1 Flashcards
Parent Company
A parent company is a corporation that owns a significant interest in another company (typically more than 50%) sufficient to influence and control said company.
Subsidiary Company
A subsidiary company is a company that is controlled by another corporation.
How do consolidated financial statements differ from the financial statements of a single company?
Consolidated financial statements combine the balance sheets, income statements, and cash-flow statements of a parent company
with those of its subsidiaries as if the parent and its subsidiaries were one company.
What is goodwill, and how does it arise? Which company reports goodwill, the parent
or the subsidiary? Where is goodwill reported?
Goodwill is an intangible asset. Goodwill is the excess of the purchase price to acquire a subsidiary company over the sum of the market value of the subsidiary’s net assets (assets minus liabilities).
Only the parent company reports the goodwill.
Goodwill appears as an intangible asset on the consolidated balance sheet.
What is non-controlling interest, and which company reports it, the parent or the subsidiary?
Where is non-controlling interest reported?
Non-controlling interest is the portion of a subsidiary’s shares that is not owned by the parent company.
The parent company reports non-controlling interest on its consolidated balance sheet among the shareholders’ equity.”
3 Types of investments classifications and methods to calculate
Financial Asset (0-20) Financial Instruments Accounting
Associate (20-50)
Equity Method
Subsidiary (50-100)
Consolidate
Financial Assets measurements (balance and income statement)
Trading securities
Loans and Receivables and Held-to-maturity
Available for sale
Trading securities
Fair market value
Change in fair value as income
Loans and receivables and held-to-maturity
Amortized cost
Change in value due to amortization
Available for sale
Fair Market value
Change in fair values as other comprehensive income
Contingent Liabilities vs Provisions
Contingent Liabilities = only in notes
Provisions (warranty repairs) = Report on balance sheet with best estimate
Market value of bond increase/decrease towards face value based on premium/discount
If premium = decrease
if discount = increase
Leases - Operating vs Capital
Definition
Conclusion
Capital increases debt ratio, so operating lease is prefered
Capital - Renter takes risk/ownership/uses for longer
leased asset + leased liability part of balance sheet
lease liability decrease with lease payments
increases debt ratio
Operating - Write off lease expense as expense Do not record lease on balance sheet future payments not recorded as liabilitiy Disclose rent payment in notes
Debt ratio formula
Total liabilities / total assets
times interest earned ratio
operating income / interest expense
ROA formula
Net income / total asset
Equity ratio
Equity / Total asset
Defined Contribution arrangement
vs
Defined Benefit Arrangement
Stock market invest
Fixed guarantee