Chap 006

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6-1

Analyzing Operating Activities

6
CHAPTER
6-2

Income Measurement
Concepts of Income
Economic Income
 Equals net cash flows + the change in the present value of
future cash flows
 Includes both recurring and nonrecurring components—
rendering it less useful for forecasting future earnings
potential
Permanent Income
 Also called sustainable earning power, or sustainable or
normalized earnings
 Estimate of stable average income that a company is expected
to earn over its life
 Reflects a long-term focus
 Directly proportional to company value
6-3

Income Measurement
Concepts
 Based on accrual accounting
 Suffers from measurement error, arising because of
accounting distortions

Accounting Income consists of:


 Permanent Component--the recurring component expected
to persist indefinitely
 Transitory Component--the transitory (or non-recurring)
component not expected to persist (Note: The concept of
economic income includes both permanent and transitory
components.)
 Value Irrelevant Component--value irrelevant components have
no economic content; they are accounting distortions
6-4

Income Measurement
Measurement
Two main components of accounting income:
Revenues (gains)
Expenses (losses)
6-5

Income Measurement
Measurement
Revenues and Gains

• Revenues are earned inflows or prospective


inflows of cash from operations*
• Gains are recognized inflows or prospective inflows
of cash from non-operations**

 
* Revenues are expected to
recur
**Gains are non-recurring
6-6

Income Measurement
Measurement
Expenses and Losses

• Expenses are incurred outflows, prospective


outflows, or allocations of past outflows of cash
from operations
• Losses are decreases in a company’s
net assets arising from
non-operations 

Expenses and losses are resources consumed, spent,


or lost in pursuing revenues and gains
6-7

Income Measurement
Alternatives
Two major income dimensions:

1. operating versus non-operating


2. recurring versus non-recurring*

 *Motivated by need to separate permanent and


transitory components
6-8

Income Measurement
Alternatives
Alternative Income Statement Measures

• Net income—widely regarded as “bottom line” measure of


income
• Comprehensive income--includes most changes to equity that
result from non-owner sources; it is actually the bottom line
measure of income; is the accountant’s proxy for economic income
• Continuing income--excludes extraordinary items, cumulative
effects of accounting changes, and the effects of discontinued
operations from net income*
• Core income--excludes all non-recurring items from net income

*Often erroneously referred to as “operating income”


6-9

Income Measurement
Analysis
Operating versus Non-Operating Income
 
Operating income--measure of company income as generated from
operating activities
 
Three important aspects of operating income
 Pertains only to income generated from operations
 Focuses on income for the company, not simply for equity holders
(means financing revenues and expenses are excluded)
 Pertains only to ongoing business activities (i.e., results from
discontinued operations is excluded)
 
Non-operating income--includes all components of net income
excluded from operating income
 
Useful to separate non-operating components pertaining to financing and
investing
6-10

Income Measurement
 

Analysis
Determination of Comprehensive Income—sample company

Net income
Other comprehensive income:
+/- Unrealized holding gain or loss on marketable securities
+/- Foreign currency translation adjustment
+/- Postretirement benefits adjustment
+/- Unrealized holding gain or loss on derivative instruments
Comprehensive income
6-11

Non-Recurring Items
 

 Extraordinary items

 Discontinued segments

 Accounting changes

 Restructuring charges

 Special items
6-12

Non-Recurring Items
 

Extraordinary Items
Criteria
Unusual in nature
Infrequent in occurrence

Examples
Uninsured losses from a major casualty (earthquake,hurricane,
tornado), losses from expropriation, and gains and losses from
early retirement of debt

Disclosure & Accounting


Classified separately in income statement
Excluded when computing permanent income
Included when computing economic income
6-13

Non-Recurring Items
Discontinued Operations
Accounting is two-fold:

• Income statements for the current and prior two


years are restated after excluding the effects of
discontinued operations
• Gains or losses from the discontinued operations are
reported separately, net of tax*
 
*Reported in two categories: (i) operating income or
loss from discontinued operations until the
measurement date, and (ii) gains and losses on
disposal
6-14

Non-Recurring Items
 

Discontinued Operations

For analysis of discontinued operations:


• Adjust current and past income to remove effects of
discontinued operations
 Companies disclose this info for the current and past two
years
 For earlier years:
 Look for restated summary info or other voluntary
disclosures
 Take care when doing inter-temporal analysis
• Adjust assets and liabilities to remove discontinued operations
• Retain cumulative gain or loss from discontinued operations in
equity
6-15

Non-Recurring Items
Accounting Changes
First Type of Accounting Change is
Accounting Principle Change—involves
switch from one principle to another

