Asc 830
Asc 830
Asc 830
statements.
Functional Currency: An entity’s functional currency is the currency of the primary
economic environment in which the entity operates; normally, that is the currency of
the environment in which an entity primarily generates and expends cash.
When an operation has transactions denominated in a currency other than its
functional currency, they must be measured in the functional currency
A foreign entity is a distinct and separable operation that is combined, consolidated,
or accounted for using the equity method of accounting and has a functional currency
other than the reporting entity’s reporting currency.
oreign Entity: An operation (for example, subsidiary, division, branch, joint venture,
and so forth) whose financial statements are both:
a. Prepared in a currency other than the reporting currency of the reporting
entity
b. Combined or consolidated with or accounted for on the equity basis in the
financial statements of the reporting entity.
Gains and losses (and the associated tax effect) from the effect of exchange rate
differences in translation are recorded in the CTA account. CTA is a separate
component of accumulated other comprehensive income (OCI) in shareholders’
equity.
A foreign entity may choose (or be required by law) to maintain its books and records
in a local currency that is not its functional currency. In accordance with ASC
830, before the local currency financial statements (prepared in accordance with US
GAAP) are translated to the reporting entity’s reporting currency, they should be
“remeasured” (so called because they were already measured in the local currency,
which may have created transaction gains and losses) into the foreign entity’s
functional currency. This remeasurement should provide results comparable to those
that would have occurred had the entity used its functional currency to maintain its
records.
From a local currency to the currency of the reporting entity (including changes due to a highly
inflationary economy)
The translated balances of monetary and nonmonetary assets and liabilities recorded in the reporting entity’s
consolidated financial statements as of the end of the prior reporting period become the new accounting basis
for those assets and liabilities in the period of the change.
To the extent that the distinct and separable operation has monetary assets and liabilities denominated in the
old functional currency, such balances will create transaction gains and losses subsequent to the change in
functional currency.
The balance recorded in the CTA account for prior periods is not reversed upon the change in functional
currency.
Property, plant and equipment are nonmonetary assets. Property, plant and equipment
purchased in a foreign currency should be initially measured and recorded in an
entity’s functional currency using the exchange rate on the date it is acquired. It
should not be subsequently remeasured for changes in exchange rates during the
period it is held.
A reporting entity must translate the functional currency financial statements of any
foreign entity, whether consolidated or accounted for using the equity method of
accounting, to include them in its consolidated financial statements. This is true
whether the reporting entity is a parent company or a subsidiary.
when a foreign entity’s books and records are not maintained in its functional
currency, the reporting entity must first remeasure the financial statements into its
functional currency and then translate the foreign entity’s financial statements into the
reporting currency.
Assets and liabilities Exchange rate at the end of the reporting period
Income statement Exchange rate on the date the income or expense was recognized; use of the
weighted average exchange rate during the period is generally appropriate
Shareholders’ Historical exchange rates at the date the entry to shareholders’ equity was
equity, including NCI recorded, except for the change in retained earnings during the year, which is
translated using the historical exchange rates used to translate each period’s
income statement
As discussed in FX 5.2, when a foreign entity maintains its books and records in a
currency other than its functional currency (e.g., if the tax laws in a country require
the local currency to be used for books and records), the reporting entity should first
remeasure the foreign entity’s financial statements into the foreign entity’s functional
currency and then translate the foreign entity’s functional currency financial
statements into the reporting currency.
When an entity remeasures its financial statements, it should apply the guidance for
foreign currency transactions. Monetary assets and liabilities are remeasured using
exchange rates at the end of the reporting period, nonmonetary assets and liabilities
are remeasured using the exchange rate on the date the item was initially recognized
(i.e., the historical rate). This remeasurement process is intended to produce the same
results as if the foreign entity maintained its books and records in its functional
currency
Translating the financial results of a foreign entity in a way that provides relevant
information requires a relatively stable unit of measure. When the functional currency
of a foreign entity is a local currency that is experiencing high inflation, the translated
financial information becomes less relevant
once a reporting entity determines that it has a foreign entity operating in a highly
inflationary economy, the reporting currency should be considered the foreign entity’s
functional currency on a prospective basis.
To the extent that the foreign entity’s books and records are not maintained in its new
functional currency, remeasurement into the functional currency is required.