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- September 26, 2018 at 10:49 am #475780
A CO acquired a 60% holding in B Limited on 1 July 20X6. At this date, A gave B a $500,000 8% loan. The interest on the loan has been accounted for correctly in the individual financial statements. The following totals for finance costs for the year to 31 December 20X6 in the individual financial statements are shown below.
A CO $200,000
B CO $70,000
What are consolidated finance costs for the year to 31 December 20X6?
A $215,000
B $225,000
C $230,000
D $250,0001. The answer is B
2. My working is as follows.
$200,000+(70,000*6/12)=235,000. We then remove interest income( A co) and finance cost of $20000(B co) which gives us a consolidated figure of $235000.3. Please locate where I am getting things wrong
September 26, 2018 at 8:11 pm #475808Hi,
This is a tricky one and the key is that the intra-company interest needs to be removed from the subsidiary before the finance cost is pro-rated.
The intra-company interest is $20,000 for the 6 months to December 20X6 (8% x $500,000 x 6/12).
We then deduct this from the $70,000 to give $50,000 which is external to the group and will have been accrued over the year. We can now pro-rate this for the 6 months to give $25,000.
This is then added to the $200,000 to give the $225,000.
Thanks
September 30, 2018 at 6:01 pm #476036“We can now pro-rate this for the 6 months to give $25,000.”
I’ve not understood this part. Could you re explain it?
Thanks
October 3, 2018 at 5:47 pm #476278Hi,
July to December is 6 months, to pro-rate it we take 6/12ths of the $50,000, as the cost has accrued over the year and we only want the amount since the date of acquisition.
Thanks
October 25, 2018 at 7:08 am #479724Hello Chris,
Thank you for your answer.
1.If we pro-rate the $70,00, it will be $35,000 for the first 6 months and $35,000 for the last
6 month( july-Dec)2.If we pro-rate the finance cost, we would obtain $20,000(8% x $500,000 x 6/12).
3. Now if we consolidate the figures we would obtain $200000+35000-20000=$215000
The working I’ve done above is wrong but could you please locate where I am getting thing wrong?
October 28, 2018 at 7:45 am #480003Hi,
You need to do your step #2 first. You then deduct this from the $70,000 and finally pro-rate, before adding to the $200,000.
Thanks
December 3, 2019 at 11:52 am #554626thank you
December 3, 2019 at 9:40 pm #554769You’re welcome!
July 3, 2020 at 2:26 am #575782I understand that A gave B a loan, so finance cost for the loan is paid to B by A, I think it should be removed from finance cost of A? could you please help me understand more?
July 11, 2020 at 9:16 am #576546If the cost is paid by B to A then the cost is removed from B’s accounts and the income removed from A’s accounts.
Thanks
May 30, 2024 at 8:48 am #706240A-200,000
B-35,000
Intra finance -(20,000)
And my answer is 215,000
Can you explain how to get the answerJune 1, 2024 at 11:01 am #706378I think that you’ve got the answer correct.
July 29, 2024 at 12:56 pm #708951i have a doubt that as per the rule we nullify the common interest income and interest expense.. so in this question common interest exp and income was $20000. so why are we only deducting this from subsidiary’s finance cost and the apportioning it? should it not be that we just do like this
i.e $200000+$35000(70000*6/12)-$20000 (intra group interest)= $215000.. please could you just tell where exactly is my logic going wrong ?? and help me out with it?Thanks
August 9, 2024 at 9:08 pm #709373You need to get the individual accounts correct first before then making the consolidation adjustments. In you calculations it doesn’t look like you’ve adjusted the individual accounts correctly first.
Thanks
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