Analysis of Multiple products

The method of calculating break-even point of a single product company has been discussed in the break-even point analysis article. A multi-product company means a company that sells two or more products. The procedure of computing break-even point of a multi-product company is a little more complicated than that of a single product company.

The determination of the break-even point in CVP analysis is easy once the variable and fixed components of costs have been determined.

A problem arises when the company sells more than one type of product. Break-even analysis may be performed for each type of product if fixed costs are determined separately for each product.

However, fixed costs are normally incurred for all the products hence a need to compute for the composite or multi-product break-even point.

In computing for the multi-product break-even point, the weighted average unit contribution margin and weighted average contribution margin ratio are used.

BEP in units  = Total fixed costs / Weighted average CM per unit

BEP in dollars = Total fixed costs / Weighted average CM ratio

The weighted average selling price is worked out as follows:

(Sale price of product A × Sales percentage of product A) + (Sale price of product B × Sale percentage of product B) + (Sale price of product C × Sales percentage of product C) + …….

and the weighted average variable expenses are worked out as follows:

(Variable expenses of product A × Sales percentage of product A) + (Variable expenses of product B × Variable expenses of product B) + (Variable expenses of product C × Sales percentage of product C) + …….

When weighted average variable expenses per unit are subtracted from the weighted average selling price per unit, we get weighted average contribution margin per unit. Therefore, the above formula can also be written as follows:

Breakeven Point = Total fixed expenses / Weighted average contribution margin per Unit

Marginal Analysis, Sunk costs, Opportunity costs and other related concepts

Marginal analysis is also widely used in microeconomics when analyzing how a complex system is affected by marginal manipulation of its comprising variables. In this sense, marginal analysis focuses on examining the results of small changes as the effects cascade across the business as a whole.

Marginal analysis compares the additional benefits derived from an activity and the extra cost incurred by the same activity. It serves as a decision-making tool in projecting the maximum potential profits for the company by comparing the costs and benefits of the activity.

Marginal analysis is an examination of the associated costs and potential benefits of specific business activities or financial decisions. The goal is to determine if the costs associated with the change in activity will result in a benefit that is sufficient enough to offset them. Instead of focusing on business output as a whole, the impact on the cost of producing an individual unit is most often observed as a point of comparison.

Marginal analysis can also help in the decision-making process when two potential investments exist, but there are only enough available funds for one. By analyzing the associated costs and estimated benefits, it can be determined if one option will result in higher profits than another.

Marginal analysis and variables

When you are using marginal analysis for decision-making, you need to take cost and production variables into consideration. The quantity of the products you’re producing is the most common variable companies evaluate. However, there are others, such as the shipping costs, which increase as you produce and distribute a higher number or weight of products. By making incremental changes in production and monitoring the benefits and costs that accompany those changes, you can choose from a range of production levels with varying levels of profitability.

Marginal analysis and opportunity cost

In order to understand the cost and benefit of certain activities, you must also understand opportunity cost. An opportunity cost is a valuable benefit that you miss when you choose one option over another. For example, if a company has room in its budget for another employee and is considering hiring another person to work in a factory, a marginal analysis indicates that hiring that person provides a net marginal benefit. In other words, the ability to produce more products outweighs the increase in labour costs. However, hiring that person still may not be the best decision for the company.

Marginal analysis and observed change

In some cases, it may make sense for a company to make small operational changes and then perform a marginal analysis afterward to observe the changes in costs and benefits that occurred as a result of those changes. For example, a company that manufactures children’s toys may choose to increase production by 1% to see what changes occur in quality and how it impacts resources.

If the managers observe that the benefits of a production increase outweigh any additional costs the company incurs, they may choose to maintain the higher production rate or even raise production by 1% again to observe the changes that occur. Through small modifications and observed change, companies can identify optimal production rates.

Limitations of Marginal Analysis

One of the criticisms against marginal analysis is that marginal data, by its nature, is usually hypothetical and cannot provide the true picture of marginal cost and output when making a decision and substituting goods. It therefore sometimes falls short of making the best decision, given that most decisions are made based on average data.

Another limitation of marginal analysis is that economic actors make decisions based on projected results rather than actual results. If the projected income is not realized as predicted, the marginal analysis will prove to be worthless.

For example, a company may decide to start a new production line based on a marginal analysis projection that the revenue will exceed costs to establish the production line. If the new production line does not meet the expected marginal costs and operates at a loss, it means that the marginal analysis used the wrong assumptions.

Sunk Cost

In economics and business decision-making, a sunk cost (also known as retrospective cost) is a cost that has already been incurred and cannot be recovered. Sunk costs are contrasted with prospective costs, which are future costs that may be avoided if action is taken. In other words, a sunk cost is a sum paid in the past that is no longer relevant to decisions about the future. Even though economists argue that sunk costs are no longer relevant to future rational decision-making, in everyday life, people often take previous expenditures in situations, such as repairing a car or house, into their future decisions regarding those properties.

