How to Account for Bad Debt Expense

3 min read

How to Account for Bad Debt ExpenseBad debt expense is an important concept that businesses must account for when it comes to their financial reporting. Regardless of the timeframe a company accounts for, it helps companies determine what portion of their receivables are collectible and what portion are not – and therefore, a bad debt expense. Depending on the receivables’ amount, this bad debt expense can take the form of either the allowance method or the direct write-off method.

Direct Write-Off Method Explained

While a company can see its receivables increase quickly, collections of these receivables might not be possible in the future due to client defaults. The direct write-off method is recommended for accounts with nominal amounts in question. A company’s receivables account sees an immediate write-off with this method. This lowers a company’s revenue, reducing net income. When it comes to accounting for it properly, the journal entry for the direct write-off method is as follows:

 
Description Debit Credit
Bad Debt Expense $500  
Accounts Receivable – ABC Business   $500

Description: Uncollectible ABC Account

Therefore, the journal entry would debit $500 to the Bad Debt Expense and credit $500 to the Accounts Receivable for the ABC Account.

Allowance Method

When it comes to more substantive or material amounts, businesses are inclined to use the Allowance Method because it’s set up to interact well with contra asset accounts that offset accounts receivable. Reported on the balance sheet, a contra asset account has an opposite balance to accounts receivable, and the journal entry is as follows:

Assets

Cash: $500,000

Accounts receivable: $300,000

Less: Allowance for doubtful accounts: $25,000

Equipment: $200,000

Less Accumulated Depreciation: $5,000

Building: $100,000

Less Accumulated Depreciation: $15,000

Since there’s zero impact on income statement accounts, contra accounts are advantageous for companies to use since the revenues aren’t lowered from a direct loss that bad debt expenses can cause with other methods.

When it comes to the Allowance Method in action, the three components are as follows:

First Step: Assess the uncollectible receivables

This is done by either determining the percentage of sales or by the percentage of receivables.

Percentage of Sales Method

This is usually determined by taking a percentage of either net or total credit sales. It’s generally dictated by past trends (both internal and macro economy forecast). For example, 2 percent of $10,000,000 = $200,000.

Percentage of Receivables

This method works by looking at the aging schedule for receivables, including those that are due but not yet late. For example, the receivables that are not late but not yet paid can have a low percentage for the particular bucket. Each successive and later bucket of unpaid receivables would require a higher percentage estimated as uncollectible.

Second Step: Journal entries are notated by entering the bad debt expense as a debit and the allowance for doubtful accounts as a credit.

Third Step: After an account is considered permanently uncollectible, the last two entries are as follows:

Description Debit Credit
Bad Debt Expense $250  
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts   $250
Description Debit Credit
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts $250  
Accounts Receivable – ABC Business   $250

Conclusion: The Importance of Calculating Bad Debt Expense

When it comes to determining a company’s results, it is required in their financial statements. If a company does not include this information, their assets could be inflated, potentially leading to overstating their net income. Calculating bad debt expense also helps companies determine which customers have defaulted on past bills, while at the same time highlighting customers that pay on time.

When it comes to accounting for bad debt expense, businesses that are experts at the two methods can effectively navigate the needs of internal and external audiences.

Dissecting the Half-Year Convention for Depreciation

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Half-Year Convention for DepreciationDepreciation can help a business realize tax benefits, maintain compliance with financial reporting requirements, and project asset replacement. The half-year convention for depreciation is an important practice to understand.

For fixed assets, depreciation is recognized and recorded on a 50 percent basis for the initial and concluding years over its schedule. This supposes that fixed assets have been in service for 50 percent of their initial calendar service year upon acquisition. It’s normally implemented by taxation agencies to limit the upper limits for depreciation attestations to 50 percent of the yearly figures.

The balance of the annual 50 percent depreciation amount is recognized/recorded during the depreciation schedule’s last year, as the fixed asset will be removed from service mid-year. Regardless of the type of depreciation – straight-line, double-declining, etc. – the half-year convention applies equally.

This has been instituted because businesses were tempted to buy fixed assets in the third or fourth quarter of a fiscal year and try to deduct it fully via complete depreciation deduction. However, this convention is explicit in that fixed assets in service on or after July 1 may only deduct half of otherwise normal depreciation schedules.

