Internal Control of Fixed Assets: A Controller and Auditor's Guide
For many companies, fixed assets represent the largest single aspect of their financial statement, yet rarely do they command time proportionate to the magnitude of the investment. This is the first book to show how to implement internal controls for fixed assets. It is a step-by-step guide for developing and maintaining a functioning internal control system that will withstand the closest scrutiny from independent public accountants and the PCAOB. With up-to-the-minute discussion of IFRS and GAAP, this is a must-have guide for controllers, auditors, and CFOs.
"1100320319"
Internal Control of Fixed Assets: A Controller and Auditor's Guide
For many companies, fixed assets represent the largest single aspect of their financial statement, yet rarely do they command time proportionate to the magnitude of the investment. This is the first book to show how to implement internal controls for fixed assets. It is a step-by-step guide for developing and maintaining a functioning internal control system that will withstand the closest scrutiny from independent public accountants and the PCAOB. With up-to-the-minute discussion of IFRS and GAAP, this is a must-have guide for controllers, auditors, and CFOs.
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Internal Control of Fixed Assets: A Controller and Auditor's Guide

Internal Control of Fixed Assets: A Controller and Auditor's Guide

by Alfred M. King
Internal Control of Fixed Assets: A Controller and Auditor's Guide

Internal Control of Fixed Assets: A Controller and Auditor's Guide

by Alfred M. King

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Overview

For many companies, fixed assets represent the largest single aspect of their financial statement, yet rarely do they command time proportionate to the magnitude of the investment. This is the first book to show how to implement internal controls for fixed assets. It is a step-by-step guide for developing and maintaining a functioning internal control system that will withstand the closest scrutiny from independent public accountants and the PCAOB. With up-to-the-minute discussion of IFRS and GAAP, this is a must-have guide for controllers, auditors, and CFOs.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781118028360
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 01/31/2011
Series: Wiley Corporate F&A , #564
Sold by: JOHN WILEY & SONS
Format: eBook
Pages: 210
File size: 651 KB

About the Author

ALFRED M. KING, CMA, is the Vice Chairman of Marshall & Stevens and the former chairman of Valuation Research Corporation, both of which are national firms of appraisers. In addition, he is the former chairman of the Accounting Committee of the Institute of Management Accountants. He speaks at various conferences (IMA, AICPA, NACVA) on valuation issues.

Table of Contents

Preface.

Chapter 1: Internal Control, Sarbanes-Oxley, and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.

Internal Controls over Property, Plant, and Equipment—Mandatory but Weak.

Internal Controls over Working Capital.

Securities and Exchange Commission and Public Company Accounting Oversight Board Scrutiny of Financial Statements.

Why Do Auditors Not Spend More Time on Property, Plant, and Equipment?

Who Is Responsible for Internal Control over Property, Plant, and Equipment?

‘‘What Is So Hard about the Job?’’.

Note.

Chapter 2: Capitalization versus Expense.

Capitalization Theory.

Why Capitalization Levels Matter.

Consequences of Increasing Minimum Capitalization Level.

What Is the Optimum Capitalization Limit?

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 3: Asset Life Cycle—Controls and Software.

Software Is the Key.

Input, Output, and Reporting Capability.

How to Evaluate Software Vendors.

Assign Responsibility for Implementation and Beyond.

Charging Departments Will Ensure Individual Responsibility.

Return on Investment Analysis.

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 4: Depreciation and Amortization for Books and Taxes.

Internal Control for Depreciable Tangible Assets.

Determining Useful Lives Whenever New Assets Are Acquired.

Choosing Accounting Lives.

How Valuation Specialists Determine Economic Lives.

Determining Lives for Intangible Assets.

Changing Lives and Depreciation for Existing Assets.

Leasing as a Way to Utilize Depreciation.

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 5: Impairment Testing.

Testing Intangible Assets That Are Not Amortized.

Testing for Impairment of Property, Plant, and Equipment, and Amortizable Intangibles.

Reviewing Lives for Assets Already in Service.

Testing for Goodwill.

Reporting Units.

Determining the Fair Value of a Reporting Unit.

Phase II Test of Accounting Standards Codification 350.

Understanding Impairment Charges.

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 6: Physical Control of Property, Plant, and Equipment.

Tagging of Property, Plant, and Equipment.

Alternative Tagging Methods.

Barcode Tagging.

Radio Frequency Identification Tags.

Asset Tagging for Expensed Assets.

Recommendation.

Summary.

Notes.

Chapter 7: Taking a Physical Inventory.

Planning and Using the Physical Inventory.

Who Should Be Responsible?

Use Own Staff, or Outsource?

What Minimum Dollar Cutoff Should We Use?

Initial Effort–Partial Facility versus Total.

The $64,000 Question—Assets to Listing or Listing to Assets?

Reconciliation of the Inventory to the Records.

Fully Depreciated Assets.

Reconciliation Process.

Revised Asset Lives.

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 8: Reconciliation of Physical Inventory to Accounting Records.

Two Approaches to Reconciliation.

Ghost Assets.

Zombie Assets.

Netting Out Ghost and Zombie Assets—Is It Permissible?

Netting Out Gains and Losses.

Performing the Inventory and Reconciliation Piecemeal.

Summary.

Chapter 9: Fixed Assets in a Business Combination.

Carryover of Target’s Book Value.

Applying Indexes to the Target Company’s Asset Register.

Inaccuracies in the Target’s Asset Property Register.

Detailed Valuation of Property, Plant, and Equipment.

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 10: Insurance for Fixed Assets.

Using the Master Property Record for Insurance.

Insurable Values Are NOT Fair Value or Fair Market Value.

How Appraisers Determine Insurable Values.

Indexing.

Proof of Loss.

Summary.

Chapter 11: Property Taxes—Personal Property and Real Estate.

Reporting Fair Market Values upon Acquisition.

Equity among Taxpayers.

Appealing Personal Property Tax Assessments.

Indexed Costs May Not Reflect Fair Market Value of Property, Plant, and Equipment.

Real Estate Taxes and Appeals.

‘‘Contingency’’ Consultants.

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 12: Developing the Fair Value of Fixed Assets.

What Is the Fair Value of Property, Plant, and Equipment?

Value in-Use of Property, Plant, and Equipment.

What Would Happen if Fair Value Reporting for Property, Plant, and Equipment Was Required?

Connection between Fair Value and Book Value.

What Would Investors Learn from Fair Value Disclosures of Property, Plant, and Equipment?

Summary.

Chapter 13: Control of Fixed Assets under International Financial Reporting Standards.

Component Depreciation.

Asset Revaluation.

Investment Property.

What Is the ‘‘Cost’’ of Property, Plant, and Equipment?

Summary.

Note.

Chapter 14: Component Depreciation for Buildings.

International Financial Reporting Standards Has a Different Approach.

Component Depreciation for Taxes.

Complying with Internal Revenue Service Requirements.

Internal Revenue Service Review of a Cost Segregation Study.

Cost Segregation Study for New Construction.

Will Cost Segregation Lower My Property Tax Expenses?

Componentization for Financial Reporting.

Summary.

Note.

Appendix: Excerpt of Internal Revenue Service Cost Segregation Audit Guide.

Introduction.

What Are the Most Common Methodologies Utilized for Cost Segregation Studies?

What Are the Attributes of Various Cost Segregation Methodologies?

Detailed Engineering Approach from Actual Cost Records.

About the Author.

Index.

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