Matt Holmes recently joined Klax Company as a staff accountant in the controller’s office. Klax Company provides warehousing services for companies in several European cities. The location in Koblenz, Germany, has not been performing well due to increased competition and the loss of several customers that have recently gone out of business. Matt’s department manager suspects that the plant and equipment may be impaired and wonders whether those assets should be written down. Given the company’s prior success, this issue has never arisen in the past, and Matt has been asked to conduct some research on this issue.

Instructions

Access the IFRS authoritative literature at the IASB website (http://eifrs.iasb.org/). (Click on the IFRS tab and then register for free eIFRS access if necessary.) When you have accessed the documents, you can use the search tool in your Internet browser to respond to the following questions. (Provide paragraph citations.)

  1. What is the authoritative guidance for asset impairments? Briefly discuss the scope of the standard (i.e., explain the types of transactions to which the standard applies).
  2. Give several examples of events that would cause an asset to be tested for impairment. Does it appear that Klax should perform an impairment test? Explain.
  3. What is the best evidence of fair value? Describe alternate methods of estimating fair value.

Short Answer

Expert verified

It does appear that Klax should perform an impairment test because the market value of the assets is most likely lower than the current carrying value.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Impairments

Impairment refersto a reduction of the market value of fixed or intangible assets, indicative of a reduction in the quantity, quality, or market value of an asset. The idea is that an asset should never be reported in a business's financial statements above the maximum amount that could be recouped through its sale.

02

(a) Explaining the authoritative guidance for asset impairments

IAS 36: Impairment of Assets is the definitive guide for asset impairments. This standard must be used to account for assets that have been impaired, except:

  1. Inventories
  2. Assets derived from construction projects
  3. Deferred tax assets
  4. Employee benefits-related assets
  5. Financial assets that fall under the IFRS 9 Financial Instruments standard
  6. Investment property valued at fair market value
  7. Biological assets associated with agricultural activities that are valued at fair market value less selling expenses
  8. IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts that include deferred acquisition costs and intangible assets stemming from an insurer's contractual rights under insurance contracts; and
  9. IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations classifies non-current assets (or disposal groupings) as held for sale.

This Standard applies to financial assets classified as:

  1. IAS 36; subsidiaries as specified in IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements
  2. IAS 28 Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures defines associates.
  3. IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements defines joint ventures. Refer to IAS 39 for impairment of other financial assets.
03

(b) Elaborating several examples of events that would cause an asset to be tested for impairment

An entity must evaluate the following indicators when determining whether there is any indication that an asset may be impaired.

External sources of information

  1. If there is a significant decrease in an asset's fair value as time progress or as it would normally decline, it is an indication that the asset may be impaired.
  2. If an entity faces significant changes during a certain period or will face them very soon, in the technological, market, economic, or legal environments in which it operates, or in the markets where it sells its assets, it is also an indication that the entity’s assets may be impaired.
  3. If interest rates and other market rates of return on investments rise, it increases the discount rate used in calculating an asset's value in use and reduces its recoverable amount.
  4. In the case of an entity, carrying value is greater than market capitalization.

Internal sources of information

  1. It is possible to provide evidence of asset obsolescence or deterioration.
  2. When significant changes in which an asset is utilized or is likely to be used occur during a specified period, or is projected to occur in the near future, having an unfavorable effect on a company, it is an indication that the entity’s assets may be impaired. If an asset is idle, preparations to stop or reorganize the operation to which the asset belongs plans to dispose of the asset before the previously planned date, or reassessing the asset's useful life as finite rather than endless are examples of internal source information.
  3. Internal reports give indications that an asset's economic performance is less than anticipated

Internal reporting evidence that an asset is potentially degraded includes the presence of:

  1. A higher cash requirement than what was originally budgeted to acquire or maintain an asset.
  2. Net cash flows or operating profits or losses are significantly lower than budgeted from an asset
  3. Net operating losses of an asset when current period amounts are combined with budgeted amounts for the future.
04

(c) Explaining the best evidence of fair value and also describing the alternative methods of estimating fair value.

  1. Different situations may result in the best proof of fair value (i.e. could be market value, revalued asset, etc.).
  2. A direct additional cost of sale is the only difference between a fair value and its fair value fewer costs to selling.
  3. Generally, recovery of revalued assets is close to or equal to their revalued amounts (i.e., fair value), as disposal costs are lower.
  4. If the disposal expenses are not trivial, the revalued asset's fair value fewer costs to sell must be less than its fair value. As a result, if the revalued asset's value in use is less than its revalued amount, it will be impaired (i.e., fair value). In this scenario, a company uses this Standard to assess whether an asset is impaired once revaluation conditions are met.
  5. Depending on how the fair value is determined, the revalued amount (i.e., fair value) may be more or less than the recoverable amount. As a consequence, an organization utilizes fair value to determine whether an asset is damaged after completing the revaluation standards.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

(Depreciation Computation—Addition, Change in Estimate) In 1990, Herman Moore Company completed the construction of a building at a cost of \(2,000,000 and first occupied it in January 1991. It was estimated that the building will have a useful life of 40 years and a salvage value of \)60,000 at the end of that time.

