The maturity value of a bill is the sum of its face value plus any interest. Interest rates are normally stated in terms of a period of one year. Interest should be computed for the period stated in days or months in the bill. For convenience, we shall assume that a year comprises 360 days. Interest is computed using the formula: Interest = Principal Rate Time The interest on our bill is `300, computed as: `10,000 12% 90/360. So the maturity value of the bill is `10,300. Determining Maturity Date The date on which a bill falls due for payment is the maturity date.15 The maturity date of our bill is computed as follows: Collecting a Bill On December 2, when Vibha Company receives the principal plus interest from S. Krishna, the entry is as follows: Dishonouring a Bill If the acceptor fails to pay at maturity, the dishonoured bill should be removed from Bills Receivable and recorded in Trade Receivables. We debit Trade Receivables in the general ledger and the acceptor’s account in the trade receivables ledger. The drawer must get the fact of dishonour recorded by a notary public. The notary certifies the dishonour and sends the acceptor a notice of protest. The acceptor is legally obliged to pay the notary’s protest fee, together with the maturity value of the bill. Suppose that S. Krishna did not pay the bill on maturity. The following entry records the dishonour dishonour and a protest fee of `50: We credit Bills Receivable, irrespective of whether the bill is honoured or not. This is because a bill ceases to be a bill on its maturity. The Bills Receivable account should, therefore, comprise only those bills that have not yet fallen due for payment. Some accountants do not favour recognition of interest on dishonoured bills on the ground that interest may not be realized. Mere dishonour does not mean that the account is uncollectible. However, the accountant would keep in mind the dishonour of the bill while deciding on the amount of provision for doubtful debts. Failing to recognize the interest is not an appropriate course. Discounting a Bill A bill receivable may be easily converted into cash before the due date. This often happens because the holder (the drawer or an endorsee) needs cash and cannot wait until maturity of the bill. Discounting a bill involves selling it to a bank or to some other buyer (usually a finance company) with recourse to the holder. When a bill is discounted, the holder endorses and delivers the bill to the bank in exchange for cash. The bank deducts in advance an interest charge called discount from the maturity value and pays the holder the balance, called proceeds. The discount is the bank’s finance charge for the period from the date of discounting to the date of maturity of the bill. This period is known as the discount period. To illustrate, assume that on October 3, Vibha Company discounted the bill at the bank at 15 per cent. We calculate the discount period as follows: We compute the proceeds as follows: Vibha Company records the discounting as follows: If the proceeds are less than the face value, we debit the difference to interest expense. For example, suppose that the bank discounts the bill at 18 per cent. The amount of discount would be `309, calculated as follows: Discount = `10,300 18% = `309 The transaction would be recorded as follows: Contingent liability The endorser of a discounted bill receivable is contingently liable for payment of the bill. This means that the endorser (Vibha Company, in our example) must pay the bank if the acceptor (S. Krishna) dishonours the bill. If the acceptor pays the bill, the contingent liability ends. If the acceptor defaults, the contingent liability becomes an actual liability. On the balance sheet date, the endorser is contingently liable for all the bills receivable discounted by him, which have not yet matured. Financial reporting rules require disclosure of the nature and amount of any contingent liability. Accordingly, the contingent liability for current bills receivable discounted must be disclosed. Chapter 9 discusses contingent liabilities. Dishonouring a discounted bill If the acceptor pays a discounted bill on the maturity date, the drawer or any subsequent endorser does not record any journal entries. If the acceptor defaults on the bill, the drawer or other endorser is required to pay the endorsee (often a bank). In the latter case, the bank should follow the procedure of noting and protesting. Every endorser is liable to pay his endorsee. The dishonoured bill will finally trace its way back to the drawer who can collect the amount from the acceptor. To illustrate, assume that S. Krishna dishonoured the bill and the bank sent Vibha Company a notice of protest and levied a protest fee of `50. Vibha Company will pay the bank `10,350 and record the following entry: End of period adjustment for interest income Interest income accrues on a day-to-day basis, but usually is only recorded at the bill’s maturity date. If, however, the bill is outstanding at the end of a reporting period, accrued interest should be computed and recorded to recognize the interest earned. For example, assume Vibha Company’s reporting period ends on September 30. The following entry records accrued interest for 27 days (the number of days held in September as calculated in determining the maturity date) on the bill:16 The following entry records the collection of the bill on December 2: This entry eliminates the bill and interest receivable and recognizes `210 of interest for the 63 days the bill was held in the current reporting period.17 Revenue from Construction Contracts, Franchises, and Leases Accounting for receivables and revenue recognition are closely related. In Chapters 3 and 4, we have seen the basic principles of revenue recognition and some special cases such as bill and hold sales, conditional sales, and lay away sales. We will now see revenue recognition for construction contracts, franchises, and leases that involve special considerations. Construction Contracts A construction contract is “a contract specifically negotiated for the construction of an asset or a combination of assets that are closely interrelated or interdependent in terms of their design, technology, and function or their ultimate purpose or use.”18 Long-term construction contracts differ from sales of goods in that the revenue-earning process in these contracts is usually spread over several financial years. Examples include contracts for construction of bridges, tunnels, dams, ships, aircraft, buildings, and complex pieces of equipment. We follow the percentage of completion method for construction contracts. Under this method, contract revenue and contract costs are recognized by reference to the stage of completion of the contract activity at the end of the reporting period.19 The advantage of this method is that it reflects revenues and costs in periods in which the related economic activity occurs. When the outcome of a contract can be estimated reliably, the percentage of completion method should be used. Otherwise, the contract revenue should be recognized only to the extent of costs incurred which are expected to be recovered. When it is probable that the total contract costs will exceed the total contract revenue, the expected loss is recognized as an expense immediately. Suppose that Ace Construction Company enters into a contract for construction of a bridge in 20X7 at a fixed price of `2,500,000. The details of the progress of the contract are as follows: In 20X7, Ace Construction should report a gross profit of `155,000, calculated as follows: revenue, `775,000 – costs, `620,000. The gross profit would be `181,000 in 20X8 and `84,000 in 20X9. You should verify these numbers to make sure that you understand the method. If, as a result of uncertainties, Ace Construction cannot estimate the percentage of completion reliably, it will not recognize any revenue or profit in either 20X7 or 20X8. In 20X9, it will recognize the entire revenue and profit on completion of the contract. Franchises A franchise is a contractual arrangement under which the franchiser grants the franchisee the right to manufacture or sell certain products or services, to use certain trademarks, or to perform certain functions, usually within an agreed area. The franchiser protects his unique concept or product through a patent, copyright or trademark. NIIT, Holiday Inn, and McDonald’s are examples of some popular franchises. Franchising has been growing rapidly in India in recent years. Franchisers derive their revenue from two sources: 1. Sale of initial franchises; and 2. Continuing franchise operations. The initial franchise fee may be recorded as revenue only when the franchiser makes substantial performance of the service he is obliged to provide, i.e. when the franchiser has no obligation to refund any cash received and has performed all the initial services required under the contract. Initial services provided by the franchiser usually cover assistance in site selection and acquisition of plant and display signs. Continuing franchise fees may be recognized as revenue when the franchiser earns the right to receive them. Leases A lease is “an agreement whereby the lessor conveys to the lessee in return for a payment or series of payments the right to use an asset for an agreed period of time.”20 Shortage of capital, attractive tax incentives, and easy availability have made leasing a booming industry in India and abroad. The substance of the leasing arrangement determines the accounting by lessors for lease rentals and profit. An operating lease is a rental arrangement under which the lessor provides an asset to a lessee, but does not transfer the risks and rewards of ownership of the asset. In India, operating leasing is yet to assume significant proportions and is currently limited to providing cars and equipment, such as photocopiers. The lessor has to depreciate the asset on operating lease in accordance with its normal depreciation policy for similar assets and recognize rentals as revenue on a systematic basis representing the pattern of the earnings process implicit in the lease. A straight-line basis may be appropriate in many cases. Estimating the residual value is an important task in accounting for an asset on operating lease. A finance lease is a lease “that transfers substantially all the risks and rewards incidental to ownership of an asset.”21 The lessor (usually a leasing company) transfers the risks and rewards of ownership of an asset to the lessee. A finance lease is usually non-cancellable for a specified period and secures for the lessor the recovery of his capital outlay plus a return for the funds invested. Finance leasing is, in substance, a financing arrangement. The income from it should, therefore, be recognized in proportion to the amount outstanding from the lessee. Usually, the residual value of a leased asset in a finance lease will not be significant. Sales-type leases are entered into by manufacturers and dealers who use leasing as a means of promoting their products. Unlike a finance lease, in a salestype lease, the lessor has to account for the profit on sale. Otherwise, accounting is similar in both these leases. We will discuss lessee accounting in Chapter 9. Pledging, Assignment, and Factoring Sometimes, the seller needs cash and cannot wait until the end of the credit period for the buyer to pay. The seller can pledge, assign or factor the receivables and raise cash. Pledging and Assignment Pledging is an agreement for using receivables as security for a loan. The lender makes the loan on the basis of his relationship with the borrower and the overall quality of the receivables. Assignment is an arrangement for a formal transfer of the receivables to the lender. Usually, the lender investigates the quality of the receivables and identifies the specific receivables to be assigned. In both cases, the buyer whose account has been pledged does not know about this event and will continue to pay the seller, as usual. The seller must repay the loan, whether or not the buyer pays the seller on the due date. Pledging and assignment have no effect on accounting for receivables. In its financial statements, the borrower continues to present the receivables as his assets and the loan as a liability and discloses the fact that the receivables have been pledged or assigned. Any prepaid finance charge is expensed over the borrowing period. To illustrate, assume that Ganesh Company assigns `100,000 of trade receivables with the National Bank. The bank levies a finance charge of 2 per cent of the amount of trade receivables. Ganesh Company would record the transaction as follows: Ganesh Company does not remove the trade receivables; instead, it recognizes a liability. Since the company retains the risks and rewards of ownership of the receivables, it includes both the trade receivables and the borrowing in its balance sheet. Further, the company records a discount of `2,000 which is a prepaid charge and will be expensed over the borrowing period. Factoring Factoring is transfer of receivables without recourse. The factor, i.e. the party who buys the receivables, assumes the risk of uncollectible accounts and absorbs any bad debts. The transaction involves derecognition, the process of removal of the receivables from the seller’s balance sheet. The lender retains a portion of the receivables. This is known as a holdback and is intended to cover unexpected sales returns and allowances. The difference between the amount of trade receivables and the amount realized is a loss on sale of trade receivables. Suppose, in the above illustration, Ganesh Company factors `100,000 of trade receivables with Standard Factors on a without-recourse basis. The factor levies a finance charge of 2 per cent of the amount of trade receivables and retains an amount equal to 5 per cent of the trade receivables. Ganesh Company would record the transaction as follows: Ganesh Company will record a loss of `2,000 in statement of profit and loss for the current reporting period. Note that, in the above case, Ganesh Company removes the trade receivables since it does not retain the risks and rewards of ownership of the receivables. This follows from the requirement that for derecognition there should be “a transfer of the contractual rights to receive the cash flows of the financial asset”.22 Financial Analysis of Receivables Financial ratios are relationships between two or more variables appearing in financial statements. Investors, lenders, and managers compute a number of financial ratios to evaluate the financial performance of a firm. In assessing the liquidity of a business, managers and lending officers are particularly concerned with the collectibility of a company’s trade receivables. To evaluate the age and realizability of a company’s trade and bills receivables, they compute some ratios from the financial statements. The average collection period (also known as days sales outstanding or DSO) is perhaps the best overall measure of the quality of a company’s trade receivables. It is computed as follows: The average collection period of 85 days means that the customers of Mega Company took, on average, 85 days to pay their invoices. If the company’s standard credit period is 60 days, it would appear that the customers delayed payments by 25 days. Possible reasons for delay may include a recession in the economy, poor credit rating of customers, and laxity in collection. The management often compares a company’s average collection period with its past experience and with the collection period in the industry. Ideally, the ratio should be computed using credit sales in the denominator. Since financial statements do not give the break-up of total sales into cash and credit sales, we have to use the total sales. If the ratio of credit sales to total sales remains more or less unchanged over time, the comparison of average collection period from one period to another will not be affected much. Looking Back Define internal control and explain the need for internal control systems Internal control is designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of objectives in effectiveness and efficiency of operations, reliability of financial reporting, and compliance with applicable laws and regulations. Describe the features of a good internal control system A good internal control system includes separation of duties, authorizing and recording transactions, sound administrative practices, sound personnel policies, and regular internal audit. An effective board, truly independent directors and an active audit committee can strengthen the control environment. Explain internal control procedures for cash receipts and payments An enterprise should record all cash receipts immediately and pay cash only on the basis of specific authorization supported by a voucher. Explain the importance of cash management Cash is the most liquid asset since it can be easily converted into other assets or used to buy services or satisfy obligations. Keeping excessive cash is not advisable. Prepare a bank reconciliation and explain its purpose A bank reconciliation explains the difference between the cash balance appearing on the bank statement and the balance according to an enterprise’s records. Define trade receivables and explain accounting for uncollectible accounts Trade receivables arise from the sale of merchandise or services on credit. Being a part of the cost of doing business on credit, bad debt expense must be recognized in the period in which the revenues from credit sales are recognized. Estimate uncollectible accounts The percentage of sales method estimates uncollectible accounts as a percentage of the net credit sales of a reporting period. The percentage of receivables method estimates uncollectible accounts as a percentage of trade receivables appearing on a firm’s balance sheet. Record transactions in bills receivable The following are the typical transactions in bills receivable: receiving a bill receivable after acceptance; collecting a bill on maturity; discounting a bill; dishonouring a bill; accruing interest. Explain revenue recognition for construction contracts, franchises, and leases The percentage of completion method recognizes revenue by reference to the stage of completion of the contract activity. Initial franchise fee may be recorded as revenue only when the franchiser makes substantial performance of the service it is obliged to provide; continuing franchise fees are recognized as revenue when the franchiser earns the right to receive them. Rentals from operating lease are recognized usually on a straight-line basis. Income from finance lease is recognized in proportion to the amount outstanding from the lessee. Describe pledging, assignment, and factoring of receivables Pledging and assignment of receivables involve raising a loan with the receivables as collateral. In factoring, a business transfers its trade receivables outright to a finance company without recourse. The purpose of all three is to get cash from a credit sale faster rather than wait until the end of the credit period. Analyze the quality of receivables The average collection period is a popular measure of the quality of receivables and indicates the speed with which a business converts its receivables into cash. We can compare a company’s average collection period with its past experience and with that of other firms in the industry. Review Problem Akshay Company’s March 31 balance sheet contained the following information relating to receivables: The following transactions took place in April: Apr. 3 Sold merchandise to Ram and accepted a 12 per cent, 90-day bill in the amount of `10,000. 8 Wrote off the `1,600 balance receivable from Vimal. 18 Discounted at State Bank the bill received from Ram on April 3 at 14 per cent. 21 Unexpectedly received a cheque for `920 from Jagannath. The amount had been written off last September. 24 Accepted a 12 per cent, 90-day, `5,000 bill in settlement of the past-due account receivable of Manoj. 29 Received payment from Jyoti on her 12 per cent, 30-day bill of March 30 in the amount of `3,000. Required 1. Prepare journal entries in the general journal to record the above transactions. 2. Suppose it is decided to keep a balance of `18,700 in the provision for doubtful debts account. Prepare the journal entry to adjust the provision. Solution 2. Journal entry to adjust the provision for doubtful debts: To recognize the bad debt expense (`18,700 – `16,620)23 ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. Cash forms a small part of the assets of most organizations. Then why do organizations pay so much attention to controlling cash? 2. Are certificates of deposit classified as cash? Why? 3. Distinguish between accounting control and administrative control. 4. Why should the cashier not be allowed to maintain the customers ledger? 5. “A good internal control system is an assurance that no error or fraud is possible.” Comment. 6. Although the computer is faster and more accurate than the human brain, frauds are more easily perpetrated in a computer environment. Do you agree? 7. What is a voucher? List some of the documents that you would expect to see in a voucher for purchase of goods. 8. Why is a bank reconciliation prepared? 9. Why do companies sell on credit though some customers do not pay? 10. Distinguish between the percentage of receivables and the percentage of sales methods. 11. Why should bills receivable discounted but not yet matured be shown as a contingent liability? 12. When is the percentage of completion method inappropriate? 13. “A factor is a financier and an insurer rolled into one.” Do you agree? 14. Can the chief buyer be allowed to look after the goods receiving function? Problem Set A Required Compute the cash balance to be reported on Shiny Company’s August 31 balance sheet. Prepare, if necessary, journal entries for the company. Prepare an ageing analysis of the trade receivables under the following age categories: Not yet due; 1–30 days past due; 31–60 days past due; 61–90 days past due; 91–120 days past due; over 120 days past due. Required Determine the amount of revenue that Win Company should recognize in each of the years under the percentage of completion method. Problem Set B The November 30 bank statement of Veekay Company disclosed a balance of `6,311. On this date, the company’s records showed a bank balance of `3,961. Your review reveals the following: (a) Cheques under collection on November 30, `1,910. (b) Outstanding cheques, `784. (c) The cash deposit of `4,780 on November 11 was recorded by the bank as `4,708. (d) A bill receivable of `4,000 and interest of `200 were collected by the bank but have not been recorded in the company’s accounts. (e) A cheque for `490 received from a customer bounced and came with the bank statement. (f) The bank levied a service charge of `135. (g) A cheque for `7,825 paid on November 18 was recorded by the bank as `7,852. Required 1. Prepare a bank reconciliation for Veekay Company for November. 2. Prepare any journal entries necessary for the company as at November 30. 3. Determine the cash balance that Veekay Company would report on the November 30 balance sheet. The following information is available from the accounting records of the company: Due to a cheque preparation error, cheque number 603 was cancelled. The following items appeared in the bank reconciliation on March 31: Outstanding cheque, cheque number 594 dated March 18, `983; cheque under collection, `690. On April 30, the bank debited service charge of `60, and credited `618 on collection of a threemonth bill receivable of `600 with interest at 12 per cent per annum. The debit of `1,180 in the bank statement on April 27 relates to the dishonour of the cheque received from Mayur deposited on April 23. Required 1. Prepare bank reconciliation for Arun Company for April. 2. Prepare adjusting entries, where necessary, in the general journal. 3. Determine the cash balance that Arun Company would report on the April 30 balance sheet. During the month, the following transactions took place: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Sales on account, `328,000. Sales returns and allowances on credit sales, `4,300. Collections from customers, `372,900. Accounts written off as uncollectible, `9,720. Uncollectible account unexpectedly collected, `1,870. Based on the company’s past experience, uncollectible accounts are estimated at 2 per cent of net credit sales. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record each of the five items summarized above. 2. Prepare the journal entry to adjust the provision for doubtful debts. 3. Post the entries to the Trade Receivables account and the Provision for Doubtful Debts account. 4. Show how trade receivables and provision for doubtful debts would appear on the March 31 balance sheet. The following information is taken from the accounting records of Jaykay Company on December 31 (year end): The company uses the percentage of receivables method to estimate bad debts. Based on its analysis of customers’ accounts on December 31 and past experience with collections, the company estimates the following percentages of trade receivables to be uncollectible in the various age categories: Required 1. Calculate the amount that should appear in the December 31 balance sheet as the provision for doubtful debts. 2. Prepare the general journal entry to record the bad debt expense for the year. 3. Post the journal entry to the Provision for Doubtful Debts account and show the account after posting this entry. 4. On February 16 of the following year, Jaykay Company decided to write off a receivable of `4,200. What effect will this have on: (a) the company’s net profit for that year; and (b) estimated net realizable value of its trade receivables? Required Prepare general journal entries to record the above transactions, assuming that Bhandari Company used the provision method of accounting for uncollectible accounts. Show interest computations and round off to the nearest rupee. Problem Set C The April 30 bank statement for Binoy Company showed a balance of `6,874. On this date, the bank balance in the company’s ledger was `2,994. Your review reveals the following: Cheques under collection on April 30, `298. Outstanding cheques, `1,718. A cheque for `2,194 issued to a supplier was recorded by the bank as `2,914. A bill receivable of `5,000 and interest of `300 collected by the bank have not been recorded in the company’s accounts. 5. A cheque for `730 received from a customer was returned by the bank owing to lack of funds with the bank. 6. Bank service charges, `90. 7. In accordance with the company’s standing instruction, on April 23 the bank paid insurance premium of `1,300 for the company’s car. 1. 2. 3. 4. Required 1. Prepare a bank reconciliation for Binoy Company for April. 2. Prepare any journal entries necessary for the company as at April 30. 3. Determine the cash balance that Binoy Company would report on the April 30 balance sheet. The following information is available from the accounting records of the company: Balance on November 30: `16,722 Balance on December 31: `25,134. Due to a cheque preparation error, cheque number 330 was cancelled. The following items appeared in the bank reconciliation on November 30: Outstanding cheque, cheque number 316 dated November 17, `749; cheque under collection, `2,100. On December 31, the bank debited service charge of `95, and credited `721 on collection of a three-month bill receivable of `700 with interest at 12 per cent per annum. The amount in cheque number 326 was entered as `967, which was duly paid by the bank. Required 1. Prepare bank reconciliation for Bala Company for December. 2. Prepare adjusting entries, where necessary, in the general journal. 3. Determine the cash balance that Bala Company would report on the December 31 balance sheet. During the month, the following transactions took place: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Sales on account, `697,200. Sales returns and allowances on credit sales, `9,700. Collections from customers, `412,200. Accounts written off as uncollectible, `8,280. Uncollectible account unexpectedly collected, `930. Based on the company’s past experience, uncollectible accounts are estimated at 3 per cent of net credit sales. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record each of the five items summarized above. 2. Prepare the journal entry to adjust the provision for doubtful debts. 3. Post the entries to the Trade Receivables account and the Provision for Doubtful Debts account. 4. Show how trade receivables and provision for doubtful debts would appear on the September 30 balance sheet. The following information is taken from the accounting records of Harinder Company as at March 31 (year end): The company uses the percentage of receivables method to estimate bad debts. Based on its analysis of customers’ accounts as at March 31 and past experience with collections, the company estimates the following percentages of trade receivables to be uncollectible in the various age categories: Required 1. Calculate the amount that should appear in the March 31 balance sheet as the provision for doubtful debts. 2. Prepare the general journal entry to record the bad debt expense for the year. 3. Post the journal entry to the Provision for Doubtful Debts account and show the account after posting this entry. 4. On April 19 of the following year, Harinder Company decided to write off a receivable of `3,290. What effect will this have on: (a) the company’s net profit for that year; and (b) the estimated net realizable value of its trade receivables? Required Prepare general journal entries to record the above transactions, assuming that Samyukt Company uses the provision method of accounting for uncollectible accounts. Show interest computations and round to the nearest rupee. Business Decision Cases Shyam set up Baron Company in 20X2 to sell a wide range of home appliances. Sales rose from `113,000 in the first year to `978,500. Initially, the emphasis was on cash sales and credit was given only in exceptional cases. Shyam quickly realized that he was losing business, because other dealers in home appliances were offering credit varying from 30 days to 90 days. From 20X2 onwards, he too began to offer credit for 30 days. As a result, the company’s 20X3 sales rose sharply to `328,000, credit sales accounting for 70 per cent. In later years, the percentage of sales on credit steadily increased as most customers preferred to pay later, all the more so since the credit was interest-free. Soon Shyam started experiencing uncollectible accounts which jumped from `1,240 in 20X3 to `28,160 in 20X6. However, as a matter of prudence, he has been setting aside a provision for doubtful debts equal to 5 per cent of credit sales. Information relating to sales, provision, and trade receivables from the time the company was set up is given in the following table: From the accounting year ending 31 March 20X7, Shyam has decided to base the company’s provision for doubtful debts on the ageing analysis of trade receivables, since he believes this approach would result in a more scientific valuation of trade receivables. The company’s accountant has prepared the following ageing analysis and estimate of uncollectible accounts: Required 1. Prepare a schedule explaining the changes in the Provision for Doubtful Debts account from the company’s inception to March 31, 20X6. 2. Prepare the journal entry to record the bad debt expense for the year ending March 31, 20X6. 3. Show how trade receivables and provision for doubtful debts would appear on Baron Company’s balance sheet as at March 31, 20X6. 4. Why do you think Baron Company changed the method of providing for uncollectible debts? What disclosure, if any, about accounting for trade receivables is required in the company’s financial statements for the year ending March 31, 20X6? How will the change affect the company’s income tax expense? Dhillon Sports Company, based in Jalandhar, manufactures a variety of sports goods. Sometime ago, it was troubled by a severe cash crunch, because of a shortage of bank credit. The company considered several alternatives for improving its liquidity. Finally, it accepted the offer from Punjab Factors to buy its trade receivables on the following terms: 1. Punjab Factors will assess a finance charge of 4 per cent of trade receivables. 2. Punjab Factors will retain 5 per cent of the amount of trade receivables to cover sales discounts, allowances, and returns. 3. Dhillon Sports will handle any returned goods, claims, and allowances for defective supplies. 4. Punjab Factors will handle the sales discounts, but charge the cost of such discounts to Dhillon Sports and absorb any bad debts. On April 1, Dhillon Sports transferred trade receivables of `600,000 to Punjab Factors. During April, Punjab Factors collected trade receivables of `435,000; sales returns and allowances were `7,400; sales discounts were `4,300; it wrote off uncollectible accounts of `7,200. On May 1, Dhillon Sports and Punjab Factors made a final cash settlement. Required 1. Prepare the journal entries to record the transactions in the books of Dhillon Sports Company, assuming that the firm’s accounting year ends on April 30. 2. How will the effect of the transfer of the trade receivables to Punjab Factors appear on Dhillon Sports Company’s balance sheet as at April 30? 3. Dhillon Sports had received another offer for credit on the security of its trade receivables at an interest rate of 30 per cent per annum. The offer was rejected by the firm’s finance manager who felt that it was too costly. Should the company have accepted the offer? Describe the factors you would consider relevant in comparing the two offers. Interpreting Financial Reports On September 14, 2011, Kweku Mawuli Adoboli, a trader working in the London-based Delta One desk of the Swiss investment bank UBS AG (“UBS”), went home from office and sent a “bombshell email” confessing to booking false trades. He was quickly called back for many hours of questioning by the bank and its lawyers. On September 15, he was arrested for fraud and false accounting – dishonesty that exposed the bank to unhedged risks and resulted in loss of $2.3 billion, a record unauthorized trading loss in Britain. The 32-yearold worked for UBS’s Global Synthetic Equities (GSE) division, buying and selling exchange traded funds (ETF), which track stocks and commodities. Adoboli was charged with abusing his position to expose UBS to risk of loss. The charges related to the periods between October 2008 and December 2009 and from January to September 2011. UBS learnt of the unauthorized trades after Adoboli informed the bank of his actions. The following is a summary of the charges: Count 1: False accounting: Falsified records between October 1, 2008 and June 1, 2011 in relation to ETF transactions in order to conceal the exposure of UBS to risk and/or the true profit and loss. Count 2: False accounting: Falsified records between October 1, 2008 and June 1, 2011, other than in Count 1, in relation to ETF transactions by entering and/or holding a zero notional/cash only trade(s) in order to conceal profit or loss. Count 3: Fraud by abuse of position: Committed fraud between October 1, 2008 and June 1, 2011, while occupying a position of trust as a senior trader with GSE in which he was expected to safeguard or not to act against the financial interests of UBS Bank. Count 4: False accounting: Falsified records between May 31, 2011 and September 15, 2011 in relation to ETF transactions in order to conceal the exposure of UBS to risk and/or the true profit and loss. Count 5: False accounting: Falsified records between May 31, 2011 and September 15, 2011, other than in Count 4, in relation to ETF transactions by entering and/or holding a zero notional/cash only trade(s) in order to conceal profit or loss. Count 6: Fraud by abuse of position: Committed fraud between May 31, 2011 and September 17, 2011, while occupying a position of trust as a senior trader with GSE in which he was expected to safeguard the financial interests of UBS by causing losses to UBS Bank calculated at $2.2502 billion dollars. The ETF desk was originally part of the Global Equities division and was supervised by a senior, Londonbased trader. In April 2011, the ETF desk was transferred to GSE, a new business sector. GSE had been formed in early 2011, when UBS restructured its existing Global Equities business sectors. The desk’s new supervisor within GSE was based in New York. While plans for him to relocate to London later in 2011 were underway, no arrangements for local supervision of the Desk in the interim period were put in place. There was no concrete hand-over of responsibilities between the Desk’s old and new supervisors. There were four traders on the ETF desk. The desk’s mandate permitted client and proprietary trading in certain cash equity products. Trading for the bank’s own account (“proprietary trading”) was chiefly undertaken by the two most senior traders (one of whom was Adoboli), who also undertook client trading. The two junior traders mainly undertook client trading. The desk was subject to net delta limits, which represented the maximum level of risk that the desk could enter into at any given time unless specifically authorized to do otherwise. The intended intraday net delta limit was $50 million, while the overnight net delta limit was $25 million. These limits were increased in April 2011 when the desk moved to GSE, to $100 million and $50 million respectively. The desk’s trading mandate and risk limits were not formally documented at desk level, but were instead communicated to the traders verbally. News of the loss pushed UBS’s stock down 8.5 per cent. The bank said that no client positions were affected, implying that the trading was proprietary. The fraud revelations added to the woes of UBS, which was already facing charges of facilitating tax evasion by its clients in the US and involved in the LIBOR manipulation scandal. The discovery was especially frustrating for chief executive Oswald Grübel, who was brought in to fix the bank after it lost $50 billion in bad mortgage loans in the financial crisis. Adoboli, the son of a retired United Nations official, was born in Ghana and educated in Britain. He worked in the back office before becoming an ETF trader. He was identified as a future leader for UBS’s elite Ascent programme. His salary jumped from £95,000 in 2007 to £370,000 in 2010. He made a $400,000 loss on a trade in 2008, but hid the loss rather than tell his manager about it. Profits were held off the books and later drip-fed back to offset the ETF desk’s losses, a mechanism called “umbrella”. By 2009 and 2010, Adoboli’s scheme was going well and the umbrella’s $40 million profit gave him confidence to do bigger trades. His activities did not ring alarm bells in the bank at the time. He claimed in his trial that his colleagues on the ETF desk and others in the back office knew of his activities and turned a blind eye to his breaching of risk limits so long as he was making profits. In the trial Adoboli said he made the losses of $2.3 billion in three phases: Between June 23 and June 30, 2011 Adoboli created a short position betting the markets would fall, and masked his unhedged real trades with a fictitious long position. While UBS believed its reported risk on June 24 was $53 million, it was said to be $147 million. On June 23, Adoboli was praised by his new line manager, John DiBacco for making $6 million of profit in one day – a record for the bank. Soon after he sent an email pulling him up for not asking for permission to exceed risk limit. By late June he was under huge pressure from senior managers and traders to abandon his bearish view of the markets and take a long position. In the market sell-off his losses accelerated in July and peaked at $11.8 billion on August 8, at a time when the bank believed its exposure was $2.3 billion. Because of his stress he said he “just went a bit catatonic” and split up with his girlfriend. He took another short position between August 11 and September 13 using ETFs with extended settlement dates, but there were losses and his risk exposure remained static at about $7 billion. By August the back office was chasing Adoboli for discrepancies in his reporting. William Steward, a back office accountant at UBS, had been alerted to a gap of $3.57 billion when the books did not balance. On November 20, 2012, the London Southwark Crown Court convicted Adoboli of two counts (count 3 and count 6) of fraud by abuse of position but acquitted him on four counts of false accounting. The court sentenced him to seven years’ imprisonment. On November 25, 2012, the UK regulator Financial Services Authority (FSA) imposed a fine of £29.7 million (after a 30 per cent discount for early-stage settlement) on UBS for “failing to take reasonable care to organize and control its affairs responsibly and effectively, with adequate risk management systems” and “failing to conduct its business from the London Branch with due skill, care and diligence”. On November 21, 2012, the Swiss regulator FINMA reprimanded UBS for “severe violation of its obligation to assure fit and proper conduct of its business operations”, directed UBS to appoint an independent third party to report on the bank’s strengthening of its risk management and control capability, and required the appointment of a third party to ensure operational effectiveness of controls against unauthorized trading. The UK regulator noted that UBS failed to: (i) adequately supervise the GSE business with due skill, care and diligence; (ii) put adequate systems and controls in place to detect the unauthorized trading in a timely manner; and (iii) have adequate focus on risk management systems and to sufficiently escalate or take sufficient action in respect of identified risk management issues. The accounting firm KPMG, appointed by UBS at the request of the FSA and FINMA to conduct an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the loss, found that the following strategies were used to conceal the unauthorized trading in the trade capture systems: (i) The Front Office risk system allowed internal futures trades to be booked to a generic counterparty of ‘internal’ and did not require an automatic mirror trade or identification of the particular counterparty. (ii) Genuine external trades were booked into the futures settlement system but were late in being booked into the Front Office risk system which allowed manipulation of the profit and loss. (iii) There was no automatic filter in the trade inputs systems which identified off market or large notional transactions and the amendment of a price in the Front Office risk system did not alter the price in the Front Office deal capture system. The investigation found that Front Office supervision was inadequate, with reported desk limits breaches not adequately acted upon by line management and that the back office function teams relevant to the desk demonstrated a lack of capability to effectively identify, challenge and escalate significant and sustained control issues. In sum, the three standard lines of defence – (a) the supervision and control of the trading desk within the Front Office and the verification and settlement of trades, undertaken by the Operations Division, (b) specific risk control tasks within the Finance, Risk and Compliance Divisions, and (c) the Group Internal Audit undertaken by UBS – failed. FINMA, the Swiss regulator, noted a number problems with the bank’s control environment and reward and recognition systems. Relationships between supervisors and the traders on the desk were characterized by too much trust and not enough discipline and control. Risk limit breaches brought to the attention of the desk’s supervisor were not investigated, or disciplinary action taken. Product Control accepted the significant increases in the desk’s proprietary trading revenues without performing any satisfactory analysis. Issues such as persistent and mis-booked trades, trades with huge notional values, and frequent and material reconciliation breaks were not brought to the attention of senior Operations and Product Control management, or to the desk’s supervisors in the Front Office. Despite several breaches of the bank’s compliance policies relating to personal account dealing and spread betting, and despite a reputation for poor adherence to control standards, Adoboli was highly remunerated and had been chosen to participate in a highly selective internal scheme for talented employees. This financial and non-financial recognition provided implicit incentives for risk-seeking behaviour. Required 1. Describe the operations of the Delta One trading desk focusing on the bank’s control system. 2. What do you understand by Adoboli’s “unauthorized trading”? What were the breaches in the controls? How did Adoboli manage to breach them? Why were the breaches not detected before Adoboli’s confession? 3. The judge said in his sentencing remarks: The tragedy for you is that you had everything going for you. Your father was in a responsible position which enabled you to be educated at a private school. I am not saying that you come from a privileged background, but you had some advantages that other people do not enjoy. In addition, you had your own natural talents. You are highly intelligent. You are plainly very articulate. And as I told the jury, you appear to have a considerable amount of charm. Your fall from grace as a result of these convictions is spectacular. Then, why did Adoboli do the wrong thing? On April 30, 2012, the German sportswear giant Adidas announced that “commercial irregularities” at its Reebok India operations could impact its past consolidated results to a pre-tax maximum of €125 million (`8.7 billion) and restructuring costs associated with changes being brought in by the new management “including changes to commercial business practices” could lead to an additional one-off charge of €70 million. Adidas made a fourth quarter operating loss of €239 million, compared with analyst expectations for profit of €28.6 million. The announcement followed the sudden and unexplained departure in the previous week of two of Adidas India’s top executives, the managing director, Subhidher Singh Prem, and the chief operating officer, Vishnu Bhagat. On May 21, the company filed a criminal complaint against the two alleging that receipts were falsified, Reebok merchandise was siphoned off, Adidasowned goods were hidden in four different warehouses and goods were sent to non-existent distributors. On May 29, the government asked the Serious Fraud Investigation Office to investigate the matter. Prem sued Adidas for defamation and recovery of his past dues amounting to `127 million. Prem and four others were arrested on September 19, 2012. The Adidas brand ranks fourth worldwide, but in India it is the market leader. This became possible mainly because of the company’s wide distribution network of over 1,000 stores. The “India growth story” played no mean part in the company’s aggressive expansion. “Establish the brand now in a rapidly growing market and money will come later” seemed to be the belief. A key element of the company’s business strategy was a “minimum guarantee”, a promise of a minimum income to a franchisee regardless of the sales. Prem reasoned that this was necessary to encourage shop owners to stock a brand. In contrast to Reebok India’s practice, global sports goods companies sell to wholesalers, who take responsibility for selling the goods. If the products sell, the wholesalers make money but the risks of not selling are also theirs. A major risk in the “minimum guarantee” model is that the franchisees may not put in their best efforts, since they were assured of a minimum income. The effect was that the profitable stores were subsidizing the loss-making ones. In 2005, Adidas acquired Reebok for $3.8 billion, but the two businesses continued to operate as separate entities. Reebok continued to focus on growth and market share and was more aggressive. In contrast, Adidas operated in a more disciplined manner, even while continuing to use the minimum guarantee approach. In late 2010, the company decided to withdraw from the minimum guarantee model and close the loss-making stores. It became known later that a third of 1,000 outlets in India would likely be shut. Reebok’s revenue was `7.72 billion in 2009 and `7.83 billion in 2010. It made a profit of `128 million in 2009 and a loss of `401 million in 2010. Suspecting that all was not well at its Indian unit, Adidas asked KPMG to conduct a forensic audit of its books. Required 1. Describe what happened in Reebok India. 2. Was there a failure of internal controls? Explain. 3. Examine other possible reasons for the happenings. Financial Analysis Auditors comment on the internal control systems under the Companies (Auditors’ Report) Order 2003. These comments appear in the Annexure to the Auditors’ Report. Study the comments for a sample of companies. Required 1. Prepare a summary of the auditors’ comments classifying them suitably and grading them as: Highly serious; Very serious; Serious; Not too serious; Not serious. Explain your grading. 2. Develop a plan for addressing the comments explaining what action you would like to be taken. Study the annual reports of a sample of companies that execute long-term contracts. Note that you should look not only for the obvious ones like Larsen & Toubro and Gammon India, but also for companies that provide services over several reporting periods. Required 1. Prepare an analysis of the accounting policies. Classify them suitably and comment on the extent to which they differ where the sample companies are in the same industry. 2. Explain how your study is useful in analyzing and interpreting the financial statements of the sample companies. Study the annual reports of a sample of companies in the same industry (e.g. consumer goods, pharmaceuticals, and software). In order to develop perspective, you should have at least 5 companies for at least 5 years for each industry and should cover at least 5 industries. Required 1. Prepare an analysis of the extent of doubtful debts and the average collection period for the companies in an industry. 2. Explain how your analysis of the quality of receivables is useful in analyzing and interpreting the financial statements of the sample companies. IFR 5.1 describes the fraud in UBS. Required 1. Explain why bank frauds happen with almost predictable regularity. 2. Recommend suitable measures to prevent bank frauds. Answers to Test Your Understanding 1 Satyam spooks market, Business Line, January 8, 2009. 2 Internal Control—Integrated Framework (Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, September 1992). 3 Ernst & Young, Fraud and Corporate Governance: Changing Paradigm in India, 2012. 4 Deloitte, India Banking Fraud Survey, 2012. 5 PricewaterhouseCoopers, Whistle-blowing: Effective Means to Combat Economic Crime, 2012 6 Ernst & Young, Fraud and Corporate Governance: Changing Paradigm in India, 2012. 7 Transparency International, Global Corruption Barometer, 2013. 8 Transparency International, Corruption Perception Index, 2013. 9 IAS 7:6/Ind AS 7:6/AS 3:5.2. 10 Net credit sales” equals total sales less cash sales and sales returns and allowances. 11 IAS 39: AG 92. 12 The IASB’s ED/2013/3, Financial Instruments: Expected Credit Losses, proposes an expected loss approach. 13 A cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker and payable on demand. A promissory note is an instrument in writing (not being a bank-note or a currency note) containing an unconditional undertaking signed by the maker, to pay on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time a certain sum of money only to, or to the order of a certain person, or to the bearer of the instrument. Bills, cheques, and promissory notes are different in several respects, but the accounting procedure for them is similar. 14 The drawer may make the bill payable either to himself or to another person. The person to whom the bill is payable is the payee. In this chapter, we assume the drawer to be the payee. 15 We do not consider the customary three-day grace period. 16 We are being consistent with the procedure for determining the maturity date. Alternatively, we can include the date of the bill. In this case, we will calculate accrued interest for 28 days, but interest income allocated to the next period will be for 62 days (instead of 63 days). 17 As an exercise, you may like to try the reversing entry described in Chapter 3. 18 IAS 11:3/Ind AS 11:3/AS 7:2.1. 19 IAS 11:22/Ind AS 11:22/AS 7:21. 20 IAS 17:4/Ind AS 17:4/AS 19:3.1. 21 IAS 17:4/Ind AS 17:4/AS 19:3.2. 22 IAS 39:18(a)/AS 30:17(a). 23 The existing balance in the provision for doubtful debts account is 16,620, calculated as follows: 17,300 + 920 – 1,600. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Describe current assets. Define inventories and apply the matching principle to inventory valuation. Analyze the effect of an inventory error. Describe how to measure the physical inventory. Distinguish between product costs and period expenses. Apply the inventory costing methods. Explain the lower-of-cost-or-market principle of inventory valuation. Appreciate the role of conservatism, neutrality, and prudence in financial reporting. Explain the significance of comparability. Estimate the value of inventory by the retail inventory and standard cost methods. Explain the perpetual inventory system. Compute the cost of goods sold for a manufacturing organization. Evaluate the efficiency of inventory management using financial analysis. Understand the importance of managing the operating cycle. AND THEN THE MUSIC STOPPED On July 31, 2013, the National Spot Exchange Limited (NSEL), a leading market for trading in commodities, announced suspension of trading in all contracts. Reports suggested that there were major violations of commodities trading regulations. Some traders had built up huge trading positions, but the exchange let them “roll over” the positions instead of forcing them to settle the positions. The fear was that if the exchange did not allow “roll over”, traders would have defaulted and that would have led to a payments crisis. So the exchange allowed them to build up larger positions thereby postponing the settlement, but the problem did not go away. It snowballed into a huge crisis estimated to be `56 billion. When the irregularities surfaced finally, the size of the fraud turned out to be so large that the exchange had to shut down. Deloitte, Haskins & Sells, the auditor of NSEL’s parent company, Financial Technologies Limited, withdrew their audit report stating that the financial statements had become unreliable. There were allegations of manipulation of inventories suggesting that the physical inventories were much less than claimed. The case is going on. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL We now move to manufacturing organizations that have more complex activities than service and merchandising organizations. This chapter deals with inventories of items such as raw materials, work in progress, finished goods, spares, and consumables. Inventories are frequently the largest item of current assets in the balance sheet of manufacturing organizations. Inventory valuation is central to income measurement. You will study the principles of inventory valuation and figure out how the cost assigned to the ending inventory affects the reported net profit. You will understand the operation of the perpetual inventory system and the techniques of estimating inventory value. Effective inventory management avoids excessively high or dangerously low inventories. You will find out how to analyze the quality of a company’s inventories from the information available in the financial statements. Finally, you will understand the importance of the operating cycle. Current Assets Assets are classified as current or non-current depending on when they can be converted into cash. An enterprise should classify an asset as a current asset when: (a) it expects to realize the asset or intends to sell or consume it in its normal operating cycle; (b) it holds the asset primarily for the purpose of trading; (c) it expects to realize the asset within 12 months after the reporting period; or (d) the asset is cash or cash equivalent unless the asset is restricted from being exchanged or used to settle a liability for at least 12 months after the reporting period.1 The operating cycle of a business is the time between the acquisition of assets for processing and their realization in cash. When an enterprise’s normal operating cycle is not clearly identifiable, it is assumed to be 12 months.2 Cash, receivables, and inventories are the three major current asset categories. Inventories generally constitute the largest current asset category and the second largest assets (after fixed assets) in the financial statements of manufacturing organizations. An asset, which is not a current asset, is classified as a non-current asset. Inventory Valuation and Income Measurement Defining Inventories Inventories are goods that are meant for eventual conversion into cash in the normal course of business. Like receivables, they are part of the operating cycle of a business. Inventories are “assets: (a) held for sale in the ordinary course of business; (b) in the process of production for such sale; or (c) in the form of materials or supplies to be consumed in the production process or in the rendering of services.”3 Item (a) refers to finished goods, (b) to semi-finished goods or work in progress, and (c) to raw materials, stores, spares, consumable items, and packing materials. A merchandising organization merely buys and sells goods, barring some repacking, and reports the cost of unsold goods as merchandise inventory. Manufacturing organizations, however, buy raw materials and convert these into finished goods to be sold. As a result, a manufacturing organization has many kinds of inventories, such as raw materials, work in progress, and finished goods. Raw materials These consist of goods yet to be introduced into the production process. Steel and paint are raw materials for Tata Motors. Crude oil is a raw material for Indian Oil. Can you think of some of raw materials for P&G, NTPC and Asian Paints? Work in progress (or work in process) In any production process, some units will be in the process, but are yet to be completed. Partly assembled cars and car parts for Tata Motors. Crude oil in the pipeline for Indian Oil. What could be the items of work in progress for L&T, Biocon and Cisco? Finished goods Goods that have been produced completely, but remaining unsold comprise the finished goods inventory of a manufacturer. Fully finished cars for Tata Motors. Petrol awaiting despatch at the refineries for Indian Oil. Name some items of finished goods for ITC, Marico and L’Oreal. Other items In addition, most manufacturing firms also keep an inventory of factory supplies, such as coolants, fasteners, cleaning materials, packing materials, and machinery spares. The commonly used classification for such items is stores and spares. Further, a separate inventory of manufacturing tools is maintained under the title loose tools. Firms that carry packing materials of significant value show them separately. Long-term assets retired from regular use and held for sale are not inventories. The valuation of inventories can have a significant effect on their financial performance and financial position. Therefore, it is important to value and present inventories properly in the financial statements. Matching Inventory Costs with Revenues You may recall from Chapter 4 that we obtain the cost of goods sold by deducting ending inventory from the cost of goods available for sale. The cost assigned to the ending inventory directly affects the determination of the cost of goods sold. Thus, if we assign a higher value to the ending inventory, the cost of goods sold will decrease and the gross profit will increase. In contrast, if we assign a lower value to the ending inventory, the cost of goods sold will increase and the gross profit will decrease. Clearly, inventory valuation affects both the statement of profit and loss and the balance sheet. Revenue from operations arises in a continuous, repetitive process by which enterprises acquire and sell goods, and acquire further goods for additional sales. The matching principle requires matching expenses with revenues earned in a reporting period. The matching process for inventories consists of determining the amount that an enterprise should deduct from the cost of goods available for sale during the reporting period and carry forward as inventory. By doing so, it can match properly the resulting cost of goods sold with the revenue for the period. Therefore, the value of inventory at a certain date is the sum of costs attributable to the goods held by a business. Effect of Inventory Error An error in the value of the year-end inventory will misrepresent the cost of goods sold, gross profit, net profit, current assets, and equity. Since the ending inventory of one year becomes the beginning inventory of the next, the error will carry forward and affect the profit for the next period. Besides, major errors in inventory values will substantially undermine the credibility of the financial statements. Since inventory is often the largest among the current assets of a business, even a 5 per cent error in inventory valuation can materially misstate the net profit. Sometimes, the effect of an error may be to convert a loss-making company into a profit-making one and vice versa. Suppose that a business overstates its Year 1 ending inventory by `1,000. The effect of this error is to overstate the profit for Year 1. As a result of the error, the enterprise will overstate Year 2 beginning inventory and understate Year 2 profit, thus offsetting the error. Exhibit 6.1 illustrates the effect of this error. A comparison of the correct and incorrect ending inventory columns shows that the overstatement of `1,000 in the ending inventory in 20X1 results in understatement of the cost of goods sold and overstatement in both gross profit and net profit by an equal amount. The error also causes overstatement of the 20X1 current assets, total assets and equity by `1,000. The error reverses in 20X2, resulting in understatement of the 20X2 gross profit and net profit by an equal amount. Note that the sum of the net profit for 20X1 and 20X2 is `5,100 and is unaffected by the inventory error, because the 20X1 ending inventory becomes the 20X2 beginning inventory. Since the error is fully offset in 20X2, the 20X2 current assets, total assets, and equity are correct. Determining the Physical Inventory The first step in proper inventory valuation is to determine the physical inventory that belongs to the business. Under the periodic inventory system, the units on hand must be counted at the end of the reporting period to determine the ending inventory. The actual physical count of all items of inventory is commonly referred to as taking an inventory. Although continuous records of inventory transactions are maintained in the perpetual inventory system, physical inventory is also taken to verify the balances shown in the records. Standard inventory taking procedures exist in most organizations. Pre-numbered inventory tickets, at least one for each inventory item, are issued to each department in the company. An employee counts the units (or measures, weighs, etc. as appropriate) and enters in the inventory ticket the description of the item and the number of units counted, and initials the ticket. Another employee verifies the count and initials the inventory ticket. A supervisor makes sure that inventory tickets have been tagged to all the items and may recount some items at random. All the inventory tickets are then collected and sent to the accounting department which verifies that all the pre-numbered tickets issued have been returned. The information on the inventory tickets is summarized on an inventory summary sheet for completion of the physical inventory process. Goods in Transit A business must include goods in transit in ending inventory if it owns them. The terms of shipment determine whether the buyer or the seller is the legal owner of the goods. In Chapter 4, we noted: If the terms are FOB shipping point, title normally passes to the buyer when the goods are delivered to the goods carrier (i.e. when the carrier accepts the goods for transport). If the terms are FOB destination, title normally passes to the buyer when the goods arrive at their destination.4 Goods on Consignment You may recall the discussion on consignment in Chapter 4. Even though the consignee has physical possession of the goods, the consignor owns the goods. Goods on consignment are, therefore, part of the consignor’s inventory and should be excluded from the consignee’s inventory. Goods transferred to a dealer or distributor for resale, as an agent for the owner of the goods, are similar to goods on consignment. Frequently, materials belonging to a firm are issued to an outside agency to carry out manufacturing process such as machining or painting. The firm must include these goods in its ending inventory. Inventory Costs Pricing the inventory is one of the most contentious topics in accounting. Since the value placed on ending inventory may have a dramatic effect on reported net profit, users of financial statements, particularly investors, managers, and tax authorities, show keen interest in inventory pricing. The accountant is faced with conflicting objectives for inventory valuation. Proper income determination is the guiding principle of inventory valuation for financial reporting, while minimizing income tax payable is considered the desirable objective for tax reporting. In this context, it is important to distinguish between product costs and period expenses. Product Costs Also known as inventoriable costs, these comprise all costs of purchase, costs of conversion, and other costs incurred in bringing the inventories up to their present location and condition.5 (a) The costs of purchase consist of the invoice price including duties and taxes (other than those subsequently recoverable from the tax authorities), freight in, and other expenditure directly attributable to the acquisition. Purchase discounts, rebates, and other similar items are deducted. (b) The costs of conversion consist of direct manufacturing costs (usually production labour cost) and indirect manufacturing costs, or production overhead. Examples of indirect manufacturing costs include factory depreciation, helpers’ wages, supervisors’ salaries, factory rent, power, and factory insurance. Period Expenses Expenses incurred in general administration, storage, selling, distribution, research and development, and interest charges are not part of inventoriable costs, and are referred to as period expenses since these are expensed in the period in which they are incurred. Also, losses and abnormal expenses, such as excessive spoilage, double freight, re-handling costs, penalties, fines, demurrage, detention charges, and idle facility expense, are treated as period expenses. Interest charges are treated as product costs in certain situations in which the value of inventory increases with ageing (e.g. wine, timber, and rice). In such cases, IAS 23/Ind AS 23/AS 16 applies. Cost Formulas The prices of most of the merchandise change during the year. So a business buys units of a specific item of inventory at different prices on different dates. When this happens, the accountant has to assume the order in which units have been sold so that the cost of goods available for sale can be allocated between the ending inventory and the cost of goods sold. In this context, it is necessary to distinguish between physical flow and cost flow. Physical flow refers to the actual sequence in which goods are physically used or sold in the operations of the business. In contrast, cost flow refers to the association of costs with the assumed sequence in which the goods are used or sold. Four methods are commonly used to assign cost based on a different cost flow assumption: 1. Specific identification; 2. First-in, First-out (FIFO); 3. Last-in, First-out (LIFO)6; and 4. Weighted-average cost (WAC). We will now see how these methods work using the following data: Specific Identification This method assigns specific costs to each unit sold and each unit on hand. It may be used if the units in the ending inventory can be identified as coming from specific purchases. The specific identification method is particularly suited to inventories of high-value, low-volume items, e.g. jewellery and designer dresses. Each unit in inventory must be affixed with an identification tag. To illustrate, assume that the December 31 inventory consisted of 60 units from the March 27 purchase, 70 units from the June 12 purchase, and 20 units from the September 19 purchase. The cost of the ending inventory is computed as follows: We compute the cost of goods sold by subtracting the ending inventory from the cost of goods available for sale, as follows: The specific identification method does not involve any assumption about cost flow. It matches the cost to the physical flow of the inventory and eliminates the effect of cost flow assumptions on reported net profit. The method is costly to implement. Besides, it is unlikely to produce better information when the inventory consists of homogeneous or high-volume items. First-in, First-out (FIFO) The FIFO method assumes that the first units acquired are the first units sold. Therefore, the cost of the units in the ending inventory is that of the most recent purchases. Although FIFO is a cost flow assumption, physical flow too often follows the first-in, first-out sequence. In our illustration, the cost of the 150 units in the ending inventory would be `850, computed as follows: Since the cost of the ending inventory under FIFO is based on the most recent purchase prices, the inventory value reflects the conditions prevalent closer to the balance sheet. A major criticism of FIFO is that it leads to an improper matching of costs with revenues since the cost of goods sold is computed on the basis of old prices which are possibly unrealistic. For example, in times of rising prices, the application of FIFO produces the highest amount of net profit although much of this profit results from matching current revenues with low purchase prices paid in the past. Nevertheless, FIFO is one of the popular inventory costing methods. Last-in, First-out (LIFO) The LIFO method assumes that the last units acquired are the first units sold. Therefore, the cost of the units in the ending inventory is that of the earliest purchases. Under LIFO, the cost of the 150 units in the ending inventory would be `350, computed as follows: LIFO ensures that the current revenues are matched with the most recent purchase prices, thus resulting in realistic reported profits. Often, the LIFO cost of goods sold will be a good approximation of the current cost of the units sold. The chief disadvantage of LIFO is that the balance sheet value of inventories may be dated and unrealistic.LIFO is not permitted in India. Weighted-average Cost (WAC) The WAC method assumes that the goods available for sale are homogeneous. Average cost is computed by dividing the cost of goods available for sale, which consists of the cost of the beginning inventory and all purchases, by the number of units available for sale. The weighted-average unit cost, which results from this computation, is applied to the units in the ending inventory.7 In our illustration, the unit cost under this would be `4, computed as follows: The cost of goods sold is `1,400, computed as follows: WAC is appropriate when the inventory units involved are homogeneous or when it is difficult to make a cost flow assumption. Besides, the cost figure for the ending inventory reported under this method is influenced by all the purchase prices paid during the year and thus evens out the effect of price increases and decreases on ending inventory value. The major criticism of WAC is that it assigns no more importance to current prices than to past prices paid several months ago. Comparing Alternative Inventory Costing Methods Of the above four most common methods for costing inventory, the specific identification method is based on actual costs, whereas the other three methods are based on cost flow assumptions. Exhibit 6.2 presents a comparison of the effects of the methods on the firm’s financial statements. We assume sales of 350 units at `10 each. From this illustration, it is clear that LIFO reports the lowest gross profit in a period of rising prices, because it charges the highest costs to the goods sold. In contrast, FIFO reports the highest gross profit, because it charges the lowest costs to the goods sold. The results will be reversed in a period of falling prices. WAC, by avoiding the extremes of FIFO and LIFO, produces a gross profit somewhere between the two. It is difficult to generalize about specific identification, because the results depend on the prices paid for the lots selected for sale. In a period of constant prices, the four methods will produce identical results. We now summarize in the following table the effects of FIFO, LIFO and WAC on ending inventory, cost of goods sold, and gross profit: Which method should a business select? The answer depends on many factors, such as the effect of each method on the financial statements and income tax. A basic problem in determining the “best” inventory formula is that the ending inventory value affects both balance sheet and statement of profit and loss. The problem is aggravated when there is a prolonged period of increasing or decreasing prices. Here is a summary of the methods: FIFO inventory value is more realistic since it is closer to current cost, but it produces a net profit unrelated to current input costs. LIFO does a fair job of matching current selling prices and cost of goods sold, which is closer to current replacement costs, but often produces an outdated inventory value. Both LIFO and WAC allow a business to manipulate net profit by changing the timing of additional purchases. The use of LIFO in a period of rising prices produces a lower net profit, leading to a lower income tax expense and more cash availability for investment purposes. LIFO liquidation occurs when the year-end inventory quantity falls below the beginning level. In that event, the cost of goods sold will be charged the ridiculously low prices paid many years ago, and the business will be forced to pay income tax on the difference between the current purchase price and the old LIFO cost. Therefore, a business using LIFO must arrange for timely purchases to maintain the inventory level. Sometimes, it may lead to unnecessary inventory accumulation. For income tax purposes, a business is free to adopt any method of inventory valuation acceptable for accounting. Once adopted, the method must be followed consistently. Inventory Profits It is clear from Exhibit 6.2 that LIFO reports the lowest profit in a period of inflation. Even so, it may still fall short of recovering the current cost of goods sold. Continuing with the illustration, assume that the current replacement cost is `8 per unit. If the company is to replace the goods sold during the year at this price, its profit is only `2 ( `10 – `8) for every unit sold and the real gross profit is `700; LIFO reports an inventory profit of `1,150 ( `1,850 – `700). As you would have thought, FIFO and WAC report much larger fictitious inventory profits of `1,650 ( `2,350 – `700) and `1,400 ( `2,100 – `700), respectively. LIFO reports the lowest inventory profit, because the LIFO cost of goods sold is based on the latest purchase prices. Since inventory profits result purely from inflation, they must be retained and reinvested in inventory. If they are distributed as taxes and dividends, there will be a reduction in a firm’s capital, and the firm will run short of cash for inventory purchases. Inventory Valuation Cost is the primary basis for valuation of inventory. However, in certain circumstances, it may be more appropriate to report inventory at an amount below cost. When the value of the inventory declines by reason of damage, deterioration, obsolescence, or fall in market prices, a loss occurs. In these circumstances, we need to depart from the cost basis, and recognize the loss by writing down the ending inventory to market. This is the lower-of-cost-or-market (LCM) principle: “Inventories should be valued at the lower of cost and net realisable value.”8 An enterprise holds inventories for eventual conversion into cash. The practice of writing inventories down below cost is consistent with the view that assets should not be carried in excess of amounts expected to be realized from their sale or use. The LCM principle provides a practical means of measuring value and determining the loss to be recognized in a reporting period. Cost is computed using a cost formula. Market means net realizable value (NRV), defined as “the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less the estimated costs of completion and the costs necessary to make the sale.”9 Normally, we should write down inventories to net realizable value item by item. However, in some circumstances, it may be appropriate to group similar or related items. In the latter case, we compare the total cost and the total market value for each category of items. Here, the category should consist of items relating to a product line, which have similar purposes or end uses. Aggregate classification such as finished goods or all the inventories is not acceptable. Exhibit 6.3 illustrates the application of the LCM principle using the two approaches. Writing down inventories to net realizable value is a principle rather than a rule. Application of the LCM principle calls for judgment so as to ensure that the writedowns do not result in understatement of income, deliberately or otherwise. For example, normal quantities of raw materials and components held for use in production are not written down below cost if the finished goods are expected to be sold at or above the cost incurred. Similarly, inventory of maintenance supplies and consumable stores is ordinarily valued at cost. Also, a temporary decline in selling prices may not warrant the recognition of a loss. The enterprise should review the net realizable value at each reporting date. The write-down is reversed to the extent of an increase in net realizable value. In other words, the reversal is limited to the amount of the original write-down. Conservatism, Neutrality, and Prudence Some cite conservatism in support of arbitrary write-downs below cost. This idea is sometimes expressed simplistically as “recognize all losses, but anticipate no profits”. It was widely applied in the early days of accounting when lenders were the principal users of financial statements. In those days, lending decisions were made mainly on the basis of the value of assets that would be available to the lenders if the borrower defaulted. Lenders face an asymmetric loss function: while they are adversely affected by their borrowers’ losses, they do not benefit from their gains. Naturally, they prefer understatement of the value of the borrower’s assets to overstatement. This provided an economic logic for the practice. In recent times, since shareholders have increasingly become the focus of financial reporting, the statement of profit and loss has emerged as the more important statement. If the ending inventory valued at below cost is sold in the next period at or above cost, the write-down understates the profit for the first period and overstates the profit for the second period. As a result, there will be distortion in reporting over time. Neutrality, a characteristic that makes financial statements useful, means that the information contained in financial statements must be free from bias, upward or downward. Financial statements should not aim at producing a predetermined result or outcome. Biased information would not be reliable. Neutrality is a principal qualitative characteristic of financial statements. As a result, accountants interpret conservatism as prudence: a cautious attitude in making assumptions, judgments, and estimates under conditions of uncertainty such that assets or income are not overstated and liabilities or expenses are not understated. Examples include the collectibility of doubtful debts, the probable useful life of plant and equipment items, the number of product warranty claims that may occur, the life expectancy of retired employees entitled to pension, and the tax treatment of a contentious item. However, deliberate understatement of assets or income, or deliberate overstatement of liabilities or expenses is not acceptable, as this would affect the reliability of financial statements. That said, we should be aware that conservatism or prudence continues to have an important economic role in financial reporting. The managers of a company know more about the company’s problems and prospects than its shareholders. When their remuneration or reappointment is related to the company’s profit, they have reason to be forthcoming in sharing good news about the company’s performance or prospects but may hold back bad news. As a result, accountants and shareholders require early recognition of losses, mitigating information asymmetry to an extent. Requiring managers to report losses promptly would discourage them from taking up unprofitable projects. This results in better monitoring of managers’ actions by boards, investors, and analysts. Thus, timely recognition of losses is more than just good accounting; it is an important corporate governance mechanism. As you can see, conservatism in financial reporting is an important mechanism to address the moral hazard problem that we discussed in Chapter 1. 