1 / 25

CHAPTER 8

CHAPTER 8. MEASURING ACCOUNTING EXPOSURE. CHAPTER OVERVIEW. I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE II. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS III. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 8. CHAPTER OVERVIEW (con’t). IV. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL

stu
Télécharger la présentation

CHAPTER 8

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER 8 MEASURING ACCOUNTING EXPOSURE

  2. CHAPTER OVERVIEW I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE II. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS III. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 8

  3. CHAPTER OVERVIEW (con’t) IV. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO.52 V. TRANSACTION EXPOSURE VI. ACCOUNTING PRACTICE AND ECONOMIC REALITY

  4. PART I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE A. Three Types of Exposure 1. Accounting Exposure: when reporting and consolidating financial statements requires conversion from foreign to local currency.

  5. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE 2. Transaction Exposure: occurs from changes in the value of foreign currency contracts as a result of exchange rate changes.

  6. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE 3. Operating Exposure arises because exchange rate changes alter the value of future revenues and costs.

  7. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE Economic Exposure = Transaction + Operating Exposures

  8. PART II. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS I. FOUR METHODS OF TRANSLATION A. Current/Noncurrent Method 1. Current accounts use current exchange rate for conversion. 2. Income statement accounts use average exchange rate for the period.

  9. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS B. Monetary/Nonmonetary Method 1. Monetary accounts use current rate 2. Pertains to - cash - accounts receivable - accounts payable - long term debt

  10. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS 3. Nonmonetary accounts - use historical rates - Pertains to inventory fixed assets long term investments 4. Income statement accounts - use average exchange rate for the period.

  11. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS C. Temporal Method 1. Similar to monetary/nonmonetary method. 2. Use current method for inventory.

  12. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS D. Current Rate Method all statements use current exchange rate for conversions.

  13. PART III. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 8 I. FASB NO. 8 A. Uniform conversion rules established B. Temporal method utilized C. Translation gains or losses 1. Reported on income statement 2. Result: net income greatly affected by exchange rate volatility.

  14. PART IV. STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52 I. FASB NO. 52 A. Dissatisfaction with FASB No. 8 true profitability often disguised by exchange rate volatility. B. Balance sheet translation uses current rate method.

  15. STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52 C. Income statement uses 1. Weighted average rate during period or 2. The rate in effect when revenue and expenses incurred.

  16. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52 D. Translation Gains or Losses 1. Recorded in separate equity account on balance sheet. 2. Known as cumulative translation adjustment account.

  17. STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52 E. New Distinction under FASB No. 52: functional v. reporting currency 1. Functional currency for foreign subsidiary = the currency used in the primary economic environment in which it operates.

  18. STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52 2. Reporting currency the currency the parent firm uses to prepare its financial statements.

  19. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52 3. If foreign subsidiary’s operations are direct extension of parent firm e.g. Hong Kong assembly plant which sells all its products in the U.S. market.

  20. PART V.TRANSACTION EXPOSURE I. WHEN DOES IT OCCUR? A. From the time of agreement to time of payment. B. Arises from possibility of exchange rate gains and losses from the transaction.

  21. TRANSACTION EXPOSURE II. MEASUREMENT A. Currency by currency B. Equals the difference between 1. The contractually-fixed invoice amount in a specific currency 2. The final payment amount denominated in current exchange rate for the specific currency.

  22. PART VI. ACCOUNTING PRACTICE AND ECONOMIC REALITY I. Accounting v. Economic Exposure measurement of exchange rate risk indicates major difference exists. A. Accounting exposure reflects past decisions of the firm.

  23. ACCOUNTING PRACTICE AND ECONOMIC REALITY B. Economic exposure 1. Focuses on future impact of exchange rate changes. 2. Not all future cash flows appear on the firm’s balance sheet.

  24. ACCOUNTING PRACTICE AND ECONOMIC REALITY II. Recommendations for International Business Executives A. There is no relationship between 1. Information from historical accounting techniques, and 2. The firm’s actual operating results.

  25. ACCOUNTING PRACTICE AND ECONOMIC REALITY B. Chief executives should: base management decisions on the economic effects of exchange rate change.

More Related