A sunk cost refers to money that has already been spent and cannot be recovered. In business, the axiom that one has to “spend money to make money” is reflected in the phenomenon of the sunk cost. A sunk cost differs from future costs that a business may face, such as decisions about inventory purchase costs or product pricing. Sunk costs are excluded from future business decisions because the cost will remain the same regardless of the outcome of a decision.

An accounting issue that encourages this adverse behavior is that capitalized costs associated with a project must be written off to expense as soon as the decision is made to cancel the project. When the amount to be written off is quite large, this encourages managers to keep projects running over a longer period of time, so that the expense recognition can be spread out over a longer period of time, in the form of depreciation.

All sunk costs are fixed costs but not all fixed costs are sunk costs. The difference is that sunk costs cannot be recovered. If equipment can be resold or returned at the purchase price, for example, it’s not a sunk cost.

Bygones principle

According to classical economics and standard microeconomic theory, only prospective (future) costs are relevant to a rational decision. At any moment in time, the best thing to do depends only on current alternatives. The only things that matter are the future consequences. Past mistakes are irrelevant. Any costs incurred prior to making the decision have already been incurred no matter what decision is made. They may be described as “water under the bridge”, and making decisions on their basis may be described as “crying over spilt milk”. In other words, people should not let sunk costs influence their decisions; sunk costs are irrelevant to rational decisions. Thus, if a new factory was originally projected to yield Rs 100 crore in value, and after Rs 30 crore is spent on it the value projection falls to Rs 65 crore, the company should abandon the project rather than spending an additional Rs. 70 crore to complete it. This is known as the bygones principle or the marginal principle.

Fallacy effect

The bygones principle does not accord with real-world behavior. Sunk costs do, in fact, influence people’s decisions, with people believing that investments (i.e., sunk costs) justify further expenditures. People demonstrate “a greater tendency to continue an endeavor once an investment in money, effort, or time has been made.” This is the sunk cost fallacy, and such behavior may be described as “throwing good money after bad”, while refusing to succumb to what may be described as “cutting one’s losses”. For example, some people remain in failing relationships because they “have already invested too much to leave.” Others buy expensive gym memberships to commit themselves to exercising. Still others are swayed by arguments that a war must continue because lives will have been sacrificed in vain unless victory is achieved. Likewise, individuals caught up in psychic scams will continue investing time, money and emotional energy into the project, despite doubts or suspicions that something is not right. These types of behaviour do not seem to accord with rational choice theory and are often classified as behavioural errors.

Plan continuation bias

A related phenomenon is plan continuation bias, which is recognised as a subtle cognitive bias that tends to force the continuation of an existing plan or course of action even in the face of changing conditions. In the field of aerospace it has been recognised as a significant causal factor in accidents, with a 2004 NASA study finding that in 9 out of the 19 accidents studied, aircrew exhibited this behavioural bias.

Opportunity costs

In microeconomic theory, the opportunity cost of an activity or option is the loss of value or benefit that would be incurred (the cost) by engaging in that activity or choosing that option, versus/relative to engaging in the alternative activity or choosing the alternative option that would offer the highest return in value or benefit.

Opportunity costs represent the potential benefits an individual, investor, or business misses out on when choosing one alternative over another. Because by definition they are unseen, opportunity costs can be easily overlooked. Understanding the potential missed opportunities foregone by choosing one investment over another allows for better decision-making.

Formula and Calculation of Opportunity Cost

Opportunity Cost = FO−CO

where:

FO = Return on best foregone option

CO = Return on chosen option

Explicit Costs

Explicit costs are the direct costs of an action (business operating costs or expenses), executed either through a cash transaction or a physical transfer of resources. In other words, explicit opportunity costs are the out-of-pocket costs of a firm, that are easily identifiable. This means explicit costs will always have a dollar value and involve a transfer of money, e.g. paying employees. With this said, these particular costs can easily be identified under the expenses of a firm’s income statement and balance sheet to represent all the cash outflows of a firm.

Examples are as follows:

  • Land and infrastructure costs
  • Operation and maintenance costs; Wages, Rent, Overhead, Materials

Implicit Costs

Implicit costs (also referred to as implied, imputed or notional costs) are the opportunity costs of utilising resources owned by the firm that could be used for other purposes. These costs are often hidden to the naked eye and aren’t made known. Unlike explicit costs, implicit opportunity costs correspond to intangibles. Hence, they cannot be clearly identified, defined or reported. This means that they are costs that have already occurred within a project, without exchanging cash. This could include a small business owner not taking any salary in the beginning of their tenure as a way for the business to be more profitable. As implicit costs are the result of assets, they are also not recorded for the use of accounting purposes because they do not represent any monetary losses or gains. In terms of factors of production, implicit opportunity costs allow for depreciation of goods, materials and equipment that ensure the operations of a company.

