Bhawana Jain, ASB, Ettimadai

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Bhawana Jain, ASB, Ettimadai

Fixed assets
Resources that are used in the operations of
a business and are not intended for sale to
customers.

Tangible Assets

Intangible Assets

Natural Resources
TANGIBLE ASSETS

Tangible assets are fixed assets that have


a physical existence.
1 Land
2 Land improvements
3 Buildings
4 Plant &Equipment
DETERMINING THE COST
OF TANGIBLE ASSETS
Recorded at cost in accordance with the cost principle.
n vo ice
Cost consists of all expenditures necessary I

to acquire the asset and make it ready for its


intended use.
These costs include purchase price, freight
costs, and installation costs.
Expenditures that are not necessary should be
recorded as expenses, losses, or other assets.
MEASUREMENT OF
TANGIBLE ASSET COST
Cost is measured by the cash paid in a cash transaction or
by the cash equivalent price when noncash assets are used
in payment.
The cash equivalent price is equal to the fair market value
of the asset given up or the fair market value of the asset
received, whichever is more clearly determinable.
COST OF
COST OF LAND
LAND

Costs debited to land account


Purchase price
Closing costs, broker commissions, accrued taxes, assumed
liens, etc.
Other costs necessary to make land ready for use.

Land
Cash price of property 100,000
Net removal cost of warehouse 6,000
Attorney’s fee 1,000
Real estate broker’s commission 8,000
Cost of land 115,000
LAND IMPROVEMENTS

The cost of land improvements includes all


expenditures necessary to make the
improvements ready for their intended use
such as:
1 parking lots, paving
2 fencing, and
3 lighting.
COST OF
COST OF BUILDINGS
BUILDINGS

The cost of a building depends on whether it is purchased or


constructed.

Purchased Constructed
Purchase price Contract price
Closing costs Architects fees
Brokers commissions Permits & excavation
Liens assumed Interest
COST OF
COST OF EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENT

Purchase price
Sales tax
Freight charges
Transit insurance
Assembly
Installation
Testing
Other ongoing expenses are expensed as incurred
COST OF
COST OF MACHINERY
MACHINERY
& JOURNAL
& JOURNAL ENTRY
ENTRY

Entry to record the cost of machinery & related expenditures:

Factory Machinery 54,500


Cash 54,500
Illustration 1
Illustration 2
Valuation of fixed assets in special cases
 Jointly owned fixed assets
Case 1
 Basket purchase
Illustration 3
Self constructed assets
Donated assets
 Accounting for Government Grants
 Specific grants
 Capital approach

 Income approach

 Non-monetary assets at a concessional rate

 General grants for a project

 Recognition of government grants

 Disclosure requirements

Illustration 4
Borrowing costs
AS 16
Qualifying asset
 Capitalisation
 Substantial period of time

 Specific Borrowings

 Borrowing for projects

 General Borrowings

 Disclosure Requirements
Illustration 5
EXPENDITURES DURING
EXPENDITURES DURING USEFUL
USEFUL LIFE
LIFE

REVENUE EXPENDITURES
Ordinary repairs and maintenance
Immaterial in amount
No effect on useful life of asset
Expensed immediately

CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
Additions and Improvements to assets
Material in amount
Extend asset’s useful life
Handhold 8.6 (pg. 371)
DEPRECIATION
Depreciation is the process of allocating to expense the
cost of a plant asset over its useful (service) life in a
rational and systematic manner.
Cost allocation is designed to provide for the proper
matching of expenses with revenues in accordance with
the matching principle.
During an asset’s life, its usefulness may decline because
of wear and tear or obsolescence.
Recognition of depreciation does not result in the
accumulation of cash for the replacement of the asset.
Land is the only plant asset that is not depreciated.
FACTORS IN COMPUTING
DEPRECIATION
Three factors that affect the computation of
depreciation are:
1 Cost: all expenditures necessary to acquire the
asset and make it ready for intended use.
2 Useful life: estimate of the expected life based on need
for repair, service life, and vulnerability to
obsolescence.
3 Salvage value: estimate of the asset’s value at the end
of its useful life.
STRAIGHT-LINE
Under the straight-line method, depreciation is
the same for each year of the asset’s useful life.
It is measured by the passage of time.
In order to compute depreciation expense, it is
necessary to determine depreciable cost.
Depreciable cost is the total amount subject to
depreciation and is computed as follows:
Cost of asset - salvage value
STRAIGHT-LINE METHOD
STRAIGHT-LINE METHOD

The formula for computing annual depreciation expense is:


