Lecture 1 & 2
Lecture 1 & 2
Lecture 1 & 2
Topic 1
Assets
Student Handout
Content:
1. Learning objectives
2. Readings
3. Seminar Preparation Qs List/PASS Qs list
4. Topic 1, part 1, slides
5. Lecture Workshop questions
6. Topic 1, part 2, slides
7. Lecture Workshop questions
8. Topic 1 Tutorial questions.
Website: http://moodle.telt.unsw.edu.au
Required Readings
Required Readings
Trotman, Gibbins & Carson (TGC) 6th edition Chapter 10.1-10.9 (inclusive)
Useful revision: Trotman, Gibbins & Carson (TGC) 6th edition Chapter 6.
Additional References
http://www.aasb.com.au
Problem 6.9
Problem 6.11
Problem 10.22
Problem 6.12
Problem 10.19
Problem 10.21
Problem 10.23
Problem 10.24
Problem 10.25
Problem 10.26
22/07/2016
ACCT1511
Topic 1
Assets (1)
Accounting Standards
Generally Acceptable Accounting Principles (GAAP): common set of
standards and procedures developed by the accounting profession
The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) develops
international financial reporting standards (IFRSs)
The AASB develops accounting standards for Australian companies
From 2005 AASB adopted most of the content and wording of the
IFRSs: Harmonisation
IASB approach to standards setting is principles based
Provides general guidelines rather than specific rules for every example
Dr Per Tronnes
Enhancing characteristics:
Comparability
Verifiability
Timeliness
Understandability
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Going concern
Economic entity
Accounting period
Monetary unit
Historical cost
Asset Definition
An asset is a resource controlled by the entity as a result
of past events and from which future economic benefits
are expected to flow to the entity (AASB Framework,
para. 49)
Consequently, Assets have three essential characteristics:
1. Future economic benefit (or service potential)
2. Controlled by the entity
3. Result of past events
Does the item form part of operating activities? If yes, then it has a
potential to indirectly contribute to the inflow of cash.
Can we sell the item for cash (or convert it into cash)? If yes, then it has
the potential to directly contribute to cash inflow.
Does the item help us save on costs? If yes, then it has a potential
reduce cash outflow.
Control
Dr Per Tronnes
Entities normally obtain assets by purchasing or producing them. It the production or the
purchase has already happen then the requirement for past even or past transaction is
satisfied.
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Asset recognition
Even if an item satisfy the definition of an asset, it is not certain that the
asset can be recognised in the balance sheet. An asset can only be
recognised in the balance sheet if it meets the definition of an asset
and satisfy both of the recognition criteria:
The item must satisfy both recognition criteria (Framework, para 83):
1. It is probable that any future economic benefit associated with the
item will flow to the entity; and
2. The item has a cost or value that can be measured with
reliability.
The item has a cost or value that can be measured with reliability.
Note that it is cost or value. That means that it is enough that one of
them can be measured with reliability.
In many cases, cost or value must be estimated. The use of
reasonable estimates is an essential part of the preparation of
financial statements and does not undermine their reliability.
When, however, a reasonable estimate cannot be made the item is
not recognised in the balance sheet or income statement.
No
Yes
Does the Asset meet both
the recognition criteria?
No
Yes
A recognised in the
entitys balance sheet
Might be separately
disclosed in the notes
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
20,000
Dr Inventory (asset)
Cr Cash (asset)
20,000
Dr Cash (asset)
Cr Revenue (income)
Dr COGS (expense)
Cr Inventory (asset)
20,000
No
No
40,000
40,000
30,000
30,000
20,000
Yes
30,000
30,000
Expense
Yes
ASSET
Historical Cost (what did we pay for the asset or how much did it
cost to develop the asset )
2.
3.
4.
5.
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
A simple Illustration
Thunderstruck bought some land for $50,000 five years ago. The
company currently hires out the land for $5,000 a year, and the
management believes they will do so for the next 10 years and
then afterwards sell the land for $55,000. The company,
however, have financial trouble, and have been looking into
selling the property in order to raise cash. Management believes,
with enough time to find a willing buyer, the property will fetch
about $65,000, but if a quick sale is to be made, they may have
to offer a significant discount and management believe they will
only receive $45,000.
Say that time value of money is measured using 10 year
government bond with a yield of 3.7% and that the annual
Dr Per Tronnes
The specific definition of Fair value varies a little from one accounting
standard to another.
For Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE), the specific definition of Fair
Value is: the amount that for which an asset could be exchanged between
knowledgeable, willing parties, in an arms length transaction (AASB 116,
para 6).
