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Financial

Statement
Analysis

K.R. Subramanyam

Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
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Analysing Investing Activities:

Inter-corporate Investments

05
CHAPTER
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Overviews of Topics
Investment Securities
Various types
Different methods of recording

Equity method of accounting for securities

Business Combinations
Derivative Securities
The Fair Value Option
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Investment Securities

What are the two main reason to


Analyzing Marketable Investment
securities?
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Investment Securities
Analyzing Investment Securities
• Two main objectives:
– To separate operating performance from investing (and
financing) performance
• Remove all gains (losses) relating to investing activities
• Separate operating and nonoperating assets when determining
RNOA (Return on operating assets)
– To analyze accounting distortions from securities
• Opportunities for gains trading
• Liabilities recognized at cost
• Inconsistent definition of equity securities
• Classification based on intent
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Investment Securities

Composition

What are the two types of Marketable


Investment securities?
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Investment Securities
Composition

What are the two types of Marketable


Investment securities?

Debt Securities

Equity Securities
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Investment Securities
Composition

What are examples of the two types of


Marketable Investment securities?
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Investment Securities

Composition

Investment (marketable) securities:


Debt Securities
• Government or corporate debt obligations
Equity Securities
• Corporate stock that is readily marketable
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Investment Securities

Accounting for Investment Securities

ASC 320 and ASC 825 –


Significantly alter (changed) the
accounting and reporting of investment
securities.
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Investment Securities
Accounting for Investment Securities

ASC 320 and ASC825


– No longer the traditional lower-of-cost-or-market
principle.
– Accounting is determined by its classification.
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Investment Securities
Accounting for Investment Securities
ASC 320 and ASC 825
Prescribes that investment securities be reported on the
balance sheet at either – Cost or Fair Market Value.
The decision depends on the following:
• the type of security
• management intend of owning the security
• the degree of influence (“control”) over the company.
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Investment Securities
Composition
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Investment Securities
Accounting for Debt Securities
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Investment Securities
Classification and Accounting for Equity Securities
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Equity Method Accounting


Required for intercorporate investments in which
the investor company can exert significant influence
over, but does not control, the investee.
– Reports the parent’s investment in the subsidiary, and
the parent’s share of the subsidiary’s results, as line items in
the parent’s financial statements (one-line consolidation

Note: Generally used for investments representing 20 to 50 percent


of the voting stock of a company’s equity securities--main difference between
consolidation and equity method accounting rests in the level of detail
reported in financial statements
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Equity Method Accounting


Equity Method Accounting
• Investment account:
– Initially recorded at acquisition cost
– Increased by % share of investee earnings
– Decreased by dividends received
• Income:
– Investor reports % share of investee company earnings as
“equity earnings” in its income statement
– Dividends are reported as a reduction of the investment
account, not as income
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Equity Method Accounting


Equity Method Mechanics
• Assume that Global Corp. Synergy, Inc.
acquires for cash a 25% interest
in Synergy, Inc. for $500,000, Current assets 700,000
representing one-fourth of
Synergy’s stockholders’ equity PP&E 5,600,000
as of the acquisition date. Total assets 6,300,000

• Acquisition entry: Current liabilities 300,000


Long-term debt 4,000,000
Investment 500,000 Stockholders’ Equity 2,000,000
Cash 500,000 Total liabs and equity 6,300,000
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Equity Method Accounting
Equity Method Mechanics

• Subsequent to the Investment 25,000


acquisition date, Synergy Equity earnings 25,000
reports net income of (to record proportionate share of
$100,000 and pays investee company earnings)
dividends of $20,000.
Global records its
Cash 5,000
proportionate share of
Synergy’s earnings and Investment 5,000
the receipt of dividends (to record receipt of dividends)
as follows:
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Equity Method Accounting


• Important points:
– Investment account reported at an amount equal to the proportionate share of the
stockholders’ equity of the investee company. Substantial assets and liabilities may
not be recorded on balance sheet unless the investee is consolidated.
– Investment earnings should be distinguished from core operating earnings (unless
strategic).
– Investments are reported at adjusted cost, not at market value.
– Should discontinue equity method when investment is reduced to zero and should
not provide for additional losses unless the investor has guaranteed the obligations
of the investee or is otherwise committed to providing further financial support to
the investee.
• Resumes once all cumulative deficits have been recovered via investee
earnings.
– Excess of initial investment over the proportionate share of the book value is
allocated to identifiable tangible and intangible assets that are
depreciated/amortized over their respective useful lives. Investment income is
reduced by this additional expense. The excess not allocated in this manner is
treated as goodwill and is no longer amortized.
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Business Combinations
The merger, acquisition, reorganization, or restructuring of two or more
businesses to form another business entity

Motivations

• enhance company image and growth potential


• acquiring valuable materials and facilities
• acquiring technology and marketing channels
• securing financial resources
• strengthening management
• enhancing operating efficiency
• encouraging diversification
• rapidity in market entry
• achieving economies of scale
• acquiring tax advantages
• management prestige and perquisites
• management compensation
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Business Combinations
Accounting for Business Combinations