Depreciable Cost / Useful Life (in years) = Depreciation Expense

Cost Salvage Depreciable


Value Cost

13,000 - 1,000 = 12,000

Depreciable Useful Annual


Cost Life Depreciation
(in Years) Expense

12,000 ÷ 5 = 2,400
UNITS OF
UNITS OF ACTIVITY
ACTIVITY

To use the units-of-activity method,


apply the formula below:

Depreciable Total Units of Depreciable


Cost Activity Cost per Unit

12,000 ÷ 100,000 miles = 0.12

Units of Annual
Depreciable
Activity during Depreciation
Cost per Unit
the Year Expense

0.12 x 15,000 miles = 1,800


WRITTEN DOWN
WRITTEN DOWN VALUE
VALUE

Formula:

√Residual value/cost,
n
1-
n = useful life in years
SUM OF
SUM OF THE
THE YEARS
YEARS DIGIT
DIGIT

Formula:

(Cost-Residual
n Value) X n
Sum of digits

Pg 360
Comparison of Methods
Depreciation expense per year

7,000
6,000 Straight line
5,000
4,000
3,000 Declining
2,000 balance
1,000 Units of
0 output
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4
FIXED ASSET DISPOSALS
Eliminate the book value of the plant asset at the date of
sale by debiting Accumulated Depreciation and
crediting the asset account for its cost.
Debit Cash to record the cash proceeds from the sale.
Compute gain or loss.
If the cash proceeds are greater than the book value,
recognize a gain by crediting Gain on Disposal for the
difference.
If the cash proceeds are less than the book value,
recognize a loss by debiting Loss on Disposal for the
difference.
FIXED ASSET DISPOSALS
1. Record depreciation expense up to date of sale
Depreciation Expense Dr
Accumulated Depreciation Cr
2. Compute gain/loss on disposal
Cost minus Accumulated depreciation minus sale proceeds
3. Record entry
Cash (proceeds) Dr
Accumulated depreciation Dr
Loss on disposal Dr
Fixed Asset Cr
Gain on disposal Cr
FIXED ASSET RETIREMENT

Fully depreciated—no gain or loss


Not fully depreciated—loss on retirement recorded
DEPRECIATION FOR
PARTIAL PERIODS
 pro rata depreciation
Materiality principle
REVISING PERIODIC
DEPRECIATION
 If wear and tear or obsolescence indicate that
annual depreciation is inadequate or excessive, a
change in the periodic amount should be made.
 When a change is made,
1 there is no correction of previously recorded
depreciation expense and
2 depreciation expense for current and future
years is revised.
 To determine the new annual depreciation
expense, the depreciable cost at the time of the
revision is divided by the remaining useful life.
REVISED
REVISED DEPRECIATION
DEPRECIATION COMPUTATION
COMPUTATION

Barb’s Florists decides on January 1, 2005 to extend


the useful life of the truck one year because of its
excellent condition. The company has used the
straight-line method to depreciate the asset to date,
and book value is $5,800 ($13,000 - $7,200). The new
annual depreciation is $1,600, calculated as follows:

Book value, 1/1/04 $ 5,800


Less: Salvage value 1,000
Depreciable cost $ 4,800

Remaining useful life 3 years (2005-2007)

Revised annual depreciation ($4,800 ÷ 3) $ 1,600


CHANGE IN METHOD
OF DEPRECIATION

Consistency principle
Other issues

Group depreciation
Block of assets under IT Act
Assets of low unit cost
Write off to P&L if not material
Income Tax Act
 WDV method at prescribed rates
 Block of assets
Revaluation
 AS10
 Revalue an entire class of assets OR select assets for
revaluation on a systematic basis and disclose this
basis
 Compute depreciation on revalued amount
 Increase – revaluation reserve (equity, capital
reserve)
 Decrease – charge to P&L A/c
382
NATURAL RESOURCES
Natural resources consist of standing
timber and underground deposits
of oil, gas, and minerals.
Natural resources have two distinguishing
characteristics:
1 They are physically extracted in operations.
2 They are replaceable only by an act of nature.
AQUISITION COST

 The acquisition cost of a natural


resource is the cash or cash
equivalent price necessary to acquire
the resource and prepare it for its
intended use.
 If the resource is already discovered,
cost is the price paid for the
property.
DEPLETION
 The process of allocating the cost of
natural resources to expense in a
rational and systematic manner over the
resource’s useful life is called depletion.
 The units-of-activity method is generally
used to compute depletion, because
periodic depletion generally is a
function of the units extracted during
the year.
FORMULA TO COMPUTE DEPLETION
EXPENSE

