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Financial Accounting 3 Summary
Financial Accounting 3 Summary
1 When an entity departs from a standard, entity should disclose the ff:
a Management has concluded that FS is fairly presented
b It has complied with applicable standards and interpretation, except that it
has departed from a particular requirement to achieve fair presentation.
c The title of the standard or interpretation from which entity has departed.
The treatment adopted
d Financial impact of the departure on each item that would have been
reported in complying with the requirement
2 Going concern is relevant when mgt shall make an estimate of the expected
outcome of future events, such as recoverability of AR and useful life of
noncurrent assets
3 Uncertainties regarding the ability of the entity to continue as a going concern
shall be fully disclosed
4 Investment income is presented separately in the income statement
5 Materiality is relativity and nature of an item(bribe)
6 Expenditure related to a provision and any reimbursement from a third party can
be offset and only the net expenditure is presented as expense in the income
statement
7 Offsetting can be displayed when gains and losses from trading securities are
netted against each other
8 Entity shall disclose comparative information in respect of the previous period for
all the amounts reported in the current period’s financial statements
9 The outcome of uncertain events at the end of the preceding period and is yet to
be resolved, are disclosed in the current period ( legal dispute). Users shall benefit
from information that an uncertainty existed at the end of the immediately
preceding period, and steps have been taken during the current period to resolve
the uncertainty.
10 When entity makes retrospective restatement, 3 statement of FS shall be
presented: end of the current period, previous period, beginning of the earliest
comparative period.
11 Financial structure-source of financing for assets. Indicates how profits and cash
flows will be distributed between creditors and owners
12 Financial flexibility- use its available cash for unexpected requirements and
investment opportunities or raise cash through borrowing and sale of securities or
sale of assets without disrupting normal operations.
13 Cash equivalents are held for the purpose of meeting short-term cash rather than
for investment purposes
14 In cash equivalents, what is important is the date of purchase which should be 3
months or less before maturity
15 Financial asset held for trading or trading securities
16 Nontrade receivable should be classified as current asset if collectible within 1
year, operating cycle notwithstanding
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17 Current assets:
a Cash and cash equivalents
b Held for trading
c Expected to be realized within 12months(nontrade receivables)
d Realized, sold, or consumed(trade receivable, inventory, prepayments)
18 Operating cycle- between processing of assets and their realization in cash
19 Noncurrent assets:
a PPE
b Long-term investments
c Intangible assets
d Other noncurrent assets
20 Exploration, evaluation asset, mineral rights and resources held for sale and
biological assets are separate line items. PAS16 on PPE doesn’t apply to them
21 Examples of long-term investments:
a. Investment in equity and bond securities
b. Joint venture
c. Subsidiaries
22. Financial liabilities held for trading are financial liabilities that are incurred with
an intention to repurchase them in the near term(quoted debt instrument).
23. Sound value or depreciated replacement cost
2 An entity whose financial statements comply with PFRS shall make an explicit
and unreserved statement of such compliance in the notes.
3 An entity cannot rectify inappropriate accounting policies either by disclosure of
the accounting policies used or by notes or explanatory information
12 Noncurrent liabilities:
a Noncurrent portion of a long-term debt
b Finance lease liability
c Deferred tax liability
d Long-term obligations to entity officers
e Long-term deferred revenue\
19 An entity shall not describe FS as complying with PFRS unless they comply with
all the requirements of each applicable PFRS
20 Accounting standards set out the required recognition and measurement principles
that an entity shall follow in preparing its FS
21 Disclosure of judgements that management has made in the process of applying
accounting policies and that have a significant effect on the amounts recognized(
whether asset should be measured at FV or amortized cost, finance lease or
operating lease)
22 Disclosures(Nonfinancial):
a Legal form/country of incorporation/address of principal place of business
b Nature of entitys operations
c Parent name or ultimate controlling entity
23 Control is the power to govern the financial and operating policies of an entity
24 Affiliates- parent, subsidiaries, fellow subsidiaries
25 Key management personnel-POSDICON
26 Close family members of individual are related parties
27 Related party transactions and outstanding balances are eliminated in the
preparation of Consolidated FS
28 Accounting recognition of a transfer of resources is normally based on the price
agreed upon between the parties. Between unrelated parties, there may be a
degree of flexibility in the price setting process
29 Close family members of an individual includes the spouse, children and
dependents.