Examples of implicit costs regarding production are mainly resources contributed by a business owner which includes:

  • Infrastructure
  • Human labour
  • Time

Non-monetary cost

Seeking a certain profit might have implicit costs such as health, ecological, or other costs. Many of those costs may not be paid directly or immediately after; they may also not be paid by those responsible for the costs. For example, if a company pollutes, the company’s accountants may not be responsible for the costs, but the costs may be externalized onto other people in the case of local pollution, or the entire population, in the case of global warming.

Smoking may personally have higher direct costs, such as health costs; it may also generate direct losses economically or increase the prevalence of health problems which could harm the economy. The tobacco industry generates losses for many sectors, however, for the tobacco industry no cost may be paid. Quitting smoking may reduce hidden costs choosing to take a walk instead of smoking could be beneficial to one’s health, for example. Choosing to work half-time may allow for more rest for a sick person.

Externalities are a kind of cost generated from one economic agent to another. For example, the restaurant sector may be growing but obesity may generate a cost, monetary or otherwise in many domains, such as an increased difficulty in recruiting fit firefighters. Some sectors are growing extensively from such costs, private or not. Dentists are needed partly because both sugary foods and tobacco generate work and demand.

Plane travel may generate externalities by contributing to global warming and air pollution, which harms many sectors such as agriculture and nature tourism. Short-term profit may lead to high costs later. Refusing to invest in infrastructure or maintenance for a company may lead to a loss of customers.

The development of tourism has driven the local consumption industry and a series of related economic growths. At the same time, it can lead to excessive development and utilization of tourism resources, serious environmental damage, and a large number of negative impacts affecting the lives of local people. Overcrowding on holidays may lead to a poor experience and a loss of tourists.

Profit Performance and Alternative Operating levels

Profit Performance

Financial performance is a subjective measure of how well a firm can use assets from its primary mode of business and generate revenues. The term is also used as a general measure of a firm’s overall financial health over a given period.

Gross margin ratio and contribution margin: What is the business’s gross margin ratio (which equals gross profit divided by sales revenue)? Even a small slip in its gross margin ratio can have disastrous consequences on the company’s bottom line. Stock analysts want to know the business’s contribution margin, which equals sales revenue minus all variable costs of sales (product cost and other variable costs of making sales).

Analysts and investors use financial performance to compare similar firms across the same industry or to compare industries or sectors in aggregate.

Trends: How does sales revenue in the most recent year compare with the previous year? Higher sales should lead to higher profit, unless a company’s expenses increase at a higher rate than its sales revenue. If sales revenue is relatively flat from year to year, the business must focus on expense control to help profit, but a business can cut expenses only so far.

Other ratios: Based on information from a company’s most recent income statement, how do gross margin and the company’s bottom line (net income, or net earnings) compare with its top line (sales revenue)? It’s a good idea to calculate the gross margin ratio and the profit ratio (net income divided by sales revenue) for the most recent period and compare these two ratios with last period’s ratios.

The income statement culminates in net income for the period, but two other specific profit calculations also offer your business leaders and potential creditors critical information about the companies’ income-earning abilities: Gross profit and Operating profit.

Net Profit

Your income statement finally reaches net profit or loss when irregular income and expenses are taken from operating profit. Legal costs such as patent filings or settlements are examples of irregular, one-time expenses. Sales of buildings and equipment are examples of irregular income. While net profits are ideal, one-time expenses do not necessarily affect long-term profitability. Net profits are also used to calculate the net profit margin.

Gross Profit

Gross profit is calculated in the income statement’s first section. It is simply the total amount of money you took in your revenue minus the cost of the goods you sold. The higher your gross profit, the more likely you are to cover your fixed costs and earn income for the period. This initial section also is useful in calculating your gross profit margin ratio.

Operating Profit

In the operating income section of the statement, fixed operating costs are subtracted from gross profit to calculate operating profit for the period. Fixed costs include building and equipment costs, utility expenses and other costs not directly tied to production. A strong operating profit is a good sign of financial health, because it represents your earnings from core business activities. Operating profit also is used to calculate operating profit margin.

Profit Performance Monitor estimates the economic cost of:

  • Lack of confidence in the APC performance.
  • Clamp MV, CV limits, dropped MVS related to short term operations, equipment, or instrument issues.
  • Lack of awareness of the overall performance impact.
  • Variance on operator skills.

Alternative Operating levels

Marginal costs and Marginal revenue

The marginal cost of production and marginal revenue are economic measures used to determine the amount of output and the price per unit of a product that will maximize profits.

