chapter 8 part i: tangible fixed assets2013/... · chapter 8 part i: tangible fixed assets....
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Chapter 8Part I: Tangible Fixed Assets
CapitalizationConcept of depreciation, Depreciation methods
Asset impairmentDepletion of natural resources
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Fixed Assets... assets used (not consumed) in operations of a business
provide benefits beyond the current accounting period…either acquired or self constructed
Capitalization of fixed assetsRecognition test applies• It must be probable that the item gives rise to future
economic benefits which flow to the firm • The cost or value of the item can be measured reliably
Valuation at initial recognition:Historical CostFair ValueFor self constructed assets direct and indirect production costs are recognized
Historical Cost for specific examples
Land • historical cost includes purchase cost, legal fees, demolition
costs of old structures etc.Buildings and equipment • historical cost includes all costs of acquisition and
preparation for use, Natural resources • historical cost includes costs of acquiring the rights to extract
natural resourcesIntangible assets • historical cost includes costs of acquiring rights or economic
benefits, such as franchises, patents, goodwill etc.
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Fixed Asset Accounting – An Overview
Balance sheet Income statement
Land ---Buildings and equipment depreciationIntangible assets (purchased) amortization /
impairment
Amortization: Allocation of the cost of intangible assets to the periods that benefit from these assets. (Covered in part 2.)
Depreciation: The process of allocating the cost of tangible assets to the periods that benefit from these assets.
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Sidestep – Terminology
terms depreciation / amortization, the latter used in connection with intangibles, mean systematic allocation of cost, not loss of valueThe term impairment means loss of value
Write-downs
Depreciation/Amortization Impairment
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Capitalization: How to determine (acquisition) costIAS 16: cost should include the purchase price and any directly attributable costs of bringing the assets to working condition for its intended use.Example: purchase and installation of a company‘s intranet
Catalogue list price € 10.000Trade discount: 10%; cash discount terms: 2/10, n/30 8.820Freight cost including insurance 280 Repair costs (unintentionally, a worker dropped a box) 400Wires and other fixtures 500Installation 500Initial tests; consulting fees 450
Cost to be capitalized: € 10.950
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Capitalization of financing cost of self-constructed assets
ProblemAre costs of debt incurred to finance asset‘s construction part of business financing as a whole? Or are they of the same type as other indirect costs incurred to construct the asset?• Inconsistent accounting treatment of debt-financed and equity-
financed self-constructed assetsPossible accounting alternatives?1. Do not capitalize borrowing costs.2. Capitalize all cost of funds, including imputed interest.3. Capitalize actual borrowing costs for „qualifying assets“ (subject
to certain conditions).Regulation on borrowing costs:
Alternative 3 is required under IAS 23 and US-GAAPAccording to German accounting principles firms are allowed but not required to capitalize borrowing costsUntil its last revision alternative 1 was the ‚benchmark treatment‘ under IAS 23
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Capitalizing interest cost
Prerequisites: expenditures have been made and interest is being incurredAmount to be capitalized: lower of actual interest and avoidable interest
Avoidable interest... the amount of interest cost that (theoretically) could have been avoided if expenditures for the asset had not been made („opportunity cost“ approach)Avoidable interest = (WAAE – specific borrowings) × WAIR
+ specific borrowings × SBIR
• WAAE = weighted average accumulated expenditures• WAIR = weighted average interest rate• SBIR = specific borrowings interest rate
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Example
Coffee Queen made the following payments on the construction of a production line in 2010:
€ 45.000 on Febr. 4th€ 120.000 on May 1st€ 70.000 on July 1st.
The total cost of the production line is € 275.000.Production begins Jan. 1st, 2011.to finance construction, a 12%, 4-year, € 100.000 note was issued on December 31, 2009.Other outstanding debt consists of
13%, 8-year bonds with face value of € 100.000, and 10%, 10-year bonds with face value of € 150.000. Interest payments are due on December 31.
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Determining WAAE:
Expenditures
Date Amount × Time to going = WAAEinto operation
04. Feb 45.000,00 326 40.750,0001. May 120.000,00 240 80.000,00
01. Jul 70.000,00 180 35.000,0031. Dec. 40.000,00 0 0,00
Determining WAIR
Interest rate × Amount =13% 100.000,00 1300010% 150.000,00 15000
250.000,00 (a) 28000 (b)WAIR = (b)/(a) = 11,20%
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Avoidable Interest:
Specific borrowings × SBIR40750 + 55000*240/360 12% = 9.290,00
WAAE - specific borrowings × WAIR65000*240/360+35000 11,20% = 8.773,33
18.063,33Actual Interest:
Interest on specific Borrowings: 12.000,0013% on 100.000,00 13.000,0010% on 150.000,00 15.000,00
40.000,00
Capitalizable Interest cost: 18.063,33
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Depreciation
The cost of an asset or other amount substituted for cost in the financial statements, less its residual value, is called depreciable amount.Depreciation is the systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of an asset over its useful life.