10 Comparability Comparability (or consistency) requires the application of the same accounting policies from one reporting period to the next. If an enterprise could freely change its accounting policies, the amounts of profit would not be comparable over time. The comparability requirement safeguards users of financial statements against managers making arbitrary and opportunistic changes in measuring income and presenting information in the financial statements. It enables investors, creditors, and other users to compare meaningfully the financial statements of an enterprise over time in order to identify trends in its financial position and performance. You have seen in Exhibit 6.2 how different inventory methods can produce different profit numbers. Further, frequent accounting changes would destroy the credibility of an enterprise’s financial reports and adversely affect the reputation of its management. While accountants frown on frequent and arbitrary changes in accounting methods, the comparability requirement does not come in the way of a change needed for improving financial reporting. An enterprise shall change an accounting policy only if the change (a) is required by an accounting standard; or (b) results in the financial statements providing reliable and more relevant information about the effects of transactions, other events or conditions on an enterprise’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows.11 Comparability is so important that it is a principal qualitative characteristic of financial statements. The effect of an accounting policy change on profit and the reasons for the change should be disclosed. Users of financial statements must study the footnotes carefully to understand the inventory method used and the effect of any accounting changes on profit in order to make meaningful comparisons. The need for comparability does not mean mere uniformity and should not be allowed to become an impediment to the introduction of improved accounting standards or the provision of high quality information. Estimating Inventory Value In a periodic inventory system, a physical inventory must be taken to determine the ending inventory value. Since frequent inventory taking disrupts normal operations and involves considerable expense, a physical inventory is usually taken at the end of the reporting period. However, the management often needs to prepare quarterly or half-yearly financial statements to report to the shareholders and lenders and to monitor the company’s performance. Besides, there are occasions when physical inventory cannot be taken and must be estimated – for instance, when the inventory has been destroyed in a fire. Estimates are also needed for insurance claims. Estimation procedures, if they are reasonable, are also a useful check on physical inventory. Two commonly used estimation techniques are: Retail inventory method; and Standard cost method. Retail Inventory Method Large merchandising firms such as supermarkets use the retail inventory method. They carry a large number of different items which are marked with selling prices. To determine the cost of the items in inventory, it is necessary to look up the purchase invoices. This is a formidable task for most of them. The retail inventory method helps in estimating the ending inventory value. To use this method, it is necessary to maintain records of the beginning inventory and purchases made during the period both at cost and at retail. “At retail” means the sticker prices of the inventory items. We estimate the ending inventory as follows: 1. Compute the amount of goods available for sale both at cost and at retail. 2. Divide the goods available for sale at cost by the goods available at retail to obtain the ratio of cost to retail. 3. Deduct sales from goods available for sale at retail to determine the ending inventory at retail. 4. Multiply the ending inventory at retail by the ratio of cost to retail to convert the inventory into cost. The retail inventory method assumes that the ending inventory consists of the same mix of goods as contained in the goods available for sale and that the selling prices of merchandise originally established do not change. In practice, the composition of inventory often varies during a period. Also, the selling prices of many items change, because of special rebates or increases in market prices. Despite these difficulties, the retail inventory method is considered a satisfactory one, and may be used to convert a physical inventory taken at retail to a cost amount. The retail method is acceptable “if the results approximate cost”.12 The gross profit method is a variant of the retail inventory method. It works on the assumption that the percentage of gross profit to net sales remains approximately the same from one period to another. It is not normally acceptable for financial reporting, because it provides only an estimate, but it is useful in estimating inventory lost or destroyed by fire, flood or theft, when proper inventory records are not available or have been destroyed. The income tax and the sales tax authorities use this method to detect suppression of revenue. Under the gross profit method, we estimate the amount of ending inventory as follows: 1. Compute the cost of goods available for sale. 2. Estimate the cost of goods sold by deducting the estimated gross profit from sales. 3. Deduct the estimated cost of goods sold from the cost of goods available for sale to arrive at the estimated ending inventory. Standard Cost Method The standard cost method uses a predetermined cost of making a product. Standard costs are based on the standards for material consumption and prices, labour efficiency and wage rates, and expected level of operations laid down by the management. These are used primarily for control of operational costs in management accounting and their use in financial accounting is somewhat limited. The use of standard costs results in savings in record-keeping costs and evens out wide fluctuations in the cost of goods sold. Significant differences between standard costs and actual costs must be distributed between the cost of goods sold and the inventories. Perpetual Inventory System So far, the discussion of inventories has focused on the periodic inventory system. Under this system, we record purchases and determine the cost of goods sold at the end of a reporting period when a physical inventory is taken. The main disadvantage of the system is the lack of real-time information about inventory levels. Management often needs up-to-the-minute information to respond quickly to customers’ enquiries, avoid shortages, and reduce interest and other expenses associated with carrying inventory. The perpetual inventory system overcomes the problems of periodic inventory. Under this system, an enterprise maintains a continuous record of all purchases and sales of merchandise, resulting in constant updating of the amount of inventory on hand. With this information, it can carry out many tasks such as the following: 1. Promptly answer questions from customers and salespersons about the availability of an item. 2. Record merchandise in real time and thus avoid running out of stock. 3. Calculate the cost of goods sold and the related profit for each sale. Not long ago, only companies that sold a limited range of products used the perpetual inventory system, because the cost and effort of maintaining the system were too high for most types of businesses. However, with the availability of computers at relatively low costs, many firms are switching from periodic to perpetual inventory. Recording Accounting Entries The perpetual inventory system updates the merchandise inventory account after each purchase and sale. We debit merchandise inventory for purchases and inward freight and credit the account for purchase returns and discounts. So, in the perpetual inventory system, we do not need accounts such as Purchases, Purchase Returns and Allowances, and Freight In. For example, assume that a stationer purchases pens at `20 each and sells them at `25 each. He began the current period with six pens, which cost a total of `120. Exhibit 6.4 shows some typical entries made under periodic and perpetual inventory systems. In sum, the perpetual inventory system: Does not require a Purchases account or a Purchase Return and Allowances account. Here, purchases and returns and allowances are recorded in the Merchandise Inventory account. Uses a Cost of Goods Sold account to record the cost of the merchandise sold. Requires no entry to record the ending inventory since a continuous record of inventory is available. The closing entries simply transfer the balance in the Cost of Goods Sold account to Statement of Profit and Loss. Entries to record sales and payment to supplier are identical under the two systems. Also, under both inventory systems, the Sales account must be closed. Maintaining Perpetual Inventory Records When there are many items in inventory, the Merchandise Inventory account serves as a control account for a subsidiary inventory ledger, also known as the priced stores ledger. An individual record is maintained for each item in inventory in the inventory ledger. The record is kept in a card in a manual system and in a computer file in an electronic system. In either case, the record for each item shows the number of units and cost of each purchase, the number of units and cost of each sale, and the resulting balance of inventory on hand. Exhibit 6.5 gives an example of a perpetual inventory record. The method of inventory costing in Exhibit 6.5 is FIFO. Under LIFO, the cost of 15 writing pads sold on July 17 would be `180, in contrast to the FIFO figure of `135. The LIFO cost of the 30 writing pads sold on July 28 would be `360, in comparison to the FIFO cost of `330. The ending inventory is `360 under FIFO and would be `285 under LIFO. As an exercise, verify the LIFO numbers. Internal Control and Perpetual Inventory System The perpetual inventory system enhances control over inventories. It helps prevent stockout as well as unnecessary investment in inventories by ensuring that the inventory level is maintained between maximum and minimum levels. Nevertheless, it is necessary to retain other elements of internal control described earlier. Since it is possible to take physical inventory at any time, shortages can be investigated immediately when noticed. Manufacturing Costs A merchandising organization has just one item of inventory: merchandise inventory. On the other hand, a manufacturing organization has several kinds of inventory, such as raw materials, work in progress, finished goods, consumable stores and spare parts, and packing materials. For a manufacturing organization, cost of goods available for sale is the sum of the beginning inventory of finished goods and the cost of goods manufactured during the period. Cost of goods sold equals cost of goods available for sale minus the ending inventory of finished goods. The computation of the cost of goods manufactured is an internal matter and is not shown in published statements. Exhibit 6.6 shows an example of the cost of goods sold statement, including the cost of goods manufactured section. Financial Analysis of Inventories A business needs inventories, similar to cash and receivables, to meet day-to-day operating needs. Keeping some inventory is often inevitable given purchasing lead times and unexpected delays in arrival of materials. Production stoppages and inability to meet customer requests could result if adequate inventories are not kept. However, the investment in inventories represents idle funds on which a business does not earn any profit. Therefore, it is necessary to optimize inventory levels. Inventory turnover is a measure of the efficiency of inventory management. It is computed as follows: Since cost of goods sold is not reported in the financial statements, we will take it as the sum of all costs excluding interest charges and income tax. To illustrate, assume the following data for Bhava Company: This means that the inventories have been turned over or rotated 12 times during the period. In other words, the company held inventories, on average, for one month. The average inventory holding period is computed as: Inventory turnover of 12 times implies average inventory holding of one month, calculated as follows: A low inventory holding period (or high inventory turnover) is generally an indicator of efficient inventory management, since it implies rapid movement of merchandise leading to lower investment in inventory. Conversely, a high inventory holding period (or low inventory turnover) indicates poor management of inventory since it implies a higher investment in inventory than necessary. The average holding period for an enterprise may be compared with its past experience and with industry average. Managing the Operating Cycle The operating cycle is the continual conversion of cash into inventories, then into receivables and back into cash in the normal course of business. A firm buys inventories on credit or for cash, sells them on credit or for cash, collects cash from its customers, and pays its suppliers. The operating cycle time is the time it takes to get back cash. An efficient business buys inventories when needed, converts them into receivables by smart selling, collects cash from its customers by laying down credit standards and ensuring timely payment, and manages to get a long credit period from its suppliers. The shorter the length of a firm’s operating cycle, the greater the firm’s efficiency in managing its current assets (receivables and inventories). The length of the operating cycle is a measure of how fast a business gets back its cash. It indicates the enterprise’s efficiency in selling, collecting, and paying. The operating cycle enables us to integrate our understanding of receivables and inventories, the two major current asset items. The other important component is payables, which we will see in Chapter 9. Figure 6.1 illustrates the operating cycle under different conditions. Figure 6.1(a) depicts a firm that has cash purchases and cash sales. The operating cycle time is the inventory holding period, i.e. the time it takes to sell the inventories. The emphasis is on selling the goods quickly. This is typical of most small businesses such as roadside vendors of fruits, vegetables, and fish. Their inventory holding period is usually zero, i.e. they sell the goods the same day. Of course, the vendors do not worry about collections since they sell for cash. Figure 6.1(b) describes a firm with cash purchases and credit sales. Here, the operating cycle time consists of the inventory holding period and the credit period for the receivables. There are some small businesses of this type. They need to worry about selling and collecting. Figure 6.1(c) describes a firm with credit purchases and cash sales. While the suppliers provide inventory financing, the enterprise sells for cash. So there are payables, but no receivables. The operating cycle time equals the inventory holding period minus the credit period for the payables. This is typical of most supermarkets. They should work on rapid inventory movement and better credit terms from their suppliers. If the suppliers’ credit period is equal to the inventory holding period, the operating cycle time is zero. This means that the suppliers get paid as soon as the goods are sold; so the enterprise does not use its cash for financing current assets. In exceptional cases, it may pay its suppliers after getting cash from sales; here the cycle time would be negative.13 Figure 6.1(d) describes a firm with credit purchases and credit sales. The enterprise’s suppliers provide inventory financing and the enterprise provides credit to its customers. The operating cycle time equals the inventory holding period plus the credit period for the receivables minus the credit period for the payables. This is typical of most manufacturing and service businesses. The enterprise’s bargaining power with both its customers and suppliers and its selling efficiency will determine the cycle time in this case. Looking Back Describe current assets A current asset is intended to be converted into cash within one year or within the operating cycle. Inventories are current assets. Define inventories and apply the matching principle to inventory valuation Inventories are assets held for sale in the ordinary course of business, or in the process of production for such sale, or for consumption in the production of goods or services for sale. The matching process for inventories consists of determining the amount that should be deducted from the cost of goods available for sale during the reporting period and carried forward as inventory. Analyze the effect of an inventory error An error in the value of the year-end inventory will distort cost of goods sold, gross profit, net profit, current assets, and equity. An error will also distort the profit for the next period. Describe how to measure the physical inventory The units on hand are counted at the end of the reporting period to determine the ending inventory. Goods in transit and goods on consignment must be included in the owner’s inventory. Distinguish between product costs and period expenses Product costs are the costs of bringing inventories to their present location and condition and they constitute the cost of inventories. The remaining costs are period expenses and are expensed as incurred. Apply the inventory costing methods Cost is the primary basis for valuation of inventory. The cost formulas allowed in India are specific identification, FIFO, and WAC. Each method is based on a different cost flow assumption. The specific identification method assigns specific costs to each unit sold and each unit on hand. FIFO assumes that the first units acquired are the first units sold. WAC assumes that the goods available for sale are homogeneous. LIFO (not allowed in India) assumes that the last units acquired are sold first. Explain the lower-of-cost-or-market (LCM) principle of inventory valuation The LCM principle requires a loss to be recognized by writing down the ending inventory to market. Appreciate the role of conservatism, neutrality, and prudence in financial reporting Lenders face an asymmetric loss function. So they prefer understatement of the borrower’s assets. With shareholders emerging as the more important users of accounting information, both understatement and overstatement of profits are unfair. Even so, conservatism forces managers to report bad news faster than they would report on their own. Neutrality is an important characteristic of financial statements: there should be no bias in reporting. Prudence is the exercise of caution in reporting while dealing with uncertainties. Explain the significance of comparability Comparability requires the application of the accounting policies over time. Accounting changes would make it difficult to compare reported performance. Estimate the value of inventory by the retail inventory and the standard cost methods When interim financial statements are to be prepared or when the inventory has been destroyed in an accident, the ending inventory must be estimated. Under the retail inventory method, the ending inventory at retail prices is multiplied by the ratio of cost to retail to arrive at the cost. The standard cost method uses a predetermined cost of making a product based on management’s standards. Explain the perpetual inventory system Under the perpetual inventory system, an enterprise keeps a continuous record of all purchases and sales of merchandise. The Merchandise Inventory account records purchases, freight in and purchase returns and discounts. A Cost of Goods Sold account is used to record the sale of merchandise. Compute the cost of goods sold for a manufacturing organization For a manufacturing organization, the cost of goods available for sale is the sum of the beginning inventory of finished goods and the cost of goods manufactured during the period. The cost of goods sold equals the cost of goods available for sale minus the ending inventory of finished goods. Evaluate the efficiency of inventory management using financial analysis The investment in inventories represents idle funds. It is necessary to optimize the level of inventories. Inventory turnover is a measure of the efficiency of inventory management. High inventory turnover implies rapid movement of merchandise leading to lower investment in inventory. Understand the importance of managing the operating cycle The operating cycle of a business indicates the speed with which a business converts its inventories and receivables back into cash. The shorter the cycle, the faster the speed of cash conversion. Review Problem Suman Company has the following inventory, purchases, and sales data for August: The company uses the periodic inventory system. The physical inventory count on August 31 shows 300 units on hand. Required Compute the cost of the inventory on hand on August 31 and the cost of goods sold for August under each of the following methods: (1) FIFO, (2) LIFO, and (3) WAC. Solution The cost of goods available for sale is computed as follows: ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. “Manipulation of inventory valuation is self-defeating.” Explain. 2. What characteristics should an asset possess to be classified as inventory? 3. Under what circumstances might interest charges be included in product costs? 4. Why do we need inventory costing methods? 5. Which inventory costing method assumes that the goods available for sale are homogeneous? 6. Explain the income tax benefits resulting from the use of LIFO during periods of inflation if LIFO is allowed for tax purposes. 7. If goods are shipped FOB destination, which party to the transaction must pay the freight bill? 8. Define the term ‘market’ as used in the phrase “lower of cost or market”. 9. Comment on the following statement: “While naked conservatism is unacceptable, an attitude of healthy scepticism is justified in the face of uncertainty”. 10. How does conservatism protect shareholders from moral hazard? 11. Explain how the comparability principle improves the usefulness of financial statements. 12. Chaman Lal, an officer in the commercial taxes department of the Government of Punjab, recently raided a merchandising firm in Ludhiana on information that it was evading sales tax. Explain how he can use the gross profit method to detect evasion of tax. 13. Suppose you compute the cost of goods sold under the perpetual and the periodic inventory systems using the following inventory methods: specific identification, FIFO, LIFO, and WAC. Which of these methods will produce (a) same and (b) different amounts for cost of goods sold under the two systems? 14. How are inventories classified in the balance sheet of a manufacturing enterprise? 15. Can a company following the perpetual inventory system dispense with year-end physical inventory taking? Problem Set A Assume that the ending inventory on July 31 consisted of 50 units from the beginning inventory, 60 units from the July 14 purchase, and 90 units from the July 23 purchase. The company uses the periodical inventory system. Required Determine the cost of the ending inventory and the cost of goods sold using the following methods: (a) specific identification, (b) FIFO, (c) LIFO, and (d) WAC. Required Using the periodic inventory system, compute the cost of ending inventory and cost of goods sold. Use the FIFO and LIFO inventory costing methods. Assume that Watawala Company, mentioned in Problem 6A.2, uses the perpetual inventory system. Required Compute the cost of ending inventory and cost of goods sold, using the FIFO and LIFO inventory costing methods. Required Compute the ending value by applying the lower-of-cost-market principle to (a) each item of inventory and (b) groups of similar items, assuming that products A, B, C, and D constitute one group and products E and F, the other group. Problem Set B The company uses the periodic inventory system. A review of the accounting records revealed the following items: 1. Merchandise costing `420 was shipped to a customer on March 31, 20X7, FOB shipping point. Physical inventory had been completed before the shipping. The sale revenue of `530 was recognized on April 12, 20X7 when the sales invoice was prepared. 2. Merchandise costing `290 shipped FOB shipping point by a supplier on March 27, 20X8 was received on April 2, 20X8. The goods were not included in the inventory on March 31, but reported as purchases on April 17, 20X8 when the invoice arrived. 3. Goods received on consignment on March 25, 20X7 were kept in a separate bay. However, one lot costing `160 was included inadvertently in the ending inventory on March 31, 20X7. 4. On March 27, 20X7, goods costing `630 were shipped FOB destination to a customer. A sales invoice for `720 was prepared on April 6. The goods, which were in transit on March 31, 20X7, were not included in the physical inventory taken on that day. 5. The total of one of the inventory sheets was recorded in the inventory summary sheet on March 31, 20X8 as `1,430 instead of `1,340. Required 1. Determine the correct ending inventory figures for 20X7 and 20X8. Itemize each correction to arrive at total corrections. 2. Prepare revised statement of profit and loss for the years ended March 31, 20X7 and 20X8. 3. Compute the total net profit for the two-year period, both before and after the revisions. Why are these figures similar or different? The company incurred operating expenses of `58,000 during the year. It uses the periodic inventory system. Required 1. Prepare a schedule to compute the cost of goods available for sale during the year. 2. Determine the ending inventory on March 31, 20X3 using the following inventory costing methods: (a) FIFO (b) LIFO (c) WAC 3. Prepare a statement of profit and loss under each of the above inventory costing methods. Required 1. Record the beginning inventory and the transactions on a perpetual inventory card using the FIFO method. 2. Record the beginning inventory and the transactions on a perpetual inventory card using the LIFO method. 3. Prepare journal entries to record the sale of 20 units at `160 each on February 14 to Jain Brothers and the purchase on February 29 from Vipul Company from the LIFO inventory card, assuming that the two transactions were on credit. Sales commission is payable on all items at 10 per cent in Product Group I and at 20 per cent in Product Group II. Delivery charges of `20 per unit are payable on product code R098. Required Compute the amount at which ending inventory is to be reported applying the LCM principle to (a) each item of inventory or (b) groups of similar items. Bashir Company sold 50,000 audio CDs at `28 during the year. Its beginning inventory consisted of 10,000 CDs at `18 per CD. The following purchases were made during the year: 15,000 CDs @ `19; 10,000 CDs @ `21; 20,000 CDs @ `22; 10,000 CDs @ `23. Operating expenses were `185,000. Income tax is payable at 40 per cent. Required 1. Compute net profit using the FIFO and LIFO methods. 2. Which method is more advantageous to the company for (a) income tax reporting and (b) shareholder reporting? Why? What trade-offs, if any, are involved in this context? Assume that the company must use the same method for both purposes. 3. Suppose that the company makes a purchase of 15,000 CDs at `25 on the last day of the reporting period. How will the purchase affect the company’s net profit and income tax expense under the two inventory costing methods? Problem Set C The company uses the periodic inventory system. A review of the accounting records revealed the following items: 1. Merchandise costing `3,700 was shipped to a customer on December 29, 20X3, FOB destination. The sales invoice for `4,300 was prepared on December 30, 20X3. The goods were received by the customer on January 3, 20X4 and were not included in the physical inventory on December 31, 20X3. 2. Merchandise costing `2,400 sent on consignment to a dealer was not included in the ending inventory on December 31, 20X4. 3. Merchandise costing `4,100 shipped FOB shipping point by a supplier on December 29, 20X3 was received on January 6, 20X4. The goods were not included in the inventory on December 31, but reported as purchases on January 9, 20X4 when the invoice arrived. 4. On December 31, 20X3, goods costing `4,400 were shipped FOB destination by a supplier. The goods were in transit on December 31, 20X3 and were not included in the physical inventory on that day, but were reported as purchases on January 14, 20X4 when the invoice arrived. 5. The total of one of the inventory sheets was recorded in the inventory summary sheet on December 31, 20X4 as `7,500 instead of `5,700. Required 1. Determine the correct ending inventory figures for 20X3 and 20X4. Itemize each correction to arrive at the total corrections. 2. Prepare revised statement of profit and loss for the years ended December 31, 20X3 and 20X4. 3. Compute the total net profit for the two-year period both before and after the revisions. Why are these figures similar or different? The company incurred operating expenses of `16,000 during the year. It uses the periodic inventory system. Required 1. Prepare a schedule to compute the cost of goods available for sale during the year. 2. Determine the ending inventory on December 31, 20X7 using the following inventory costing methods: (a) FIFO (b) LIFO (c) WAC 3. Prepare a statement of profit and loss under each of the above inventory costing methods. Required 1. Record the beginning inventory and the transactions on a perpetual inventory card using the FIFO Method. 2. Record the beginning inventory and the transactions on a perpetual inventory card using the LIFO Method. 3. Prepare journal entries to record the sale of 90 units at `90 each on November 8 to Rohini Company and the purchase on November 26 from Tanvir Company from the LIFO inventory card, assuming that both transactions were on credit. Sales commission is payable on all items at 10 per cent. Delivery charges of `10 per unit are payable on all items in Product Group II. Required Compute the amount at which ending inventory is to be reported applying the LCM principle to (a) each item of inventory or (b) groups of similar items. Jupiter Company sold 20,000 crates of a soft drink at `120 during the year. Its beginning inventory consisted of 1,000 crates at `70 per crate. The following purchases were made during the year: 5,000 crates @ `75; 8,000 crates @ `76; 9,000 crates @ `80. Operating expenses were `365,000. Income tax is payable at 30 per cent. Required 1. Compute the net profit using the FIFO and LIFO methods. 2. Which method is more advantageous to the company for (a) income tax reporting, and (b) shareholder reporting? Why? What trade-offs, if any, are involved in this context? Assume that the company must use the same method for both purposes. 3. Suppose the company makes a purchase of 4,000 crates at `85 on the last day of the reporting period. How will the purchase affect the company’s net profit and income tax expense under the two inventory costing methods? Business Decision Cases The warehouse of Giridhar Clothing Company was destroyed in a fire that broke out on the night of May 7, resulting in extensive damage to the company’s inventories. Even in the best of times, the company did not maintain proper accounting records. In the past, a CA firm was engaged to prepare the financial statements based on information compiled from the company’s invoice files, correspondence, and bank statements. Inventory was last taken on March 31, the end of the last reporting period. Both purchases, and sales were on FOB shipping point terms. While all purchases were on credit, there was a small amount of cash sales. There were no purchases or sales in transit on May 7. All cheques and cash received were deposited into bank every day. Payments to suppliers and transporters were by cheque. Cash was withdrawn from bank for making specific cash payments for office and warehouse rent, insurance premium, and miscellaneous office and selling expenses. The following information was culled from the company’s records for the current period: Further examination of the folders revealed that all invoices pertaining to unpaid purchases and unpaid sales listed in the March 31 balance sheet were settled by April 15. The insurance company’s surveyor assessed the damage to the inventories at `500 (net of estimated salvage of `500), and would issue a cheque for the amount without any proof of loss. The insurance company was willing to consider a claim for a higher amount if it was supported by proper evidence. Giridhar Clothing Company’s gross profit averaged 20 per cent of sales in the past two years. Required 1. Prepare an estimate of the cost of inventory destroyed in the fire. Assume that the surveyor’s estimate of salvage is reasonable. 2. What was the percentage of gross profit implicit in the insurance company’s proposed settlement? 3. You are informed that selling prices went up by 2 per cent during the current period. How would your answer to 1 change in light of this information? Interpreting Financial Reports Elite Advisers was co-founded by Miriam Mascherin and Michel Tamisierin 2007. The company specializes “in the creation of niche and elitist products”, according to its website. It invests in fine wine and collectable watches. Elite Advisers manages Nobles Crus, a Luxembourg-based specialized fund that invests in wine. The website states: “The wines in the portfolio are valued every month on the basis of four price lists, two of which come from wine merchants in Continental Europe and the United Kingdom, and two of which come from leading auction houses such as Sotheby’s or Christie’s. In total, around sixty wine merchants may be used as a basis for the valuation. This comprehensive valuation process also includes an annual review of our merchants to ensure their pricing policy is correct and their quality standards meet our criteria.” Nobles Crus launched with €2 million in 2008 and had grown to €109 million by 2012. Interest in wine funds has grown as investors are looking at alternatives to a troubled equity market. On September 30, 2012, the Financial Times questioned the valuation of the holdings of Nobles Crus. The fund reported a gain every month since the start of 2011, though the benchmark Liv-ex Fine Wine index declined to 260.08 in September 2012 from a peak of 364.69 in June 2011. For example, one of the wines, a Lafite Rothschild 1996, was valued by Nobles Crus at €1,718, more than double the Liv-ex price of €855. Elite Advisers said that Noble Crus valued its wines by taking the average of two prices from auction houses, without removing commission, and two from wine merchants. Live-ex valuations are based on actual transaction prices on its Fine Wine Exchange. Responding to the criticism of its valuation method, Nobles Crus stated that it had been working on an “automatic and scientific valuation system with two renowned finance professors and that this valuation method would be implemented next year. Also, it engaged Ernst & Young, a Big Four accounting firm, and a wine auction house to provide an independent third party review of the fund’s portfolio, valuation, and valuation methodology. Required 1. How should wine investment funds account for their holdings? 2. Comment on Nobles Crus’ accounting policy. 3. Evaluate Nobles Crus’ response to the criticism of its accounting? Financial Analysis Study a sample of company annual reports for five years. Required 1. Prepare an analysis of the inventory valuation methods followed by the companies. 2. Do you see any patterns? Explain. 3. Why is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Study a sample of company annual reports for five years. Required 1. Locate companies that changed their inventory valuation policies. 2. Explain possible managerial motivations for the changes from the information available. 3. Why is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Study a sample of annual reports of companies in any one industry for five years. Required 1. 2. 3. 4. Prepare an analysis of the inventory holding period for the companies. Do you see any industry patterns? Explain. Analyze trends seen, if any, in the holding period. Why is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Study a sample of annual reports of companies in any one industry for five years. Required 1. 2. 3. 4. Prepare an analysis of the operating cycle for the companies. Do you see any industry patterns? Explain. Analyze trends seen, if any, in the operating cycle. Why is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Answers to Test Your Understanding 6.1 The error would overstate the net profit and equity for 20X1, and understate the net profit for 20X2, by `5,000. The correction would reduce the net profit and equity for 20X1, and increase the net profit for 20X2, by `5,000. Neither the error nor its correction would affect the net profit for 20X3 or the equity for 20X2 and 20X3. 6.2 FOB shipping point. 6.3 The carrying amount is `74,500. The net realizable value is `66,000, calculated as follows: Estimated selling price, `70,000 – Sales commission at 5%, `3,500 – Delivery expense, `500. LCM = `66,000. The write-down is `8,500. 6.4 If the physical inventory at retail was `1,620, the loss due to shoplifting, etc. at retail is `180, or `120 at cost. 6.5 6.6 Cost of goods sold = Beginning finished goods inventory, `2,310 + Cost of goods manufactured, `17,680 – Ending finished goods inventory, `1,870 = `18,120. 6.7 Average inventories = (`1,200 + `2,600)/2 = `1,900; Inventory turnover = `5,700/ `1,900 = 3 times; Average inventory holding period = 360 days/3 = 120 days. 1 IAS 1.66/Ind AS 1.66 and Schedule III to the Companies Act 2013. 2 IAS 1.68/Ind AS 1.68. Schedule III to the Companies Act 2013 has a similar definition: “Operating cycle is the time between the acquisition of assets for processing and their realisation in cash or cash equivalents. Where the normal operating cycle cannot be identified, it is assumed to have a duration of twelve months.” 3 IAS 2:6/Ind AS 2.6/AS 2:3.1. 4 Other common shipment terms include EXW (ex works), CFR (cost and freight) and CIF (cost, insurance, and freight). The principles discussed in Chapter 4 and in this chapter should be applied to these contracts to determine the legal owner of the goods. 5 IAS 2:10/Ind AS 2:10/AS 2:5. 6 LIFO is permitted in the US. IAS 2/Ind AS 2/AS 2 do not permit LIFO, but we describe the method in order to cover the traditional methods. 7 Weighted-average costs may be computed by means of a continuous, a periodic, or a moving periodic calculation. 8 IAS 2:9/Ind AS 2:9/AS 2:5. 9 IAS 2:6/Ind AS 2:6/AS 2:3.2. 10 S. Basu, The conservatism principle and the asymmetric timeliness of earnings, Journal of Accounting and Economics, December 1997. 11 IAS 8:14/Ind AS 8:14/AS 5:29. 12 IAS 2:21/Ind AS 2:21/AS 2:18 13 A negative operating cycle is possible. Dell, the computer manufacturer, could manage that by taking advance payments from customers and delaying payments to suppliers. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Describe the nature and types of fixed assets. Determine the cost of fixed assets. Explain depreciation. Compute depreciation under popular methods. Distinguish between capital expenditure and revenue expenditure. Understand the difference between accounting and tax depreciation. Account for discarding, sale, or exchange of depreciable assets. Dispel the myths about depreciation. Explain revaluation of fixed assets. Describe and account for intangible assets. Account for natural resources. Explain impairment of assets. Analyze the utilization of fixed assets. DEPRECIATION AND CASH Deciding on the right amount of depreciation often involves conflicting considerations. A higher depreciation charge reduces the reported profit and is not going to go down well with a company’s shareholders. Also, managers may not be enthusiastic about a higher expense, since that would reduce the size of the bonus pool and thereby their bonus. On the other hand, the minimum alternative tax (MAT) may provide a motivation for increasing the depreciation charge. Lanco Infratech, a power and construction business, reported a net profit of `705 million for the quarter ended September 30, 2010 (Q2FY11), a decline of 43 per cent over the quarter ended September 30, 2009 (Q2FY10). The company’s revenue increased six per cent over the same period. The depreciation charge increased four times, because of a change in the method. The charge for Q2FY11 was nearly one-half of that for FY10. This was despite a smaller growth in the fixed assets. Under the new method, the depreciation charge was `1,370 million, compared with `498 million under the old method. The company’s advertisement and press release highlighted that the cash profit went up by 60 per cent year on year and EBITDA by 48 per cent. The company’s spokesperson said that the company opted for higher depreciation in order “to conserve cash.” But depreciation does not entail cash outgo. So what was that supposed to mean? THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL In this chapter, you will learn about fixed assets: investments in assets that are used to provide goods or services. These assets represent a major source of future revenue potential to the enterprise, and may give some indication as to future cash flows. Fixed asset accounting has several objectives: to give investors, creditors, management, and tax and regulatory authorities accurate information about these assets; to account for use and disposal of these assets; and to plan for acquisitions through realistic budgeting. You will learn about revaluation of fixed assets and accounting for intangible assets and natural resources. Fixed Assets in Perspective A fixed asset is held for the purpose of producing or supplying goods or services and not for sale in the normal course of business. Unlike inventories, fixed assets are meant for use by an enterprise for conducting its business, and not for resale. A manufacturing enterprise’s fixed assets would often include land, buildings, machinery, furniture and fixtures, and office equipment. Fixed assets are non-current assets. Whether an asset is a fixed asset or not depends on the purpose for which it is held. For example, the land on which a company’s factory is built is its fixed asset. However, if it plans to use its land for property development, it will be a current asset. So the intention of the owner in holding an asset determines its classification as a fixed asset or a current asset. This classification provides the basis for its valuation. Fixed assets, also known as long-lived assets or long-term assets, are of the following types: 1. Property, plant and equipment These are tangible items, i.e. they have physical existence and can be seen and felt. An enterprise: (a) holds these assets for use in the production or supply of goods or services, for rental purposes, or for administrative purposes; and (b) expects to use them during more than one period.1 Examples: Land, buildings, plant, aircraft, vehicles, furniture, and office equipment. 2. Intangible assets Unlike tangible assets, these have no physical existence; they represent legal rights with associated economic benefits. Also, these are separately identifiable. Intangible assets exclude monetary assets such as receivables and investments.2 Examples: Brand names, mastheads and publishing titles, patents, licences and franchises, copyrights, and designs. 3. Natural resources These constitute a category by themselves because of their special characteristics. Examples: Oil, natural gas, minerals, and forests. Property, Plant and Equipment Accounting for property, plant and equipment involves the following issues: Determining the cost of acquisition of an item of property, plant and equipment. Allocating the cost of the item to several reporting periods. Recording the disposal of the item. Figure 7.1 describes the accounting issues that arise in the various stages of the life cycle of an item of property, plant and equipment. Cost of Acquisition Traditionally, the accounting profession has placed considerable emphasis on the objectivity of valuation. You may recall from Chapter 1 that the case for the historical cost system rests on the going concern assumption. Accountants prefer cost as the basis of valuation of property, plant and equipment, because cost is easier to measure and verify than other measures, such as market value. Also, cost would often approximate the service value of an asset in an arm’s length transaction. The general principle is that an enterprise can recognize a property, plant and equipment item as an asset only if it meets the following criteria: It is probable that the item will give future economic benefits to the enterprise. The cost of the item can be measured reliably. Property, plant and equipment items acquired for safety or environmental reasons, e.g. electrostatic precipitators used in a cement plant to reduce emissions, also qualify for recognition as assets, because without them it will not be possible to use the main asset. The cost of property, plant and equipment comprises the following:3 1. Purchase price, including import duties and purchase taxes; It excludes refundable or adjustable taxes, such as goods and services tax, value added tax, and duty drawback. Trade discounts and rebates are deducted in arriving at the purchase price. 2. Any directly attributable costs of bringing the asset to the location and condition for its intended use; and 3. Estimated costs of the obligation for dismantling and removing the item and restoring the site on which it is located. Examples of directly attributable costs include: (a) Stamp duty and registration fees for transfer of title to land or building; (b) Professional fees, e.g. fees of architects, engineers, and lawyers; (c) Commission and brokerage for purchase; (d) Cost of site preparation; (e) Freight, transit insurance, and handling costs; (f) Cost of testing; and (g) Installation costs, such as special foundations for plant. The principle is that expenditures that result in future economic benefits or are normal or unavoidable should be capitalized, i.e. they should be treated as part of the asset’s cost, and expenditures that do not result in improving the service potential of the asset should be charged to current income. Often, some expenditure on start-up and trial production is necessary to bring a plant to its working condition. Such pre-production expenditure is capitalized. Again, customs duty paid on imported machine is capitalized, because it is a necessary cost. Avoidable or abnormal costs are not capitalized. For example, if a machine is damaged during installation, the related repair expense should not be capitalized. This is because it should be possible to install the machine without damaging it and the repair does not make the machine more useful than it was when it arrived in good condition. Administration and other general overhead costs and costs of opening a new store do not specifically relate to acquiring an asset or bringing it to the “location and working condition” for its intended use, and should not be capitalized. Borrowing Costs4 Borrowing costs are interest and other costs that an enterprise incurs in connection with the borrowing of funds.5 These costs include interest expense calculated using the effective interest method, and finance charges in respect of finance leases.6 An enterprise shall capitalize borrowing costs which are directly attributable to a qualifying asset: an asset that necessarily takes a substantial period of time to get ready for its intended use or sale. A large petroleum refinery that often takes three to five years to be commissioned is an example of a qualifying asset. “Substantial period of time” usually means one year for many types of assets. Determining whether an asset is a qualifying asset requires the exercise of management judgment. Inventories, manufacturing plants, power generation facilities, intangible assets, and investment properties can be qualifying assets, depending on the circumstances. The principles for capitalization of borrowing costs are as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. What to capitalize Capitalize borrowing costs that are directly attributable to a qualifying asset. Costs are “directly attributable” only when they could have been avoided if the expenditure on an asset had not been made. Example: Interest cost on funds borrowed specifically for obtaining an asset. What not to capitalize Do not capitalize the actual or imputed costs of equity. This is because the cost of equity capital is not a borrowing cost. When to capitalize Start capitalization from the date when the enterprise first meets all of the following conditions: (a) It incurs expenditures for the asset. (b) It incurs borrowing costs. (c) It undertakes activities that are necessary to prepare the asset for its intended use or sale. When to suspend Suspend capitalization of borrowing costs during extended periods in which an enterprise suspends active development of the asset for its intended use or sale. When to stop Stop capitalization of borrowing costs when substantially all the activities necessary to prepare the asset for its intended use or sale are complete. Thereafter, borrowing costs are expensed when incurred. Basket Purchases An enterprise may buy a group of assets for a composite sum. In such cases, it should allocate the total purchase price to the various assets on the basis of fair value: the amount for which an asset could be exchanged between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction. In practice, professional valuers determine the fair value of an asset. A fair allocation of the purchase price is important to resolve conflicting accounting and tax considerations: 1. The estimated useful lives of various assets are often different. For example, land is normally not depreciated, while buildings are depreciated over their useful lives. In our example, if the enterprise had allocated `12,500 each to land and building, it would not have depreciated an amount of `5,000 that was added excessively to the cost of the land (i.e. allocated amount, `12,500 – fair value, `7,500), resulting in a lower depreciation expense for the building. 2. Think of a firm motivated by tax considerations. It would like to exaggerate the cost allocated to depreciable assets, since that would result in lower income tax expense. Therefore, the tax department too is keen on a fair allocation of the lump sum purchase price. The best way to resolve this conflict is to use fair value as the basis of allocation. Of course, there can be different views on an asset’s fair value. Donated Assets When a business gets assets by donation, e.g. land given free or at a nominal price by government, there is no cost of acquisition to the business. Therefore, donated assets should be shown at zero value. But to record them at zero value does not reflect the economic reality of an increase in an enterprise’s assets. Self-constructed Assets When an enterprise constructs an asset, using its resources, it has to arrive at the cost to be recorded in the accounts. It can trace the costs of materials and direct labour directly to the construction. Since assigning indirect costs of construction, such as power and supervision may be difficult, some companies prefer to expense these items. Internal profit, i.e. the profit the company would have earned had it done the same work for a customer, cannot be charged to the asset since their inclusion would violate the realization principle. Also, cost inefficiencies in the production of self-constructed assets, regardless of the reasons, should not be included as part of the cost. Components of Assets Sometimes, the cost of a part of an asset may be significant in relation to its total cost. Each such part must be depreciated separately.7 For example, the major parts of an aircraft include airframe, engines, and interiors, such as seats and galleys. These have different useful lives and maintenance requirements. The airframe has a long useful life. Engines go through periodical major and minor overhaul and require replacement after their life. Seats and galleys require frequent replacement as they wear out much faster. It is necessary to allocate the cost of the asset to its significant parts and depreciate the parts separately. Another example is an offshore drilling platform that has a life of 20 years, but its mechanical parts require replacement every three years. The mechanical parts will be treated as a component separate from the platform. Business enterprises use property, plant and equipment over a number of reporting periods. Neither expensing the entire cost in the year of acquisition of the asset nor retaining the cost on the books until disposal of the asset provides for satisfactory measurement of periodic income. Allocation of the asset cost to the periods receiving benefits from the asset is necessary to provide periodic information on the results of operations to investors, lenders, management, regulators and others who use the information. Accountants think of depreciation as allocation of the cost of an asset to the periods that are expected to benefit from its use. It is the gradual conversion of the cost of an asset into expense. Depreciation “is the systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an asset over its useful life.”8 The principle is that “the depreciable amount of an asset shall be allocated on a systematic basis over its useful life.”9 “Systematic basis” is the key requirement. Therefore, arbitrary assignment of the cost of an asset to reporting periods is not acceptable. Another key implication of the definition is that it is necessary to charge depreciation even if the market value of an asset has appreciated, because depreciation is a process of allocation of past cost, and not valuation. Depreciation begins from the time an asset is available for use (even if it is not actually used). It continues even when the asset becomes idle or is retired from active use unless the asset is fully depreciated. Depreciation stops once the asset is classified as “held for sale” or when the asset is disposed of. Land normally has an indefinite useful life (with some exceptions such as quarries and landfill sites) and is, therefore, not depreciated. Plant and equipment items have a limited useful life and are depreciated. For this reason, land and buildings should be treated as separate assets. Revisit the discussion on basket purchases, if necessary. The depreciation accounting process involves the following steps: 1. Establishing the depreciable amount. 2. Estimating the useful service life. 3. Choosing an appropriate cost allocation method. Establishing the Depreciable Amount The depreciable amount of an asset is its cost, less residual value. The residual value of an asset is the estimated amount that an enterprise would currently realize from its disposal, after deducting the estimated costs of disposal if the asset were already of the age and condition expected at the end of its useful life. If the residual value of an asset equals or exceeds the asset’s carrying amount, there will be no depreciation charge. Estimating the Useful Life The useful life (also known as useful service life or useful economic life) of an asset is either (a) the period over which an asset is expected to be available for use by the enterprise, or (b) the number of production or similar units expected to be obtained from the asset by the enterprise. The useful life of an asset is not the same thing as its physical life. The latter depends on an asset’s physical wear and tear and the enterprise’s maintenance policy. For example, if a plant works excessive hours, or is not subject to regular preventive maintenance, its ability to produce goods in the future will be reduced. Quite often, the useful life of an asset for an enterprise is shorter than its physical life, because of other factors, such as the following: Technological improvements result in supersession of assets currently in use. Example: Many organizations replace their existing computers in good condition when superior computers come into the market. Changes in product markets may make an asset obsolete. Example: Many jute mills went out of business after synthetic fibres came. Limits on asset lives are specified by regulatory agencies on ecological and safety considerations. Example: Safety laws specify much shorter legal life for nuclear power plants than their physical or technological life. Contractual terms may constrain the use of an asset after a period of time. Example: A building on leasehold land is not available to the lessee after the lease for the land expires. Some companies voluntarily may adopt asset replacement policies that shorten the useful lives of assets based on safety and operating cost considerations. Example: Many airlines replace their aircraft before their physical life, because aged planes are less safe to fly and entail more fuel and maintenance costs. In sum, the physical life of an asset is, at best, a good starting point for estimating its service life. Often, the useful life of an asset is less than its physical life due to technological, marketing, and legal factors. An enterprise generally estimates useful life based on its past experience with similar assets and the experience of other firms in the industry. Estimation of the useful life is a matter of managerial judgment. Depreciation Methods The final step in the depreciation process is to decide the method of apportioning the asset’s depreciable amount. Several methods are available to allocate the depreciable amount over an asset’s useful life. Depreciation accounting controversies centre on the choice of a suitable allocation method. Theoretically, the best method is the one that matches the consumption of an asset accurately with the benefits received from it in each period. These benefits can be in the form of additional revenue expected to be generated by the asset, or likely savings in the costs of material, labour, power, and so on. However, these measurements are extremely difficult. Over the years, accountants have developed a number of methods that purport to allocate an asset’s cost in a systematic manner to the periods in which the asset is used. The common depreciation methods are as follows: 1. Straight-line method 2. Accelerated methods • Written-down-value method • Sum-of-the-years’-digits method 3. Production-units method Straight-line Method The straight-line method distributes the depreciable amount equally over the life of an asset. This method assumes that depreciation arises solely from the passage of time and that the effect of usage on the service value of the asset is insignificant. The yearly depreciation expense is computed by dividing the depreciable amount (cost of the asset less residual value) by the number of years of useful life. Assume that a bus costs `800,000 and is expected to realize `80,000 at the end of its estimated useful life of six years. The annual depreciation expense is calculated as: The depreciation schedule for the asset is as follows: The journal entry to record the depreciation expense in each year is as follows: The straight-line method is the simplest and the most widely used method. It is used for assets that depreciate mainly with time and are little affected by the extent of usage. For example, buildings decline in service value as they age and it is immaterial whether they are used or not. However, service from most assets declines as they get older. We know that older cars give less mileage than new cars and cost more in repairs. By assuming that assets give equal benefits in each reporting period, the straight-line method undercharges depreciation in the earlier years. Accelerated Methods The accelerated depreciation methods provide relatively larger amounts of depreciation in the early years of an asset’s useful life and smaller amounts in later years. These methods assume that certain types of plant, equipment and vehicles are most efficient when they are new and decline in service as they age. The accelerated methods assume that depreciation depends only on time, but, unlike the straight-line method, they do not assume that the asset is equally useful in each year. Charging higher depreciation in the early years would be consistent with the matching principle if the benefits received in those years are higher. The accelerated depreciation methods also assume that certain assets lose service value, because of rapid technological changes. In such cases, the need for early replacement justifies the use of accelerated depreciation rates. Besides, repair expenses are lower in the early years; so the sum of repair and depreciation expense tends to be constant over the life of the asset. We now describe two accelerated methods: (a) the written-down-value method, and (b) the sum-of-the-years’-digits method. Written-down-value Method In this method, depreciation is computed at a fixed rate on an asset’s carrying amount at the beginning of a reporting period. Thus, the depreciation expense for Year 1 will be a certain per cent of the beginning carrying amount, which is cost. From Year 2 onwards, the depreciation charge would be related to the cost of the asset less accumulated depreciation at the beginning of the year. Since the fixed percentage is applied to the beginning carrying amount, the depreciation expense will keep decreasing from year to year. This method is also known as the diminishing-balance method. The depreciation rate can be calculated using the following formula: To illustrate the written-down-value method, let us take the bus example again. The depreciation schedule for the bus under the written-down-value method is as follows: Yearly depreciation is computed by applying the depreciation rate to the carrying amount at the beginning of the year. For example, depreciation expense for Year 1 = `800,000 31.87 per cent = `254,960. Depreciation expense for Year 2 is `545,040 31.87 per cent = `173,705. The journal entries to record the depreciation expense for the first two years are as follows: Since the written-down-value method is the only method acceptable for tax purposes for most assets, record-keeping costs are reduced by adopting the method for accounting purposes as well. However, the tax depreciation rates contain an incentive element for quick replacement of assets; hence, using these rates for accounting depreciation will have the effect of writing off assets faster than can be justified by the matching principle. Therefore, even if a firm follows the writtendown-value method, it should make independent asset life estimates for accounting. Sum-of-the-years’-digits Method This method is rarely used in India. Being an accelerated depreciation method, it charges a large part of the cost of an asset in the early years. Under this method, we calculate depreciation expense for a year as the product of the depreciable amount and the factor, (k/S). The value of the numerator, k, would be n for Year 1, (n – 1) for Year 2, (n – 2) for Year 3, ..., and 1 for Year n, n being the useful life of the asset expressed in years. S equals the sum of the numbers, 1 to n, and is computed as 1 + 2 + 3 + + n. The formula n(n + 1)/2 gives the value of the denominator. Using the sum-of-the-years’-digits method, we calculate depreciation expense for Year 1 as: The depreciation schedule is as follows: Note that depreciation expense for Years 1 to 6 is in the reverse ratio, 6:5:4:3:2:1. Production-units Method The production-units method assumes that depreciation arises solely from the use of an asset and that time plays a trivial role in the depreciation process. Under this method, the depreciable amount of an asset is divided by the total estimated output during its useful life to obtain the unit depreciation rate. Yearly depreciation expense is calculated by multiplying the unit rate by the yearly output. For example, if the bus has an estimated useful life of 200,000 km, the unit depreciation would be worked out as follows: Let us assume that the bus log shows that its usage was 10,000 km in the first year, 30,000 km in the second, 70,000 km in the third, 20,000 km in the fourth, 50,000 km in the fifth, and 20,000 km in the sixth year. The depreciation schedule under the production-units method would be as follows: The production-units method is appropriate when it is possible to estimate the productive capacity of an asset with a fair degree of accuracy and there is a direct relationship between an asset’s use and its loss of service potential. Productive capacity may be expressed in terms of the number of units of output (machines), hours (aircraft), kilometres (cars), or tonnes (mining equipment), as appropriate to the asset. Where an asset’s output fluctuates widely from one period to another, the production-units method results in a better matching of costs and revenues than the straight-line method which computes a constant depreciation expense, regardless of the output. An accurate record of asset use, such as a properly written machine log, is a prerequisite to the application of the production-units method. Very few companies follow this method, most probably because the additional data-collection costs involved in the method outweigh the benefits of better allocation of depreciation resulting from its adoption. Comparing the Depreciation Methods A comparison of the four methods described earlier shows that straight-line depreciation is equal over the six-year period (`120,000). By contrast, the accelerated methods (written-down-value and sum-of-the-years’-digits) begin with much higher amounts than straight-line (212 per cent and 171 per cent of straightline depreciation, respectively), and taper off to amounts below straight-line. The pattern generated by the production-units method follows the pattern of output, which fluctuates from year to year. The straight-line method produces a higher carrying amount than the accelerated methods in the early years. Exhibit 7.1 compares these methods. Figures 7.2(a) and 7.2(b) show depreciation expense and carrying amount under the straight-line and written-down-value methods. Selecting a Depreciation Method Which depreciation method should an enterprise select? The method used should reflect the pattern in which the enterprise expects to consume the asset’s future economic benefits.10 Accounting standards do not provide specific guidance on how to select the method. In principle, the method chosen should result in a fair allocation of depreciation to the periods in which an enterprise benefits from the use of an asset. Such a method will be consistent with the matching principle. The enterprise’s management is in the best position to judge the expected pattern in which an enterprise expects to consume an asset’s benefits. While the straight-line method is the simplest of the depreciation methods, it does not match costs and revenues when the output of an asset fluctuates. In such situations, the production-units method is a better choice. The written-down-value method may result in reduced record-keeping costs if an enterprise follows the tax depreciation rates for financial reporting as well. Factors such as the relative simplicity of a method, managerial motives, savings in record-keeping costs, tax laws, and legal requirements influence the choice of the method. Many listed companies use the straight-line method, because it enables them to report higher earnings to their shareholders in the early years of new projects. Also, communicating the effect of the straight-line method to investors is relatively uncomplicated. Analysts would view a company that uses accelerated depreciation as being more prudent in measuring its earnings and hence having a higher earnings quality since higher depreciation charges in the early years of an asset’s life result in lower profit. Legal Requirements Relating to Depreciation Schedule II to the Companies Act 2013 specifies the useful life and residual value of various tangible assets. These provisions will apply as follows: 1. Prescribed class of companies: The useful life and residual value of an asset shall not normally be different from those specified in Schedule II. If a company uses a different useful life or residual value, it must disclose the justification for doing so. The “prescribed class of companies” would include listed companies. 