Early in 2001, an addition to the building was constructed at a cost of \(500,000. At that time, it was estimated that the remaining life of the building would be, as originally estimated, an additional 30 years and that the addition would have a life of 30 years and a salvage value of \)20,000.

In 2019, it is determined that the probable life of the building and addition will extend to the end of 2050, or 20 years beyond the original estimate.

Instructions

  1. Using the straight-line method, compute the annual depreciation that would have been charged from 1991 through 2000.
  2. Compute the annual depreciation that would have been charged from 2001 through 2018.
  3. Prepare the entry, if necessary, to adjust the account balances because of the revision of the estimated life in 2019.
  4. Compute the annual depreciation to be charged, beginning with 2019.

Electroboy Enterprises, Inc. operates several stores throughout the western United States. As part of an operational and financial reporting review in a response to a downturn in its markets, the company’s management has decided to perform an impairment test on five stores (combined). The five stores’ sales have declined due to aging facilities and competition from a rival that opened new stores in the same markets. Management has developed the following information concerning the five stores as of the end of fiscal 2016.

Original cost \(36million

Accumulated depreciation \)10 million

Estimated remaining useful life 4 years

Estimated expected future

annual cash flows (not discounted) \(4.0 million per year

Appropriate discount rate 5 percent

Accounting

  1. Determine the amount of impairment loss, if any, that Electroboy should report for fiscal 2016 and the book value at which Electroboy should report the five stores on its fiscal year-end 2016 balance sheet. Assume that the cash flows occur at the end of each year.
  2. Repeat part (a), but instead assume that (1) the estimated remaining useful life is 10 years, (2) the estimated annual cash flows are \)2,720,000 per year, and (3) the appropriate discount rate is 6 percent.

Analysis

Assume that you are a financial analyst and you participate in a conference call with Electroboy management in early 2017 (before Electroboy closes the books on fiscal 2016). During the conference call, you learn that management is considering selling the five stores, but the sale won’t likely be completed until the second quarter of fiscal 2017. Briefly discuss what implications this would have for Electroboy’s 2016 financial statements. Assume the same facts as in part (b) above.

Principles

Electroboy management would like to know the accounting for the impaired asset in periods subsequent to the impairment. Can the assets be written back up? Briefly discuss the conceptual arguments for this accounting.

In what way may the use of percentage depletion violate sound accounting theory?

Neither depreciation on replacement cost nor depreciation adjusted for changes in the purchasing power of the dollar has been recognized as generally accepted accounting principles for inclusion in the primary financial statements. Briefly present the accounting treatment that might be used to assist in the maintenance of the ability of a company to replace its productive capacity.

(Depreciation—SYD, Act., SL, and DDB) The following data relate to the Machinery account of Eshkol, Inc. at December 31, 2017.


Machinery

A

B

C

D

Original cost

\(46,000

\)51,000

\(80,000

\)80,000

Year purchased

2012

2013

2014

2016

Useful life

10 years

15,000 hours

15 years

10 years

Salvage value

\( 3,100

\) 3,000

\( 5,000

\) 5,000

Depreciation method

Sum-of-the year digits

Activity

Straight-line

Double-declining balance

Accum. depr. through 2017

\(31,200

\)35,200

\(15,000

\)16,000

*In the year an asset is purchased, Eshkol, Inc. does not record any depreciation expense on the asset. In the year an asset is retired or traded in, Eshkol, Inc. takes a full year’s depreciation on the asset.

The following transactions occurred during 2018.

  1. On May 5, Machine A was sold for \(13,000 cash. The company’s bookkeeper recorded this retirement in the following manner in the cash receipts journal.

Cash 13,000

Machinery (Machine A) 13,000

b. On December 31, it was determined that Machine B had been used 2,100 hours during 2018.

c. On December 31, before computing depreciation expense on Machine C, the management of Eshkol, Inc. decided the useful life remaining from January 1, 2018, was 10 years.

d. On December 31, it was discovered that a machine purchased in 2017 had been expensed completely in that year. This machine cost \)28,000 and has a useful life of 10 years and no salvage value. Management has decided to use the double-declining-balance method for this machine, which can be referred to as “Machine E.”

Instructions

Prepare the necessary correcting entries for the year 2018. Record the appropriate depreciation expense on the above-mentioned machines. No entry is necessary for Machine D.

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