Chapter 14 Segment and Interim Financial Reporting
Chapter 14 Segment and Interim Financial Reporting
Chapter 14 Segment and Interim Financial Reporting
LO1
1.
LO1
2.
LO1
3.
revenues
or
LO1
4.
LO1
5.
LO2
6.
Revenues.
Depreciation.
R&D expenditures.
Discontinued operations.
5 percent of revenues.
5 percent of profits.
10 percent of revenues.
10 percent of profits.
LO2
7.
LO2
8.
LO2
9.
LO4
10.
LO4
11.
LO5
12.
LO6
13.
Assets.
Equity.
Intersegment sales.
Extraordinary items.
Assets.
Liabilities.
Revenues.
Profit or loss.
External revenues.
External and intersegment revenues.
Profit or loss.
Total assets.
LO7
14.
LO7
15.
LO7
16.
LO7
17.
LO8
18.
LO8
19.
$ 50,000.
$ 80,000.
$100,000.
$140,000.
LO8
20.
$30,000.
$34,000.
$37,200.
$61,200.
LO2
Exercise 1
The accountant for Oyster Corporation has assigned
companys assets to its three segments as follows:
Motion pictures
Communications
Publishing
Total
$
$
most
of
the
1,520,000
2,400,000
320,000
4,240,000
and
For
the
are
Required:
1. What is the proper threshold value to use in determining which
of the operating segments shown above are reporting segments?
2. Which of
segments?
the
operating
segments
are
considered
reporting
LO2
Exercise 2
For internal decision-making purposes, Crane Corporations operating
segments have been identified as follows:
Operating Segment
Appliances
Clothing
Lawn and Garden
Auto Accessories
Service Contracts
Catalog Sales
Home Furnishings
Tools
Operating
Profit
or Loss
Revenues
$
100,000 $ (
120,000
(
92,000
110,000
55,000
(
200,000
300,000
250,000
1,227,000 $ (
20,000
70,000
5,000
12,000
5,000
11,000
20,000
24,000
23,000
Identifiable
Assets
) $
)
60,000
50,000
15,000
22,000
10,000
50,000
100,000
25,000
332,000
) $
Required:
1. In applying the reported
reporting
segments,
what
Corporation?
of
Crane's
LO2
Exercise 3
The following data relate to Plover Corporations industry segments:
Sales to
External
Customers
Industry Segment
Oil Exploration
Refinery
Plastics
Chemicals
Solar Power
Totals
40,000
120,000
10,000
110,000
10,000
290,000
Intersegment
Sales
Segment
Assets
$
$
$
10,000
80,000
36,000
126,000
156,000
360,000
60,000
570,000
138,000
1,284,000
Required:
1. Which of Plover's operating segments would
reporting segments under the revenue test?
2. Which of Plover's operating segments would
reporting segments under the asset test?
be
considered
be
considered
LO2&3
Exercise 4
For internal decision-making purposes, Falcon Corporation identifies
its industry segments by geographical area. For 2006, the total
revenues of each segment are provided below. There are no
intersegment revenues.
Canada
United States
Mexico
South America
China
Russia
Australia
European Union
Other European
Total revenues
Total
Revenues
22,000,000
76,000,000
10,000,000
9,000,000
2,000,000
1,500,000
3,000,000
12,000,000
14,000,000
149,500,000
Required:
1. Which operating segments will be considered reporting segments
based on the revenue test?
2. What is the test value for determining whether a sufficient
number of segments are reported?
3. What will
reported?
be
the
minimum
number
of
segments
that
must
be
LO5
Exercise 5
The following data relate to Crake Corporations industry segments.
(Crake HQ represents the corporate headquarters). All other segments
are geographical sales segments.
Attribute
Europe
External sales $
Intersegment
Sales
Expenses
Assets assigned
Income from
Equity investee
Russia
China
35,000 $
24,000 $
33,000 $
2,000
27,000
20,000
1,000
18,000
22,000
4,000
29,000
30,000
Japan
Crake
HQ
0 $
0
5,000
14,000
0
0
12,000
15,000
5,000
Required:
1. Prepare a report which reconciles the reportable segment profits
to total consolidated profits assuming that corporate expenses
are not allocated to the operating segments.
2. Prepare a report which reconciles the reportable segment profits
to total consolidated profits assuming that corporate expenses
are allocated evenly among the operating segments.
LO7
Exercise 6
Curlew Corporation has several accounting issues with respect to its
interim financial statements for the first quarter of calendar 2007.
For each of the independent situations given below, state whether or
not the method proposed by Curlew is acceptable. Justify each answer
with appropriate reasoning.