30 Adjusting events:
a Bankruptcy of customers
b Sale of inventories gives evidence about NRV
31 Nonadjusting:
a Business combination after the reporting period
b Plan to discontinue an operation
c Abnormally large changes in asset price and foreign exchange rates
d Change in tax rate enacted
32 An entity shall disclose the date when the FS are authorized for issue and who
gave the authorization
33 If the entity’s owners or others have the power to amend the FS after issue, entity
shall disclose such fact
34 Development stage entity shall disclose cumulative net losses with a descriptive
title, “deficit accumulated during the development stage” in SHE
35 Comprehensive income includes:
a profit/loss
b other comprehensive income
36 Profit or loss is the bottom line in the traditional income statement
37 Other comprehensive income comprises items of income and expenses including
reclassification adjustments that are not recognized in profit/loss
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distinguished if its assets, liabilities, etc are directly attributable to the component
and it is directly attributable if they would be eliminated when the component is
disposed of.
64 A discontinued operation occurs when the operations and cash flows of that
component have been or will be eliminated from the ongoing operations of the
entity and the entity will have no significant continuing involvement in that
component after its disposal
65 PFRS 5 prohibits the retroactive classification as a discontinued operation when
the discontinued criteria are met after the end of the reporting period.
66 Discontinued operation is accounted for as a “disposal group classified as held for
sale”
67 The results of discontinued operation, net of tax including impairment loss, gain
or loss from actual disposal and termination cost shall be presented as a single
amount in the income statement below the income from continuing operations.
68 If a disposal group is classified as held for sale in the current year, the results of
the disposal group fro prior period shall be represented as relating to discontinued
operation in the comparative income statement
69 If a disposal group is classified as held for sale in the current year, an entity shall
not reclassify or represent the assets and liabilities of the disposal group for the
prior period. Presentation of the assets and liabilities of the disposal group in the
prior period is not changed.
70 The net cash flows attributable to the activities of the discontinued operation shall
be separately presented in the statement of cash flows or disclosed in the notes.
71 If the assets to be abandoned constitute a major line of business or geographical
area of operations, they are reported in discontinued operations at the date on
which they are actually abandoned.
72 Examples of not changes in accounting policy:
A Changes in accounting policy for transactions or events that
differ in substance
B Application of new accounting policy for transactions that did
not occur previously or that were immaterial
73 A change in reporting entity is a change whereby entities change their nature and
report their operations in such a way that the financial statements are in effect
those of a different reporting entity. It is actually a change in accounting policy
and shall be treated retrospectively to disclose what the statements would have
looked like if the current entity had been in existence in the prior year
74 Hierarchy of guidance:
a Requirements of current standards dealing with similar matters
b Framework for the preparation and presentation of financial statements
c Most recent pronouncements of other standard-setting bodies that use
similar framework, other accounting literature and accepted industry
practices.
1 Interim financial reporting means the preparation and presentation of financial
information for a period of less than one year. It may be presented monthly,
quarterly or semi-annually.
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2 Quarterly interim reports are the most common although public traded entities are
encouraged to provide interim financial reports at least semiannually and such
reports are to be made available not later than 60 days after the end of interim
period
100. PAS34 does not mandate which entities are required to publish interim financial
reports, how frequently, or how soon after the end of an interim period
111. SEC and PSC require entities covered by the reportorial requirements of Revised
Securities Act and Rules on Commercial Papers and Financing Act to file quarterly
interim financial reports within 45 days after the end of each of the first three quarters
112. Two views in financial reporting:
a. Integral view—each interim period is an integral part of the annual accounting
period. Annual expenses are estimated and then allocated to the interim periods based on
forecasted revenue or sales volume. Cost incurred which clearly benefit the entire year
are allocated to the interim periods benefited. The results of subsequent interim periods
must be adjusted to reflect prior estimation errors. Estimation and allocation are
necessary to avoid creating misleading fluctuations in interim period income. It would
result to interim income which would be more indicative of the annual income and thus
useful in predicting future operations and making informed decisions.
b. Independent view—Each interim period is considered a separate accounting
period with status equal to a fiscal year. The same expense recognition rules shall apply
as under annual reporting and no special interim accruals or deferrals are permitted. No
estimations or allocations are made for interim purposes unless such estimations or
allocations are allowed for annual reporting.
113. Independent view argued that estimation and allocation may have undesirable
effects like a significant drop in an earnings trend during the year may be obscured.
114. Essentially, the standard adopts a mix of the integral and independent views.
115. The method of accounting for income tax and the recognition of commission and
warranty cost based on sales is an application of the integral view.
116. Direct cost and revenue are best accounted for as incurred and earned which equates
an independent view. On the other hand, Indirect costs are more likely to require an
allocation process which is suggestive of integral view.
