chapter 24

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Chapter 24: Full Chapter 24: Full Disclosure in Financial Disclosure in Financial Reporting Reporting Intermediate Accounting, 11th ed. Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield

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Page 1: Chapter 24

Chapter 24: Full Chapter 24: Full Disclosure in Financial Disclosure in Financial

ReportingReporting

Intermediate Accounting, 11th ed.Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield

Page 2: Chapter 24

1. Review the full disclosure principle and describe problems of implementation.

2. Explain the use of notes in financial statement preparation.

3. Describe the disclosure requirements for major segments of a business.

4. Describe the accounting problems associated with interim reporting.

After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

Chapter 24: Full Chapter 24: Full Disclosure in Financial Disclosure in Financial

ReportingReporting

Page 3: Chapter 24

5. Identify the major disclosures found in the auditor’s report.

6. Understand management’s responsibilities for financials.

7. Identify issues related to financial forecasts and projections.

8. Describe the profession’s response to fraudulent financial reporting.

Chapter 24: Full Chapter 24: Full Disclosure in Financial Disclosure in Financial

ReportingReporting

Page 4: Chapter 24

The full disclosure principle calls for financial reporting of significant facts affecting the judgment of an informed reader.Two problems of implementing: 1. costs of disclosure 2. information overload

The Full Disclosure The Full Disclosure PrinciplePrinciple

Page 5: Chapter 24

Types of Financial Types of Financial InformationInformation

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Reasons for increasing reporting requirements:

• Complexity of the business environment (derivatives, business combinations, pensions, stock options)

• Necessity for timely information (interim data, forecasts)

• Accounting used as a control and monitoring device

• Financial Reporting Scandals

Increase in Reporting Increase in Reporting RequirementsRequirements

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1. Notes amplify or explain items presented in the body of the financial statements.

2. A statement that identifies the accounting policies of the entity must be disclosed (Summary of Significant Accounting Policies).

3. Some common notes are:• Inventory• Deferred taxes• PPE• Contingencies and commitments• Changes in accounting policies

Notes to the Financial Notes to the Financial StatementsStatements

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(Transactions not carried out at arm’s-length)

Required disclosures:• The nature of the relationship• A description of the transactions• The dollar amounts of transactions• Amounts due from or due to related

parties at the balance sheet date

Disclosure of Related Party Transactions

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Notes to the financial statements must explain any significant financial events that occurred after the balance sheet date, but before the issuance of the financial statements.

Financial statement period Post-balance sheet events

Balancesheet date

Issue date

Post-Balance Sheet Post-Balance Sheet EventsEvents

(Subsequent Events)(Subsequent Events)

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1. Events that provide additional evidence about conditions that existed at the balance sheet date and therefore require F/S adjustments.

e.g. Litigation, bad debt expense, warranty expense

Two types of post-balance sheet events require action

Page 11: Chapter 24

2. Events that arose subsequent to the balance sheet date:

• No F/S Adjustments• Note Disclosure Required

e.g. Sale of stocks or bonds, business combination, loss on note receivable created after balance sheet date

Two types of post-balance sheet events require action

Page 12: Chapter 24

• Investors need information regarding income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement.

• Investors also need information about segments to assess profitability.

• Segmented information could harm reporting firms (disclosure of data useful to competitors).

Reporting by Reporting by ConglomeratesConglomerates

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Provide information about: different types of business activities different economic environments in

which the entities operate.

Objectives of Segment Objectives of Segment ReportingReporting

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An operating segment is a component that:

• engages in business activities that earn revenues & incur expenses,

• is reviewed by the company’s chief operating officer; and

• produces discrete financial information from the internal financial reporting system.

Identifying Operating Identifying Operating SegmentsSegments

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An operating segment is identified as a reportable segment if it satisfies one or more of the following criteria:

1. revenue criterion2. profit or loss criterion3. identifiable assets criterion

Reportable SegmentsReportable Segments

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• Segment revenue

• Segment profit or loss

• Identifiable assets

• External & internal revenue ≥ 10 percent of the combined revenue of all operating segments

• ≥ 10 percent in absolute amount of the greater of: the combined profit of all operating segments not showing a loss, or the combined loss of all operating segments reporting a loss

• ≥ 10 percent of the combined assets of all operating segments

Criterion Thresholds

Reportable SegmentsReportable Segments

Page 17: Chapter 24

• Segment Disclosure Sufficiency:• Disclosed segment results must be ≥

75% of the combined external revenues for entire company

• Prevent Information Overload:• FASB established an upper limit of

ten disclosed segments

Additional Segment Additional Segment GuidelinesGuidelines

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• General information about its operating segments

• Segment profit and loss information• Segment assets• Reconciliation of segment revenues,

profits and losses, and segment assets to totals for the entire company

• Information about products and services • Information about geographical areas• Major customers

Required Segmented Required Segmented DisclosuresDisclosures

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• Integral View- Interim report is an integral part of the annual report.

• Discrete View- Each interim report is treated as a separate accounting period.• Report accounting transactions as they

occur (like in the annual report)

• Companies often use integral approach for some expenses & discrete approach for others

Two Interim Reporting Two Interim Reporting ApproachesApproaches

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• Integral View- Interim report is an integral part of the annual report (FASB preferred).• Integral view can make Interim F/S data more

useful when a company has a seasonal business (e.g. Christmas tree grower).

• Fixed expenses are assigned to parts of a year on the basis of sales volume or some other activity.

