ACCOUNTING VALUATION

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ACCOUNTING VALUATION

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Title: ACCOUNTING VALUATION


1
ACCOUNTING VALUATION
  • University Lecturer
  • MARIAN COVLEA
  • PhD Candidate in
  • Financial Management
  • May 14, 2007

2
Kind Requests!
  • It will not be easy, so please pay your full
    attention to the presentation!
  • Please turn your cell phones on Silent or Mute
    mode
  • You can ask anything, anytime!
  • Thank you in advance!

3
Kind Advice!
  • You can divide your sheets of note-paper
  • into two vertical halves (columns)
  • The left column for slide contents
  • The right column for additional comments,
    explanations, examples, synonyms, etc.
  • 2. Be attentive rather than writing
    word-by-word, these slides are available for free
    at http//www.ucdc.info/cd/cd_profil.php?cid1064

4
WHAT IS VALUATION? (1)
  • Valuation is a highly educated mental process
    aiming to (having as purpose)
  • Setting a value (or a monetary level) on a
    certain element (asset, liability, equity,
    company, business)
  • The act of appraisal
  • The estimation or acknowledgement of the worth of
    something

5
WHAT IS VALUATION? (2)
  • Valuation is the process of estimating the market
    value of a financial asset or liability.
    Valuations can be done on assets (for example,
    investments in marketable securities such as
    stocks, options, business enterprises, or
    intangible assets such as patents, trademarks,
    know-how, software, databases, and goodwill) or
    on liabilities (e.g., bonds issued by a company).
    Valuations are required in many contexts
    including investment analysis, capital budgeting,
    merger and acquisition transactions, financial
    reporting, taxable events to determine the proper
    tax liability, and in litigation.

6
WHAT IS VALUATION? (3)
  • Valuation is a technique of the
  • Financial Accounting Method
  • Accounting Valuation
  • is preceeded by
  • (Business) Analysis and Diagnosis
  • of the element to be valued

7
What is Value? (1) Value in Economy
  • Here are some meanings of Value in Economy
  • Relative worth or importance
  • Monetary or material worth, as in commerce
  • The worth of something in terms of some medium of
    exchange
  • Equivalent worth in money, material or service
  • Estimated or assigned worth

8
What is Value? (2)Value in Accounting
  • Value is a complex notion, including
  • Intrinsic Value
  • reflects the objective, hard, visible, tangible,
    concrete, verifiable part of an asset, a
    liability, a business or a company.
  • inspires and generates patrimonial valuation
    methods, based on costs of incorporated factors
    (labour, energy, materials and information) in
    the element to be valued.

9
What is Value? (3) Value in Accounting
  • Utility Value
  • represents the extension of users want/need
    fulfillment and satisfaction, it is highly
    subjective.
  • reflects the subjective, soft, invisible, hardly
    verifiable or provable part of an asset, a
    liability, a business or a company.
  • generates non-patrimonial valuation methods, such
    as Discounted Cash Flow.

10
What is Value? (4)
  • The Market Value (as a form of Fair Value)
    reconciles the two types of value
  • CONCLUSION
  • Value and Valuation
  • are core subjects and major concerns in
    Accounting

11
What is Valuable?
  • Having considerable monetary worth
  • Of considerable use or importance
  • Having qualities worthy of esteem

12
Scopes (Purposes) of Valuation
  • Accounting evidence and reporting (A True and
    Fair View on Patrimony)
  • Taxation of Properties
  • Mergers and Acquisitions of companies
  • Sale/Purchase of a Business or parts of it
  • Association / Partnership Contracts (Deeds)
  • Stock Exchange Listing and Transactions
  • Litigations

13
What do we valuate? (1)
  • We valuate everything a company owns or owes, and
    the company as a whole
  • Assets (tangible and intangible, fixed and
    current, investments, rights, receivables)
  • Liabilities (debts, payables, obligations, loans)
  • Equity (owners shares or capital)
  • Income (revenue, gains/profits/benefits)

14
What do we valuate? (2)
  • Expenses, costs
  • Securities (stocks/shares, bonds, derivatives -
    options, futures)
  • Businesses
  • Companies
  • Activities
  • Advertising campaigns, etc.

15
The Necessity of Accounting Valuation
  • According to IAS/IFRS Framework, a financial
    statement element (assets, liabilities, equity,
    income, expenses) should be recognized in the
    financial statements only if
  • It is probable that any future economic benefit
    associated with the item will flow to or from the
    entity and
  • The item has a cost or value that can be measured
    with reliability.

16
Valuation and Accounting Policies (1)
  • Accounting policies are the specific principles,
    bases, conventions, rules and practices adopted
    by an entreprise in preparing and presenting
    financial statements.
  • Accounting policies should be chosen in order to
    comply with IASs and IFRSs.

