A307 Exam 3 (Part 1)
Accounting treatment for a contingent liability depends on :
- Likelihood of having to pay - Ability to estimate
Three options for contingent liabilities:
- Recognize (on BS as an expense on IS) - Disclose (only) (just put the word contingencies on BS, no amount or detail) - Do nothing
What you need to PV:
1. # periods (n) 2. Interest rate (discount rate) per period (i) 3. Amount (PV or FV) 4. Type of cash flows (single sum or ordinary annuity)
Two main sources of financing for a company's economic resources (assets):
1. Liabilities/debt (funds from creditors) 2. Equity (funds from the company's owners; contributed capital + RE)
Probable (>_____%) Reasonably possibly (_____-_____%) Remote (<_____50%)
75; 50-75; 50
Annuity or single sum: $50,000 in 6 months and $50,000 in 1 year with an annual rate of 3%
Annuity (receive same amount at regularly scheduled intervals)
Why do bond prices go down when interest rates go up?
Bond payments are fixed but if our discount rate changes, our PV change; if our discount rate increases and cash payments stay the same, PV goes down
_____ are a type of debt (a debt security) that consists of a principal component and an interest component
Bonds
This is the bond liability reported on the BS at a given point in time:
Carrying value
_____ interest: where we are heading now. Interest calculated on principal + accumulating interest
Compounding
What are these examples of: Pending lawsuits, warranties and product recalls, data breaches, natural and environmental disasters, and performance target payouts
Contingent liabilities
What is an existing, uncertain situation that might result in loss depending on the outcome of a future event?
Contingent liability
This is the interest rate stated on the face of the bond - what the issuer is paying in interest:
Coupon rate
_____ liability: due within one year (<= 12 months) from BS date
Current
Coupon rate < market interest --> issued at _____
DISCOUNT
If a short-term lease, then (do or do not?) record an asset or liability on BS
DO NOT
If reasonably probable likelihood...
Disclose in footnotes (no amounts on financial statements)
Coupon rate = market interest rate --> issued at _____
FACE
This is the principal payment due at maturity of the bond:
Face value
Why lease?
Flexibility, generally lower payments, downside protection
Why might the coupon rate and market interest rate (at issuance) differ?
Investors perceive credit/default risk as being different from the rate of return the company is offering
The life of a bond:
Issuance --> Life --> Maturity
This is the price investors are willing to pay (willing to lend) for the bond at issuance:
Issue price
This is the interest rate investors demand on the day the bond is issued:
Market interest rate
This is the rate used to discount future cash flows to the present and to calculate interest expense on the IS:
Market interest rate
How do price changes on the secondary market after issuance affect how we account for bonds?
No impact! WE only care about the market interest rate at the date of issuance
_____ liability: due beyond one year (<= 12 months) from BS date
Non-current
Coupon rate > market interest rate --> issued at _____
PREMIUM
When are cash flows the same and at even intervals?
PV of an annuity
- Not required to under GAAP - What if amount changes - DO not admit blame
Reasons to NOT recognize
- Restore faith in public relations - Cookie jar reserve - Show total cost and that the company will survive - Be overly conservative
Reasons to recognize
_____ interest: what we have talked about so far in class
Simple
Annuity or single sum: $20,000 in one year and $25,000 in 2 years with an annual rate of 3%
Single sum (different payments over time)
Annuity or single sum: $20,000 in 3 years from now with an annual rate of 3%
Single sum (one payment)
1. The issuance of a note payable and receipt of cash 2. Accrual of interest expense at period end (if note is not paid off yet) 3. The repayment of the note along with any interest
The three events that impact the financial statements for short-term debt financing
- Interest expense on bonds is tax deductible - Shareholders maintain control of the company and do not dilute ownership - Signaling positive future prospects
Why to issue a bond vs. issue equity
- A company may need more money than a single bank is willing to loan - Typically, bonds have more favorable interest rates and fewer financial covenants - Access a broader set of investors
Why to issue. bond vs. get a loan from the bank
Are contingent liabilities difficult to estimate?
Yes, - Uncertain; depend of future events - Depend on management's incentives and horizon
Face value * coupon rate =
cash payment
Interest expense - cash payment =
change in carrying value
If remote likelihood...
do nothing
Trade off is attempting to _____ or _____ contingent liabilities - which one provides better information to financial statement users?
estimate; ignore
If short-term lease/rent, expense on IS as _____
incurred
Carrying value * market rate at issuance =
interest expense
There is a(n) _____ relation between market interests rates and bond prices
inverse
PV of a single sum (face value) + PV of ordinary annuity =
issue price
Companies often _____ assets rather than _____ them
lease; purchasing
If long-term lease, then record asset as a _____ on the BS at _____ values at lease inception
liability; present
Most liabilities on the BS are _____
long-term
Report bonds as a _____ on the BS at _____ value
long-term liability; present
Prior to 2019, most leases were NOT reported on BS; they were a major form of...
off-balance sheet financing
Coupon rate * face value =
periodic cash interest payments
WE measure and report long-term liabilities at their _____ _____
present values
Issue price is the _____ value of the bond's future cash flows, which are discounted using the _____ rate at issuance
present; market interest
Companies issue bonds to...
raise capital ($$)
If reasonably estimable and probable...
recognize liability as an expense and disclose details in footnotes
Many companies use _____ debt financing from banks for things like payroll, inventory purchases, dividends, etc.
short-term