2. Other companies: The useful life of an asset shall not be longer and residual value shall not be higher than those specified in Schedule II. Thus, companies in the “prescribed class” the specified useful lives and residual value can adopt shorter or longer useful life and higher or lower residual value, if they have reasons. Ordinarily, the residual value of an asset is often insignificant, but it should generally be not more than 5% of the original cost of the asset. Exhibit 7.2 gives the useful lives for selected assets from Schedule II. Companies must disclose their depreciation method(s) and depreciation rates or useful lives of assets, if the rates followed are different from the Schedule II rates. Schedule II states that the useful life or residual value of any specific asset, as notified by a regulatory authority, shall be applied in calculating the depreciation to be provided for such asset irrespective of the requirements of Schedule II. For example, electricity companies must follow the rates and method notified by the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission. Some Issues in Depreciation Accounting Depreciation for Partial Reporting Periods When an asset is bought during a reporting period, depreciation for the period is proportionate to the period (or pro rata) it is held. Assume that an enterprise buys a machine with an estimated useful life of 10 years and a residual value of `10,000 for `250,000 on January 1, 20XX and that the financial year ends on March 31, 20XX. The straight-line depreciation for three months would be `6,000, calculated as follows: Assets of Low Value Items such as loose tools, dies, moulds, and spare parts have a short life and have to be replaced constantly. For practical convenience, many companies charge off assets of low value to current period’s income. It is tedious to maintain records for such numerous items. The practice of writing off assets of low value is acceptable if the amounts are not material in relation to the net profit of an enterprise. This is an example of how the materiality principle may be applied. Revising Useful Life and Residual Value Useful life and residual value estimates are seldom precise. Therefore, enterprises must review them at each reporting date. If current expectations differ from previous estimates, they must revise the estimates. New developments such as unanticipated physical damage or unforeseen obsolescence would require changing the previous estimates. Also, more experience in using the asset may suggest the need for changing the estimate. A change in accounting estimate is recognized prospectively by including it in the financial performance and financial position in the current and future periods.11 The enterprise expenses the depreciable amount at the time of the change over the remaining useful life of the asset. Changing the Depreciation Method An enterprise should apply the same depreciation method over time, so that users of financial statements can compare the numbers. The depreciation method should reflect the pattern in which the enterprise expects to consume the future economic benefits from the asset. New information could suggest a different pattern. The method must be reviewed at each reporting date. If there is a significant change in the pattern of consumption of the future benefits, the enterprise must change the method to reflect the new pattern. A change in the depreciation method is treated as a change in accounting estimate and recognized prospectively in the financial performance and financial position in the current and future periods.12 Appropriate disclosures are required. Depreciating Components of an Asset When the cost of a part of an asset is significant in relation to its total cost, the cost of the asset must be allocated to its significant parts. Also, it must depreciate separately each of those parts. That means the enterprise must estimate the useful life and the residual value of each such part and select a depreciation method that is appropriate for each. This involves significant managerial effort, especially for large enterprises with numerous assets. At times, a significant part of an asset may have a useful life and depreciation method, which are the same as the useful life and the depreciation method of another significant part of the same asset. Such parts may be grouped in determining the depreciation charge. Fully Depreciated Assets An enterprise must not remove a fully depreciated asset from the accounting records, so long as it is in good working condition and continues to be used. This is necessary in order to maintain control over fixed assets. Also, there will be no depreciation charge for a fully depreciated asset. Since the objective of depreciation is to allocate the cost of an asset over its useful life, the total depreciation for an asset cannot exceed its cost. The cost and accumulated depreciation should be removed when the asset is no longer used in a business. 13 Capital and Revenue Expenditures An enterprise incurs costs on an asset after its initial acquisition. If the costs meet the recognition criteria for items of property, plant and equipment – (a) probable future economic benefits and (b) reliable measurement, they can be capitalized. Otherwise, they have to be expensed. Capital expenditures are expenditures for the acquisition of assets. Subsequent expenditures that extend the useful life, improve the quality of output, or reduce operating costs of an existing asset beyond their originally estimated levels are capital expenditures. For example, the construction of an additional floor in a hotel increases the hotel’s revenue-earning capacity. So there are probable future economic benefits and the cost of construction can be reliably measured. Using similar reasoning, providing air-conditioning in inter-city coaches and replacing co-axial telecommunication lines by optical fibre cables are capital expenditures. Revenue expenditures are expenditures for ordinary repairs, maintenance, fuel, insurance, or other items needed to maintain and use buildings, and plant and equipment. They go to expense accounts and reduce the profit of the period in which they are incurred, because the benefits from these expenditures do not last beyond that period. Legal expenses incurred to defend title to an asset are revenue expenditures. An enterprise may relocate its factory, or rearrange and reinstall a group of machines in a plant, for improving efficiency, and incur substantial expenditures for this purpose. These expenditures may benefit a number of periods. If these expenditures cannot be separated from normal operating expenses, they are expensed when incurred. Ordinary repairs are expenditures incurred to maintain assets in good working condition. These are the costs of day-to-day servicing of assets that include the costs of labour, materials, and small parts. Periodic replacements of fused bulbs and worn-out car tyres, oiling and cleaning of equipment, and painting of buildings are treated as ordinary repairs since these expenditures are fairly regular and their benefit does not last beyond the year in which they are incurred. Ordinary repairs are expensed as incurred. Major repairs are different as they benefit a number of periods. For example, the benefit of relining a furnace or refurbishing aircraft interiors such as seats and galleys will go beyond the current year. Hence, most businesses capitalize such items and depreciate them over the periods in which they expect to benefit from the expenditures. Some assets require regular major inspections, whether or not any parts are replaced. For example, civil aviation authorities stipulate major periodic inspections for faults as a condition for operating an aircraft. The dry-docking of a ship is another example of such an event. The cost of each major inspection that meets the recognition criteria is capitalized as a component of the related asset and depreciated over the period until the next inspection. At that time, any remaining amount relating to previous inspection is derecognized. At the time of acquisition of an asset that requires major inspection, the estimated cost of the next major inspection is separated from the asset’s cost and depreciated over the period until the next inspection. In effect, we follow the component approach for depreciation of significant parts of an asset for major repairs and major inspections. A practical approach is to treat any expenditure that will benefit several reporting periods as a capital expenditure, and any expenditure that will benefit only or mostly the current reporting period as a revenue expenditure. For practical purposes, many enterprises establish policies stating what constitutes a capital or revenue expenditure. For example, small expenditures on capital items may be charged to income, because the amounts involved are frequently thought to be not material in relation to the reported profit. For example, the cost of a stapler, which may last many years, would be treated as supplies expense rather than as an asset. Effect of a Capital-Revenue Error A capital expenditure is normally debited to an asset account and does not reduce the income of the current period. The amount will be depreciated in the future periods. A revenue expenditure is accounted by debiting an expense account and is deducted in computing the income of the current period. Any error in distinguishing between capital and revenue expenditures will result in distorting the reported profits of current and future reporting periods. Suppose that a firm erroneously charges the cost of equipment to repairs. The effect of this error will be to overstate the expense and thus understate the profit for the current period. In future periods, profits will be overstated, because of the absence of depreciation charge. If the firm capitalizes current repairs, the result will be to understate repairs expense, thereby overstating the profit of the current period. Profits in future periods will be understated to the extent of the depreciation expense computed on the amount of repairs. The effect of error in treating a capital expenditure as a revenue expenditure and vice versa is self-reversing, similar to an inventory error. Conflicting Motives The distinction between capital and revenue expenditures is not always straightforward. Hence, firms wishing to boost their profits frequently attempt to capitalize expenditures which, on closer scrutiny, may have to be written off as revenue expenditures. Auditors review the firm’s treatment of nebulous expenditure items to ensure that current expenses are not capitalized. In contrast, for tax purposes, most businesses, in case of doubt, choose to expense an outlay rather than capitalize it, because expensing the item has the effect of reducing their taxable income and tax expense. Of course, tax officials will scrutinize such items carefully to ensure that capital expenditure is not allowed as business expense. As may be expected, tax payers and the tax department usually differ on the appropriate treatment of many an expenditure. Therefore, the Supreme Court and the High Courts have to decide numerous disputes leading to the development of a large body of case law on the subject. Now think of a firm that is even more tax-driven. It would be too happy to expense costs incurred in acquiring assets, such as brokerage and lawyer’s fee, immediately and reduce its taxable income for the current period. There have been bizarre instances of companies splitting up a large capital expenditure into small amounts and expensing them in order to save tax. Depreciation for Income Tax Purposes Depreciation benefits under the income tax law are frequently confused with the depreciation charge in the financial statements. For reporting to shareholders and lenders, financial statements must be prepared in conformity with accounting principles and standards. In contrast, income tax returns and related statements must comply with income tax regulations. While financial accounting and tax accounting are similar in some respects, they differ significantly in other areas. Depreciation is an example. Income-tax rules permit tax payers to claim depreciation benefits at the prescribed rates using the written-down-value method.14 The government seeks to encourage business enterprises to invest in new assets by allowing them to charge off assets rapidly. So, in many countries including India, the tax law permits accelerated write-off of asset costs by prescribing recovery periods that are shorter than the estimated useful lives for accounting purposes as well as permitting recovery of a large portion of the cost of the investments in the early years. Also, the tax law requires legal ownership and use of an asset, but accounting depreciation is based on economic ownership. The stipulations for accounting and tax depreciation are different, simply because the objectives of financial reporting differ from those of taxation. Exhibit 7.3 gives a sample of the tax depreciation rates. To illustrate the calculation of tax depreciation, let us revert to our bus example and apply a tax depreciation rate of 30 per cent. You might have noticed that for tax purposes the business can claim nearly 66 per cent of the asset cost in the first three years, although the asset has an estimated useful life of six years. Different methods of depreciation may be used for reporting to shareholders and income tax authorities. In this sense, there is nothing devious about businesses maintaining “two sets of accounting records”: one for shareholders and the other for tax authorities. Most large enterprises use straight-line depreciation in their financial statements, because it is convenient to use and makes it possible to show higher earnings in the early years. But they use the written-down-value method for tax purposes, postponing payment of income taxes. Thus, they have the best of both worlds. Tax rates of depreciation are not usually acceptable for shareholder reporting. Disposal of Depreciable Assets When an asset wears out or becomes obsolete, it is no longer useful. An enterprise scraps or sells it, or exchanges it for another asset. Seldom is the disposal value of an asset equal to its carrying amount; so it is usually necessary to recognize a gain or a loss on disposal. Accounting entries differ depending on the manner of disposal of a used asset: (a) discarding; (b) holding for disposal; (c) selling; or (d) exchanging for another asset. Depending on the manner of disposal, the entries must do the following: 1. Record depreciation for the part of the period ending with the date of disposal; 2. Remove the cost of the asset and the accumulated depreciation from the books; 3. Show any receipt or payment of cash; 4. Recognize any gain or loss on disposal; and 5. Recognize any new asset acquired. To illustrate the procedure for disposal, suppose that Amit Company acquired a photocopier on April 1, 20X1, for `170,000 with an estimated useful life of eight years and residual value of `10,000. Amit charges straight-line depreciation. The company disposes of the photocopier on June 30, 20X6, i.e. after using it for five years and three months. The financial year-end is March 31. Just before the disposal, the asset and accumulated depreciation would have appeared in the books as follows: The carrying amount of the asset is now `65,000. We will now see the procedure for recording the disposal of the asset in different ways. Discarding an Asset Suppose that Amit Company abandons the photocopier without realizing any amount. It will remove the asset and accumulated depreciation accounts and recognize the asset’s carrying amount as loss. The following entry will record the disposal: Holding an Asset for Sale Suppose that the company withdraws the asset from its intended use and plans to sell it later. As before, it will remove the asset and accumulated depreciation accounts, and recognize the lower of the asset’s carrying amount and estimated net realizable value (i.e. fair value less costs to sell) as a “non-current asset held for sale”. It will recognize the carrying amount of the asset less estimated net realizable value as loss. Assume that the photocopier is estimated to sell for `10,000 after deducting estimated selling costs. The following entry records the disposal: Selling an Asset Suppose that Amit Company sells the photocopier for `50,000 after meeting the selling costs. It will remove the asset and accumulated depreciation accounts, record the net sale proceeds, and recognize the difference between the carrying amount of the asset less net sale proceeds as gain or loss. It will record the transaction as follows: If the asset is sold for an amount greater than its carrying amount, a gain will result. Assume that the net sale proceeds are `90,000. The following entry records the gain: If the net sale proceeds equal the carrying amount of the asset, no gain or loss arises. In that case, Amit removes the asset and accumulated depreciation accounts and records the net sale proceeds, as follows: Exchanging an Asset for Another Asset Suppose that Amit Company exchanges the existing photocopier for another asset or a combination of another asset and a cash payment. At what amount should it record the asset received? Should it recognize a gain or loss on exchange? The principle is that an asset acquired in an exchange should be measured at fair value if (i) the exchange transaction has “commercial substance”; and (ii) the fair value of either the asset received or the asset given up can be reliably measured. An acquired asset not measured at fair value is recorded at the carrying amount of the asset given up. If both the fair value of the asset received and the fair value of the asset given up can be estimated with equal reliability, the asset received should be measured at the fair value of the asset given up. If the fair value of the asset received can be measured with more reliability, that value is used. The fair value or carrying amount is adjusted for any cash paid or received. An exchange transaction has commercial substance if: 1. the configuration (risk, timing, and amount) of the cash flows of the two assets differs; or 2. the net present value of the post-tax cash flows of the operations of the enterprise affected by the transaction changes as a result of the exchange.15 In either case, the difference should be significant relative to the fair value of the assets exchanged. Suppose that Amit Company exchanges the photocopier with a fair value of `75,000 and cash amount of `25,000 for a scanner with a fair value of `100,000. Assume that the cash flow configuration of the two assets is different. So the transaction has commercial substance. The company will record the scanner at its fair value of `100,000 and the gain on the exchange of `10,000, the difference between fair value and carrying amount of the photocopier: Now let us suppose that Amit Company exchanges the photocopier with a fair value of `75,000 and cash of `25,000 for a new photocopier with a fair value of `100,000. On the face of it, there is a gain of `10,000. But the transaction lacks commercial substance, because the company’s cash flow configuration is not expected to change as a result of the exchange. In effect, the company is in the same position as it was before the transaction, and there is no gain, really. So it recognizes the asset received at the carrying amount of the asset given up, adjusting for the cash paid: In other words, the cost of the asset received is reduced by the amount of notional gain. Gains and Losses under Tax Laws For tax purposes, gains and losses on disposal of depreciable assets are calculated in respect of a “block of assets”, a group of assets that have the same depreciation rates within the asset classes of buildings, furniture, machinery and plant, ships, and intangible assets. Under the tax laws, there is no need to maintain item-wise records. The block increases with addition of assets and decreases with disposals. So long as the proceeds from the sale of an asset (or the fair value of the asset obtained in exchange) are less than the depreciable amount of the block to which the asset pertains, no gain arises for tax purposes. A gain will arise for tax purposes only if the carrying amount of the block at the time of the disposal is less than the value of the asset being disposed. A loss will arise only if all the assets in a block have been disposed of and a balance remains in the block after deducting the disposal value of the asset already being disposed. Myths About Depreciation To accountants, depreciation is the allocation of an asset’s cost to the periods over which it is expected to be useful. Many users of financial statements seem to have fanciful notions of depreciation. Here are three such notions: Myth 1: Depreciation is a source of cash. Myth 2: Depreciation is intended to provide funds for replacement. Myth 3: Depreciation is a valuation process. Let us now deal with them. Myth 1: Depreciation is a Source of Cash Many users of financial statements believe that depreciation is a source of cash. The greater the provision for depreciation, they figure, the higher the firm’s cash generation. They could be imagining that accumulated depreciation represents wads of currency notes waiting to be used when fixed assets are to be replaced. Depreciation expense is similar to any other expense in that it reduces net profit. But it does not entail a cash outflow, unlike other expenses, e.g. salaries. This is not the same thing as a cash inflow. Depreciation expense is just the result of an accounting entry to allocate the cost of an asset to different reporting periods. The accumulated depreciation account is a contra asset account in that it represents the amount of the cost an asset already written off. Note that the cash account has a debit balance, whereas the accumulated depreciation account has a credit balance. Consider a sample journal entry for recording depreciation expense. This entry does not affect cash. We can appreciate this better with the help of a cash flow statement. Suppose that you start a business with cash of `10,000. You pay cash and buy equipment costing `6,000 with an estimated useful life of four years and zero residual value. You charge straight-line depreciation. In the first year, your business makes cash sales for `8,000 and cash purchases for `5,000. The cash flow statement for the first year would be as follows: Note that depreciation does not appear as an inflow in the statement. The ending cash balance will be `7,000, whether the depreciation rate is 0, 25, or 100 per cent. It is thus clear that depreciation accounting has nothing to do with the generation of cash. Smart businessmen have always known that there is only one source of cash from operations, and that is the cash provided by sales to customers. Myth 2: Depreciation is Intended to Provide Funds for Replacement As we have seen, accumulated depreciation does not exist in the form of cash. Very few businesses earmark a part of their cash balance for asset replacement, since investment in plant and equipment is much more profitable. Occasionally, we may come across a company that has a depreciation fund, a reserve represented by cash or investment in securities earmarked for financing asset replacement. In addition, there is the problem of inflation. Asset prices rise in times of inflation; so, the cost of a new asset that will replace an existing asset will be greater than the amount of profit retained based on the historical cost of the asset. Recall that the purpose of depreciation is to spread the cost of an asset. The depreciation charge is related to the historical cost of an asset, not its replacement cost. As a result, dividends and other payments are made based on ‘illusory’ profits, leaving insufficient funds for replacement of property, plant and equipment. In fact, this is one of the major weaknesses of the historical cost system. Businesses can handle the problem of finding cash in several ways: 1. Revalue the fixed assets and relate the depreciation charge to the replacement cost of the assets. This is the modified historical cost system, described in the next section. While many companies have revalued their fixed assets, unfortunately, they continue to provide depreciation based on the historical costs of the assets to avoid reporting lower profit to shareholders. 2. Set aside in a reserve a supplementary depreciation equal to the excess of current value depreciation over the historical cost-based charge. This may be done with or without revaluation of assets. The supplementary depreciation would form part of a company’s distributable reserves. This is a ‘below the line’ item. 3. Prepare comprehensive inflation-adjusted statements and decide on dividend payout on the basis of the revisedk net profit. These approaches reduce the amount of cash available for distribution and thus reduce the cash outflow. In India, hardly any company does any of these things. Myth 3: Depreciation is a Valuation Process Financial statements do not purport to show the fluctuating market values of fixed assets. Therefore, we depreciate an asset even if its market value has increased. For example, buildings have gone up in value in many parts of the world. Yet the accountant depreciates buildings, because they have a finite useful life over which their cost must be expensed. Accounting depreciation does not mean a decline in the market value of an asset. Consequently, the balance sheet values of fixed assets seldom reflect their current market values. Revaluation of Property, Plant and Equipment Traditionally, fixed assets have been shown in the financial statements at their cost of acquisition. Persistent and high rates of inflation have led to substantial differences between the historical costs and current market values of assets. Some argue that the information on asset values given in the balance sheet is irrelevant to the needs of managers, investors, and other users, because the balance sheet does not reflect the current worth of a business. Responding to this criticism, many businesses recognize the current replacement values of their property, plant and equipment assets. The disconnect between historical costs and current values is particularly evident in the case of land and buildings, since property values have tended to appreciate significantly in many cities and major towns. Revaluation enables a company to present a healthier balance sheet by lowering the debt-equity ratio, a measure of the extent of a firm’s reliance on borrowings and an indicator of its long-term solvency. Also, a company may revalue its assets with the aim of lifting its stock price by informing investors of its current value. A rise in the stock price would make the company a less attractive takeover target. Enterprises can choose either the historical cost model or the revaluation model for property, plant and equipment.16 Under the historical cost model, the asset appears at its cost less any accumulated depreciation and impairment losses. Under the revaluation model, the asset appears at its fair value at the date of the revaluation less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses. Regular revaluations are necessary to ensure that the asset’s carrying amount does not differ materially from its fair value. Selective revaluation of assets can lead to a confusing mixture of costs and values on different dates. Therefore, when a firm revalues an item of property, plant and equipment, it should revalue the entire class of assets to which the item belongs. Examples of classes are land, land and buildings, machinery, ships, aircraft, motor vehicles, furniture and fixtures, and office equipment. Usually, enterprises obtain periodic appraisals of assets from professionally qualified valuers. A look at published reports over the years would show that the number of Indian companies revaluing their assets has been increasing.17 Revaluation Reserve An increase in an asset’s carrying amount arising from revaluation goes directly to equity as revaluation reserve. As a matter of prudence, a decrease in the carrying amount is charged to the statement of profit and loss. An increase will go to the statement of profit and loss to the extent it reverses a past charge, and a decrease will go to revaluation reserve to the extent it reverses a past surplus. Revaluation surplus is an unrealized gain. Based on legal and accounting principles, it is a capital reserve, a reserve that is not available for distribution as dividends or for issue of bonus shares. (You will learn more about these in Chapter 10.) Accounting for Revaluation To illustrate the accounting for revaluation, assume that Victor Company bought a plant on January 1, 20X0 for `15,000 with an estimated useful life of five years and depreciated it using the straight-line method. On December 31, 20X2, the plant would appear in the balance sheet as follows: Assume further that the current purchase price of a new plant is `25,000. If the existing plant is revalued, the above numbers would be revised as follows: The journal entry to record the revaluation is as follows: The credit of `9,000 to Accumulated Depreciation is the “backlog” depreciation for three years for the difference between depreciation based on revaluation and on cost. Depreciation on Revalued Assets An enterprise opts for revaluation, because it wants to present the current value of its assets. It follows that the charge for consumption of assets should also be in current value terms. From the time of revaluation, the depreciation charge should be based on the revalued amount. In the above example, the depreciation expense for 20X3 would be `5,000, as compared to `3,000 under the cost model. Intangible Assets An intangible asset is an “identifiable non-monetary asset, without physical substance.”18 Intangible assets are long-term assets that can generate future earnings. The value of an intangible asset arises from the long-term rights, privileges, or advantages it confers on its owner. Identifiability, control, and future benefits are necessary in order to recognize an item as an intangible asset. An intangible asset meets the identifiability criterion when it (a) can be separated or divided from the enterprise and sold or transferred, and (b) arises from contractual or other legal rights. A copyright is an intangible asset, because it is identifiable separately from other assets, it arises from a legal right, and the owner has exclusive control over its use, and he expects future benefits from it. Other examples of intangible assets are aircraft landing rights, brand names, mastheads, trademarks, customer lists, computer software, patents, motion picture films, fishing licences, mobile phone licences, website development costs, carbon credits, import quotas, and franchises. An enterprise certainly benefits from supplier relationships, customer loyalty, employee skills, and market share. Unfortunately, these do not meet the definition of an intangible asset (particularly, identifiability and control) and hence enterprises cannot recognize them in the financial statements. Intangible Assets and Competitive Advantage Professor Baruch Lev of New York University, a leading authority on intangible assets, says: Wealth and growth in today’s economy are primarily driven by intangible (intellectual) assets. Physical and financial assets are rapidly becoming commodities, yielding an average return on investment. Abnormal profits, dominant competitive positions, and sometimes even temporary monopolies are achieved by the sound deployment of intangibles, along with other types of assets.19 It is easy for a business to acquire tangible assets such as buildings and equipment. Hence, having such assets cannot give a business an edge over its rivals. Intangible assets, such as the reputation of a brand, strength of research and development, and highly trained and motivated employees, are much more difficult to develop, acquire or copy. The competitive advantage that gives a firm the ability to earn a better rate of return relative to its industry peers comes mainly from intangible assets. Today, much of a firm’s worth is represented by intangible assets. As the role of service industries with a large number of intangible assets continues to rise, the question of recognizing these assets is becoming important for a large number of companies and the users of their financial statements. Efforts are on to develop more objective methods of valuing intangible assets. Accounting for intangibles is likely to occupy the agenda of accounting regulators in the coming decades. Recording Acquisition of Intangible Assets The general principle is that an enterprise can recognize an intangible asset only if it meets two criteria: 1. It is probable that it will give future economic benefits to the enterprise. 2. The cost of the asset can be measured reliably. The first step in accounting for an intangible asset is to arrive at its cost of acquisition. The principles are the same as those for tangible assets. Thus, the cost of an intangible asset comprises its purchase price, import duties and other taxes, and any directly attributable costs of bringing the asset to working condition for its intended use.20 Directly attributable costs include costs of employee benefits, e.g. salaries, pensions and other benefits, professional fees, such as lawyers’ fees, and costs of testing whether the asset is functioning properly. Trade discounts, rebates, and refundable taxes are deducted in arriving at the purchase price. Suppose that a publisher buys the copyright for a book titled How to Live Happily Forever for `100,000. The company pays `5,000 for its lawyer’s services and `2,000 for copyright filing and registration. We record the purchase of the copyright as follows: Amortization of Intangible Assets Amortization is “the systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an intangible asset over its useful life.”21 Amortization is the term used for depreciation of intangible assets. Many intangible assets have finite useful lives. A number of factors, such as likely obsolescence, competitors’ actions, and contractual and legal terms on the use of the asset, determine the useful life of an intangible asset. For example, the useful life of a patent for a CT scanner will depend on its typical product life cycle (introduction, growth, maturity, decline, and exit), likely technological developments, competitors’ products, regulatory requirements, and so on. The method used for amortization is usually the straight-line method though other methods such as the written-down-value method and the production-units method may be appropriate in some cases. Suppose that the publisher expects How to Live Happily Forever to be sold over the next five years, although the copyright has a legal life of sixty years. The following entry records the yearly amortization charge: Exhibit 7.4 outlines the accounting for selected intangible assets. The Income Tax Rules provide that for tax purposes the following intangible assets can be amortized at the rate of 25 per cent on a WDV basis: know-how, patents; copyrights; trademarks; licences; franchises; or any other business or commercial rights of similar nature. Internally Generated Intangible Assets Brands Names such as Amul, Apple, Bournvita, Coke, Colgate, CNBC, Dettol, Lux, Maggi, Nescafe, Nike, Nirma, LG, Sony, Surf, Van Heusen, and Visa are among the scores of brands that dominate the daily lives of millions of Indian consumers. Brands command enormous loyalty from consumers who frequently remain largely indifferent to the brand’s ultimate ownership. (Do you know who owns the Complan brand?) Brands are increasingly recognized as the most important of all marketing tools, and this is why businesses are investing heavily in acquiring and developing brands. Yet, in India, as in most other countries, brands do not appear in the balance sheet. Accounting standards permit the recording of acquired brands, but prohibit recognition of “home-grown” or internally generated brands (and other similar items including mastheads, publishing titles, and customer lists).22 The reason is that home-grown brands are indistinguishable from the cost of developing a business as a whole. Whether acquired or home-grown, brands require considerable expenditure, generate substantial income, and add value to their owner. Businesses argue that disallowing recognition of home-grown brands results in balance sheets that reflect only the value of acquired brands, and companies that have generated brands internally do not have the benefit of showing the strength of their brands in their balance sheets. Excluding brands from the financial statements understates the value of companies and potentially exposes them to the risk of hostile takeover. Goodwill Goodwill means many things to many people. Businessmen use the term goodwill to refer to a company’s advantages, such as excellent reputation, enviable location, and superior personnel. While few will doubt the contribution of these factors to a company’s well-being, placing a monetary value on them is extremely difficult. Since personal opinions play an important part in measuring these items, it is not possible to value goodwill objectively. The inclusion in financial statements of subjective amounts as goodwill may give a misleading view of the worth of a business and undermine the reliability of these statements. Internally generated goodwill does not have the essential characteristics of an intangible asset, because it is neither separable from the enterprise nor does it arise from contractual or other legal rights. Therefore, it is not possible to recognize any internally generated goodwill.23 Research and Development (R&D) Companies in hi-tech industries spend considerable sums of money on pure research as well as development of new and improved products, processes, and materials. In most cases, there is little, if any, direct relationship between the amount of current R&D costs and future benefits, because the amount and timing of such benefits are usually uncertain. Accountants distinguish between research and development phases: Research involves gaining new knowledge and understanding (e.g. searching for a new drug molecule). Development involves the application of research findings for the production of better materials, products or processes (e.g. designing and testing a new drug). An enterprise should expense any amounts spent on research as incurred, because it is not possible to demonstrate the existence of any future economic benefits at the research phase. The development phase of a project is further advanced than the research phase. If it is not possible to distinguish between these two phases of a project, the amounts spent on the project should be expensed as incurred. An intangible asset arising from development should be recognized if and only if an enterprise can demonstrate all of the following:24 (a) The technical feasibility of completing the intangible asset so that it will be available for use or sale; (b) Its intention to complete and use or sell the intangible asset; (c) The ability of the enterprise to use or sell the intangible asset; (d) How the intangible asset will generate probable future economic benefits (e.g. the existence of a market for the output of the intangible asset); (e) The availability of adequate technical, financial, and other resources to complete the development of, and to use or sell, the intangible asset; and (f) The ability of the enterprise to measure the expenditure attributable to the intangible asset during its development reliably. It is not possible to reinstate past amounts expensed as part of the cost of an intangible asset at a later date. The financial statements should disclose the aggregate amount of R&D expenditure recognized as an expense during the period. Companies are required to give the following information on R&D in the directors’ report: 1. Specific areas of the company’s R&D activity; 2. Benefits derived as a result of R&D activities; 3. Future plan of action; and 4. Expenditure on R&D, showing capital and revenue expenditures separately. It appears that many Indian companies view these requirements as a burden rather than as an opportunity to communicate their long-term growth prospects to their shareholders and others. So the discussion on R&D matters in the directors’ report often tends to become routine and less informative. Comprehensive reporting on R&D activities will enable users of financial statements to take a long-term view of companies instead of unduly focusing on earnings per share. While managers constantly fault the “short-termism” of analysts and institutional investors, they disclose too little about expenditure on R&D to help users make informed judgments about how companies are spending their money and the likely future benefits. Increasingly, large institutional shareholders are seeking to bring about greater disclosure of R&D efforts. Companies are concerned about the fallout of the additional information becoming available to their competitors and must balance the benefits of improved disclosure to their investors and the competitive costs of such disclosure. Natural Resources Natural resources may be either non-renewable or renewable. Accounting for extracting non-renewable resources (e.g. mines and oil wells) and for developing renewable resources (e.g. forests and plantations) involve different kinds of complexities. We now examine accounting for non-renewable resources. Enterprises in extractive industries such as mines, oil, and natural gas look for and take out natural resources that lie underneath the earth. The oil and gas industry has seven broad phases: 1. Prospecting It involves analyzing historical geological data and carrying out topographical, geological and geophysical studies. Since the information generated from prospecting activities do not give rise to enforceable rights, the associated costs would not be recognized as an asset. Prospecting costs are expensed as incurred. 2. Acquisition of mineral rights This entails acquiring licence from a government to explore a defined area for oil and gas. The legal rights may take several forms, such as property titles conferring outright ownership of 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. the oil and gas property, lease or concession arrangements that are granted by the owner of the rights (usually a government), or production sharing contracts with governments. These rights meet the definition of an asset, because the enterprise that owns them alone can engage in exploration in the defined area and the rights have a positive value. A common process for selling exploration rights is to auction new exploration blocks to the highest bidder. The amount paid by the winning bidder would represent a legal rights asset. Exploration It involves searching for oil and gas. Exploration costs in the oil and gas industry include the costs of seismographic shooting, core drilling, and drilling of an exploratory well. Evaluation It calls for determining the technical feasibility and commercial viability of extracting oil and gas. Evaluation takes place only if oil and gas have been found. Evaluation costs include the costs of drilling appraisal wells and costs of detailed engineering studies to determine how best the reservoir can be developed to obtain maximum recovery. Development It refers to gaining access to the oil and gas deposit. Development costs include the costs of constructing platforms or preparing drill sites from which to drill wells to gain access to and produce oil and gas and installing equipment and facilities necessary for bringing oil and gas to the surface. Development costs should be recognized as part of the legal rights asset to the extent they have future economic benefits. Production It involves extracting oil and gas from the earth and making the produce marketable or transportable. Production costs include lifting the extracted oil and gas and removal of impurities, transportation, and storage. Besides, the costs accumulated as asset until the development phase should be depreciated/amortized over the quantity of reserves to reflect the consumption. Property, plant and equipment used in production should be depreciated similarly. Some assets may have a shorter life, while others can be redeployed in other locations. In that case, the component approach should be followed and the assets depreciated separately. Closure and decommissioning These involve dismantling and removing the assets and restoring the site on which it is located. The exploration licence usually imposes an obligation for closure and decommissioning. The related liability should be dealt with as discussed in Chapter 9. Oil and gas enterprises face significant uncertainties. To begin with, there is no direct relationship between the amount of exploration costs and the prospects of finding oil and gas. For example, a small expenditure may lead to a major find, while a large expenditure may yield nothing. Even if an exploration is successful, the quantity of oil and gas that can be extracted would depend on geological, technical, and economic conditions. The uncertainties persist during the development and production phases. The political and regulatory environment often exacerbates the uncertainties. It would seem that the oil and gas industry has a lot in common with research and development. IFRS 6 deals with accounting for exploration and evaluation costs. Currently, there are two methods of accounting followed in the oil and gas industry: (a) the successful efforts method, and (b) the full-cost method. IFRS 6 permits both. Successful Efforts Method Only those costs that lead directly to the discovery, acquisition, or development of mineral resources are capitalized. Other costs are expensed as incurred. Each property, licence, concession or production sharing contract is treated as a cost centre for determining success. Full Cost Method All exploration and evaluation costs are capitalized. Here the cost centre is much larger than a licence area. It is often a country but may even be a group of countries. The successful efforts method requires the immediate expensing of the exploration costs of a dry well, but the full cost method allows the costs of a dry well to be retained as part of a larger cost centre that would have both successful and unsuccessful wells. As you can see, the successful efforts method is more prudent. The IASB has issued a discussion paper on accounting in extractive industries.25 Non-renewable assets, such as mines, oil, and natural gas are in essence stockpiles of inventories that are exploited over a number of reporting periods. Depletion is the act of recovering the natural resources available, such as mining coal or pumping out oil. The term also means the allocation of the cost of a natural resource to the units extracted in a period. Depletion, unlike depreciation, focuses on the narrow physical phenomenon of exhaustion of a resource. The accounting procedure for depletion is similar to the production-units method of depreciation. To illustrate accounting in the oil and gas industry, assume that BigOil is interested in bidding for three licence areas in the Krishna-Godavari basin and incurs the following costs in 20X1 (all amounts in this illustration are in million): Under both the successful efforts method and the full cost method, BigOil expenses geological survey and topographical study costs as incurred, since these occur prior to acquisition of licences (in practice, there will be separate entries on many dates): BigOil bids for all three licence areas, but wins Licence Areas 1 and 2. It incurs the following further costs in 20X1: Both the successful efforts method and the full cost method will record the expenditures as follows: Exploration and evaluation expenditure of `320,500 will be carried as an intangible item in the 20X1 balance sheet. Exploration and evaluation activities continue in 20X2 and the company incurs the following expenditures: In late 20X2, the company finds oil in Area 1, but determines that Area 2 is not commercially feasible and so abandons further efforts. The company estimates the reserves in Area 1 to be 100 million tonnes. Both the successful efforts method and the full cost method will record the expenditures initially as follows: From now on, the two methods will differ. We will describe the successful efforts method first. Successful Efforts Method BigOil defines each licence area as a cost centre. At the time of deciding to abandon Area 2, BigOil records the following under the successful efforts method: The Exploration and Evaluation Expenditure account now has a balance of `138,000, representing only the expenditure on Area 1 so far (recall that we expensed prospecting expense). BigOil transfers that amount and the balance in Development Expenditure to an oil asset, as follows: Suppose that BigOil produces 5 million tonnes in 20X3. It records the depletion of the well as follows: Full Cost Method Suppose that BigOil defines the entire Krishna-Godavari basin as a cost centre. Here BigOil does not write off the expenditure on the unsuccessful licence area. Instead, it carries forward it as an asset along with the costs incurred on the successful licence area. At the time of the decision to continue with Area 1 and abandon further activities in Area 2, BigOil transfers the balance of `334,500 in Exploration and Evaluation Expenditure (i.e. the entire amount spent so far except prospecting expense) and the development expenditure, as follows: A comparison of the two methods shows that BigOil would report a lower profit under the successful efforts method by recognizing the cost of the dry well in 20X2, but recognizes lower depletion expense in future. But the full cost method defers the loss from the dry well to the future, hence it recognizes a higher depletion expense. Impairment of Assets Depreciation accounting aims at planned expensing of an asset’s carrying amount over its useful life. It assumes that an enterprise will be able to recover the carrying amount from its future revenue. However, unanticipated events, such as physical damage, changes in product markets, technological progress, new government regulations, and economic and political developments, often diminish an asset’s value. For example, audio and video cassettes are not in demand after CDs and DVDs came, and facilities that once churned out millions of metres of those tapes are not worth much now. The balance sheet value of an asset should stand for its expected “future economic benefits”. If the benefits are expected to be less valuable, the asset has been impaired and accountants require the asset to be written down to the amount that the enterprise believes it to be worth now. Impairment loss is the amount by which an asset’s carrying amount exceeds its recoverable amount. Recoverable amount is the higher of (a) its fair value less costs to sell, and (b) its value in use. “Fair value less costs to sell” is the amount obtainable from an asset’s sale in an arm’s-length transaction between knowledgeable, willing parties, less disposal costs. Value in use is the present value of the future cash flows expected to be derived from an asset. Appendix B presents the idea of present value. Where a group of assets, rather an individual asset, generates cash inflows, we determine impairment at the group level referred to as a cash-generating unit (CGU). The output of the coke oven battery in a steel plant does not have a market. The steel plant is the CGU. The following discussion applies to both asset and CGU, though for convenience we refer to asset. Evidence of impairment may be available from (a) external indicators such as a decline in an asset’s market value, adverse developments in an enterprise’s product market, technological, economic or legal environment, increase in interest rates, the carrying amount of an enterprise’s assets less liabilities exceeding its market capitalization, and (b) internal indicators such as an asset’s obsolescence or physical damage, asset becoming idle, and plans for disposal of an asset or for restructuring the operation to which an asset belongs. Note the following points on how an enterprise should account for impairment. The firm should: 1. Assess at the end of each reporting period whether there is any indication that an asset (tangible or intangible) may be impaired. If any such indication is available, the enterprise should estimate the recoverable amount of the asset. If it is not possible to estimate the recoverable amount of an individual asset, the firm should estimate the recoverable amount of the CGU to which the asset belongs. 2. Recognize an impairment loss as an expense in the statement of profit and loss. 3. Depreciate/amortize the asset’s revised carrying amount less any residual value on a systematic basis over its remaining useful life. 4. Assess at the end of each reporting period whether there is any indication that an impairment loss recognized in prior periods may no longer exist or may have decreased. If any such indication is available, the firm should estimate the recoverable amount of the asset and recognize a reversal of impairment loss immediately in the statement of profit and loss. After the reversal, it should depreciate/amortize the revised carrying amount of the asset less any residual value on a systematic basis over its remaining useful life. In practice, companies set up a contra-asset account similar to accumulated depreciation/amortization, to recognize impairment loss rather than reduce the cost of an asset. Financial Analysis of Fixed Assets The more effectively an enterprise employs its fixed assets to provide goods and services, the greater the revenue that it can generate from its operations. Managers must evaluate whether the enterprise is utilizing its fixed assets effectively. Fixed asset turnover is a measure of a firm’s efficiency in utilizing its fixed assets. It indicates how many times a firm turned over the fixed assets in a period and thereby generated sales. If the turnover is high, the firm is able to get a lot of sales out of every rupee of investment in fixed assets and is, therefore, managing its fixed assets efficiently. On the other hand, if the turnover is low, the firm has idle or underutilized fixed assets. Averages rather than year-end amounts of assets are often a better measure of the level of assets held during the year. The fixed asset turnover measure is computed as follows: To illustrate, assume the following data for Varun Company: To be able to say how good the turnover of 2.5 times is, we should know the company’s business. A capital-intensive business, such as steel or cement, requires huge initial investment in property, plant and equipment and a fixed asset turnover of 2.5 times would appear to be impressive. However, businesses such as consulting or travel agency do not need much fixed assets. Therefore, we should compare the fixed asset turnover for enterprises in the same business to find out where an enterprise stands in relation to its competitors. Also, we can study the movement of an enterprise’s ratio over time to see if there are any trends. Looking Back Describe the nature and types of fixed assets An enterprise holds fixed assets for its own use, and not for resale. Fixed assets may be tangible – have physical existence, or intangible – economic rights or benefits, or may be natural resources. Determine the cost of fixed assets The cost of a fixed asset comprises its purchase price, import duties and taxes on purchase, any directly attributable costs of bringing the asset to working condition for its intended use, and estimated dismantling, removing and restoration costs. Explain depreciation Depreciation is the allocation of the cost of an asset to the periods that are expected to benefit from its use. The useful life of an asset is usually less than its physical life, because of factors such as obsolescence and legal limits on the asset’s use. Compute depreciation under popular methods In India, straight-line and written-down-value methods are the most commonly used methods. Proper matching of costs and revenues, ease of application, recordkeeping costs, tax laws, and legal requirements influence the selection of a depreciation method. Distinguish between capital expenditure and revenue expenditure Capital expenditures are for the purchase or expansion of fixed assets, and revenue expenditures are for ordinary repairs, maintenance, or fuel. Misclassification of expenditures can distort reported profits. Understand the difference between accounting and tax depreciation Accounting depreciation aims at a systematic allocation of the cost of an asset. Tax depreciation is more generous and has economic and social objectives. Account for the discarding, sale, or exchange of depreciable assets When an asset is discarded, sold, or exchanged for a new asset, the cost and the accumulated depreciation of the asset are removed from the books, and a gain or loss on disposal is recognized. Dispel the myths about depreciation Depreciation is not a source of cash. For any business, cash provided by sales to customers is the only source of cash from operations. Depreciation is not intended to provide funds for replacement. It should be charged even if there is an increase in the market value of an asset. Explain revaluation of fixed assets Departing from the pure historical cost system, in recent years many companies have revalued fixed assets so that the carrying amounts are closer to the current replacement values. Describe and account for intangible assets Intangible assets, such as brands, are becoming important in many industries. Accountants record these at cost and amortize them over the useful lives of these assets. Enterprises usually expense R&D costs, but if they can demonstrate the technical and commercial feasibility of the potential product or process, they can amortize them. Account for natural resources The accounting procedure for a natural resource depletion, consists of charging off the cost of the resource over the estimated quantity of the asset. Explain impairment of assets An asset is impaired if the value recoverable from its future use is less than its carrying amount. Impairment loss is the difference between the two amounts. An enterprise must recognize the impairment loss by writing down the carrying amount of the impaired asset. Analyze the utilization of fixed assets Fixed asset turnover is a measure of a firm’s efficiency in utilizing its fixed assets. A high turnover indicates that the firm is able to generate a lot of revenue per rupee invested in fixed assets. Review Problem Ganesh Construction Company bought an earth moving machine for `200,000. The equipment was expected to be useful for six years, or 15,000 hours, with an estimated residual value of `20,000 at the end of that time. The equipment logged 2,000 hours in the first year. Required Compute the depreciation expense for the first year under each of the following methods: (1) Straight-line, (2) Written-down-value, (3) Sum-of-the-years’-digits, and (4) Production-units. Solution ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. What are the chief characteristics of fixed assets? 2. How is accounting for fixed assets useful to a business? 3. “Interest costs on debt incurred for financing an asset can be charged to the asset account.” Do you agree? Explain. 4. What does depreciation mean in accounting? 5. Why is land not depreciated? 6. Is it necessary to charge depreciation on a building when its market value is expected to exceed the cost of acquisition? Why or why not? 7. Why is the useful life of an asset often less than its physical life? 8. Navin Printers has bought a high-speed laser printer for the first time. How can it estimate the printer’s useful life? 9. How is the straight-line method different from the accelerated method? 10. When can a business justify the use of an accelerated method? 11. When is the production-units method more appropriate than other depreciation methods? 12. Why is the straight-line method popular despite its shortcomings? 13. What non-accounting considerations could influence the selection of a depreciation method? 14. Explain the relevance of Schedule II (Schedule XIV) depreciation rates to financial reporting. 15. Is it necessary to follow the same depreciation method for accounting and tax purposes? 16. “There is nothing devious about companies maintaining one set of 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. accounting records for shareholders and another set for tax authorities.” Explain. How is depreciation for partial periods recorded? How does a revision in the remaining useful life of an asset affect past and future depreciation expense? How are assets of low value accounted for? When can a company change the depreciation method, and how is the change accounted and reported? When can assets be grouped for depreciation purposes? What will be the effect on reported profit of charging routine maintenance to an asset account? A car hire company recently replaced the petrol engines in its cars with diesel engines. How should it account for the expenditure? Evaluate the following statement: “It is not necessary to show on the balance sheet an asset that has been fully depreciated because the omission does not affect its carrying amount.” Sudhir Enterprises exchanges its computer for a new model by paying a small amount. At what cost is the new computer to be recorded? How are the gains and losses on disposal treated under tax laws? How does the tax treatment differ from the accounting treatment? What does accumulated depreciation represent? Does it represent cash available for purchase of new assets? Explain why or why not. In highly inflationary periods, how can a company ensure that adequate funds are available for replacement of assets? Why do companies revalue their property, plant and equipment? Explain how the change to IFRS would affect the depreciation of revalued assets. When can brands be shown on the balance sheet, and at what amounts? How in general is the period of time for amortization of an intangible asset determined, and what pattern of amortization is generally followed? Why is testing for asset impairment necessary when an asset is already being depreciated? “Natural resources are inventories in the garb of fixed assets.” Do you agree? Problem Set A Required Prepare a journal entry to show the depreciation expense for 20X8 and to give effect to the change in the depreciation method under (a) IGAAP and (b) IFRS. Shree Sugar Mills installed a new plant costing `600,000 with an estimated useful life of seven years and an estimated residual value of `40,000. In the first year, the company’s cash revenues were `3,000,000 and cash expenses were `2,000,000. For tax purposes, the plant is eligible for depreciation at the rate of 25 per cent. The income tax rate is 30 per cent. Required Compute for the first year the profit after tax (assuming straight-line depreciation) and the cash flow from operations after tax. Leo Consultants bought a screen projector on April 1, 20X4 for `40,000. It had an estimated useful life of nine years and an estimated residual value of `4,000. Straightline depreciation was charged. The equipment was disposed of on September 30, 20X9. The company’s reporting period corresponds to the calendar year. Required Prepare journal entries to record the disposal under each of the following independent cases, making sure to update depreciation. The equipment was: 1. 2. 3. 4. Scrapped as having no sale value. Sold for `18,000. Sold for `21,200. Sold for `16,500. 5. Exchanged for an equipment with a similar configuration having an invoice price of `50,000. The existing equipment was allowed `16,000, and the balance was paid in cash. 6. Exchanged for an equipment with a different configuration having an invoice price of `50,000. The existing equipment was allowed `3,000, and the balance was paid in cash. 7. Exchanged for an equipment with a similar configuration having an invoice price of `50,000. The existing equipment was allowed `23,000, and the balance was paid in cash. Rayalaseema Granite Company bought a granite quarry for `6,000,000. The quarry was estimated to contain 1,000,000 tonnes of granite. It incurred an expenditure of `1,000,000 in developing the quarry site. The company extracted and sold 300,000 tonnes of granite in the first year. Required 1. Prepare a journal entry to record the depletion expense for the first year. 2. Show how the quarry would appear on the balance sheet of Rayalaseema Granite Company at the end of the first year. (a) Vinay Shah paid `200,000 to be the exclusive franchisee of Computerland for a training school in three districts in Gujarat. The franchise is valid for four years and may be renewed by mutual consent. (b) In 20X4, Chopra Company spent `200,000 in developing a new software product, Big Bull, to be used by stockbrokers and financial analysts. The technological feasibility of the software was established in 20X5, during which the company spent a further `1,000,000. The product was successfully completed in 20X5. The company expects the product to yield `5,000,000 in revenues over five years beginning 20X6. Required Compute the annual amortization of the franchise and software product. Problem Set B Image Processing Products developed a research laboratory in 20X3. The costs incurred in connection with this project and debited to the Laboratory Project account are as follows: The laboratory was commissioned on October 1, 20X3. The company’s reporting period ends on December 31. Required 1. Prepare a statement listing each item in one of these four columns: Land, Land Improvements, Building, and Equipment. 2. Prepare a journal entry on October 1 for capitalizing the costs associated with the project. 3. Prepare a journal entry to show the depreciation expense for 20X3 using the straight- line method. The useful life of building and land improvements is estimated at 25 years, while that of equipment is 10 years. There is no residual value at the end. Kiran Computers bought a machine for making printed circuit boards (PCBs) for `800,000. The machine was expected to be useful for five years and an estimated residual value of `40,000. The machine is expected to produce 50,000 PCBs. It produced 15,000 PCBs in Year 1; 12,000 PCB’s in Year 2; 3,000 PCBs in Year 3; 16,000 PCBs in Year 4; and 4,000 PCBs in Year 5. Required 1. Compute the depreciation expense for each year under each of the following methods: (a) straight-line, (b) written-down-value, (c) sum-of-the-years’digits, and (d) production-units. 2. Comment on the trend of yearly depreciation expense and carrying amount. The delivery van logged 6,000 km in the year ended March 31, 20X6. Required 1. Compute the depreciation expense for the period ended March 31 in 20X4, 20X5, and 20X6. The amount is to be rounded off to the nearest rupee. 2. Show how these assets would appear on the balance sheet on March 31 each year. KBU Corporation provides air transport services for short distances. It acquired an aircraft costing `100 million. The aircraft was expected to last 50,000 flying-hours with an estimated residual value of `4,000,000. At the beginning of Year 4, the company carried out a modification to the aircraft engine at a cost of `8,000,000. At the time, the aircraft had completed 30,000 flying-hours. After the modification, the aircraft will have a remaining estimated useful life of 30,000 flying-hours and an estimated residual value of `7,500,000. In Year 4, the aircraft flew 8,000 hours. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the cost of the modification and the depreciation expense for Year 4. 2. Repeat Requirement 1, assuming that the modification was not carried out. In the beginning of Year 4, the aircraft was estimated to have a remaining useful life of 10,000 flying-hours and a residual value of `4,000,000. In Year 4, the aircraft flew 8,000 hours. Mary Industries Limited started business with equity capital of `2,500,000 in cash. Soon after, it bought machinery costing `2,000,000 for cash. The machinery had an estimated useful life of 10 years and an estimated residual value of `100,000. In the first year, the company’s revenues (in cash) were `7,000,000 and cash operating expenses were `4,500,000. The machinery was depreciated on the straight-line basis. For tax purposes, the machinery was eligible for depreciation at the rate of 25 per cent. Income tax rate is 35 per cent. Required 1. Prepare the statement of profit and loss and the cash flow statement for Year 1. Using a reconciliation statement, explain the difference between the profit after tax and the cash flow from operations. 2. Repeat Requirement 1, assuming that the machinery has an estimated useful life of eight years and an estimated residual value of `100,000. Does the cash flow from operations differ from that in Requirement 1? Explain. 3. Repeat Requirement 1, assuming that the company uses the income tax depreciation for accounting purposes as well. How do the results differ from your answer to Requirement 1? After using these assets for three years, the company decided to change its depreciation policy as follows: (a) Change the method of depreciation for machinery to the straight-line method; (b) Revise the remaining useful life of building to 30 years, keeping its residual value at `100,000. These changes are to be implemented in the financial statements for Year 4. Required 1. Prepare a journal entry to record the change in Azad Company’s depreciation policy. 2. Compute the depreciation expense for Year 4 without giving effect to the change in depreciation policy. What is the effect of the change on the profit before tax for Year 4? 3. What disclosures concerning the change should the company make in its financial statements for Year 4? 4. What would be the position under IFRS? Sharief Company purchased a diesel generator for `1,000,000. The generator had an estimated useful life of eight years with an estimated residual value of `40,000 at the end of that time. Required Prepare journal entries to record the disposal of the generator at the end of the third year in each of the following independent situations. Straight-line depreciation was charged. 1. The generator was sold for `390,000. 2. It was sold for `700,000. 3. It was exchanged for an equipment with a different configuration having an invoice price of `1,100,000. The generator was allowed `720,000, and the balance was paid in cash. 4. It was exchanged for an equipment with a similar configuration having an invoice price of `1,100,000. The generator was allowed `720,000, and the balance was paid in cash. 5. Same as Requirement 3 except that the generator was allowed `580,000. 6. Same as Requirement 4 except the generator was allowed `580,000. Ahuja Dyestuff Company bought machinery on April 1, 20X1 for `600,000. The machinery was expected to have a useful life of ten years. The company followed the straight-line depreciation method. In 20X6, the company engaged a firm of professional valuers to determine the current value of the machinery. The valuers reported that on April 1, 20X6 similar machinery with an estimated useful life of 10 years would cost `1,000,000. The company’s year-end is March 31. Required 1. Prepare a journal entry to record the revaluation. 