17
Valuation and Accounting Policies (2)
  • Accounting policies should be developed so that
    information provided by the financial statements
    is
  • Relevant for the decision-making needs of users
  • Reliable neutral (free from bias), prudent,
    complete in all material aspects, reflect the
    economic substance of events and transactions and
    not merely their legal form, and offer a True
    and Fair View on patrimony, financial results
    and financial position of the company.

18
Valuation and Accounting Principles (Conventions)
  • Prudence for reasons of prudence, between book
    value and present value, the least of the two
    will be selected
  • Adequacy valuation methods should be adequate to
    (consistent with) the nature of the valuated
    element

19
BUSINESS VALUATION
  • BUSINESS VALUATION (Evaluare economico-financiar
    a) includes
  • Accounting Valuation
  • To valuate a evalua dpdv economic si contabil
  • Valuation (process) (procesul de) evaluare
  • Valuer evaluator

20
Synonyms for Valuation (1)
  • To appraise a evalua, a determina valoarea
    economica, monetara, etc.
  • Apparaisal evaluare in economie
  • Appraiser pretuitor, evaluator
  • American Society of Appraisers

21
Synonyms for Valuation (2)
  • To assess a aprecia, a estima oficial valoarea
    unei proprietati in scop de impozitare
  • Assessment estimare oficiala
  • Assessor persoana care face evaluari de
    proprietati in scop de impozitare
  • Scottish Assessors Association

22
Synonyms for Valuation (3)
  • To estimate a estima, a aproxima,
  • a evalua global
  • Estimation estimare, aproximare

23
Synonyms for Valuation (4)
  • To evaluate a evalua acte, probe in justitie,
    situatii, etc.
  • Evaluator evaluator de acte, probe in justitie,
    situatii, etc.
  • World Evaluation Service
  • for academic documents

24
Synonyms for Valuation (5)
  • To approximate a aproxima
  • Approximation aproximare

25
Synonyms for Valuation (6)
  • To survey a analiza in amanunt, a inspecta, a
    expertiza, a evalua (o proprietate)
  • Surveyor inspector evaluator
  • The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors

26
Synonyms for Valuation (7)
  • To valorize to maintain the value or the price
    (of a commodity), especially by subsidies or the
    governments purchase at a fixed price.
  • Valo(u)r boldness or determination in facing
    danger worth.
  • Valorous to be worth.

27
Synonyms for Valuation (8)
  • Pricing is the manual or automatic process of
    applying prices to purchase and sales orders,
    based on factors such as a fixed amount,
    quantity break, promotion or sales campaign,
    specific vendor quote, price prevailing on entry,
    shipment or invoice date, combination of multiple
    orders or lines, and many others. Automated
    systems require more setup and maintenance but
    may prevent pricing errors.

28
Synonyms for Valuation (8)
  • Pricing is one of the four ps of the marketing
    mix. The other three aspects are Product,
    Promotion and Place. It is also a key variable in
    microeconomic price allocation theory. Price is
    the only revenue generating element amongst the
    4ps,the rest being cost centers.

29
ACCOUNTING VALUATION
  • Norms, Regulations and Good Practice (1)
  • International Accounting Standards (IAS), issued
    by International Accounting Standards Committee
    (IASC) until April 2001
  • International Financial Reporting Standards
    (IFRS), issued by International Accounting
    Standards Board (IASB) after April 2001

30
ACCOUNTING VALUATION
  • Norms, Regulations and Good Practice (2)
  • International Valuation Standards (IVS),
    including Guidelines, issued by International
    Valuation Committee
  • Best Practices (including Professional Ethics and
    Deontology) created and developed by big
    international consultancy companies (Big Four,
    etc.) and promoted by professional bodies as
    Guidelines and Codes

31
ACCOUNTING VALUATION
  • Norms, Regulations and Good Practice (3)
  • Tradition (Rules of Thumb), especially in Great
    Britain, United States, Germany and France
  • On this subject, an article is posted and can
    be downloaded for free from
  • http//www.ucdc.info/cd/cd_profil.php?cid1064
  • as Metodele rapide de evaluare
  • OMFP nr. 1.752/2005 (Monitorul Oficial nr. 1.080
    / 30.11.2005), completed and updated

32
Romanian Professional Bodies in Valuation
  • Asociatia Nationala a Evaluatorilor din Romania
    (ANEVAR)
  • Corpul Expertilor Contabili si Contabililor
    Autorizati din Romania (CECCAR)
  • These professional bodies issue technical norms
    for valuation and promote good practices, ethics
    and deontology

33
Bases for Accounting Valuation - Types of Value
(1)
  • Historical cost or book value purchase or
    production cost plus other expenses (freight,
    installation, provision, non-deductible taxes)
  • Current (present, actual) cost updated, nowadays
    historical cost less depreciation or amortization
  • Net realizable (settlement) value sale price
    less sale expenses
  • Present (market) value, a variety of Fair Value