• Projection of annual results by multiplying a given quarter’s results by four can be misleading for seasonal companies without integral view adjustments.

Interim Reporting:Interim Reporting:Integral ViewIntegral View

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• Discrete View- Each interim report is treated as a separate accounting period.• Report accounting transactions as they

occur (like in the annual report).• Fixed expenses are treated as period

costs and expensed as incurred.

Interim Reporting:Interim Reporting:Discrete ViewDiscrete View

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• Companies should use the same inventory methods as used in the annual report. Exceptions:• May use Gross Profit Method to estimate EI

for Interim Reporting• When LIFO inventory is liquidated but is

expected to be replaced by year end, COGS is based on expected replacement cost

• Should not defer inventory market declines beyond the interim period unless no loss is expected for the fiscal year

Interim Reporting Interim Reporting Inventory RequirementsInventory Requirements

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• Expenses subject to year-end adjustments such as bad debts and pension costs should be allocated to interim periods

• Income taxes are progressive but should be estimated using estimated annual effective rate

• Extraordinary items should be recognized as incurred—no allocation to other periods.

• Cumulative Effect of change in accounting principle should be reported only in the first quarter regardless of when adopted

• Earnings per share should be computed as a stand-alone period

Problems of Interim Problems of Interim ReportingReporting

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• whether the financial statements are in conformity with U.S. GAAP

• circumstances in which U.S. GAAP have not been consistently applied

• whether disclosures in financial statements are deemed adequate

• an opinion on the financial statements, if possible

• an opinion on the effectiveness of internal controls

Auditor’s Reports Must Auditor’s Reports Must IncludeInclude

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• Unqualified Opinion (clean opinion)

• May contain explanatory paragraph for:

• Material uncertainty such as a contingent loss that is probable but not estimable

• Lack of Consistency due to Change in Accounting Principle

• Emphasis of a Matter such as related party transactions

Auditor’s OpinionAuditor’s Opinion

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• Qualified Opinion contains Exceptions that are not large enough to warrant an Adverse opinion

• The financial statements present fairly, except for, … • Scope of auditor’s examination is limited• Statements not fairly presented because:

• Lack of GAAP conformity• Inadequate disclosure

Auditor’s OpinionAuditor’s Opinion

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• Adverse Opinion: Exceptions are too material to justify a Qualified opinion.

• The financial statements taken as a

whole are Not presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP.

• Adverse opinions are rare.

Auditor’s OpinionAuditor’s Opinion

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• Disclaimer of an Opinion: Auditor has insufficient information to render an opinion on the financial statements.

• Must expressly state that no opinion can be expressed.

Auditor’s OpinionAuditor’s Opinion

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• Management’s Discussion and Analysis covers three aspects of an enterprise1. Liquidity2. Capital resources3. Results of operations

• Requires management to highlight: • favorable or unfavorable trends • significant events and uncertainties

that affect the three aspects • Increased SEC scrutiny of MD&A

Management’s ReportManagement’s Report

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• Investors and Creditors need and want more and better information about corporate expectations.

• The disclosures take one of two forms:

1. Financial forecast 2. Financial projection

Financial Forecasts and Financial Forecasts and ProjectionsProjections

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Financial Forecast of an entity’s expected

financial position, results of operations, and cash flows.

• Forecast is based on assumptions and conditions expected to exist

• Therefore, a forecast projects financial information that management expects to occur

Financial Forecasts and Financial Forecasts and ProjectionsProjections

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Financial Projection is based on hypothetical

assumptions that might take place.

• Projection is based on hypothetical assumptions and conditions that might exist

• Therefore, a projection provides financial information about what might happen, Not what is expected to happen

Financial Forecasts and Financial Forecasts and ProjectionsProjections

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1. AICPA is concerned about potential liability associated with forward-looking information.• SEC (1979) & Congress (1995) provided “safe harbor”

rules intended to protect companies when forward-looking data is released. However, this has not prevented lawsuits.

2. Accountants must provide a summary of significant assumptions used to prepare the forecast or projection.

3. AICPA provides guidelines for presentation of such information.

AICPA Position on AICPA Position on Financial Forecasts and Financial Forecasts and

ProjectionsProjections

Page 34: Chapter 24

• Corporations can reach more users by the internet

• Internet reporting can make traditional reports more timely & useful

• Concern about security on the internet (hackers)

• Electronic filing through EDGAR is publicly available (www.sec.gov)

Internet Financial Internet Financial ReportingReporting

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Defined as “intentional or reckless conduct, whether act or omission, that results in materially misleading financial statements.”• Could be misapplication of

accounting principles or failure to properly disclose material items

• Enron, Worldcom, HealthSouth, etc.

Fraudulent Financial Fraudulent Financial ReportingReporting

Page 36: Chapter 24

• Impacted by internal and external environments

• Opportunities increase in certain situations:

1. Weak board of directors or audit committee

2. Weak internal controls (SOX 404 should help)

3. Unusual or complex transactions4. Accounting issues requiring significant

subjective judgments5. Ineffective internal audit function

Causes of Fraudulent Causes of Fraudulent Financial ReportingFinancial Reporting

Page 37: Chapter 24

COPYRIGHTCOPYRIGHT

Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted in Section 117 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act without the express written permission of the copyright owner is unlawful. Request for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his/her own use only and not for distribution or resale. The Publisher assumes no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages, caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein.