University Company Accounting (Group structure and consolidation) Mind Map on Group Structures and Consolidation, created by Nafisa Zahra on 03/10/2013.
An investor controls an investee when the investor is exposed, or has rights to variable returns from its involvement with the investee and has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the investee
Power over the investee refers to
exisiting rights that investor has that
gives it the current ability to direct the
relevant activities that significantly
affect the investee's returns
Only one investor
can control
investee
Pre acquisition equity eliminated
Annotations:
Parent's portion of equity won't appear in CFS due to elimination.
Only non-controlling interest will. Parents portion of post-acq equity (reserves and retained earnings) are aggregated with those of parent.
Dr Share capital of S x
Dr Reserves of S x
Dr SOP Retained earnings of S
Dr Goodwill ??
Cr Investment (or Shares) in S x
Cr Gain from bargain purchase ??
Revaluation surplus so created
from fair value adjustment is
part of pre-acquisition equity
Reasons for Group Formation
Annotations:
Diversification into other industries to spread operating risk
Vertical integration to participate in factor markets and product markets
Horizontal integration to increase market share and reduce competition
Pyramding to control resources of another company without paying 100% of their fair value
Containment of risk to insulate parent from extended losses incurred by any subsidiary
taxation reasons (avoid tax)
Major steps of consolidation
Annotations:
1. Adjustments to prepare for consolidation
2. Elimination of transactions and balance between enitities in the group
3. Aggregation of financial statements of entities in the group
4. Apportionment or allocation between parent shareholders' interest and non-controlling interest
Adjustments include ensuring same reporting date
Annotations:
When reporting dates of parent and subsidiary are different, subsidiary prepares, for consolidation purposes, additional FS of the same date as parent's FS
Uniform accounting policies
Data must be made complete and
correct before aggregations
Annotations:
Leads and lags in recording intragroup transactions
Eliminations
Annotations:
Intragroup balances and transactions are eliminated. P&L resulting from intragroup transactions recognised in assets are eliminated in full. Intragroup losses may indicate an impairment that requires recognition. Income Taxes applies to temporary differences that aris from elimination of profits and losses resulting from intragroup transactions
S's Pre-acq Equity
Annotations:
At the acquisition date P's invesment in S and net assets of S both exist so it would be double counting. P's investment in S and equity of S are internal contra items and would cancel each other. P's investment in S is eliminated against P's portion of the pre-acquisition equity of S
Reasons for Preparing CFS
Annotations:
Parent's own F/S are inadquate because resoures that parent can deploy may be owned by subsidiaries and not revealed in P's balance sheet.
Liabilities contracted through subsidiairies to finance resources are also omitted from P's balance sheet
parent's P&L statements and cash flows only shows dividends from subsidiaries not profit or loss and cash generating capacit of subs
parent can manipulate its own revenue and profit figures by manipulating subsidiaires' dividend policies and by manipulating volume and price of sales between parent and subs.
Consolidation method
Annotations:
AASB 10 adoptes the entity concept: CFS include 100% of a subsidiary's assets and liabilities, profit and loss, and cash flows whatever the percentage of parent's interest