Depreciation does not refer to the physical deteriorationor the decrease in market value of assets
Depreciation is a means of cost allocation, not valuation.
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The useful life of assets
determines depreciation period („depreciable life“) and depreciation chargesis defined in terms of the time during which the asset is expected to be used by the company
The asset management policy may provide the disposal of assets after a specified time or after consumption of a certain proportion of the economic benefits embodied in the asset. Therefore, the useful life of an asset may be shorter than its economic life. [IAS 16, paragraph 44)
depreciable life:a time period, e.g. ten years, or an estimate for total production or usage, e.g. 70.000 units or 30.000 hours
physical deterioration and obsolescence limit useful life
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Depreciation is not for
valuationdepreciation charges reflect that assets wear out (asset costs are charged to expense) but it does not reflect a decline in fair market valuenet book value = asset cost that has not yet been allocated as an expenseImpairment is a valuation• loss in market value• loss in utility• estimation and measurement problems
replacementcumulative depreciation as a provision for replacement„internal financing“Note, however, that financing is a matter of cash flows not of bookkeeping!
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Example:Two identical companies record identical transactions (revenues, expenses etc.) but differ with respect to depreciation – NoDep does not record depreciation and distributes the entire profit each year, and WeDep does record depreciation charges and distributes the remaining profit each year but undistributed assets are kept as current assets.Income statement and balance sheet in year 1:
NoDep WeDep
gross profit 10.000 gross profit 10.000less expenses 6.000 less expenses 6.000 less depreciation 2.000
net profit 4.000 distributed net profit 2.000 distributed
balance sheet balance sheet
fixed assets 20.000 capital 50.000 fixed assets 20.000 capital 50.000profit 4.000 less depreciation 2.000 profit 2.000
current assets 30.000 less distribution 4.000 current assets 32.000 less distribution 2.000
50.000 50.000 50.000 50.000
example adapted from Alexander/Nobes, p. 201
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Depreciation Methods
most common methods:1. activity or usage method 2. straight-line method 3. sum-of-the-years‘-digits method 4. declining-balance method
Requirement: depreciation method employed must be „systematic and rational“each of the four methods is „systematic“„rational“ depends on the context
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1 - Activity or Usage Methodif assets mainly wear out through use
it is „rational“ to depreciate on the basis of usagelife of asset estimated in terms of output or inputadvantage: low-output (input) periods generate low depreciation charges
Year Units produced Depreciation charge ( € )
1 13.000 10.4002 15.000 12.0003 17.000 13.6004 11.000 8.8005 5.000 4.0006 8.000 6.4007 1.000 800
70.000 € 56.000
000.56000.70000.13400.10 ⋅=Depreciation charge in year 1:
estimation e.g. based
on a product life
cycle
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2 – Straight-Line Method
usability constant over time or no reasons for another pattern
rational to spread depreciable cost uniformly over the asset‘s lifefairly constant repair/maintenance cost
Income (after Rate ofYear Depreciation charge ( € ) Book value depreciation) return*
€ 80.000_1 10.000 70.000 5.000 6,67%2 10.000 60.000 5.000 7,69%3 10.000 50.000 5.000 9,09%4 10.000 40.000 5.000 11,11%5 10.000 30.000 5.000 14,29%6 10.000 20.000 5.000 20,00%7 10.000 10.000 5.000 33,33%
€ 70.000 residual value: € 10.000* income / average total assets
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3 – Sum-of-the-Years‘-Digits Method
decreasing charge method „rational“ if asset has increasing repairs and maintenance
2)1( +
=nn
„sum of the years“ 282
562
)17(7==
+in the example:
Remaining Depreciation Depreciation Book valueYear Depreciation base ( € ) life in years fraction charge year-end
80.0001 70.000 7 7/28 17.500 62.5002 70.000 6 6/28 15.000 47.5003 70.000 5 5/28 12.500 35.0004 70.000 4 4/28 10.000 25.0005 70.000 3 3/28 7.500 17.5006 70.000 2 2/28 5.000 12.5007 70.000 1 1/28 2.500 10.000
28 28/28 € 70.000
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4 – Declining-Balance Method
(again a) declining charge methodconstant percentage applied to a decreasing book valueno estimate of the useful life required, only a yearly depreciation rate needed
Rate on de- Depreciation Balance Accumu- Book valueYear Depreciation base ( € ) clining balance expense lated depreciation year-end