34
Bases for Accounting Valuation - Types of Value
(2) Fair Value
  • Whenever possible, financial statement elements
    should be valuated at a Fair Value. Market Value
    is the most desirable variety of Fair Value
  • Fair value, also called fair price, is a concept
    used in finance and economics, defined as a
    rational and unbiased estimate of the potential
    market price of a good, service, or asset, taking
    into account such factors as
  • 1. Relative scarcity
  • 2. Perceived utility (economist's term for
    subjective value based on personal needs)
  • 3. Potential risk/return characteristics (i.e.,
    for a tradable asset)
  • 4. Replacement costs, or costs of close
    substitutes
  • 5. Production/distribution costs, including a
    cost of capital

35
Bases for Accounting Valuation - Types of Value
(3) Active Market
  • Market Value is the most desirable variety of
    Fair Value.
  • Market Value is accepted only if all Active
    Market conditions exist
  • The items traded in the market are homogeneous
  • Willing buyers and sellers can normally be found
    at any time and
  • Prices are available to the public.

36
Bases for Accounting Valuation - Types of Value
(4) Market Value
  • Market value is the estimated amount for which a
    property should exchange on the date of valuation
    between a willing buyer and a willing seller in
    an arms-length transaction after proper
    marketing wherein the parties had each acted
    knowledgeably, prudently, and without compulsion.

37
Bases for Accounting Valuation - Types of Value
(5) Value Added
  • Value added difference, at each stage of
    production and trade, between the price of final
    product and the cost of all factors purchased to
    make the product. Value added includes wages,
    amortization, interest, provisions, taxes and
    fees, profit.

38
Value/Cost of Inventories as Input (1)
  • Cost of inventories comprise
  • Purchase costs, such as the purchase price
    (including transportation fee) and import charges
  • Cost of conversion direct labour and production
    overheads including variable overheads and fixed
    overheads allocated at normal production capacity
  • Other costs, such as design and borrowing costs

39
Value/Cost of Inventories as Input (2)
  • The cost of inventories exclude
  • Abnormal amounts of wasted materials, labour and
    overheads
  • Storage costs, unless they are necessary prior to
    a further production process
  • Administrative overheads
  • Selling costs

40
Value/Cost of Inventories as Output (1)
  • The cost of inventories that are not ordinarily
    interchangeable and those produced and segregated
    for specific projects are assigned by specific
    identification of their individual costs
  • The cost of other inventories is assigned by
    using either of the following cost formulas
  • Weighted Average Cost
  • FIFO First In First Out
  • LIFO Last In First Out

41
Value/Cost of Inventories as Output (2)
  • The following techniques can be used to measure
    the cost of inventories if the results better
    approximate cost
  • Standard Cost
  • Normal levels of materials, labour and actual
    capacity should be taken into account
  • The standard cost should be reviewed regularly in
    order to ensure that it properly approximates
    actual costs.

42
Value/Cost of Inventories as Output (3)
  • Retail Method
  • 1. Sales value should be reduced by gross margin
    to calculate cost.
  • 2. Average percentage should be used for each
    homogeneous group of items.
  • 3. Marked-down prices should be taken into
    consideration.

43
Value/Cost of Inventories as Output (4)
  • Net Realisation Value (NRV) is the estimated sale
    price less the estimated cost of completion and
    costs necessary to make the sale. These estimates
    are based on the most reliable evidence at the
    time the estimations are made.

44
Valuation of Goodwill (1)
  • Post-factum Net Acquisition Value (book value,
    recognised by the market Market Value)
  • Aquisition Price of Company
  • less
  • Value of Identifiable Assets
  • Ante-factum (income capitalisation approach)
    Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) used only for sale of
    the business or forecasting purposes, not for
    bookkeeping.

45
Valuation of Goodwill (2)
  • Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Method is derived from
    the future value formula for calculating the time
    value of money and compounding returns, or the
    capacity of a business to create over-profit
  • FV PV (1 k)n
  • FV Future Value, after n years
  • PV Present Value
  • n number of years of period considered

46
Valuation of Goodwill (3)
  • k Discount Rate, which includes
  • Risk-free long-term government bond rate
  • Long-term equity risk premium
  • Small company risk premium (where applicable)
  • Specific company risk premium
  • An additional risk premium based on the
    appraisers judgement of specific company risks

47
Valuation of Equity
  • Net Present Value (NPV) E A L
  • (E Equity, A Assets, L Liabilities)
  • It represents the value of a company as a
    whole, calculated by accountants.
  • Market Value (at the Stock Exchange, for listed
    companies).

48
Value and Price
  • Value is an opinion of an expert and merely an
    interval, it is a base for commencement of bids,
    auctions and/or negotiations.
  • Price is the final and monetary expression of
    value and it is fix, precise, firmly determined,
    stipulated in an offer or in a contract as a
    result of bids / auctions, negotiations,
    commodity exchange transactions, etc.