How It Works

In this example, Production Equipment is purchased for $50,000 on April 1, 2022, with a useful life of 7 years. Using the half-year convention, depreciation is as follows:

Straight-line Depreciations = Cost of Asset / Useful Life = $50,000 / 7 = $7,142.86

Half-Year Convention: $7,142.86 / 2 = $3,571.43

This also assumes that there’s no scrap of salvage value. Although there are 7 years for the item’s useful life, with the half-year convention, it’s treated as 8 years for the depreciation schedule:

Year 1: $3,571.43

Year 2: $7,142.86

Year 3: $7,142.86

Year 4: $7,142.86

Year 5: $7,142.86

Year 6: $7,142.86

Year 7: $7,142.86

Year 8: $3,571.43

Context for Depreciation Convention

A depreciation convention gives context on how depreciation is performed by the company. It guides the company on available depreciation methods based on the asset’s useful life, how much the asset can be depreciated once it’s removed from service, and how depreciation is accounted/claimed in the initial and final year during the asset’s recovery period.

Depending on the situation and the type of depreciation convention involved, the following are some different conventions and how they vary:

  • Full Month permits a business to get a complete month of depreciation for the month when the asset has been put in service. There’s no depreciation taken for the month of disposal.
  • Next Month permits a business to start recording depreciation for the fixed assets the following month and being able to record one month of depreciation “when disposed of.”
  • Actual Days permits depreciation to be recorded for every single day an asset is in service during its fiscal year.
  • Mid-Quarter permits depreciation for half of the 3-month business period whenever the asset’s been put in place and disposed of (for both quarters).

Conclusion

While this is illustrative of financial reporting requirements, it’s an important consideration for business owners and their accounting professionals. Optimizing fixed asset depreciation leads to more accurate books, which will help in tax planning.

Understanding the Differences Between FCFF and NOPAT

3 min read

What is NOPATWhen it comes to financial analysis, there are two metrics that internal stakeholders and external users, such as investors and analysts, can use to assist with analyzing a business’s operations.

Free cash flow to the firm (FCFF) is used as part of a discount cash flow (DCF) calculation that aids in determining a company’s intrinsic value, helping investors make better informed decisions. This metric provides insight into how much cash flow is available to all funding claimants of the business (be it convertible bond investors, debt holders, and preferred and common stockholders). This is compared to free cash flow to equity (FCFE), which is how much cash flow a business can use if it has zero debt.

While there are many ways to arrive at FCFF, the following is one way to calculate it:

Step 1

Start with Net Operating Profit (NOPAT), which is determined by Earnings Before Interest and Taxes x (1 – Tax Rate)

Step 2

Add Depreciation and Amortization expenses to NOPAT

Step 3

Remove Capital Expenditures

Step 4

Remove Modifications in Net Working Capital

Further Considerations of FCFF Versus FCFE

FCFF assumes there are no payments for interest; nor have any changes in debt been factored in the company’s financial statements. FCFE factors in interest payments and any applicable changes in debt the company may have taken or paid off during the particular accounting time frame. FCFE provides analysts with the ability to determine how efficient a company is and how well (or not) it is at producing cash for equity holders.

Defining NOPAT

NOPAT is a way to see what the company’s operations produce, assuming it has no debt and, accordingly, no outstanding interest expense obligations. It gives analysts and investors an opportunity to look at potential investments with a standardized metric because companies can be seen as having debt and not having debt. It provides easier ability to see if companies can obtain and/or manage debt levels, along with other financial metrics used by investors and analysts.

Along with the already established formula to calculate NOPAT, there’s an alternate formula:

(Net Income + Tax + Interest Expense + Any Non-Operating Gains/Losses] x (1 – Tax Rate)

Operating Earnings = the company’s profits pre interest and taxes (or what the company would earn if it had zero debt, and therefore zero interest expense).

Putting NOPAT in Context

Other important considerations for NOPAT are that it excludes changes in accounts receivable, inventory, accounts payable, and inventory. Additionally, it excludes capital expenditures but accounts for amortization and depreciation.

How NOPAT Assists Analysts and Investors

Businesses can use this data to see how this metric drills down on the business’s core functions. It’s a way to determine how profitable or not a business’ core functions are over shorter and longer time frames. It helps businesses determine how efficient a company is against its competitors since it removes debt and tax comparisons.

Analysis is easier for both businesses looking for acquisitions and for investors. NOPAT helps investors determine which companies are most efficient within their sector based on their main functions. It helps remove the “noise” of debt levels and tax situations.

Looking at these two metrics at face value can seem daunting, but after breaking them down and understanding the differences, it’s easier to see how they aid in financial analysis.