2. Compute the depreciation expense for the year ended March 31, 20X7 under (a) IFRS, and (b) IGAAP. Manali Company bought a patent for a chemical product from Baroda Company for `1,200,000. The patent has an estimated remaining useful life of six years and was carried in Baroda Company’s books at `1,000,000. Required Prepare journal entries to record the purchase and the annual amortization of the patent by Manali Company. Problem Set C The expansion was financed partly by borrowings of `3,500,000, on which interest is payable at 15 per cent per year. The principal amount will be repaid in equal annual instalments over the next six years. Interest for 20X7 was debited to Interest Expense. Work on the project commenced on February 1, 20X7. The new plant was commissioned on December 1, 20X7. It is to be assumed that the borrowings were applied equally to the building and the plant. A production supervisor was posted to assist in the project. He spent one month on preparation of the land, one month on improvements, four months on construction of the building, and another four months on installation of the machinery. The supervisor’s annual salary of `60,000 was charged to Salaries Expense. Required 1. Prepare a statement listing each item in one of these four columns: Land, Land Improvements, Building, and Plant and Machinery. 2. Prepare a journal entry on December 31, 20X7, for capitalizing the costs associated with the project. 3. Prepare a journal entry to show the depreciation expense for 20X7, using the straight- line method. The estimated useful life of building and land improvements is 25 years, while that of equipment is 10 years. There is no estimated residual value at the end. Bond Company bought for `600,000 a piece of equipment for detecting defective bottles. The equipment has an estimated useful life of six years and an estimated residual value of `60,000. It is expected to last 50,000 hours. The machine worked 10,000 hours in Year 1; 18,000 hours in Year 2; 2,000 hours in Year 3; 11,000 hours in Year 4; 6,000 hours in Year 5; and 3,000 hours in Year 6. Required 1. Compute the yearly depreciation expense for each year under each of the following methods: (a) straight-line, (b) written-down-value, (c) sum-of-theyears’-digits, and (d) production-units. 2. Comment on the trend of yearly depreciation expense and book value. The van logged 10,000 km in the year ended June 30, 20X8. Required 1. Compute the depreciation expense for the period ended June 30 in 20X6, 20X7, and 20X8. The amount is to be rounded to the nearest rupee. 2. Show how these assets would appear on the balance sheet on June 30 each year. Goa Tourism Company offers local sight- seeing trips. It acquired an air-conditioned coach costing `1,500,000. The coach was expected to be useful for six years, with an estimated residual value of `45,000 at the end of that time. At the beginning of Year 4, the company carried out an overhaul of the coach at a cost of `150,000. As a result, it is expected that the coach will have a remaining useful life of five years and an estimated residual value of `100,000. Straight-line depreciation is provided. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the cost of the overhaul and the depreciation expense for Year 4. 2. Repeat Requirement 1, assuming that the overhaul was not carried out. In the beginning of Year 4, the coach was estimated to have a remaining useful life of five years and a residual value of `45,000. Amit Textiles started business with a capital of `4,000,000 in cash. Soon after, it purchased machinery costing `3,700,000 for cash. The machinery had an estimated useful life of seven years and an estimated residual value of `200,000. In the first year, the company’s revenues (in cash) were `10,000,000 and cash operating expenses were `6,500,000. The machinery was depreciated on straight-line basis. For tax purposes, the machinery was eligible for depreciation at the rate of 25 per cent. Income tax rate was 30 per cent. Required 1. Prepare the statement of profit and loss and the cash flow statement for Year 1. Using a reconciliation statement, explain the difference between the profit after tax and the cash flow from operations. 2. Repeat Requirement 1, assuming that the machinery has an estimated useful life of five years and an estimated residual value of `200,000. Does the cash flow from operations differ from that in Requirement 1? Explain. 3. Repeat Requirement 1, assuming that the company uses the income tax depreciation for accounting purposes as well. How do the results differ from your answer to Requirement 1? After using these assets for four years, the company decided to change its depreciation policy as follows: (a) Change the method of depreciation for machinery to the straight-line method; (b) Revise the remaining useful life of building to 40 years, keeping its residual value at `90,000. These changes are to be implemented in the financial statements for Year 5. Required 1. Prepare a journal entry to record the depreciation expense after the change in policy. 2. Compute the depreciation expense for Year 5 without giving effect to the change in depreciation policy. What is the effect of the change on the profit before tax for Year 5? 3. What disclosures concerning the change should the company make in its financial statements for Year 5? 4. What would be the position under IFRS? Standard Manufacturing Company purchased a robot for its assembly operations. The cost of the robot was `1,400,000. It had an estimated useful life of four years. It could be sold for an estimated `100,000 at the end of four years. Required Prepare journal entries to record the disposal of the robot at the end of the second year in each of the following independent situations. Straight-line depreciation was charged. 1. The robot was sold for `660,000. 2. It was sold for `810,000. 3. It was exchanged for a robot with a different configurations having an invoice price of `1,700,000. The robot was allowed `910,000, and the balance was paid in cash. 4. It was exchanged for a robot with a similar configuration having an invoice price of `1,700,000. The robot was allowed `910,000 and the balance was paid in cash. 5. Same as Requirement 3 except the robot was allowed `690,000. 6. Same as Requirement 4 except the robot was allowed `690,000. 7. The robot was totally damaged in an accident. The insurance company paid compensation of `470,000 in full settlement. Premium Automobile Ltd. purchased a building on January 1, 20X3 for `900,000. The building was expected to have a useful life of 25 years. The company charged straight-line depreciation. In 20X8, the company commissioned a firm of professional valuers to determine the current value of the building. The valuers reported that on January 1, 20X8, a similar building with an estimated useful life of 25 years would cost `1,400,000. The company’s reporting period corresponds to the calendar year. Required 1. Prepare a journal entry to record the revaluation. 2. Compute the depreciation expense for 20X8 on the basis of (a) IFRS, and (b) IGAAP. Reddy Ice Creams acquired for `600,000 a franchise to open ice cream parlours in two southern Indian states. The franchise has an estimated useful life of four years. Required Prepare a journal entry to record the purchase and the annual amortization of the franchise by Reddy Ice Creams. Business Decision Cases Mohini Sharma is an investment analyst in Esbeeye Securities, a medium-sized stock brokerage firm. She specializes in the stocks of non-ferrous metal companies. As a part of her job, she provides reviews on these stocks in the firm’s newsletter. The newsletter is a monthly publication and is sent to Esbeeye’s clients who are mostly private, non-institutional shareholders. In early July 20X8, Mohini prepared an analysis of aluminium companies based on their annual reports for the year ended March 31, 20X8. She has come across the following footnote appearing in the financial statements of Bengal Aluminium Company: During the year, the company has changed the method of depreciation for the main smelter from the written-down-value method to the straight-line method. If the company had not made this change, the depreciation expense for the current year would have been higher by `141,586,327. No other reference to the depreciation method change was available in the company’s report, except an item in the statement of profit and loss, “Excess provision for depreciation written back, `782,312,370”, shown ‘above the line’. Until last year, aluminium companies have followed similar accounting policies. The main smelter of Bengal Aluminium was bought on April 1, 20X5, for `3,000 million with an estimated useful life of 10 years and was expected to fetch `150 million at the end of that time. There are five major producers in the aluminium industry and they vary widely in terms of sales and total assets. On these dimensions, National Aluminium Company comes closest to Bengal Aluminium Company. Sales and profits after tax (in million) of the two companies in recent years are as follows: Mohini’s immediate problem is how to evaluate Bengal Aluminium’s 20X8 results in light of (a) the company’s past performance, and (b) the 20X8 results of National Aluminium. Her other concern is to find out the management’s motives for the depreciation policy switch. Required 1. What would have been Bengal Aluminium’s profit after tax for the year ended March 31, 20X8 but for the change in depreciation method? 2. Compute the ratio of profit after tax to sales for the two companies for each year. 3. What could have been the motives for Bengal Aluminium’s depreciation policy switch? 4. Do you consider the company’s disclosure of the accounting change adequate? 5. Draft a short paragraph on the accounting change which Mohini should consider including in her report on aluminium stocks. Interpreting Financial Reports Jet Airways is the largest private airline in India. Set up in 1993, the company has both domestic and international operations. Excerpts from the company’s press release on its June 2008 quarter results are as follows: 29 July 2008 Highlights for quarter ended June 30, 2008 vs. June 30, 2007 Operational System-wide ASKMs of 8,154 million, up 71.4% System-wide RPKMs of 5,498 million, up 67.2% System wide seat factor of 67.4% vs 69.1% 3.15 million revenue passengers carried up 18% Financial Revenue of `28,992 million (US$ 673.7 million), up 46.2% Profit before tax `2,191 million (US$ 50.9 million) vs profit of `495 million (US$12.2 million), up 343% Profit after tax of `1,434 million (US$ 33.3 million) vs profit of `309 million (US$7.6 million), up 401% During this quarter, we have changed our accounting policy for charging depreciation on our narrow body aircraft used for the domestic operations and we will now charge depreciation on a straight-line method (SLM) basis as compared to a written-down-value (WDV) basis. This method is in line with the method that we follow to depreciate our wide body aircraft that we use for International operations. The impact on account of this change in method was `9,159 million (US$ 213 million) for the quarter at the company level. The company’s recent quarterly results are as follows: A business newspaper carried a report on Jet Airways.26 Required 1. What could be the possible reasons for the accounting change by Jet Airways? Which of these likely explain the company’s action? Why? 2. Analyze the performance of Jet Airways in the June 2008 quarter. 3. What does the expression “depreciation payout” in the news report mean? Do you agree with its use? 4. Comment on the disclosure on the accounting change in the company’s quarterly earnings announcement and press release. 5. From the standpoint of users of financial statements, what safeguards are available against attempts by corporate management to make arbitrary accounting changes? Financial Analysis Study a sample of company annual reports for five years. Required 1. Prepare an analysis of the depreciation methods followed by the companies. 2. Do you see any patterns? Explain. 3. Comment on possible managerial motivations for depreciation method changes by the sample companies. Your comments should be based on the information available in the financial statements and other portions of the annual report. 4. Why is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Study a sample of company annual reports. Required 1. Locate companies that present fixed assets at revalued amounts. 2. Comment on possible managerial motivations for revaluation in the case of the sample companies. Your comments should be based on the information available in the financial statements and other portions of the annual report. 3. How important is revaluation to the sample companies? To assess this, calculate the percentage of revaluation reserve to total reserves and surplus. 4. Suppose that the companies decide to charge depreciation based on revalued amounts rather than original costs. How much would this change affect their profit? 5. Who are the valuation experts engaged by the companies? How much did the companies pay them for their services? Study a sample of company annual reports. Required 1. Prepare a list of intangible assets that the companies show in their financial statements. Comment on any patterns. 2. How significant are intangible assets to the companies? Calculate the percentage of intangible assets to the total fixed assets. 3. Prepare a list of intangible assets that the companies would have but do not show in their financial statements. 4. Comment on the accounting policies for intangible assets. 5. Explain why this study is important for analyzing and interpreting financial statements. Study a sample of company annual reports for five years. Required 1. Analyze instances of asset impairment. How does impairment affect the reported profit? 2. Explain why this study is important for analyzing and interpreting financial statements. Study a sample of company annual reports for five years. Required 1. Analyze accounting policies for R&D. Do you see any patterns? 2. Explain why this study is important for analyzing and interpreting financial statements. Study a sample of annual reports of companies in any one industry for five years. Required 1. 2. 3. 4. Prepare an analysis of the companies’ fixed asset turnover. Do you see any industry patterns? Explain. Explain any trends in the operating cycle. Why is your study important for analyzing financial statements? Answers to Test Your Understanding 7.1 Capitalize: (a), (b), (d), (e), (g), (h) and (i). Expense: (c) and (f), because demurrage and repair charges are not normal to importing the plant, and do not increase the value or the productive capacity of the asset. Normal spoilage during trial run, item (h), is often an unavoidable cost of putting a machine to use. 7.2 1 IAS 16:6/Ind AS 16.6/AS 10:6.1. 2 IAS 38:8/Ind AS 38.8/AS 26:6.1. 3 IAS 16:16/Ind AS 16:16/AS 10:9.1 4 The principles for treating borrowing costs as inventoriable costs are the same as those discussed in this section. 5 IAS 23:5/Ind AS 23:5/AS 16:3.1. 6 These terms are explained in Chapters 8 and 9. 7 IAS 16:43/Ind AS 16:43. 8 IAS 16:6/Ind AS 16:6/AS 6:3.1. 9 IAS 16:50/Ind AS 16.50. 10 IAS 16:60/Ind AS 16:60. 11 AS 8:36/Ind AS 8:36/AS 5:23. 12 IAS 8:61/Ind AS 8.61. 13 David M. Kreps, Microeconomics for Managers, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 2004. 14 The straight-line method is prescribed for companies engaged in generation and distribution of power. 15 Net present value is the difference between the present value of the cash inflows from an asset and the cash outflow for acquisition of the asset. Appendix B on time value of money explains present value calculation. 16 IAS 16:29/Ind AS 16:29/AS 10:13. 17 Revaluations are also common in many British Commonwealth countries including the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. Revaluations are prohibited in the United States. 18 IAS 38:8/Ind AS 38:8/AS 26:6.1. 19 Baruch Lev, Intangibles: Management, measurement, and reporting, Brookings Institution Press, Washington D.C., 2001. 20 IAS 38:27/Ind AS 38:27/AS 26:8. 21 IAS 38:8/Ind AS 38:8/AS 26:6.7. 22 IAS 38:63/Ind AS 38:63/AS 26:50. 23 IAS 38:6/Ind AS 38:6/AS 26:35. However, “purchased” goodwill is recognized. We will see this in Chapter 8. 24 IAS 38:57/Ind AS 38:57/AS 26:44. 25 IASB, Extractive Industries, DP/2010/1 April 2010. 26 Tarun Shukla, One-time gain masks Jet’s `7,755 million loss in Q1, Mint, July 30, 2008. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Describe the nature and types of investments. Define and describe financial instruments and financial assets. Account for equity and debt instruments held as financial investments. Explain impairment of financial assets. Distinguish between equity investments held as operating investments from those held as financial investments. Define a subsidiary and explain control. Explain consolidated financial statements. Explain business combination and goodwill. Prepare consolidated financial statements applying the acquisition method of business combination. Define a joint venture and explain joint control. Explain proportionate consolidation for jointly controlled entities. Define an associate and explain significant influence. Explain the equity method for associates. Account for investments in separate financial statements. Define and account for investment property. WHEN THE PARTY ENDS… For a long time life was simple: accountants recorded everything at their historical cost. Then someone said that historical cost was irrelevant and assets must appear at their fair value in the financial statements. That divided the world neatly into two camps: those who stood by historical cost (“cost is a fact, value is an opinion”) and those who embraced fair value (“cost is about the past, value is about the future”). Many reasons have been advanced for the financial crisis in 2008: Alan Greenspan, bankers’ greed, Chinese savings, derivatives, easy liquidity, rating agencies, regulatory failure, southern Europeans…. Politicians held fair value responsible for first blowing the bubble and then bursting it. They contended: “When the markets were booming, fair value went up and investors made paper profits. This led to further investments in those assets causing their prices to rise even further leading to a bubble. When the bubble burst, the markets fell and everyone rushed to sell the assets and this deepened the crisis.” The problem got complicated, because there were many financial products for which there were no public markets and these had to be valued using some models. Warren Buffett, the investment superstar, said that many financial assets were marked to myth. Did fair value accounting cause the financial crisis? THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL Companies often invest in shares and debentures of other entities. Accounting for investments is one of the most complex areas. This chapter presents an overview of the common accounting issues in investments. You will get a grasp of the basics necessary for analyzing and interpreting the financial statements. Investments in Perspective A business enterprise may hold investments for earning an income and benefiting from increase in their value or for acquiring a say in the running of companies with which it intends to have business relations. What sets apart an investment from other assets is that it is not intended to be available for the investor’s production, selling or administrative activities. Investments may be financial claims on other enterprises, such as equity shares or debt instruments or land and building held for the purpose of earning a rental income and a possible rise in their market value. Financial claims may be held for the purpose of short-term gain or for strengthening longterm business interests. Accounting for investments should reflect the investor’s intention and time horizon. Financial Instruments and Financial Assets A financial instrument is any contract that gives rise to a financial asset of one entity and a financial liability or equity instrument of another entity.1 Thus, a financial instrument may be a financial asset, a financial liability or equity. In this chapter, we consider financial assets. Chapters 9 and 10 discuss financial liabilities and equity. A financial asset is any of the following: (a) Cash; (b) An equity instrument of another entity; (c) A contractual right to receive cash or another financial asset from another entity. The owner of a financial asset has a contractual claim on the entity that has issued the financial instrument. The instrument may be a debt instrument (another entity’s financial liability) that gives its owner a right to periodical interest payments and principal repayment, or an equity instrument (another entity’s equity shares) that carries a right to any dividends distributed and residual assets. Equity and Debt Instruments A company may want to invest its surplus cash in order to earn a return. Some enterprises, such as banks, are in the business of lending. The intention in making such investments is to earn a financial return in the form of interest, dividend, and capital appreciation. Think of these as financial investments. (Later in this chapter, we will consider investments in equity instruments made as part of business operations.) Accountants classify financial assets into four categories: 1. 2. 3. 4. Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss; Held-to-maturity investments; Loans and receivables; and Available-for-sale financial assets. Financial Assets at Fair Value through Profit or Loss A financial asset at fair value through profit or loss (or FAFVPL) is either (a) classified as held for trading or (b) designated as a FAFVPL at the time of initial recognition. A financial asset classified as held-for-trading is acquired principally for the purpose of selling it in the near term. An entity holding a financial asset for trading intends to generate a profit from short-term price fluctuations by active and frequent buying and selling of the asset. Held-for-trading financial assets are also known as trading securities. Since the investor intends to sell these securities as part of its business, these assets are worth just the amount they are expected to fetch in the market when sold. So accountants measure them at fair value: the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s-length transaction. If there is an active market for an instrument meaning that the share is bought and sold regularly, the quoted market price is usually its fair value. For this reason, this valuation principle is commonly known as mark-to-market accounting. Investments in equity and debt instruments held by mutual funds are examples of FAFVPL. On initial recognition, FAFVPL are measured at fair value. Transactions costs, such as brokerage, are not considered. The investor recognizes in its statement of profit and loss (a) any realized or unrealized gains and losses, measured as the change in the fair value of the securities since their purchase or the last balance sheet date, and (b) any dividend or interest income earned during a period. If an instrument does not have a quoted market price in an active market, accountants use valuation techniques to establish its fair value. If it is not possible to establish the fair value of an equity instrument reliably, it cannot be designated as a FAFVPL. Instead, such instruments are measured at cost. This method is followed for unlisted or unquoted equity instruments. For financial assets carried at cost, the investor recognizes in its statement of profit and loss any dividend income earned during a period. Debt investments carry contractual rights to payment of interest and repayment of principal. Equity securities do not carry such rights. Accounting for investments in debt instruments at fair value through profit or loss is broadly similar to that for equity investments. Held-to-Maturity Investments A business enterprise may invest in another company’s debentures in order to provide medium-term or long-term financing. Banks, insurance companies, and other financial institutions routinely invest in debt securities, e.g. government securities and corporate bonds, as part of their operations. Also, industry regulations require banks and insurance companies to invest a portion of their investments to be held in government securities. Held-to-maturity investments are financial assets that (a) have fixed or determinable payments and fixed maturity and (b) the investor has the positive intention and ability to hold to maturity.2 The terms of a debt instrument specify (a) the principal amount, or face value, (b) the interest rate, or coupon, and (c) the repayment date. The coupon is applied to the face value of the instrument to compute the amount of periodical interest. Thus, if an investor intends to hold a debenture until the repayment date and has the financial resources to live up to that intention, it would be a held-to-maturity (HTM) investment. A debt instrument with a variable interest rate can be a HTM investment. A perpetual debt instrument that provides for interest payments for an indefinite period cannot be classified as a HTM investment, because there is no maturity date. Equity instruments cannot be HTM investments, because they have an indefinite life. Investments in the HTM classification exclude the following: (a) Those that the investor upon initial recognition designates as at fair value through profit or loss; (b) Those that the investor designates as available for sale; and (c) Those that meet the definition of loans and receivables. Initially, HTM investments are measured at fair value. Transactions costs, such as brokerage, are considered. Subsequently, the investments are measured at amortized cost using the effective interest method. Amortized cost is the amount at which a financial asset is measured at initial recognition minus principal repayments and adjusted for periodic amortization of the difference between the amount of initial recognition and the amount payable on maturity. The effective interest method calculates the amortized cost of a financial asset and allocates the interest income at the rate that exactly discounts estimated future interest receipts to the carrying amount of the financial asset. This rate is also known as the internal rate of return (IRR). Suppose that F0 is the fair value of an investment, I1, …, In are interest, S the sum payable on maturity, n the period of investment, and i the effective interest rate.3 The effective interest rate is given by solving the following equation for i: The equation can be solved by trial and error, plugging in different values for i or by using the IRR function in a spreadsheet. The effective interest rate is also known as the market interest rate (or yield). You should review Appendix B to understand the idea of time value of money. For most financial assets, fair value is a more appropriate measure than amortized cost. The HTM classification is an exception and must satisfy the test of intention and ability to hold the investment to maturity.4 Therefore, it is expected to be used only in limited circumstances. Classification as a HTM investment would be ‘tainted’ if the entity has sold or reclassified a ‘not insignificant’ amount of such investments before maturity during the current financial year or the two preceding financial years. The remaining portion of such an investment will have to be reclassified as available for sale. Loans and Receivables Loans and receivables are financial assets with fixed or determinable payments and fixed maturity, but are not quoted in an active market. They differ from HTM investments in two ways: 1. It does not matter whether the investor intends to hold a loan or receivable to maturity. 2. Assets in the loans and receivables category are not subject to the penalty arising from the ‘tainting’ provisions. Trade receivables, bank deposits, and loans and advances given by banks to customers are examples of items in this classification. A financial asset that is quoted in an active market, e.g. a quoted debenture, does not qualify for classification as a loan or receivable. Financial assets that do not meet the definition of loans and receivables, e.g. because they are quoted in an active market, may be classified as HTM investments if they meet the relevant conditions. Loans and receivables exclude the following: (a) Those that the investor intends to sell immediately or in the near term, which shall be classified as held for trading, and those that the investor upon initial recognition designates as at fair value through profit or loss. (b) Those that the entity upon initial recognition designates as available for sale. (c) Those for which the investor may not recover substantially all of his initial investment, other than because of credit deterioration, which shall be classified as available for sale. Initially, loans and receivables are measured at fair value. Transactions costs, such as brokerage, are considered. Subsequently, these assets are measured at amortized cost using the effective interest method, similar to HTM investments. Short-term receivables with no stated interest rate may be measured at the original invoice amount if the effect of discounting is immaterial. Available-for-Sale Financial Assets Available-for-sale financial assets (or available-for-sale securities) are financial assets that are (a) either designated as available for sale or (b) not classified as loans and receivables, HTM investments or FAFVPL. The available-for-sale (AFS) classification is effectively a default classification. Initially, AFS financial assets are measured at fair value. Transactions costs such as brokerage are considered. Subsequently, these investments are measured at fair value, but unrealized gains and losses are taken to other comprehensive income, a component of equity, rather than routed through the statement of profit and loss. The investor recognizes any dividend or interest income earned from AFS securities assets in the statement of profit and loss. Think of these as financial assets at fair value through balance sheet. Impairment of Financial Assets Financial assets carried at amortized cost (i.e. HTM investments and loans and receivables), financial assets carried at cost, and AFS financial assets are subject to review for impairment.5 An entity must assess at each reporting whether there is any “objective evidence” of impairment. The evidence comes from an event that occurred after the initial recognition of a financial asset and that ‘loss event’ has an impact on the estimated future cash flows of the financial asset or group of assets that can be reliably estimated. Examples of loss events include significant financial difficulty of the borrower, default in interest or principal payments, the lender granting to the borrower a concession that the lender would not otherwise consider, and the probability that the borrower will enter bankruptcy. Impairment results from a combination of several loss events rather than a single event. Also, the loss event must have happened after the initial recognition, but before the reporting date. This is the incurred loss approach that the IASB has accepted. In this approach, losses expected as a result of future events, no matter how likely, are not recognized. For example, a bank expects from past experience that one per cent of the principal amount of loans cannot be collected. The incurred loss approach does not allow the bank to recognize an immediate impairment loss of one per cent of loans given. In March 2013, the IASB published proposals for moving to an approach based on expected loss.6 We now consider measuring the impairment of financial assets. Financial Assets Carried at Amortized Cost If there is objective evidence that an impairment loss has been incurred on loans and receivables or HTM investments, that loss should be measured as the difference between the carrying amount of the asset and the present value of estimated future cash flows discounted at the financial asset’s original effective interest rate (i.e. the effective interest rate computed at initial recognition). An investor can reduce the asset’s carrying amount either directly or use an allowance (i.e. provision) account. The amount of impairment or bad debt loss may decrease in a subsequent period. If the decrease can be related objectively to a new event (e.g. an improvement in the debtor’s credit rating), the previously recognized impairment loss is reversed either directly or by adjusting an allowance account. The reversal shall not result in a carrying amount larger than what the amortized cost would have been at the date of reversal had the impairment not been recognized. The amount of the reversal shall be recognized in the statement of profit and loss. Financial Assets Carried at Cost If there is objective evidence that an impairment loss has been incurred on an unquoted equity instrument that is not carried at fair value, that loss should be measured as the difference between the carrying amount of the financial asset and the present value of estimated future cash flows discounted at the current market rate of return for a similar financial asset. Such impairment losses shall not be reversed. Available-for-sale Financial Assets When a decline in the fair value of an AFS financial asset has been recognized in other comprehensive income and there is “objective evidence” (refer to the discussion on ‘loss event’) that the asset has been impaired, the cumulative loss that had been recognized in other comprehensive income shall be reclassified from equity to statement of profit and loss. The amount of the cumulative loss is the difference between the acquisition cost (net of any principal repayment and amortization) and current fair value, less any impairment loss on that financial asset previously recognized in the statement of profit and loss. Impairment losses recognized in the statement of profit and loss for an investment in an equity instrument shall not be reversed through statement of profit and loss. If the fair value of a debt instrument increases in a subsequent period and the increase can be objectively related to a new event, the impairment loss shall be reversed and the amount of the reversal shall be recognized in the statement of profit and loss. Table 8.1 summarizes the position on measurement of financial assets. TABLE 8.1 Measurement of Financial Assets Equity Investments for Business Purposes A company may invest in another company’s equity shares as part of its long-term plan of developing a closer business relationship with the company in which it invests, or investee. This type of investment is no different from investments in property, plant and equipment, and intangible assets in one’s own business. In effect, a business can expand its operations without investing in its own assets by buying the shares of another company. There are several reasons why a company may choose to acquire another company, such as the following: Acquiring an existing company with readily available manufacturing facilities, distribution networks, experienced employees, and long-standing suppliers and customers, rather than setting up a business from scratch, gives a head start. Starting a greenfield venture is considerably more risky, because of problems in land acquisition and getting government approvals, delays in project completion, developing brands, and so on. There may be legal and regulatory requirements to set up a separate entity or there may be tax considerations. Think of equity investments of the kind described above as operating investments, which are different from financial investments that we discussed earlier. Though these investments are in equity instruments and hence are financial assets, they are made for business purposes (e.g. obtaining technology, expanding production, enlarging product markets, sourcing raw materials, and accessing distribution networks), rather than for getting dividend income or benefiting from capital appreciation in the shares. Accounting should reflect the investor’s investment objective. The appropriate accounting for investments would depend on management’s intent, i.e. whether the investor plans to sell the shares quickly and make a profit, or it intends to hold on to the investment for a long, unspecified period in the future and is going to gain or lose depending on the investee’s longterm performance. A simple way to figure out this is to look at the investment time horizon. Accounting for equity investments made for business purposes differs depending on the nature of the investor’s interest in an investee. The principle of substance over form is the basis for the accounting for such investments. According to this principle, we should account for and present transactions and other events in accordance with their substance and economic reality and not merely their legal form. Depending on the degree of the investor’s say in running the investee’s business, we classify an investee as a subsidiary, a joint venture or an associate, and apply different accounting methods. Subsidiaries Control A subsidiary is an enterprise over which an investor – i.e. parent – has control. Control is the power to govern an investee’s financial and operating policies so as to benefit from its activities.7 A subsidiary may be an incorporated entity such as a company, or may be an unincorporated entity such as a partnership. A group consists of a parent and all its subsidiaries. If an investor owns, directly or indirectly, more than half of an investee’s voting power, accounting rules presume that the investor has control, unless, in exceptional circumstances, it can be clearly demonstrated that such ownership does not constitute control. Control also exists when an investor owns half or less of an investee’s voting power when there is (a) power over more than half of the voting rights by virtue of an agreement with other investors; (b) power to govern the investee’s financial and operating policies under a statute or an agreement; (c) power to appoint or remove the majority of the investee’s board of directors; or (d) power to cast the majority of votes at meetings of the investee’s board of directors. The one-half voting power test is a fuzzy line, an example of the principle-based nature of IFRS, but the reference to “exceptional circumstances” makes it harder to cross the line. Financial and operating policies would include matters such as approval of the annual budget, raising of capital, approval of investment and acquisition proposals, and dividend policy. Other important financial and operating policies include deciding on an entity’s strategic direction, product pricing, production, employee appointments, and winding up the entity. Consolidated Financial Statements Business enterprises often conduct their activities through several entities under the ultimate control of the group’s parent for a variety of legal, tax, and other reasons. For example, the parent may be a shell company registered in a tax haven, such as St. Kitts, with investments in many subsidiaries. The parent would have no revenues or expenses of its own. In such cases, the parent’s financial statements, or standalone financial statements, do not present a complete view of its activities. Consolidated financial statements are the financial statements of a group comprised a parent and all its subsidiaries presented as if they were a single economic entity. For example, the financial statements of Infosys Limited pertain to that company. In contrast, its consolidated financial statements for 2013 cover both that legal entity and its 35 group companies, such as Infosys Technologies (Australia) Pty Limited, Infosys Consulting India Limited, Infosys BPO Limited, and Lodestone Holding AG. Consolidated financial statements are more useful to users of financial statements, because they present information about the group as a whole. In spite of the consolidated financial statements, the parent and its subsidiaries are separate legal entities that enter into contracts in their respective names, continue to have their respective assets, liabilities and share capital, and often prepare their own financial statements. The parent applies consolidation for its investments in subsidiaries in the consolidated financial statements. The consolidation procedure consists of three important steps: 1. Combine line items: Line items such as revenues, expenses, assets, liabilities, and equity of the parent are added with those of the subsidiaries in the group. For this reason, the consolidation method is also known as lineby-line consolidation. 2. Eliminate intragroup items: Financial statement items that represent transactions or claims within the group, such as the parent’s investment in a subsidiary or a loan payable by a subsidiary to the parent, are eliminated in the consolidation. 3. Identify non-controlling interests: Non-controlling interests (or minority interests) representing the share of a subsidiary’s profit or loss and equity not attributable to the parent are determined and presented separately. Accountants think that recognizing income simply on the basis of dividends or even applying the equity method (discussed later in this chapter) may not be an adequate measure of the income earned from an investor from an enterprise that he controls. Consolidated financial statements reflect the substance and economic reality of the parent’s control over a subsidiary. Business Combination A business combination is a transaction or other event in which an entity obtains control over a business.8 The entity that obtains control is the acquirer and the acquired business is the acquiree. Several structures are possible for a business combination. The choice of a structure depends on the acquirer’s business, legal, tax, and other objectives. Consider the following possibilities: Parent and subsidiary continue as legal entities: A parent-subsidiary relationship is a common form of a business combination. Here, the acquirerparent and the acquiree-subsidiary continue to be separate legal entities. In this case, we consolidate the parent’s and the subsidiary’s financial statements. Acquiree merges with the acquirer: The acquiree’s business legally merges into the acquirer’s business and the acquiree ceases to exist as a legal entity. In this case, the acquiree’s assets and liabilities are already on the acquirer’s financial statements. Acquirer and acquiree merge with a new entity: The combining entities transfer their net assets to a newly formed entity and cease to be legal entities. A business combination requires a business, usually understood to mean applying processes to inputs to produce outputs (e.g. making steel by melting and purifying iron ore and manganese and adding carbon). The mere acquisition of an asset or a group of assets (e.g. acquiring a steel melting shop) does not constitute a business combination. The key element in a business combination is acquisition. It means that one of the parties to a business combination can always be identified as the acquirer. Recall the idea of control from the earlier discussion on parent and subsidiary. Often, the parties engaged in a business combination describe the transaction as a “true merger” or “merger of equals”, implying that there is no acquisition by anyone of them. Such talk may be intended to help the parties assure their shareholders that they continue to have control over the future of their businesses, but has no significance for accounting purposes. In accounting, every business combination is an acquisition and one party is the acquirer and the other, the acquired. There are no two ways about it.9 Goodwill Often, the consideration for an acquisition is a cash payment, an issue of shares or a mix of cash and shares. The consideration covers the value to the acquirer of the acquiree’s identified assets less liabilities and, usually, a premium known as goodwill that represents the future economic benefits from assets that are not identified. Suppose that a business has highly satisfied customers, talented staff, and a good location. The acquirer has to pay for not only the acquiree’s net assets, i.e. tangible assets and identifiable intangible assets less liabilities but also the future benefits from superior customer relations, reliable suppliers, employee talent, and advantageous location. That excess is the goodwill component of the purchase price. Irrespective of whether there is any indication, goodwill acquired in a business combination should be tested annually for impairment.10 For the purpose of testing, it should be allocated to each of the acquirer’s cash-generating units (explained in Chapter 7) that are expected to benefit from the combination. Acquisition Method A business combination must be accounted for by applying the acquisition method, also known as the purchase method, as of the acquisition date. The elements of this method are as follows: 1. The acquirer recognizes the identifiable assets acquired, the liabilities assumed, and any non-controlling interest in the acquiree. 2. The acquirer measures each identifiable asset acquired and liability assumed at its acquisition-date fair value. 3. The acquirer recognizes goodwill, measured as the excess of (a) over (b) below: (a) the sum of: (i) the fair value of the consideration; (ii) the amount of any non-controlling interest in the acquiree (this will be zero if it is a 100 per cent acquisition); and (iii) the fair value of the acquirer’s previously held equity interest, if any (this will be zero if the acquirer gains control in a single investment, rather than investing in instalments); (b) the net identifiable assets acquired. There are two acceptable methods for measuring non-controlling interest in the acquiree:11 Fair value Non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of the acquiree’s identifiable net assets. The fair value method views the group as an economic entity, rather than from the viewpoint of the controlling shareholder group. It does not distinguish between the controlling and non-controlling interest. The second method views the group through a controlling interest viewpoint and does not consider goodwill relating to the non-controlling interest. Consolidated Financial Statements and Business Combination Illustrated On January 1, 20XX, Libra Company acquired for cash 75 per cent of the outstanding shares of Virgo Company at `32 per share. On that date, Virgo Company’s share price was `30. Exhibit 8.1 presents the balance sheets of Libra Company and Virgo Company just prior to the acquisition. The consideration for the acquisition is `48,000, i.e. 1,500 shares `32 per share. Libra Company records the acquisition as follows: We conclude that Libra Company obtains control of Virgo Company by means of owning more than half of the latter’s voting shares. So Libra Company is the acquirer and Virgo Company is the acquiree. The acquisition date is January 1, 20XX, the date on which control is obtained. Exhibit 8.2 presents the financial statements of the two companies immediately after the acquisition. The appraisal report on Virgo Company as of the acquisition date indicated the following: Property, plant and equipment was worth 20 per cent higher. A patent worth `3,000 came to light. Inventories included obsolete items costing `1,000. Trade receivables included irrecoverable amounts of `2,000. A trade payable of `1,000 had been omitted. The fair values of the remaining assets and liabilities were equal to their carrying amounts. Exhibit 8.3 presents the effect of the fair value adjustments in Virgo Company’s balance sheet. Note the following in the fair value adjustments: 1. Both property, plant and equipment and accumulated depreciation increase by 20 per cent. We need to report the two separately in the consolidated balance sheet. 2. Patent is an identifiable asset with a fair value. So we include it in the fair value calculation, though the acquiree did not recognize it. Libra Company pays `32 per share when the market price is `30 per share, implying a control premium of `3,000 on the 1,500 shares acquired. The consideration of `48,000 consists of three components: (a) The acquirer’s share of fair value of identifiable net assets (i.e. 75% of `52,000).................................................................................`39,000 (b) ‘Normal’ goodwill (i.e. 1,500 shares × `30 per share– `39,000)...............6,000 (c) Control premium.............................................................................................3,000 The acquirer pays a goodwill of `9,000, the sum of ‘normal’ goodwill and control premium. The non-controlling interest’s share of goodwill is `2,000, calculated as follows: fair value of non-controlling interest, `15,000 (i.e. 500 shares × `30 per share) – non-controlling interest’s share of fair value of identifiable net assets, `13,000 (i.e. 25% of `52,000). Under the fair value method, we consider goodwill paid by the acquirer and noncontrolling interest’s share of goodwill. Libra Company will record net assets of `52,000, consideration of `48,000, goodwill of `11,000 (= acquirer’s goodwill, `9,000 + non-controlling interest’s share, `2,000), and fair value of non-controlling interest, `15,000. Exhibit 8.4 presents the worksheet on January 1, 20XX that Libra Company will prepare to consolidate the balance sheets of the two companies applying fair value. An alternative method is to consider goodwill paid by the acquirer, but ignore non-controlling interest’s share of goodwill. In other words, we recognize noncontrolling interest’s proportionate share of the acquiree’s identifiable net assets. Applying this method, Libra Company will record net assets of `52,000, consideration of `48,000, goodwill of `9,000, and non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of the acquiree’s identifiable net assets, `13,000. Exhibit 8.5 presents the worksheet according to this method. Exhibit 8.6 presents the consolidated balance sheet of Libra Company and Virgo Company after the business combination on January 1, 20XX according to the two methods. The difference between the two methods is in the treatment of goodwill. The fair value method allocates goodwill to both controlling and non-controlling interests. Under proportionate share of fair value of net assets, goodwill is allocated only to controlling interest; non-controlling interest is calculated based on its share of the fair value of net assets, i.e. excluding goodwill. There is a consequent difference in the amount of non-controlling interest. Consolidation Requirements Dates of financial statements The financial statements of the parent and its subsidiaries shall be prepared as of the same date. When the parent and a subsidiary report on different dates, the subsidiary has to prepare additional financial statements as of the date of the parent’s financial statements, unless it is impracticable to do so. If the dates are different, adjustments are made for the effects of significant transactions or events that occur between those dates. In any case, the difference between the dates cannot exceed three months. Accounting policies Uniform accounting policies shall be followed for like transactions and other events in similar circumstances. For example, if the consolidated financial statements follow the straight-line method of depreciation for a certain class of assets, while a subsidiary follows the written-down-value method for the same class of assets, appropriate adjustments are made to the subsidiary’s financial statements, so that the depreciation for that class of assets is based on the straight-line method. Non-controlling interests Non-controlling interests are presented in the consolidated balance sheet within equity, separately from the equity of the parent’s shareholders. Intragroup balances and transactions In the consolidated financial statements, the parent’s investment in a subsidiary and the subsidiary’s equity are eliminated. Intragroup balances shall be eliminated fully. While the reason for this is obvious in the case a 100 per cent subsidiary, it may not be intuitive in a partially-owned subsidiary. Remember that consolidated financial statements seek to present the group as an economic entity. There is no place in them for transactions and balances within the group. For example, suppose that the parent with 70 per cent shareholding holds an investment of `10,000 out of its subsidiary’s bonds payable of `100,000. In its consolidated financial statements, the parent will eliminate both (a) its investment of `10,000 in the bonds appearing as an asset in its balance sheet and (b) an amount of `10,000 from the bonds payable appearing in the subsidiary’s balance sheet. Thus, the consolidated financial statements will show a liability of `90,000 for bonds payable by the group to outsiders. Consider an example of an intragroup transaction. Suppose that the parent sold inventory costing `10,000 to its subsidiary at `12,000 and the inventory is in the subsidiary’s balance sheet at the year end. The parent’s statement of profit and loss would include the `12,000 revenue and the `10,000 cost of goods sold. In the consolidated financial statements, the revenue of `12,000, the cost of goods sold of `10,000, and the unrealized profit (unrealized from the group’s standpoint) of `2,000 will be eliminated. The unsold inventory will appear at `10,000 after deducting the unrealized gain. Exemption from Consolidation A parent need not prepare consolidated financial statements if it is a non-public entity, i.e. an entity that is not of interest to the wider investing public. That would be possible only if it meets all the following conditions: (a) The parent is a shell company The parent is itself a wholly-owned subsidiary. The parent is nothing more than a shell company; real control lies with the parent’s parent, and no other investor would care. The parent’s consolidated financial statements would be of no value. If the parent is a partially-owned subsidiary of another entity, that entity’s other owners should have been informed about the parent not presenting consolidated financial statements, and they should not object to it. (b) There is no public market for the parent’s debt or equity The parent’s bonds or equity shares are not traded in a domestic or foreign stock exchange or an overthe-counter market. This means that the parent’s bonds or equity shares are not listed. Those who want to buy or sell the parent’s bonds or shares can do so only in a private market. If the bonds or equity shares are listed but there is no trading in them, this condition is probably not met. (c) The parent is not about to raise capital from the public The parent did not file its financial statements with a security regulator for the purpose of issuing bonds or equity shares. It means that the parent is not intending to make a public offering. Together with condition (b) it means that the parent’s bonds or shares are not currently traded, nor is an effort being made to create a public market for them. (d) The parent’s parent produces consolidated financial statements The parent’s ultimate parent or an intermediate parent produces consolidated financial statements that are publicly available. This is to avoid unduly burdening the parent, when its parent or some entity in the chain of control prepares consolidated financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards. In other words, exemption from consolidation is only available to a “non-public entity”, i.e. (a) the entity that is itself either a wholly-owned subsidiary or whose minority shareholders do not object to non-consolidation, (b) it is neither listed nor about to be listed, and (c) its ultimate or intermediate parent presents IFRScompliant consolidated financial statements. Joint Ventures Joint Control A joint venture is a contractual arrangement whereby two or more parties undertake an economic activity that is subject to joint control: the contractually agreed sharing of control to govern an economic activity so as to obtain benefits from it.12 Control is the power to govern the financial and operating policies of an economic activity, so as to obtain benefits from it. A party to a joint venture that has joint control is a venturer. Each venturer has joint control over that joint venture along with the other venturers. Joint control exists only when the strategic financial and operating decisions relating to the activity require the unanimous consent of the venturers. The venturers agree to pool their voting power. An investor in a joint venture is a party to a joint venture who does not have joint control. The essentials of a joint venture are (a) two or more parties are bound by a contractual arrangement; and (b) the contractual arrangement establishes joint control. The existence of a contractual arrangement distinguishes a joint venture from an associate, i.e. an entity in which an investor has significant influence. Simply stated, “no contractual arrangement, no joint venture”. Joint control means that no single venturer can have its way disregarding the views of the other venturers. The contractual arrangement, usually in writing, deals with such matters as the joint venture’s activity, duration, and reporting obligations, the appointment of the joint venture’s board of directors, and the venturers’ voting rights, venturers’ capital contributions, and the sharing by the venturers of the joint venture’s output, income, expenses or profits. Forms of Joint Venture Joint ventures can be of three broad types: 1. Jointly controlled operations; 2. Jointly controlled assets; and 3. Jointly controlled entities. Jointly Controlled Operations In a jointly controlled operation, each venturer uses its own assets, such as property, plant and equipment, and inventories. Often, the operation is similar to, and carried out alongside, those operations. Each venturer pays its own expenses and takes a share of the revenue from the operations. For the venturers it is business as usual. For example, suppose that some leading automobile manufacturers form a joint venture. One makes engines, another makes transmission, yet another makes chassis, and so on. One of them assembles the parts and sells the car. The venturer who makes engines uses its own manufacturing facilities, pays its own production costs, and gets a share of the revenue from the sale of the car that represents the agreed value of the engine. It does not pay any of the costs of the other manufacturers. Jointly controlled operations are a relatively loose arrangement and the accounting reflects this. A venturer recognizes the assets that it controls and the liabilities that it incurs. It also recognizes the expenses that it incurs and its share of the joint venture’s revenue. Jointly Controlled Assets The venturers may have joint control of assets. A jointly controlled asset may be an asset contributed by a venturer or acquired for the purpose of the venture. The asset may belong to one of the venturers or there may be joint ownership of the asset. The venturers agree to take a share of the output from the assets and each bears an agreed share of the expenses incurred. There is no separate entity that owns the assets. Jointly controlled assets are common in the oil, gas, and mineral extraction industries, e.g. an oil pipeline. Each venturer uses the pipeline to transport its own products and bears an agreed share of the operating expenses. A venturer recognizes the following in its financial statements in respect of a jointly controlled asset, e.g. a jointly controlled oil refinery: 1. Its share of a jointly controlled asset, e.g. a share of the refinery’s cost; 2. Its liabilities, e.g. loans raised to finance its share of the refinery; 3. Its share of the liabilities incurred jointly with the other venturers in relation to the venture, e.g. the refinery’s Trade payables; 4. Income from the sale of its share of the output, e.g. revenue from the refinery’s sales of oil, and its share of the expenses of the joint venture, e.g. the refinery’s operating and maintenance expenses; and 5. Expenses that it has incurred in respect of its interest in the joint venture, e.g. interest expense on its loans to finance the refinery. A venturer does not make any adjustments or follow other consolidation procedures for a jointly controlled asset, because it already recognizes the relevant assets, liabilities, income, and expenses in its financial statements. This is similar to a jointly controlled operation. Jointly Controlled Entities A jointly controlled entity is a joint venture that takes the legal form of a corporation, partnership or other entity in which each venturer has an interest. A contractual arrangement between the venturers establishes joint control over the entity’s economic activity. The entity controls, and often owns, the joint venture’s assets, incurs liabilities and expenses, and earns revenues. Each venturer is entitled to a share of the entity’s profits and sometimes to a share of its output. Jointly controlled entities are common in the oil and natural gas industry. Companies, such as Shell, BP, and ONGC, take up a prospective block for exploration and development by a contractual arrangement with the government that owns and auctions the block. A jointly controlled entity differs from a jointly controlled asset in two ways: 1. Venturers transfer certain assets and liabilities into a jointly controlled entity, but there is no such transfer in a jointly controlled asset. 2. A jointly controlled entity maintains its own accounting records and prepares and presents financial statements, but there are no separate financial statements for a jointly controlled asset. Proportionate Consolidation A venturer in a jointly controlled entity accounts for its interest in the entity applying proportionate consolidation. Under this method, the venturer recognizes its share of jointly controlled entity’s assets, liabilities, income, and expenses with similar line items in its financial statements. For example, a venturer in a 50:50 jointly controlled entity would recognize on its balance sheet its own assets and liabilities and 50 per cent of the jointly controlled entity’s assets and liabilities. There are two formats for presenting this: 1. Combine the items line by line The venturer combines its share of that entity’s inventories with its inventories, its share of that entity’s receivables with its receivables, and so on. 2. Show separate line items The venturer shows its share of that entity’s inventories next to its inventories, its share of that entity’s receivables next to its receivables, and so on. These two formats differ in presentation and not in content. They report identical amounts of profit or loss, and of each major classification of assets, liabilities, income, and expenses. Accountants believe that proportionate consolidation better reflects the substance and economic reality of a venturer’s interest in a jointly controlled entity, that is, control over the venturer’s share of that entity’s future economic benefits. The principal difference between consolidation for partly-owned subsidiaries and proportionate consolidation for joint ventures is that in the latter there is no non-controlling interest. An alternative to the proportionate consolidation method is the equity method, followed for associates, discussed in the next section. Proportionate Consolidation Requirements Dates of financial statements The financial statements of the venturer and its jointly controlled entities shall be prepared as of the same date. When the venturer and a jointly controlled entity report on different dates, the jointly controlled entity has to prepare additional financial statements as of the date of the venturer’s financial statements, unless it is impracticable to do so. If the dates are different, adjustments are made for the effects of significant transactions or events that occur between those dates. In any case, the difference between the dates cannot exceed three months. Accounting policies Uniform accounting policies shall be followed for the like transactions and other events in similar circumstances. For example, if the consolidated financial statements follow FIFO for inventory valuation, while a jointly controlled entity follows WAC, appropriate adjustments are made to the jointly controlled entity’s financial statements so that the application of the inventory valuation method is uniform. Goodwill Goodwill can arise on acquisition of a jointly controlled entity. Any excess of the fair value of the consideration given to acquire a share in a jointly controlled entity over the net of the fair values of the identifiable assets acquired and the liabilities assumed is goodwill. The accounting for goodwill and fair value adjustments is similar to that for a subsidiary in a business combination. Intragroup balances In the consolidated financial statements, the venturer’s investment in a jointly controlled entity and the venturer’s share of jointly controlled entity’s equity. Intragroup balances shall be eliminated to the extent of the venturer’s interest. For example, suppose that a venturer in a 60:40 joint venture has made a loan of `10,000 to the jointly controlled entity. In its consolidated financial statements, the venturer will eliminate its share of (a) the loan receivable appearing as an asset in its balance sheet and (b) the loan payable appearing in the jointly controlled entity’s balance sheet. Thus, the venturer’s consolidated financial statements will show a loan receivable of `4,000, i.e. `10,000 × (100% – 60%) and an equal amount of loan payable. Suppose that the venturer sold inventory costing `10,000 to the jointly controlled entity at `12,000 and the inventory is in the jointly controlled entity’s balance sheet at the year end. The venturer’s statement of profit and loss would include the revenue of `12,000 and the cost of goods sold of `10,000. In the venturer’s consolidated financial statements, the revenue and the cost of goods sold will appear at `4,800 and `4,000, respectively, i.e. 40 per cent of the transaction amounts. Thus, the unrealized profit of `1,200, i.e. 60 per cent of `2,000, has been eliminated. The unsold inventory will appear at `10,800 after deducting the unrealized gain. Exemption from Proportionate Consolidation and Equity Method A venturer having an interest in a jointly controlled entity is exempted from applying proportionate consolidation or the equity method when it meets the following conditions: (a) The interest is classified as “held for sale” in accordance with IFRS 5: It is accounted for in accordance with that IFRS. (b) The venturer is a parent that is a “non-public” entity: Recall that a parent that is a non-public entity need not present consolidated financial statements. It is also exempted from applying proportionate consolidation or the equity method. (c) The venturer is not a parent, but a “non-public” entity: A venturer classified as a “non-public entity” is exempted from applying proportionate consolidation or the equity method. Associates Significant Influence An associate is an enterprise over which an investor has significant influence: the power to participate in an entity’s financial and operating policy decisions.13 An associate may be an incorporated entity such as a company, or may be an unincorporated entity such as a partnership. If an investor holds 20 per cent or more of an investee’s voting power, accountants presume that the investor has significant influence unless it can be clearly demonstrated that this is not the case. Conversely, if an investor holds less than 20 per cent of an investee’s voting power, the rules presume that the investor does not have significant influence unless such influence can be clearly demonstrated. Thus, the 20 per cent of voting power test is a fuzzy line, not a bright line. This is an example of the principle-based nature of IFRS. An investor can have significant influence even when another investor has majority ownership in the investee. For determining whether an investor has significant influence, we should consider the investor’s direct ownership and indirect ownership, such as through subsidiaries. Significant influence may be evident in a number of ways, such as the investor’s representatives being on the investee’s board of directors, the investor’s participation in investee’s dividend and other policy decisions, material purchases, sales and other transactions between the investor and the investee, interchange of managerial personnel between the investor and the investee, and the investor providing essential technical information to the investee. The Equity Method: One-line Consolidation The investor accounts for an investment in an associate by applying the equity method. In this method, the investor recognizes the investment at cost at the time of acquisition and adjusts it for subsequent changes in the investor’s share of the associate’s net assets. When the investee earns a profit, its net assets increase; when it incurs a loss, its net assets decrease. Reflecting these changes, the carrying amount of the investment increases by the amount of the investor’s share of the associate’s profit and decreases by the amount of its share of the associate’s loss. Concurrently, the investor recognizes in its statement of profit and loss its share of the associate’s profit or loss in every period. Dividends received from the associate reduce the carrying amount of the investment. Recognizing a dividend income would result in double counting, because the investor would have already recorded as income its share of the associate’s profit or loss. Accountants think that recognizing income simply on the basis of dividends may not be an adequate measure of the income earned by an investor on an investment in an associate, because the dividends received may bear little relation to the associate’s performance. The investor has an interest in the associate’s performance that goes beyond passively receiving dividends. The associate’s performance as measured by its earnings is a better indicator of its performance and the investor’s share of those earnings provides a superior measure of the return on the investment in the associate. Thus, the equity method reflects the economic substance of the investment, rather than its mere legal form of receiving dividends. The equity method of accounting is also known as one-line consolidation, because it shows the investor’s interest in the associate in a single line rather than in the manner of lineby-line consolidation followed for subsidiaries. The equity method is applied in the consolidated financial statements. The investor ascertains the fair value of the associate’s assets and liabilities at the time of acquisition. Note that the investor also considers assets and liabilities not recognized by the associate. The excess of the cost of acquisition over the investor’s share of the fair value is goodwill. To illustrate, suppose that Ajay Company acquires a 30 per cent interest in Deepak Company for `200,000. At that date, the carrying amount of Deepak’s net assets was `500,000. The fair value of Deepak’s net assets was equal to their carrying amount except for a piece of land that had a book value of `40,000 and a fair value of `50,000. Ajay calculates a goodwill of `47,000, as follows: The fair value adjustment in the above illustration relates to land, a nondepreciable asset. So the investor does not depreciate the amount of `3,000. Fair value adjustment relating to a depreciable asset should be charged over the asset’s remaining useful life. For example, suppose that the fair value adjustment related to an item of property, plant and equipment with a remaining useful life of 10 years. Ajay should recognize a yearly charge of `300 for 10 years in its consolidated statement of profit and loss and reduce the carrying amount of the investment. Furthermore, the investor should adjust the carrying amount for his share of any changes in the associate’s other comprehensive income arising from revaluation of property, plant and equipment, foreign exchange translation differences and marking to market AFS securities. Note that the investor includes goodwill in the carrying amount of the investment and does not record it separately. For this reason, goodwill is not tested for impairment separately, unlike goodwill acquired in a business combination. Instead, the entire carrying amount of the investment is tested for impairment as a single asset. Exemption from the Equity Method An investor having an associate is exempted from applying the equity method when the following conditions are meet: 1. The investment is classified as “held for sale” in accordance with IFRS 5: It is accounted for in accordance with that IFRS. 2. The investor is a parent that is a “non-public” entity: Recall that a parent that is a non-public entity need not present consolidated financial statements. Such a parent is also exempted from applying the equity method. 3. The investor is not a parent but is a “non-public” entity. An investor that is a non-public entity is exempted from applying the equity method. Figure 8.2 illustrates the key ideas in accounting for business investments. Investments in Separate Financial Statements Separate financial statements are “those presented by a parent, an investor in an associate or a venturer in a jointly controlled entity, in which the investments are accounted for on the basis of the direct equity interest rather than on the basis of the reported results and net assets of the investees.”14 These are the financial statements of an enterprise reporting as a legal entity, ignoring the effect of the substance and economic reality of its relationship with any other entities. They show that entity’s revenues, expenses, assets, liabilities, and equity. In India, these are commonly known as standalone financial statements. In the separate financial statements, an entity accounts for investments in subsidiaries, jointly controlled entities and associates as follows: 1. Investment: The direct equity interest in a subsidiary, associate or jointly controlled entity is measured at (a) cost or (b) fair value in accordance with IFRS 9. Cost is the cost of acquisition of the investment. 