A rational company always seeks to squeeze out as much profit as it can, and the relationship between marginal revenue and the marginal cost of production helps them to identify the point at which this occurs. The target, in this case, is for marginal revenue to equal marginal cost.

Production costs include every expense associated with making a good or service. They are broken down into two segments: fixed costs and variable costs.

Fixed costs are the relatively stable, ongoing costs of operating a business that are not dependent on production levels. They include general overhead expenses such as salaries and wages, building rental payments or utility costs. Variable costs, meanwhile, are those directly related to, and that vary with, production levels, such as the cost of materials used in production or the cost of operating machinery in the process of production.

Marginal Cost

In economics, the marginal cost is the change in the total cost that arises when the quantity produced is incremented, the cost of producing additional quantity. In some contexts, it refers to an increment of one unit of output, and in others it refers to the rate of change of total cost as output is increased by an infinitesimal amount.

To optimize marginal cost and revenue, it’s essential to understand a few standard production terms. Every business that generates production costs can divide them into two key categories:

  • Fixed costs: These are essential expenses that stay relatively flat over time, even if your company increases production. For example, expenses related to equipment and facilities are considered fixed costs.
  • Variable costs: These expenses are less consistent from day to day or month to month. Instead, they can rise or fall significantly depending on production levels. For example, raw materials and labour force are considered variable costs.

Short run marginal cost

Short run marginal cost is the change in total cost when an additional output is produced in the short run and some costs are fixed. In the on the right side of the page, the short-run marginal cost forms a U-shape, with quantity on the x-axis and cost per unit on the y-axis.

On the short run, the firm has some costs that are fixed independently of the quantity of output (e.g. buildings, machinery). Other costs such as labour and materials vary with output, and thus show up in marginal cost. The marginal cost may first decline, as in the diagram, if the additional cost per unit is high if the firm operates at too low a level of output, or it may start flat or rise immediately. At some point, the marginal cost rises as increases in the variable inputs such as labor put increasing pressure on the fixed assets such as the size of the building. In the long run, the firm would increase its fixed assets to correspond to the desired output; the short run is defined as the period in which those assets cannot be changed.

Long run marginal cost

The long run is defined as the length of time in which no input is fixed. Everything, including building size and machinery, can be chosen optimally for the quantity of output that is desired. As a result, even if short-run marginal cost rises because of capacity constraints, long-run marginal cost can be constant. Or, there may increasing or decreasing returns to scale if technological or management productivity changes with the quantity. Or, there may be both, as in the diagram at the right, in which the marginal cost first falls (increasing returns to scale) and then rises (decreasing returns to scale).

Marginal Revenue

Essentially the opposite of marginal cost, marginal revenue refers to the extra revenue your business can generate by selling one additional unit. This number is different depending on the market circumstances:

Perfectly competitive market: In this type of idealistic market, marginal revenue tends to remain constant because the market controls the sale price and your business has the power to sell as many units as possible. As a marginal cost and marginal revenue graph would show, the output is proportional to the revenue. Because costs decrease as you increase production, your company’s total profit grows.

Imperfectly competitive market: In this more realistic situation, marginal revenue tends to fluctuate when supply and demand affect the market. In this type of monopoly market, your business can’t continue to make and sell more products at the same sale price. Instead, you have to lower the sale price. Eventually, marginal costs may exceed marginal revenue, which negates any profit. You can use the perfect market as a standard to compare to your real-world market in order to measure its efficiency and effectiveness.

Marginal revenue = Change in total revenue / Change in quantity

Marginal Revenue vs. Marginal Cost

When you adjust for marginal revenue, the cost may also change, which can affect your optimal production levels. To compare marginal cost vs. marginal revenue, it’s helpful to understand how these two numbers behave in relation to one another:

  • If marginal revenue is higher than marginal cost, your company should raise production levels to improve efficiency and generate more profit overall.
  • If marginal cost and marginal revenue are equal, your business has reached its optimal production level. At this level, efficiency has reached its peak, and you’ve maximized profits.
  • If marginal cost is higher than marginal revenue, your business should lower production levels to reduce profit loss.

Stamp Report (Canada)

The Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) published a report in June 1980 on ‘Corporate Reporting: Its Future Evolution’ which was written by Edward Stamp.

Important objectives of company financial reporting:

  • It is an objective of good financial reporting to provide such information in such a form as to minimise uncertainty about the validity of information, and to enable the user to make his own assessment of the risks associated with the enterprise.
  • One of the primary objectives of published corporate financial reports is to provide an accounting by management to both equity and debt investors, not only a management’s exercise of its stewardship function but also of its success (or otherwise) in achieving the goal of producing a satisfactory economic performance by the enterprise and maintaining it in a strong and healthy financial position.
  • The objectives of financial reporting should be taken to be directed towards the need of users who are capable of comprehending a complete (and necessarily sophisticated) set of financial statements or alternatively, to the needs of experts who will be called on by the unsophisticated users to advise them.
  • It is necessary that the standards governing financial reporting should have ample scope for innovation and evolution as improvements become feasible.

