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Chapter 11: Liabilities, on and off balance sheet
General issuesLong-term debt, contingent liabilities
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Liabilities, definition and classification
present obligations based on past transactions or events that require either future payment or future performance of services
recognized when incurred; end-of-period adjustments may be necessaryvalued at the amount due or at fair market value
classified as current or long-term; determinable or contingent
A liability is a present obligation of the enterprise arising from pastevents, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow fromthe enterprise of resources embodying economic benefits. [IASBFramework, paragraph 49]
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Long-term / current
Long-term Liabilitydue beyond the current period or the normal operating cycle, whichever is longerused to cover long-term financing needs
Current Liabilitydue within one year or within the normal operating cycle, whichever is longerincurred in connection with operating processlong-term liabilities may contain a current portion according to the lapse of time• to be shown separately
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Part I: Current Liabilities
Accounts Payablesometimes called trade accounts payablebalances owed to others for goods and services purchased on open accounttime lag between resource inflow and payment
Short-Term Loans„line of credit“ – short-term borrowing when neededpromissory note• interest rate may vary over time
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Notes Payable, accounting treatment when granted
written promises to pay a certain sum on a specified future dateused to secure loans or to pay suppliers for goods
money received equal to face value of note
money received equal to present value of note
Case 1 - Interest stated separately
Sep 30 Cash 10.000 Notes Payable 10.000 (To record issuance of 9%, 90-day note to Commerzbank)
Case 2 - Interest in face amount
Sep 30 Cash 9.779Discount on Notes Payable _221 Notes Payable 10.000 (To record issuance of zero-interest-bearing 90-day note to Commerzbank)
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Accounting treatment of payment
interest expense
= 10.000 x 9% x 90/360
interest expense is lower in case 2 than in case 1 since the effective amount borrowed was lower, too.
Case 1 - Interest stated separately
Dec 30 Notes Payable 10.000Interest Expense _225 Cash 10.225 (To record payment of Commerzbank interest-bearing note and accrued interest at maturity)
Case 2 - Interest in face amount
Dec 30 Notes Payable 10.000 Cash 10.000 (To record payment of note with interest included in face amount)
Dec 30 Interest Expense ____221 Discount on Note Payable 221 (To record interest expense on note payable)
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other current debt
Current Maturities of Long-Term Debtportions of long-term debt maturing within the next year are classified as current liabilitiese.g. installment due on a long-term liability, i.e. a loan
Dividends Payableliability is incurred after the board‘s decision to pay out dividendsliability exists until dividends are paid
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Unearned Revenuesexamples:
sale of season tickets for a sports clubsubscription of magazinesgift certificatesmeal tickets
accounting treatmentwhen payment is received: debit cash, and credit unearned revenue accountwhen revenue is earned: debit unearned revenue, and credit an earned revenue account
Type of Account TitleBusiness Unearned Revenue Earned Revenue
Airline Unearned Passenger Ticket Revenue Passenger RevenueRestaurant Unearned Meal Revenue Meal RevenueMagazine Publisher Unearned Subscription Revenue Subscription RevenueSports Club Unearned Ticket Revenue Ticket Revenue
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Economic function of unearned revenue
recognize unearned revenue when customers are entitled to receive future service for their present payment with certainty
to be distinguished from warranty reserves
Example – Microsoftunearned revenue increased year after yearu.r. arise from sale of Windows and Office
you do not buy just the current version but future improvements as well
if sales are growing so is unearned revenue
Increases in unearned revenues may signal favorable future development!
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Contingencies
Definition„ ... an existing condition, situation, or set of circumstances involving uncertainty as to possible gain (gain contingency) or loss (loss contingency) to an enterprise that will ultimately be resolved when one or more future events occur or fail to occur.“ [FASB] Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.5, par.1 (1975)
Gain contingencies are not recorded.Loss contingencies are not existing liabilities, but potential liabilitiesliabilities contingent on occurence or nonoccurence of a future event
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Example
Dream Cars Inc., a car dealer, offers various specialties to its customers:
Free repair of newly bought cars in case of defect within the next two yearsFree inspection on request by new customers within the next six months with purchase of 4 new tires before christmas (as a christmas customer appreciation special)
No definite liability incurred; Uncertain:payee dueamount.
Neverthelessit is probable, that a liability has been incurred, andthe liability can reasonably be estimated.
Record the estimated amount as a contingent liability!