 Disclosure includes:
• Nature of and justification for change
• Effect of change on current income and
earnings per share
• Cumulative effects of retroactive
application of change on income and EPS
for income statement years
6-16

Non-Recurring Items
Accounting Changes
Second Type of Accounting Change is
Accounting Estimate Change—
involves change in estimate
underlying accounting
 
• Prospective application—a change
is accounted for in current and
future periods
• Disclose effects on current income
and EPS
6-17

Non-Recurring Items
 

Accounting Changes
Analyzing Accounting Changes
• Are cosmetic and yield no cash flows
• Can better reflect economic reality
• Can reflect earnings management (or even
manipulation)
• Impact comparative analysis (apples-to-apples)
• Affect both economic and permanent income
 For permanent income, use the new
method and ignore the cumulative effect
 For economic income, evaluate the
change to assess whether it reflects
reality
6-18

Non-Recurring Items
Special Items
Special Items--transactions and events that are unusual or
infrequent
 
Challenges for analysis

 Often little GAAP guidance


 Economic implications are complex
 Discretionary nature serves earnings management aims
 
Two major types

 Asset impairments (write-offs)


 Restructuring charges
6-19

Non-Recurring Items
 

Special Items
Asset Impairment—when asset fair value is below carrying (book) value
 
Some reasons for impairments
 Decline in demand for asset output
 Technological obsolescence
 Changes in company strategy
 
Accounting for impairments
 Report at the lower of market or cost
 No disclosure about determination of amount
 No disclosure about probable impairments
 Flexibility in determining when and how much to write-off
 No plan required for asset disposal
 Conservative presentation of assets
6-20

Non-Recurring Items
 

Special Items
Restructuring Charges—costs usually related to major changes in company
business
 
Examples of these major changes include
 Extensive reorganization
 Divesting business units
 Terminating contracts and joint ventures
 Discontinuing product lines
 Worker retrenchment
 Management turnover
 Write-offs combined with investments in assets, technology or manpower
 
Accounting for estimated costs of restructuring program
 Establish a provision (liability) for estimated costs
 Charge estimated costs to current income
 Actual costs involve adjustments against the provision when incurred
6-21

Non-Recurring Items
 

Analyzing Special Items

Earnings Management with Special Charges

(1)  Special charges often garner less investor


attention under an assumption they are non-recurring
and do not persist

(2)  Managers motivated to re-classify operating


charges as special one-time charges

(3) When analysts ignore such re-classified charges


it leads to low operating expense estimates and
overestimates of company value
6-22

Non-Recurring Items
 

Analyzing Special Items

Income Statement Adjustments


 
(1) Permanent income reflect profitability of a company
under normal circumstances
• Most special charges constitute operating expenses
that need to be reflected in permanent income
• Special charges often reflect either understatements
of past expenses or investments for future profitability
 
(2) Economic income reflects the effects on equity of all
events that occur in the period
• Entire amount of special charges is included
6-23

Non-Recurring Items
Analyzing Special Items

Balance Sheet Adjustments


Balance sheets after special charges often better reflect
business reality by reporting assets closer to net realizable
values
 
Two points of attention
(1) Retain provision or net against equity?
• If a going-concern analysis, then retain
• If a liquidating value analysis, then offset against equity
 
(2) Asset write-offs conservatively distort asset and liability
values
6-24

Revenue Recognition
Guidelines
Revenue Recognition Criteria
 Earning activities are substantially complete and no significant
added effort is necessary
 Risk of ownership is effectively passed to the buyer
 Revenue, and related expense, are measured or estimated with
accuracy
 Revenue recognized normally
yields an increase in cash,
receivables or securities
 Revenue transactions are at arm’s
length with independent parties
 Transaction is not subject to revocation
6-25

Revenue Recognition

Guidelines
Some special revenue recognition situations are

 Revenue When Right of Return Exists


 Franchise Revenues
 Product Financing Arrangements
 Revenue under Contracts
 Percentage-of-completion method
 Completed-contract method
 Unearned Revenue (amount of revenues that are still
unrecognized appear in the balance sheet as a liability)
6-26

Revenue Recognition
 
Analysis
Revenue is important for
 Company valuation
 Accounting-based contractual agreements
 Management pressure to achieve income expectations
 Management compensation linked to income
 Valuation of stock options
 
Analysis must assess whether revenue reflects business reality
 Assess risk of transactions
 Assess risk of collectibility
 
Circumstances fueling questions about revenue recognition include
 Sale of assets or operations not producing cash flows to fund interest
or dividends
 Lack of equity capital
 Existence of contingent liabilities
6-27