1. Curlew will not perform a physical inventory at the end of the
calendar quarter. It intends to estimate the cost of sales by
using the gross profit inventory method.
2. Curlew grants volume discounts to its customers based upon their
total annual purchases. The discounts are calculated on a
sliding scale ranging from 1% to 8%. The amount of discount
applied will progressively increase for a customer as the
cumulative purchase total for the customer increases during the
year. Curlew will use the average rate of discounts earned for
each customer in the prior year as the expected discount rate
for the current year.
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$2,000,000
500,000
250,000
400,000
650,000
45%
111,000
28%
75,000
84,000
Additional information
At the end of the year, Rail accrues its annual pension and
depreciation
expenses
which
amount
to
$40,000
and
$62,000,
respectively.
Required:
Prepare Rail's
calendar 2006.
interim
income
statement
for
the
third
quarter
of
LO7
Exercise 8
Seagull Corporation is preparing its interim financial statements for
the third quarter of calendar 2006.
The following trial balance information is available for third
quarter:
Account
Debit
Cash
Accounts Receivable
Inventory
Fixed assets
Accounts Payable
Common Stock
Retained Earnings
Sales
Administrative expense
Cost of goods sold
Loss on sale of securities
sold on July 30
Annual equipment overhaul
costs paid on August 1
Totals
Credit
98,000
285,000
750,000
600,000
312,000
2,650,000
300,000
50,000
80,000
4,400,000
4,830,000
75,000
$
60,000
4,830,000
Additional information
At the end of the year, Seagull distributes annual employee bonuses
and charitable donations that are estimated at $50,000, and $6,000,
respectively. The cost of goods sold includes the liquidation of a
$50,000 base layer in inventory that Seagull will restore in the
fourth quarter at a cost of $90,000. Effective corporate tax rate for
2006 is 32%.
Required:
Prepare Seagull's interim income statement for the second quarter of
calendar 2006.
LO8
Exercise 9
Stilt Corporation estimates its income by calendar quarter as follows
for 2007:
1st
Quarter
Estimated
Income
30,000 $
2nd
Quarter
40,000 $
3rd
Quarter
40,000 $
4th
Quarter
50,000 $
2007
Total
160,000
15%
25%
35%
Required:
Determine Stilts effective tax rate.
LO8
Exercise 10
Avocet Corporation is preparing its first quarterly interim report.
It is subject to a corporate income tax rate of 20% on the first
$50,000 of taxable income and 35% on taxable income above $50,000.
Its estimated pretax accounting income for 2007, by quarter, is:
1st
Quarter
Estimated
Income
75,000 $
2nd
Quarter
3rd
Quarter
4th
Quarter
165,000 $
143,000 $
120,000 $
2006
Total
503,000
Avocet expects to earn and receive operating income for the year and
does not contemplate any changes in accounting procedures or
principles that would affect its pretax accounting income.
Required:
1. Determine Avocets estimated effective tax rate for 2006.
2. Prepare a schedule to show Avocets estimated net income for
each quarter of 2006.
SOLUTIONS
Multiple Choice Questions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Exercise 1
Requirement 1
SFAS 131 allows the assets of the corporate headquarters to be
included in the segments if the assets are included in the measure of
the segments assets that are reviewed by the chief operating
decision maker. This interpretation would justify the exclusion of
goodwill and inclusion of the corporate headquarters assets. The
threshold value would be 10% times the sum of ($4,240,000 + $240,000)
or $448,000.
Requirement 2
Using the criterion established in Requirement 1, Motion Pictures and
Communications
would
both
be
considered
reporting
segments.
Publishing would not be a reporting segment because it falls below
the $448,000 threshold value. ($320,000 + $240,000/3 = $400,000).
Exercise 2
Requirement 1
If the absolute value of the loss segments, $95,000, is more than the
absolute value of the profitable segments, $72,000, the absolute
value of the loss segments, when multiplied by 10%, would become the
test value for each segment. The $95,000 is multiplied by 10% to get
$9,500, which is the test value for both the profitable and loss
segments.
Requirement 2
Based on the answer to Requirement 1, Lawn and Garden and Service
Contracts are not considered reporting segments. All of the other
segments would be reporting segments because the absolute value of
their profit or loss is more than $9,500.
Exercise 3
Requirement 1
The test value is 10% of the combined revenues of all operating
segments including intersegment revenues, or, 10% x $416,000 or
$41,600. Based on this test value, Refinery, Chemicals, and Solar
Power would be the reporting segments because each of these segments
has more than $41,600 in total sales.
Requirement 2
The test value is 10% of the combined identifiable assets or 10% x
$1,284,000 or $1,284. Based on this test value, Oil Exploration,
Refinery, Chemicals, and Solar Power would be the reporting segments
because each of these segments has more than $1,284 in segment
assets.