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Accounting for contingencies under US-GAAP
Event
Contingent Loss Contingent Gain
Probability ofOccurence High Reasonable Remote High Reasonable Remote
Is it estimable?
Yes No
AccountingTreatment Accrue Disclose Disclose Ignore Disclose Ignore Ignore
Source: Pratt, p. 432.
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Common instances of loss contingencies/contingent liabilities:
Litigation, claims, and assessmentsthe cause for legal action occurred in the pastprobability of unfavorable outcome assessed accoding to past experienceestimate of expected loss: legal action is decided but number of claimants uncertainpending litigation vs. actual/possible claims and assessments: no exact amounts disclosed due to influence on position before the court
Guarantee and warranty costsguarantee for credit defaultproduct warranty
Premiums and coupons.Environmental liabilities.Pensions and other postemployment benefit obligations.
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follo
win
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ges
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Guarantee and warranty costs
Warranty: guarantee to repair or replace defective goods during a predetermined period following the saleaccounting either
Cash Basis – warranty costs charged to period in which company complies with the warrantyAccrual Basis – warranty costs charged to period of sale as operating expense• Example (accrual basis): Michael Drums sells music
instruments. Per 100 units sold, 2 require warranty service. The cost per service is estimated at € 70. In 2002, he sold 800 units. Five warranty services have already been performed at costs totalling € 430. So there remain eleven warranty services as an estimated liability.
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1. Sale of 800 units at average price € 100
Cash or Accounts Receivable 80.000 Sales 80.000
2. Recognition of warranty expense
Warranty Expense 430 Cash,Inventory, or Accrued Payroll _ _430 (warranty costs incurred)
Warranty Expense 770Estimated Liability under Warranties _ _770 (to accrue estimated warranty costs)
3. Recognition of warranty costs incurred in 2003 (on 2002 sales)
Estimated Liability under Warranties 770 Cash, Inventory, or Accrued Payroll _ _770
Journal entries for the example:
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Premiums and coupons
Examplesfrequent-flyer programsbonus cards of department stores
Accounting problem again: estimation of the liability incurred with the sales
(to comply with the matching principle)
Journal entries – similar to „Drums example“
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Environmental liabilitiesresult from obligation to clean up, say, toxic waste or to landscape sites no longer used for business
sometimes very hard to estimate the liabilityindemnity claims after environmental catastrophes
For example: Bayer AG“[28 ] Other provisionsOther provisions are valued in accordance with IAS 37 (Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets) using the best estimate of the extent of the obligation. Interest-bearing provisions are discounted to present value. Personnel commitments mainly include annual bonus payments, long service awards and other personnel costs. The miscellaneous provisions include € 131 million for restructuring. Provisions for environmental protection relate to future relandscaping, landfill modernization and the remediation of land contaminated by past industrial operations. Sufficient provisions have been established for such commitments.” [Bayer AG, Annual Report 2000, notes to financial statements.]
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Part II: Long-term liabilities
BondsDefinition of a bondWhy issuing bondsTypes of bondsAccounting for bond issuesAccounting for bond retirements
Long-Term Notes PayableReporting and Analysis of Long-Term Debt
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Bonds
securities issued by, e.g. corporations or governmental agencies, to obtain large-sum long-term financingnormally due ten to fifty years after issuevarious covenants and restrictions for protection of both lenders and borrowerssmall denominations allows collection of large sums of moneyinterest payment
annually or semiannuallyzero bonds
„bond issue“ refers to total number of bonds issued at one time
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Why issue bonds?
to obtain large sums of money for long time that cannot be collected otherwise e.g. from banksdebt financing has some advantages over equity financing
stockholder control remains unaffectedtax savings: interest expense is tax deductibleleverage effect: spread between return on assets and interest cost is usually positive and increases return on equity
Stock financing vs. bond financing – an example€ 2 million needed to fund a projectalternative I – issues 100.000 shares at current price of € 20 per sharealternative II – issuance of € 2 million, 9% bonds at face value
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Funds obtained by ... issuance of ... issuance ofadditional shares bonds(250.000 shares (150.000 shares
outstanding) outstanding)
Earnings before interest and income taxes € 700.000 € 180.000 € 700.000 € 180.000Interest 0 0 180.000 180.000
Earnings before income taxes € 700.000 € 180.000 € 520.000 € 0Income taxes at 35% 245.000 63.000 182.000 0
Net income € 455.000 € 117.000 € 338.000 0
Earnings per share € 1,82 € 0,47 € 2,25 0
Note: Net income under bond financing is lower than under stock financing, but returnon equity may be higher.
