Chapter 10 - Advanced Accounting
The temporal method requires translating property, plant, and equipment acquired at different times at different
(historical) exchange rates
A country has a highly inflationary economy when its cumulative three year inflation exceeds
100 percent (With compounding, it equates to an average of 26 percent per years for 3 years)
AOCI
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
Translation exposure gives rise to
foreign exchange gains and losses that are ultimately realized in cash
A credit is recognized by a
gain
Under the temporal method, assets and liabilities are carried on the foreign operation's balance sheet at
historical cost and are translated at historical exchange rates to yield an equivalent historical cost in U.S. dollars
Under the temporal method for remeasurement, land, patents, inventory, prepaid expenses, and intangible assets are carried at
historical rate
The temporal method translates the Cash account at the exchange rate on the date of sale, and the Land account is translated at the
historical rate (this is used to calculate the gain or loss on sale)
Stockholders' equity items are translated at
historical rates
Translation methods differ as to which balance sheet and
income statement accounts are translated at historical exchange rates and at current exchange rates
If the foreign currency increases in value, an
increase in the U.S. dollar value of the net asset occurs and will be reflected through a positive (credit balance) translation adjustment
A debit is recognized by a
loss
Liabilities translated at the current exchange rate when the foreign currency has appreciated generate a
negative (debit) translation adjustment
Assets translated at the current exchange rate when the foreign currency has appreciated generate a
positive (credit) translation adjustment
If the U.S dollar is the functional currency, we use the
temporal method
Remeasurement process is associated with the
temporal method
In highly inflationary economies, the
temporal method for translation is required with remeasurement gains or losses reported in net income
To measure the net investment's exposure to foreign exchange risk, all assets and liabilities of the foreign operation are translated at
the current exchange rate
Historical Exchange Rate
the exchange rate that existed when a transaction occured
Current Exchange Rate
the exchange rate that exists at the balance sheet date
Bonds payable is remeasured using the current exchange rate under
the temporal method
Net assets =
total assets - total liabilities
When the U.S. dollar is the functional currency, U.S. GAAP requires remeasurement
using the temporal method with remeasurement gains and losses reported in income
Ending R/E in FC =
Beginning R/E in FC + Net Income in FC - Dividends in FC
COGS in U.S. $ =
COGS in Foreign Currency x Average Exchange Rate
net realizable value
Expected selling price of an item - the cost of making the sale.
FC
Foreign Currency
Reporting currency
The currency in which an entity prepares its financial statements, U.S. based companies use the U.S. dollar
The two major translation methods are:
The current rate (or closing rate) method or the temporal method (back to historical rate)
Under the current method, what are the effects of a negative translation adjustment and a foreign exchange gain in its consolidated financial statements?
Translation adjustments less the foreign exchange gains are reported in accumulated other comprehensive income on the balance sheet
Under the temporal method for remeasurement,
accounts receivable are carried at current rate
Under the current rate method, COGS in foreign currency is translated using the
average-for-the-period exchange rate
The temporal method remeasures cash, receivables, and liabilities into U.S. dollars using the
current exchange rate
Long-term debt is translated at the
current exchange rate under the temporal method
Translation process is associated with the
current method
If the foreign currency is the functional currency, we use the
current rate method
If the foreign currency decreases in value against the U.S. dollar, a
decrease in the U.S. dollar value of the foreign currency net asset occurs
The current rate method translates the gain on sale of land at the
exchange rate in effect at the date of sale