Total Cost Total Depletion


minus Salvage Estimated Cost per
Value Units Unit

Number of
Depletion
Units Depletion
Cost per
Extracted Expense
Unit
and Sold

Helpful hint: The computation for


depletion is similar to the computation for
depreciation using the units-of-activity
method.
RECORDING DEPLETION
The Lane Coal Company invests $5 million in a mine estimated to
have 10 million tons of coal and no salvage value. In the first year,
800,000 tons of coal are extracted and sold. Using the formulas, the
calculations are as follows:

$5,000,000 ÷ 10,000,000 = $.50 depletion cost per ton

$.50 X 800,000 = $400,000 depletion expense


The entry to record depletion expense for the first year of operations is
as follows:

400,000

400,000
INTANGIBLE ASSETS

Intangible assets are rights, privileges, and


competitive advantages that result from the
ownership of long lived assets that do not possess
physical substance.
Intangibles may arise from government grants,
acquisition of another business, and private
monopolistic arrangements.
ACCOUNTING FOR
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 In general, accounting for intangible
assets parallels the accounting for
tangible assets.
 Intangible assets are:
1 recorded at cost;
2 written off over useful life in a
rational and systematic manner; and
3 at disposal, book value is eliminated
and gain or loss, if any, is recorded.
ACCOUNTING FOR
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 Differences between the accounting for intangible
assets and the accounting for plant assets include:
 The systematic write-off of an intangible asset is
referred to as amortization.
 To record amortization, Amortization Expense is
debited and the accumulated amortization of
specific intangible asset is credited.
 The amortization period cannot be longer than 10
years unless an enterprise can establish longer life.
(AS26)
 Amortization is typically computed on a straight-
line basis.
PATENTS
A patent is an exclusive right issued by the government
that enables the recipient to manufacture, sell, or
otherwise control his or her invention for a period of 20
years from the date of grant.
The initial cost of a patent is the cash or cash
equivalent price paid when the patent is
acquired.
Legal costs incurred in successfully defending the
patent are added to the Patent account and amortized
over the remaining useful life of the patent.
The cost of the patent should be amortized over its
20-year legal life or its useful life, whichever is shorter.
COPYRIGHTS
 Copyrights are granted by the
government, giving the owner the
exclusive right to reproduce and
sell an artistic or published work.
 Copyrights extend for the life of the
creator plus 60 years.
 The cost of a copyright consists of
the cost of acquiring and defending
it.
 Amortize over its legal life or its
useful life, whichever is shorter
TRADEMARKS AND
TRADE NAMES
A trademark or trade name is a word, phrase,
jingle, or symbol that distinguishes or identifies a
particular enterprise or product.
If the trademark or trade name is
purchased, the cost is the purchase price.
If it is developed by a company, the cost includes
attorney’s fees, registration fees, design costs and
successful legal defense fees.
Registered for 10 years, renewable indefinitely for
successive periods of 10 years each
They are amortized over the estimated useful life.
FRANCHISES AND
LICENSES
A franchise is a contractual arrangement under
which the franchisor grants the franchisee the
right to sell certain products, to render specific
services, or to use certain trademarks or trade
names, usually within a designated geographical
area.
Another type of franchise, commonly referred
to as a license or permit, is entered into between
a governmental body and a business enterprise
and permits the enterprise to use public
property in performing its services.
Amortize over the period of franchise or license
GOODWILL
Goodwill is the value of all favorable attributes
that relate to a business enterprise.
These attributes may include exceptional
management, desirable location, good customer
relations and skilled employees.
Goodwill cannot be sold individually in the
marketplace; it can be identified only with the
business as a whole.
GOODWILL
Goodwill is recorded only when there is an
exchange transaction that involves the purchase
of an entire business.
When an entire business is purchased, goodwill is
the excess of cost over the fair market value of the
net assets (assets less liabilities) acquired.
Goodwill is written off over its useful life usually
between 3 and 5 years.
RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT COSTS
 Research and development costs pertain to
expenditures incurred to develop new
products and processes.
 Research costs are not intangible costs, but
are usually recorded as an expense when
incurred. (AS 26)
Computer Software costs
Preliminary project stage – expense
Development stage – para 44 of AS 26, amortize over
3-5 years (not exceeding 10 yrs)
Deferred charges
AS 26 – expense revenue exp.
AS-28 IMPAIRMENT OF ASSETS
OBJECTIVE.

- To ensure that the assets are carried at no more than


recoverable amount
- Recoverable amount not to exceed the amount to be
recovered through use or sale of the asset
- Impaired loss to be recognised in the financial statement
- Impaired loss may be reversed in certain circumstances
- To make certain disclosures for impaired assets.
Financial analysis
Fixed asset turnover ratio:

Sales
(Beginning FA + Ending FA)/2

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