117. PAS34 allows an entity to publish a set of condensed financial statements or
complete set of financial statements
118. Condensed means that each of the headings and subtotals presented in the entity's
most recent annual financial statement is required but there is no requirement to include
greater detail unless this is specifically required by PAS34
119. PAS 34 assumes that financial statement users have an access to the entity's most
recent annual report so it is a superfluity to provide the same notes in the interim financial
report.
120. At interim date, it would be meaningful to provide only an explanation of the events
and transactions that are significant to the understanding of the changes in financial
position and financial performance since the last annual reporting.
121. Presentation of comparative interim statements for income and comprehensive
statement is current and cumulatively (6 months ending and 3 months ending).
Presentation for changes in equity and cash flows is cumulatively only.
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122. Major repairs, year-end bonuses, insurance, property taxes and depreciation are
allocated. The essence is that, an expense should be allocated to the four quarters if it
clearly benefits the interim periods.
123. Depreciation and amortization for an interim period shall be based only on assets
owned during the interim period
124. Paid vacation and holiday leave shall be accrued for interim purposes because these
are enforceable as legal commitments.
125. Gains or losses shall not be allocated.
126. Many entities diversified their operations to spread the risks of investment over a
number of industries and product lines to reduce dependence on any one set of suppliers
and customers.
127. The different industry segments in effect operate as separate entities within an
overall corporate umbrella.
128. Segment reporting is the disclosure of certain financial information about the
products and services an entity produces and the geographical areas in which an entity
operates. This is to enable investors and users make better assessment of each business
activity leading to the understanding of the performance of the entity as a whole.
129. One segment may be performing well and others may not. It becomes then necessary
to not only report total performance but also the individual performance.
130. Segment information is only required in the consolidated financial statements.
131. To be classified as operating segment(distinguishable component), separate financial
information must be available about the segment and its operating results shall be
regularly reviewed by a chief decision maker.
132. Chief operating decision maker is the one responsible for the allocation of resources
and assessing the performance of operating segments. It may be the CEO, COO or a
group of executive officers.
133. Operating segments are identitfied using the management approach. It means that
operating segments are identified based on the components of the entity that are
considered to be important for internal management reporting.
134. Reportable segment should meet any of the two quantitative thresholds: (1) segment
revenue should be atleast 10percent of the combined revenue of all operating segments
(2) absolute amount of profit or loss should be atleast 10percent of the greater between
the combined profit of all operating segments that reported a profit and combined loss of
all operating segment that reported a loss. (3) the assets of the segment are 10 percent or
more of the combined assets of all operating segments.
135. Even if a segment does not meet any of the quantitative thresholds, it can still be
reported or separately disclosed if management believes that information about the
segment would be useful to the users of the financial statements.
136. The total external revenue of the reportable operating segments should constitute 75
percent of the total external revenue of the segments. If the reportable segments do not
meet the 75 percent criteria, additional segments which have majority common
characteristics should be lumped into one reportable segment and included in the
reportable segments to satisfy the 75 percent criteria.
137. PFRS 8 suggests that if the number of reportable segments exceeds ten, it is likely
that the information may become too detailed and consequently lose its usefulnes, thus,
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an entity shall consider whether a practical limit has been reached in the number of
segments reported.
138. Whenever a reportable segment no longer meets the 10percent quantitative
threshold, it will still be continued to be reported separately if management considers the
segment of continuing significance.
139. If an operating segment becomes reportable in the current period, the segment data
in the prior period shall be restated to reflect the newly reportable segment for
comparative purposes.
140. Prior period segment information shall not be restated if the necessary information is
not available and the cost to develop it would be excessive.
141. An entity shall disclose the general information, information about profit/loss,
segment assets and liabilities, and reconciliations for each reportable operating segment.
142. An entity shall disclose a measure of profit/loss under all circumstances while the
measure of segment assets and liabilities shall only be disclosed if such amount is
regularly provided to the chief operating decision maker.
143. The amount of segment revenue and expense, and segment assets and liabilities
disclosed for a reportable segment shall be the measure reported to the chief operating
decision maker.
144. The items to be disclosed must be specified in PFRS 8 and are included in the
measurement or regularly reported to the chief operating decision maker.
145. Entity-wide disclosures or additional information that should be disclosed if it is not
provided as part of the reportable segment information: (1) products and services (2)
geographical areas (3) major customers
146. A major customer is defined as a single external customer accounting for 10 percent
or more of an entity’s external revenue
147. The entity shall disclose only its reliance on major customers, the total amount of
revenue from major customers and the identity of the segment(s) reporting the revenue.
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