Forums › ACCA Forums › ACCA FA Financial Accounting Forums › Consolidated Financials (Inter-company Transactions)
- This topic has 3 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 8 years ago by John Moffat.
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- February 22, 2016 at 3:58 am #301502
John,
I was doing a practice question on the BPP revision kit, the question was the following: Swing purchased 80% of Cat’s equity on 1 Jan 20X8 for $120,000 when Cat’s retained earnings were $50,000. The fair value of the non-controlling interest on that date was $40,000. During that year, Swing sold goods which cost $80,000 to Cat, at an invoiced cost of $100,000. Cat had 50% of the goods still in inventories at year end.
They then give us the separate financials. I got most of the question right, including the part where I take only 50% of the unrealized profit since they must have sold 50% of the inventory to outsiders. My problem arose when I calculated Trade receivables and payables. In your lecture we adjusted for the inter-company transaction by subtracting both the payables and the receivables by the $ amount of inventory bought/sold respectively. In this example the answer does not adjust for the inter-company transaction, they just simply ignore it and add up trade receivables and payables as we would current assets and liabilities. Is there an exception to the rule that I am not aware of?
Thanks for the help!
February 22, 2016 at 4:24 am #301506We do not subtract inventory from the receivables and payables!
What we subtract is anything still owing from one company to the other, which is nothing to do with whether or not there is any inventory remaining.
The object it is show the total receivables and payables owing from/to outside the group.
If there is nothing owing from one company to the other at the end of the period, then there is no adjustment needed.February 22, 2016 at 4:32 am #301507Yes, I agree, we had subtracted the amount owed from one company to another, we adjusted the inventory by the unrealized profit. In this case, isn’t there still $50,000 owing to Swing that needs to be adjusted for?
February 22, 2016 at 7:48 pm #301596From what you typed originally there is no mention of anything owing from one company to the other.
Just because there is inventory left does not mean that the goods have not been paid for!
In future, if you want me to answer you must ask in the Ask the Tutor Forum – this forum is for students to help each other 🙂
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