In other words, Fair value generally means the same as Current or Market
Value.
22/07/2016
1. How much of the costs are capitalised on the initial recognition of the
asset?
$25,000
$ 5,000
$ 500
$30,500
Dr Per Tronnes
Calculating depreciation
Depreciation starts when the asset is ready for use as
intended by the management.
To choose a depreciation method, we need to make
judgments on:
useful life
residual value (sale or scrap)
pattern of flow of benefits over the useful life.
i.e. the pattern of revenue will determine how
we allocate the costs in the appropriate
periods.
Useful life, residual value and pattern of flow will need
to be reassessed annually.
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Residual value
Useful life
Depreciation methods
Three
Illustration
A machine with an original cost of $50,000 and
accumulated depreciation of $24,000 (as at 30 June
2008)
It was sold on 1 August 2008 for $21,000 cash.
The straight line method was used to record
depreciation on the old asset.
The annual amount of depreciation was $12,000.
Required: Prepare journal entries to record the events
explained.
Dr Per Tronnes
Illustration (Cont.)
Recording depreciation up until Historical Cost
the date of disposal
Acc Depn
Dr Depn Exp 1,000
Carrying/Book Value
Cr Acc Depn
1,000
Cash received (Market
Removing the non-current asset
Value)
from the companys books.
Accounting Gain/(Loss)
Dr Cash
21,000
Dr Acc Depn
25,000
Dr Loss on Sale 4,000
Cr Machinery
50,000
50,000
25,000
25,000
21,000
(4,000)
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Improvements to Assets
Repairs/Maintenance vs. Improvement to the Asset
Repairs/Maintenance costs are expensed. They do not improve the
asset, but are necessary to get out the existing economic benefits.
Costs that improves the asset is capitalised. If the costs makes the
asset more productive, more efficient or extends it useful life, then
the economic benefits embedded in the asset has increased.
Question to ask: Has there been a betterment to the asset.
Dr Per Tronnes
Historical cost
Depreciation
expense
Accumulated
depreciation
1
2
3
DO NOT WRITE OUTSIDE THE BOX
Carrying value
(c) How do the concepts of cost, asset and expense relate to the desktop computer?
22/07/2016
ACCT1511
Topic 1
Assets (2)
That is, first estimate fair value (i.e. current or market value),
then depreciate the asset based on the fair value until next time
the assets fair value is estimated.
Revaluations shall be made with sufficient regularity to ensure that the
carrying amount does not differ materially from what which would be
determined using fair value at the reporting date. (AASB 116, para 31)
That is, it is not necessary to revalue the asset every year, it is enough
that this happens on a regular basis. In practical terms, that is usually
every three to five years. It must also be regular. If its three years, then
it is every three years, no longer and no less. Companies cannot cherry
pick the years they want to do the revaluations.
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
510,000
500,000
Year 1
20,000
20,000
20,000
520,000
Cost at initial
recognition
$500,000
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
480,000
20,000
20,000
30,000
20,000
10,000
Update depreciation
Write down the asset to its carrying amount
Record the increment or decrement
Recalculate the depreciable amount.
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
500,000
500,000
7. Write down the asset to its carrying amount (30 June 2012):
Dr Accum. Depn 120,000
Cr Building
120,000
8. Revalue the building (30 June 2012):
Dr Revaluation Reserve
90,000
Dr Loss on Revaluation
50,000
Cr Building
140,000
(Carrying amount of building $420,000; Fair value estimate $280,000. Record
a decrement of $140,000. Must reverse out previous amounts recognised in
revaluation reserve before any losses can be recognised)
9. Recording depreciation (until 30 June 2013):
Dr Depn Expense 40,000
Cr Accum. depn
40,000
(40,000=(280,000-0)/7)
If an asset under the revaluation method is disposed off, any amount that is left in
revaluation reserve can be taken to retained earnings
This is because those net increments in value belong to previous periods and not the
current period. Previous net decrements will already be included in retained earnings
as those have been recorded as losses in the income statement)
Example 1: Land is revalued from $100 to $220 in year 1 and is in beginning of year 2
subsequently sold for $220 cash. (assume no tax):
Y1
Y2
Dr Land
120
Cr Revaluation Reserve
Dr Cash
Cr Land
Dr Revaluation Reserve 120
Cr Retained Earnings
120
220
220
120
Elements of costs:
Its purchase price, including import duties and non-refundable
purchase taxes after deducting trade discounts and rebates
Any directly attributable costs of preparing the asset for its
intended use
For internally generated intangibles the cost is the sum of
expenditure incurred from the date when the intangible asset first
meet the recognition criteria (i.e. from the development phase).