Note that interest cost will increase with leverage because of an increasing defaultrisk.
Volatility of earning increases.
RoE 9.1% 2.34% 11.27% 0%
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How to issue bonds ?
usually, approval by board of directors and general meeting of shareholders necessary; authorized:
number of bondstotal face value and nominal interest rate• face value: amount of principal the issuer must repay at maturity• nominal interest rate determines amount of cash interest the issuer
has to pay (also stated rate of interest)bonds are taken by investment banks („underwriters“) and sold to the publicunderwriters buy bonds for resale or on a commission basisbondholders are represented by a trustee, typically a large bankcontract between company and bank is called bond indenture
specifies terms of the bond, rights, privileges, and limitations of bondholders
bondholders receive bond certificates as evidence of the company‘s debt to the bondholder; bondholders are creditors !
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Types of Bonds
Secured and Unsecured Bondssecured bonds: bondholders have a claim to certain assets of the company upon default, e.g. mortgage bondunsecured bonds: issued against general credit of borrower (debenture bonds)
Term and Serial Bondsterm bonds: all bonds of an issue mature on the same dateserial bonds: bonds mature over several maturity dates
Registered and Coupon Bondsregistered bonds: corporation maintains record of all bondholderscoupon bonds: bond not recorded in the name of the owner; transferable by delivery
cont‘d next page
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Types of Bonds, cont‘d
Convertible and Callable Bondsconvertible bonds: bonds that can be converted into common stock at the option of the holder• bonds furnished with a stock option to reduce coupon
callable bonds: bonds that can be retired before maturity at the issuer‘s option
Income and Revenue Bondsincome bonds: interest payment only if company is profitablerevenue bonds: interest on the bonds is paid from specific revenue sources
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Accounting for Bonds Payable
bonds are traded in the capital marketmarket rate (effective yield) of interest and (current) bond prices are inversely related• yield rate: the virtual interest rate r a bond purchased at the
current price in the market yields to the owner• Let c denote the coupon, B the bond price, T the maturity
(time to repayment), face value = F.• Then r is the solution to the following equation:
• The yield for longer term debt uses to be higher than for shorter term debt (normal term structure of interest rates)
• yield rate (bond price) depend on credit rating
( ) ( )B
rF
rc
T
T
tt =
++⎟⎟
⎠
⎞⎜⎜⎝
⎛
+∑= 111
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Accounting for Bonds Payable
face value € 300.000 stated rate of interest 7% market rate of interest 10% 12%
schedule of payments year 1 year 2 year 3 year 4 year 1 year 2 year 3 year 4
interest € 21.000 € 21.000 € 21.000 € 21.000 € 21.000 € 21.000 € 21.000 € 21.000principal € 300.000 € 300.000
present value of interest € 66.567 € 63.784present value of principal € 204.904 € 190.655
present value (selling price) of the bond € 271.471 € 254.440
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Inverse relation between interest rates and bond prices
bond #1 – stated rate of interest of c1= 5% and term to maturity of T1= 10
bond #2 - stated rate of interest of c2 > c1 and term to maturity of T2=T1
bond #3 - stated rate of interest of c3=c1 and time to maturity T3 = 5 < T1
assumption: bonds 1-3 have the same face value = 100
% r
B
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Stated rate of interest, market rate of interest, effective rate of interest, and bond issue prices:
The stated rate of interest i = c/F may differ from the market rate of interest
since the yield must be equal to the market rate the issue price must be adapted accordingly:
If the stated rate islower than the market rate: issue price lower than face value, bond sells at a discount higher than the market rate: issue price exceeds face value, bond sells at a premium
at the date of issue
must hold with a given market rate r
( ) ( )B
rF
rc
T
T
tt =
++⎟⎟
⎠
⎞⎜⎜⎝
⎛
+∑= 111
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Issuing Bonds At Face Value (“at par”)stated rate of interest i = r market rate of interestaccounting entry: cash proceeds = face value of the bonds
Example: 5-year term bonds, face value of € 900.000, dated January 1, 2009, interest rate 8%, annual interest payments on January 1.