80.0001 80.000 26% 20.560 20.560 59.4402 59.440 26% 15.276 35.836 44.1643 44.164 26% 11.350 47.187 32.8134 32.813 26% 8.433 55.620 24.3805 24.380 26% 6.266 61.886 18.1146 18.114 26% 4.655 66.541 13.4597 13.459 26% 3.459 70.000 10.000
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Determining the depreciation rate for given life and salvage value:
withSV: salvage valueAC: acquisition costn: useful life, and d: the depreciation rate
ACdSV n)1( −= nACSVd −=1
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Comparison of depreciation charges
Purchase price: € 80.000; salvage value: € 10.000; useful life: 7 years
Depreciation charges under different methods
0
5.000
10.000
15.000
20.000
25.000
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
years
depr
ecia
tion
char
ge
straight-line sum-of-the-years declining balance activity
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Depreciation Methods Used in PracticeOther1%
Straight-line82%
Accelerated12%
Units-of-production
5%
Source: Harrison / Horngren, p.328 – Survey of 600 companies conducted by AICPA
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Depreciation for partial periods
if asset is purchased or sold during the year: adjust depreciation chargestwo common procedures(1) apportion depreciation charges pro rata temporis(2) full-year or half-year depreciation charges for assets that are on hand at year endExample.
depreciation charges for office equipment • purchased in February 2004• purchase price: € 84.000• using the straight-line method• useful life: 7 years• sold on 31st of May 2006 • fiscal year ends December 31.
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Alternative 1:
Alternative 2:
Year Annual DepreciationRate
Depreciation Period
Depreciation Charge
2004 12,000 11/12 11,000
2005 12,000 12/12 12,000
2006 12,000 5/12 5,000
Year Annual DepreciationRate
Depreciation Period
Depreciation Charge
2004 12,000 12/12 12,000
2005 12,000 12/12 12,000
2006 12,000 6/12 6,000
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Revisions of Depreciation Ratesuseful life is only an estimate, subject to changedepreciable amount can change (see next slide)changes are handled in current and prospective periods, no revision of earlier periods!
Example change in useful life: asset with depreciation base of €10.000 and useful life of 5 years; in year four, useful life is reestimated to be 8 years overall.
2.0005
10.000= 800
3-86.000-10.000
=„initial“ charges: revised charges:
Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Total
Depreciation charge 2.000 2.000 2.000 800 800 800 800 800 10.000
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Revisions of Depreciation Base
Postacquisition expenditures: betterments or maintenance?
repair and maintenance cost: necessary to maintain assetbetterments – costs incurred to improve the asset
What characterizes a betterment (capital improvement)?
Increase the asset‘s useful lifeImprove the quality of the asset‘s outputIncrease the quantity of the asset‘s outputReduce the costs associated with operating the assetmaterial amount of investment relative to acquisition cost
Improvements are capitalized.
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Revision of depreciation method
Accelerated method is replaced by straight line method at the time when the accelerated book value would exceed the one resulting from the straight line method applied to the rest of the useful life.Example: AC = 100; n = 10; SV = 0; d = 20%.
depreciation straight line reviseddec. Balance depreciation depreciation
20,00 10,00 20,0016,00 8,89 16,0012,80 8,00 12,8010,24 7,31 10,248,19 6,83 8,196,55 6,55 6,555,24 6,55 6,553,93 6,55 6,552,62 6,56 6,561,31 6,56 6,560,00
100,01
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Gains and losses on sales of tangible assetsnot every asset is held until the end of its useful lifesales price different from current book value: gain/loss from sales resultsExample : computer that has a useful life of three years is sold after two years for a price of € 1.000; original cost was € 2.100.
Journal entry:
Income statement presentation:
in most cases, gains/lossesincluded in „other income“
Sales price 1.000Less book value Cost 2.100 Accumulated depreciation 1.400 700 Gain 300
Cash 1.000Accumulated depreciation 1.400
Computer equipment 2.100Gain on sale of equipment 300
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Asset Impairmentlower-of-cost-or-market rule does not apply to plant assetsimpairment carrying value higher than recoverable amount
Calculation of a possible impairment loss :
impairment loss = depreciated cost less
recoverable amount
Balance sheet value
lower of
Depreciated Recoverablecost amount
higher of
Value in Net sellinguse price
Source: Alexander/Nobes, p.208