F7 Course
F7 Course
F7 Course
Course slides
Syllabus
A B C D E
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A conceptual framework for financial reporting A regulatory framework for financial reporting Financial statements Business combinations Analysing and interpreting financial statements
Format of the Exam Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Preparation of group FS Preparation/restatement of non group FS Appraisal of performance and may include statements of cash flow
Marks 25 25 25
Question 4
Question 5 Total
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15
10 100
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Chapter 1
ASSETS
LIABILITIES
EQUITY
Financial position
INCOME
EXPENSES
Financial performance
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The elements
ASSET A resource controlled by an entity as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity
LIABILITY A present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits EQUITY INCOME The residual interest in the assets of an entity after deducting its liabilities Increases in economic benefits during the period other than contributions from equity participants
EXPENSE Decreases in economic benefits during the period other than distributions to equity participants
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
X X
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$000
X X X X X X X X X X X
Total assets
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X X X X X X X X
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Balance at 1 January 20X6 Changes in accounting policy Restated balance Changes in equity for 20X6 Dividends Total comprehensive income for the year Balance at 31 December 20X6 Changes in equity for 20X7 Issue of share capital Dividends Total comprehensive income Balance at December 20X7
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Approach to questions
1. Read requirements & scan question 2. Set up proformas & page for workings 3. Read additional information & make a mark by relevant caption that is going to change
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Lecture example
AZ Co is a quoted manufacturing company. Its finished products are stored in a nearby warehouse until ordered by customers. AZ Co has performed very well in the past, but has been in financial difficulties in recent months and has been reorganising the business to improve performance.
The trial balance for AZ Co at 31 March 20X3 was as follows:
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TRIAL BALANCE AT 31 MARCH 20X3 Sales Cost of goods manufactured in the year to 31 March 20X3 (excluding depreciation) Distribution costs Administrative expenses Restructuring costs Interest received Debenture interest paid Plant and equipment (20% straight line) Vehicles (25% reducing balance) Accumulated depreciation at 31 March 20X2: Plant and equipment Vehicles Investment properties (at market value) Inventories at 31 March 20X2 Trade receivables Bank and cash Ordinary shares of $1 each, fully paid 6% redeemable preference shares of $1 each Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings at 31 March 20X2 Ordinary dividends paid Preference dividends paid 7% debentures 20X7 Trade payables
$'000
$'000 124,900
Comprehensive income
94,000 9,060 16,020 121 1,200 639 30,315 3,720 6,060 1,670 24,000 4,852 9,330 1,190 20,000 1,000 430 3,125 9,552 1,000 60 18,250 8,120 194,307
Financial position
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194,307
(ii) (iii)
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(vi)
(vii)
The preference shares will be redeemed at their par value ($1,000,000) in 20X9. Preference dividends are paid on 31 March each year. The 7% debentures are 10-year loans due for repayment by 31 March 20X7. Interest on these debentures needs to be accrued for the six months to 31 March 20X3. The restructuring costs in the trial balance represent the cost of a major restructuring of the company to improve competitiveness and future profitability. No fair value adjustments were necessary to the investment properties during the period.
Required: Prepare the income statement section of the statement of comprehensive income for AZ Co for the year to 31 March 20X3 and a statement of financial position at that date.
