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8-1 Acquiring Plant Assets Long-term operational assets Assets that last for more than one accounting period Used to help a business generate revenue Types of long-lived assets Tangible assets Property, plant, and equipment Intangible assets Trademarks, patents, copyrights, etc.
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8-2 Acquisition Costs Historical cost principle requires assets to be recorded at their cost Plus cost of getting asset in place and ready for use
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8-3 Basket Purchase Allocation Purchase of two or more assets for one price Cost allocated to each asset based on their relative fair market values Percent of total FMV of the assets
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8-4 Basket Purchase Example On July 1, Valdez Environmental purchased a tug boat and oil cleaning equipment for $7M FMV of tug boat is $4M FMV of oil cleaning equipment is $6M How much of the $7M will be allocated to the tug boat and to the oil cleaning equipment?
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8-5 Depreciation and Depletion Purchase of long-term tangible assets are capitalized (recorded as assets) L-T tangible assets expensed by depreciating (or depleting) them Depreciation allocates the COST of an asset to the periods that benefit from the use of the asset
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8-6 Depreciation and Depletion Depreciation terminology Acquisition cost (cost) Estimated useful life Estimated useful life Salvage value (residual value) Estimated value of an asset at the end of its useful life Depreciable base = cost - salvage value Book value (carrying value) Book value (carrying value)
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8-7 Depreciation and Depletion Depreciation and Depletion Depreciation methods Straight-line Straight-line Activity (units of production) Activity (units of production) Declining balance Declining balance Depletion Depletion
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8-8 Straight line Depreciation Equal amount of an asset are expensed each year Depreciable base is constant (cost-SV) Depreciation rate is constant (1/UL) Depreciable cost (cost - SV) Useful life (in years)
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8-9 Activity (Units of Production) Depreciation Amount of asset expensed each year depends on asset’s usage Depreciable base is constant (cost-SV) Depreciation rate is constant (1/UL) Depreciable cost (cost - SV) Useful life in units Annual depreciation expense depr rate x actual level of activity for year Depr Rate =
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8-10 Declining Balance Depreciation Accelerated depreciation method Annual depreciation expense declines over asset’s useful life Depreciable base changes (beg book value) Depreciation rate is constant (X/UL) X = Depreciation rate Most common rate is 200% Also called double-declining balance (DDB) Never depreciate below salvage value
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8-11 Depreciation Example Photocopier purchased on 1/1/08 Acquisition cost $14,000 Useful life 5 years or 300,000 copies Estimated salvage value $2,000
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8-12 Depreciation Example Straight-line method $14,000 - $2,000 5 years Activity method Assume 40,000 copies were made $14,000 - $2,000 300,000 copies =$2,400/year x 40,000 =$1,600
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8-13 Depreciation Example Double-declining balance method Year 1 Year 2 2 _ 5 yrs x $14,000 = $5,600 2 _ 5 yrs x ($14,000 - $5,600) = $3,360
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8-14 Depletion Used to expense natural resources as they are used up Same computation to activity depreciation with zero salvage value Cost _ Useful life in units Annual depletion expense depl rate x actual level of activity for year Depl rate =
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8-15 Using Intangible Assets: Amortization Rights, privileges, or benefits that have long-term value to the firm Recorded at cost Amortization Same method of expensing as straight-line depreciation with zero salvage value Accumulated amortization calculated for each intangible asset
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8-16 Using Intangible Assets: Amortization Copyright Provides U.S. legal protection for authors of original work Amortized over shorter of legal or useful life Patent A property right on inventions Amortized over shorter of legal life (20 years) or useful life (often around 10 years)
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8-17 Using Intangible Assets: Amortization Trademarks 10 years of protection; renewable Franchise Agreement that authorizes someone to sell or distribute a company’s goods or services in a certain area Goodwill Research and development costs Immediately expensed.
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8-18 Changes After an Asset Purchase Asset impairment Permanent reduction in market value below book value Similar to LCM method for inventory Capital expenditures to improve or extend an asset’s useful life Capitalize and depreciate Revising estimates of useful life and salvage value Depreciate remaining depreciable cost over remaining useful life
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8-19 Revising an Estimate Example Facts Asset cost: $30,000 Original useful life: 5 years Original salvage value: $8,000 In the beginning of year 3, the asset is determined to have 4 years of useful life remaining and a salvage value of $6,000
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8-20 Revising an Estimate Example Depreciation expense for yr 1 & 2 ($30,000 - $8,000)/5 = $4,400/yr Book value at beginning of year 3 ($30,000 - $8,800) = $21,200 Depreciation expense yr 3-6 ($21,200 - $6000)/4 = $3,800/yr 4 =remaining years of useful life
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8-21 Selling Long-term Assets Cash proceeds > BV = gain Cash proceeds < BV = loss Cash proceeds = BV = no gain/loss Journal entry Increase cash (debit) Remove asset (credit) Remove A/D (debit) Record gain (credit) or loss (debit)
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8-22 Financial Statement Analysis Return on assets (ROA) Measures how well a company is using its assets to generate revenue Answers the following Did the company invest wisely in its assets? Net Income + Interest Expense Average Total Assets Avg total assets = (Beg TA + End TA)/2
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8-23 Financial Statement Analysis Asset Turnover Ratio Measures how efficiently a company uses its assets to generate sales Net Sales _ Average Total Assets Explain how a company can have a high asset turnover and a low ROA
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8-24 Business Risk, Control, and Ethics Risks associated with long-term assets Theft, vandalism, natural disasters, terrorist attacks, etc. Controls used to safeguard assets Physical controls Complete and reliable record keeping
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8-25 Business Risk, Control, and Ethics Controls used to safeguard assets (continued) Monitoring Make sure that physical controls, separation of duties, and other policies and procedures related to protecting assets are operating properly Who is responsible for monitoring function?
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8-26 Assign #1: pg. 421-424 - E8-1A, E8-2A, E8-18A - (due 4/2) Assign #2: pg. 428-429 - P8-1A, P8-2A - (due 4/4)
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