To record issuance of bonds on January 1
Cash 900.000
Bonds Payable 900.000
To record accrued interest expense at year end (December 31)
Bond interest expense 72.000
Bond interest payable 72.000
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Issuing Bonds at Discount
stated rate of interest i < r market rate of interestExample: as before, but market rate of interest now 10% (stated rate of interest 8%).
discount is 68.234has to be amortized over the time to maturity• usually: straight line method: 68.234 / 5 = 13.647
766.8311,1000.900
1,1000.72
5
5
1=+∑
=tt
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Issuing Bonds at Discount
Long-term liabilities Bonds Payable € 900.000 Less: Discount on Bonds Payable 112.159 € 787.841
Balance sheet presentation:€ 900 000
68.234 € 831.766
To record issuance of bonds on January 1
Cash 831.766
Discount on Bonds Payable 68.234
Bonds payable 900.000
To record accrued interest expense and accrued amortization at year-end (December 31)
Bond interest expense 85.647
Discount on Bonds Payable 13.647
Interest Payable 72.000
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Long-term liabilities Bonds Payable € 900.000 Add: Premium on Bonds Payable 133.901 € 1.033.901
Balance sheet presentation
Issuing bonds at a premiumstated rate of interest i > r market rate of interest
Example: as before, but market rate of interest now 6%
€ 900 00075.823 € 975.823
To record issuance of bonds on January 1
Cash 975.823
Premium on Bonds Payable 75.823
Bonds payable 900.000
To record accrued interest expense and accrued amortization at year-end (December 31)
Bond interest expense 56.835
Premium on Bonds Payable 15.165
Interest Payable 72.000
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Amortizing Bond Premium / Bond Discount
the bond premium (discount) is amortized over the life of the bonds
straight-line methodeffective interest method
Straight-line methodequal amounts of the premium (discount) are amortized in each period, equal interest expense recorded in each period
interest expense = interest to be paid + amortized discountamortized discount = (face value – issue price) / number of interest periodsinterest expense = interest to be paid – amortized premiumamortized premium = (issue price – face value) / number of interest periods
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Effective interest method
interest expense = bond carrying value ×effective rate of interest
discount amortization = interest expense –interest to be paidpremium amortization = interest to be paid –interest expense
increasing amounts are amortized in each period• interest expense is equal to a constant percentage
of the carrying value of the bonds• interest expense recorded is, thus, increasing
under discountand decreasing under premium amortization
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Annual interest paid interest discount unamortized bond carryingperiod expense amortization discount value
issue date 68.234 831.7661 72.000 83.177 11.177 57.057 842.9432 72.000 84.294 12.294 44.763 855.2373 72.000 85.524 13.524 31.239 868.7614 72.000 86.876 14.876 16.363 883.6375 72.000 88.364 16.364 0 900.000
Effective interest discount amortization schedule for an 8% bond sold to yield 10%
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The journal entry to record accrued interest at December 31, 2004, is
... and bond interest expenses will keep rising as the carrying value of the bonds increases.
Bond interest expense 83.177Discount on bonds payable 11.177Bond interest payable 72.000
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Effective interest premium amortization schedule for 8% bonds sold to yield 6%
Annual interest paid interest premium unamortized bond carryingperiod expense amortization premium value
issue date 75.823 975.8231 72.000 58.549 13.451 62.372 962.3722 72.000 57.742 14.258 48.115 948.1153 72.000 56.887 15.113 33.002 933.0024 72.000 55.980 16.020 16.982 916.9825 72.000 55.019 16.981 1 900.001
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The journal entry to record accrued interest on December 31, 2009, is
... and bond interest expenses will keep falling as the carrying value of the bonds decreases.
Bond interest expense 58.549Premium on bonds payable 13.451Bond interest payable 72.000
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Zero Bonds
bonds that bear no interest (explicitly) and are issued solely for cashalso called deep discount bonds
Example: An 8-year zero bond with face value of € 10 million (10.000 x € 1.000 each) is issued and sold at a price of € 3.270.000.
What is the implicit interest rate ?
The implicit interest rate is 15%. It is the interest rate that equates (in present value terms) the cash received with the amounts to be paid in the future.
8)1(000.000.10€000.270.3€ −+⋅= i
14999,01000.270.3000.000.10
8 =−=i
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Disclosure Requirements for Long-Term Debt
composition of long-term debtlong-term debt maturing within one year should be reported as a current liabilitymaturities of long-term debt during each of the next five yearsany special arrangements, e.g. refinancing, conversion into stock, „off-balance-sheet financing“