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
Only when the item meets two recognition criteria (AASB 138,
paragraph 21):
1.
2.
patents,
licences,
copyrights,
franchises,
trademarks
Intangible Assets:
Acquisition vs. Internally Generated
We treat intangible assets differently depending on whether they were acquired
or whether they were internally generated.
Separate acquisition: The intangible asset is purchased from outside the
company.
- Example: Company A purchases a patent regarding a new technology
for sharing messages for $20,000 from Company B.
Internally generated: The intangible asset is developed by the company.
- Example: Company A develops a new technology for sharing
messages.
Dr Per Tronnes
- Notice that for intangible assets there must be a cost that can be measured with
reliability.
Separate Acquisition
Accounting for intangible assets when there is a separate
acquisition is actually quite simple.
Because....the effect of probability is reflected in the cost of the
asset. Therefore, the probability recognition criterion.....is always
considered to be satisfied for separately acquired intangible asset
(AASB138, para 25)
In other words, if we buy an intangible asset, for example a patent,
we recognise it as an asset on the balance sheet.
Dr Intangible Asset
Cr Cash/Accounts Payable
XXX
XXX
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So what is development?
So what is Research?
Research is original and planned investigation undertaken with the
prospect of gaining new scientific or technical knowledge and
understanding.
2)
3)
4)
XXX
XXX
(The following few slides are a somewhat simplification But you will revisit
goodwill in greater detail in Accounting 2B)
(An active market for could possible be found for intangible assets such
as taxi licences and carbon emission quotas)
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
Goodwill
Some things that you might have understood:
The 10,000 goodwill of Company B due to synergies, reputation, loyalty of
clients, staff knowledge or whatever it else it is can only be valued at
10,000 because company A acquired Company B.
Therefore, it was no goodwill in Company Bs books before Company A
acquired it. That is, before company A acquired Company B, a value could
not be put on the synergies, reputation, loyalty of clients, staff knowledge
etc.
As you can probably see, the goodwill is a somewhat funny accounting
concept. Pinning down exactly what the goodwill amount represent is
difficult. As it is measured, the more money Company A pay for Company B,
the higher the goodwill in Company As books. One way of interpreting
goodwill (somewhat critically) may be that Company A paid too much for
Company B.
Accounting for goodwill is, however, necessary. Without a debit to Goodwill
in Company As books, the journal entry would not balance.
Simple Illustration
Cost of Business:
Fair Value of Identifiable Assets:
Fair Value of Liabilities Assumed:
Fair Value of Net Assets:
Goodwill:
$30,000
$40,000
$20,000
$20,000
$10,000
40,000
10,000
20,000
30,000
Impairment
An entity shall assess at each reporting date whether there is any
indication that an asset may be impaired (AASB 138, para 9.)
Simply stated, at each reporting date we check whether there is an
indication that any of the assets value are overstated.
If there is an indication that an asset value is overstated, then we must
test for impairment. If there is no indication that an asset is overstated,
then we just leave everything as it is, and there is no need to test for
impairment.
Note: Intangible asset with an indefinite useful life and Goodwill must,
irrespective of indication or not, be tested for impairment at least
annually
Indicators of impairment
External Sources:
Internal Sources:
1) obsolescence or physical damage of an asset,
2) changes making an asset idle, plans to discontinue or
restructure operations to which asset belong, plans to dispose of
asset before the previously expected date,
3) internal reporting indicates the economic performance of an
asset will be worse than expected.
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
Impairment testing
1.
2.
b)
3.
Fair value less cost to sell (the amount obtainable from the sale of an
asset in an arms length transaction between knowledgeable, willing
parties, less cost of disposal)
Value in use (the present value of the future cash flows expected to
be derived from an asset)
Dr Loss on Impairment
Cr Accumulated Impairment
If the revaluation method is used instead of the cost method, then any
impairment loss is treated as a revaluation decrement (AASB 138, para
60)
Dr Loss on Revaluation (or Revaluation Reserve)
Cr Asset
(Note that this is exactly as the if the asset is revalued downwards, and
any previous net increments are reversed out of the revaluation
reserve).
Impairment
As noted above, if the revaluation method is used, any impairment is treated
exactly the same as if it were a downward revaluation. But it is important to
recognise that the revaluation method and impairment are two distinct concepts
(and covered in different accounting standards). Just because a company is
using the revaluation method, that does not mean it can ignore indications of
impairment.