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Lecture example
AZ CO INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 20X3 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses Other expenses Finance income Finance costs Profit before tax Income tax expense Profit for the year $'000 124,900
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Expenses Cost of sales Distribution $000 $000 9,060 94,000 Admin $000 16,020 Other $000 121
Per question
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Lecture example 1
AZ CO INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 20X3 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses Other expenses Finance income Finance costs (639 Profit before tax Income tax expense Profit for the year $'000 124,900
1,200
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Cost Accumulated depreciation b/d NBV b/d Charge for year NBV c/d
$000
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment Investment properties Current assets Inventories Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 24,000
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings
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Expenses Cost of sales Distribution $000 $000 9,060 94,000 4,852 Admin $000 16,020 Other $000 121
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment Investment properties Current assets Inventories Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 24,000
9,330 1,190
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000
1,000
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Lecture example 1
AZ CO INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 20X3 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses Other expenses Finance income Finance costs (639 + 60 Profit before tax Income tax expense Profit for the year $'000 124,900
1,200
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment Investment properties Current assets Inventories Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 24,000
9,330 1,190
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000
18,250 1,000
8,120
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Cost Accumulated depreciation b/d NBV b/d Charge for year 30,315 x 20% 2,050 x 25% NBV c/d
24,255 (6,063)
18,192
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment (W2) Investment properties Current assets Inventories Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 19,729 24,000
9,330 1,190
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000
18,250 1,000
8,120
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Expenses Cost of sales Distribution $000 $000 Per question 9,060 94,000 Opening inventories 4,852 Depreciation - P&E (W2) 6,063 - vehicles (W2) 513 Admin $000 16,020 Other $000 121
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Lecture example 1
AZ CO INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 20X3 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses Other expenses Finance income Finance costs (639 + 60 Profit before tax Income tax expense Profit for the period $'000 124,900
1,200
(161)
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment (W2) Investment properties Current assets Inventories Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 19,729 24,000
9,330 1,190
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000
18,250 1,000
8,120 161
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment (W2) Investment properties Current assets Inventories (5,180 (W3) 15) Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 19,729 24,000
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000
18,250 1,000
8,120 161
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Expenses Cost of sales Distribution $000 $000 Per question 9,060 94,000 Opening inventories 4,852 Depreciation - P&E (W2) 6,063 - vehicles (W2) 513 Closing inventories (5,180 (W3) 15) (5,165) Admin $000 16,020 Other $000 121
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Lecture example 1
AZ CO INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 20X3 Revenue Cost of sales Gross profit Distribution costs Administrative expenses Other expenses Finance income Finance costs (639 + 60 + ((18,250 x 7%) 639) Profit before tax Income tax expense Profit for the year $'000 124,900
1,200 (1,338)
(161)
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment (W2) Investment properties Current assets Inventories (5,180 (W3) 15) Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 19,729 24,000
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000
18,250 1,000
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Expenses Cost of sales Distribution $000 $000 Per question 9,060 94,000 Opening inventories 4,852 Depreciation - P&E (W2) 6,063 - vehicles (W2) 513 Closing inventories (5,180 15 (W3)) (5,165) 99,750 9,573 Admin $000 16,020 Other $000 121
16,020
121
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Lecture example 1
AZ CO INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 20X3 $'000 124,900 Revenue (99,750) Cost of sales (W1) 25,150 Gross profit (9,573) Distribution costs (W1) (16,020) Administrative expenses (W1) (121) Other expenses 1,200 Finance income (1,338) Finance costs (639 + 60 + ((18,250 x 7%) 639) (702) Profit before tax (161) Income tax expense (863) Profit for the year
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Lecture example 1
Non-current assets Property, plant and equipment (W2) Investment properties Current assets Inventories (5,180 (W3) 15) Trade receivables Cash and cash equivalents 19,729 24,000 43,729 5,165 9,330 1,190 15,685 59,414 20,000 430 3,125 7,689 31,244 18,250 1,000 19,250 8,120 161 639 8,920 59,414
Equity Ordinary share capital Share premium Revaluation surplus Retained earnings (9,552 1,000 863)
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Chapter 4
Non-current assets
Subsequent costs
e.g. airframe, depreciate over 20 years
IAS 16
Fair value Land and buildings Plant and equipment Specialised market value (prof valuers) market value (appraisal) income/ depreciated replacement cost
Chapter 5
Intangible assets
Measurement at recognition
Examined 12/07
Separate acquisition
Cost
NOT recognised
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PIRATE
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Measurement at recognition
Separate acquisition
Cost
NOT recognised
Asset/grant @ FV Only or recognised if PIRATE Nominal amount + criteria met direct expenditure
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Chapter 6
Impairment of assets
Recoverable amount
FV costs to sell
Value in Use
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Lecture example
Before impairment $000 Goodwill (2,000 1,800) 200 PPE 1,300 Dev exp 200 Net current assets 250 1,950 Impairment loss (W1)/(W2) $000 After impairment $000
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Lecture example 2
(W1) Impairment loss Carrying value Recoverable amount $000 1,950 (1,500) 450
200 250
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Lecture example 2
(W2) Allocation of impairment loss
