Buffl

International Financial Accounting

SR
by Sweda R.

IAS 7

Indirect Method

starts with the accrual net income and adjusts itr to arrive at the net cash from operating activities.

-> more commonly used

Information needed for Preperation

  • Current Income Statement

    • to know net income and non-cash expenses

  • Current Balance Sheet

    • identify changes in assets and liabilities

  • Immediate Past Balance Sheet

    • compare and determine changes in working capital

  • Changes in Long-Term Assets and Liabilities

    • to adjust for non-operating activities

  • Changes in Equity

    • to account for financing activities

Steps to Prepare CF using indirect methos

  1. Begin with Net income from income statement

    • Net income is derived from accrual basis of accounting, which includes non-cash items

    • adjustments necessary to convert to cash basis

  2. Adjust for Non-Cash items

    • Add back non-cash expenses such as depreciation, amortization, impairement

    • subtract deferred revenue (doesn’t represent actual CF in that period)

      -> Non-Cash expenses reduce net income but do not involve actual CF so needed to be added back

  3. Adjust for Gains and Losses

    • Gains for non-operating activites increase net income but don’t represent cash inflows from operating activities

      -> subtract gains

    • Losses from non-operating activites decrease net income but don’t represent cash outflows from operating activities

      -> add losses

  4. Adjust for changes in current assets

    • Changes in currents assets reflect timing differences between revenue recognition and cash receipts

    • increase in current assets: use of cash

      -> subtract increases

    • decrease in current asstes: source of cash

      -> add decreases

  5. Indirect Methos (operating Cash Flow)

    • increase in current liability

      -> add increases

    • decrease in current liability

      -> add decrease

  6. Accounts payable (operating CF)

    • Purchase of inventory

      • increase inventory and accounts payable but doesnt affect net income

    • Recognition of COGS

      • occurs when inventory is sold reducing net income

    • CF adjustment

      • increase in accounts payable is added back to net income to reflect the cash conserved by delaying payments.

      • not reflected in net income

      -> add increase in accounts payable to net income

  7. Accrued liabilities

    expenses that have been incurred but not yet pais

    • CF adjustment

      • when they increase company has incurred expenses but not yet paid

        -> increases net income

      • when they decrease company has paid incurred expenses

        -> decreases net income


Mechanisms managers use to influence accounting numbers

Real Transactions

-> influence earnings by changing what the company actually does

  1. Overproduction

Exisiting Costs

  • factory rent

  • Machinery

  • Permanent Productivity Staff

-> Accounting spreads these fixed costs over the number of units produced

-> if managers decide to produce more units than demand requires

  • fixed costs are divided over more units

  • cost per unit becomes lower

  • cost of good sold per unit decreases

-> Nothing fake happens but

  • inventory builds up

  • cash may worsen

  • future write-downs may occur

  1. Cutting discretionary spending

Expenses that not legally required, can be postponed or reduced

  • R&D

  • Marketing

  • Advertising

-> if managers decide to cut or delay these

  • expenses decrease immediately

  • profits increase immediately

Accounting Methods

-> Nothing changes in the business accounting treatment changes

  1. Revenue Recognition

depends on judgement about

  • when a performance obligation is satisfied

  • whether revenue should be recognized now or later

-> recognizing revenue realier increases current profits

-> recognizing revenue later reduces profits

Cash is unchanged

Customer is unchanged

  1. Depreciation Methods

An Asset costs the same and provides same economic benefits

-> Depreciaiton

  • straight-line

  • accelarated

-> Different Methods change

  • Expense timing

  • Change reported profit in each period

-> Early years: lower depreciation -> higher profit

-> Later years: higher depreciation-> lower profit


Accounting Estimates

-> judgement based numbers NOT OBSERVABLE FACTS

-> Most powerful and sensitive mechanism

-> Numbers depend on expectations

  1. Provisions

Estimates of future losses or obligations

  • Doubtful debts

  • Inventory obsolescence

  • Warranty Claims

If management estimates

-> higher provisions -> higher expense -> lower profit

-> lower provisions -> lower expense -> higher profit

Managers can

  • increasse provisions in good years

  • realease in bad years

-> shifts profit between periods without changing cash

-> how hidden reserves are created

  1. Impairement of assets

Reuires estimating

  • future cash flows

  • discount rates

  • recoverable amounts

(all of which involve only judgement)


If management is optimistic

-> no impairement -> higher profit

If Management is pessimistic

-> large impairement -> lower profit


Managers can choose when to recognize impairements

  • delay

  • take big losses in bad years



Author

Sweda R.

Information

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