Impairment of assets is the diminishing in quality, strength, amount, or value of an asset. An impairment cost must be included under expenses when the book value of an asset exceeds the recoverable amount. Fixed assets, commonly known as PPE (Property, Plant & Equipment), refers to long-lived assets such as buildings, land, machinery, and equipment; these assets are the most likely to experience impairment, which may be caused by several factors.
In United States GAAP, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) introduced the concept in 1995 with the release of SFAS 121. SFAS 121 was subsequently replaced by SFAS 144 in August 2001.
The issue of impairment of financial assets exposed deficiencies in the IAS 36 framework during the 2008 financial crisis, and the IASB issued an exposure draft in November 2009 that proposed an impairment model based on expected losses rather than incurred losses for all financial assets recorded at amortised cost. The IASB and FASB made joint efforts to devise a common impairment model, but the FASB eventually decided to propose an alternative scheme in January 2011. The IASB issued a new exposure draft in January 2013, which later led to the adoption of IFRS 9 in July 2014, effective for annual periods beginning on or after January 1, 2018. The FASB is still considering the matter.
Inventories |
Insurance Contract assets |
Non-current assets held for sale |
Assets arising from construction contracts |
Deferred tax assets |
Assets arising from employee benefits |
Impairment of assets |
Financial assets |
Investment property carried at fair value |
Agricultural assets carried at fair value |
The FASB Accounting Standards Codification addresses impairment in the following sections:
Receivables |
Investments |
323 |
325 |
Inventories |
Other Assets & Deferred Costs |
Goodwill & Intangibles |
Plant, Property & Equipment |
If such evidence exists, the next step is to estimate the recoverable amount of investments. The impairment cost would then be calculated as follows:
The carrying value is defined as the value of the asset appearing on the balance sheet. The recoverable amount is the higher of either the asset's future value for the company or the amount it can be sold for, minus any .
For example, assume a company has an investment in Company A bonds with a carrying amount of $37,500. If their market value falls to $33,000, an impairment loss of $4,500 is indicated and the impairment cost calculated as follows:
This is recorded as a loss of $4,500 in the income statement. Using the 'T' account system, there will be a debit in the Loss on Impairment account and a credit in the Investment account. This will mean the double-entry bookkeeping principle is satisfied.
Debit: Loss on Impairment $4,500
The depreciation charge is smaller than if the original non-current asset value had been used.
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