2. Dividend income: The investor recognizes dividend from a subsidiary, associate or jointly controlled entity when its right to receive the dividend is established. In India, that happens when dividend is declared. A public entity that does not prepare consolidated financial statements applies either proportionate consolidation or the equity method for its jointly controlled entities and the equity method for its associates in its financial statements. Note that these financial statements are not separate financial statements as defined above, because proportionate consolidation and the equity method are based on the reported results and net assets of the investees. Investment Property Investment property is property (land, building or both) held to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both.15 Investment property excludes property held for use in the production or supply of goods or services or for administrative purposes or for sale in the ordinary course of business. For example, a business enterprise may buy an apartment for several reasons. If the enterprise intends to use it in its own business, it should be classified as property, plant and equipment. If its intention is to sell it as part of its business (e.g. a real estate dealer), it is a part of its inventories. If it invests in the apartment with a view to benefiting from an anticipated increase in its market value rather, it is an investment property. Investment property is recognized as an asset when and only when: (a) It is probable that the future economic benefits that are associated with the investment property will flow to the entity; and (b) The cost of the investment property can be measured reliably. An investment property is measured initially at its cost. Transaction costs are included in the initial measurement. Professional fees for legal services and property transfer taxes, such as stamp duty and registration fee, are examples of transaction costs. For measurement after recognition, an entity can choose between the fair value model or the cost model, but it must apply the same model to all of its investment property. Fair Value Model The fair value model can be applied except when it is not possible to determine the fair value of an investment property reliably on a continuing basis. A gain or loss arising from change in the fair value of investment property is recognized in the statement of profit and loss for the period to which it relates. The fair value of investment property shall reflect the market conditions at the end of the reporting period. Cost Model An entity that chooses the cost model shall measure its investment properties at cost less depreciation, similar to property, plant and equipment. Investment property measured at cost is subject to impairment. Looking Back Describe the nature and types of investments Investments are assets that are not intended to be available for the investor’s production, selling or administrative activities. Investments may be financial claims on other enterprises or land and building held for renting out and increase in value. Define and describe financial instruments and financial assets A financial instrument is a contract that gives rise to a financial asset of one entity and a financial liability of another entity. A financial asset can be cash, an equity instrument of another entity, or a contractual right to receive cash or another financial asset from another entity. Account for equity and debt instruments held as financial investments Financial assets are classified depending on the investor’s intention. Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss are measured at fair value and holding gains and losses and dividend or interest income are recognized in statement of profit and loss. These are usually held-for-trading financial assets. If it is not possible to establish fair value of equity instruments reliably, they are carried at cost. For financial assets carried at cost dividend income is recognized in statement of profit and loss. Held-to-maturity investments and loans and receivables are measured at amortized cost using the effective interest method. Available-for-sale financial assets are measured at fair value but gains and losses are taken to other comprehensive income, a balance sheet item; dividend or interest income is recognized in statement of profit and loss. Explain impairment of financial assets Financial assets carried at amortized cost (i.e. HTM investments and loans and receivables), financial assets carried at cost, and AFS financial assets are assessed at each reporting date to find out whether there is any “objective evidence” of impairment. Impairment loss must be recognized in statement of profit and loss. Distinguish between equity investments held as operating investments from those held as financial investments Equity instruments may be held as part of a long-term business plan, rather than for near-term trading. These are operating investments, rather than financial investments; the intention is to acquire another company for business, regulatory or tax purposes instead of building a business from scratch. Define a subsidiary and explain control A subsidiary is an enterprise over which an investor – parent – has control: the power to govern an investee’s financial and operating policies so as to benefit from its activities. Owning more than half of an investee’s voting power gives control. Control may also result from a shareholder agreement. Explain consolidated financial statements Consolidated financial statements are the financial statements of a group consisting of a parent and all its subsidiaries presented as if they were a single economic entity. The consolidation procedure combines line items of the individual companies, eliminates intragroup items, and identifies and presents non-controlling interests. Explain business combination and goodwill A business combination is a transaction in which an entity obtains control over a business. A parent-subsidiary relationship is a common form of a business combination. The key element in a business combination is acquisition, meaning that one of the parties can be identified as the acquirer. Goodwill is the premium paid over the fair value of the net assets. A business combination must be accounted for by the acquisition method. Prepare consolidated financial statements applying the acquisition method of business combination The first step is to determine the acquisition date – the date on which the acquirer obtains control. The next step is to establish the fair values of the acquiree’s identifiable assets and liabilities including any assets or liabilities not recognized on the acquiree’s balance sheet. Non-controlling interest can be measured applying the fair value method that allocates goodwill to both controlling and non-controlling interests, or using the proportionate share of fair value of net assets that allocates goodwill only to the controlling interest. The financial statements of the parent and its subsidiaries shall be prepared as of the same date and following uniform accounting policies. Non-controlling interest is presented separately from the equity of the parent’s shareholders. The parent’s investment in a subsidiary and the subsidiary’s equity and all intragroup balances are eliminated. A parent need not prepare consolidated financial statements if it is a non-public entity. Define joint venture and explain joint control A joint venture is a contractual arrangement whereby two or more parties (venturers) undertake an economic activity that is subject to joint control: the contractually arranged sharing of control to govern an economic activity, so as to obtain benefits from it. Joint control exists only when the strategic financial and operating decisions relating to the activity require the unanimous consent of the venturers. Explain proportionate consolidation for jointly controlled entities Under proportionate consolidation, the venturer recognizes its share of jointly controlled entity’s assets, liabilities, income and expenses with similar line items in its financial statements. The financial statements of the venturer and its joint ventures shall be prepared as of the same date and following uniform accounting policies. Goodwill is the excess of the fair value of the consideration given to acquire a share in a jointly controlled entity over the net of the fair values of the identifiable assets acquired and the liabilities assumed. A venturer need not apply proportionate consolidation if it is a non-public entity. Define an associate and explain significant influence An associate is an entity over which an investor has significant influence: the power to participate in an entity’s financial and operating policy decisions. Significant influence is presumed if an investor holds 20 per cent or more of an investee’s voting power. Explain the equity method for associates Under the equity method, the investor recognizes the investment at cost at the time of acquisition and adjusts it for subsequent changes in the investor’s share of the associate’s net assets. The carrying amount of the investment increases (decreases) by the amount of the investor’s share of the associate’s profit (loss) and the investor recognizes its share in its statement of profit and loss. The investor does not recognize dividend income from the associate in its statement of profit and loss but reduces it from the carrying amount of the investment. Account for investments in separate financial statements Separate financial statements are those presented by a parent, an investor in an associate or a venturer in a jointly controlled entity, in which the investments are accounted for on the basis of the direct equity interest measured at cost or fair value. The investor recognizes dividend income from a subsidiary, associate or jointly controlled entity. The investor does not apply consolidation, proportionate consolidation or the equity method in these statements. Define and account for investment property Investment property is land, building or both held to earn rentals, or for capital appreciation, or for both. An investment property is initially measured at its cost. Subsequently, an entity can follow the fair value model or the cost model. Review Problem On August 1, 20X5, Pushpak Company bought Navin Company’s `100,000, 15 per cent, 10-year debentures for `86,304. It has the intention and ability to hold the investment to maturity. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31 in arrears. The company’s year-end is March 31. Prepare journal entries to record the following: 1. Purchase of debentures on August 1, 20X5. 2. Receipt of semi-annual interest on December 31, 20X5 and amortization of discount. 3. Accrual of interest on March 31, 20X6 and amortization of discount. Solution The effective interest rate is 9 per cent. The investment will be recorded initially at its fair value of `86,304, verified as follows: 7,500 9.1285 + 100,000 0.1784. Note that we discount the cash flows at 9 per cent for 20 periods. We apply the amortized cost method as follows: ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. 2. 3. How are investments different from other assets? What is a financial asset? Why is it important to treat equity shares held as financial investments differently from those held as operating investments? 4. Name the four categories into which equity and debt instruments held as financial assets are classified. 5. 6. 7. When are financial assets carried at cost? Why is fair value accounting known as mark-to-market accounting? How does accounting differ between financial assets at fair value through profit or loss and availablefor-sale financial assets? 8. 9. 10. What is the essential difference between held-to-maturity investments and loans and receivables? Explain amortized cost using the effective interest method. Explain the tainting provisions for held-to-maturity investments. Do these also apply to loans and receivables? 11. 12. 13. 14. What is “objective evidence” in the context of impairment of a financial asset? How is impairment loss on held-to-maturity investments or loans and receivables measured? Can impairment loss on a financial asset be reversed subsequently? Vinod Company holds 45 per cent of the voting shares of Raja Company. It has entered into a binding agreement with the latter’s shareholders who hold 15 per cent of the voting shares that they will vote as directed by Vinod Company. Is Raja Company a subsidiary of Vinod Company? 15. 16. 17. How are consolidated financial statements more useful than a parent’s financial statements? What is the criterion for an acquisition? Suppose that the consideration for an acquisition is equal to the net of the fair values of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed. Would it be correct to say that there is no goodwill in this acquisition? 18. 19. 20. Explain the two methods of measuring non-controlling interest. Distinguish between control and joint control. When is a parent exempted from preparing consolidated financial statements? 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. How is a venturer different from an investor in a joint venture? How is significant influence different from joint control? Why is the equity method known as one-line consolidation? How is the treatment of goodwill different for a joint venture and an associate? What are separate financial statements? How is the treatment of dividend income in separate financial statements different from that in consolidated financial statements? 27. Renu Company has surplus land that it intends to sell. Is this investment property? Problem Set A On March 1, Thomas Company buys `100,000 of 10%, 15-year debentures. Interest is payable semi-annually on August 31 and February 28 or 29 in arrears. Compute the fair value of the debentures if the market interest rate on March 1 is (a) 18 per cent, (b) 10 per cent, or (c) 8 per cent. On October 17, 20X1, Suhrid Company bought 2,000 equity shares of Piyush Company at `24 per share as part of its cash management. On January 12, 20X2, Piyush Company paid an interim dividend of `2 per share. On March 31, 20X2, Suhrid Company’s fiscal year end, Piyush Company’s share traded at `27. On July 15, 20X2, Piyush Company paid a final dividend of `4 per share. On January 19, 20X3, Piyush Company paid an interim dividend of `3 per share. On March 31, 20X3, Piyush Company’s share traded at `25. Required Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. On January 1, 20X1, Dinesh Company invested surplus cash in 1,000 of Chand Company’s 15 per cent, `100 debentures bought at `97 per debenture, ex-interest. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31 in arrears. On September 30, 20X1, Dinesh Company’s fiscal year end, the debenture traded at `93 plus accrued interest. On September 30, 20X2, the debenture traded at `94 plus accrued interest. Interest was received as stated. Required Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. On November 3, 20X1, Ashwin Company bought as AFS assets 1,000 equity shares of Vipul Company at `45 per share. On March 14, 20X2, it received an interim dividend of `3 per share. The share had a fair value of `49 on March 31, 20X2, Ashwin Company’s fiscal year-end. On September 12, 20X2, Vipul Company paid a final dividend of `5 per share. On March 9, 20X3, it paid an interim dividend of `2 per share. On March 31, 20X3, the share traded at `42. Required Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. On January 1, 20XX, Francis D’Costa paid `200,000 for a senior solicitor’s practice with the following assets and liabilities: equipment, `20,000; furniture, `15,000; prepaid rent, `8,000; electricity expense payable, `700; salaries payable, `3,000. Required Prepare the journal entry to record the acquisition. Problem Set B Required 1. 2. 3. Prepare journal entries assuming that all are trading securities. Prepare journal entries assuming that all are available-for-sale securities. Prepare journal entries assuming that the investments in Abhijit Company and Victor Company are trading securities and the investment in Vincent Company is an AFS security. 4. Prepare journal entries assuming that the investments in Abhijit Company and Victor Company are trading securities but the current market value of Victor Company is not a reliable guide to the fair value of the investment. The appraisal report as of acquisition date indicated the following: Property, plant and equipment had a fair value of `20,000 Inventories included obsolete items costing `2,000 A trade payable of `1,000 omitted Fair values of the remaining assets and liabilities were equal to their carrying amounts. Kiran Company’s payables included an amount of `2,000 due to Shalom Company. Required 1. Prepare the balance sheets of the two companies immediately after acquisition. 2. Prepare a statement showing fair value adjustments as of acquisition date. 3. Prepare a consolidation worksheet as of acquisition date. 4. Prepare a consolidated balance sheet as of acquisition date. Abhinav Company acquired for cash 80 per cent of the outstanding shares of Prakriti Company on September 30, 20XX at `20 per share. On that date, Prakriti Company’s share price was `18. The balance sheets of the two companies just prior to the acquisition were as follows: The appraisal report as of acquisition date indicated the following: Property, plant and equipment had a fair value of `45,000 Inventories included obsolete items costing `3,000 A trade payable of `2,000 was omitted Fair values of the remaining assets and liabilities equalled their carrying amounts. Abhinav Company’s investments included Prakriti Company’s bonds of `8,000. Required 1. Prepare the balance sheets of the two companies immediately after the acquisition. 2. Prepare a statement showing fair value adjustments as of the acquisition date. 3. Prepare a consolidation worksheet as of acquisition date applying (a) fair value, and (b) non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of identifiable net assets. 4. Prepare a consolidated balance sheet as of acquisition date applying (a) fair value, and (b) non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of identifiable net assets. On March 31, 20X1, Amar Company acquired for cash 30 per cent of the equity shares of Lahar Company for `45,000. On that date, Lahar Company’s balance sheet was as follows: equity share capital, `40,000; retained earnings, `60,000; property, plant and equipment, `100,000. The property, plant and equipment had a remaining useful life of five years and a fair value of `140,000. On June 11, 20X1, Lahar Company paid a dividend of `10,000. On March 31, 20X2, the company reported a net profit of `17,000 for the year ended that date. Amar Company’s fiscal year-end is June 30. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record these transactions by Amar Company. 2. Prepare an analysis of the carrying amount of the investment in Amar Company’s balance sheet on (a) June 30, 20X1, and (b) June 30, 20X2. Problem Set C Required 1. Prepare journal entries assuming that all are trading securities. 2. Prepare journal entries assuming that all are AFS securities. 3. Prepare journal entries assuming that the investments in Akash Company and Surya Company are trading securities and the investment in Antariksh Company is an AFS security. 4. Prepare journal entries assuming that the investments in Akash Company and Antariksh Company are AFS securities but the current market value of Surya Company is not a reliable guide to the fair value of the investment. The appraisal report as of acquisition date indicated the following: Property, plant and equipment was worth `27,000. A licence worth `5,000 had not been recognized. Inventories included obsolete items costing `1,000. Trade receivables included an irrecoverable amount of `2,000. The fair values of the remaining assets and liabilities were equal to their carrying amounts. Shabnam Company’s investments included Hamid Company’s bonds of `2,000. Required 1. Prepare the balance sheets of the two companies immediately after the acquisition. 2. Prepare a statement showing fair value adjustments as of acquisition date. 3. Prepare a consolidation worksheet as of acquisition date. 4. Prepare a consolidated balance sheet as of acquisition date. The appraisal report as of acquisition date indicated the following: Property, plant and equipment was worth `156,000. Inventories included obsolete items costing `7,000. Trade receivables included an irrecoverable amount of `4,000. A trade payable of `3,000 had been omitted. The fair values of the remaining assets and liabilities were equal to their carrying amounts. Uttam Company’s investments included Anupam Company’s bonds of `8,000. Required 1. Prepare the balance sheets of the two companies immediately after the acquisition. 2. Prepare a statement showing fair value adjustments as of acquisition date. 3. Prepare a consolidation worksheet as of acquisition date applying (a) fair value, and (b) non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of identifiable net assets. 4. Prepare a consolidated balance sheet as of acquisition date applying (a) fair value, and (b) non-controlling interest’s proportionate share of identifiable net assets. On September 30, 20X1, Vinod Company acquired for cash 25 per cent of the equity shares of Sachin Company for `51,000. On that date, Sachin Company’s balance sheet was as follows: equity share capital, `20,000; retained earnings, `100,000; property, plant and equipment, `120,000. The property, plant and equipment had a remaining useful life of 10 years and a fair value of `180,000. On November 14, 20X1, Sachin Company paid a dividend of `12,000. On September 30, 20X2, Sachin Company reported a net profit of `32,000 for the year ended that date. Vinod Company’s fiscal year-end is December 31. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record these transactions by Vinod Company. 2. Prepare an analysis of the carrying amount of the investment in Vinod Company’s balance sheet on (a) December 31, 20X1, and (b) December 31, 20X2. Business Decision Cases You are the chief financial officer of Flexi Bank. Vikram Suri, the bank’s chief executive, has worked in large banks in New York and London. Flexi Bank’s loan and investment portfolio grew from `3,000 million to `9,000 million in the three years since he joined. Suri believes that the bank must take full advantage of India’s rapid economic progress but thinks that it has been too conservative. He is pushing for aggressive corporate and consumer lending and active investing in the financial markets and thinks that the bank’s “current accounting policies are unhelpful in presenting the bank’s extraordinary growth story.” Required 1. What do you think could the chief executive have meant when he says that the bank’s “current accounting policies are unhelpful in presenting the bank’s extraordinary growth story”? Do you agree with him? 2. Prepare a note setting out how institutional safeguards, including accounting principles, are necessary to protect the bank’s investors, creditors, and employees – you and the chief executive, included. Interpreting Financial Reports On March 4, 2008, the shares of ICICI Bank, the largest non-government bank in India, ended 5 per cent lower than the previous close.16 The trigger was an announcement in Parliament that as on January 31, 2008 ICICI Bank had suffered mark-to-market losses of $264 million (about `15,560 million) on account of exposure to overseas credit derivatives and investments in fixed income assets. Read the related news report. Required 1. Explain the following terms: mark-to-market loss; credit derivative; fixed income asset. 2. Prepare a note setting out the principles of valuation of credit derivatives and fixed income assets and issues in applying the principles. Unicredit, one of the largest banks in Europe, announced on April 23, 2008 that it would be recording write-downs of about €1 billion ($1.6 billion) in January and February because of the global financial crisis.17 Read the related news report. The bank had already announced a loss of €1 billion in its asset-backed securities. Unicredit’s largest holdings of these securities included interests in real estate and car loans and only a tiny exposure to the subprime sector. There will be a further write-down of €350 million as a result of adverse movements in spreads in bonds and credit default swaps. Required 1. Explain the following terms: asset-backed security; subprime sector; credit default swap. 2. Prepare a note setting out the principles of valuation of asset-backed securities and issues in applying the principles. Financial Analysis Companies often pay large amounts of goodwill to acquire other entities in happy times. Unfortunately, they invariably find that they overpaid. Required 1. Prepare a report using actual company data on the amount of goodwill paid for acquisitions. You can select a sample of companies across industries or a couple of industries for this study. 2. Track the performance of the acquisitions over the next few years. Does the post-acquisition performance of the companies indicate that the goodwill was overvalued? 3. Examine company practices for recognizing impairment of goodwill. In the wake of the financial crisis, there was a lot criticism of fair value accounting. Commentators argued that fair value accounting was defective in both theory and practice for valuing securities that had illiquid markets or when the market had seized up. A few went to the extent of saying that fair value accounting caused the financial crisis and its procyclicality aggravated the crisis. Required 1. Prepare a report outlining the arguments for and against fair value accounting. 2. What does “procyclicality” mean in the context of fair value accounting? 3. Examine how the International Accounting Standards Board and the Financial Accounting Standards Board responded to concerns about fair value accounting. Answers to Test Your Understanding 8.4 At the market interest of 16 per cent per annum, or 8 per cent per semi-annual period, Viraj Company pays `8,036, the fair value of the debentures. This amount is given by the following calculation: 600/1.081 + + 600/1.0820 + 600/1.0820. The following table shows the application of the effective interest method. Note that we allocate the discount of `1,964 to each period over the life of the debenture. The following entry records the interest income for the first period. 8.5 The interest rate is approximately 12.98 per cent. We round it to 13 per cent. We adjust the rounding difference in the last year’s interest income. Amortized cost is used for determining interest income. Year-end valuation is based on fair value. The following entry records the redemption of the debentures: The gain will be transferred to the statement of profit and loss. 8.6 The shareholding is as follows: Tanvi Company does not own more than half of Varun Company’s voting rights. To test for control, suppose that Tanvi Company votes for a dividend proposal. By virtue of the shareholder agreement, Abhay Company also must vote in favour of the proposal. The agreement gives Tanvi Company control over more than half of Varun Company’s voting rights. Therefore, Tanvi Company controls Varun Company. 8.7 The shareholding is as follows: Manoj Company neither owns nor controls more than half of Anant Company’s voting rights. By virtue of the shareholder agreement, Manoj Company has the power to decide on the number of electric cars to be produced and Anant Company’s board of directors must accept Manoj Company’s decision. Besides, Manoj Company provides the manufacturing technology. Production decisions and technology are extremely important, because they greatly affect a lot of other matters such as profitability, capital investment and dividend distribution. The agreement gives Manoj Company the power to govern Anant Company’s financial and operating policies. Therefore, Manoj Company controls Anant Company. 8.8 8.9 Taken alone, Vijay Company’s 38 per cent, Vikram Company’s 13 per cent or Vir Company’s 49 per cent does not give any of them control over Dare Company. However, by virtue of the contractual arrangement between them, Vijay Company and Vikram Company control 51 per cent of Dare Company’s voting power, enough to get their proposals accepted and Vir Company’s proposals rejected, regardless of which way Vir Company votes. Therefore, Vijay Company and Vikram Company have joint control over Dare Company, their joint venture, and both are its ventures. Vir Company has neither control nor joint control (even though it holds the largest voting block); it is an investor in the joint venture. 8.10 Janet Company should show a net receivable from Josephine Company of `10,000, calculated as follows: own contribution, `60,000 – 50% of liabilities of jointly controlled operation, `50,000. Josephine Company should show a net payable to Janet Company of `10,000, calculated as follows: own contribution, `40,000 – 50% of liabilities of jointly controlled operation, `50,000. The jointly controlled operation is not a separate legal entity. Therefore, Janet Company cannot show a receivable of `30,000 (representing its share of its contribution) and a payable of 20,000 (representing its share of Josephine Company’s contribution). 8.11 Jyoti’s carrying amount of the investment in Pradeep Company is as follows: 1 IAS 32:11/Ind AS 32:11. 2 IAS 39:9/Ind AS 39:9. 3 In other words, fair value is the present value of the cash flow stream. Chapter 9 explains this calculation. 4 IAS 39:AG 20/Ind AS 39:AG20. 5 There is no need to review FAFVPL for impairment, since they are marked to fair value and any gain or loss is recognized. 6 The IASB’s ED/2013/3, Financial Instruments: Expected Credit Losses, proposes an expected loss approach. 7 Ind AS 27:4. IFRS 10.A defines the term differently. Also, there are differences in the terms used in the two standards. 8 IFRS 3:Appendix A/Ind AS 103:Appendix A. 9 Until some years ago, it was possible to treat a business combination as a merger, meaning the coming together of equals, rather than as an acquisition. That is no longer possible. 10 IAS 36:10(b)/Ind AS 36:10(b). 11 IFRS 3:19/Ind AS 103:19 12 Ind AS 31:3. IFRS 11:A and IAS 28:3 define the term differently. Also, there are differences in the terms used in Ind AS and IAS/IFRS. 13 IAS 28:2/Ind AS 28:2. 14 Ind AS 27:4. IAS 27:4 defines the term differently. 15 IAS 40:16/Ind AS 40:16. 16 ICICI Bank takes $264-m hit on overseas credit exposure, Business Line, March 5, 2008. 17 Adrian Michaels, Unicredit to write down €1 billion, Financial Times, April 24, 2008. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Define liabilities. Describe current and non-current liabilities and secured and unsecured liabilities. Define and record definite and estimated liabilities. Explain how to report contingent liabilities. Describe the principal features of debentures. Record the issue of debentures and account for interest expense. Account for debenture redemption and retirement. Account for compound financial instruments. Explain the operation of a debenture redemption fund. Account for mortgages, leases, and employee benefits. Account for current and deferred tax. Explain off-balance sheet financing arrangements. OOPS! MY BOND PRICES HAVE GONE UP In October 2012, JP Morgan reported that it lost $211 million, because the yield on its bonds decreased. This may sound absurd, but it is true. How does this happen? Yield is the interest rate at which the market discounts the future interest and principal payments to determine the value of a bond. When the yield decreases, the value goes up. Unfortunately, this has an adverse effect. Banks must mark their financial liabilities to market. So when the value of its bonds goes up, the bank must recognize the increase as a mark-to-market loss. In 2012, bond yields were falling, because investors were clamouring for the extra yield that was available from banks’ bonds, pushing up prices and lowering bond yields. In 2008, when liquidity was scarce, bond prices plummeted and, applying fair value accounting, banks recognized impressive gains from the decrease in their liabilities. When a bank’s credit rating falls, its yield goes up and the fair value of its debt falls. The difference is a gain. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL In this chapter, you will learn about liabilities: amounts payable by an organization to persons for past transactions or events. Liabilities may relate to current operations or long-term needs. Liabilities related to operations affect income measurement, since an expense and a payable are closely related. Debentures are an important means of raising long-term financing. In this chapter, you will learn how to determine and record liabilities and debenture transactions. You will also learn about the issues in recognizing long-term leases and pensions and other postretirement benefits payable. Accounting profit and taxable income differ significantly for many firms. Deferred tax accounting captures the effect of these differences. Off-balance sheet liabilities are as important as those recognized. Liabilities in Perspective A liability is a “present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits.”1 In other words, liabilities arise from past transactions or events that will require the future payment of assets or performance of services. Buying goods on credit, accepting advance payment from a customer, and receiving a bank loan are examples of past transactions. Each of these transactions gives rise to a liability that must be settled sometime in the future. Not every expected future payment is recognized in the accounting records as a liability. The balance sheet presents the financial position of an enterprise at the reporting date and not its possible position in the future. To qualify as a liability, a present obligation must have arisen from a past transaction. In the course of business, companies enter into contracts for future transactions. For example, a company may sign a three-year contract with a supplier for purchase of copper for `10 million per year. This is a commitment to pay for purchases to be made in the future. The company is not obliged to pay until the merchandise is purchased. Since there is no present obligation, no liability is recorded when the contract for purchase of goods is signed. For an obligation to be recognized as a liability, it should exist independently of an enterprise’s future actions, i.e. it should be unavoidable regardless of what the enterprise does. An action that an enterprise intends to take voluntarily does not give rise to a liability. For example, a leather-processing plant should recognize as a liability the cost of undoing damage already caused to the surrounding paddy fields. However, if it plans to install cleaning equipment to eliminate or reduce future damage, it should not make a provision for the estimated cost of the equipment. Classification of Liabilities We can classify liabilities in several ways. Standard classifications are (i) current and non-current, and (ii) secured and unsecured. Current and non-current liabilities Liabilities are classified depending on when they are due. An enterprise should classify a liability as a current liability when: (a) it expects to settle the liability in its normal operating cycle; (b) it holds the liability primarily for the purpose of trading; (c) the liability is due to be settled within 12 months after the reporting period; or (d) the entity does not have an unconditional right to defer settlement of the liability for at least 12 months after the reporting period.2 Current liabilities are normally paid by using existing current assets, creating other current liabilities or fulfilling contractual obligations to provide goods or services. Examples are trade payables, bills payable, bank overdraft, unearned revenue, and income tax payable. A liability which is not a current liability is a non-current liability, or long-term liability. Debentures payable, long-term bank loans, and pensions payable are examples of non-current liabilities. Secured and unsecured liabilities Liabilities are also classified on the basis of the security available to the creditor in case of default. A secured liability is backed by a pledge, hypothecation or mortgage of the borrower’s specific assets or asset classes in favour of the creditor. If the borrower defaults, the creditor can sell the assets and use the proceeds to settle the dues. An unsecured liability is incurred based on the borrower’s general credit standing, and the creditor has a legal claim only against the borrower’s net assets. Information about the security provided is given in the financial statements. Schedule III to the Companies Act 2013 follows the current/non-current classification and requires disclosure of the security provided. Current Liabilities Current liabilities can be definite liabilities or estimated liabilities. We will discuss these now. Definite Liabilities Definite liabilities are current obligations that can be determined precisely. The accounting problems concerning definite liabilities relate to ascertaining the existence and the amount of the liabilities and recording them properly as they arise. Examples are trade payables, interest payable, bills payable, VAT and GST payable, and current portions of long-term debt. In Part One, we saw how to account for trade payables and make adjustments for accrued liabilities and unearned revenue. We now consider some other items of definite liabilities. Bills payable When a business buys merchandise or equipment on credit or takes loans, it issues a bill payable to the seller or lender. Sometimes, a bill payable may substitute a past-due account payable. The accounting procedure for bills payable is the mirror image of the procedure for bills receivable, discussed in Chapter 5. Figure 9.1 shows a bill payable for `10,000 drawn by Hindustan Finance (drawer) on Sapna Corporation (drawee and acceptor) for a borrowing. VAT and GST Value added tax (VAT) is a state government levy on sales transactions. The seller collects the VAT from the customer and periodically remits the collections to the state government. The seller credits the amount of VAT collected on each sale to a VAT Payable account. The balance in the account represents a current liability. When the seller remits the tax, he debits VAT Payable and credits Cash. In course of time, the proposed goods and services tax (GST) is expected to replace VAT and other levies such as the Central excise duty. As you can see, Madhur Company effectively pays tax on `200, the value added by it. Current maturities of long-term debt A portion of long-term debt may be payable in the course of next 12 months. Suppose that a loan of `100,000 is to be paid in annual instalments of `10,000 in the next 10 years. The instalment of `10,000 payable in the next financial year is a current liability. Estimated Liabilities An estimated liability (or provision) is “a liability of uncertain timing or amount.”3 Estimated liabilities are definite obligations; only their precise timing or amount cannot be determined presently. The difficulty is in making a reasonable estimate of the amount of the liability. Examples of estimated liabilities include income tax, product warranties, and pensions. We consider the first two below and employee benefits later. Income tax A company is a separate taxable entity. It must file tax returns and pay income tax. The Central government levies corporate income tax in accordance with the Income Tax Act 1961. The computation of taxable profit of a large corporation is often very complex, because it must take into consideration not only the provisions of the Act but also the decisions of the courts and the instructions issued by the Central Board of Direct Taxes. Besides, disputes with the tax authorities over the amount of tax payable involve time-consuming legal procedures. Consequently, the precise amount of income tax liability is seldom known when the financial statements are prepared. Since income tax is an expense in the year in which income is earned, the liability should be estimated and recorded. To illustrate, assume that the estimated income tax expense is `36,500. The following entry records the liability: Product warranties A product warranty is a promise to the customer under which the seller or manufacturer is legally obliged during a certain period to bear the cost of replacement parts or repair costs, if the product fails to perform.4 The cost of the warranty is an expense of the period in which the product is sold since the warranty helped the sale. However, the exact amount of expense is not known at the time of sale and the warranty expense is estimated based on past experience. Contingent Liabilities A contingent liability is “(a) a possible obligation that arises from past events and whose existence will be confirmed only by the occurrence or non-occurrence of one or more uncertain future events not wholly within the control of the entity; or (b) a present obligation that arises from past events, but is not recognized, because (i) it is not probable that an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits will be required to settle the obligation; or (ii) a reliable estimate of the amount of the obligation cannot be made.”5 A contingent liability will be confirmed by the outcome of an uncertain future event. Alternatively, either it may result from a remote possibility or a reliable estimate of the liability cannot be made. In other words, a contingent liability is “iffy”. Once the uncertainty surrounding the outcome of the event is resolved, a contingent liability will either become a full-fledged liability or be altogether eliminated. In Chapter 5, we considered the contingent liability for bills discounted. Disputed taxes, product liability suits against the company, and wage demands are also examples of contingent liabilities. The accounting treatment of contingencies would depend on the expected outcome of the contingency. If it is probable that the contingency will happen (i.e. probability > 0.5) and the amount of the resulting loss can be reasonably estimated, the contingent liability should be recognized as a liability. However, if either the contingency is not probable (though it could occur) or the amount of the contingent loss cannot be reasonably estimated, the contingency should be disclosed in the notes to the financial statements. A contingency which may be only remotely possible need not be disclosed. Contingent liabilities may develop in unexpected ways. So they must be assessed continually and if they are probable and reliable estimates can be made, they should be recognized. Long-term Liabilities While current liabilities can provide cash for recurring business needs, they are neither adequate nor satisfactory for financing the long-term requirements of a business. A company requires large funds for a fairly long period of time to finance expansion and restructuring of business. Also, it may incur other kinds of long-term obligations. Debentures, mortgages, leases, and pensions are examples of long-term or non-current liabilities. Long-term liabilities differ from current liabilities in four ways: 1. The period of repayment of long-term debt is usually longer than 10 years. In some cases, the period may be as long as 30 years or even longer. 2. Long-term borrowing is accompanied by considerable formality, such as approval by the board of directors and shareholders, and by the government in certain situations. 3. Long-term liabilities usually require interest payments. 4. Long-term liabilities have to be discounted. A financial liability is (a) a contractual obligation to deliver cash or a financial asset to another entity or to exchange financial assets or financial liabilities with another entity under conditions that are potentially unfavourable, or (b) a contract that will or may be settled in the entity’s own equity instruments. Long-term liabilities are typically financial liabilities and they usually carry interest. We will now describe the principal types of long-term liabilities. Debentures Payable A debenture (also called a bond), an important form of longterm borrowing, consists of a written promise to pay a principal amount at a specified time and interest at a specified rate. A debenture issue consists of a large number of debentures of small denominations rather than one large bond. For example, a borrowing of `10 million could consist of 10,000 debentures of `1,000, thus enabling many investors to participate in the issue. A debenture certificate is issued to each lender as evidence of the issuing company’s obligation to the debentureholder. The debenture trust deed (also known as bond indenture) is a legal document that states the rights and obligations of the debentureholders and the issuer. This deed contains a number of covenants for the protection of the lenders. The covenants deal with many matters including the interest rate to be paid, the maturity date and amount, restrictions on dividends, and further borrowing by the issuer. A company may sell the debentures directly to the public or to an underwriter, an investment firm which will sell the debentures to the public later. Even in a public issue of debentures, the debenture issuer often engages underwriters who are paid a commission in return for a promise to buy the debentures not taken up by the public. The issuer appoints a bank as debenture trustee to represent the large number of debentureholders. The primary function of the trustee is to ensure that the issuer complies with the terms of the trust deed. Interest paid on debentures is a cost of borrowing and it is tax-deductible, i.e. allowed as an expense for computing taxable profit. So the effective cost of borrowing is lower than the nominal interest rate stated on the debenture. The shareholders of a company would benefit, if the interest rate is lower than the prospective return on the company’s investment. Chapter 11 explains how shareholders may benefit from debt financing. Characteristics of debentures The terms of a debenture issue are a matter of contract between the borrower and the lender. They reflect the borrower’s financing needs and the lender’s expectations. Debentures with a wide variety of features are in use. We shall now see some of them. Secured and unsecured debentures Debentures which are backed by specific assets to ensure their repayment are secured debentures. Most debentures issued in India are secured. Mortgage, pledge, and hypothecation are the most common forms providing security. A mortgage is a legal arrangement for securing a borrowing with immovable assets such as land, building or embedded plant and machinery. Pledge and hypothecation are means of securing movable assets such as inventories and receivables. In a pledge, the borrower gives physical possession of the asset to the lender, e.g. pawning jewellery with a bank as security for a loan. In a hypothecation, the borrower is allowed to use the asset, e.g. running a vehicle that has been given as security. Unsecured debentures are backed only by the general creditworthiness of the issuer, not by a legal interest in any specific assets. Term and serial debentures When all the debentures of an issue fall due for payment on the same date, they are called term debentures. In contrast, serial debentures mature in instalments on a series of specified dates. For example, a `10 million issue of serial debentures may mature at the rate of `1 million per year for 10 years. Convertible debentures The debentureholder has the option of exchanging these debentures for shares of the issuing company. A convertible debenture has a stipulated conversion rate of some number of shares for each debenture. Callable bonds These bonds contain a provision that gives the issuer the right to call the debenture before its maturity date. The price the issuer must pay, known as the call price, is specified in the debenture trust deed. If the yield falls before the maturity date, the issuer can pay back the costly borrowing and substitute it with a cheaper borrowing. Zero-coupon bonds Also known as deep discount bonds, these debentures do not carry any periodic interest payment, or coupon. Zero-coupon bonds have two special features: (a) they have a low issue price and a high maturity value, and (b) they are issued for long periods. Debenture ratings Credit rating agencies assign ratings indicating their opinion on the relative safety of timely principal and interest payment on debentures and other debt securities. Credit ratings are useful to present and potential investors in understanding the degree of risk associated with investment in debentures. Note that a rating is not a recommendation to purchase, sell, or hold a debenture nor is it an evaluation of the company. It is just the professional judgment of a group of independent experts relating to a specific instrument issued by a company. Credit ratings influence companies’ borrowing rates. Thus, a company with a AAA rating for its debentures will be able to borrow at a lower interest rate than another with an inferior rating. A debenture that is rated BB or lower by Standard & Poor’s (or equivalent by other rating agencies) is known as a high-yield bond or junk bond. A debenture that is rated BBB or above is known as an investment grade bond. Issuing debentures The Companies Act 2013 contains provisions regarding a company’s borrowing powers. In addition, a company’s memorandum and articles of association may also set limits on the borrowing powers of its board of directors. The accounting procedure for issue of debentures varies depending on the terms of the issue. All debentures have a face value (or par value), the principal amount that must be repaid on the maturity date of the debentures. Face value of the debentures is not entered in the accounting records. Being financial liabilities, debentures are recorded at their fair value. Debenture prices and interest rates The debenture certificate specifies the interest rate, or coupon, payable on the debenture. The coupon is applied to the face value of the debentures to compute the amount of interest that will be paid each year. Suppose that on January 1, 20X0, Maya Company issues `100,000 of 12 per cent, 10-year debentures. Interest is payable semi-annually on June 30 and December 31 in arrears, i.e. after the period to which it relates. Maya Company will pay an interest of `12,000 a year, or `6,000 every six months, until maturity. Thus, the coupon establishes the amount of periodical interest payment. The actual interest rate incurred by the company will equal the interest rate available to the investors from loans carrying similar risks. Yield, or market interest rate or effective interest, is the rate of interest that investors will expect on debentures of a particular risk category. The greater the risk associated with an investment, the higher the interest rate required by investors. Yield is the investor’s opportunity cost. Yield keeps changing all the time and is affected by several factors besides the risk category of a debenture such as the Reserve Bank of India’s benchmark rates, inflation expectations, liquidity conditions, and the level and terms of government borrowing. If the coupon equals the yield, the investor will get a fair return and the debenture will be priced at par. Here, the fair value would equal the face value. However, the coupon can (and often does) differ from the yield. For example, if the market rate is 16 per cent, Maya Company will not be able to issue its debentures at par. This is because a potential investor can earn an interest income of `8,000 per period by lending at the yield, but could earn only `6,000 on Maya Company’s debentures. If Maya Company wants investors to purchase its debentures, it must issue the debentures at a discount, i.e. below par. On the other hand, if the yield is 10 per cent, Maya Company will be able to issue the debentures at a premium, i.e. above par. Debenture prices are often stated in terms of a percentage of par. For example, if a debenture is issued at 104, it means that a debenture of face value `100 is sold at a premium of 4 per cent. An issue price of 98 would mean that the debenture is sold at a discount of 2 per cent. If the coupon differs from the yield, we obtain the issue price by discounting at the yield the following two kinds of cash flow: 1. A series of interest payments; and 2. A single principal payment at maturity. The present value of the debenture issue, calculated as above, is its fair value.You should review Appendix B to understand the idea of time value of money. We will now see how to account for issue of debentures. Debentures issued at par Assume that on January 1, 20X0, Maya Company issues `100,000 of 12 per cent, 10-year secured debentures at par. Interest is payable semi-annually on June 30 and December 31. The entry to record the issue is as follows: Debentures issued at a discount or premium Assume that Maya Company issues debentures for `80,359 when the market rate of interest is 16 per cent. We record the issue of the debentures as follows: In Maya Company’s balance sheet, Debentures Payable will appear at `80,359 as a liability under Long-term Borrowings. If Maya Company issues the debentures for `112,463 when the yield is 10 per cent, the following entry records the issue: In Maya Company’s balance sheet, Debentures Payable will appear at `112,463 as a liability under Long-term Borrowings. The discount or premium is to be amortized over the life of the debenture, as explained below. Effective interest method for amortization of debenture discount and premium The effective interest method discussed in Chapter 8 calculates the amortized cost of a financial asset and allocates the interest income at the rate that exactly discounts estimated future interest receipts to the carrying amount of the financial asset. Applying the semi-annual yield of 8 per cent to the proceeds of `80,359, we get the interest expense for the period ended June 30, 20X0: `80,359 8% = `6,429. The interest payment is `6,000. The difference of `429 is the amount of discount amortization for the period. The following entry records the interest payment and amortization: Exhibit 9.1 presents the debenture discount amortization schedule for Maya Company. Note that interest expense (Column B) is a constant 8 per cent of the carrying amount appearing in the previous row. The amortization in an interest period equals the difference between the effective interest expense and the interest paid in the period. The procedure for amortizing premium is similar to that illustrated in Exhibit 9.1. Year-end accrual of debenture interest expense Suppose that Maya Company’s reporting period ends on March 31. The following entry records interest accrued for three months: Debentures issued between interest dates Assume that Maya Company issued the debentures on April 1, 20X0 (i.e. between interest payment dates) and the reporting period ends on March 31. In this case, the issuer pays interest for the partial period for which the debentures were held. The entry to record the interest payment for the first semi-annual interest period is as follows: Debenture issue expenses The issue of debentures involves transaction costs, such as expenses of printing debenture certificates and offer documents, accountants’ and lawyers’ fees, advisers’ fees, brokers’ and underwriters’ commissions, regulators’ filing fees, and marketing expenses. These are incremental costs directly attributable to the issue. At the time of initial recognition, transaction costs are deducted from the amount originally recognized for liabilities. The effective interest method is applied to the amount net of transaction costs. Derecognition of debentures A financial liability is removed from the balance sheet when it is extinguished. Extinguishment can happen in several ways, for example: (a) the debtor settles the obligation by paying cash or giving other assets; (b) the creditor waives its contractual rights to receive the amount of the obligation; or (c) the obligation expires leaving the creditor without a legal right to recover the amount. In each case, the debtor is legally released from its obligation to pay the creditor. Derecognition involves the removal of a previously recognized financial liability from an entity’s balance sheet. Legal release is a requirement for derecognition. We examine three cases of derecognition of debentures: redemption, retirement, and conversion. The first two are discussed below, and the last in the next section. Redemption is the payment of debentures at maturity. When Maya Company redeems its debentures, it derecognizes the liability: Retirement is the early redemption of a debenture. An issuer may retire its debt, because it wants to reduce the amount of debt or issue new debt at a lower interest rate. Debentures may contain a call feature that enables the issuer to buy-back and retire the debentures before maturity. Even when there is no call feature, issuers may retire debentures by purchasing them on the open market. In either case, the issuer recognizes a gain or loss for the difference between the consideration paid for the debentures retired and the related carrying amount on the balance sheet. A gain arises if the purchase price of the debentures is less than the carrying amount and a loss occurs if the purchase price is greater than the carrying amount. As an example, assume that on January 1, 20X4 Maya Company retired at 82 the 12 per cent debentures it had issued for `80,359 on January 1, 20X0. On this date, the carrying amount of the debentures was `84,919 (Exhibit 9.1, Semi-annual Interest Period 8, column E). The retirement of the debentures is recorded as follows: Any transaction costs incurred in connection with retirement should be adjusted in calculating the gain or loss. If the issuer retires a part of the debentures, the carrying amount to be considered is proportionate to the portion retired. Compound financial instruments These are financial instruments that contain both a liability and an equity component. A common form of a compound financial instrument is a convertible debenture. It is a debenture with an embedded conversion option. It can be converted into the issuing company’s equity shares. The conversion feature makes the debentures more attractive to debentureholders by giving them an opportunity to benefit from a rise in the price of the issuing company’s equity shares. Furthermore, the debentureholder receives interest at the specified rate until conversion and is therefore subject to less risk relative to an equity shareholder. The advantage to the issuing company is that convertible debentures carry a lower yield than non-convertible debentures. Convertible debentures come with numerous variations. A convertible debenture may contain terms that compel the holder to convert the debenture or leave it to the holder’s option. Depending on the terms, the interest rate may be either variable or fixed. The holder may have a call option (i.e. right to buy) to convert into a specified number of shares. Here again, the holder may be able to convert at maturity of the debenture (European call option) or before maturity (American call option). We will now examine the accounting issues in convertible debentures with relatively simple features. Issue of convertible debentures The basic requirement here is to measure and recognize the liability and equity components separately. The components are as follows: Financial liability: The issuer’s obligation to pay interest and redeem the debenture; and Equity instrument: The holder’s right to call for the issuer’s shares. The issuer has to record the two components separately. This is ‘split accounting’. The issuer determines the fair value of the liability component and determines the equity component as the residual amount.6 Conversion at maturity On conversion of a convertible debenture at maturity, the entity derecognizes the liability component and recognizes it as equity. Both the original equity component and the new equity component are allocated to other line items such as share capital, share premium, and so on in accordance with legal requirements. There is no gain or loss on conversion at maturity.7 Conversion before maturity The holders may exercise the conversion option before maturity if the equity share is trading at above the conversion price. There is no specific guidance on the accounting treatment if the holder opts to convert the debenture early. We can take the view that since the instrument ‘matures’ on the date that the holder converts in accordance with the contractual terms of the instrument, the position is essentially the same as that for conversion at maturity. The amount recognized in equity should be the carrying amount of the liability for the debt with adjustment for cash received or paid. If the conversion price agreed upon is more than the face value of the share, the excess will go to the Share Premium account. Debenture redemption fund Companies should have cash to pay back the debentures when they mature. Some debenture trust deeds require companies to make periodic cash deposits to a debenture redemption fund, or sinking fund. The debenture trustees invest the cash in high-quality income-earning securities. The periodic deposits plus the earnings on the investments accumulate in the fund. When the debentures mature, the trustees sell the investments and use the proceeds to pay the debentureholders, and return any excess cash to the issuing company; the company must make up any deficiency. The sinking fund assets appear as part of the long-term investments of the issuing company. To illustrate the operation of a debenture redemption fund, assume that Kiran Company issues `100,000 of five-year debentures on January 1. The trustee expects to earn a return of 10 per cent on the investments, net of expenses of administering the fund. Referring to Appendix B, Table 2, we find that if `1 is invested at the end of every year for five years at 10 per cent, it will cumulate to `6.1051 at the end of year 5. The amount of sinking fund deposit is `16,380, calculated as100,000/6.1051. At the end of five years, the value of the sinking fund investments will be equal to the face value of the debentures, as shown in Exhibit 9.2. The entries to record the amount deposited every year are as follows:8 At the end of every year, the trustees will report the earnings on the investments to the issuer. The issuer then records the sinking fund earnings in its accounts and reports them on its statement of profit and loss. For example, if the investments yielded 10 per cent in the second year, Kiran Company would record the earnings as follows: Income from investments would appear on the statement of profit and loss. At the end of the fifth year, the investments will be sold and the proceeds utilized to repay the debentures. Any gain or loss will be recognized at this time. For example, let us assume that the investments are sold for `102,500. The sale will be recorded as follows: Gain on sale of investments would appear on the statement of profit and loss. Mortgages Payable A mortgage is a legal arrangement in which a borrowing is secured by specific immovable assets such as land, building, and plant and machinery. If the borrower does not pay, the lender has the legal right to have the specific assets sold and pay himself out of the proceeds. A home loan is a common example of mortgage in which the borrower gives his house as security for repayment of loan in monthly instalments over a fairly long period. Mortgages are of different types. At one extreme is conditional mortgage which must be registered with a government authority, in which the borrower’s legal title to the property is transferred to the lender and is re-transferred to the borrower when the loan is repaid. At the other end, equitable mortgage is a relatively simple arrangement in which the borrower deposits with the lender the title deeds for the property and takes them back when the loan is repaid. Between these there are many types. Mortgage payments are generally made in equal instalments that comprise both interest and principal components. Each payment is applied first to the accrued interest and the remainder reduces the principal. In the early years of repayment, the principal balance is high. Therefore, a major portion of the instalment goes towards interest. As the repayment period progresses, the principal component gradually decreases until the balance payable reaches zero. To illustrate, assume that on January 1 a mortgage debt of `100,000 was obtained. The mortgage carries interest at 18 per cent per annum and is repayable in 48 monthly instalments of `2,937. Exhibit 9.3 shows the repayment schedule for the first three months including break-up of principal and interest. The entry to record the first monthly payment on February 1 is as follows: Leases As you learnt in Chapter 5, a lease is “an agreement whereby the lessor conveys to the lessee in return for a payment or series of payments the right to use an asset for an agreed period of time.”9 Leasing makes it possible to acquire an asset for use without having to invest own or borrowed funds. There are two types of lease: finance lease and operating lease. Figure 9.2 illustrates their key features. Finance lease This is a lease “that transfers substantially all the risks and rewards incidental to ownership of an asset.”10 In a finance lease, the lessor (usually a leasing company) transfers the risks and rewards of ownership of an asset to the lessee for a series of rental payments under a non-cancellable lease contract. Acquisition of assets on finance lease is equivalent to obtaining a secured loan. The principle of substance over form requires entities to account for and present transactions and events in accordance with their economic substance and reality, and not merely their legal form. While the legal form of a finance lease agreement is that the lessee does not acquire legal ownership of the leased asset, the substance is that the lessee acquires the economic benefits of the use of the asset for a major part of its useful life. In the following situations (only illustrative, not exhaustive) a lease is normally classified as a finance lease: 1. The lease transfers ownership of the asset to the lessee by the end of the lease term; 2. The lessee has a “bargain purchase” option, i.e. an option to purchase the asset at a price that is expected to be sufficiently lower than the fair value at the date the option becomes exercisable for it to be reasonably certain, at the inception of the lease, to be exercisable; 3. The lease term is for the major part of the economic life of the asset even if title is not transferred; 4. At the inception of the lease the present value of the minimum lease payments amounts to at least substantially all of the fair value of the leased asset; and 5. The leased assets are of such a specialized nature that only the lessee can use them without major modifications. In practice, “major part of the economic life of the asset” is taken to be 75 per cent and “at least substantially all of the fair value of the leased asset” is taken to be 90 per cent. The classification of a lease as an operating or a finance lease will depend on the substance of the transaction rather than on the form of the contract. A finance lease must be recognized in the lessee’s balance sheet as an asset and an obligation, a practice known as lease capitalization. Exhibit 9.4 presents the definitions of key terms in lease accounting. Finance lease A lease that transfers substantially all the risks and rewards incident to ownership of an asset. Title may or may not eventually be transferred. Operating lease A lease other than a finance lease. Inception of the lease The earlier of the date of the lease agreement and the date of commitment by the parties to the principal provisions of the lease. Lease term The non-cancellable period for which the lessee has contracted to lease the asset together with any further terms for which the lessee has the option to continue to lease the asset, with or without further payment, when at the inception of the lease it is reasonably certain that the lessee will exercise the option. Minimum lease payments The payments over the lease term the lessee is or can be required to make, excluding contingent rent, costs for services and taxes to be paid and reimbursed to the lessor, together with (a) for a lessee, any amounts guaranteed by the lessee or by a party related to the lessee; or (b) for a lessor, any residual value guaranteed to the lessor by (i) the lessee; (ii) a party related to the lessee; or (c) a third party unrelated to the lessor that is financially capable of discharging the obligations under the guarantee. Fair value The amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction. Interest rate implicit in the lease The discount rate which, at the inception of the lease, causes the aggregate of the present value of (a) the minimum lease payments and (b) the unguaranteed residual value to be equal to the sum of (i) the fair value of the leased asset and (ii) any initial direct costs of the lessor. Lessee’s incremental borrowing rate of interest The rate of interest the lessee would have to pay on a similar lease or, if that is not determinable, the rate that, at the inception of the lease, the lessee would incur to borrow over a similar term and with a similar security, the funds necessary to purchase the asset. Source: IAS 17:4 To illustrate lease capitalization, assume that Abdullah Company signs an agreement with a leasing company to lease equipment from that date. The information about the lease is as follows: 1. The term of the lease is four years and the lease agreement is noncancellable. The equipment reverts to the lessor at the end of the period. 2. Lease rental of `28,679 must be paid at the beginning of each year. The first rental is payable on signing the agreement. 3. The equipment has a fair value of `102,000 at the inception of the lease, an estimated useful life of four years, and no residual value. 4. Abdullah Company’s incremental borrowing rate is 12 per cent. 5. The lessor is known to charge an interest rate of 10 per cent on the lease. 6. Abdullah Company uses the straight-line method for depreciation of similar equipment. The procedure for lease capitalization is as follows: 1. Determine whether the agreement is a finance lease. The agreement is clearly a finance lease because it is non-cancellable for the entire useful life of the equipment. Therefore, it passes the test of substantial transfer of risks and rewards incident to ownership of the asset. 2. Compute the present value of the minimum lease payment. The minimum lease payments consist of the annual lease rentals payable by the lessee at the beginning of each year. Since the lessor’s interest rate is known (10 per cent), it is used as the discount rate disregarding the lessee’s incremental borrowing rate. The present value calculation is as follows: Note that the table shows the present value of annuity due, i.e. the annuity payable at the beginning of the period, whereas Appendix B, Table 4 is based on the annuity payable at the end of the period. 