• Purchase method of accounting


– Companies are required to recognize on their balance sheets the
fair market value of the (tangible and intangible) assets acquired
together with the fair market value of any liabilities assumed.
• Tangible assets are depreciated and the identifiable intangible assets
amortized over their estimated useful lives.
• Excess of initial investment over the proportionate share of the book
value is allocated to identifiable tangible and intangible assets that are
depreciated/amortized over their respective useful lives.
• The excess not allocated in this manner is treated as goodwill and is
no longer amortized.
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Business Combinations
Consolidated Financial Statements
Consolidated financial statements report the results of operations and
financial condition of a parent corporation and its subsidiaries in one set of
statements
Basic Technique of Consolidation
Consolidation involves two steps: aggregation and elimination

Aggregation of assets, liabilities, revenues, and


expenses of subsidiaries with the parent

Elimination of intercompany transactions


(and accounts) between subsidiaries and the parent

Note: Minority interest represents the portion of a subsidiary’s equity


securities owned by other than the parent company
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Business Combinations
Consolidation Illustration
On December 31, Year 1, Synergy Corp. purchases 100% of
Micron Company by exchanging 10,000 shares of its common
stock ($5 par value, $77 market value) for all of the common
stock of Micron.

On the date of the acquisition, the book value of Micron is


$620,000. Synergy is willing to pay the market price of $770,000
because it feels that Micron’s property, plant, and equipment
(PP&E) is undervalued by $20,000, it has an unrecorded
trademark worth $30,000 and intangible benefits of the business
combination (corporate synergies, market position, and the like)
are valued at $100,000.
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Business Combinations
Consolidation Illustration
The purchase price is, therefore, allocated as follows:
Purchase price 770,000
Book value of Micron 620,000
Excess 150,000
Excess allocated to – useful life annual
deprec/amort.
Undervalued PP&E 20,000 10 2,000
Trademark 30,000 5 6,000
Goodwill 100,000 indefinite -0-
150,000
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Business Combinations
Synergy Corp and Micron Company
Consolidated Income Statement Steps
• The four consolidation entries are
1. Replace $620,000 of the investment account with the book
value of the assets acquired. If less than 100% of the
subsidiary is owned, the credit to the investment account is
equal to the percentage of the book value owned and the
remaining credit is to a liability account, minority interest.
2. Replace $150,000 of the investment account with the fair value
adjustments required to fully record Micron’s assets at fair
market value.
3. Eliminate the investment income recorded by Synergy and
replace that account with the income statement of Micron. If
less than 100% of the subsidiary is owned, the investment
income reported by the Synergy is equal to its proportionate
share, and an additional expense for the balance is reported for
the minority interest in Micron’s earnings.
4. Record the depreciation of the fair value adjustment for
Micron’s PP&E and the amortization of the trademark. Note,
there is no amortization of goodwill under current GAAP.
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Business Combinations
Synergy Corp and Micron Company
Consolidated Income Statement Steps
• Income statement of Synergy is combined with that of Micron.
• Depreciation / amortization of excess of purchase price over the
book value of Micron’s assets is recorded as an additional expense
in the consolidated income statement.
• Any intercompany profits on sales of inventories held by the
consolidated entity at year-end, along with any intercompany profits
on other asset transactions, are eliminated.
• Equity investment account on Synergy’s balance sheet is replaced
with the Micron assets / liabilities to which it relates.
• Consolidated assets / liabilities reflect the book value of Synergy
plus the book value of Micron, plus the remaining undepreciated
excess of purchase price over the book value of Micron assets.
• Goodwill, which was previously included in the investment account
balance, is now broken out as a separately identifiable asset on the
consolidated balance sheet.
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Business Combinations
Impairment of Goodwill
• Goodwill recorded in the consolidation process is subject to
annual review for impairment.
– The fair market value of Micron is compared with the book value of
its associated investment account on Synergy’s books.
– If the current market value is less than the investment balance,
goodwill is deemed to be impaired and an impairment loss must
be recorded in the consolidated income statement.
– Impairment loss reported as a separate line item in the operating
section of Synergy’s consolidated income statement.
– A portion of the goodwill contained in Synergy’s investment
account is written off, and the balance of goodwill in the
consolidated balance sheet is reduced accordingly.
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Business Combinations
Issues in Business Combinations

Contingent Consideration - a company usually records the amount of


any contingent consideration payable in accordance with a purchase
agreement when the contingency is resolved and the consideration is
issued or issuable.
Allocating Total Cost - once a company determines the total cost of an
acquired entity, it is necessary to allocate this cost to individual assets
received; the excess of total cost over the amounts assigned to identifiable
tangible and intangible assets acquired, less liabilities assumed, is
recorded as goodwill.
In-Process Research & Development (IPR&D) - some companies are
writing off a large portion of an acquisition’s costs as purchased research
and development. Pending accounting standard will require capitalization
of IRR&D and annual testing for impairment.
Debt in Consolidated Financial Stetements - Liabilities in
consolidated financial statements do not operate as a lien upon a common
pool of assets.
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Business Combinations
Issues in Business Combinations

