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Chapter Seven Consolidated Consolidated Financial Financial Statements – Statements – Ownership Ownership Patterns and Patterns and Income Taxes Income Taxes McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Page 1: Chap007

Chapter Seven

Consolidated Consolidated Financial Financial

Statements – Statements – Ownership Ownership

Patterns and Patterns and Income TaxesIncome Taxes

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Page 2: Chap007

Indirect Subsidiary Control

When a parent controls a subsidiary which in turn controls other firms, a “pyramid” or “father-son-grandson” relationship exists

“Father

75 % Ownership

“Son”

80 % ownership

“Grandsons”

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Page 3: Chap007

Consolidation When Indirect Control is Present

Start from the bottom of the “pyramid” and work upwards

Recognize realized income of the “grandson(s)”

Use this to consolidate the “son” and “grandson(s)” financial information, taking care to calculate any noncontrolling interest

Finally, consolidate the “son(s)” and parent in the same manner

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Note: In practice this can become quite complicated

Page 4: Chap007

Indirect Control -- Example

Determine consolidated income for the entire

combination by:

Combining Midway and Bottom to determine Midway’s realized income.

Combining Top with the realized income from Midway.

70% Ownership

Top Co.

Midway Co.

Bottom Co.

60% Ownership

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Page 5: Chap007

Indirect Control -- Example

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The following data is from the individual company financial records:

Page 6: Chap007

Indirect Control – Example

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Following the consolidation steps to determine Midway’s realized income:

Page 7: Chap007

Indirect Control -- Example

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Then combine Top Company’s income with Midway’s realized income:

Midway’s realized income as calculated in the last step.

Page 8: Chap007

Indirect Control -- Example

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Lastly, using the calculation of income from the previous calculations, determine the noncontrolling interest:

Bottom and Midway’s individual incomes as calculated in the first step.

Page 9: Chap007

Consolidation Process --Indirect Control

Use the standard consolidation entries to complete the father-son-grandson combination.

Essentially, the entries are duplicated for each relationship.

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Page 10: Chap007

Indirect Subsidiary Control - Connecting Affiliation

Low Company

Side Company

70% owned

30% owned

45% owned

The combination

of the parent’s DIRECT

ownership and INDIRECT

ownership can result in control of a subsidiary.

High Company

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Page 11: Chap007

Indirect Subsidiary Control - Connecting Affiliation

In this case, High controls Side directly

with 70% ownership, and

controls Low indirectly with 61.5% effective

ownership. 30% +(70% x 45%)

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Low Company

Side Company

70% owned

30% owned

45% owned

High Company

Page 12: Chap007

Indirect Subsidiary Control - Connecting Affiliation

Basic Consolidation Rules Still Hold: Eliminate effects of intra-entity transfers. Adjust parent’s beginning R/E to

recognize prior period ownership. Eliminate sub’s beginning equity

balances. Adjust for unamortized FV adjustments. Record Amortization Expense. Remove intra-entity income and

dividends. Compute and record noncontrolling

interest in subsidiaries’ net income.

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Page 13: Chap007

Up Company

Down Company

90% owned

20% owned

Mutual Ownership

Occurs when the sub owns shares of the parent.

The primary method used to account for the mutually owned shares is the Treasury Stock Approach

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Page 14: Chap007

Mutual Ownership

GAAP recommends that “shares of the parent held by the subsidiary should be eliminated in consolidated financial statements”

Theoretically, these shares are not “outstanding” because they are not held by parties outside the combination

There is no legitimate accounting distinction between the parent owning stock of a subsidiary, or a subsidiary owning stock of a parent – they are both intra-entity stock ownership.

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Page 15: Chap007

Mutual Ownership -- Treasury Stock Approach

The cost of the parent shares held by the subsidiary is reclassified on the worksheet into Treasury Stock.

Intra-entity dividends on shares of the parent owned by the subsidiary are eliminated as an intra- entity cash transfer.

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Page 16: Chap007

Mutual Ownership -- Treasury Stock Approach Example Pop Co owns 70% of Sun Co. Sun owns 10% of Pop Co,

purchased for $120,000, and records the investment under the Fair Value Method.

Pop pays dividends of $8,000 to Sun, who records dividend income.

