Module10
Module10
STATEMENT
ANALYSIS &
VALUATION
Peter Easton
7eMcAnally
Mary Lea
Steve Crawford
Greg Sommers
Module 10
Analyzing Leases, Pensions, and Taxes
Total expense over the lifetime of the lease equals the total remaining
lease payments plus total amortization of any up-front costs
Assume a company
Executes a five-year lease requiring annual payments of $22,463
Pays $5,000 of initial direct costs prior to commencing the lease
The income statement will reflect the total lease cost of $117,314
differently for operating and finance leases
Operating lease Lease expense of $23,463 ($117,314 / 5 years) is
recognized each period as rent expense
Finance lease Lease expense includes interest on the lease liability
plus straight-line amortization of the right-of-use asset
For year 1: lease expense $100,000 × 4% + $105,000/5 = $25,000
Amortization of the right-of-use asset is included in income from operations (similar to
depreciation expense relating to PPE assets)
Interest expense will be reported after operating income
Operating profit will be higher than by the amount of interest expense recognized as
nonoperating
© Cambridge Business Publishers 15
Lease Income Statement Reporting: Microsoft
2. Defined benefit plan This plan requires the company make periodic
payments to a third party, which then makes payments to an employee
after retirement
Payments usually based on years of service and employee’s salary
The company may or may not set aside sufficient funds to cover these obligations
(federal law sets minimum funding requirements)
As a result, defined benefit plans can be over- or underfunded
All pension investments are retained by the third party until paid to employees
In the event of bankruptcy, employees have the standing of a general creditor, but
usually have additional protection in the form of government pension benefit
insurance
The amount of the liability is certain, and the company’s obligation is fully
satisfied once payment has been made
The company uses these assumptions to estimate the amount that will be
paid to employees from retirement until the end of their lives
This amount is discounted (at an assumed rate called the “settlement
rate”) to yield the present value of the future pension benefits to be paid
© Cambridge Business Publishers 26
Defined Benefit Plans on the Balance Sheet
On the balance sheet companies report the funded status for pension and
other post-employment obligations
Funded Status = Projected benefit obligation − Pension plan
assets
Pension plan assets This is an investment portfolio with debt and
equity securities
The portfolio provides a return that will fund future payments to retirees
Each period the investment account increases with investment income (interest,
dividends, and gains) and as the company contributes additional cash to the portfolio
The investment account decreases with investment losses and as cash is paid to
retirees
© Cambridge Business Publishers 27
Defined Benefit Plans on the Balance Sheet
Projected benefit obligation (PBO) This represents the present value
of the company’s estimated future payments to retirees
A company must estimate required future payments
Following factors make it difficult to project future payments (companies
hire actuarial advisors to do this)
Payments often do not occur for many decades into the future
Number of eligible employees is uncertain
Employees’ longevity with the company is unknown
Payments depend on employees’ final salary levels, which must be estimated
Employees and analysts are keenly interested in the likelihood that the
company will be able to pay its pension obligations
This negative funded status is cause for some concern
© Cambridge Business Publishers 30
Sufficiency of Plan Assets
Funded status is not the only measure we can use to assess the
company’s ability to pay its pension obligations
Companies provide a schedule of expected benefit payments for the
next five years and for the five-year period thereafter
The bottom line is that the cash for benefit payments must come from
the pension plan assets
Either the plan assets must generate sufficient returns to fund
benefit payments, or the company must make additional contributions
to the pension plan assets
Severely underfunded plans might not have sufficient assets to cover
the projected payments to retirees
In this case, the company might need to use operating cash flow, or
worse, borrow to cover its pension benefit obligations
Service cost
Pension benefits based on years of service and salary levels at retirement
As employees work another year, their cumulative years of service increase as does
their salary level―this increases the benefits due to them at retirement
Funded status increases and the related expense is called service cost since it relates
to the service provided to the company by employees that year
Interest cost
The PBO is computed as the present value of the expected benefit payments
Each year, the liability increases by the interest accrued on the PBO liability, computed
using the discount rate―this expense is called interest cost
Investment returns
If a pension investment portfolio generates a positive investment return, plan assets
increase and the funded status liability decreases―this creates income (reduces
expense)
If the pension investment portfolio reports a loss, plan assets decrease and the funded
status liability increases, resulting in additional pension expense
Actuarial adjustments
Computing PBO requires estimates about future payments, pension investment
portfolio returns, and discount rates
Companies can, and often do, change these estimates, which affects the PBO and
the funded status
Wage inflation If a company increases its inflation assumption, estimated salaries at
retirement will be higher and the pension liability increases, resulting in higher expense
Years of benefit payments If the company assumes a longer period for benefit payments
to retirees, the pension liability increases, resulting in higher expense
Discount rate While a higher discount rate reduces the present value of the PBO, the annual
interest cost is at a higher rate but accrued on a lower PBO. The net effect on the pension
liability is, therefore, indeterminate.
Investment returns Investment returns on plan assets offset pension expense. So as
investment returns increase, pension expense decreases
We see that benefits are paid from the pension plan assets, and the
payments reduce both the plan assets and the PBO liability
1. To what extent will the company’s pension plans compete with investing
and financing needs for the available cash flows?
Federal law (Employee Retirement Income Security Act) sets minimum standards
for pension contributions
If investment returns are insufficient, companies must make up the shortfall
that compete for available operating cash flows with other investing and financing
activities
Companies might need to postpone capital investment
Analysts must be aware of funding requirements when projecting future cash flows
At the end of Year 1, the company knows that additional tax must be paid in
Year 2 because the financial reporting and tax reporting depreciation
schedules are set when the asset is placed in service
Given these known amounts, the company accrues the deferred tax
liability in Year 1 in the same manner as it would accrue any estimated
future liability
©Cambridge Business Publishers 55
Illustration of Deferred Tax Liabilities
At the end of Year 2, the additional income tax is paid and the company’s
deferred tax liability is now satisfied
Deferred tax assets arise when the tax payment is greater than the tax
expense for financial reporting purposes
For example, restructuring accruals create deferred tax assets
In the year a company approves a reorganization plan, it records restructuring
expense and accrues a restructuring liability to cover future severance payments and
asset write-downs
For tax purposes, restructuring costs are not deductible until paid in cash and
losses on asset value are not deductible until the assets are sold
The timing difference between the GAAP expense and the tax
deduction permitted by the IRC creates a deferred tax asset
Occurs when net operating loss carryforwards (NOLs) expire before they can be used to
offset other profits
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2022
Current tax expense from company’s tax returns―must be paid (in cash) or
installments during the year―remaining balance is included as a current
liability
Deferred tax expense is the effect on tax expense from changes in deferred
tax liabilities and deferred tax assets
©Cambridge Business Publishers 66
Disclosures for Income Taxes
Companies required to reconcile the difference between the U.S. corporate
tax rate and the company’s effective tax rate (Tax expense/Pretax income)
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2022