Deferred Charges

Costs incurred but deferred because they are


expected to benefit future periods

Consider four categories of deferred costs

• Research and development


• Computer software costs
• Costs in extractive industries
• Miscellaneous (Other)
6-28

Deferred Charges
Research and Development
Accounting for R&D is problematic due to:*

• High uncertainty of any potential benefits


• Time period between R&D activities and determination of success
• Intangible nature of most R&D activities
• Difficulty in estimating future benefit periods
 
Hence:
• U.S. accounting requires expensing R&D when incurred
• Only costs of materials, equipment, and facilities with alternative
future uses are capitalized as tangible assets
• Intangibles purchased from others for R&D activities with alternative
future uses are capitalized
 
*These accounting problems are similar to those encountered with
employee training programs, product promotions, and advertising
6-29

Deferred Charges
Computer Software Costs
[Note: Accounting for costs of computer software to be
sold, leased, or otherwise marketed identifies a point
referred to as technological feasibility]
 
Prior to technological
feasibility, costs
are expensed when
incurred
 
After technological feasibility, costs are capitalized as
an intangible asset
6-30

Deferred Charges
Costs in Extractive Industries
Search and development costs for natural resources is important to
extractive industries including oil, gas, metals, coal, and nonmetallic
minerals
 
Two basic accounting viewpoints:
• “Full‑cost” view—all costs,
productive and nonproductive,
incurred in the search for resources
are capitalized and amortized to
income as resources are produced
and sold

• “Successful efforts” view—all costs that do not result directly in


discovery of resources have no future benefit and should be
expensed as incurred. Prescribed for oil and gas producing
companies
6-31

Employee Benefits

Overview

 Increase in employee benefits supplementary to salaries and


wages
 Some supplementary benefits are not accorded full or timely
recognition:

• Compensated absences
• Deferred compensation contracts
• Stock appreciation rights (SARs)
• Junior stock plans
• Employee Stock Options (ESOs)
6-32

Employee Benefits
Employee Stock Options
ESOs are a popular form of
incentive compensation
—reasons include:

 Enhanced employee performance


 Align employee and company incentives
 Viewed as means to riches
 Tool to attract talented and enterprising workers
 Do not have direct cash flow effects
 Do not require the recording of costs
6-33

Employee Benefits
Employee Stock Options
Option Facts
• Option to purchase shares at a specific price on or after a future
date
• Exercise price is the price a holder has the right to purchase
shares at
• Exercise price often set equal to
stock price on grant date
• Vesting date is the earliest date
the employee can exercise
option
• In-the-Money: When stock
price is higher than exercise
price
• Out-of-the-Money: When stock price
is less than exercise price
6-34

Employee Benefits
Employee Stock Options

Two main accounting issues


• Determining Dilution of earnings per share (EPS)
 ESOs in-the-money are dilutive securities and affect diluted
EPS
 ESOs out-of-the-money are antidilutive securities and do not
affect diluted EPS
• Determining Compensation expense
 Determine cost of ESOs granted
 Amortize cost over vesting period
6-35

Interest Costs
Interest Defined

Interest
Compensation for use of money
Excess cash paid beyond the money (principal)
borrowed
 
Interest rate
Determined by risk characteristics of borrower
 
Interest expense
Determined by interest rate, principal, and time
6-36

Interest Costs

Interest Analysis

• Interest on convertible debt is controversial by


ignoring the cost of conversion privilege
• Diluted earnings per share uses number of shares
issuable in event of conversion of convertible debt
• Analysts view interest as a period cost—not
capitalizable
• Changes in a company borrowing rate, not explained
by market trends, reveal changes in risk
6-37

Income Taxes
Temporary Income Tax Differences


GAAP
GAAP
GAAP
GAAP
Financial
Taxable Income
Statement Income
 Differences that are temporary in nature
 expected to reverse in the future
 mainly in the nature of timing differences between tax
and GAAP accounting
 accounted for using deferred tax adjustments
6-38

Income Taxes
Income Tax Accounting

• Identify types and amounts of temporary differences and the


nature and amount of each type of operating loss and tax credit
carryforward
• Measure total deferred tax liability for taxable temporary
differences
• Compute total deferred tax asset for deductible temporary
differences and operating loss carryforwards
• Measure deferred tax assets for each type of tax credit
carryforward
• Reduce deferred tax assets by a valuation allowance
6-39

Income Taxes
Income Tax Analysis

• Financial Statement Adjustments


• Present Valuing Deferred Tax Assets and
Liabilities
• Forecasting Future Income and Cash Flows
• Analyzing Permanent and Temporary
Differences
• Earnings Management and Earnings Quality

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