Gain on subsidiary stock sales - The equity investment account is


increased via subsidiary stock sales. Companies can record the gain either
to income or to APIC

Consequences of Accounting for Goodwill - goodwill is not


permanent and the present value of super earnings declines as they extend
further into the future – future impairment losses are likely

Push-Down Accounting - a controversial issue is how the acquired


company (from a purchase) reports assets and liabilities in its separate
financial statements (if that company survives as a separate entity)
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Business Combinations
Additional Limitations of Consolidated Financial Statements
• Financial statements of the individual companies composing the
larger entity are not always prepared on a comparable basis.
• Consolidated financial statements do not reveal restrictions on use of
cash for individual companies. Nor do they reveal intercompany cash
flows or restrictions placed on those flows.
• Companies in poor financial condition sometimes combine with
financially strong companies, thus obscuring analysis.
• Extent of intercompany transactions is unknown unless the
procedures underlying the consolidation process are reported.
• Accounting for the consolidation of finance and insurance subsidiaries
can pose several problems for analysis. Aggregation of dissimilar
subsidiaries can distort ratios and other relations.
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Business Combinations
Consequences of Accounting for Goodwill
• Superior competitive position is subject to change.
– Goodwill is not permanent.
• Residual goodwill - measurement problems.
• Timing of goodwill write-off seldom reflects prompt recognition
of this loss in value.
• In many cases goodwill is nothing more than mechanical
application of accounting rules giving little consideration to
value received in return.
• Goodwill on corporate balance sheets typically fails to reflect a
company’s entire intangible earning power
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Business Combinations
Pooling Accounting
• Used prior to the passage of the current business
combination accounting standards.
– Disallowed for combinations initiated post June 30, 2001.
– Companies may continue its use for acquisitions accounted for
under that method prior to the effective date of the standard.

Under the purchase method, the investment account is debited for the
purchase price. Under the pooling method, this debit is in the amount of
the book value of the acquired company. Assets are not written up from
the historical cost balances reported on the investee company balance
sheet, no new intangible assets are created in the acquisition, and no
goodwill is reported. The avoidance of goodwill was the principle
attraction of this method.
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Derivative Securities

Background

Hedges are contracts that seek to insulate companies from market risks—
securities such as futures, options, and swaps are commonly used as
hedges

Derivative securities, or simply derivatives are contracts whose value


is derived from the value of another asset or economic item such as a
stock, bond, commodity price, interest rate, or currency exchange rate

— they can expose companies to considerable


risk because it can be difficult to find a
derivative that entirely hedges the risks or
because the parties to the derivative contract
fail to understand the risk exposures
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Derivative Securities
Definitions
Futures contract—an agreement between two or more parties to
purchase or sell a certain commodity or financial asset at a future date
(called settlement date) and at a definite price.

Swap contract—an agreement between two or more parties to exchange


future cash flows. It is common for hedging risks, especially interest rate
and foreign currency risks.

Option contract—grants a party the right, not the obligation, to execute a


transaction. A call option is a right to buy a security (or commodity) at a
specific price on or before the settlement date. A put option is an option to
sell a security (or commodity) at a specific price on or before the
settlement date.
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Derivative Securities
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Derivative Securities
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Derivative Securities

Qualitative Disclosures
Disclosures generally outline the
types of hedging activities
conducted by the company
and the accounting methods
employed.

Quantitative Disclosures
Campbell Soup provides
quantitative information relating to
its interest rate and foreign
exchange hedging activities in the
MD&A section of the annual report.
These disclosures are provided in
Exhibit 5.8.
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Derivative Securities
Analysis of Derivatives
• Identify Objectives for Using Derivatives
• Risk Exposure and Effectiveness of Hedging
Strategies
• Transaction Specific versus Companywide Risk
Exposure
• Inclusion in Operating or Nonoperating Income
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The Fair Value Option


Fair Value Reporting Requirements
Eligible assets and liabilities - Reporting Requirements
investments in debt and equity 1. Carrying amount of the asset (or
securities, financial instruments, liability) in the balance sheet will
derivatives, and various financial always be at its fair value on the
obligations. measurement date.
Not allowed: investment in 2. All changes in the fair value of the
subsidiaries that need to be asset (or liability), including unrealized
consolidated, postretirement benefit gain and losses, will be included in net
assets and obligations, lease assets/ income.
obligations, certain types of insurance
3. Can choose to report the unrealized
contracts, loan commitments; equity
method investments under certain gain/loss portion differently from cash
conditions. flow components or together.

Selective Application
Substantial flexibility exists to
selectively apply the fair value option to
individual assets or liabilities.
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The Fair Value Option


Analysis Implications
• Reliability of fair value measurements
• Opportunistic adoption of ASC 825-10-25
– SFAS 159 allows considerable discretion to companies in
choosing the specific assets or liabilities for which they exercise
the fair value option.
– An analyst needs to verify whether the fair value election has been
opportunistic with an aim to window dressing the financial
statements.

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