Topic 4 Plant and Intangible Assets
Topic 4 Plant and Intangible Assets
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Learning resources
Williams, Bettner, Carcello, Financial and
managerial accounting – The basis for
business decision (19th edition), McGraw-
Hill, 2021, Chapter 9
End of chapter self-test questions, exercies,
discussion questions, problems...
Other resources:
◦ Other accounting textbooks
◦ Online English dictionaries
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Learning Objectives
Determine the cost of plant assets.
Distinguish between capital expenditures and revenue
expenditures.
Compute depreciation by the straight-line and
declining-balance methods.
Account for depreciation using methods other than
straight-line or declining-balance.
Account for the disposal of plant assets.
Explain the nature of intangible assets, including
goodwill.
Account for the depletion of natural resources.
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Asset
Cost = price
+
Reasonable and
necessary costs . . .
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Special Considerations
Improvements to land
such as driveways,
Land
Improvements
fences, parking lots, and
landscaping are recorded
separately.
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Special Considerations
Costs incurred for
remodeling prior to the
Buildings building being put in use
are considered part of the
building’s cost.
Related interest,
insurance, and property
Equipment taxes are treated as
expenses of the current
period.
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Special Considerations
The allocation
The total cost is based on
must be the relative
allocated to Fair Market
separate Value of each
accounts for asset
each asset. purchased.
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Depreciation
The allocation of the cost of a plant asset
to expense in the periods in which
services are received from the asset.
Balance Sheet
Purchase
Assets:
cost as
Plant and
assets equipment
purchased
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Depreciation
Book Value
Cost – Accumulated Depreciation
Depreciation
Contra-asset
Represents the portion of an asset’s cost that
has already been allocated to expense.
Causes of Depreciation
Physical deterioration
Obsolescence
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Straight-Line Depreciation
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Straight-Line Depreciation
On January 2, S&G Wholesale Grocery buys a
new delivery truck. The truck cost $17,000, has
an estimated residual value of $2,000, and an
estimated useful life of 5 years.
Compute annual depreciation using the
straight-line method.
Straight-Line Depreciation
S&G will record $3,000 depreciation each year for five
years. Total depreciation over the estimated useful life
of the equipment is:
Salvage Value
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Half-Year Convention
Using the half-year convention, assume that an
insurance company purchases hundreds of desktop
computers throughout the current year at a total
cost of $600,000. The company depreciates these
computers by the straight-line method, assuming a
three-year life and no residual value.
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Declining-Balance Method
Depreciation in the early years of an asset’s
estimated useful life is higher than in later years.
Accelerated
Depreciation Remaining
= × Depreciation
Expense Book Value
Rate
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Declining-Balance Method
On January 2nd , S&G buys a new delivery
truck paying $17,000 cash. The truck has an
estimated residual value of $2,000 and an
estimated useful life of 5 years.
Compute depreciation for the first year using
the double-declining balance method.
Declining-Balance Method
Total depreciation over the estimated
useful life of an asset is the same using
either the straight-line method or the
declining-balance method.
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Predicted Predicted
salvage value useful life
So depreciation
is an estimate.
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Units-of-Output: Example
Consider Marpole Company’s delivery truck, which cost $35,000
and has an estimated salvage value of $5,000. Assume that Marpole’s
management plans to retire this truck after it has been driven
60,000 miles. The depreciation rate per mile of operation is 50 cents,
computed as follows.
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KEY POINT
This method provides an excellent matching of expense with revenue
when the total units of output can be determined with reasonable
accuracy. This method is used only for assets such as vehicles and
certain types of machinery whose use can be measured in miles,
machine hours, or some other measure of use.
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Intangible Assets
Noncurrent assets Often provide
without physical exclusive rights
substance. or privileges.
Characteristics
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Intangible Assets
Record at
current cash Patents
equivalent cost, Copyrights
including Leaseholds
purchase price, Leasehold
legal fees, and Improvements
filing fees. Goodwill
Trademarks and
Trade Names
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Amortization
• Amortization is the systematic write-off to
expense of the cost of intangible assets over their
useful life or legal life, whichever is shorter.
• Amortization of an intangible asset is essentially
the same as depreciation for a tangible asset.
• Use the straight-line method to amortize most
intangible assets.
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Goodwill
Occurs when one Only purchased
company buys goodwill is an
another company. intangible asset.
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Patents
Exclusive right granted
by federal government to sell or
manufacture an invention.
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Purchased
Internally trademarks
developed are recorded
trademarks at cost, and
have no amortized over
recorded shorter of legal
asset cost. or economic life.
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Franchises
Legally protected right to sell products
or provide services purchased by
franchisee from franchisor.
Copyrights
Exclusive right granted by the
federal government to protect
artistic or intellectual properties.
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Natural Resources
Total cost,
Extracted from
including
the natural
exploration and
environment
development,
and reported
is charged to
at cost less
depletion expense
accumulated
over periods
depletion.
benefited.
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Depletion: Example
Rainbow Minerals pays $48 million to acquire the Red Valley Mine,
which is believed to contain 5 million tons of coal. The residual value
of the mine after all of the coal is removed is estimated to be $8
million. The depletion that will occur over the life of the mine is the
original cost minus the residual value, or $40 million. This depletion
will occur at the rate of $8 per ton ($40 million ÷ 5 million tons) as
the coal is removed from the mine. If we assume that 2 million tons
are mined during the first year of operations, the entry to record the
depletion of the mine would be as follows.
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Depreciation is a
non-cash charge to
income and has no
effect on cash flows.
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