The Stamp Report has not found FASB’s Conceptual Framework and objectives on financial reporting suitable and useful for Canada because of the environmental difference between USA and Canada. This is true not only in case of any particular country but applicable equally to other countries as well.

Financial reporting  its objectives and scope  are influenced by the economic, legal, political, institutional and social factors prevailing in a country. Therefore, these factors need to be considered before developing financial reporting objectives in any country.

Users in Financial Reporting:

The company financial reporting is intended to provide external users information that is useful in making business and economic decisions, that is, for making reasoned choices among alternative uses of scarce resources in the conduct of business and economic activities. Thus, users are potentially interested in the information provided by financial reporting.

Among the potential users are owners, lenders, suppliers, potential investors and creditors, employees, management, directors, customers, financial analysts and advisors, brokers, stock exchanges, lawyers, economists, taxing authorities, regulatory authorities, legislators, financial press and reporting agencies, labour unions, trade associations, business researchers, teachers and students, and the public.

Some users such as owners, creditors, and employees have or contemplate having direct economic interests in particular business enterprises. Managers and directors, who are charged with managing the enterprise in the interest of owners, also have a direct interest.

Some users  such as financial analysts and advisors, regulatory authorities, and labour unions have indirect interests because they advise or represent those who have or contemplate have direct interests.

Potential users of financial information most directly concerned with a particular business enterprise are generally interested in its ability to generate favourable cash flows because their decisions relate to amounts, timing, and uncertainties of expected cash flows.

To investors, lenders, suppliers, and employees, a business enterprise is a source of cash in the form of dividends or interest and, perhaps, appreciated market price, repayment of borrowing, payment of goods or services, or salaries or wages.

They invest cash, goods, or service in an enterprise and expect to obtain sufficient cash in return to make the investment worthwhile. To customers, a business enterprise is a source of goods or services, but only by obtaining sufficient cash, to pay for the resources it uses and to meet its other obligations, can the enterprise provide those goods or services.

To managers, the cash flows of a business enterprise are a significant part of their management responsibilities, including their accountability to directors and owners. Many, if not most, of their decisions have cash flow consequences for the enterprise.

Thus, investors, creditors, employees, customers, and managers significantly share a common interest in an enterprise’s ability to generate favourable cash flows. Other potential users of financial information share the same interest, derived from investors; creditors, employees, customers, or managers whom they advise or represent or derived from an interest in how those groups (and especially shareholders) are fair.

Some of the potential users listed above may have specialised needs but also have the power to obtain the information needed. For example, the information needed to enforce tax laws and regulations are specialised needs.

However, although the taxing authorities often use the information in financial statements for their purposes, they also have statutory authority to require the specific information they need to fulfill their functions, and do not need to rely on information provided to other groups.

Some investors and creditors or potential investors and creditors may also be able to require a business enterprise to provide specified information to meet a particular need. For example, a bank or insurance company negotiating with an enterprise for a large loan or purchase of securities can often obtain desired information by making the information a condition for completing the loan transaction.

Some users of financial information can obtain more information about an enterprise than others. This is clearly so for managers, but it also holds true for others, such as large scale equity shareholders and creditors. Financial statements are, it is argued, especially important to those who have limited access to information and limited ability to interpret it.

Development in Financial reporting objectives

Financial Reporting involves the disclosure of financial information to the various stakeholders about the financial performance and financial position of the organization over a specified period of time. These stakeholders include; investors, creditors, public, debt providers, governments & government agencies.

The Objectives & Purposes of financial reporting:

  • Providing information to investors, promoters, debt provider and creditors which is used to enable them to male rational and prudent decisions regarding investment, credit etc.
  • Providing information to the management of an organization which is used for the purpose of planning, analysis, benchmarking and decision making.
  • Providing information to shareholders & public at large in case of listed companies about various aspects of an organization.
  • Providing information as to how an organization is procuring & using various resources.
  • Providing information about the economic resources of an organization, claims to those resources (liabilities & owner’s equity) and how these resources and claims have undergone change over a period of time.
  • Providing information to various stakeholders regarding performance management of an organization as to how diligently & ethically they are discharging their fiduciary duties & responsibilities.
  • Enhancing social welfare by looking into the interest of employees, trade union & Government.
  • Providing information to the statutory auditors which in turn facilitates audit.

Primary objectives of financial reporting:

(a) Investment Decision-making.

