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Module 5

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Title: Module 5


1
Module 5
  • Reporting and Analyzing Operating Income

2
Operating and Nonoperating Components in the
Income Statement
3
Revenue Recognition
  • Revenue recognition criteria
  • realized or realizable, and
  • earned
  • Realized or realizable means that the sellers
    net assets (assets less liabilities) increase.
  • Earned means that the seller has performed its
    duties under the terms of the sales agreement.

4
Arguments Against Revenue Recognition
  • Rights of return exist
  • Consignment sales
  • Continuing involvement by seller in product
    resale
  • Contingency sales

5
Pfizers Revenue Recognition Policy
  • Pfizer recognizes its revenues as follows
  • Revenue Recognitionwe record revenue from
    product sales when the goods are shipped and
    title passes to the customer. At the time of
    sale, we also record estimates for a variety of
    sales deductions, such as sales rebates,
    discounts and incentives, and product returns.

6
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7
Oracles Revenue Recognition Policy
8
Risks of Revenue Recognition
  • Case 1 Channel stuffing
  • Case 2 Barter transactions
  • Case 3 Mischaracterizing transactions as
    arms-length
  • Case 4 Pending execution of sales agreements
  • Case 5 Gross versus net revenues
  • Case 6 Sales on consignment
  • Case 7 Failure to take delivery
  • Case 8 Nonrefundable fees

9
Percentage-of-Completion
  • The percentage-of-completion recognizes revenue
    by the proportion of costs incurred to date
    compared with total estimated costs.
  • Assume that Abbott Construction signs a 10
    million contract to construct a building. Abbott
    estimates construction will take two years and
    will cost 7,500,000. This means the contract
    yields an expected gross profit of 2,500,000
    over two years.
  • The following table summarizes construction costs
    incurred each year and the revenue Abbott
    recognizes.

10
Percentage-of-Completion
  • Revenue recognition policies for these types of
    contracts are disclosed in a manner typical to
    the following from the 2005 10-K report footnotes
    of Raytheon Company

11
Johnson Controls Revenue Recognition
Percentage-of-Completion
12
Risks of Percentage-of-Completion
  • The percentage-of-completion method of revenue
    recognition requires an estimate of total costs.
  • If total construction costs are underestimated,
    the percentage-of-completion is overestimated
    (the denominator is too low) and revenue and
    gross profit to date are overstated.
  • This uncertainty adds additional risk to
    financial statement analysis.

13
Recognition of Unearned Revenue
  • Deposits or advance payments are not recorded as
    revenue until the company performs the services
    owed or delivers the goods.
  • Until then, the companys balance sheet shows the
    advance payment as a liability (called unearned
    revenue or deferred revenue) because the company
    is obligated to deliver those products and
    services.

14
Recognition of Unearned Revenue
  • Assume that on January 1 a client pays Pfizer
    360,000 for a guaranteed one year supply of a
    rare medicine.

15
  • Microsoft reports 10.9 billion of unearned
    revenue in 2006. the company describes its
    recognition policy as follows

16
Research and Development (RD) Expenses
  • Expense all RD costs as incurred unless those
    assets have alternative future uses (in other RD
    projects or otherwise).
  • For example, a general research facility housing
    multi-use lab equipment is capitalized and
    depreciated like any other depreciable asset.
  • However, project-directed research buildings and
    equipment with no alternate uses must be expensed.

17
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18
Pfizers RD Accounting Footnote
19
Cisco Systems RD
14 of sales
20
Restructuring Expenses
  • Restructuring costs typically consists of two
    components
  • Employee severance or relocation costs
  • Asset write-downs
  • Accounting standard
  • A company is required to have a formal
    restructuring plan that is approved by its board
    of directors before any restructuring charges are
    accrued.
  • Also, a company must identify the relevant
    employees and notify them of its plan.
  • In each subsequent year, the company must
    disclose in its footnotes the original amount of
    the liability (accrual), how much of that
    liability is settled in the current period (such
    as employee payments), how much of the original
    liability has been reversed because of cost
    overestimation, any new accruals for unforeseen
    costs, and the current balance of the liability.
  • This creates more transparent financial
    statements, which presumably deters earnings
    management.

21
Analysis of Restructuring Costs
  • Asset write-downs - prior periods profits are
    arguably not as high as reported, and the current
    periods profit is not as low.
  • Employee severance or relocation costs -
    overstatements are followed by a reversal of the
    restructuring liability, and understatements are
    followed by further accruals.

22
Hewlett-Packards 2005 Restructuring Plan
  • Of the 1.6 billion of expense recognized in
    2005, 630 million was paid in that year,
    yielding an ending balance of approx. 1 billion.
  • In fiscal year 2006, H-P paid out an additional
    747 million.

23
Income Tax Expenses
  • Companies maintain two sets of accounting
    records, one for preparing financial statements
    for external constituents, including current and
    prospective shareholders, and another for
    reporting to tax authorities.
  • Two sets of accounting records are necessary
    because the U.S. tax code is different from GAAP.

