Initially, when acquiring an asset, you account the purchase amount to your PPE ledger and balance sheet. Question is however, from what sum should you start accounting purchases (namely assets and not services obviously) as items of PPE? Continue reading
Category Archives: 1.05 Property, Plant and Equipment
Changing the useful life of an asset
Let us say you’ve determined a useful life for an asset and as it happens, you want to change it.
Generally saying the reasons for changing the useful life is pretty straightforward – an event has triggered the asset to be used for a shorter or a longer period. This event can be a few things: Continue reading
Deciding on a useful life
An asset’s useful life is the period it’s planned to be used – normally longer than 12 months for it to be part of property, plant and equipment.
When you purchase an asset and you’ve initially accounted for it (the asset and the respective liability), there are numerous things you ought to determine for the asset to account for it subsequently. Continue reading
Treating accumulated depreciation when revaluing assets
When revaluing assets, your two options for dealing with current accumulated depreciation are either to eliminate it entirely or restate it proportionately. Let me explain both options with examples detailing the steps.
Elimination
With this option the accumulated depreciation is eliminated against the gross carrying amount of the asset with the net amount restated to equal the revalued amount. To give you an example:
| Before revaluation: |
|
| – cost |
3,000 |
| – accumulated depreciation |
1,000 |
| Net book amount |
2,000 |
|
The asset is revalued to: |
3,500 |
|
After revaluation: |
|
| – cost |
3,000 |
| – gain on revaluation |
500 (a) |
| Asset at revalued amount |
3,500 |
|
Accumulated depreciation |
1,000 |
| Gain on revaluation |
-1,000 (b) |
|
Accumulated depreciation after revaluation
|
0
|
| The gain on revaluation is 1,500 (500 (a) + 1,000(b)) * |
|
* Essentially if you think about it, the net book amount was 2,000 and the revalued amount 3,500. The difference between those two is 1,500 so there’s your gain again found by a shorter method.
Proportional restatement
Accumulated depreciation is restated proportionately with the change in the gross carrying amount of the asset such that the net book value of the asset after revaluation equals its revalued amount. As an example (base details taken from above):
| After revaluation: |
|
| – cost |
3,000 |
| – gain on revaluation |
2,250* (a) |
|
Asset at the revalued amount: |
5,250* |
|
|
|
| – accumulated depreciation |
1,000 |
| – loss (that is, additional depreciation) on revaluation |
750 (b) |
|
Accumulated depreciation after revaluation
|
1,750
|
| The gain on revaluation is 1,500 (2,250 (a) – 750 (b)) |
|
* You essentially have to find indexes (cost value to the net book amount and accumulated depreciation amount to the net book amount) and multiplied by the new revalued amount (In this case it’s 3,000 / 2,000 * 3,500 = 5,250 being the new cost value and as for the gain, you take off the initial cost that was 3,000. This results in gain of 2,250).
** The same as the cost, 1,000 / 2,000 * 3,500 = 1,750.
Revaluation gains – how to treat them on your statements
Initially, when accounting for a revaluation surplus, you take it into equity. It does not affect the income statement up until to the point where the asset was valued downwards in the past in which case the reverse of this decrease is accounted on the income statement just in the amount the decrease was recognized in expenses. For an example, if the initial loss was 10,000 and our current surplus is 15,000, from this 10,000 is recognized on the income statement as gain (reversal of the expense) and the rest (5,000 in this case) is going straight to equity under the line “Revaluation surplus”. Continue reading
List of actions to take if you decided to use revaluation method for your PPE items
Let’s say you’ve initially measured your assets using the depreciation method. This means that the cost of the asset is subsequently expensed showing also the “drop in its value” and in essence what you’ve been doing so far is distribute the expense of the investment over the period it’s being used. Continue reading
An assets, that’s usually a non-current, is going to be sold within next 12 months
Every now and then it happens that you’re going to get rid off one or some of your equipment or machinery. It could be even buildings or rooms that you own which are part of your property. Regardless of what it is exactly, matter of fact is that there comes a time you’re going to sell some of those items. Continue reading