3. Take the lower of fair value and the present value of minimum lease payments. Since the present value of minimum lease payments of `100,000 is less than the fair value of `102,000, the lease will be recorded by the lessee as an asset and a liability at `100,000. The following entry would record the transaction: On the lessee’s balance sheet on Leased Equipment is shown in the fixed assets section and Finance Lease Obligation appears as a non-current liability. Abdullah Company must depreciate the asset and record the following entry for each period: The first lease rental is paid immediately on signing the agreement and is therefore fully offset against the lease obligation. The second, third and fourth lease rentals consist of two elements: (a) repayment of the principal and (b) an interest cost. Exhibit 9.5 shows the computation of interest expense in each period. Using this information, the entry to record the first lease payment is as follows: Accounting for leases is one of the most controversial topics. Lessees have resisted capitalization of leases to avoid reporting large amounts of lease obligations since such reporting adversely affects key financial indicators such as the debt-equity ratio. So, when lessee accounting was tightened by specifying the conditions under which capitalization would be required, the lessees ensured that the lease did not satisfy those conditions. For example, the lessees set the lease term at marginally less than 75 per cent to escape capitalization. Considering the practical difficulties involved in enforcing strict compliance with the spirit of any capitalization rule, the IASB has proposed a radical overhaul of leases accounting that would require capitalization of a “right-of-use asset” and a lease liability for all leases of more than 12 months. A lessee can choose to recognize a right-of-use asset and a lease liability for leases of 12 months or less but is not required to do so.11 Operating lease It is defined as “a lease other than a finance lease”. Operating lease is a short-term rental arrangement such as renting office space, car or photocopier. The lessee expenses operating lease payments. Normally, the lessee recognizes the expense on a straight-line basis over the lease period unless another systematic basis is more representative of the time pattern of the user’s benefits. The lessee does not make any other accounting entries for operating leases. Employee Benefits Many organizations provide a variety of benefits to their employees. Employee benefits are “all forms of consideration given by an entity in exchange for service rendered by employees.” Employee benefits can be of the following types:12 (a) Short-term employee benefits: These are given to current employees and include wages, salaries and employer’s provident fund contributions and nonmonetary benefits such as medical care, housing and cars. Paid annual leave, paid sick leave, profit-sharing, and bonuses payable within 12 months after the end of the period in which the employees serve are also short-term benefits. (b) Post-employment benefits: These are given to retired employees and include gratuity, pension, and post-employment health care. (c) Other long-term benefits: These are given to current employees and include long-service leave, sabbatical leave, jubilee or other service benefits, and profitsharing, bonuses and deferred compensation if not payable within 12 months after the end of the period. (d) Termination benefits: These are benefits payable as a result of either an enterprise’s decision to terminate an employee’s employment before the normal retirement date or an employee’s decision to accept voluntary redundancy (voluntary retirement) in exchange for those benefits. We will now illustrate how to recognize the first two benefits. The same principles apply to the other two. Short-term benefits Employees are entitled to compensated absence (i.e. paid leave) for reasons such as vacation, sickness, short-term disability, and maternity. Compensated absences may be non-accumulating or accumulating. Nonaccumulating compensated absences must be used in the reporting period in which the employees get the entitlement and must be recognized when absences occur. Examples are maternity or paternity leave and sick leave. Accumulating compensated absence can be carried forward to and used in future periods (e.g. earned leave). An enterprise must recognize the expected cost of accumulating compensated absence when the employees render service that increases their entitlement to future compensated absences. Accumulating compensated absence may be either vesting (employees can get cash payment for unused leave) or non-vesting (employees cannot get cash payment for unused leave). In either case, an obligation exists which the enterprise must recognize. The obligation would equal the additional amount that the enterprise expects to pay for the unused entitlement. Post-employment benefits These benefits are of two types: 1. Defined contribution plans: Here the enterprise agrees to contribute to a separate trust fund to provide for the payment of post-employment benefits to its employees. The amount of annual contribution is determined by agreement between the enterprise and its employees. The benefits depend solely on the amounts contributed to, and income accumulated in, the fund (e.g. provident fund13). 2. Defined benefit plans: In these plans, the enterprise is required to provide post-employment benefits to its employees, determined by reference to a formula normally based on employees’ remuneration and years of service. The enterprise must estimate the amount of annual contribution necessary to meet the retirement obligations that will arise in the future (e.g. pension and gratuity). Accounting for the cost of benefits under a defined contribution plan is fairly straightforward. The enterprise recognizes its contribution as an expense as part of the payroll and a corresponding payment, or liability if the contribution has not been paid. When a defined benefit plan is funded, the annual contributions are paid to a separate trust fund which pays the benefits. When the plan is not funded, the enterprise pays the benefits as they fall due. In a defined benefit plan, the employer is obliged to provide the promised retirement benefits regardless of the funding arrangements made. For example, if the trust fund does not have sufficient assets, the employer must make up the shortfall; any excess may be taken back by the employer. Determining liability under defined benefit plans is complex. For this reason, an actuary – an expert on insurance risk assessment – is engaged to prepare a valuation of the company’s liability for pension and other benefits. Primarily designed to calculate funding requirements, actuarial valuations are generally used to determine the expense to be recognized during each period. The annual expense includes the following items: Current service cost; Interest cost; and Expected return on plan assets. Other items are actuarial gains and losses, past service costs, and the effects of any curtailments or settlements. For the sake of simplicity, we do not consider them in this discussion. Income Taxes Income tax expense and income tax payable are important items in the financial statements. The income tax regulations determine taxable profit. Accounting principles and a company’s accounting policies are the basis for measuring accounting profit. The systems of computing taxable profit and accounting profit differ, because the objectives are different: the tax law seeks to raise revenue to meet the cost of government operations, whereas accounting principles are designed to provide financial statements that are useful for making investment and credit decisions. Therefore, taxable profit and accounting profit differ frequently and sometimes significantly. Accounting Profit and Taxable Profit Accounting profit is profit or loss for a period before deducting tax expense. It is the outcome of applying accounting principles, standards and policies to an enterprise’s transactions and other events. Revenue recognition, matching, accrual, going concern, and prudence are the key determinants of accounting profit. Consider the following accounting practices: 1. The accrual system recognizes receivables and payables, not just receipts and payments. 2. Though depreciation expense does not involve a cash outflow in the current period, it is necessary to recognize it in order to match expenses with related revenues. 3. Revenue is recognized only when goods or services are provided to customers. The carrying amounts for assets and liabilities that appear on the financial statements are the effect of applying accounting rules. For example, the carrying amount of a receivable reflects revenue recognized in accordance with accounting principles. The carrying amount of a piece of equipment signifies the amount that management expects to recover from the item over its remaining useful life. Unearned revenue represents the amount for which an enterprise is liable to provide goods or services in the future for payment already received. Taxable profit (tax loss) is the profit (loss) for a period, determined in accordance with the rules established by the taxation authorities; income tax is payable (recoverable) on this income.14 The taxation system sometimes works differently from the accounting system. The tax authorities calculate the value of an enterprise’s assets and liabilities in accordance with the tax laws. For example, tax depreciation rates are higher, and tax generally follows accelerated depreciation. Therefore, the carrying amount of a depreciable item for accounting purposes is different from that for tax purposes. Current Tax Current tax is the amount of income tax payable (recoverable) in respect of the taxable profit (tax loss) for a period. Think of current tax as the amount that a business needs to pay as income tax to avoid falling foul of the law. It must write a cheque for that amount in favour of the government. Usually, current tax is payable in instalments, called advance tax, during the period in which the taxable profit is earned. Any excess payment (short payment) is a current tax asset (current tax liability). In a few countries (not in India), there is a system of ‘carryback of tax loss’, meaning that a tax loss can be set off against taxable profit of past periods on which current tax was paid. In that case, the right of carryback will be recognized as an asset. To illustrate, suppose that Vipul Company’s accounting profit is `40,000 each year for three years. At the beginning of Year 1, it buys a computer for `30,000 and depreciates it equally over three years. Assume that for tax the asset is expensed equally over two years. The income tax rate is 30 per cent. This is a simplification because tax generally follows the written-down-value method. Exhibit 9.6 presents the calculation of Vipul Company’s taxable profit and current tax expense. Minimum alternative tax Tax payable on taxable profit is normal tax. Minimum alternative tax (MAT) is a tax calculated on accounting profit. A company must pay the higher of normal tax and MAT. The effect of MAT is that companies with zero taxable profit pay tax and companies with a low taxable profit pay a larger tax than they would have had to in the absence of MAT. To illustrate, assume a MAT rate of 15 per cent and a normal tax rate of 30 per cent for three years. Let us look at four cases for Abhinav Company: Case 1: It has no taxable profit, but has an accounting profit. It pays MAT of `3,000. Case 2: It has a taxable profit, but normal tax is less than MAT. It pays MAT of `3,000. Case 3: Normal tax is equal to MAT. It pays normal tax of `3,000. Case 4: Normal tax is more than MAT. It pays normal tax of `3,600. MAT credit MAT is current tax and is expensed as incurred. However, MAT paid can be carried forward and adjusted against normal tax payable in a specified number of future years. This is known as MAT credit, which is treated as a recoverable during that period. In Year 1, assume either Case 1 or Case 2: Abhinav Company paid MAT of `3,000. It can claim credit for the amount from normal tax payable in the future. Suppose that in Year 2, it has a taxable profit of `15,000 and an accounting profit of `14,000. Its normal tax is `4,500 and MAT is `2,100. So it pays normal tax, but can claim MAT credit. Since it must pay a minimum of `2,100, it claims MAT credit of `2,400 and pays normal tax of `2,100. It carries forward the unutilized MAT credit of `600 (i.e. Year 1 MAT paid, `3,000 – Year 2 MAT credit utilized, `2,400). Suppose that in Year 3, it has a taxable profit of `18,000 and an accounting profit of `15,000. Its normal tax is `5,400 and MAT is `2,250. It pays normal tax of `4,800, after claiming the remaining MAT credit of `600. Deferred Tax An enterprise expects to recover or settle the carrying amount of an asset or liability recognized in the financial statements. Because of the difference between accounting and tax, recovery or settlement of that carrying amount could make future tax payments larger or smaller. In such cases, the enterprise should recognize a deferred tax liability or deferred tax asset. Tax base and temporary differences are the building blocks of deferred tax accounting. Tax base The tax base of an asset or liability is the amount attributed to that asset or liability for tax purposes.15 Tax base of an asset The tax base of an asset is the amount that will be deductible for tax purposes against any taxable economic benefits that will flow to an entity when it recovers the asset’s carrying amount. If those benefits will not be taxable, the tax base of the asset is equal to its carrying amount. Tax base of a liability The tax base of a liability is its carrying amount less any amount that will be deductible for tax purposes in respect of that liability in future periods. In the case of revenue received in advance, the tax base of the resulting liability is its carrying amount less any amount that will be not be taxable in future periods. Exhibit 9.7 summarizes these ideas. In Vipul’s Company’s illustration (Exhibit 9.6), the tax depreciation for the computer was `15,000 in Year 1. Future benefits from the computer are taxable (Case A). So the tax base of the computer at the end of Year 1 is its tax-deductible amount of `15,000 (cost, `30,000 – cumulative tax depreciation, `15,000). By the end of Year 2, the asset will be fully depreciated for tax purposes. As a result, the tax base will be zero at the end of both Year 2 and Year 3. Exhibit 9.8 presents the calculation of the tax base for the asset. Temporary differences These are differences between the carrying amount of an asset or liability in the balance sheet and its tax base.16 Temporary differences are of two kinds: Taxable temporary differences Deductible temporary differences. Taxable temporary differences and deferred tax liabilities Taxable temporary differences result in taxable amounts in determining taxable profit of future periods when the carrying amount of the asset or liability is recovered or settled. An asset’s carrying amount is a measure of its future economic benefits; its tax base measures the amount that is allowed as a deduction for tax purposes. As you know, the two are often not equal because the objectives of accounting and taxation are different. When the carrying amount exceeds the tax base, the amount of taxable economic benefits will exceed the tax allowance for the asset. In other words, an enterprise expects to earn an amount equal to the asset’s carrying amount, but the tax authorities will only allow it to claim its tax base. The difference is a temporary difference on which it must pay tax. Hence there would be a future outflow, a form of liability. This gives rise to a deferred tax liability: the amount of income tax payable in future periods in respect of taxable temporary differences. The liability is measured using the applicable tax rate. Note that the carrying amount and the tax base would be equal both at the beginning and at the end of an asset’s useful life. The difference between them originates in periods in which the tax depreciation allowance is more than the accounting depreciation expense – the position in the early part of the asset’s life because of generous tax benefits for new assets. The position reverses in subsequent years. All taxable temporary differences give rise to a deferred tax liability. For Vipul Company, the tax base of the computer at the end of Year 2 and Year 3 is zero. The company depreciates the asset cost of `30,000 on a straight-line basis over its estimated useful life of three years. So, the annual depreciation expense is `10,000. At the end of Year 1, the carrying amount is `20,000 (cost, `30,000 – accumulated depreciation, `10,000), the tax base is `15,000, and the taxable temporary difference is `5,000. This represents taxable future economic benefits from the asset. At the tax rate of 30 per cent, deferred tax liability is `1,500 at the end of Year 1. Exhibit 9.9 presents deferred tax liability calculations for Vipul Company’s computer. Deferred tax expense and income tax expense Income tax expense comprises current tax expense and deferred tax expense. Deferred tax expense is measured as the change in deferred tax liability over the period. Vipul Company’s deferred tax expense for Year 1 is `1,500 (deferred tax liability at the end of Year 1, `1,500 – deferred tax liability at the beginning of Year 1, `0), for Year 2 is `1,500 (deferred tax liability at the end of Year 2, `3,000 – deferred tax liability at the end of Year 1, `1,500), and for Year 3 is – `3,000 (deferred tax liability at the end of Year 3, `0 – deferred tax liability at the end of Year 2, `3,000). Exhibit 9.10 presents the calculation of Vipul Company’s deferred tax expense and income tax expense. The `1,500 amount of deferred tax expense each in Year 1 and Year 2 results from originating temporary differences and the amount of – `3,000 in Year 3 is the effect of reversing of those differences. Exhibit 9.11 shows the presentation of income tax expense in Vipul Company’s statement of profit and loss. Marginal tax rate, effective tax rate, and deferred tax accounting Marginal tax rate (or statutory tax rate) is the rate at which an enterprise must pay tax on its taxable profit. The marginal tax rate determines an enterprise’s current tax expense. Vipul Company’s marginal tax rate is 30 per cent. In Year 1 the company has to pay current tax of `10,500 on its taxable profit of `35,000. Parliament enacts the statute that specifies the marginal tax rate and may change the rate from one year to another. Effective tax rate is the rate at which an enterprise pays tax on its profit. It is measured as the ratio of income tax expense to accounting profit. It tells us about an enterprise’s tax burden. If we take tax as only current tax, Vipul Company’s effective tax rate for is 26.25 per cent (10,500/40,000) in both Year 1 and Year 2 and 37.5 per cent in Year 3 (15,000/40,000). This is an incomplete idea of the effect of tax on the enterprise, because it ignores the effect of temporary differences between accounting and tax, which are bound to even out over time. We have seen how this works in the case of depreciation. Considering only current tax expense results in gross distortion of the enterprise’s tax burden and is likely to mislead the users of the financial statements on the true taxation cost. Therefore, we should learn to think of income tax expense as consisting of both current tax expense and deferred tax expense. Applying this concept, we get an effective tax rate of 30 per cent for each year (12,000/40,000). This is reasonable. If the profit from operations and the marginal tax rate are constant over time, the enterprise’s tax burden should also be constant. Exhibit 9.12 sums up the position of taxable profit, accounting profit, deferred tax and tax rates. As a result of this entry, deferred tax liability of `1,500 originates in Year 1. At the end of Year 1, the Deferred Tax Liability account would show a balance of `1,500, as shown below: When we record the income tax expense for Year 2, a further deferred tax liability of `1,500 originates. As a result of this entry, the balance in the Deferred Tax Liability account increases by `1,500 and, at the end of Year 2, the account would show a balance of `3,000. The Deferred Tax Liability account shows the effect of this entry: Other taxable temporary differences In practice, depreciation is often the most significant item of taxable temporary difference. Other examples include the following: (a) Interest revenue received in arrears and included in accounting profit on a time proportionate basis but included in taxable profit on a cash basis. (b) Revenue from sale of goods included in accounting profit when goods are delivered but included in taxable profit when cash is collected subsequent to delivery. (c) Development costs capitalized and amortized but deducted in determining taxable profit in the period in which they were incurred. (d) Prepaid expenses already deducted on a cash basis in determining the taxable profit of the current or previous periods. Taxable temporary differences, such as depreciation and the other examples above arise when income or expense is included in accounting profit in one period but included in taxable profit in a different period. Such temporary differences are often described as ‘timing differences’ and result from transactions that affect the statement of profit and loss. Taxable temporary differences may also result from other transactions. Revaluation of assets is an example. Tax authorities do not allow higher depreciation because of revaluation in the current period or in future periods. So the tax base of an asset is not increased by the difference between an asset’s fair value and carrying amount. But this difference represents future economic benefits from either using or disposing of the asset and these benefits are taxable. As a result, revaluation gives rise to a deferred tax liability. Initial recognition exemption There is no deferred tax accounting for a transaction that affects neither accounting profit nor taxable profit. Suppose that a business buys an asset costing `1,000 with an estimated useful life of five years and no residual value. The tax rate is 30 per cent. Assume that depreciation of the asset is not deductible for tax purposes and that on disposal any gain would not be taxable and any loss would not be deductible. The tax base (i.e. tax-deductible amount) of the asset is nil from its purchase to disposal. The taxable temporary difference is, and will be, `1,000. However, the deferred tax liability of `400 (30 per cent of `1,000) that results from only the initial recognition of the asset is never going to be settled. Deferred tax liability should not be recognized for this item initially or subsequently. The case of goodwill arising in a business combination is similar, because tax authorities do not allow reductions in the carrying amount of goodwill as a deductible expense in determining taxable profit.17 Deductible temporary differences and deferred tax assets Deductible temporary differences result in amounts that are deductible in determining taxable profit of future periods when the carrying amount of the asset or liability is recovered or settled. Accounting profit includes the effect of provisions for estimated liabilities and estimated losses in the value of assets. Tax authorities deal with them differently. Consider the following examples of deductible temporary differences. Estimated liabilities: Financial statements show estimated warranty provisions in order to match expenses with sales revenue. However, the tax authorities do not allow provisions for estimated expenses. They allow warranty expenses only on payment or when a definite liability exists. Estimated losses: Financial accounting recognizes estimated losses from bad debts. But the tax authorities allow only actual bad debt losses. Unrealized losses from investment are similar. Expenses allowed on payment: The income tax law allows deduction of certain expenses (such as central excise, customs duties, and sales tax) for computing taxable profit on payment. But the financial statements recognize these items on accrual. Income taxed on receipt: Sometimes a receipt can be taxed but recognized as income in accounting later. The right of an enterprise to claim these and other similar items in determining taxable profit in a future period (when the related liability is paid or the loss in the asset’s value is realized) would result in a lower taxable profit in that period. The difference is a temporary difference that represents a tax saving, a future economic benefit. It gives rise to a deferred tax asset: the amount of income tax recoverable in future periods in respect of deductible temporary differences. To illustrate, suppose that Simran Company has an accounting profit of `60,000 per year for three years. It recognizes a provision for doubtful debts of `12,000 in accounting in Year 1, but the actual loss is `9,000 in Year 2 and `3,000 in Year 3. The tax authorities allow only actual uncollectible amounts for determining taxable profit. Assume a tax rate of 30 per cent. Exhibit 9.13 presents the calculation of the company’s current tax expense. Year 1: The carrying amount of the provision for doubtful debts is `12,000 and its tax base is nil.18 The temporary difference is `12,000. Since the tax authorities will allow the actual bad debt loss in future periods, this is a deductible temporary difference (i.e. it will be deducted for determining future taxable profit). Since the related income tax is recoverable, the provision gives rise to a deferred tax asset of `3,600 (30 per cent of `12,000) that originates in Year 1. The following entry records the income tax expense consisting of current tax expense and deferred tax income (i.e. future tax benefit) and recognizes the deferred tax asset: As a result of this entry, deferred tax asset of `3,600 originates in Year 1. At the end of Year 1, the Deferred Tax Asset account has a balance of `3,600, as shown below: Year 2: In Year 2, the tax authorities allow a bad debt loss of `9,000. As a result, deferred tax asset reverses to the extent of `2,700 (30 per cent of `9,000). Simran Company records the following entry to recognize the income tax expense and the reversal: As a result of this entry, the balance in the Deferred Tax Asset account would be reduced by `2,700 and, at the end of Year 2, the account would show a balance of `900. The Deferred Tax Liability account below shows the effect of this entry: Year 3: In Year 3, the tax authorities allow the remaining bad debt loss of `3,000 and the balance of the deferred tax asset of `900 (30 per cent of `3,000) reverses. The following entry records the income tax expense and the reversal: We can now summarize the Deferred Tax Asset account: Accounting for deferred tax asset removes the difference between Simran Company’s marginal tax rate and effective tax rate. Exhibit 9.14 sums up the position of taxable profit, accounting profit, deferred tax and tax rates. Here again we note that defining income tax expense as consisting of both current and deferred tax measures the tax burden accurately. As a result of this entry, the income tax expense for 20X1 is reduced by `4,500. This reduction in income tax expense can be thought of as deferred tax income, i.e. a lower charge to income tax expense because of deferred tax asset. The following entry records the income tax expense, reversal of deferred tax asset and tax payable in 20X2: An enterprise recognizes deferred tax assets only when it is probable that taxable profits will be available against which the deductible temporary differences can be utilized. It is probable that taxable profit will be available when, and to the extent that, there are sufficient taxable temporary differences relating to the same tax authority and the same taxable entity which are expected to reverse (a) in the same period as the expected reversal of the deductible temporary difference or (b) in periods in which a tax loss arising from the deferred tax asset can be carried forward. In such circumstances, the deferred tax asset is recognized in the period in which the deductible temporary differences arise. Deferred tax assets can also arise from the carryforward unused tax losses and unused tax credits. We discuss these now. Unused tax loss carryforward The tax authorities allow current period tax losses to be carried forward to future periods and deducted from future taxable profits, subject to conditions. Tax loss carryforwards would represent future economic benefits, provided an enterprise can make profits in the future and claim the deduction from future taxable profits. In India, tax loss can be carried forward for eight years, after which it lapses. The tax depreciation component of tax loss (commonly known as unabsorbed depreciation in India) can be carried forward for an indefinite number of years. To illustrate, suppose that Maria Company has a tax loss of `30,000 in Year 1 and there are no taxable temporary differences. It is probable that sufficient taxable profit will be available in Year 2 against which the tax loss can be utilized. The tax rate is 30 per cent. The company records the following entry at the end of Year 1: The tax recoverable of `9,000 (30 per cent of `30,000) is an asset. Suppose that Maria Company’s taxable profit in Year 2 is `50,000, equal to its accounting profit. The following entry records the income tax expense for Year 2: Maria Company’s current tax expense is `15,000 (30 per cent of `50,000). To the extent of the deferred tax asset of `9,000 from past taxable loss, it does not have to pay tax. Therefore, the net tax payable is `6,000. The following entries record these transactions: Deferred tax asset arising from tax loss carryforward is similar to a receivable from the tax department and is realized by paying a lower tax in the future. Note that it does not reverse, unlike a deferred tax asset arising from taxable temporary differences, but is adjusted at the time of paying tax. Unused tax credit carryforward In India, the tax authorities allow the minimum alternative tax (MAT) paid in a year to be adjusted against normal tax payable within a specified number of future years. This is an example of tax credit forward. Unused tax credits would represent future economic benefits if an enterprise can make sufficient taxable profit in future periods and avail of the credits. To illustrate, suppose that in Year 1, Vaibhav Company has an accounting profit of `20,000 and has no taxable profit or taxable temporary differences. Assume that the MAT rate is 15 per cent, the normal tax rate is 30 per cent and the unused MAT credit carryforward period is 10 years. So it pays a MAT of `3,000 that can be adjusted against normal tax in future periods. The following entries record this transaction: Suppose that in Year 2 it has a taxable profit of `25,000, equal to the accounting profit. Its normal tax is `7,500. After adjusting the MAT credit of `3,000 from Year 1, it pays `4,500. The following entries record this transaction: Deferred tax asset arising from unused tax credit carryforward is similar to a receivable from the tax department and is realized by paying a lower tax in the future. Note that it does not reverse, unlike a deferred tax asset arising from taxable temporary differences, but is adjusted at the time of paying tax. The condition for recognizing deferred tax assets arising from the carryforward of unused tax losses and unused tax credits is the same as that for recognizing deferred tax assets arising from deductible temporary differences, i.e. it is probable that sufficient taxable profit will be available against which deductible temporary differences can be utilized. However, the existence of unused tax losses is strong evidence that future taxable profit may not be available. Therefore, when an enterprise has a history of recent tax losses, it recognizes a deferred tax asset from unused tax losses or unused tax credits only to the extent that the entity has sufficient taxable temporary differences or there is convincing other evidence that sufficient taxable profit will be available against which unused tax losses or unused tax credits can be utilized by the enterprise. In such circumstances, the amount of the deferred tax assets and the nature of the evidence should be disclosed. Some items that do not appear as assets or liabilities in the balance sheet, and hence have no carrying amount, could have a tax base. For example, research costs are expensed as incurred for determining accounting profit but may be allowed for tax purposes in one or more future periods. The tax base of the research costs and the related deductible temporary difference is the amount that will be allowed by the tax authorities. Off-balance Sheet Financing Off-balance sheet financing refers to the availing of a source of finance which is not legally required to be shown as a liability in the balance sheet of an enterprise. In other words, the financing is not apparent from the balance sheet. The motivations for off-balance sheet financing include: A possible increase in the borrowing capacity of the enterprise as the debtequity ratio is kept low; Better view of the liquidity position of the enterprise; and Improved return on assets. In a world characterized by intense competition for funds and better terms for raising capital, these motivations can be significant. As one business writer commented, “The basic drives of man are a few: to get enough food, to find shelter, and to keep debt off the balance sheet.” Conceptually, the issues concerned with off-balance sheet financing centre on the fundamental question of economic substance versus legal form. Conventionally, enterprises recognize only assets owned and liabilities owed in the balance sheet. The question is whether the balance sheet should list the enterprise’s legal assets and liabilities or show its economic resources and obligations. The answer is far from simple and that is why there is so much controversy among accountants over what to do about off-balance sheet financing. Accounting regulators have eliminated many forms of off-balance sheet financing, but some variations of these keep surfacing from time to time. We will now see some transactions with potential for off-balance sheet financing. Transfer of receivables with recourse As discussed in Chapter 5, a transfer of receivables with recourse in the form of pledging or assignment should be treated as a borrowing, and not as a sale, by the transferor. This is because the so-called ‘sale’ of receivables is nothing more than a financing transaction, the receivables merely serving as a collateral security for the borrowing. The difference between the proceeds and the receivables is an interest cost. It cannot derecognize the receivables. An entity shall derecognize a financial asset (such as a receivable) only when it transfers the asset i.e. it “transfers the contractual rights to receive the cash flows of the financial asset”.19 If an entity “retains substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership of the financial asset, the entity should continue to recognize the financial asset.”20 Product financing arrangement This is a transaction in which an enterprise (the sponsor) sells and agrees to repurchase inventory at a later date. The repurchase price equals the original sale price plus holding and financing costs. The substance of a product financing arrangement, regardless of its legal form, is that of a financing arrangement rather than a sale or purchase by the sponsor. As a result, the sponsor finances its inventory without reporting either the liability or the inventory. Product financing arrangements are often referred to as parking transactions because the seller simply “parks” the inventory on the balance sheet of another enterprise. To illustrate, assume that Kapil Company sells inventory costing `8,000 to Saif Company for `10,000 and agrees to repurchase the same inventory for `10,500 in 30 days. Kapil Company should enter the transaction as follows: The difference of `500 between the sale price and the purchase price is interest. Unconditional purchase obligation This results when one party is required to transfer funds to another party in return for future delivery of specified quantities of goods or services at specified prices. Conventionally, accounting principles do not require the recording of transactions in respect of which the performance of the parties to the contract is not completed. These are known as executory transactions. Exchanges are recorded when the transfer of resources or obligations occurs. However, if the existence of significant unfilled purchase commitments are not disclosed, the financial statements may be misleading. In a take-or-pay contract, a buyer agrees to pay specified periodic amount for certain products or services. The buyer must make the specified periodic payments, even though he does not take delivery of the products or services. In a throughput contract, one party agrees to pay specified periodic amounts to another party for the transportation or processing of a product. The periodic payments must be made, even though the minimum quantities specified in the agreement in each period have not been sent to the other party transporting or processing the product. The characteristic feature of the take-or-pay or throughput contracts is that the periodic payments are unconditional and are not dependent on the occurrence of a specified event or the fulfilment of a condition. So they are different from contingent liabilities. In India, companies must disclose the following as commitments: (a) estimated amount of contracts remaining to be executed on capital account and not provided for; (b) uncalled liability on shares and other investments partly paid; and (c) other commitments. Financial instruments There has been an explosion of different types of financial instruments in recent years. Derivative financial instruments, such as forward contracts, futures contracts, swaps and options are used extensively in risk management. Suppose that Indian Oil wants to protect itself against an increase in the price of crude oil in the international market. It can enter into a forward contract for purchase of crude at a specified price on a certain date. In this manner, the company can ensure that it will be able to buy oil at the contracted price even if the price goes up. A futures contract is a standardized forward contract traded in a market. Both forwards and futures are binding on both parties. In an interest rate swap, a party who wants to borrow at a fixed rate for protection but finds the borrowing too expensive swaps the interest payments with another borrower who has a fixed-rate loan but wants a floating rate. This is a convenient way to limit exposure to rising interest rates for a borrower with a substantial amount of variable debt. Further, companies with low credit ratings that cannot borrow in the fixed-rate market can swap into it. Of course, a risk-taker can swap a fixed-rate borrowing for a floating rate. Banks, insurance companies, and large manufacturing and trading firms have huge exposures under derivative contracts. An option is a right but not an obligation to buy or sell shares, commodities or other items. Unlike forwards and futures, an option is not binding on the holder. Looking Back Define liabilities Liabilities are present obligations for the future payment of assets or performance of services and are the result of past transactions or events. Liabilities are unavoidable regardless of en enterprise’s future actions. Describe current and non-current liabilities and secured and unsecured liabilities Current liabilities are typically expected to be settled in an enterprise’s normal operating cycle or within 12 months after the reporting period. Other liabilities are non-current. Secured liabilities are backed by the borrower’s identified assets. Unsecured liabilities are incurred based on the borrower’s general credit standing. Define and record definite and estimated liabilities Definite liabilities can be determined precisely. Estimated liabilities are of uncertain timing or amount. Explain how to report contingent liabilities A contingent liability depends on the outcome of an uncertain event. It should be recognized if it is probable and the related loss can be reasonably estimated. Describe the principal features of debentures Debentures may be: secured or unsecured, term or serial, convertible or non-convertible, callable or non-callable, coupon or zero-coupon. Record the issue of debentures and account for interest expense Debentures are recorded at their fair value obtained by discounting the principal and interest payments at the yield. Interest expense is calculated using the effective interest method. Account for debenture redemption and retirement Redemption is the payment of debentures at maturity. Retirement is early redemption. A gain or loss is recognized for the difference between the price paid for the debentures retired and their carrying amount. Account for compound financial instruments A compound financial instrument, such as a convertible debenture, is part equity and part debt. The basic requirement is to measure and recognize the liability and equity components separately. Explain the operation of a debenture redemption fund A debenture redemption fund is meant to ensure availability of sufficient cash to pay back the debentures. The fund consists of the deposits and interest earned on them. Account for mortgages, leases and employee benefits Mortgage payments are separated into interest and principal components. A lessee recognizes a finance lease as an asset and an obligation. Employee benefits such as long-term leave, pensions and post-employment health care are recognized as liabilities based on actuarial estimates. Account for current and deferred tax Accounting profit and taxable profit almost always differ. Current tax is expensed as incurred. The tax effect of taxable temporary differences is recognized as deferred tax liabilities and of deductible temporary differences as deferred tax assets. Unutilized MAT credit that meets certain conditions is treated as an asset. Explain off-balance sheet financing arrangements Off-balance sheet items do not appear as liabilities in the balance sheet but are disclosed. Accounting regulators are coming down heavily on many forms of offbalance sheet financing transactions. Review Problem On August 1, 20X5, Navin Company issued `500,000, 15%, 10-year debentures for `480,000. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31 in arrears. The company’s year end is March 31. The yield was 18 per cent. Prepare journal entries to record the following: 1. Issue of debentures on August 1, 20X5. 2. Payment of semi-annual interest on December 31, 20X5 and amortization of discount. 3. Accrual of interest on March 31, 20X6 and amortization of discount. Solution The issue proceeds are `431,519, calculated as follows: 37,500 9.1285 + 500,000 0.1784. We discount the cash flows at 9 per cent for 20 periods. ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. Distinguish between an obligation and a liability. 2. Why is it important to distinguish between current liabilities and long-term liabilities? 3. How does an estimated liability differ from a definite liability? Give three examples each of definite and estimated liabilities. 4. How should contingent liabilities be reported? 5. How are long-term liabilities different from current liabilities? 6. Why is the debenture trust deed important? 7. How does the call feature of a debenture help the issuer? 8. What are the common forms of providing security for a debt? 9. How is yield determined? 10. For a debenture issued at a discount, why does the interest expense increase over the life of the debenture? 11. How should debenture redemption premium be accounted for? 12. What is a compound financial instrument? Give two examples. 13. How does a debenture redemption fund protect the debentureholders’ interest? 14. Pensions are deferred wages. Do you agree? 15. Why is it necessary to accrue interest cost on pension liability? 16. Distinguish between accounting profit and taxable profit. 17. Explain tax base? 18. Can a temporary taxable difference or temporary deductible difference result from a transaction that does not affect the statement of profit and loss? Give an example. 19. Distinguish between unused tax loss carryforward and unused tax credit carryforward. 20. What is a product financing arrangement? 21. Are purchase obligations liabilities? Why or why not? 22. What are take-or-pay contracts and throughput contracts? 23. Are operating leases a source of off-balance sheet financing? Explain. Problem Set A On April 1, 20X1, Vani Company issues `1,000,000 of 10%, 15-year debentures. Interest is payable semi-annually on March 31 and September 30 in arrears. Compute the issue price of the debentures if the yield on April 1 equals (a) 18 per cent, (b) 10 per cent, or (c) 8 per cent. On January 1, 20X3, Easy Ways Company issued `300,000, 18%, 10-year debentures. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31 in arrears. The company’s financial year ends on December 31. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the issue if the proceeds were (a) `280,000, and (b) `310,000. 2. Prepare journal entries in 20X3 to record interest expense. On January 1, 20XX, Veer Company issued `500,000 of 15 per cent, 5-year, `1,000 debentures convertible into 30 equity shares of face value of `10 at par. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31 in arrears. On June 30, 20XX, after paying interest and amortizing discount, unamortized discount was `20,000. On that date, `200,000 of the debentures were converted. Required Prepare the journal entry to record the conversion of the debentures. On February 1, 20X5, Vivian Company issued `100,000 of 18 per cent, 10-year debentures for `88,000. Interest is payable on January 31 and July 31. The company’s financial yearend is March 31. Required Prepare journal entries to record accrual of interest and amortization of discount on March 31, 20X5 and payment of interest and amortization of discount on August 1, 20X5. On January 1, 20X7, Kamal Company issued `200,000 of 12 per cent, 20-year debentures. The debenture trust deed requires the company to create a sinking fund and invest the assets in investment grade securities that yield an annual return of 10 per cent. Investments and interest receipts will take place on December 31. Required Prepare journal entries to record payment of the deposit on December 31, 20X7 and receipt of the earnings from the deposit on December 31, 20X8. On January 1, 20X1, Jeet Company took furniture on lease for 18 months. The lease rental is `10,000 per month in the first year and `4,000 per month in the second year. All payments are made at the end of quarter, beginning March 31, 20X1. The furniture had an estimated useful life of five years. Required Prepare journal entries to record payment of the lease rental expense. Ritu Company reported an accounting profit of `50,000 and tax loss of `20,000 for the year ended March 31, 20XX. The tax rate is 35 per cent and the minimum alternative tax rate is 10 per cent. Required Prepare the journal entry to record the income tax expense for the year. Problem Set B Lucky Traders had the following bills payable transactions: Mar. 11 Purchased merchandise from Khan Company on a 90-day, 18 per cent bill for `20,000. Apr. 24 Borrowed from Vijaya Bank on a 60-day, 16 per cent bill for `30,000. May 4 Purchased merchandise on account from Khan Company, `8,000. June 9 Paid the 90-day bill payable to Khan Company. 10 Issued a 90-day, 18 per cent bill in settlement of the amount due to Khan Company. June 23 Paid Vijaya Bank. Sep. 8 Paid Khan Company. 17 Purchased merchandise from Khan Company on a 90-day bill for `10,400. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. 2. Prepare the adjusting entry on May 31, the company’s year-end, to record the accrued interest payable on the two bills. Siraj Company sells geysers under a warranty contract that requires the company to replace defective parts free of charge, but the customer must pay the labour charges. In the past, 5 per cent of the sales required warranty replacement costing `150 per piece. During March, the company sold 700 pieces at an average price of `4,300. During the month, the company received 60 pieces under the warranty and these were returned after repairs costing `7,430. The company collected labour charges of `600. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record (a) the cost of warranty repairs completed during the month, assuming that the company follows the cash system of accounting for warranty; and (b) receipt of service revenue. 2. Prepare journal entries to record (a) the cost of warranty repairs completed during the month; (b) the estimated liability for warranty for sales during the month, assuming that the company follows the accrual system of accounting for warranty; and (c) receipt of service revenue. 3. Assume that the company follows the accrual system and at the beginning of the month, the estimated warranty liability account had a credit balance of `71,230. Compute the balance of the account at the end of the month. How would it appear on the balance sheet on March 31? 4. Describe the circumstances in which the cash system of accounting for warranty can be followed. On July 1, 20X0, Arjun Company issued `300,000 of 12 per cent, 8-year secured debentures at `246,895. The debentures yield 16 per cent. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31 in arrears. The debentures are due for redemption on July 31, 20X8. The company’s year-end is December 31. Required 1. Prepare a discount amortization schedule. 2. Prepare journal entries to record the following: (a) issue of debentures; (b) interest expense on December 31, 20X0; (c) interest expense on June 30, 20X1; and (c) redemption of debentures. On August 1, 20X0, De Silva Company issued `200,000 of 16 per cent, 9-year debentures for `182,490, callable at market price on or after July 31, 20X7. The market rate of interest was 18 per cent per annum. The debenture trust deed requires the company to deposit `14,728 with the trustee at the end of every reporting period during the life of the debentures. The company’s year end is July 31. Interest is paid on January 31 and July 31. The sinking fund investments are expected to earn a return of 10 per cent per year. All deposits were made and the amounts were invested as stipulated in the trust deed. After payment of interest on July 31, 20X8, the company called the debentures at the market price of 95.6, sold the investments for `165,110, and paid the debentureholders. Required 1. Prepare a schedule showing accumulation of sinking fund investments up to July 31, 20X8. 2. Prepare a debenture discount amortization schedule up to July 31, 20X8. 3. Prepare journal entries to record the following transactions: (a) issue of debentures; (b) sinking fund investment on July 31, 20X1; (c) sale of sinking fund investments; and (d) retirement of debentures. On August 15, 20X1, the board of directors of Mahendra Company approved the issue of `150,000 of 10 per cent, 10-year convertible debentures and of `100,000 of 16 per cent, 8year callable debentures. Each 10 per cent debenture of `100 is convertible into six shares of `10 face value. The company’s year end is March 31. The company completed the following transactions pertaining to the debentures: Required Prepare journal entries to record the debenture transactions. Part I An equipment lease agreement has the following features: (a) The term of the lease is four years and the lease agreement is non-cancellable. The equipment reverts to the lessor at the end of the period. (b) Lease rental of `28,679 must be paid at the beginning of each year. The first rental is payable on signing the agreement. (c) The equipment has a fair value of `100,000 at the inception of the lease, an estimated useful life of eight years, and no residual value. (d) The lessor’s incremental borrowing rate is 12 per cent. (e) The lessor is known to charge an interest rate of 10 per cent on the lease. (f) The lessee uses the straight-line method for depreciation of similar equipment. Part II Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (a) a fair value of `106,830 and (b) an unguaranteed residual value of `10,000. Part III Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (a) a fair value of `103,415 and (b) a residual value of `5,000, guaranteed by the lessee. Part IV Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (a) a fair value of `103,415 and (b) a residual value of `5,000, guaranteed by an independent third party financially capable meeting the obligation. Part V Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (a) a fair value of `113,660 and (b) an unguaranteed residual value of `20,000. Part VI Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (a) a fair value of `113,660, (b) an unguaranteed residual value of `20,000, and (c) a useful life of five years. Required Answer the following questions separately for each Part. 1. What are the minimum lease payments from the standpoint of (a) the lessee? (b) the lessor? 2. Is this a finance lease? Why or why not? 3. What is the interest rate implicit in the lease? 4. How should the lessee record the lease? Additional information: (a) Other current liabilities include (i) unearned revenue, `1,000, (ii) sales tax payable, `400, and (iii) fine payable, `100. Items (i) and (ii) are taxed or deducted on the cash basis; item (c) is not tax-deductible. (b) Tax depreciation on equipment is `3,000. (c) Other expenses include (i) estimated bad debt expense, `500 and (ii) fine, `150. Item (i) is not taxdeductible, but a write-off of `50 will be allowed. Item (ii) is not tax-deductible. (d) Short-term loans and advances include advance tax, `1,500. (e) Income tax rate is 30 per cent; MAT rate is 10 per cent. Required 1. Calculate the company’s (a) current tax expense, (b) temporary differences, and (c) deferred tax assets and liabilities, if any. 2. Prepare the journal entry to record the income tax expense for 20XX. Problem Set C Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. 2. Prepare the adjusting entry on September 30, the company’s year-end, to record the accrued interest payable on the bills. Jaya Company sells toasters under a warranty contract that requires the company to replace defective parts free of charge, but the customer must pay the labour charges. In the past, 3 per cent of the sales required replacement under warranty, costing `200 per piece. During July, the company sold 1,200 pieces at an average price of `6,000. During the month, the company received 20 pieces under warranty and these were returned after repairs costing `3,190. The company collected labour charges of `400 from customers under the terms of the warranty. Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record (a) the cost of warranty system repairs completed during the month, assuming that the company follows the cash system of accounting for warranty; and (b) receipt of service revenue. 2. Prepare journal entries to record (a) the cost of warranty repairs completed during the month; (b) the estimated liability for warranty for sales during the month, assuming that the company follows the accrual system of accounting for warranty; and (c) receipt of service revenue. 3. Assume that the company follows the accrual method and at the beginning of the month, the estimated warranty liability account had a credit balance of `47,160. Compute the balance of the account at the end of the month. How would it appear on the balance sheet on July 31? 4. Describe the circumstances in which the cash system of accounting for warranty can be followed. On January 1, 20X4, Arjun Company issued `500,000 of 16 per cent, 5-year secured debentures at `438,534. The debentures yield 20 per cent. Interest is payable on June 30 and December 31. The debentures are due for redemption on January 1, 20X9. The company’s year-end is December 31. Required 1. Prepare a debenture discount amortization schedule. 2. Prepare journal entries to record the following: (a) issue of the debentures on January 1, 20X4, (b) payment of interest and amortization of the discount on July 1, 20X4; (c) payment of the interest and amortization of the discount on January 1, 20X5; and (d) redemption of debentures on January 1, 20X9. 3. What would have been the balance in the discount on debentures payable account on December 31, 20X6 if the company had followed the straight-line method amortization? Assume that the interest payment due on January 1, 20X7 is accrued on December 31, 20X6. On January 1, 20X2, Christina Company issued `500,000 of 14 per cent, 7-year debentures for `458,797, callable at market price on or after December 31, 20X7. The market rate of interest was 16 per cent per annum. The debenture trust deed requires the company to deposit `49,559 with the trustee at the end of every reporting period during the life of the debentures. The company’s fiscal year ends on December 31. Interest is paid on June 30 and December 31. The sinking fund investments are expected to earn a return of 12 per cent per year. All deposits were made and the amounts were invested as stipulated in the trust deed. On December 31, 20X7, the company called the debentures at the market price of 96.4, sold the investments for `404,310, and paid the debentureholders. Required 1. Prepare a schedule showing accumulation of sinking fund investments up to December 31, 20X7. 2. Prepare a debenture discount amortization schedule up to December 31, 20X7. 3. Prepare journal entries to record the following transactions: (a) issue of debentures; (b) sinking fund investment on December 31, 20X2; (c) sale of sinking fund investments; and (d) retirement of debentures. On March 22, 20X4, the board of directors of Ranatunga Company approved the issue of `200,000 of 12 per cent, 15-year convertible debentures and of `300,000 of 18 per cent, 10year callable debentures. Each 12 per cent debenture of `100 is convertible into four shares of `10 face value. The company’s financial year-end is November 30. The company completed the following transactions pertaining to the debentures: Required Prepare journal entries to record the debenture transactions. Part I An equipment lease agreement has the following features: (a) The term of the lease is six years and the lease agreement is non-cancellable. The equipment reverts to the lessor at the end of the period. (b) Lease rental of `30,044 must be paid at the beginning of each year. The first rental is payable on signing the agreement. (c) The equipment has a fair value of `150,000 at the inception of the lease, an estimated useful life of ten years, and no residual value. (d) The lessor’s incremental borrowing rate is 9 per cent. (e) The lessor is known to charge an interest rate of 8 per cent on the lease. (F) The lessee uses the straight-line method for depreciation of similar equipment. Part II Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (i) a fair value of `159,453 and (ii) an unguaranteed residual value of `15,000. Part III Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (i) a fair value of `155,042 and (ii) a residual value of `8,000, guaranteed by the lessee. Part IV Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (i) a fair value of `155,042 and (ii) a residual value of `8,000, guaranteed by an independent third party financially capable of meeting the obligation. Part V Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (i) a fair value of `168,906 and (ii) an unguaranteed residual value of `30,000. Part VI Same facts as in Part I, except that the equipment has (i) a fair value of `170,166, (ii) an unguaranteed residual value of `32,000, and (iii) a useful life of eight years. Required Answer the following questions separately for each Part. 1. What are the minimum lease payments from the standpoint of (i) the lessee? (ii) the lessor? 2. Is this a finance lease? Why or why not? 3. What is the interest rate implicit in the lease? 4. How should the lessee record the lease? Additional information: (a) Other current liabilities include (i) interest received in advance, `120, (ii) employer’s provident fund contribution payable, `160, and (iii) donation payable, `140. Items (i) and (ii) are taxed or deducted on the cash basis; item (iii) is not tax-deductible. (b) Tax depreciation on equipment, `1,000. (c) Other income include interest on tax-free bonds, `100. (d) Other expenses include (i) estimated bad debt expense, `300 and (ii) donation, `180. Item (i) is not taxdeductible, but a write-off of `40 will be allowed. Item (ii) is not tax-deductible. (e) Short-term loans and advances include (i) interest receivable on tax-free bonds, `40 and (ii) advance tax, `350. (f) Income tax rate is 30 per cent; MAT rate is 10 per cent. Required 1. Calculate the company’s (a) current tax expense, (b) temporary differences, and (c) deferred tax assets and liabilities, if any. 2. Prepare the journal entry to record the income tax expense for 20XX. Business Decision Cases Chandra Rubber Company manufactures a range of rubber products having industrial as well as domestic applications. The company’s corporate head office is in Kochi. A significant part of the revenues is earned from exports to the United States and to several countries in Europe. On May 15, 20X6, Suresh Nair, chief financial officer of the company, was reviewing the company’s financial statements for the year ended March 31, 20X6. In the course of his review, he noticed the following items: 1. The company has received a notice from Rai & Co., lawyers, claiming damages of `250,000 under the Consumer Protection Act. The notice stated that a seven-year old child in Mumbai was injured while riding a toy car made from rubber produced by the company. This is the first time Chandra Rubber has received a product liability claim. The company has decided to accept the claim to avoid adverse publicity, although its legal advisers feel that the amount of damages can be reduced to about `150,000 in a legal proceeding. 2. The assessment order for the year ended March 31, 20X4 issued by the Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax disallowed expenses of `180,000 incurred by the company for the visit of the managing director to Switzerland in November 20X3 on the ground that “it was not incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes”. As a result, the company is required to pay income tax of `72,000 and penalty of `36,000. The company’s accountants advised the company to appeal the assessment order to the Commissioner of Income Tax and were reasonably certain that the Commissioner would allow half of the travel and completely waive the penalty since there was no intention to avoid payment of tax. Accordingly, the company has filed an appeal to the Commissioner of Income Tax. If the company were to lose the appeal, it can go on further appeal to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and, if necessary, to the High Court. Similarly, the Income Tax Department can go on appeal to these authorities, should it lose the appeal. 3. Walt Disney Company has sued the company in a Delhi court claiming exemplary damages of `10 million for infringement of its intellectual property rights since the characters portrayed in the company’s recent promotion campaign closely resembled Aladdin, a Walt Disney copyright. The company’s legal advisers expect the case to be settled at an amount ranging from `100,000 to `500,000 and estimate the probable amount at `200,000. The company does not want to publicize the case since it could lead to sanctions against the company in the United States, a major destination for its exports. 4. A past employee of the company has filed an appeal in the Calcutta High Court against the company for wrongful dismissal and has claimed back wages of `40,000 and damages of `100,000. The company’s legal department believes that it has an iron-clad case since the employee was caught redhanded while removing the company’s materials outside the factory. The company won the case in the labour court in October 20X4 and again in the district court in January 20X6. 5. The residents of a village near the company’s main plant in Howrah have written to the West Bengal State Pollution Control Board demanding closure of the plant alleging air and water pollution. The company feels that the case is not sustainable since it complies with relevant pollution control standards and the effluents are treated as required by law. However, the company may have to close down operations in the plant if the Board determines that there has been a violation by the company; alternatively, the company can continue operations after installing pollution control equipment costing `150 million. Either way, the company will face significant financial problems. The Board is under enormous pressure from environmental activists to close down the plant. On May 10, 20X6, the Board has informed the company that it was deputing a team of officers for an onthe-spot study in the next two weeks. At the moment, there is no clue as to which way the matter will go. Information from several sources indicates that the Pollution Control Boards in many States have taken a fairly stringent view of similar cases on orders from the Supreme Court. Required 1. How should the chief financial officer report each of the above items in the company’s financial statements for the year ended March 31, 20X6? Explain. 2. The chief executive of the company is apprehensive about the negative effect of reporting items 1, 2, 3 and 5 on the company’s stock prices. He asks the chief financial officer to come up with a solution without violating the law or any accounting principle. What considerations, accounting and ethical, are involved? The finance manager of Softscape Corporation is considering two alternatives for financing the company’s proposed acquisition of computers costing `1,000,000. The equipment has an estimated useful life of three years at the end of which it is expected to have a residual value of `100,000. The company can borrow at 20 per cent per annum from its bank and pay for the acquisition. The loan is repayable in six equal semi-annual instalments that include principal and interest. Expro Finance, a leasing company, has given a proposal for leasing the equipment at a semi-annual lease rental of `229,605 over the lease period. In the latter case, the equipment reverts to the lessor at the end of the lease period. Loan instalments and lease rentals are paid at the end of each semi-annual period. It follows the straight-line method of depreciation. Required 1. Compute the amount of expense that must be recognized in each of the three years under the borrowing and leasing alternatives, assuming (a) capitalization and (b) no capitalization. 2. Prepare the journal entry to record the lease at the time of inception of the contract. 3. Evaluate the leasing and borrowing alternatives. 4. The marketing manager of Expro Finance informed Softscape that the proposed lease would be “off-balance sheet”. What does it mean? In your view, should Softscape capitalize the lease? Interpreting Financial Reports Essar Oil Limited is one of the largest oil refining companies in India. The company opted to defer payment of sales tax collected by it for sales from its refinery on the basis of a scheme of the Government of Gujarat. This meant that the company could retain the sales tax collected for some years before remitting it to the government. Sales tax is normally payable in the month following the month in which it is collected. The deferred sales tax liability was effectively an interest-free loan that was intended to encourage companies to set up business in Gujarat. However, the refinery could not start operations by August 15, 2003, the specified time-limit for availing of the deferral benefit, because of a cyclonic storm in 1998 and a High Court stay in 1999. As a result, the company would not be eligible for sales tax deferral. In January 2004, the Supreme Court lifted the stay and the company could resume work on the project. The company requested the government to extend the time-limit, but the government did not grant extension. In response to the company’s petition, on April 22, 2008 the High Court directed the government to consider the company’s application for deferral. From May 1, 2008, the company started deferring sales tax payment. On July 14, 2008, the government challenged the High Court’s order in the Supreme Court. On January 17, 2012, the Supreme Court set aside the High Court’s order. Since May 1, 2008, the company transferred its liability to pay deferred sales tax to a related party at its present value. As a result, the company did not show any deferred sales tax liability and recognize the difference between the deferred sales tax payable and its present value as a gain in its statement of profit and loss for each year. The following table gives these amounts: Required 1. What were the possible managerial considerations for removing the deferred sales tax liability from Essar Oil’s financial statements? 2. What are the accounting requirements for derecognizing a liability? Did Essar Oil meet those requirements? 3. Comment on the quality of the disclosures in Essar Oil’s financial statements on the accounting for removal of the liability. Kingfisher Airlines Ltd. was one of the largest aviation companies in India. The company’s jaunty slogan “Welcome to a world without passengers” was meant to say that the passenger is “made to feel like a guest and not just a passenger”. Unfortunately for the company, the slogan soon acquired its literal meaning. The company’s financial statements for the year ended March 31, 2012 contained the following information on deferred taxes: Note 39: Deferred tax asset on unabsorbed depreciation and business losses has been recognized on the basis of business plan prepared by the management which takes into account certain future receivables arising out of contractual obligations. The management is of the opinion that there is virtual certainty supported by convincing evidence that sufficient future taxable income will be available against which the deferred tax asset can be realized. The auditors’ report (paragraph 10) contained the following observation (italics in original): Attention of the members is invited to note 39 regarding recognition of deferred tax credit on account of unabsorbed losses and allowances during the year aggregating to `11,181 million (year ended March 31, 2011 `4,934 million) (Total amount recognized up to March 31, 2012 `40,458 million). This does not satisfy the virtual certainty test for recognition of deferred tax credit as laid down in AS 22. A note to the company’s financial statements for the year ended March 31, 2013 stated: Note 39: Deferred tax credit earlier recognized up to March 31, 2012 aggregating to `40,459 lacs has been derecognized during the year by debit to surplus account (reserves and surplus) in the balance sheet. Required 1. Do you agree with the company’s position on deferred taxes? Explain. 2. Identify possible management motives for the position adopted and examine to what extent they might apply in this case. 21 On January 29, 2008, Lehman Brothers reported record revenues of nearly $60 billion and record earnings in excess of $4 billion for fiscal year ending November 30, 2007. During January 2008, Lehman’s stock traded as high as $65.73 per share and averaged in the high to mid-fifties, implying a market capitalization of over $30 billion. Less than eight months later, on September 12, 2008, Lehman’s stock closed under $4. On September 15, 2008, Lehman filed for bankruptcy, the largest ever. The examiner’s report referred to “balance sheet manipulation” by Lehman executives. Lehman employed off-balance sheet devices, known as “Repo 105” and “Repo 108” transactions, to temporarily remove securities inventory from its balance sheet, usually for a period of seven to ten days, and to create a materially misleading picture of the firm’s condition in late 2007 and 2008. Repo 105 transactions utilized fixed income securities and required a minimum of $105 worth of securities in exchange for $100 cash borrowed; Repo 108 transactions utilized fixed income securities and required a minimum of $108 worth of securities in exchange for $100 cash borrowed. Repo 105 (we use this term to refer to both Repo 105 and Repo 108) transactions were nearly identical to standard repurchase and resale (“repo”) transactions that Lehman and other investment banks used to secure short-term financing with a critical difference: Lehman accounted for Repo 105 transactions as sales. Lehman regularly increased its use of Repo 105 transactions in the days prior to reporting periods to reduce its publicly reported net leverage. It did not disclose the cash borrowing from the Repo 105 transactions. It used the cash from Repo 105 transactions to pay other liabilities, thereby reducing both the total liabilities and the total assets reported on its balance sheet and lowering its leverage ratios. Required 1. How is a standard repo transaction accounted? How is Repo 105 transaction accounted? Why does the accounting differ? 2. According to the examiner’s report, “Lehman’s auditors, Ernst & Young, were aware of but did not question Lehman’s use and nondisclosure of the Repo 105 accounting transactions.” Do you agree with the auditors’ position? 3. What safeguards would be useful in dealing with practices, such as Repo 105? Barclays PLC is a large UK-based bank with operations in many countries. Excerpts from its results for the year 2008 follow: Performance Highlights In a very difficult economic environment in 2008, Barclays has steered a course that has enabled us to be solidly profitable despite strong headwinds. We are well positioned to maintain Barclays’ competitive strengths through the undoubted challenges that will come in 2009 and beyond. —Marcus Agius, Chairman We thank our customers and clients for the business they directed to Barclays in 2008. High levels of activity on their behalf have enabled us to report substantial profit generation in difficult conditions. We benefited from a number of gains on acquisitions and disposals. These contributed to headline profit, and to capital, but the main driver of our results was a solid operating profit performance and record income generation. We commit to reducing the size of our balance sheet over time, and we will maintain our capital ratios at levels that are well ahead of regulatory requirements. We intend to recommence dividend payments during the second half of 2009. —John Varley, Chief Executive Group profit before tax was £6,077m, down 14% on 2007. Profit included: — Gains on acquisitions of £2,406m, including £2,262m relating to Lehman Brothers North American business — Profit on disposal of the closed life assurance book of £326m — Gains on Visa IPO and sales of shares in MasterCard of £291m — Gross credit market losses and impairment of £8,053m — Gains on own credit of £1,663m Group Performance Barclays delivered profit before tax of £6,077m in 2008, a decline of 14% on 2007. The results included the following significant items: Gains on acquisition of £2,406m, including £2,262m gain on acquisition of Lehman Brothers North American business Profit on disposal of Barclays Closed UK Life assurance business of £326m Gains on Visa IPO and sales of shares in MasterCard of £291m, distributed widely across the Group Gross credit market losses and impairment of £8,053m, or £4,957m net of related income and hedges of £1,433m and gains on own credit of £1,663m. Required 1. 2. Was Barclays “solidly profitable”? Why or why not? What does the item “Gains on own credit” mean? Do you think it should be included in profit? Why or why not? 3. One commentator said: “That is insane. These ‘profits’ do not exist.” Do you agree? Financial Analysis Study the disclosures of post-employment benefits, such as pensions and health care, appearing in the financial statements of a sample of companies. You will find them in schedules, statement of accounting policies, and notes. Required 1. Prepare a comparative summary of the assumptions on discount rates, expected return on plan assets and salary increase. Why do these assumptions differ for your sample companies? 