Consolidations Subsequent To The Date Of Acquisition

Page 4 of 50 - About 500 Essays
  • Premium Essay

    Gaap

    presentation Interim financial reporting Consolidations, joint venture accounting and equity method investees Business combinations Inventory Long-lived assets Intangible assets Impairment of long-lived assets, goodwill and intangible assets Financial instruments Foreign currency matters Leases Income taxes Provisions and contingencies Revenue recognition Share-based payments Employee benefits other than share-based payments Earnings per share Segment reporting Subsequent events Related parties Appendix —

    Words: 19604 - Pages: 79

  • Premium Essay

    Title

    opportunity for such direct acquisition (especially of inventory) is often the underlying motive for the creation of the combination. II. Intra-entity inventory transfers A. The individual accounting systems of the two companies will record the transfer as a sale by one party and as a purchase by the other B. Because the transaction was not made with an outside, unrelated party, the sales and purchases balances created by the transfer must be eliminated in the consolidation process (Entry Tl)

    Words: 14704 - Pages: 59

  • Premium Essay

    Revision

    securities appear in the balance sheet. Securities that firms expect to sell within the next year appear as “Marketable Securities” in the Current Asset section of the balance sheet. Securities that firms expect to hold for more than one year from the date of the balance sheet appear in “Investments in Securities,” which firms include in a separate section of the balance sheet between Current Assets and Property, Plant and Equipment. When a company owns sufficient number of shares to control another

    Words: 3287 - Pages: 14

  • Premium Essay

    Chapter 8 Consolidations — Changes in Ownership Interests

    Chapter 8 CONSOLIDATIONS — CHANGES IN OWNERSHIP INTERESTS Answers to Questions 1 Preacquisition earnings and dividends are the earnings and dividends applicable to an investment interest prior to its acquisition during an accounting period. Assume that P purchases an 80 percent interest in S on July 1, 2011 and that S has earnings of $100,000 between January 1 and July 1, 2011 and pays $50,000 dividends on May 1, 2011. In this case, preacquisition earnings and dividends are $100,000 and

    Words: 8025 - Pages: 33

  • Premium Essay

    Title

    opportunity for such direct acquisition (especially of inventory) is often the underlying motive for the creation of the combination. II. Intra-entity inventory transfers A. The individual accounting systems of the two companies will record the transfer as a sale by one party and as a purchase by the other B. Because the transaction was not made with an outside, unrelated party, the sales and purchases balances created by the transfer must be eliminated in the consolidation process (Entry Tl)

    Words: 14704 - Pages: 59

  • Premium Essay

    Paper

    HKAS 21 Revised July 2012May 2014 Hong Kong Accounting Standard 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates HKAS 21 COPYRIGHT © Copyright 2014 Hong Kong Institute of Certified Public Accountants This Hong Kong Financial Reporting Standard contains IFRS Foundation copyright material. Reproduction within Hong Kong in unaltered form (retaining this notice) is permitted for personal and non-commercial use subject to the inclusion of an acknowledgment of the source. Requests

    Words: 12583 - Pages: 51

  • Premium Essay

    Ifrs

    contents Introduction .....................................................................2 Financial statement presentation......................................4 Interim financial reporting ................................................6 Consolidation, joint venture accounting and equity method investees .............................................................7 Business combinations ...................................................11 Inventory ........................................

    Words: 18710 - Pages: 75

  • Premium Essay

    Claims and More Claims

    contents Introduction..................................................................... 2 Financial statement presentation ..................................... 3 Interim financial reporting................................................ 6 Consolidation, joint venture accounting and equity method investees/associates ........................................... 7 Business combinations................................................... 13 Inventory ...........................................

    Words: 18304 - Pages: 74

  • Premium Essay

    Fa4 Spring Assignment 1

    where the issuance costs are deducted from the amount received in the sale of the shares; or by the retained earnings method, where the issuance cost are charged directly to retained earnings. c) $91,000 of goodwill was included in the acquisition costs. Acquisition Cost Fair Value of Bagley’s Net Assets (1,638,000 – 689,000) Goodwill d) Journal entry for Davis Inc. (cash): Current assets Property, plant & equipment Patents Goodwill Current liabilities Long-term debt Cash $1,040,000 949,000 91,000

    Words: 1589 - Pages: 7

  • Premium Essay

    Advanced Accounting

    describes a business combination to be accounted for as a statutory merger?  b. Only one of the combining companies survives and the other loses its separate identity. 3. A firm can use which method of financing for an acquisition structured as either an asset or stock acquisition? a. Cash b. Issuing Debt c. Issuing Stock d. All of the above 4. The objectives of FASB 141R (Business Combinations) and FASB 160 (NonControlling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements) are as

    Words: 4970 - Pages: 20

Page   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 50