(b) Management Accountability.

 

(a) Investment Decision-Making:

The basic objective of financial reporting is to provide information useful to investors, creditors and other users in making sound investment decisions. These decisions concern the efficient allocation of investment funds and the selection among investment opportunities.

(b) Management Accountability:

A second basic objective of financial reporting is to provide information on management accountability to judge management’s effectiveness in utilizing the resources and running the enterprise.

Management of an enterprise is periodically accountable to the owners not only for the custody and sale-keeping of enterprise resources, but also for their efficient and profitable use and for protecting them to the extent possible from unfavorable economic impacts of factors in the economy such as technological changes, inflation or deflations.

Enable the Analysis of the Assets, the Liabilities, and the Owner’s Equity

By monitoring the assets, the liabilities and the owner’s equity, and any changes in them using the financial reporting by the company, one can know that what it can expect in the future and should be changed now for the future. It also shows the availability of resources by the company for future growth.

Track the Cash Flow in the Business

With the help of financial reporting, different stakeholders of the company can know that from where the cash in the business is coming, where the money is going, whether there is sufficient liquidity in the business or not to meet its obligations, whether the company can cover their debts, etc.

It shows the details about the cash transactions by adjusting the non-cash transactions, thereby determining whether cash in the business is enough all the time or not.

Information About the Accounting Policies Used

There are different types of accounting policies, and various companies can use different policies as per their particular requirements and applicability. Financial reporting provides information about the accounting policies used by the company. This information helps the investors and the other stakeholders in knowing about the policies used in the company for the different aspects.

It also helps to know whether the proper comparison between the two companies is possible or not. Two companies within the same industry can also use two different policies, so the person making the comparison should consider this fact in mind at the time of making the comparison.

Provide Information to the Investors and the Potential Investors

Investors of the company who have invested their funds in any business want to know that how much return they are getting from their investment, how efficiently their capital investment is being used, and how the company is reinvesting the cash.

Also, the potential investors want to know how the company is performing in the past where they are planning to invest their funds and whether it is worth investing.

Financial reporting by the company helps the investors and the potential investors in deciding whether the business is worth for their cash or not.

True Blood Report (USA)

The True-blood Committee stated that “The basic objective of financial statements is to provide information useful for making economic decisions.” Recently, the FASB (USA) in its Concept No. 1 also concluded that financial reporting should provide information that is useful to present and potential investors and creditors and other users in making rational investment, credit and similar decisions.

It is essential to have an understanding of the investment decision process applied by external users in order to provide useful information to them. The investors seek such investment which will provide the greatest total return with an acceptable range of risk. Investment return is comprised of future interest or dividends and capital appreciation (or loss).

To develop objectives of financial statements, a Study Group was appointed in 1971 by American Institute of Certified Public Accountants under the Chairmanship of Robert M. Trueblood. The Study Group solicited the views of more than 5000 corporations, professional firms, unions, public interest groups, national and international accounting organisations and financial publications.

The Study Group conducted more than 50 interviews with executives from all sectors of the business and from government. To elicit the widest possible range of views, 35 meetings were held with institutional and professional groups representing major segments of the US economy.

The objectives developed in the Study Group Report are as follows:

  • An objective of financial statements is to serve, primarily, those users who have limited authority, ability, or resources to obtain information and who rely on financial statements as their principal source of information about an enterprise’s economic activities.
  • The basic objective of financial statements is to provide information useful for making economic decisions.
  • An objective of financial statements is to provide information useful to investors and creditors for predicting, comparing and evaluating potential cash flows to them in terms of amount, timing and related uncertainty.
  • An objective of financial statements is to supply information useful in judging management’s ability to utilise enterprise resources effectively in achieving the primary enterprise goal.
  • An objective of financial statements is to provide users with information for predicting, comparing, and evaluating enterprise earning power.
  • An objective of financial statements is to provide factual and interpretative information about transactions and other events which is useful for predicting, comparing and evaluating enterprise earning power. Basic underlying assumptions with respect to matters subject to interpretation, evaluation, prediction, or estimation should be disclosed.
  • An objective is to provide a statement of periodic earnings useful for predicting, comparing and evaluating enterprise earning power. The net result of completed earning cycles and enterprise activities resulting in recognisable progress towards completion of incomplete cycles should be reported. Changes in values reflected in successive statements of financial position should also be reported, but separately, since they differ in terms of their certainty realisation.
  • An objective is to provide a statement of financial position useful for predicting, comparing and evaluating enterprise earning power. This statement should provide information concerning enterprise transactions and other events that are part of incomplete earning cycles. Current values should also be reported when they differ significantly from historical costs. Assets and liabilities should be grouped or segregated by the relative uncertainty of the amount and timing of prospective realisation of liquidation.
  • An objective is to provide a statement of financial activities useful for predicting, comparing, and evaluating enterprise earning power. This statement should report mainly on factual aspects of enterprise transactions having or expected to have significant cash consequences. This statement should report data that require minimal judgement and interpretation by the compiler.
  • An objective of financial statements for governmental and non-profit organizations is to provide information useful for evaluating the effectiveness of management of resources in achieving the organisation’s goals. Performance measures should be qualified in terms of identified goals.
  • An objective of financial statements is to report on those activities of the enterprise affecting society which can be determined and described or measured and which are important to the role of the enterprise in its social environment.
  • An objective of financial statements is to provide information useful for the predictive process. Financial forecasts should be provided when they will enhance the reliability of users’ predictions.

