Long-Lived Assets: Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 10
Long-Lived Assets: Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 10
Long-Lived Assets: Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 10
Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 10
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Learning objectives
1. What measurement base is used for long-lived assets.
2. What kinds of costs are capitalized and how joint costs are
allocated among assets.
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Learning objectives concluded
6. How to account for asset retirement obligations and assets held
for sale.
10. The key differences between GAAP and IFRS requirements for
long-lived asset accounting.
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Long-lived operating assets
An asset generates future economic benefits and is under the
exclusive control of a single entity.
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Initial asset measurement rules
The initial balance sheet carrying amount of a long-lived asset is
governed by two rules:
1. All costs necessary to acquire the asset and make it ready to use are
included in the asset account (meaning they are capitalized costs). Other
costs are “expensed” to income.
Capitalized Expensed
$100 Equipment A
$200 delivery
and installation fee
$100 Equipment B
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Initial asset measurement rules:
Interest capitalization
Authoritative accounting literature requires capitalization of
avoidable interest payments on self-constructed assets.
Interest paid to lenders during the construction period is
considered to be a cost necessary to prepare the asset for its
intended use. Follows from initial asset
measurement rule 1.
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Capitalization criteria:
Costs incurred after initial use
GAAP capitalizes costs incurred after the asset has been placed
in use as long as the expenditure:
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Financial analysis and fixed assets:
Assume:
No new capital expenditures.
Prices rise at 3% per year.
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Financial analysis and fixed assets
Why ROA appears to increase
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Intangible assets:
Overview
The accounting for acquired
Intangible assets are intangible assets is straight-
long-lived assets that do forward:
The asset is first recorded
not have physical
at the arm’s length
substance. They include: transaction price.
Patents Then amortized (think
Copyrights “depreciation”) over its
Trademarks expected useful life.
Brand names Difficult financial reporting
Customer lists issues arise when the
Licenses intangible asset is developed
internally instead of being
Technology purchased.
Franchises
Employment contracts
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Intangible assets:
Research and development (R&D)
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Asset impairment:
Long-lived Asset Impairment Guidelines
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Depreciation:
Basic concepts
The costs of productive assets must be apportioned to the periods
in which they provide benefits (matching principle).
• Buildings
Depreciation • Equipment
Amortization • Intangibles
• Mineral deposits
Depletion • Wasting assets
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Exchanges of Nonmonetary assets
Sometimes firms exchange one nonmonetary asset like inventory or
equipment for another nonmonetary asset.
FMV of truck
plus cash
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Global Vantage Point
Comparison of IRFS and GAAP Long-Lived Asset
Accounting
Tangible Long-Lived Assets
IAS 16 allows two different models
Cost Method – same as U.S. GAAP
Revaluation Method – asset is carried at a revalued amount
reflecting fair market value at the revaluation date. Subsequent
depreciation is based on fair value, not original cost. The amount of
the write-up is credited to an owners’ equity account called
Revaluation Surplus (equivalent to Accumulated other
comprehensive income).
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Global Vantage Point
Comparison of IRFS and GAAP Long-Lived Asset
Accounting
Intangible Long-Lived Assets
Similar to U.S. GAAP except that a revaluation method is allowed,
but an active market must be available for the intangible.
IAS 38 distinguishes between research and development
Research is expensed
Development may be capitalized if certain criteria is met.
Impairment of Assets
Similar to U.S. GAAP unless the impairment loss occurs if the
carrying value exceeds the recoverable amount
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Summary
The need for reliable and verifiable numbers causes long-lived
assets to be measured using historical cost.
The balance sheet amounts for intangible assets often differ from
their real value.
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Summary concluded
Depreciation differences can complicate comparisons across
firms. Footnote details can be used to improve these
comparisons.
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