2. Prepare a sensitivity analysis of changes in these assumptions. What do you learn from this analysis? 3. Explain how this study is useful in analyzing and interpreting financial statements. Study the income tax expense (current and deferred) in the statement of profit and loss and the items appearing in the schedule of deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities in the balance sheet of a sample of companies. Required 1. Prepare a list of items for which companies recognize deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities. Explain why each of the items in your list qualifies for deferred tax accounting. 2. Analyze the composition of income tax expense in the statement of profit and loss. Calculate current tax, deferred tax liability, and deferred tax asset for each of the items. 3. Explain how this study is useful in analyzing and interpreting financial statements. Answers to Test Your Understanding 9.3 We allocate the issue costs between the liability and the equity components in proportion to the allocation of the proceeds. The net proceeds will be as follows: 9.4 9.5 9.6 1. `3,000; 2. Nil; 3. `30,000; 4. `9,000; 5. `700. 9.7 9.8 9.9 1. Carrying amount, `8,000; Tax base, `7,000; Taxable temporary difference, `1,000; Deferred tax liability, `300. 2. Carrying amount, `100; Tax base, nil; Taxable temporary difference, `100; Deferred tax liability, `30. 3. Carrying amount, `2,000; Tax base, `2,000; Temporary difference, nil. 4. Carrying amount, `300; Tax base, `300; Taxable temporary difference, nil; 5. Carrying amount, `500; Tax base, `500; Temporary difference, nil. 6. Carrying amount, `20,000; Tax base, nil; Deductible temporary difference, `20,000; Deferred tax asset, `6,000. 7. Carrying amount, `200; Tax base, nil; Deductible temporary difference, `200; Deferred tax asset, `60. 8. Carrying amount, `4,000; Tax base, `4,000; Temporary difference, nil. 9. Carrying amount, `600; Tax base, `600; Deductible temporary difference, nil. 10. Carrying amount, `1,000; Tax base, `1,000; Temporary difference, nil. 9.10 1 IAS 37:10/Ind AS 37:10/AS 29:10.2. 2 IAS 1.69/Ind AS 1:69 and Schedule III to the Companies Act 2013. 3 IAS 37:10/Ind AS 37:10. 4 A waggish definition of warranty period: the period soon after which a product is certain to fail. 5 IAS 37:10/Ind AS 37:10/AS 29:10.4. 6 IAS 32:28/Ind AS 32:28. 7 IAS 32:AG32/Ind AS 32:AG 32. 8 The Companies Act 2013/Companies Act 1956 requires transfer of an amount equal to the amount of deposit from Retained Earnings to Debenture Redemption Reserve. At the time of repayment of the debentures, the balance in Debenture Redemption Reserve is transferred back to Retained Earnings. 9 IAS 17:4/Ind AS 17:4/AS 19:3.1.1. 10 IAS 17:4/Ind AS 17:4/AS 19:3.2. 11 IASB Exposure Draft Leases May 2013 12 IAS 19:7/Ind AS 19:7/AS 16:7.1. 13 Assurance of a minimum interest rate on the balance in the provident fund account could make it a defined benefit plan. 14 It is also known as taxable income (tax loss). For convenience, we will use taxable profit. 15 IAS 12:5/Ind AS 12:5. 16 IAS 12:5/Ind AS 12:5. 17 In India, taxation is based on standalone financial statements. 18 This is a contra asset and is treated similar to Case D (any other liability) in Exhibit 9.7. 19 IAS 39:18(a)/Ind AS 39:18(a)/AS 30:17(a). 20 IAS 39:20(b)/Ind AS 39:20(b)/AS 30:19(b). 21 This case is based on newspaper reports and draws substantially on the report of Anton R. Valukas, Examiner. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. Describe the features of a corporate organization. Explain the components of capital stock. Record issue of share capital. Describe the features of preference shares. Describe the different kinds of reserves. Explain buy-back of shares and treasury operations and how to account for them. Account for issue of bonus shares. Account for payment of dividends. Explain the need for share-based payment and account for it. Explain the statement of changes in equity. Compute earnings per share. AFFLUENT PROMOTERS AND SICK COMPANIES Can a company promoter be affluent while his company is sick? When a company is performing badly, sometimes the person who controls the company is seen flaunting his wealth and living an opulent life. The shareholders are not getting any dividends, the stock price is plummeting, the company is not paying back its depositors, and the banks have to write off their loans or take significant “haircuts”. Understandably, the company’s shareholders, depositors, and bankers resent the promoter’s uncaring conduct in such circumstances. Legally, they can do nothing about it, because the company is a separate legal entity and its shareholders have limited liability: the idea that the shareholders are not bound to pay for the company’s debts beyond their agreed contribution. Limited liability applies to its company’s promoters as much as to its other shareholders. However, limited liability cannot be a legal defence in cases of fraud, tax evasion, misuse of company resources, and criminal activities. Further, the promoter will be personally liable if he has given personal guarantees for loans taken by the company. Of course, there could be a moral argument for the promoter to suffer, despite limited liability, when his company is not doing well. While the debate is on, the promoter is probably busy watching IPL matches and attending parties. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL In this chapter, you will learn about shareholders’ equity – the item that represents the interests of a company’s shareholders. Shareholders’ equity equals the excess of a company’s assets over its liabilities and consists of share capital and reserves. You will see the various types of share capital and reserves. You will learn how to account for issue and buy-back of share capital and for issue of bonus shares. You will be able to compute earnings per share, an important summary measure of a company’s financial performance for investors. You will also learn about accounting for stock options, an important mechanism for motivating and rewarding employees. The Corporate Organization A corporation is an artificial legal person and is created by a charter. It comprises many members. The word ‘corporation’ is derived from the Latin word corpus, meaning ‘body’. It refers to a body of people that acts on behalf of all them. Corporations, in the sense of shareholders forming a private business enterprise for profit, existed in the Mauryan empire in ancient India.1 Corporations come into existence in different ways: 1. A chartered corporation is constituted by a royal charter issued by a king or queen. Example: The British East India Company was chartered by Queen Elizabeth I of England in 1600. 2. A statutory corporation is established by an Act of Parliament or a state legislature. Example: The Reserve Bank of India was set up under the Reserve Bank of India Act 1934. 3. A company is a typical corporate business organization. In India companies are registered under the Companies Act 2013 or the earlier Companies Acts. Examples: Tata Motors Limited, Wipro Limited, and Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited. The Companies Act is a comprehensive code covering formation, management, and liquidation of companies. A company is registered by filing the memorandum of association and the articles of association with the Registrar of Companies. You may revisit Exhibit 1.2 for a comparison of the common forms of business organization. We will now see the key features of a corporate organization. Separate legal existence A company is a separate legal entity distinct from its members. It has most of the rights and obligations of a natural person. It can buy, sell or own assets, borrow money, and employ people; it is liable to pay taxes; it can even be declared bankrupt. Since a company has a distinct legal entity, it can have several contractual relationships with its members. For example, a company’s shareholder can also be its employee, customer, supplier or lender. Companies do not have certain rights that only natural persons can have; for example, they cannot vote at, or contest, elections. Limited liability of shareholders Since a company is a separate legal entity, it is obliged to pay its debts from its assets. The liability of the members is limited to the amount they have agreed to invest in the company, less any amount already invested by them. If the shareholders have paid the entire amount agreed to by them, they cannot be asked to make good any shortfall in the company’s assets. In contrast, a proprietor’s or the partners’ personal assets (such as home, vehicle, and jewellery) can be taken to pay off the creditors of the business. Limited liability enables individuals to participate in risky ventures by limiting their risk to predetermined amounts. Free transferability of ownership rights The ownership rights of a company, called shares, can be freely transferred by one shareholder to another. Transfer of shares does not affect the company’s business operations. Free transferability of shares, coupled with the existence of an active stock market, enables individuals and financial institutions to buy and sell the shares at will and makes it easy for the company to raise capital. Private companies restrict share transfers. Perpetual existence A company continues to exist until it is dissolved by a legal process. The death or incapacity of any or even all of its members does not affect the continued existence of the company. Common seal A company’s actions are authenticated by affixing its common seal to a document. It is made of metal and embossed on important documents, such as share certificates and contracts. Professional management A company’s shareholders elect a board of directors, but do not take part in its day-to-day activities. The board appoints a chief executive and other officers to manage the business. The separation of ownership from management enables the company to entrust the business to individuals who have the necessary qualifications and experience. Government regulation The privilege of limited liability has its costs. Companies are subject to detailed regulation by the government and regulatory agencies. They must file the financial statements and numerous reports and documents. A company may be a public company or a private company. A public company is one in which anyone may hold shares. There must be at least seven members to incorporate a public company, but there is no upper limit on the number. A public company must have at least three directors. It can raise capital from the public. A listed company is a public company whose shares are listed with a stock exchange where the shares may be bought and sold. The National Stock Exchange (NSE) and the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) are the most important stock exchanges in India. A private company needs at least two members and it cannot have more than 200 members. A member of a private company can transfer his shares subject to the company’s restrictions. A private company cannot invite capital from the public. A private company must have at least two directors. The Companies Act 2013 has introduced one-person company, a private company with limited liability formed by a single individual. Share Capital The shareholders’ equity of a company consists of two parts: Share capital Reserves and surplus. In this section, you will learn about share capital. Share capital represents the initial as well as later issues of capital by a company. Exhibit 10.1 illustrates the presentation of share capital using the 2013 annual report of Tata Steel Limited. We will now consider some of the terms related to share capital. Capital stock The capital stock of a company is divided into a number of units, called shares of stock or, simply, shares. Each share has a distinctive number. The ownership of shares in a company is evidenced by a share certificate that indicates the kind and number of shares as well as their distinctive serial numbers. The share certificate is signed by the company secretary and bears the company’s common seal. Initially, the certificate is sent to the individual who applied for the shares. When a shareholder transfers shares, she must complete a share transfer form and send along with it the share certificate to the company for recording the change in share ownership. Large companies which may have thousands of shareholders appoint registrars and transfer agents to handle the numerous ownership changes in their shares. Many companies keep their shares in electronic form, known as dematerialized or demat shares, to avoid the paperwork associated with share transfers. A company may be authorized to issue either only equity share capital or both equity share capital and preference share capital. Equity share capital represents the residual equity in the company since equity shareholders can be paid only after all other claims have been paid. As the real owners of the company, equity shareholders appoint the company’s directors and declare dividends. Preference shareholders enjoy certain privileges over equity shareholders. You may have noticed that Tata Steel has issued only equity shares (also known as ordinary shares). Authorized capital The Memorandum of Association specifies the maximum number of shares of stock that may be issued by a company and the par value of each share. This is the authorized capital. Generally, a company obtains authorization for more shares than it plans to issue initially, so that it can issue additional shares later. A company can increase its authorized capital with its shareholders’ approval. Tata Steel’s authorized capital has 2,050 million equity shares and 625 million preference shares. Issued, subscribed, and paid-up capital Issued capital is the number of shares issued by a company. Subscribed capital is the number of shares taken up by the public. Paid-up capital is the amount of share capital that has been received by the company. For example, a company may have an authorized capital of 100,000 equity shares of `10 each. Of these, it may have issued 40,000 shares and the public may have taken up 25,000 shares. If the company has called up and received `6 on each share, its paid-up capital will be `150,000 (25,000 shares × `6 per share). Tata Steel has issued 972,126,020 equity shares, of which 971,215,229 have been fully subscribed and paid up. It has not issued any preference shares. Par value It represents the minimum amount that a shareholder must pay on each share. The par value (or face value) of a company’s stock constitutes the company’s legal minimum capital. Each shareholder can be compelled to pay the par value of the shares held by him. Tata Steel’s equity shares have a par value of `10. Companies are prohibited from returning any part of the minimum capital except by following a special procedure. This is intended to protect the company’s creditors from the possibility of the shareholders withdrawing assets from the company and leaving behind a virtual shell. Accounting for Share Capital A company may issue capital stock with or without a par value. Par value stock specifies an amount that must be recorded as share capital. Any amount received in excess of par value is securities premium or share premium, which is part of shareholders’ equity. No-par stock is capital stock that does not have a par value. In the latter case, a company may assign a stated value which becomes its legal capital. If there is no stated value, the entire proceeds are taken as share capital. Indian law does not permit issue of no-par stock. A company may issue share capital for cash or other assets or for services. The procedure for recording issue of share capital is identical for equity shares and preference shares. Issue of share capital with par value When a company issues shares for cash, it credits the par value to Share Capital and the rest of the proceeds to Securities Premium. For example, assume that Deepak Company issues 1,000 equity shares of `10 per equity shares at `15 (including premium `5) requiring full payment. The following entry records this transaction: Issue of share capital at a discount, i.e. at less than par, is rare. The company should debit the discount to the Discount on Issue of Share Capital account. If Deepak Company issues its shares at `9.50 per share, the entry would be as follows: The principle is that financial instruments are measurement at fair value. Since the discount is not an asset, it is deducted from the amount of reserves and surplus. Shares cannot be normally issued at a discount. Issue of share capital without par value When a company issues no-par stock, it credits the entire proceeds from the issue to the Share Capital account. For example, assume that Deepak Company issued 1,000 shares of no-par value at `15 per share. The following entry records this transaction: The law may require a company to designate a part of the proceeds as “stated value” which cannot be withdrawn. Assume that the no-par stock in the above example has a stated value of `7. In this case, it will record the above transaction as follows: To record issue of no-par value equity shares at a stated value Issue of share capital for non-cash assets and services A company may issue share capital in exchange for non-cash assets such as land, buildings, and plant, or for services. It should record the exchange at the fair value of the assets or services received if their fair value can be estimated reliably. If not, the assets or services should be recorded by reference to the fair value of the shares issued.2 To illustrate, assume that Deepak Company’s lawyers agree to accept 500 shares of `10 par value for preparation of legal documents and other services rendered in connection with formation of the company. The fair value of the services is `8,000. The following entry records this transaction: Preliminary expenses are recognized as expenses as incurred.3 If the fair value of the goods or services cannot be estimated reliably and if Deepak Company’s shares are listed, the market price of the shares may be used. Suppose that the company issues 10,000 equity shares of `10 each to acquire a piece of land but the fair value of the land is not evident. If the company’s shares trade at `18, we record the exchange as follows: Sweat equity refers to equity shares issued by a company to its directors or employees for providing intangible assets such as know-how. The accounting for issuing such shares is similar to the above. Sweat equity can be issued at a discount. Rights issue of share capital When a company intends to make additional issue of share capital, the law gives the company’s existing shareholders the preemptive right to subscribe to the new shares. This right enables them to maintain their proportion of the company’s share capital. The offer of shares to the existing shareholders of a company in pursuance of the right of preemption is known as a rights issue, or “rights”. Generally, the price of rights is lower than the current market price of the shares. An existing shareholder who receives a rights offer may (a) take up all the shares offered to him, (b) take up less than the number of shares offered to him, (c) renounce his rights in favour of another person (who need not be a current shareholder of the company), or (d) ignore the rights offer. The procedure for recording proceeds from rights issues is the same as that for the first issue of share capital. Receipt of Share Capital in Instalments Companies generally receive share capital in several instalments in order to match the cash receipts with their requirements as well as to minimize the pressure on the investors to find the cash. Typically, the terms of the offer specify the part of the issue price payable with the share application and require the balance to be paid on allotment and on calls by the board of directors for further payment. Application money is refunded for rejected applications. To illustrate, assume that Deepak Company issued 10,000 shares of `10 each at par payable as follows: `3 with application, `2 on allotment, and the balance when called. On April 3, the company received applications for 15,000 shares. On May 20, the company’s board allotted 10,000 shares and refunded the application money for the remaining shares. The amounts payable on allotment were received on June 25. On August 7, the board made the first call for `3 per share and the amounts were received on September 16. The second and final call was made on November 22 and the amounts were received on December 29. Entries to record these transactions are as follows: Forfeiture of Shares Sometimes, a shareholder is unable to pay the amounts due on allotment or any of the calls. In that event, the board of directors can take back the shares and retain the amount paid on the shares and the shareholder forfeits his shares. These are called forfeited shares. The company debits the total amount due on allotment or calls on the forfeited shares to Share Capital and credits Share Allotment or Share Call. The amount already paid goes to Shares Forfeited. Assume that, in the above example, Deepak Company did not receive the amount of second call on 100 shares until December 29 and the shares were forfeited on January 17. The following entry records the forfeiture: The balance in Shares Forfeited is regarded as a part of the company’s share capital. It is not available for distribution to shareholders. From Exhibit 10.1, Tata Steel has 389,516 forfeited shares. Preference Share Capital Companies can issue two classes of share capital: (a) equity, and (b) preference. Preference shareholders enjoy preference over equity shareholders in two aspects: Payment of periodic dividends Distribution of assets on liquidation of the company. Preference shares usually carry a fixed rate of dividend which is payable when the company has earned adequate profits and when the dividend is declared in the company’s annual general meeting. Preference shareholders get the dividend before equity shareholders. On liquidation, they are paid after paying the creditors but before the equity shareholders. There are many types of preference shares depending on the rights attached to them. We now discuss some of them. Cumulative and non-cumulative preference shares The holders of cumulative preference shares receive dividends for one or more year(s) in which no dividend was paid. The preference dividends not declared in a period are called dividends in arrears. To illustrate, assume that Pratibha Company has 10,000 of 10 per cent, `10 par value cumulative preference shares. The annual dividend is `10,000. If dividends are in arrears for three years, preference shareholders are entitled to receive a total dividend of `40,000 at the end of Year 4 before any payment is made to equity shareholders, as shown below: Dividends in arrears are not a liability, because no obligation exists until the dividend is declared by the company. However, the amount of the arrears must be disclosed in the notes to the financial statements. Arrears of past dividends are not payable in non-cumulative preference shares. Participating and non-participating preference shares Participating preference shares carry the right to share in the profits of the company after the equity shareholders are paid a certain rate of dividend. These shares can also carry the right to share in the assets of the company over and above their face value. The holders of non-participating preference shares can only receive the fixed dividend and cannot share in the surplus left after paying equity dividend. To illustrate, assume that Khalid Company has `100,000 of 12 per cent par value participating preference shares and `1,000,000 of par value equity shares. It must pay `12,000 of preference dividends (`100,000 12%) and `120,000 of equity dividends (`1,000,000 12%) before the participating right takes effect. Additional dividends are distributed between the preference and the equity shareholders on the basis of their respective par values. The total share capital is `1,100,000 (`100,000 + `1,000,000). The ratio of distribution is 1/11 (`100,000/`1,100,000) for preference shareholders and 10/11 (`1,000,000/`1,100,000) for equity shareholders. If the company pays `110,000 of additional dividends, preference shareholders will receive `10,000 (1/11 of `110,000) and equity shareholders will receive `100,000 (10/11 of `110,000). Redeemable and non-redeemable preference shares Redeemable preference shares are repayable after the period of holding stated in the share certificate. There may be a redemption premium. Non-redeemable preference shares cannot be repaid except at the time of liquidation. In India, companies cannot issue nonredeemable preference shares or preference shares redeemable after eight years from the date of issue. Assume that a `10 par value preference share is redeemable with a premium of `2 per share. On redemption, a preference shareholder will receive the following: (a) the par value of the share; (b) the redemption premium; (c) any dividends in arrears if the shares are cumulative; and (d) the proportionate dividend for the current year. The redemption feature is useful to the issuing company because it can pay back the preference share capital when it has surplus cash or it can substitute the preference capital by debt with a lower interest rate. The law requires a company to transfer an amount equal to the par value of the preference share capital redeemed to capital redemption reserve except when the redemption is made out of the proceeds of a fresh issue of share capital. The balance in capital redemption reserve is, for the most part, similar to share capital. Convertible and non-convertible preference shares Convertible preference shares can be converted into equity at a predetermined ratio. Non-convertible preference shares always remain preference shares. Suppose that Parag Company issued `200,000 of 10 per cent, `10 par value preference shares with two preference shares convertible into one equity share of `10 five years later. At the end of five years, the company’s 20,000 preference shares will stand converted into 10,000 equity shares of `10 par value and the balance of `100,000 becomes securities premium. Reserves and Surplus Reserves are the other component of the shareholders’ equity of a company. In the balance sheet, reserves appear under the grouping Reserves and Surplus which comprises retained earnings as well as non-earnings items. There are several kinds of reserves: A capital reserve is not available for distribution to shareholders as dividends: Examples: Securities premium capital redemption reserve. Revenue reserves, or free reserves, arise from the business operations of a company and are available for payment of dividends. Examples: Statement of profit and loss (i.e. retained earnings); general reserve. Statutory reserves are set up to comply with the requirements of a law such as the Income Tax Act in order to avail of certain tax benefits. They are not available for distribution to shareholders during the period specified in the law. Examples: Investment allowance reserve; export profit reserve. Realized reserves arise from receiving cash or other assets received in an exchange transaction. Example: Profit on sale of equipment. Unrealized reserves are the result of accounting entries without any underlying exchange transaction. Example: Revaluation reserve. We will now discuss some of the reserves. Securities Premium Securities premium, similar to share capital, cannot be returned to the shareholders. However, Section 52 of the Companies Act 2013 provides that the balance in the securities premium account can be utilized for the following purposes: 1. Issuing fully paid bonus shares. 2. Writing off the preliminary expenses of the company. 3. Writing off the expenses of, or commission paid or discount allowed on, an issue of shares or debentures of the company. 4. Providing for the premium payable on the redemption of redeemable preference shares or debentures of the company. Capital redemption reserve The amount required for redemption of redeemable preference shares must come out of the proceeds of a fresh issue of shares. Otherwise, the company must transfer an amount equal to the par value of the shares redeemed to the capital redemption reserve account. Also, when a company buys back its own equity shares, it must transfer an amount equal to the nominal value of the shares to capital redemption reserve. It is similar to share capital in that the amount cannot be returned to the shareholders. However, the company can issue fully paid bonus shares out of the capital redemption reserve. Debenture redemption reserve The debenture trust deed may require the company to transfer an amount equal to the annual sinking fund deposit to debenture redemption reserve from retained earnings. A transfer may be required even when there is no sinking fund. The purpose of the transfer is to prevent the company from distributing the amount as dividends so that the company’s assets are not reduced to the detriment of its creditors. The balance in debenture redemption reserve is transferred to retained earnings at the time of repayment of the debentures and is not available for issue of bonus shares until the debentures are repaid. Investment allowance reserve The Income Tax Act has a special allowance, known as investment allowance, for investment in plant and machinery. A condition for the allowance is that the company must transfer a specified percentage of the amount of the allowance to an investment allowance reserve. The balance in the account is not available for dividends or bonus shares for eight years from the year of investment. Besides, the company must satisfy many other conditions. Appropriations Many companies transfer amounts from the statement of profit and loss to various reserves, such as general reserve, contingency reserve, dividend equalization reserve, and development reserve. This process is known as appropriation. Note that this process does not affect dividend distribution since a company can pay dividends out of its current or past profits regardless of how it is designated. For this reason, companies in many countries do not make appropriations of profits; instead, they keep the balance in the retained earnings account. It may be noted that transfers to certain reserves such as investment allowance reserve and export profit reserve are required by law. As already stated, such reserves are not distributable. Appropriations and dividends appear in the statement of retained earnings, and are known as ‘below the line’ items. Accumulated other comprehensive income As you learnt in Chapter 8, gains and losses resulting from measuring available-for-sale securities at fair value are taken to other comprehensive income, a component of equity, rather than routed through the statement of profit and loss. Translation gains and losses resulting from foreign operations and gains and losses on cash flow hedges are also examples of other comprehensive income items. Accumulated other comprehensive income is cumulative other comprehensive income. Buy-back of Shares and Treasury Stock In many countries, companies are allowed to reacquire their own shares. Here are some common reasons why companies may reacquire their shares: 1. A company has surplus cash, but does not have any plans for capital expenditure or acquisitions. So it wants to return a part of the cash to its shareholders. 2. The managers worry about a hostile takeover. By buying back their shares, they reduce the number of shares available to the hostile bidder in the market and thus hope to thwart the takeover. 3. The managers believe that the company’s stock is undervalued and want to signal their belief that the stock is worth more. 4. The managers believe that the company is overcapitalized and it is difficult to service the large share capital base by paying high dividends. So they want to reduce the share capital. Reacquiring own shares may be by means of a buy-back or treasury stock operations. Buy-back of Share Capital Buy-back reduces the number of shares and the paid-up capital. The Companies Act 2013 permits a company to buy-back its own shares for cancellation. Section 68 of the Act lays down the following main conditions: 1. A company can buy-back its shares to the extent of its free reserves and securities premium or out of the proceeds of a fresh issue of shares, or other specified securities. 2. Buy-back shall not be less than 10 per cent or more than 25 per cent of the company’s paid-up capital and free reserves. 3. Buy-back should be authorized by the company’s Articles of Association and a resolution of the shareholders. 4. The excess of the buy-back price over the paid-up capital is debited to free reserves.4 For example, suppose that Samir Company has 10,000 shares of `10 each and a balance of `50,000 in the Securities Premium account. The company decides to buy back 200 shares at `25. The entry to pay the shareholders is as follows: The Companies Act requires transfer to the capital redemption reserve account of a sum equal to the paid-up capital of the shares bought back. The following entry is records this transfer: Treasury Stock Operations Treasury stock is a company’s own share capital that was issued and reacquired by the company as investment. As the term suggests, treasury stock operation is part of a company’s cash management activities. Treasury stock is often a temporary investment until the company identifies long-term investment opportunities. It may be either preference shares or equity shares and may be held for any period of time, reissued or retired. Dividends are not paid on treasury stock and these shares do not carry voting rights in the meetings of shareholders. Treasury stock is not considered as part of shares outstanding and is, therefore, excluded for calculation of earnings per share. Currently, treasury stock is not allowed in India. Purchase When a company purchases its own shares, it reduces both the assets and the shareholders’ equity by equal amounts. To illustrate, assume that Shweta Company purchases 1,000 of its fully paid shares at `22 per share. The transaction is recorded as follows: The cost of the treasury stock appears in the shareholders’ equity section as a deduction. Note that the purchase does not change the amount of issued share capital. However, it reduces the amount of outstanding share capital representing the number available for trading. Reissue Treasury stock may be reissued at, above, or below cost. If reissued at cost, the entry to record the transaction is the reverse of the entry to record the purchase. If the treasury stock is sold at “above cost”, the amount received in excess of cost goes to the Securities Premium, Treasury Stock account. For example, if Shweta Company sells 500 of the treasury shares purchased at `22 per share for `25 per share, the transaction would be recorded as follows: When treasury stock is reissued at below cost, the excess of cost over the sale price is debited to Securities Premium, Treasury Stock to the extent of the balance available. Any remaining excess is debited to Retained Earnings. For example, if Shweta Company sells its remaining shares of treasury stock at `15 per share, the entry to record the sale is as follows: Retirement A company may acquire its own shares to retire the share capital rather than holding it as treasury stock. When shares are retired, the shareholders’ equity amounts related to the retired shares are removed from the accounts. If the purchase price of the treasury stock is more than the original issue price, the difference is debited to Retained Earnings. If the purchase price is less than the original issue price, the difference is credited to Securities Premium, Treasury Stock. For example, assume that Shweta Company decides to cancel the treasury stock purchased for `22,000. Assuming that the `10 equity shares were originally issued at a premium of `4 each, the entry to record the retirement is as follows: If the company had paid `12 per share for the treasury stock, the entry would be as follows: Bonus Shares Bonus shares are additional shares of a company’s share capital distributed to its shareholders without their having to pay for them. The board of directors proposes the terms of distribution of bonus shares to the company’s shareholders, who finally approve the distribution. The issue of bonus shares does not affect the company’s assets or total shareholders’ equity. Its effect is a transfer of retained earnings or other items in reserves and surplus to share capital. For this reason, the issue of bonus shares is also known as capitalization of reserves. Companies issue bonus shares for various reasons including the following: 1. Profitable companies that are engaged in a major capital expenditure programme prefer to issue bonus shares rather than pay current dividends to avoid strain on their cash. 2. Companies issue bonus shares in order to reduce the market price per share by increasing the number of shares in circulation. 3. Directors use bonus issues to signal to the shareholders their confidence in the company’s prospects. In theory, a bonus issue should not have any effect on a company’s stock price. However, evidence suggests that it is not always so in practice, indicating the signalling effect of bonus issue. Bonus shares can be issued out of retained earnings or other reserves permitted by the company law. The credit balances in the following accounts, among others, can be capitalized: Statement of profit and loss (i.e. retained earnings); General reserve; Securities premium; and Capital redemption reserve. The balances in revaluation reserve and other similar accounts that do not represent a realized increase in the company’s assets are not available for bonus issues. To illustrate the accounting procedure for a bonus issue, assume that Xavier Company has the following shareholders’ equity on March 31: Assume further that the board of directors declares a 50 per cent bonus issue (meaning one bonus share for two existing shares) on August 10, distributable on September 30 to shareholders in the company’s record on September 15. The bonus shares are to be issued by capitalizing the entire amount in the Securities Premium account, and the Retained Earnings account for the balance amount required. The entry to record the transaction is as follows: After the bonus issue, the company has 15,000 equity shares. A stock split, similar to a bonus issue, results in an increase in the number of shares available in the market and does not affect the total shareholders’ equity. However, after a stock split, the par value of the share is reduced and the reserves remain unchanged. If Xavier Company makes a stock split of two for one, it will have 20,000 shares of `5 par value after the split. The stock split will not have any effect on any of the reserves. Both bonus shares and stock splits are applicable to all shares including treasury stock. Dividends A dividend is a distribution of cash to shareholders. A company’s board of directors recommends payment of dividend and the shareholders approve the payment by a declaration at the company’s annual general meeting. This is also known as the final dividend. The board can declare interim dividends during the year. The amount of dividend cannot ordinarily exceed the total of the current and past profits of the company. Any dividend in excess of profit is a return of the legal minimum capital and is prohibited except in special circumstances such as liquidation or capital reduction. In addition to profits, the company must have sufficient cash or other liquid assets, so that the dividend outgo does not affect its normal operations. Tax considerations may also be important. For example, dividend payment would entail payment of dividend distribution tax. Dividends are stated in terms of either percentage of paid-up capital or rupees per share. For instance, a company may declare a dividend of 25 per cent or `2.50 per share, and a shareholder owning 100 fully paid shares of `10 each will receive a dividend of `250. Dividends are paid by means of a special cheque known as dividend warrant or by bank transfer. Dividends cannot be paid in kind. The shares of a listed company are traded in the market. After declaring a dividend, the company fixes a date known as the date of record for the purpose of determining the right of shareholders to receive the dividend. On this date, the company will temporarily stop recording share transfers in order to prepare the list of shareholders eligible for dividend. Dividends will be paid to those who hold the shares on the date of record. All purchases of shares up to this date are cumdividend, i.e. the buyer will receive the dividend. After this date, the purchases are ex-dividend i.e. the seller will receive the dividend. To sum up, the following four steps are important in connection with dividends: Share-based Payment A share-based payment arrangement is an agreement under which an employee receives shares or stock options or the employer incurs a liability to the employee in amounts based on the price of the employer’s stock. Share-based payment is often an important part of the total compensation and is common in technology and banking firms. In many investment banks, compensation in stock is a significant part of the total compensation. Stock issued to employees can dilute the value of the holdings of investors. Share-based payment arrangements are also used to pay for goods and services. You have already seen in this chapter how to record share capital issued for professional services received. Now you can have a look at employee compensation in the form of stock options. A stock option plan gives employees the right to acquire shares in the future. Stock options became popular in the 1990s with start-up technology companies choosing to compensate their employees in the form of options, rather than pay large cash salaries. To begin with, let us briefly review the case for stock options. As you know, a company is owned by its shareholders, but managed by the chief executive and other officers under the supervision of the board of directors. This separation of ownership and management is the essence of the corporate form of business. In theory, this arrangement is beneficial to the shareholders, since the company is run by professional managers who understand the complexities of the business better. A major drawback of the corporate form is the agency problem, i.e. managers may not act in the interests of shareholders. For example, most managers may not feel any need to improve the company’s performance, if they do not get to participate in the benefits of better performance. A manager who holds stock options has the right to buy a company’s shares in the future at a fixed price even if the price goes up. Generally, stock price is positively related to company performance. So a manager who holds stock options has more incentive to strive for better performance. Therefore, stock options are thought to be useful in aligning managerial behaviour with shareholders’ interests. Several types of stock option plans are in vogue. An employer selects a plan based on several considerations such as the plan’s effect on employee motivation, tax, and industry practices. The plan that is best for a steel company may not be suitable for a software company. Share-based payment plans, including stock option plans, are thought of as a means of compensating, attracting, motivating, and retaining good employees. Fast-growing, knowledge-based start-up companies that normally do not pay large salaries find them particularly useful. Most stock option plans require employees to put in a minimum service period to be eligible for the options and specify a period thereafter within which the options must be exercised; otherwise the options will lapse. Exhibit 10.2 presents the definitions of key terms in stock options. The fair value method measures the cost of share-based payment at the fair value of the stock options on the grant date.5 This value is determined using an option-pricing model that considers factors such as current price of the stock, exercise price, expected life of the option, risk-free interest rate, expected volatility, and expected dividend yield. The Black-Scholes model and the binomial model are among the most widely used methods for pricing options. The intrinsic value method, which most Indian companies follow, calculates the compensation element as the excess of the fair value (usually the market price) at the grant date over the exercise price of the share. Thus, if the exercise price equals the market price at the grant date, there is no compensation element. In both the methods, the cost is expensed over the vesting period, the minimum service period required to be able to exercise the options. To illustrate, let us assume that on January 1, 20X4 Abhay Company grants its managers 1,000 stock options. Each option entitles the holder to buy one share of `10 par value at `100, the market price on the grant date. The options will vest on January 1, 20X8 and may be exercised until December 31 that year. On the basis of an option-pricing model, the options have a fair value of `55 each on the grant date. The company follows the calendar year. The following discussion illustrates how to apply the fair value and the intrinsic value methods. Recognizing compensation expense Under the fair value method, compensation cost equals the fair value of the stock option at the grant date. In our example, the fair value of the options is `55,000 [i.e. 1,000 `55]. The intrinsic value of the options is zero, because the market price equals the exercise price. Compensation expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the vesting period of four years. The yearly compensation expense is `13,750 [i.e. `55,000/4 years] under the fair value method. From 20X4 to 20X7, the company records the following entry to recognize the compensation expense for the year: Outstanding Stock Options is a part of shareholders’ equity. Exercise of the options Let us assume that 900 options are exercised on November 1, 20X8. The company receives the exercise price of `100 and removes the outstanding stock option of `55: Expiry of the options Suppose that the remaining options are not exercised and hence they lapse. Abhay Company should not make subsequent adjustment to total equity. Therefore, the entity should not subsequently reverse the amount recognized for services received from the employees.6 Which method? Many believe that the intrinsic value method does not reflect the cost of compensation which is a cost of doing business just as salaries and materials costs are. Companies mostly issue stock options “at the money”, i.e. they set the exercise price of the shares under option equal to their market price on the grant date, as in our example. If the stock price increases, the options will move “into the money” and the employees holding stock options will benefit. Companies believe that this motivates employees to perform better. The employees exercise the options, if the stock is “in the money” at exercise date, that is, if the market price is greater than the exercise price. Since at the time of grant there is no compensatory element, the intrinsic value method does not recognize any expense for such options although these may have a value. The fact remains that, when options are in the money, the shareholders lose and the employees gain, similar to what happens when a company pays salaries. Think of a firm that pays all its expenses including salaries by means of stock options. The firm’s revenue will equal its profit. This is irrational. To see why, compare this firm with another firm that has the same amount of revenue and assets, but pays all its expenses with cash. The latter will report lower earnings. The intrinsic value method confuses a firm’s operating activities (payment of salaries) with financing activities (selling options) and nets out the effect of the two. Both FASB and the IASB mandate the fair value method.7 Statement of Changes in Equity The statement of changes in equity explains the changes in a company’s share capital and reserves and surplus. The statement of changes in equity presents the following information: Number of shares and amount of share capital for each type or class of shares such as preference, equity, Class A, and Class B; Securities premium; Reserves such as capital reserve, capital redemption reserve, and general reserve; Accumulated other comprehensive income; and Retained earnings. The purpose of the statement of changes in equity is to present in one place the changes in the various items that make up the shareholders’ equity. Changes in equity usually result from the following: 1. Owner changes: These result from a company’s transactions with its shareholders and can be of the following types. (a) Exchanges and transfers: Share issues may be for cash or non-cash consideration or on conversion of a liability into equity. Share buy-back and dividends require cash payment. (b) Issue of bonus shares: A bonus issue does not involve cash or other assets changing hands. It involves changes in the composition of equity. 2. Non-owner changes: These result from a company’s transactions with persons other than its shareholders and can be of the following types. (a) Recognized in the statement of profit and loss: Net profit is the result of changes in the value of assets and liabilities that are recognized in the statement of profit and loss. It increases retained earnings. (b) Recognized directly in equity: Some gains and losses are not routed through the statement of profit and loss, but recognized directly in equity. For example, changes in the value of available-for-sale assets, net of tax, are recognized as other comprehensive income. Again, revaluation reserve is taken directly to equity. Basic Earnings Per Share Earnings per share is reported only for equity share capital. The computation of EPS depends on a company’s capital structure. A simple capital structure consists only of equity share capital and has no convertible debentures, convertible preference share capital, and stock options” – instruments that can increase the number of equity shares. A company which has a simple capital structure could have non-convertible preference share capital. Accountants calculate the basic earnings per share by dividing the net profit or loss for the period attributable to equity shareholders (the numerator) by the weighted average number of equity shares outstanding (the denominator) during the period.8 The objective of basic EPS information is to provide a measure of the interests of each equity share in the performance of the entity in a period. In consolidated financial statements, we consider the profit or loss attributable to the parent company’s equity shareholders (i.e. excluding the portion attributable to noncontrolling interests). For example, assume that Trishul Company has 100,000 equity shares and has reported a profit after tax of `500,000 for the year ended March 31, 20X1. We now compute the company’s basic earnings per share: If Trishul Company has non-convertible preference shares, we must deduct the preference dividend before computing earnings per share on equity shares. Assume that Trishul Company has `50,000 of `10 par value, 10 per cent cumulative preference shares. We now recompute the company’s basic earnings per share: Issue and buy-back of shares If a company had issued or bought back equity shares during the year, the amount of resources available during the period is not constant. So we compute EPS based on the weighted-average number of shares. Assume that Trishul Company had 100,000 shares on April 1, 20X1 and issued 50,000 additional shares on July 1, 20X1. The company bought back 30,000 shares on January 1, 20X2. The weighted-average number of shares and EPS for the year ended March 31, 20X2 are computed as follows: Bonus issue and stock split When a company issues bonus shares, the number of shares and the amount of share capital increase, but the amount of shareholders’ equity remains unchanged. There is no change in the resources available to the company as bonus shares are issued without consideration. In the event of an issue of bonus shares during a period, we calculate the EPS as if the issue had occurred prior to the beginning of the period. Continuing with the above example, assume that on October 1, 20X2 Trishul Company issued two equity shares for every equity share outstanding on that date. The number of shares after the bonus issue is 360,000, consisting of 120,000 original shares and 240,000 bonus shares. Suppose that the company has a profit after tax (PAT) of `522,000 for the year ended March 31, 20X3. We calculate the EPS for the year as follows: In order to make the figures comparable over time, we adjust the EPS for the previous period using the same denominator. Thus, we recalculate the EPS for 20X2 as `1.39 (`500,000/360,000 shares). Rights issue As with any issue of shares, the number of outstanding shares changes when there is a rights issue. Therefore, the weighted-average number of shares during the period should be used to calculate the EPS. However, a rights issue is different because the issue price is generally lower than the current market price of the share. Therefore, it has a bonus element. The denominator number of equity shares for calculating the EPS for all periods prior to the rights issue is the number of equity shares outstanding prior to the issue, multiplied by the following adjustment factor: We first calculate the theoretical ex-rights fair value per share by adding the aggregate fair value of the shares immediately prior to the exercise of the rights to the proceeds from the exercise of the rights, and dividing by the number of shares outstanding after the exercise of the rights. Continuing further with the above example, assume that on September 1, 20X3 Trishul Company made a rights issue of one share for every four shares outstanding (i.e., it issued 90,000 shares) at a price of `20 per share. The rights were to be exercised not later than November 1, 20X3, and the market price on that date was `30. The theoretical ex-rights fair value per share is `28, calculated as follows: We now calculate the adjustment factor: Suppose that the profit after tax for the year ended March 31, 20X4 is `545,000. The EPS is calculated as follows: Note that the factors 7/12 and 5/12 are used to calculate the weighted average number of shares for the increase in the number of shares on November 1, 20X3. Diluted Earnings Per Share When a company has a simple capital structure, the computation of EPS is fairly straightforward. Many companies, however, have a complex capital structure which includes securities that may be converted into equity share capital. The conversion, if effected, has the potential of reducing or diluting the EPS by increasing the number of equity shares. Dilution is a reduction in EPS or an increase in loss per share resulting from the assumption that convertible instruments are converted, options or warrants are exercised, or equity shares are issued upon the satisfaction of specified conditions.9 Accountants compute the diluted earnings per share under the assumption that all potentially dilutive securities would be converted into equity shares. The objective of diluted EPS is to provide a measure of the interests of each equity share in the performance of the entity in a period, while giving effect to all dilutive potential equity shares outstanding. In consolidated financial statements we consider the profit or loss attributable to the parent company’s equity shareholders (i.e. excluding the portion attributable to non-controlling interests). The net profit for the period is recomputed by adding back the after-tax amount of preference dividend, interest on convertible debentures, and any other changes that would result from the conversion of the potentially dilutive securities. This is because after the conversion of these securities, the company will not have to pay preference dividend and convertible debenture interest. We will now illustrate the calculation of diluted earnings per share using convertible debentures and stock options. Convertible debentures To illustrate the dilutive effect of convertible debentures, assume that Trident Company has 100,000 equity shares and 1,000 of 10 per cent debentures of `100 convertible into 10 equity shares each. For the year ended March 31, 20X1, the company has a profit after tax of `500,000 and the income tax rate is 35 per cent. We calculate the company’s basic earnings per share as follows: The calculation of the diluted earnings per share is as follows: 10 As a result of the potential dilution, there is a decrease of 39 paise in Trident’s earnings per share. Stock options To illustrate the dilutive effect of stock options, assume that Trident Company has 100,000 equity shares and 10,000 equity shares under stock options. The fair value of an equity share is `50, and the exercise price is `40. The company has a profit after tax of `500,000. The excess of the fair value over the exercise price is expressed in terms of equity shares and added to the number of equity shares outstanding. As before, the basic earnings per share works out to `5. The calculation of the diluted earnings per share is as follows: The drop of 10 paise in the earnings per share is the measure of the ‘free’ element implicit in the stock option. The option holders can buy 10,000 shares at `10 per share lower than the market price. The ‘loss’ to the existing shareholders would be `100,000. At the current market price of `50, this is equivalent to the company issuing 2,000 shares for free ( `100,000/50). So the denominator becomes 102,000 shares. Since there will be no additional earnings to the company from the 2,000 ‘free’ shares, the profit after tax is unchanged at `500,000. Looking Back Describe the features of a corporate organization The key features of a corporation are separate legal entity, limited liability of shareholders, free transferability of ownership rights, perpetual existence, common seal, professional management, and regulation by the government. Explain the components of capital stock Share capital is divided into a number of shares. Authorized capital is the maximum number of shares that may be issued. Issued capital is the number of shares issued to the shareholders. Subscribed capital is the number of shares actually taken by the shareholders. Paid-up capital is the amount of share capital for which payment has been received by the company. Record issue of share capital Capital stock has a par value. Share capital may be issued at a price equal to face value (at par), above face value (at a premium) or below face value (at a discount). Also, shares may be issued in exchange for non-cash assets or for services. Describe the features of preference shares Preference shares enjoy preference over equity shares in matters of payment of periodic dividends and distribution of assets on a company’s liquidation. Preference shares usually carry a fixed rate of dividend. There are many types of preference shares depending on the rights attached to them. Describe the different kinds of reserves Revenue reserves can be distributed as dividends, but not capital reserves. Statutory reserves are created to comply with the requirements of a law. Realized reserves are those that represent cash or other assets received by a company in an exchange transaction. Unrealized reserves result from accounting entries without any exchange transaction. Explain buy-back of shares and treasury operations and how to account for them A company can buy back its shares for cancellation out of its free reserves, securities premium account or the proceeds of a fresh issue of shares. Buy-back reduces the number of shares and the paid-up share capital. Treasury stock is a temporary investment by a company in its own share capital. Account for issue of bonus shares Bonus shares are additional shares of a company’s share capital given to its shareholders. A bonus issue transfers retained earnings or other items in reserves and surplus to share capital. Revaluation reserve is not available for issue of bonus shares. Account for payment of dividends A dividend is a distribution of cash to shareholders. The board of directors recommends dividends and the shareholders declare the dividend. Accounting for dividends requires recording first proposed dividend as an estimated liability, then recognizing dividend payable, and finally eliminating dividend payable on payment of dividend. Explain the need for share-based payment and account for it The fair value method requires recognition as compensation expense the value of stock options over the vesting period. Explain the statement of changes in equity The statement of changes in equity presents owner and non-owner changes in a reporting period. Compute earnings per share When a company has only equity share capital (simple capital structure), its basic earnings per share equals the profit after tax divided by the number of equity shares. When a company’s capital structure includes potentially dilutive securities (complex capital structure), such as convertible debentures and options, the company must present, in addition, a diluted earnings per share computed under the assumption that all potentially dilutive securities were converted into equity shares. Review Problem On January 1, Inder Ltd. was incorporated with an authorized capital of 50,000 shares. On January 5, the company issued 20,000 shares of `10 each at par payable as follows: `2 with application, `2 on allotment, and the balance when called. On January 10, the company received applications for 25,000 shares. On January 18, the company’s board allotted 25,000 shares. The amounts payable on allotment were received on February 15. On March 20, the board made the first call for `4 per share and the amounts were received on April 22. The second and final call was made on June 10 and the amounts were received on July 27. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. ASSIGNMENT MATERIAL Questions 1. 2. State three differences between a partnership and a company. Why are companies subject to more government regulation than sole proprietorships and partnerships? 3. 4. 5. 6. What is the significance of the shareholders’ preemptive right? Whom does legal capital help? How does a dividend differ from a bonus? “Securities premium is a waste of shareholders’ money because dividend is payable only on the share capital component.” Do you agree? 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. What is the principle for recording issue of share capital for services or non-cash assets? Why are stock option plans more popular with software companies? Why do the book value and market value of a company’s shares differ? What is a stock split? How is it different from a bonus issue? How is treasury stock similar to and different from a company’s other investments? What is appropriation? Why do companies make appropriations? Why is a company with a complex capital structure required to report two earnings per share amounts? Problem Set A The share capital of Veer Company consists of 10,000 equity shares of `10 par value and 2,000 10 per cent, cumulative preference shares of `10 par value. The company declared and paid total dividends in the first four years of operation as follows: first year, `800; second year, `1,200; third year, `14,000; fourth year, `17,000. Required 1. 2. Determine the rate of dividend on each class of share capital in each of the four years. Determine the rate of dividend on each class of share capital in each of the four years, assuming that the preference share capital is non-cumulative. On September 1, 20X1, Guna Company issued one bonus share for every share held by its shareholders by capitalizing all of its securities premium and retained earnings, to the extent required. On that date, the company had 100,000 equity shares of `10 par value, all fully paid-up, held by 1,230 shareholders. The company had a balance of `710,000 in the securities premium account and `491,200 in the statement of profit and loss. Required Prepare the journal entry to record the issue of bonus shares. Required Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. Shamsher Company earned a profit after tax of `210,000 for the year ended December 31, 20XX. The company had 20,000 equity shares at the beginning of the year. On October 1, 20XX, it issued 40,000 shares. Required Compute the company’s weighted-average earnings per share for the year. Problem Set B Required 1. 2. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. Prepare the shareholders’ equity section of the company’s balance sheet as at December 31, 20XX. On February 1, 20XX, Pranav Company issued 500,000 shares of `10 par value at `15 with the option to retain up to an additional 20 per cent of the shares in the event of oversubscription. Payment was due as follows: with application `5, including premium of `2; on allotment `5, including premium of `3; the balance when called in at least two instalments. The following transactions took place in connection with the issue: Required 1. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. 2. Prepare the shareholders’ equity section of the balance sheet as at December 31, 20XX. Sharad Company has 1,000 of 10 per cent, `100 par value convertible preference shares and 50,000 equity shares of `10 par value. During the last five years, the company paid out the following amounts in dividends: No dividends were in arrears for the years prior to 20X1. Required 1. Compute the amount of dividend on preference shares and equity shares separately under each of the following assumptions: (a) The preference shares are non-cumulative and non-participating; (b) The preference shares are cumulative and non-participating; and (c) The preference shares are cumulative and fully participating. 2. At the option of the company, the preference share capital can be converted into equity after 20X5 at the rate of one equity share for one preference share. Will the existing equity shareholders benefit from the conversion assuming that the company expects to earn and distribute a profit after tax of `96,000 for 20X6? Assume that the preference shares are cumulative and fully participating. Mohan Company reported an after-tax net profit of `317,000 for 20XX. On January 1, 20XX, the company had 96,000 equity shares of `10 par value and 1,000 of 12%, `100 nonconvertible, cumulative preference shares. Information about transactions that affected the share capital account follows: Mar. 1 Declared a 1:4 bonus. May 1 Issued 60,000 shares at a premium of `25. July 1 Purchased 12,000 shares to be held as treasury stock. Aug. 1 Reissued 6,000 shares of treasury stock. Oct. 1 Cancelled 2,000 shares of treasury stock. On December 31, the company declared preference dividends of `12,000. Required 1. Compute the basic earnings per share for 20XX. 2. Suppose that Mohan Company did not declare preference dividends because it did not have cash. How would this affect the computation of earnings per share assuming that the preference shares were non-convertible, noncumulative? 3. Suppose that Mohan Company had dilutive securities throughout 20XX. Assuming that all dilutive securities had been converted at the beginning of the year, the weighted number of equity shares would have been 250,000. Compute the diluted earnings per share. During the year ended March 31, 20X5, Raja Company was engaged in the following transactions: Required 1. 2. 3. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. Prepare a statement of retained earnings for the year ended March 31, 20X5. Prepare a schedule of reserves and surplus on March 31, 20X5. Problem Set C Required 1. 2. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. Prepare the shareholders’ equity section of the balance sheet as at March 31, 20X6. On January 1, 20XX, Amal Company issued 100,000 shares of `10 par value at `12 with the option to retain up to an additional 10 per cent of the shares in the event of oversubscription. Payment was due as follows: with application `5, including premium of `2; on allotment `3; the balance when called in at least two instalments. The following transactions took place in connection with the issue: Required 1. 2. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions. Prepare the shareholders’ equity section of the balance sheet on December 31, 20XX. No dividends were in arrears for the years prior to 20X4. Required 1. Compute the amount of dividend on preference shares and equity shares separately under each of the following assumptions: (a) The preference shares are non-cumulative and non-participating; (b) The preference shares are cumulative and non-participating; (c) The preference shares are cumulative and fully participating. 2. At the option of the company, the preference share capital can be converted into equity after 20X8 at the rate of two equity shares for one preference share. Will the existing equity shareholders benefit from the conversion assuming that the company expects to earn and distribute a profit after tax of `2,87,500 for 20X9? Assume that the preference shares are cumulative and fully participating. On December 31, the company declared preference dividends of `15,000. Required 1. 2. Compute the basic earnings per share for 20X3. Suppose that Avik Company did not declare preference dividends because it did not have cash. How would this affect the computation of earnings per share, assuming that the preference shares were non-convertible, non-cumulative? 3. Suppose that Avik Company had dilutive securities throughout 20X3. Assuming that all dilutive securities had been converted at the beginning of the year, the weighted number of equity shares would have been 450,000. Compute the diluted earnings per share. During the year ended December 31, 20X2, Prabhakar Company engaged in the following transactions: Business Decision Cases On May 5, the board of directors decided to recommend a dividend of 10 per cent on both preference and equity share capital. The net profit for the year had been transferred to retained earnings from which the dividends would be paid. Required 1. 2. Compute the book value per equity share on March 31, 20X9. Tarapore Company’s equity share was quoting at `120 on the balance sheet date. Why did the price differ from the book value of the share? 3. What was the maximum ratio of bonus issue the company could have made on the balance sheet date? The company would like a balance of `650,000 to be left in the retained earnings after the bonus issue. The management of Cholamandalam Chemicals Limited is considering a proposal for expansion of plant capacity that would enable it to produce a range of new chemical products. The expansion plan is estimated to cost `1,000,000. After several rounds of discussions with the company’s investment bankers, the following three alternatives have emerged: 1. 2. 3. Issue 10,000, 10% cumulative, non-participating preference shares of `100 at par. Issue 5,000, 10% cumulative, participating preference shares of `100 at `200. Issue 40,000 equity shares of `10 at `25. The company estimates that the additional investment would give a return of 25 per cent per year after payment of all expenses including income tax. Net profit for the latest year is `140,000. Currently, the shareholders’ equity of the company consists of the following: authorized capital of 10,000; 10 per cent cumulative, non-participating preference shares of `100 and `5,000; 10 per cent cumulative, participating preference shares of `100, and 100,000 equity shares of `10; issued capital of 60,000 equity shares of `10 fully paid; and retained earnings of `275,000. The company plans to distribute the entire net profit in the coming year. Required 1. From the standpoint of the company’s existing shareholders, which is the best alternative? Should the company proceed with the expansion? Explain. 2. What other factors should the company consider in making the decision? Interpreting Financial Reports Housing Development Finance Corporation Limited (HDFC) is the largest home mortgage lender in India. The financial statements for the year ended March 31, 2013 had the following note: Note 5.2 During the year, `5,015.6 million (previous year `5,488.3 million) has been utilized out of the Securities Premium account in accordance with Section 78 of the Companies Act 1956. Out of the above, `nil (previous year `1.7 million) has been utilized by one of the subsidiary companies towards debenture issue expenses, `163.9 million (previous year `165.7 million) has been utilized by one of the subsidiary companies towards buy-back of equity shares, `1.0 (previous year `nil) has been utilized by one of the subsidiary companies towards share issue expenses and `4,850.7 million (net of tax `2,232.5 million) [(previous year `5,320.9 million) (net of tax `nil)] has been utilized by HDFC Ltd. towards the proportionate premium payable on the redemption of zero-coupon secured redeemable non-convertible debentures. HDFC Ltd. has also written back `nil ( `937.6 million) on conversion of FCCBs to the Securities Premium account. In a report titled “The last bastion falls”, two analysts from Macquarie Equities Research downgraded their rating on HDFC’s stock to “underperform” from “outperform” citing a likely structural de-rating of the lender as its earnings quality and return on equity were being driven by its corporate customers and aggressive accounting practices. The analysts stated: Over the past two years, HDFC Ltd. has been adopting aggressive accounting practices by passing provisioning through reserves and also making the adjustments for zero-coupon bonds (ZCBs) through reserves. We believe FY11 and FY12 earnings are overstated by 38% and 24% respectively and reported return on equity [ROE] would have been 600 and 400 bps (basis points) lower at 16% and 18% respectively, if the adjustments had been made through the P&L. In other words, earnings growth has been managed, in our view. HDFC responded that the ZCBs were used to raise funds for investment in subsidiaries’ businesses. Since under Indian accounting principles, the income from subsidiaries (barring dividends) was not taken into account, HDFC was charging the interest costs on ZCBs to the securities premium account. On provisions, HDFC said that it was a one-time requirement pertaining to past assets and was transitory in nature. Required 1. 