The Corporate Report (UK)

The Accounting Standards Steering Committee of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales Published ‘The Corporate Report’ in 1976 as a discussion paper covering the scope and aims of published financial reports, public accountability of economic entities, working concepts as a basis for financial reporting, and most suitable means of measuring and reporting the economic position, performance and prospects of undertakings.

The Corporate Report’s main findings are as follows:

  1. The basic philosophy and starting point of The Corporate Report is that financial statements should be appropriate to their expected use by potential users. In others words, they should attempt to satisfy the information needs of their users.
  2. The report assigned responsibility for reporting to the ‘economic entity’ having an impact on society through its activities. The economic entities are itemized as limited companies, listed and unlisted; pension schemes, charitable and other trusts, and not-for-profit organisation; non-commercially oriented Central Government departments and agencies, partnerships and other forms of un-incorporate business enterprises; trade unions and trade and professional association; local authorities, and nationalized industries and other commercially oriented public sector bodies.
  3. The report defined users as those having a reasonable right to information and whose information needs should be recognised by corporate reports. The users are identified as the equity investor group, the loan creditor group, the employee group, the analyst-adviser group, the business contact group, the government, and the public.
  4. To satisfy the fundamental objectives of annual reports set by the basic philosophy, seven desirable characteristics are cited, namely, that the corporate report be relevant, understandable, reliable, complete, objective, timely, and comparable.
  5. After documenting the limitations of current reporting practices, the report suggests the need for the following additional statements:
  • An employment report, showing the-size and composition of the work force relying on the enterprise for its livelihood, the work contribution of employees, and the benefits earned.
  • A statement of value added, showing how the benefits of the efforts of an enterprise are shared among employees, providers of capital, the state and reinvestment.
  • A statement of money exchange with government, showing the financial relationship between the enterprise and the state.
  • A statement of future prospects, showing likely future profit, employment, and investment levels.
  • A statement of corporate objectives showing management policy and medium-term strategic targets.
  • A statement of transactions in foreign currency, showing the direct cash dealing, between the United Kingdom and other countries.

Finally, after assessing six measurement bases (historical cost, purchasing power, replacement cost, net realisation value, value to the firm, and net present value) against three criteria (theoretical acceptability, utility, and practicality) the report rejected the use of historical cost in favour of current values accompanied by ;he use of general index adjustment.

Qualities of Financial Reporting

Fundamental Characteristics distinguish useful financial reporting information from that is not useful or misleading.

The two fundamental Qualitative characteristics are:

  • Relevance
  • Faithful Representation

Materiality: Information is material if omitting it, or misstating it could influence decisions that users make on the basis of financial information about a specific reporting entity.

Materiality is an aspect of relevance which is entity-specific. It means that what is material to one entity may not be material to another. It is relative. Information is material if it is significant enough to influence the decision of users. Materiality is affected by the nature and magnitude (or size) of the item.

Faithful Representation

The Financial reports represent economic phenomena in words and numbers. The financial information in the financial reports should represent what it purports to represent. Meaning, it should show what really are present (Example: Position of Assets and Liabilities) and what really happened (Example: Position of Income and expenditure), as the case may be. 

Timeliness:

All the information in the financial statements must be provided within a relevant span of time. The disclosures must not be excessively late or delayed so that while making their economic decisions the users of these statements possess all the relevant and up-to-date knowledge. Although this characteristic may take more resources but still it is a vital characteristic as delayed information makes any corrective reactions irrelevant.

Reliability:

The information provided in the financial statements must be reliable and true. The information extracted to prepare these financial statements must be from reliable and trustworthy sources. The financial statements must depict the true and fair picture of the status of the company affairs. This means that the information provided must not have any significant errors or material misstatements. The transactions shown must be based on the concepts of prudence and must represent the true nature of company’s transactions and operations. The areas that are judgmental and subjective in nature must be presented with due care and keen competence.