24
Income Tax Expenses
Assume the following facts
25
Year 1
Year 2
26
Year 3
27
Deferred Tax Liabilities and Assets
  • Deferred tax liabilities arise when the net book
    value of liabilities is less for financial
    reporting than for tax reporting, or when the net
    book value of assets is greater for financial
    reporting than for tax reporting.
  • Deferred tax assets arise when the net book value
    of liabilities is greater for financial reporting
    than for tax reporting, or when the net book
    value of assets is smaller for financial
    reporting than for tax reporting.

28
Loss Carryforwards
  • When a company reports a loss for tax purposes,
    it can carry back that loss for up to two years
    to recoup previous taxes paid.
  • Any unused losses can be carried forward for up
    to twenty years to reduce future taxes.
  • This creates a benefit (an asset) on the tax
    reporting books for which there is no
    corresponding financial reporting asset and thus
    the company records a deferred tax asset.

29
Valuation Allowance
  • Companies are required to establish a deferred
    tax valuation allowance for deferred tax assets
    when the future realization of their benefits is
    uncertain.
  • The effect on financial statements is to reduce
    reported assets, increase tax expense, and reduce
    equity.
  • These effects are reversed if the allowance is
    reversed in the future when realization of these
    tax benefits becomes more likely.

30
Income Tax Footnotes
  • Income tax expense reported in its income
    statement (called the provision) consists of the
    following two components (organized by federal,
    state and foreign)
  • Current tax expense - the amount payable (in
    cash) to tax authorities
  • Deferred tax expense - the effect on tax expense
    from changes in deferred tax liabilities and
    deferred tax assets.

31
Pfizers Income Tax Footnote
32
Pfizers Deferred Tax Footnote
33
Another Illustration
NOTE While Black Decker has an overall 2005
net deferred tax asset of 116.2 million, that
amount is composed of tax assets and liabilities
arising from a variety of tax reporting/financial
reporting differences.
34
Reconciliation of Statutory and Effective Tax
Rates - Pfizer
35
Reconciliation of Statutory and Effective Tax
Rates Dell, Inc.
Notice the fluctuation in effective tax rate from
21.9 to 31.5 in the past two years.
36
Operating Income Below the Line
  • Two categories of items are presented
    below-the-line
  • Discontinued operations Net income (loss) from
    business segments that have been or will be sold,
    and any gains (losses) on net assets related to
    those segments sold in the current period.
  • Extraordinary items Gains or losses from events
    that are both unusual and infrequent.

37
Black Decker Discontinued Operations
38
Raytheon Discontinued Operations
39
Raytheon Discontinued Operations
Note other DOs reported a net loss of 5M,
yielding the 176 net income reported in the
income statement.
40
Extraordinary Items
  • The following items are generally not reported as
    extraordinary items
  • Gains and losses on retirement of debt
  • Write-down or write-off of operating or
    nonoperating assets
  • Foreign currency gains and losses
  • Gains and losses from disposal of specific assets
    or business segment
  • Effects of a strike
  • Accrual adjustments related to long-term
    contracts
  • Costs of a takeover defense
  • Costs incurred as a result of the September 11,
    2001, events

41
Earnings Per Share
42
Symantecs EPS Footnote
43
Apples EPS Footnote
44
Foreign Currency Translation
  • A change in the strength of the US vis-à-vis
    foreign currencies affects reported income in the
    following manner changes in foreign currency
    exchange rates have a direct effect on the US
    equivalent for revenues, expenses, and income of
    the foreign subsidiary because revenues and
    expenses are translated at the average exchange
    rate for the period.

45
Pfizers Foreign Currency Translation Footnote
  • The US weakened against many foreign currencies
    for several years preceding and including 2005.
  • Thus, each unit of foreign currency purchased
    more US. Therefore, revenues and expenses
    denominated in foreign currencies were translated
    to higher US equivalents, yielding increased
    revenues and profits even when unit volumes
    remained unchanged.

46
BMYs Foreign Currency Translation
47
BMYs FC Translation Solution
  • The 233 million foreign currency translation
    adjustment is a positive amount that reduces the
    negative cumulative foreign currency translation
    adjustment. As a result, stockholders equity
    increases by 233 million.
  • The translation adjustment is related to the
    conversion of balance sheets denominated in
    foreign currencies into US. For solvent
    companies, assets exceed liabilities. Therefore,
    a positive foreign currency translation
    adjustment would be consistent with a weakening
    of the US. As foreign currencies strengthen
    vis-à-vis the US, the US value of assets
    denominated in those currencies increases as does
    the value of liabilities. And, since assets
    exceed liabilities for solvent companies, the
    asset adjustment exceeds the liability
    adjustment, yielding a positive foreign currency
    translation adjustment.
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