The following entries are recorded in consolidation:

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Treasury Stock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $120,000 Investment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $120,000Dividends Paid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,000 Dividends Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,000

Page 17: Chap007

IFRS and Indirect Control

Under GAAP, the consolidation

process begins at the lowest level in the ownership

structure and works its way up.

Under IFRS, firms may apply a direct

method that consolidates each

controlled subsidiary without

regard to an intermediate

controlling affiliate.

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Page 18: Chap007

Income Tax Accounting for a Business Combination

Business combinations may elect to file a consolidated federal tax return for all companies composing an affiliated group.

The affiliated group (as defined by the IRS) will likely exclude some members of the business combination.

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Page 19: Chap007

Income Tax Accounting for a Business Combination

Affiliated Group

= The parent company

+ Any domestic subsidiary where the parent owns 80% or more of the voting stock AND 80% of each class of nonvoting stock.

All others must file separately (including any foreign subsidiaries.)

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Page 20: Chap007

Benefits of Using an Affiliated Group

Intra-entity profits are not taxed until realized.

Intra-entity dividends are nontaxable (regardless of filing a consolidated return).

Losses of one affiliated group member can be used to offset taxable income earned by another group member.

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Page 21: Chap007

Income Tax Accounting -- Deferred Income Taxes

Tax consequences are often dependent on whether separate or consolidated returns are filed.

Transactions affected:

Intra-entity Dividends

Goodwill

Unrealized Intra-entity

Gains

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Page 22: Chap007

Income Tax Accounting – Deferred Income Taxes

Intra-entity Dividends For accounting purposes, all intra-

entity dividends are eliminated. For tax purposes, dividends are

NOT eliminated if ownership is less than 80%. (They are currently taxed at a rate of 20%.)

A deferred tax liability is created based on the difference.

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Page 23: Chap007

Income Tax Accounting -- Deferred Income Taxes

Amortization of Goodwill Current tax law permits the

amortization of Goodwill and other purchased Intangible Assets over 15 years.

GAAP does not systematically amortize Goodwill for financial reporting purposes, but instead reviews it annually for impairment.

A deferred tax liability results from the timing differences between the amortization and write-off.

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Page 24: Chap007

Income Tax Accounting -- Deferred Income Taxes

Unrealized Intra-Entity Gains If consolidated returns are filed,

intra-entity gains are deferred until realized and no timing difference is created.

If separate returns are filed, taxable gains must be reported in the period of transfer.

The “prepayment” of taxes on the unrealized gains creates a deferred income tax asset.

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Page 25: Chap007

Assigning Income Tax Expense – Consolidated Return

Consolidated tax returns require allocation of tax expense between the parties

Important for the subsidiaryIf separate financial statements

are needed for loans or equity issues

As a basis for calculating noncontrolling interest’s share of consolidated income

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Page 26: Chap007

Assigning Income Tax Expense7-26

Two Methods may be used to allocate Income Tax Expense: Percentage Allocation Method –

Tax Expense is assigned based on relative net incomes of the companies.

Separate Return Method – Tax Expense is assigned based on relative tax expense IF they had filed separate returns.

Page 27: Chap007

Business Combinations and Operating Loss Carryforwards

Net operating losses for companies may be carried back for two years and/or forward for twenty years

Because some acquisitions appeared to be primarily to take advantage of this situation, US law has been changed to require operating loss carryforwards to be used only by the company incurring the loss (in most situations.)

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Page 28: Chap007

Business Combinations and Operating Loss Carryforwards

FASB ASC Topic 740 requires deferred tax assets to be recorded for any net operating loss carryforwards

Valuation allowances are recorded if it is more likely than not (based on available evidence) that some or all of the deferred tax asset will not be realized.

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Page 29: Chap007

Summary

Control may be indirect. Consolidation of pyramid structures

requires a systematic bottom-to-top approach.

Mutual affiliation occurs when a subsidiary owns shares of the parent, and either the treasury stock or conventional approaches may be used to produce consolidated information.

Affiliated groups, which may differ from the consolidated entity due to IRS restrictions, are permitted to file consolidated returns.

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Page 30: Chap007

Possible Criticisms

Due to IRS regulations, the affiliated groups filing a tax return are often different from the consolidated entity, creating differences in financial statement income versus taxable income for the combination.

Indirect ownership creates a different “control environment” than direct ownership, but this difference is not disclosed.

WHAT DO YOU THINK????

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