2. 3. Explain the transaction described in the note. Comment on the company’s accounting for interest on ZCBs and provisions for standard assets. Examine the possible aims that the company intended to achieve via the transaction and the related accounting. Financial Analysis Identify a sample of companies that have stock options and study their annual reports. Required 1. Explain why the companies may have stock option plans. Provide any references to relevant information in the financial statements and other parts of the annual report. 2. 3. 4. How do the companies account for stock options? Summarize the methods and their features. Comment on the quality of disclosure on stock option plans. Restate the net profit of the companies that follow the intrinsic value method for the fair value method. Some companies provide information in the footnotes that would enable you to do this exercise. How would the adoption of the intrinsic value method affect the profit of these companies? Collect annual reports of a sample of companies. Required 1. Prepare a list of reserves that appear in the balance sheet of these companies. Classify them according to the categories described in this chapter. 2. 3. How much of the reserves is available for (a) dividend payment and (b) bonus issue? Most companies have a general reserve. Explain why they keep this reserve rather than keep the amount in the statement of profit and loss. Identify companies that have had a share buy-back in the last five years. Required 1. Explain on the basis of the information provided in the offer document why each company bought back its shares. Do you agree with the reasons given? 2. 3. Analyze the cash position of the companies before and after buy-back. Dividend payment is an alternative to buy-back. Explain why the companies preferred buy-back to dividend. Identify a sample of companies that have had a bonus issue in the last five years. Required 1. 2. 3. What do you think are the reasons for bonus issue in each of the sample companies? Identify the reserves that the companies capitalized. Dividend payment is an alternative to bonus issue. Explain why the companies preferred bonus to dividend. Answers to Test Your Understanding 10.1 `35,000, its paid-up capital. 10.2 10.3 The excess over par value is securities premium and is part of shareholders’ equity. Since it is from a capital transaction, it is not an item of income. 10.4 Investment allowance reserve represents retained profits by another name and exists to comply with the tax law. The purpose of the reserve is to prevent paying the amount as dividends. The reserve is not to be confused with a cash or bank balance. Availability of cash is an entirely different matter. 10.5 10.6 1 Vikramaditya S. Khanna, The Economic History of the Corporate Form in Ancient India, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 2005. 2 IFRS 2:10/Ind AS 102:10. 3 IAS 38:69(a)/Ind AS 38.69(a)/AS 26:56(a). 4 For the purpose of buy-back , “free reserves” includes securities premium account (Explanation II to Section 68 of the Companies Act 2013). 5 IFRS 2:10/Ind AS 102:10. 6 IFRS 2:23/Ind AS 102:23. 7 Wayne Guay, S.P. Kothari, and Richard Sloan provide an economic analysis of the issues in accounting for share-based payment in “Accounting for employee stock options”, American Economic Review, May 2003, pp. 405–409. 8 IAS 33:10/Ind AS 33:10/AS 20. 9 IAS 33:5/Ind AS 33:5. 10 The after-tax cost of interest is given by the pre-tax rate multiplied by (100 – tax rate) i.e. 10% × (100 – 35)%. By now, you should have a clear understanding of the asset, liability, and equity items that appear in the financial statements. You should be in a position to explain how accountants measure and present the common items and should be able to apply the accounting principles and standards and the relevant legal requirements. STEP 1: Internal Control Systems and Current Assets Internal Control Systems: 1. What do you learn from the directors’ responsibility statement? 2. Locate any references to internal control systems in the auditors’ report. 3. Study the composition of the audit committee and the business and financial expertise of its members. 4. How is the certificate of the CEO and CFO on the financial statements useful? Cash: 5. Evaluate the adequacy of the company’s cash. 6. Make a rough estimate of the company’s surplus cash. 7. How can the company utilize its surplus cash? Receivables: 8. Did the company provide for its doubtful debts? 9. What percentage of the company’s receivables is classified as doubtful? 10. Comment on the age of the receivables. 11. What additional information about receivables would be useful? 12. How much receivables did the company write off? 13. What was the bad debt expense for the period? 14. Calculate the average collection period. State your assumptions. 15. Does the company have any bills receivable? 16. Locate any references to receivables in the auditors’ report. How are they useful? Inventories: 17. Identify the various types of inventories. 18. What cost formula(s) did the company use? 19. Locate any references to inventories in the auditors’ report. How are they useful? 20. Calculate the company’s average inventory holding period. State your assumptions. 21. Calculate the company’s operating cycle. State your assumptions. 22. What did the directors say about company’s inventory management efforts? STEP 2: Tangible Assets, Intangible Assets, and Investments Tangible Assets: 1. Give three examples of the company’s property, plant and equipment items. 2. How does it measure property, plant and equipment? 3. What depreciation method(s) does it use? 4. What is the estimated useful life of computers? Is this higher or lower than those specified in Schedule II or Schedule XIV? 5. Are there any fully depreciated property, plant and equipment items? 6. What was the gain or loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment items? 7. How does it measure impairment loss? 8. Locate any observations on property, plant and equipment in the auditors’ report. How are they useful? Intangible Assets: 9. Give two examples of the company’s intangible assets. 10. How does it measure intangible assets? 11. How much did the company spend on R&D? Investments: 12. Identify the company’s investments in equity and debt securities. How does its classification compare with the one used in this book? 13. Identify its subsidiaries. What is the percentage of its shareholding in each of them? 14. What is the amount of non-controlling interest (minority interest) in the company’s subsidiaries? 15. How can you find out whether the company is a subsidiary of Unilever? 16. Does it have any associates? If yes, name them. 17. Does it have any joint ventures? If yes, name them. 18. Study its accounting for investments. How does it compare with the principles discussed in this book? 19. What is the amount of goodwill on consolidation? How does it account for it? STEP 3: Current Liabilities and Non-current Liabilities Current Liabilities: 1. How are short-term borrowings different from short-term liabilities? 2. Does the company have any bills payable? 3. What are the company’s estimated liabilities? 4. What additional information about trade payables would be useful? 5. Is proposed dividend a liability? Non-current Liabilities: 6. What are the company’s long-term liabilities? 7. How are long-term borrowings different from long-term liabilities? 8. How does the company define deferred tax? Is it same or different from the definition used in this book? 9. What employee benefits does the company recognize as liabilities? 10. What are the company’s assumptions in estimating the liability for retirement benefits? Contingent Liabilities and Commitments: 11. What are the company’s contingent liabilities? Why are they not recognized? 12. How are contingent liabilities different from commitments? STEP 4: Shareholders’ Equity Share Capital: 1. What is the face value of the company’s shares? 2. What types of share capital does the company have? 3. Has the company issued any shares for services or non-cash assets? 4. What percentage of the company’s share capital does Unilever hold? Reserves: 5. Group the reserves according to the categories discussed in the chapter. 6. What is Employee Stock Options Outstanding? 7. What are the terms of Export Profit Reserve? 8. What are the terms of Development Allowance Reserve? 9. Are there any accumulated other comprehensive income items? Buy-back, Bonus, and Dividends: 10. Was there a share buy-back? If yes, what were the terms? How did it affect the various items in the shareholders’ equity? 11. Has the company issued any bonus shares? If yes, how many? 12. Was there a final or interim dividend? How much was the total dividend for the period? Was all of it paid? 13. Is the dividend specified as a percentage of the paid-up amount or as rupees per share? 14. What is the dividend distribution tax? What is the tax rate? Share-based Payment Arrangement: 15. Does the company have a share-based payment arrangement? How does it account for the related expense? Earnings per Share: 16. How much is the basic EPS? 17. What is the weighted average number of equity shares for calculating EPS? Is it different from the year-end number? Why or why not? 18. Does the company have any potentially dilutive securities? If yes, what were these? How would they be dilutive? Others: 19. What is the length of the notice for the annual general meeting? Is it sufficient? “Auditors’ lives would no longer be the same and without doubt be extremely challenging.” Question: What are the major challenges for accountants and auditors today? Answer: The accountants of today face many challenges. The CFO is generally perceived to be the second most important person in the organization after the CEO and is the face of the organization to regulators. This imposes upon him the onerous task of compliance with ever increasing regulations and dealing with regulators. The explosion of on-line information sources, competing real time news feeds in the form of TV channels devoted exclusively to business, the rapid developments in technology, the advent of “information on the move”, access to information on handheld mobile devices, and globally inter-connected markets – in sum the thirst for real-time and relevant information – have significantly impacted the quality and timeliness of financial reporting by accountants. Accounting standards which have not kept pace with newer business arrangements and emerging financial products pose additional challenges to accountants. After all, standards are akin to a house we raise over our heads. They define the perimeter within which a person, family, business or society can function. We live by the standards we set and it is to our peril that we dismantle them or lower the bar. Given the tendency to flood the financial statements with endless disclosures, it is important for the accountant to pay attention to the quality and the relevance of disclosures. It has often been noted that the lengthier a disclosure, the more it obfuscates the underlying facts. Samuel Johnson once said: “Where secrecy or mystery begins, vice or roguery is not far off”. Possibly he had disclosures accompanying financial statements in mind! The challenges an auditor of today faces are no less than that of an accountant but on a different canvas – the ever increasing expectation from investors and regulators, the oft-misconstrued role that an auditor lends insurance rather than assurance, the need to keep abreast of the sophisticated and rapid changes in the technological environment and, therefore, the need to retool, stakeholder activism and increased independent oversight, just to cite a few. Question: How has Satyam changed reporting and auditing in India? Answer: In my view Satyam has had a limited and temporary impact on reporting and auditing in India. This is evident from the frauds which have surfaced in the last two years. The absence of a robust system of internal control over financial reporting (equivalent to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act requirement), compliance with independent director and audit committee requirements in form rather than substance by a large number of companies, and the limited regulatory oversight on financial reporting and the attest function has resulted in companies and auditors being complacent. The slow and time-consuming systems of enforcement and punishment have not instilled the necessary fear or concern for quality of financial reporting or attestation. The auditing profession enjoys the unique mandate of “independence” which stems from statute and bears the burden of not only being objective and independent at all times but also having to appear at all times to be objective and independent. This is a very strong public expectation and is only expected to grow in days to come. Question: How would the Companies Act 2013 affect auditors? Answer: The Companies Act 2013 affects auditors at two levels. By the creation of the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) there would be an independent oversight on auditors. NFRA would, among others, inspect audit firms to monitor audit quality and would also have the powers of enforcement and punishment. At an individual level, auditors would be impacted by rotation rules, limits on number of audits (which will now include private companies), enhanced reporting responsibilities – with auditors now having to report directly to the Central Government on suspected frauds, wider restrictions on non-audit services, more stringent punishment against audit partners and firms, disgorgement of fees, class action suits, etc. Auditors’ lives would no longer be the same and without doubt be extremely challenging. Question: What are the pros and cons of auditor rotation? On balance, is rotation good? Answer: The argument in favour of rotation is the threat of familiarity where the compelling view is that too close an association of an auditor with his client would impair his ability to take an independent view. This view is mainly anecdotal and not on the basis of any empirical data. Studies across the world have shown that frauds have happened more during the periods of auditor change than otherwise. In US, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) recently took up the discussion on audit firm rotation, but did not find support. While the European Union has taken steps towards mandatory audit firm rotation, it is worth noting that the draft law approved by the European Parliamentary Legal Affairs Committee requires public interest entities such as banks, insurance firms, and listed companies to rotate audit firms every 14 years which period could be extended to 25 years when certain safeguards are put in place. The original proposal had called for rotation every six years, but a majority of the committee judged that period to be a costly and unwelcome intervention in the audit market. The UK Competition Commission has put paid to the proposal to force leading companies to change audit firms periodically. Instead, the Commission was of the view that a re-tender once every five years would have a similar effect to a policy of mandatory rotation, but with less cost. The core issue is audit quality. This is not addressed by mere rotation. There is no guarantee that audit quality would be enhanced by changing audit firms and also no guarantee that the benefit, if any, of such enhancement in quality will outweigh the costs of change. There is a high probability that the new auditors will have so much less knowledge about the company that it will take years for them to duplicate the understanding that previously existed with the incumbent auditors. There is a need to have an effective and independent oversight on the audit quality delivered by audit firms. It is also necessary to correct the profile of the profession first before introducing audit rotation. We need to have a sufficiently large number of firms with skills, experience, and scale for corporates to make an effective choice. It should also be borne in mind that while auditors are perceived to be guardians of financial truth, as noted by Oscar Wilde, truth is rarely pure and never simple. It is worth remembering that auditors, being an integral part of society, are not immune from the ebb and flow of custom. But they are bound to defend the terrain of their truth. On balance, I believe that mandatory rotation is bad, but there should be a periodic evaluation of auditor performance and rigorous, independent oversight on audit quality, while at the same time ensuring that those charged with governance and quality of financial reporting are held accountable and face severe penalties for negligence. Question: What is holding back IFRS implementation in India? Answer: India’s roll out of IFRS in 2011 was deferred primarily due to two reasons. (a) the Companies Act 1956 had to be amended to remove provisions inconsistent with IFRS and (b) tax issues relating to fair value measurement, treatment of other comprehensive income (OCI) and the treatment of the effect of the one-time adjustments to values of assets and liabilities on first-time implementation of IFRS needed resolution. Although the Companies Act 2013 has dealt with the first issue, the issue of tax treatment has not fully been resolved notwithstanding the proposal to introduce Tax Accounting Standards (which is undesirable) as a quick-fix solution. In the meantime IFRS has moved ahead requiring further revision to the Ind AS standards which were earlier aligned to IFRS. Yet another issue is the standard on financial instruments (IFRS 9/IAS 39) which is yet to take a final and complete shape. In the insurance sector, the standard on insurance contracts (IFRS 4) is under revision and is expected to be effective only in 2018. There are other issues which are being debated which may delay the implementation of IFRS: (i) whether two sets of standards should co-exist and apply to different classes of entities or should there be one set of standards with exemption for certain classes of companies; (ii) the need for a separate set of standards for small and medium enterprises (SMEs); (iii) whether IFRS-equivalent standards should be made applicable in a phased manner or should there be a ‘big bang’ approach. There has been sufficient awareness created about the need for transitioning to IFRS and a lot of time has been spent on training practitioners. It is now time to cut the umbilical cord to the old framework and bring in the new reporting framework by implementing IFRS-equivalent standards across the board in all public interest entities. Question: Are Indian companies and banks ready for fair value accounting? Answer: In my understanding, a large part of the Indian corporate sector including the banking sector is not fully ready for fair value accounting. There is an imperative need for more guidance and training, accreditation and oversight of valuers. It is also necessary for corporates and banks to prepare for the significant effect of transition to fair value accounting. Even a simple mark-to-market effect of foreign currency assets and liabilities has seen Indian corporate sector seeking relief. Question: What do Indian accountants have to do to come up with a global accounting firm similar to the Big Four? Answer: The Big Four have grown to their size by a series of mergers, acquisitions, and alliances. Indian accountants have to first change their mindset and transition from being family-run firms to become fully professionally managed firms. The next steps would possibly involve merging with other like-minded firms or acquisitions or alliances. This would necessarily mean a willingness to re-align existing management control or seniority, change in the way of working and ability to handle the challenges large firms face, etc. It would mean transforming the existing firms to multi-disciplinary firms by partnering with non-CAs and also widening the geographical presence and changing from being pure local firms to firms with national or international operations. Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Describe the objectives of financial statement analysis. Describe the sources of financial information. Explain the standards of comparison for financial statement analysis. Assess a company’s earnings quality. Explain horizontal analysis, trend analysis, vertical analysis, and ratio analysis. Explain profitability and perform DuPont analysis. Distinguish between the performance of operations from the profitability of financial activities. Analyze liquidity. Analyze solvency. Evaluate a company’s capital market standing. Question management communications. Understand the forces that influence corporate disclosure policy. Describe the implications of the efficient market hypothesis for financial statement analysis. Describe earnings management and identify motives for managing earnings. TILL DEBT DO US PART “No dream too big” proclaims the cover of the Jaypee group’s annual reports. It was probably meant to epitomize the group’s approach to business growth. In the event, it ended up as a statement on the size of its debt. Debt ballooned eight-fold from `62 billion in 2007 to `530 billion in 2013. Over the same period, revenue increased five times. The group invested in power projects that involve long gestation even in the best of times. It commissioned 2,200 MW of capacity over since 1992 and over projects totalling 10,000 MW were under construction. High-profile projects such as the Ganga Expressway were stuck in government approvals. The 5,000-acre Sports City along the Yamuna Expressway stalled, because of the slump in the real estate market. The group’s golf course resort and hotels suffered, because of the economic slowdown. The group made gross losses of `3.7 billion in 2013 and its interest cover sank to 1.4 times. The mounting debt forced the company to sell its cement plant in Gujarat to UltraTech at what was regarded as a bargain price. THE CHAPTER IN A NUTSHELL The primary objective of financial reporting is to provide information to present and potential investors, creditors, and others in making rational investment, credit, and other decisions. Effective decision-making requires evaluation of the past performance of companies and assessment of their future prospects. In this chapter, we describe a number of techniques used by investors, creditors, and analysts for analyzing and interpreting the information contained in financial statements. We look closely at the components of earnings to see if they are sustainable. You will learn how to perform horizontal, vertical, and trend analyses. Analysts attempt to condense the mass of data in financial statements into a handful of financial indicators that convey the story of a business. You will learn how to calculate and interpret those indicators. The intense competition for capital spurs firms to provide additional information in order to attract investors. You will see how firms can benefit from providing voluntary disclosure. Finally, you will learn about managerial motives for earnings management. Objectives of Financial Statement Analysis Financial statement analysis is the collective name for the tools and techniques that are intended to provide relevant information to decision-makers. The purpose of the analysis is to assess a company’s financial health and performance. Financial statement analysis consists of comparisons for the same company over periods of time and for different companies in the same industry or different industries. Financial statement analysis enables investors and creditors to evaluate past performance and financial position; and predict future performance. Evaluation of Past Performance and Financial Position The starting point in the analysis of a company is to look at the record. Information about past performance is useful in judging future prospects. For example, trend of past sales, earnings, cash flow, profit margin, and return on investment provide a basis for evaluating the efficiency of a company’s performance and aid in assessing its prospects. An assessment of current status will show where the company stands at present, in terms of items such as inventories, borrowings, and cash position. To a large extent, the expectations of investors and creditors about future performance are shaped by their evaluation of past performance and current position. Individual investors are often passive and they rarely intervene in the working of a company as long as it is reasonably successful. Their evaluation of the company helps them assess prospects for their investments. Investors who are dissatisfied with a company’s performance will typically sell their shares in the company. In contrast, institutional investors (e.g. LIC, SBI, Franklin Templeton) are generally more active and may insist on major business and management changes when the company does not fare well. Creditors are concerned with management’s compliance with loan indentures and may take legal action if covenants are broken. Prediction of Future Performance Investors and creditors use information about the past to assess a company’s prospects. They look ahead by looking back, so to speak. Investors expect an adequate return from the company in the form of dividends and stock price appreciation. Creditors expect the company to pay interest and repay the principal in accordance with the terms of lending. Therefore, they are interested in predicting the earning power and debt-paying ability of the company. You may recall the discussion in Chapter 1 on users of financial statements and their information needs. Investors and creditors try to balance expected risks and returns. The returns they receive should be commensurate with the risks they perceive. Future returns are far more difficult to predict when they are expected to fluctuate widely; prediction becomes much easier when the fluctuations are within a narrow range. Thus, investors and creditors will invest in, or lend to, high-risk ventures only if they expect adequately high returns. Similarly, they will accept low returns only if the expected risk is low. For example, it is relatively easier to predict an electricity company’s future performance than a movie company’s fortunes. Therefore, equity investors would be willing to accept a relatively low return from an electricity company, but they would want a higher return in the form of dividends and stock price increase from a movie company. For the same reason, loans to a movie company will carry a higher interest rate than loans to an electricity company. Sources of Information Individual investors and creditors must often depend on published sources of information about a company. The most common sources of information about listed companies are company reports, stock exchanges, business periodicals and television, and information services. Company Reports Every company publishes an annual report which contains valuable financial and other information about the company. Annual reports are the beginning and ending points in obtaining information about individual companies. As a starter, they provide an overview of the company’s business, current status, and past performance. At the end of the information gathering process, annual reports are used to corroborate the vast array of company-specific data assembled from various sources. A typical Indian company annual report contains the following documents: Directors’ report and management discussion and analysis; Financial statements; Schedules and notes to the financial statements; and Auditor’s report. In addition, some companies provide tables and charts showing current period highlights and trend of performance for the past five or ten years, the chairman’s letter to the shareholders, and a lot of other information that is difficult to audit, such as brand valuation, human assets valuation, corporate social responsibility initiatives and, of course, impressive photographs of products, people, and facilities. The annual report is sent to the shareholders of the company free of charge and is usually available on the company’s website. Listed companies are also required to publish quarterly statements of financial results in leading newspapers within one month after the quarter. These are typically not audited but they go through a “limited review” by the auditors. Stock Exchanges Listed companies must file copies of their annual reports, as well as additional documents such as a statement of distribution of share ownership and quarterly results, with the stock exchanges in which they are listed. The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) is the oldest stock exchange in Asia. It has a library of annual reports and other documents filed with it. The National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) is the leading stock exchange in terms of trading activity. The BSE and the NSE have a number of publications that give financial and other information about companies. A lot of useful information is also available on their websites. The listing agreement requires companies to inform the stock exchange promptly of major developments affecting them, including management and auditor changes, director resignations, board meetings, bonus and dividend decisions, strikes, accidents, and plant closures. Business Periodicals and Television Business newspapers and magazines are important and, often, timely sources of financial and business news. Major financial and business publications in India include The Economic Times, Business Line, Business Standard, Financial Express, and Business Today. These publications give stock prices and carry news items and analytical write-ups on companies. General newspapers too devote a few pages to business news. Increasingly, the two leading international business newspapers, the Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal provide good coverage of economic and business developments in India. Television channels provide round-the-clock coverage of political and economic events. Channels such as CNBC-TV18, NDTV Profit, Bloomberg UTV and ET Now focus on business and economic news. Information Services Credit rating agencies bring out periodical company and industry studies. Several studies of financial ratios are available, notably the ones published by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE). Useful databases include Prowess and Capitaline that provide Indian company data and Thomson Reuters’ DataStream for international company data and I/B/E/S that has analyst forecasts. Economic reports and forecasts are available from the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) as well as from private sources. Industry-specific data come from the government, trade associations, and a variety of other sources. Analysts in brokerage firms and investment advisory services prepare periodic reports on companies and industries for their clients and sometimes for outsiders. Sophisticated users of financial statements invariably seek more information for their purposes. For example, banks and financial institutions often demand additional information for processing loan requests. Similarly, credit rating agencies need considerably more information from companies requesting ratings than that available from published reports. In addition, there are many agencies that undertake private information search for a fee. Professional analysts collect information during plant visits and field trips. Standards of Comparison Financial analysts look for pertinent standards of comparisons to determine whether the results of their financial statement analysis are favourable or unfavourable. For this purpose, comparisons are made with the following: 1. 2. 3. 4. Rule-of-thumb indicators; Past performance of the company; Internal standards; and Industry standards. We will now discuss them. Rule-of-thumb Indicators Financial analysts and bankers use rule-of-thumb or benchmark financial ratios. For example, it is generally thought that a current ratio of 2:1 or above is satisfactory. Rule-of-thumb measures are useful in making broad comparisons of companies in different industries. Nevertheless, they should be used with great caution since individual circumstances often differ. For example, a firm with a current ratio of 2:1 may have slow-moving inventories and old receivables, while another firm having a current ratio of 1.5:1 may have fast-moving inventories and receivables within the credit period. Past Performance Financial analysts compare a company’s current performance with its past performance. Five- or ten-year summaries of selected financial data appear in some annual reports. Also, financial track record is cited in company prospectuses and advertisements. A look at the past performance will show broadly whether the company is improving or declining. Also, a study of past ratios and percentages may assist in extrapolating them. However, there are problems with historical comparisons: 1. Fundamental changes in a company’s environment, such as government regulation, competition, and state of technology, can make it difficult to project past trends into the future. 2. Accounting policy changes (e.g. changes in depreciation and inventory valuation) will affect comparability of the past figures. 3. Non-operating items (e.g. foreign exchange gains and losses and gain on sale of assets and investments) are not predictable. 4. Comparisons with the company’s own past can, at times, create an illusion of growth. For instance, an annual rise of 10 per cent in a company’s sales may in itself sound good, but would not be considered adequate if the market is growing by 30 per cent a year. The success of a business in the long run depends on whether it outperforms its competitors rather than its own past. Internal Standards Companies follow internal standards for monitoring and rewarding performance. There are broad corporate goals for profit, return on assets, sales growth, market share, new product launches and so on. Budgets specify detailed targets for profit centres, business units and departments. Standard costs are predetermined costs of making a product and are based on the standards for material consumption and prices, labour efficiency and wage rates, and expected level of operations laid down by the management. These are used primarily for control of operational costs. Internal standards are greatly useful in evaluating an enterprise’s performance. They are directly relevant to the enterprise’s circumstances and are, therefore, likely to be more meaningful as a basis for comparison. They are regularly revised in light of changes in the enterprise’s economic and business environment. Unfortunately, they are not routinely available to outsiders. Nevertheless, analysts can question the management in conference calls and analyst briefings about internal expectations specified in budgets and other internal documents. Industry Standards The performance of a company can be compared with that of other companies in the industry. Comparisons with industry standards help overcome the limitations of historical comparisons. For example, if a company has a gross margin of 7 per cent, while the industry average is 12 per cent, its operations are not as profitable as some of its peers. Industry comparisons can be misleading for the following reasons: 1. Comparisons are difficult for diversified companies that operate in several unrelated lines of business. For example, Hindustan Unilever’s products include soaps, detergents, toothpaste, and food. What is a comparable firm for the company? Procter & Gamble is in detergents, but it is also in products that HUL is not in. ITC is in food, but it is also in a big way in hotels and tobacco. Colgate makes toothpaste but not any of HUL’s other products. Comparing HUL’s performance with that of Procter & Gamble, Colgate or ITC would be of limited value. To an extent, segment reporting can mitigate this problem. 2. Companies often follow different accounting policies. Inventory valuation methods, useful life estimates for fixed assets, and revenue recognition practices differ across companies. 3. Yet another difficulty is the lack of uniformity in reporting periods. Most companies follow the March 31 year-end, but a few do not. For instance, HUL reports for the year ended March 31, while Procter & Gamble’s fiscal year ends on June 30. The Companies Act 2013 requires companies to use the March 31 fiscal year, unless they qualify for exemption. Earnings Quality A key objective of financial statement analysis is to estimate future earnings from current earnings. Unfortunately, the profit reported in the annual report is a ‘noisy’ measure of a company’s operating performance. The analyst needs to identify the major sources of revenue and profit, such as divisions and product lines, as well as understand the extent to which a company’s earnings are dependent on each of them. An important part of the exercise of recomputing a company’s earnings is to identify and segregate non-operating items so that the resulting earnings number represents probable future earnings from regular and continuing activities. Earnings quality refers to the probability of earnings trends continuing and the extent to which earnings could represent distributable cash. Earnings are said to be of high quality if: (a) they can be distributed in cash; (b) they are derived primarily from continuing operations that are not volatile from year to year; and (c) the methods used in measuring profit are conservative. In contrast, earnings are said to be of low quality if they have only a small percentage of distributable cash, are derived from non-operating sources, and are computed using liberal accounting methods. Examples of low-quality earnings are as follows: 1. Change to liberal accounting estimates. Examples: Increasing useful life of fixed assets; understating provision for doubtful debts. 2. Change to liberal accounting methods. Examples: Switching to the straight-line method from the written-downvalue method in the early part of an asset’s life; moving to FIFO from WAC in inflationary times. 3. Non-recurring items contributing significantly to results. Examples: Gain on sale of subsidiary; receipt of a large tax refund. 4. Earnings that are cyclical. Examples: Earnings of shipping and cement companies. 5. Earnings subject to wide variations due to uncontrollable factors. Examples: Earnings of coffee and tea plantation companies. Let us now see how a company’s earnings quality may be affected by the following: Choice of accounting policies; Prior period errors; Discontinued operations; Changes in accounting policies; and Non-operating and non-recurring items. Choice of Accounting Policies Accounting standards lay down the broad framework for the preparation and presentation of financial statements. Within this framework, management has considerable flexibility in selecting accounting methods and estimating key accounting determinants, such as useful life of assets and the amount of provision for doubtful debts. Reported income numbers are often affected significantly by the accounting methods and estimates used. Conservative accounting methods and estimates tend to produce a lower profit. Exhibit 11.1 gives examples of accounting policy choices in areas in which management exercises a great deal of discretion and judgment: The bewildering variety of accounting policies complicates comparisons of earnings of companies even within the same industry. At a minimum, companies should disclose in the summary of accounting policies the measurement bases used in preparing the financial statements (e.g. historical cost, current cost, net realizable value, fair value or recoverable value), other accounting policies that are relevant to an understanding of the financial statements, management’s judgments and assumptions it makes about the future and other sources of estimation uncertainty.1 To illustrate the effect of alternative accounting policies, suppose that two companies, Conservative Company and Liberal Company, were set up in 20X1 in the same industry. Conservative’s accounting policies are: WAC for inventory valuation, WDV for depreciation, and full write-off of product development costs. Liberal Company follows the FIFO method for inventory valuation, SLM, and onefifth amortization of product development costs. Both companies have identical revenues, expenses, and purchases, and have 10,000 equity shares. Assume a 30 per cent income tax rate. Exhibit 11.2 presents the statement of profit and loss of the two companies. There is a huge difference between the earnings per share (EPS) of the two companies. As a result of its more stringent accounting policies, Conservative Company reports earnings per share of `16.90, while Liberal Company’s EPS is `45.40. Clearly, we should keep in mind differences in the accounting methods between the two companies while comparing their results. The more stringent inventory valuation policy has helped Conservative save `30,000 in tax (difference in cost of goods sold, `100,000 × tax rate, 30 per cent). Thus, in terms of net cash flow from operations, Conservative is better off by `30,000 as compared to Liberal. From the discussion in Chapter 6, you would know that the effect of the difference will reverse in future years. For example, the higher year-end inventory will have the effect of increasing cost of goods sold next year, thereby decreasing next year’s net profit. So Liberal’s higher earnings per share is transitory. This example does not consider the deferred tax effect of any of the differences. As an exercise, you can recompute the EPS with deferred tax accounting. In this illustration, the recomputation of the earnings of Liberal on a basis comparable to Conservative is not too difficult mainly because all the information required for this purpose is available. Unfortunately, in the real world, much of the information required to make the recomputation is not available since companies do not often disclose all the information that is needed for reworking the numbers. Meaningful comparisons are not possible, unless the analyst knows the accounting policies followed. Prior Period Errors Prior period errors are “omissions from, and misstatements in, the entity’s financial statements of one or more prior periods arising from a failure to use, or misuse of, reliable information that (a) was available when financial statements for those periods were authorized for issue; and (b) could reasonably be expected to have been obtained and taken into account in the preparation and presentation of those financial statements.”2 Prior period errors include the effect of mathematical mistakes, mistakes in applying accounting policies, oversights or misinterpretations of facts, and fraud. Examples include inaccuracy in totalling inventory sheets and flawed depreciation calculations arising from use of incorrect asset lives or omission to consider residual values. Prior period errors are different from changes in accounting estimates (e.g. revision of asset lives or provision for doubtful debts), which are inherently approximations that are routinely revised as additional information becomes available in subsequent periods. An enterprise shall correct material prior period errors retrospectively in the first set of financial statements authorized for issue after their discovery by (a) restating the comparative amounts for the prior period(s) presented in which the error occurred; or (b) if the error occurred before the earliest prior period presented, restating the opening balances of assets, liabilities and equity for the earliest prior period presented.3 A prior period error shall be corrected by retrospective restatement except to the extent that it is impracticable to determine either the period-specific effects or the cumulative effect of the error. Retrospective restatement corrects the recognition, measurement and disclosure of amounts of elements of financial statements as if a prior period error had never occurred. Besides, an entity shall disclose (a) the nature of the prior period error; (b) for each prior error presented, to the extent practicable, the amount of the correction for each financial statement line item affected, (c) the amount of the correction at the beginning of the earliest prior period presented; and (d) if retrospective restatement is impracticable for a particular period, the circumstances that led to the existence of that condition, and a description of how and from which period the error has been corrected. Financial statements of subsequent periods need not repeat these disclosures. Since the financial statements of large companies are generally audited by reputable accounting firms, it is fair to expect these statements to be free from material errors and omissions. So, prior period items are rare in published reports. When there are prior period errors, the analyst should segregate them and recompute the amounts beginning with the year in which the error occurred. Discontinued Operations Most large companies are engaged in many types of business. The different activities are organized as separate groups of products, services, or customers. Sometimes, a company may discontinue operations in certain major business segments either because they are not profitable or for other reasons. A discontinued operation is “a component of an entity that either has been disposed of, or is classified as “held for sale”, and (a) represents a separate major line of business or geographical area of operations, (b) is part of a single coordinated plan to dispose of a separate major line of business or geographical area of operations, or (c) is a subsidiary acquired exclusively with a view to resale.”4 A component of an entity comprises operations and cash flows that can be clearly distinguished, operationally and for financial reporting purposes, from the rest of the entity. In other words, a component of an entity will have been a cashgenerating unit or a group of such units. For predicting earnings from regular, on-going activities, the analyst should separate the results of continuing operations. In addition, the analyst should exclude any gain or loss from the disposal of a business segment as a part of recomputation of the earnings. Separate disclosure of discontinued operations is necessary to facilitate evaluation of the ongoing activities of the business. Unfortunately, such disclosure is rare in India. Changes in Accounting Policies We know that an enterprise should follow accounting policies consistently for similar transactions within each period and from one period to the next so that the results of different periods can be compared. For example, if an entity switches to SLM from WDV, the profit in the current period will not be comparable with that in the previous period. Therefore, an entity shall change an accounting policy only if the change (a) is required by an IFRS or Ind AS; or (b) results in the financial statements providing reliable and more relevant information about the effects of transactions on the entity’s financial position, financial performance or cash flows.5 “Reliable” means that the financial statements (i) represent faithfully the entity’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows; (ii) reflect the economic substance of transactions, and not merely the legal form; (iii) are neutral, i.e. free from bias; (iv) are prudent; and (v) are complete in all material respects. “Relevant” means that the information that results is relevant to the economic decision-making needs of users. A company’s anxiety to maintain a certain level of profitability in a bad year or to lower the amount of income tax expense is not an acceptable reason for a change in an accounting policy. An accounting policy change may be voluntary or required by an IFRS or Ind AS. When an entity changes an accounting policy voluntarily, it must apply the change retrospectively. Retrospective application is applying a new accounting policy to transactions as if that policy had always been applied. An entity shall account for a change in accounting policy resulting from the initial application of an IFRS or Ind AS in accordance with any specific transitional provisions in that standard. If an IFRS or Ind AS does not include specific transitional provisions, the entity must apply the change retrospectively. When a change in accounting policy is applied retrospectively, the entity shall adjust the opening balance of each affected component of equity for the earliest prior period presented and the other comparative amounts disclosed for each prior period presented as if the new accounting policy had always been applied. When a voluntary change in accounting policy has an effect on the current period or any prior period (even if it is impracticable to determine the related amount), or might have an effect on future periods, an entity shall disclose (a) the nature of the change in accounting policy; (b) the reasons for the change; and (c) the amount of the adjustment for the current period and each prior period presented for each financial statement line item affected. Apart from violating comparability frequent changes are perceived by analysts and others as desperate attempts to camouflage serious financial and business difficulties being experienced by an enterprise. Even so, a few companies change their accounting policies to improve their reported earnings. When accounting changes have been made by a company, the analyst has to restate the results of earlier periods so that the earnings series becomes comparable. Sometimes, accounting changes intended to increase reported profit have the effect of lowering profits in later years because of unexpected changes in the economic environment. For example, in the early 1990s, a few companies began to show their land holdings as inventories so as to take advantage of the boom in real estate prices. These companies transferred the unrealized appreciation in the value of their lands to capital reserve. However, when the property market went into a recession, they got into trouble. Changes in accounting estimates As a result of the uncertainties inherent in business activities, many items in financial statements cannot be measured with precision but can only be estimated. You have seen examples of estimates of bad debts, inventory obsolescence, the fair value of financial instruments, the useful lives of and/or the expected pattern of consumption of the benefits from depreciable assets, and warranty obligations. The use of estimates is unavoidable. Estimation involves judgments based on the latest available, reliable information. It is important to revise an estimate if changes occur in the circumstances under which the estimate was based or as a result of new information or experience. Recall how we revised asset useful lives. The revision of an estimate does not relate to prior periods and is not the correction of an error. The effect of a change in an accounting estimate shall be recognized prospectively. An entity shall disclose the nature and amount of a change in an accounting estimate, which has an effect in the current period or is expected to have an effect in future periods. Non-recurring and Non-operating Items Certain items of income and expense may be large, or otherwise important to users of financial statements in understanding and making projections about the financial performance of a business. The reported results can be considered to be representative if the underlying activities and events in a period are of a normal, recurring nature. The effect of unusual and non-recurring events should be isolated to predict the likely profit for the next year. In the past, items such as losses caused by floods, earthquakes and other natural disasters and expropriation of assets by government were disclosed as extraordinary items. Since the classification was often subjective, the concept of extraordinary items has been eliminated. Instead, an entity must disclose separately the nature and amount of items of income or expense that are material.6 Sometimes these are referred to as exceptional items in published financial statements. Circumstances which may give rise to the separate disclosure of income and expense from ordinary activities include the following: 1. Write-down of inventories to net realizable value or of property, plant and equipment to recoverable amount, as well as the reversal of the write-down; 2. Restructuring of an entity’s activities and reversals of any provisions for the costs of restructuring; 3. Disposal of items of property, plant and equipment; 4. Disposal of investments; 5. Discontinued operations; 6. Litigation settlements; and 7. Other reversals of provisions. For many companies, income from non-operating sources has been significantly higher in recent years. Dividend income from units, dividends from subsidiaries and associates, interest income for manufacturing and service organizations, foreign exchange gains, and gain on sale of property, plant and equipment are examples of income from non-operating sources, and these appear under “other income” in the statement of profit and loss.7 Much of the “other income” comes from sources other than a company’s core business or related to items of a non-recurring nature. Nonoperating income is increasing for many companies and even helping some of them hide losses from their normal business operations. Here are a few examples of how non-recurring and non-operating items affect profit, favourably or adversely: (a) Hindustan Unilever: The company’s June 2012 quarter net profit of `13,312 million included a one-time gain of `6,072 million from sale of property. (b) NIIT: Net profit of `407 million for the December 2011 quarter included a gain of `210 million from the sale of Element K, the company’s US subsidiary. (c) Reliance Industries: The company’s June 2013 quarter ‘other income’ was higher at `25,350 million as against `19,040 million in the year ago quarter. Net profit was `53,520 as against `45,030 million. ‘Other income’ was mainly on account of profit on sale of investments. Sales of investments was the second highest contributor (after refining) to the company’s profit. (d) Infosys: ‘Other income’ of `23,590 constituted 24 per cent of the profit before tax for the year ended March 31, 2013. Techniques of Financial Statement Analysis Very few numbers in financial statements are significant in themselves. But we can draw meaningful inferences from their relationship to other amounts or their change from one period to another. The tools of financial statement analysis help in establishing significant relationships and changes. The most commonly used analytical techniques are: 1. 2. 3. 4. Horizontal analysis; Trend analysis; Vertical analysis; and Ratio analysis. In this section, we illustrate the application of these techniques using the 2013 financial statements of HUL. Note the following: (a) The amounts for 2012 and 2013 are taken from the financial statements for the respective years. However, the amounts for 2011 are those in the 2011 column in the 2012 financial statements, because the format of the financial statements changed in 2012.8 (b) Minority interests are not liabilities, because they are not payable by the parent to the subsidiary’s non-controlling shareholders. We include them in shareholders’ equity. As you would know, HUL is a leader in consumer products. It has a number of well-known brands in a variety of segments, such as the following: Soaps and detergents: Domex, Lifebuoy, Liril, Lux, Pears, Surf excel, Vim, Wheel. Personal products: Axe, Clinic, Fair & Lovely, Huggies, Lakme, Pepsodent, Sunsilk. Beverages: 3 Roses, Bru, Red Label, Taaza, Taj Mahal. Foods: Annapurna, Kissan, Knorr. Horizontal Analysis Financial statements present comparative information for at least two years. Horizontal analysis calculates the amount and percentage changes from the previous year to the current year. It is a simple but useful exercise. While an amount change in itself may mean something, converting it to percentage is more useful in appreciating the order of magnitude of the change. Exhibits 11.3 and 11.4 present the horizontal analysis of HUL’s financial statements. The calculations shown in Exhibit 11.3 are revealing. In 2013, sales were up 15 per cent, while net profit was up 37 per cent. This gives the impression that there was a dramatic improvement in profitability. But the story is not that straightforward. “Other income” and “exceptional items” consist mostly of nonoperating items and are highly volatile, and both shot up in 2013. Excluding these items, the profit was `39,283 for 2013 and `32,484 for 2012, an increase of 21 per cent. After tax, the growth turns out to be 11 per cent. The profit grew much slower than the sales. Earnings quality analysis enables us to find out the real growth. Another way to look at performance is to compare the company’s sales growth with growth in total assets and in specific asset categories. From Exhibit 11.4, we see that assets were up 6 per cent, less than the growth in sales. We also need to look at the growth in individual asset categories. While non-current assets went up 25 per cent, property, plant and equipment grew much lower at 7 per cent. Capital work-in-progress declined 2 per cent, indicating that the company is not expanding in-house manufacturing capacity. Non-current investments which are mostly financial assets grew over four times. Current assets were down 2 per cent. Inventories were up 1 per cent, less than the sales growth. Receivables grew almost in step with sales. The slow growth in inventories could have been because of better inventory management. But this also raises a question whether the inventories are sufficient to maintain the current momentum in sales. Lower inventories could result in loss of production and sales, and may indicate less optimistic sales growth expectation. These are propositions that need testing with more data. Another way to analyze the percentage changes is to compare them with the inflation rate. Percentage changes should be interpreted with care; otherwise, they can be misleading. For example, tangible assets increased 7 per cent, while intangible assets were up 21 per cent but on significantly different base amounts. Trend Analysis Trend analysis involves studying changes in financial statement items for many years. It is an extension of horizontal analysis. We first assign a value of 100 to the financial statement items in a past financial year used as the base year and then express the amounts in the following years as a percentage of the base-year value. Exhibit 11.5 illustrates trend analysis with sales, net profit and fixed assets for HUL from 2009 to 2013. To illustrate, using 2009 as the base year, the sales value in 2010 becomes 108 as shown below: From 2009 to 2013, sales increased 65 per cent, net profit 91 per cent and fixed assets 44 per cent. On the whole, the three moved in the same direction, but at a different pace. These numbers imply that profit margin and asset utilization improved over the period. Trend analysis helps in identifying basic changes in the nature of the business. Since many large corporations publish performance summaries and selected financial indicators for five or more years, it is possible to perform trend analysis. Vertical Analysis Vertical analysis is the proportional expression of the amount of each item on a financial statement to the statement total. The results of vertical analysis are presented in the form of common-size statements in which the items within each statement are expressed in percentages of some common number and always add up to 100. It is conventional to express items in the statement of profit and loss as percentages of sales, and balance sheet items as percentages of the total of shareholders’ equity and liabilities (or as percentages of total assets). Vertical analysis helps in making comparisons of companies that differ in size since the financial statements are expressed in comparable common-size format. Further, a comparison of common-size statements for several years may reveal important changes in the components from one year to another. Exhibits 11.6 and 11.7 show HUL’s common-size statement of profit and loss and balance sheet for 2013 and 2012. There are significant changes in expenses and tax. Also, you should recall the earlier discussion on the effect of “other income” and “exceptional items”. In the balance sheet, there are major changes in shareholders’ equity, short-term provisions, and current investments. Common-size statements are especially useful in presentations where the focus is on overall comparisons. Ratio Analysis Ratio analysis involves establishing a relevant financial relationship between components of financial statements. Two companies may have earned the same amount of profit in a year, but unless the profit is related to sales or assets, it is not possible to conclude which of them is more profitable. Ratio analysis helps in identifying significant relationships between financial statement items for further investigation. If used with understanding of industry factors and general economic conditions, it can be a powerful tool for recognizing a company’s strengths as well as its potential trouble spots. Financial ratios are used to evaluate profitability, liquidity, solvency, and capital market strength. In the earlier chapters, you have seen how certain financial ratios assist investors, creditors, and managers in evaluating an enterprise. The objective of this chapter is to provide a comprehensive coverage of all the major ratios. Commonly used financial ratios and their interpretation are discussed in the following sections. Our evaluation is based on the information available in published reports. We should use additional information, such as internal benchmarks, where available. Profitability Analysis Profitability ratios measure the degree of operating success of a company. The only reason why investors are interested in a company is that they think they will earn a reasonable return in the form of capital gain and dividends on their investment. Therefore, they are keen to learn about the ability of the company to earn revenues in excess of its expenses. They will not be interested in a company that does not earn a sufficient margin on its sales. Failure to earn an adequate rate of profit over a period will also drain the company’s cash and impair its liquidity. The commonly used ratios to evaluate profitability are: Profit margin; Asset turnover; Return on assets; Return on equity; and Earnings per share. We discuss these ratios below. Profit Margin This ratio, also known as return on sales (ROS), measures the amount of net profit earned from each rupee of revenue. Using the data in Exhibit 11.3, we compute HUL’s margin as follows: Profit margin vaulted to 14.22 per cent in 2013 from 11.95 per cent in 2012. Net profit is a “noisy” measure, because of the inclusion of “other income” and “exceptional items”, which are non-operating and non-recurring. If we exclude them, the profit becomes `27,016 for 2013 and `24,269 and the revised margin is 10 per cent for 2013 and 10.36 per cent. We get a very different picture now: the margin is much lower for both years and it actually decreased in 2013. Profit margin provides some indication of the cushion available to the company in the event of an increase in costs or a drop in selling prices, because of recession or greater competition. The margin was 15.26 per cent in 2006, but has been falling steadily since then. But for the help from non-operating items, it would have fallen in 2013. The pressure on margin should be analyzed by looking at major categories of expenses, such as materials, salaries and wages, and advertising. Asset turnover This is a measure of a firm’s efficiency in utilizing its assets. It indicates how many times the assets were turned over in a period in order to generate sales. If the asset turnover is high, we can infer that the enterprise is managing its assets efficiently. A low asset turnover implies the presence of more assets than the business needs for its operations. Averages rather than year-end amounts of assets are a better measure of the level of assets held during the year. The difference between average and year-end amounts will be more pronounced for companies that are engaged in expanding (or reducing) capacity. From Exhibit 11.4 and Appendix A, HUL’s assets are as follows: 123,096 in 2013; 116,040 in 2012; and 105,414 in 2011. Average assets are: 119,568 in 2013 and 110,727 in 2012. Using the sales data in Exhibit 11.3 and the average assets, we can now compute HUL’s asset turnover: In 2013, HUL had sales of about `2.26 per rupee of investment in assets as compared to `2.12 in 2012. The increase of 14 paise in sales per rupee of investment indicates significant improvement in utilization of assets in 2013. This inference is in line with our observation in horizontal analysis that assets grew slower than sales. Increase in asset turnover could be because of capacity reduction, regular equipment maintenance, timely availability of raw materials and power, effective management of inventories, receivables and cash, better industrial relations, and so on. Asset turnover rates differ from one industry to another. A fast-food restaurant operating from rented premises may have asset turnover of 20, while a refinery’s asset turnover could be even lower than one. Return on Assets Return on assets (ROA), also known as return on investment (ROI), is a measure of profitability from a given level of investment. It is an excellent indicator of a company’s overall performance. We compute HUL’s ROA as follows: The increase in the ROA indicates significant improvement in the company’s overall profitability. The ROA increased because of the improvement in both margin and turnover, as we saw earlier. We note that the higher ROA came from a larger investment, suggesting that the additional investment was probably even more profitable. The DuPont system of financial analysis clearly brings out the effect of these two drivers on the ROA. Figure 11.1 presents the DuPont chart. It shows how profit margin and asset turnover interact to produce ROA. Level 1 is the return on equity, which we will consider shortly. Look at Level 2 – return on assets, and Level 3 – its drivers, viz. profit margin and asset turnover. It is possible to produce a certain ROA by varying the margin and turnover. For example, a 20 per cent ROA can come from a margin of 10 per cent and a turnover of two times or a margin of 4 per cent and a turnover of five times. Level 3 describes the calculation of margin and turnover. A firm selects a combination that reflects how it intends to do business. Does it want to sell upmarket, differentiated products or cheap, mass market goods? To achieve a certain ROA, businesses can choose between various combinations of margin and turnover. Companies that target the “mass market”, such as supermarkets, typically have low profit margins, but keep high asset turnover. Companies that sell premium products such as designer dresses or diamonds or operate in a niche market enjoy high profit margins, but have low asset turnover. Using the DuPont approach, we can analyze HUL’s ROA as follows: This analysis shows that the company earned a higher ROA in 2013, because of both higher margin and higher asset turnover. As a result, the ROA was up 6.82 per cent. We can separate the effect of the two drivers to explain the change in the ROA, as follows: We calculate the effect of the change in margin on the ROA as follows: Change in margin in 2013 Asset turnover in 2012. This calculation helps us answer the question: How much did the increase in margin increase the ROA in 2013? Answer: 4.81%, i.e. 2.27% 2.12. We can now explore the effect of the change in asset turnover as follows: Change in turnover in 2013 Margin in 2013. We can now answer the question: What was the incremental effect of the change in asset turnover on the ROA in 2013? Answer: 1.99%, i.e. 0.14 14.22%. The margin and turnover effects add up to 6.80 per cent. (The change in return on assets is 6.82 per cent. The difference is due to rounding.) The analyst investigates the factors responsible for the deterioration and relates them to firm-specific factors, industry trends and macroeconomic developments. Return on Equity Return on equity (ROE) is a measure of profitability from the shareholders’ standpoint. It measures the efficiency in the use of shareholders’ funds. In order to moderate the influence of shareholder transactions such as share issue and buyback and the effect of change in retained earnings, analysts generally use the average of beginning and ending amounts for the year. From Exhibit 11.4 and Appendix A, HUL’s equity is as follows: 28,857 in 2013; 36,993 in 2012; and 27,495 in 2011.9 Average equity is: 32,925 in 2013 and 32,244 in 2012. Using the sales data in Exhibit 11.3 and the average assets, calculated earlier, we can now compute HUL’s ROE: Competitors try and replicate a firm’s special advantages in product offerings, cost efficiencies, innovation, technology, distribution network, and brands. This adversely affects a firm’s ability to maintain a supernormal ROE. As a result, the ROE tends to revert to the industry mean over time. The dramatic increase in the ROE in 2013 was driven by improved ROA. Shareholders expect the ROE to be higher than the cost of equity, the rate of return expected by the shareholders for the risk that they take in investing in a company. HUL’s cost of equity for 2013 is 10.07 per cent (p. 113 of the 2013 annual report). Extended DuPont Analysis You would have noticed that in both 2013 and 2012 the ROE has been higher than the ROA, implying that the company earned more per rupee of shareholders’ funds than per rupee of assets. One reason for the better return to the shareholders is the use of debt financing. When the ROA is more than the interest rate on debt, the benefit of the spread goes to the shareholders. Leveraging, or trading on the equity, is the use of debt finance to acquire assets in order to earn a higher ROE. The flip side of debt financing is that, when the ROA falls below the interest rate, shareholders will lose. We will discuss the risk of debt later in this chapter. HUL’s use of interest-bearing debt is trivial. However, the company gets significant interest-free credit from its suppliers of goods and services. From Exhibit 11.7, we see that 43 per cent of the company’s sources of funds are from trade payables. To that extent, the shareholders do not pay for the company’s assets all by themselves. Nevertheless, they reap the benefits of such interest-free financing. Figure 11.1 provides a framework for understanding the effect of leverage on return on assets. From Levels 1 and 2, we note that ROE is the product of leverage and ROA, which in turn is the product of profit margin and asset turnover. For a given ROA, it is possible to produce a higher ROE by financing a part of the assets with debt. This is how the use of debt can “lever up” the ROA for the shareholders. The assets-to-equity ratio is a measure of leverage. We can now see how Figure 11.1, Level 1 works. In 2013, HUL’s ROA was 32.11 per cent. Its leverage was 3.63, calculated as follows: Assets, 119,568/Equity, 110,727. The ROE of 116.61 per cent is the product of ROA of 32.11 per cent and leverage of 3.63. Earnings Per Share Financial analysts regard the earnings per share (EPS) as an important measure of profitability. The computation of HUL’s EPS for 2013 and 2012 (based on net profit after minority interests) is as follows: EPS is useful in comparing performance over time. The increase in HUL’s EPS in 2013 means that the company did better from the shareholders’ perspective. But the EPS is not of much help in making comparisons across firms, because the number of equity shares can differ even if all of them happen to have identical amount of shareholders’ equity. It is useful as an input into the price-earnings ratio, which we shall see later in this chapter. Advanced Profitability Analysis: Focus on Operations In our analysis, we did not distinguish between operating and non-operating items. This is true of our income measure and asset base: Profit after tax includes “other income” that has a number of nonoperating items. Assets that include investments and bank deposits. Operating Profit Since interest expense and non-operating items are determined by factors that have little to do with the efficiency of management of assets, analysts calculate a return measure based on the net operating profit after tax (NOPAT). For this purpose, we consider only revenues from sales and cost of operations and exclude nonoperating incomes – interest income and other non-operating incomes and exceptional items – and non-operating expenses – principally, interest expense. We have to adjust for the tax effect of these exclusions. For instance, since interest income is taxable, the reported income tax expense includes tax on interest income. Since operating income excludes interest income, the tax expense should also exclude the tax effect of that income. So we deduct the tax on interest income from the reported tax expense, as if there was no interest income. Similarly, since interest expense is tax-deductible, the tax expense includes the tax saving on interest expense. Since operating income excludes interest expense, the tax expense should also exclude the tax effect of that expense. So we add back the tax saving on interest expense from