Example 1. A company uses the revaluation method for its buildings. The
company revalue its buildings with sufficient regularity every 3 years. The last
revaluation was done in 2012 and its next revaluation is to take place in 2015.
In 2013, however, the property market for where the company had its buildings
crashed and property values have declined.
In this example, the company cannot ignore the indication of impairment just
because it uses the revaluation method. Although the next revaluation is to take
place in 2015, the company must test for impairment in 2013 even if this is
outside their regular revaluation dates.
Inventory (ACCT1501)
Inventory types:
raw materials
work in progress
finished goods inventory
costs of purchase
costs of conversion
other costs incurred in bringing the
inventories to their present location and
condition.
merchandise inventory.
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
Raw materials
$$$
Merchandise inventory
$$$
$$$
Labour
$$$
Work in process
$$$ $$$
$$$
Overhead
$$$
Finished goods
$$$ $$$
Opening inventory
Purchases
Ending inventory
obsolescence
damage
demand
Any loss from the application of this rule is recorded as an expense in the
accounting period in which the write down occurs.
Dr Per Tronnes
22/07/2016
15 000
15 000
Relevance vs Reliability
Prudence / Conservatism
Much of the asset valuation issues covered this week relates to the concept of
prudence/conservatism (not in the framework any more, but it used to be). That
is, we are careful not to overstate assets and income and careful not to
understate liabilities and expenses.
In the past few decades, a greater use of market value has become the
norm as accounting standards have adopted this a legitimate way of
valuing certain assets.
Dr Per Tronnes
Example 3: The lower of cost and net realisable value rule for inventory means
that inventory can never be recorded at a value higher than cost, but it can be
recorded at a lower value. That is, we make sure that inventory is not
overstated but we do not really care whether it is understated.
Control:
Past event/transaction:
Probable:
Reliable measurement:
Verifiability:
$120,000
($78,000)
During 2017 financial year, Gibbs Ltd incurred the following costs which were paid
in cash:
Equipment maintenance and repairs
Major equipment upgrade to improve efficiency
$1000
$35,000
The equipment, when first purchased, had an expected useful life of 20 years, and
residual value is $7,200. Gibbs Ltd depreciates equipment on a straight line basis.
There have been no changes in the estimates of useful life, residual value and the
depreciation method.
Required:
a) What is the journal entry that was made on 30 June 2016 for depreciation on
manufacturing equipment? Show your workings.
Costs
1
2
$40,000
$62,500
Residual
value
$5,000
$7,500
Expected
useful life
7 years
10 years
Accum. depn
(straight line)
$15,000
$0
Machine 1 was sold on 1 July 2012 for $10,000 cash. Machine 2 was sold on 30 June
2013 for $30,000. $20,000 was received in cash, and the remaining $10,000 on credit.
Required:
What journal entries are required to record the disposal of Machine 1?
$000
620
740
230
290
150
10
130
(d) Discuss how the concepts of cost, asset and expense relate to the motor
vehicle in the accounts of Ray Ltd.
(b) Under the revaluation method, why is revaluation increments recorded in the
equity section but revaluation decrements recorded as expenses?
Cons:
1 September 2006, Jailbreak Pty Ltd bought the machinery for $575,000 cash. In
order to get the machinery ready to be used, Jailbreak Pty Ltd spent an additional
$50,000 cash to have the machinery installed on 1 October 2006. The machinery
has an expected useful life of 10 years and an expected residual value of $25,000
and the machinery is depreciated on a straight-line basis.
Jailbreak Pty Ltds the chief accountant and your superior, Angus Young, decided to
account for the machinery is accounted for using the cost method.
As at 30 June 2007, there was an indication that the machinery might be impaired. In
preparing for the impairment testing, you have estimated, as at 30 June 2007, the
machinerys fair value less cost sell to be $345,000 and its value in use to be
$354,000. As at 30 June 2007, the useful life of the machinery was revised to be only
seven years; there was no change in the original assessment of the residual value or
the depreciation method.
As at 30 June 2009, Jailbreak Pty Ltd. shut down its operations and sold its machinery
for $200,000 and received cash in full.
Required:
(a) With respect to the machinery, write the journal entries for the following
transactions or events (if any). Assume no tax.
1st September 2006:
2010
$90,000
$140,000
$46,000
2011
$56,000
$30,000
$59,000
$5,000
At the very beginning of 2011, the project had a significant breakthrough that finally
caused the management to believe that all the costs of the project could be recouped in
the future. TuneIn Pty Ltds financial year end is 31 December.
a) How much of the costs over the life of the project can be capitalised and
recognised as assets (write Zero if no asset can be recognised)? (1 mark)