1,083 PPE (250 x 1,300/1,500) Dev exp (250 x 200/1,500) PPE cannot be reduced below FV - CTS of 1,120 $000 217 33 250 37 Loss allocated $000 180 70 250
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Lecture example 2
Before impairment Goodwill (2,000 1,800) PPE Dev exp Net current assets $000 200 1,300 200 250 1,950 Impairment loss (W1)/(W2) $000 (200) (180) (70) (450) After impairment $000 1,120 130 250 1,500
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Chapter 7
IFRS 5: Approach
First measure in accordance with applicable IFRS
Classify as held for sale, at lower of: Carrying amount; and Fair value less costs to sell (FV CTS) Subsequent changes in FV CTS: Further impairment loss/ loss reversal Not depreciated Separately disclosed on face of B/S
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Chapter 8
Introduction to groups
Illustration
Shareholders BPP Holdings plc
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Chapter 9
Goodwill
Goodwill Consideration transferred Non-controlling interest Less: Net fair value of identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities X X (X) X
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Non-controlling interest
P
P controls S because it has > 50% of voting power
P does not own 80% all of S
e.g. S pays a $100 dividend: - P receives $80 - the non-controlling shareholders receive $20
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(X)
X X
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Remain in inventories
Profit realised
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Profit unrealised
Group structure
Proforma Assets & liabilities Adjustments Goodwill
Step 6
Step 7 Step 8
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Investment in associate
Non-controlling interest Retained earnings
Chapter 10
Examined 6/08
Add 100% P + 100% S as represents what is controlled Profit for period (PFP)
Ss PFP x NCI%
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Current assets Share capital Retained earnings Non-current liabilities bank loan 4% loan from P Current liabilities
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Revenue Cost of sales and expenses Profit before interest and tax Finance income (from S) Finance costs Profit before tax Income tax expense Profit for the year
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Chapter 11
Equity method
Statement of financial position Non-current assets Investment in associate Working
X
X X/(X) X/(X) (X) (X) X
Initial cost Add/less: post acquisition share of profits/losses Add/less: post acquisition share of gains/losses not in I/S Less: post-acquisition dividends received Less: impairment losses on associate to date
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Equity method
Income statement As Profit for the period x Group % X
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Chapter 12
Cost
$ 27 14 43 29 113
NRV
$ 32 8 55 40 135
Lower
$ 27 8 43 29 107
Issue
Chapter 13
Provisions: obligations
Legal
Constructive
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Contingent liabilities
For a provision we needed: (a) Present obligation (b) Probable outflow (c) Reliable estimate
possible
contingent liability
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Contingent liabilities
contingent liability
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Contingent liabilities
For a provision we needed: (a) Present obligation (b) Probable outflow (c) Reliable estimate
contingent liability
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Contingent assets
Inflow
Virtually certain Probable Possible
Treatment
Recognise Disclose Do nothing
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Chapter 14
Examined 6/08
Amortised cost
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If the shares were held at fair value through profit and loss the gain would be reported in profit or loss. In either case, dividends received on the share are reported as income
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Equity instruments
Illustration
A company issues 100,000 $1 shares when the market price is $2.60 per share. Issue costs of $3,000 are incurred.
The shares are shown at their net proceeds in accordance with IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Presentation, i.e. any issue costs reduce the value recorded for the shares as follows:
DR Cash [(100,000 x $2.60) $3,000] CR Share capital (100,000 x $1) CR Share premium [(100,000 x $1.60) $3,000] or $257,000 $100,000 $157,000
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
Leasing
SP = FV
Rec. any profit or loss immediately
SP < FV
SP > FV
Excess over FV Rec. any profit/ loss defer & amortise immediately unless loss compensated by over period expected to be used future rentals defer & amortise
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
Market price
Bonus issue
Rights issue
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Chapter 19
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Step 1
Read requirements
Step 2
Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Step 6
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Chapter 20
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Accounting policies
Choice of accounting policy can affect the financial statements - such as whether to revalue assets or capitalise interest costs. Change of accounting policy can only be justified on grounds of fairer presentation.
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No two companies have the same risk profile, therefore comparison difficult
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Chapter 21
Examined 6/08
Step 3
Step 4 Step 5 Step 6 Step 7
Transfer figures from statement of comprehensive income (income statement) to face or working
Deal with additional information Finish workings Do additional workings for direct method (if required) Finish statement of cash flows
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$000
$000
Chapter 22
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Chapter 23
Primary aims
Public sector entities Examples: Government departments Health services (if government funded) Education services (publicly funded) Aims To provide service to the public To make good use of taxpayers funds Private sector entities Example: Charities Aims To provide service to beneficiaries To raise funds for this purpose
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Regulatory framework
Public sector
International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSASs), based on IFRS Private sector Regulated nationally eg by Charities Commission in UK.
Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP) 2005. Charities must use accruals basis (unless revenue below 100,000 p.a.) and apply UK standards.
In other countries, requirements will be different.
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Performance measurement
Not judged by bottom line profit but must show that they have managed their funds properly.
Performance measured in terms of achievement of stated purpose.
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