Comparability:

The financial statements must be prepared in such a way that they are comparable with prior year financial statements. This characteristic of financial statements is very important to maintain, as it makes sure that the performance of the company could be monitored and compared. This characteristic is maintained by adopting accounting policies and standards that are applied are consistent from period to period and between different jurisdictions. This enables the users of the financial statements to identify and plot trends and patterns in the data provided, which makes their decision making easier.

Understandability:

The financial statements are published to address the shareholders of the company. So, it is important that these statements must be prepared in such a way that is easy to understand and interpret for the shareholders. The information provided in these statements must be clear and legible. For the sake of understandability, the management must consider not only the statutory data and information but also the voluntary information disclosures which would make financial statements easier to understand. The directors must elaborate the information provided in the statements where necessary.

Ind AS-103: Business Combinations

Ind AS 103 “Business Combinations” deals with the accounting for business combinations in standalone as well as consolidated financial statements. A set of assets acquired and liabilities assumed are typically regarded as a business if they can together run independently as a going concern (i.e. it consists of inputs and processes applied to those inputs, which has the ability to create an output). If they do not constitute business, the same shall be accounted as an asset acquisition.

It is a transaction or event where an acquirer obtains control of one or more business. ‘A business combination may be structured in a variety of ways for legal, taxation or other reasons, which include but are not limited to:

(a) One or more businesses become subsidiaries of an acquirer or the net assets of one or more businesses are legally merged into the acquirer.

(b) One combining entity transfers its net assets, or its owners transfer their equity interests, to another combining entity or its owners.

(c) All of the combining entities transfer their net assets, or the owners of those entities transfer their equity interests, to a newly formed entity (sometimes referred to as a roll-up or put-together transaction).

(d) A group of former owners of one of the combining entities obtains control of the combined entity’(Appendix B B6)

One of the most essential elements covered in this Standard is the manner of accounting in a common control transaction. Before we discuss the accounting procedure, it is crucial to understand the meaning of terms “control” and “common control”.

Ind AS 103 has defined common control business combination as a business combination in which all the combining entities or business are ultimately controlled by the same person/ persons both before and after the combination and such control is not transitory in nature. It further states that a company may be said to be under the control of another entity or an individual or a group of them where they exercise the right to govern its financial statements and operating policies arising out of contractual agreements so as to obtain benefits from its activities.

Interestingly, Ind AS 103 does not prescribe any threshold limit from a shareholding perspective to determine control in the entity. Instead, it has laid down few aspects such as decision-making powers, board composition and contractual rights to determine control. Therefore, this brings in an element of subjectivity in determining where control lies.

Ind AS 110 Consolidated Financial Statements states that where an entity (say, “A”) has power over the other entity (say, “B”), has the rights to variable returns from its involvement with B and the ability to use its power to affect the returns of B, then it may be said that Entity A controls Entity B.

Accounting treatment under common control transactions under Ind AS 103

Ind AS 103 prescribes application of pooling of interest method to account for common control business combinations. Under this method:

  • All identified assets and liabilities will be accounted at their carrying amounts, i.e. no adjustment would be made to reflect their fair values unlike in case of non-common control business combinations.
  • Balance of retained earnings in the books of acquiree entity shall be merged with that of the acquirer entity, and identity of the reserves shall be preserved.
  • Any difference, whether positive or negative, shall be adjusted against the capital reserves (or “Amalgamation Adjustment Deficit Account” in some cases).
  • Hence, no goodwill can be recorded in books under common control transactions under Ind AS 103.

Applying the acquisition method comprises four steps that are:

  • Determining the acquisition date.
  • Identifying the acquirer.
  • Recognising and measuring identifiable assets acquired, liabilities assumed and any non-controlling interest in the acquire.
  • Recognising and measuring excess or shortfall paid as relative to fair value of assets.
  • Recognise and measure the consideration transferred for the acquire.

Initial Accounting of BC:

If initial accounting of BC could be done only on provisional measurement at the end of the reporting period, adjustments to provisional measurement based on new information as to facts and circumstances that existed at the acquisition date are allowed within one year of the acquisition date retrospectively as if the adjustments have been made at the acquisition date except to correct error under Ind.AS 8.

BC achieved in stages:

If the acquirer enhances the equity interest in the acquiree to achieve control, the previous previously held is re-measured at acquisition date fair value any resultant gain or loss is recognised in Profit and loss.

Date of acquisition is the date on which acquirer obtains control of the acquired entity

Acquisition related costs are accounted as expenses in the period they are incurred and related services received such as follows:

  • Cost of internal staff who work on the deal.
  • Cost of maintaining an acquisitions department.
  • Cost of investigation.
  • Issue costs for debt or equity.
  • Incentives to of potential targets employees to remain with company post acquisition.
  • Direct costs related to acquisition like consultant fees, rating fee etc.
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