49
Other Methods of Valuation (1)
  • Liquidation Value The estimated amount of money
    that an asset or company could quickly be sold
    for, such as if it were to go out of business. If
    the liquidation value per share for a company is
    less than the current share price, then it
    usually means that the company should go out of
    business (or that the market is misvaluing the
    stock), although this is uncommon.

50
Other Methods of Valuation (2)
  • Rule of Thumb A rule of thumb is a principle
    with broad application that is not intended to be
    strictly accurate or reliable for every
    situation. It is an easily learned and easily
    applied procedure for approximately calculating
    or recalling some value, or for making some
    determination. It comes from tradition,
    experience and local market conditions.

51
Other Methods of Valuation (3)
  • 4 applications of The Rule of Thumb method
  • Fast food franchise 50 of annual sales
  • Heating, ventilation air conditioning
    contractors 2 times annual cash profits
  • Mail order business 50 of annual sales
    inventory
  • M o t e l 20,000 times number of rooms.

52
Moments in Accounting Valuation
  • Input/Entry into Patrimony (investments as
    owners equity, purchase, conversion/production,
    subsidy)
  • Inventory (periodical complete factual listing /
    check of patrimony items assets and
    liabilities)
  • End of the year, for financial reporting purposes
  • Output/Exit from Patrimony (sale, sponsorship,
    shareholder withdrawal, etc.)

53
Pricing System
  • Price is the unit of measurement for value
  • Any price includes cost and profit of seller
  • Types of prices on the chain of distribution
  • Manufacturers price
  • Whole sale price
  • Retail price
  • Export/Import price
  • A previous price is a cost for the next link.

54
ACCOUNTING VALUATION
  • You may ask any question!
  • Do not be shy!

55
ACCOUNTING VALUATION
  • Thank You,
  • for Your Kind and Understanding
  • Attention!

56
BIBLIOGRAPHY (1)
  • ACCA (The Association of Chartered Certified
    Accountants) Preparing Financial Statements
    International Stream (Paper 1.1), BPP Publishing,
    London UK, 2001
  • Bannock, Graham Manser, William Dictionar
    international de finante, Editura Universal Dalsi
    2000, Bucuresti, 2000
  • Boardman, Anthony E. Greenberg, David H.
    Vining, Aidan R. Weimer, David L. Analiza Cost
    Beneficiu Concepte si practica, Editura ARC,
    Chisinau, Republica Moldova, 2004
  • Caplan, Suzanne Finance Accounting, Adams
    Media Publishing House, Avon Massachussetts,
    USA, 2000
  • Calin, Oprea Ristea, Mihai Bazele
    contabilitatii, Editura National, Bucuresti,
    2001
  • Collin, P.H. Jollife, Adrian Dictionar de
    contabilitate englez român, Editura Universal
    Dalsi 2000, Bucuresti, 2000

57
BIBLIOGRAPHY (2)
  • International Accounting Standards Board
    International Accounting Standards/International
    Financial Reporting Standards, London UK, 2007,
    www.iasb.org
  • International Valuation Standards Committee
    International Valuation Standards, Eighth
    Edition, London UK, 2007, www.ivsc.org
  • Low, Jonathan Cohen Kalafut, Pam Invisible
    Advantage How Intangibles Are Driving Business
    Performance, Cap Gemini Ernst Young, Cambridge
    Massachussetts, USA, 2002
  • Needles Jr., Belverd E. Anderson, Henry R.
    Caldwell, James C. Principiile de baza ale
    contabilitatii (editia a cincea), Editura ARC,
    Chisinau, Republica Moldova, 2001
  • Random House Websters College Dictionary, New
    York - NY, USA, 2003
  • Siegel, Joel G. Shim, Jae K. Dictionary of
    Accounting Terms, Barrons Business Guides,
    Hauppauge New York, USA, 2005

58
BIBLIOGRAPHY (3)
  • Smith Linton, Heather Business Valuation, Adams
    Media Publishing House, Avon Massachussetts,
    USA, 2004
  • Trasca, Margareta Evaluari contabile
    patrimoniale, Editura Tribuna Economica,
    Bucuresti, 1998
  • Ulrich, Dave Smallwood, Norm How Leaders Build
    Value, John Wiley Sons, Inc., Hoboken New
    Jersey, USA, 2006
  • Van Greuning, Hennie Standardele Internationale
    de Raportare Financiara (editie bilingva engleza
    româna), Editura IRECSON, Bucuresti, 2005.

59
THE END
  • From the bottom of my heart
  • THANK YOU
  • FOR YOUR KIND ATTENTION!
  • marian.covlea_at_gmail.com
  • mariancovlea_at_yahoo.co.uk
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