Exercise 4
Requirement 1
The reporting segments will be those segments whose segment revenue
is 10% or more of the combined revenues of all operating segments.
The total combined revenue of the operating segments is $149,500,000
and 10% of that number is $14,950,000. Only Canada and the United
States will satisfy the 10% revenue test.
Requirement 2
The appropriate test value is the 75% of consolidated revenues test
which is $112,125,000 ($149,500,000 x 75%).
Requirement 3
Canada and the United States must be included and will account for
$98,000,000 of the minimum $112,125,000. A minimum of two additional
segments must be added in order to surpass the 75% consolidated
revenue test since no one segment can contribute the remaining
shortfall of $14,125,000. Therefore, the minimum number of segments
is four.
Exercise 5
Requirement 1
Total profit or loss for reportable
Europe:($35,000 + $2,000 - $27,000)
Russia:($24,000 + $1,000 - $18,000)
China:($33,000 + $4,000 - $29,000)
segments
=
$10,000
=
7,000
=
8,000
25,000
(
(
5,000
7,000 )
17,000 )
6,000
(
(
13,000
5,000
7,000 )
5,000 )
6,000
Requirement 2
Total profit or loss for reportable segments
Europe:($35,000 + $2,000 - $27,000 - $4,000) +
Russia:($24,000 + $1,000 - $18,000 - $4,000) +
China:($33,000 + $4,000 - $29,000 - $4,000) =
Plus: Income from equity investee
Less: Intersegment revenues
Less: Japans expenses
Equals: Consolidated net income
Exercise 6
1. The use of the gross profit method for estimating ending
inventory and cost of sales is an acceptable accounting
procedure to use in the preparation of interim financial
statements. It is explicitly permitted under APB Opinion 28.
2. The use of reasonable estimates based upon the experience of
prior periods is an acceptable accounting procedure for
allocating annual expenses to interim periods. An integral
approach is permitted but not required under APB Opinion 28.
3. Since the entire loss has been realized in the first quarter,
Curlew has no justifiable basis for allocating the loss to the
other quarters. It must show the entire loss in the first
quarter. The discrete approach is required under APB Opinion 28.
4. It is an acceptable accounting procedure to allocate some
seasonal costs to other accounting periods on a reasonable
basis. An integral approach is permitted but not required under
APB Opinion 28.
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Exercise 7
Rail Corporation
Interim Income Statement
For the Calendar Quarter Ending on September 30, 2006
Sales Revenue ($2,000,000 + $500,000)
Less:
Cost of Goods Sold (2,500,000 x 45%)
Selling and general and administrative expenses paid
Insurance expense ($84,000/12 months x 2 months)
Depreciation expense (62,000/4)
Estimated pension expense ($40,000/4)
Income before taxes
Income tax expense ($1,224,500 x 28%)
Net income
$
$
2,500,000
1,125,000
111,000
14,000
15,500
10,000
1,224,500
342,860
881,640
Exercise 8
Seagull Corporation
Interim Income Statement
For the Calendar Quarter Ending on June 30, 2006
Sales Revenue ($4,400,000)
Less:
Cost of Goods Sold ($2,650,000 + $40,000 LIFO base
replacement)
Selling and general and administrative expenses paid
Loss on sale of securities
Bonus expense (50,000/4)
Charitable contribution expense ($6,000/4)
Maintenance expense ($60,000/4)
4,400,000
2,690,000
312,000
75,000
12,500
1,500
15,000
1,294,000
414,080
879,920
Exercise 9
Income tax on estimated income
First quarter
($30,000 x 15%)
Second quarter
($20,000 x 15%) + ($20,000 x 25%)
Third quarter
($5,000 x 25%) + ($35,000 x 35%)
Fourth quarter
($50,000 x 35%)
Total estimated taxes
4,500
8,000
13,500
17,500
43,500
27.19%
Exercise 10
Requirement 1
Calculation of estimated effective tax rate
First quarter
($50,000 x 20% + $25,000 x 35%)
Second quarter
($165,000 x 35%)
Third quarter
($143,000 x 35%)
Fourth quarter
($120,000 x 35%)
Total estimated taxes
18,750
57,750
50,050
42,000
168,550
33.51%
Requirement 2
Y-T-D income
1ST
2nd
3rd
4th
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
$
75,000 $ 240,000 $ 383,000 $ 503,000 $
Quarterly income
Income tax**
Estimated NI
75,000
$
-25,132
49,868 $
165,000
143,000
120,000
-55,290
109,710 $
-47,918
95,082 $
-40,211
79,789 $
** (Deducted at 33.509%)
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2006
503,000
-168,551
334,449