11 Making Informed Judgments Part 10 Statistics, Measurement, and the Fair Value Hierarchy Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © 1991-2009.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Teaching Fair Value Measurement
Advertisements

1 Making Informed Judgments Part 2 Asset, Liability, and Owners Equity Measures Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc.
Fair Value Measurements
Statement 157 Measuring the Fair Value of Financial Assets
IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement
#CPACONGRESS D2: Not-for-profit sector – status update Ram Subramanian CPA Policy Adviser – Reporting and Auditing CPA Australia Friday 21 November 2014.
1 Making Informed Judgments Part 7 Income Measures Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc LLC. Modified by [Your Name].
11 Making Informed Judgments Part 3 Connecting Users’ and Preparers’ Judgments Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc.
Making Informed Judgments Part 6 Factors Driving the Dispersion of Measures Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc LLC.
Chapters 1 & 2 Financial Accounting and Accounting Standards and Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting ACCT
Theoretical Structure of Financial Accounting
11 Making Informed Judgments Part 9 Statistics, Measurement, and the Financial Crisis Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, ©
FAS 157 And Fair Value Disclosures Acct 592. Materials & Labor Markets Manu- facturer Wholesale Market Dealer Retail Market Consumer 2 nd Hand Market.
The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenters, not necessarily those of the FASB. Fair Value Measurement Ben Couch, Valuation Practice.
Page 0©2009 Clark Nuber. All rights reserved New Guidance on Accounting for GIK at Fair Value AERDO Conference December 7, 2009 Andrew Prather CPA Clark.
Prepared by Arabella Volkov University of Southern Queensland.
Fair Value Measurement
Concepts – Evolution of a Global Conceptual Framework
Lecture 9 Impacts of financial reporting decisions on individual financial statement users (module 7) & Asset measurement (module 8)
INTERMEDIATE ACCOUNTING Chapter 2 Financial Reporting: Its Conceptual Framework © 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied.
Fair Value Measurement (SFAS 157)
© 1 Fair Value Measurements SFAS What Does SFAS 157 Accomplish? Defines fair value Establishes a framework for measuring fair value in GAAP Expands.
Consolidation of Financial Information
Auxiliary Organizations Technical Update Mark Thomas, Partner KPMG LLP May 19, 2015.
Financial Statements 2 Lecture 3
ACCA P2 CLMN December 2012 exam Current issues Presenter – Tom Clendon 1.
Technical Update Mark Thomas, Partner KPMG LLP April 24, 2015.
11 Making Informed Judgments Part 5 Risks and Rewards Application: Shopping Mall Exercise and Credit Crisis Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter.
Fair Value Measurement By: Associate Professor Dr. GholamReza Zandi
Financial Statements 2 Lecture 3 Conceptual Framework.
Auditing Fair Value Measurements. 2 General Challenges presented to auditors:  Obtain a sufficient understanding of the entity’s processes and relevant.
Chapter 05 Audit Evidence and Documentation McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
11 Making Informed Judgments Part 4 Risks and Rewards Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc LLC. Modified by [Your.
Conceptual Framework For Financial Reporting
1 ASEM IFRS SEMINAR Shanghai, March 2006 Fair Value Measurement Dr Allister Wilson Technical & Audit Partner Ernst & Young, UK Senior Advisor to.
Management’s Role in Valuing Alternative Investments with NAV’s April 19, 2011.
FIRMA National Conference New Orleans 2009 FAS 157 Michael Daly VP Risk Management and Quality Control Union Bank of California.
© Grant Thornton LLP. All rights reserved. FASB Statement 157: Fair Value Issues Impacting Financial Services Webcast Wednesday, February 27 th, 2008 The.
11 Making Informed Judgments Part 8 Cash Flow Measures Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc LLC. Modified by [Your.
1 Making Informed Judgments Part 7 Income Measures Navigating Accounting, G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc LLC, Modified by [Your Name].
FRAMEWORK FOR FINANCIAL REPORTING
GAAP PowerPoint #3. Understandability Decision Usefulness Relevance Predictive Value Feedback Value Timeliness Reliability Verifiability Neutrality Representational.
International Financial Reporting Standards
Intermediate Financial Accounting I Conceptual Framework Underlying Financial Reporting.
Fair Value Hunter Buie ACTG 6110 Fall Relevance vs. Reliability Relevance Relevant information can make a difference by improving decision makers’
Fair Value Measurement By: Feras Alghamdi Shawneen Kelly Austin Tullos Meredith Whitaker.
CFA Institute Centre for Financial Market Integrity Remarks by Matthew Waldron, CPA CFA Society of Minnesota May 28, 2009.
ICPAK The Financial Reporting Workshop Comfy Hotel, Eldoret November 10, 2014 Fair Value Measurement- IFRS 13.
By Samuel Bediako & Mo Zhang IFRS for Small and Medium Entities(SME)
OVERVIEW THE AUDIT PROCESS Overview of the Audit Process.
2007 Annual Meeting ● Assemblée annuelle 2007 Vancouver 2007 Annual Meeting ● Assemblée annuelle 2007 Vancouver Canadian Institute of Actuaries Canadian.
Fair Value
Financed by a grant from Switzerland through the Swiss Contribution to the enlarged European Union Poland Financial Reporting Technical Assistance Program.
International Financial Reporting Standards The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter, not necessarily those of the IASB or IFRS.
Chapter 4 Measurement PowerPoint Presentation by Matthew Tilling ©2012 John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd.
Chapter 10 Fair Value Accounting PowerPoint Presentation by Matthew Tilling ©2012 John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd.
Financial Accounting II Lecture 16. Long Term Investments.
1.01 Generally Accepted Accounting Principles – Accounting Constraints, Concepts, Assumptions, and Principles GAAP PowerPoint #3.
Assessment of Investment Company & Practical Expedient (US GAAP)
Real Estate Institute of Zimbabwe
Conceptual Framework for financial reporting
Fair Value Developments
Environment and Theoretical Structure of Financial Accounting
Fair value measurement
GODFREY HODGSON HOLMES TARCA
Quiz: Assets: fair value measurement
Concepts – Evolution of a Global Conceptual Framework
Mark-to-Market Accounting and the Evolving Guidance
Fair value measurement
Mensuração de Valor Justo
Presentation transcript:

11 Making Informed Judgments Part 10 Statistics, Measurement, and the Fair Value Hierarchy Navigating Accounting, ® G. Peter & Carolyn R. Wilson, © NavAcc LLC. Modified by [Your Name].

22Menu  Fair value hierarchy Fair value hierarchy  Statistics, measurement, and the hierarchy Statistics, measurement, and the hierarchy  Closing thoughts Closing thoughts View in Slide Show Mode > click hyperlink.

33 Fair Value Hierarchy  Fair values are hypothetical prices “that would be received or paid” on the reporting dates and thus they must be estimated.  Under U.S. GAAP, the fair value hierarchy classifies fair value measures as based on attributes of the inputs used in valuation techniques used to determine fair values as either:  Level 1  Level 2  Level 3 Things You Need to Know Return to menu

44 Fair Value Hierarchy  Level 1 inputs are quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the reporting entity has the ability to access at the measurement date (FASB ).  An active market for an asset or liability is a market in which transactions for the asset or liability occur with sufficient frequency and volume to provide pricing information on an ongoing basis (FASB ). Things You Need to Know Return to menu

55 Fair Value Hierarchy  Level 2 inputs are inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly.  They include quoted prices for similar assets and liabilities in active markets, quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in inactive markets, other observable inputs such as interest rates. (FASB ) Things You Need to Know Return to menu

66 Fair Value Hierarchy  Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability. (FASB )  Unobservable inputs are inputs that reflect the reporting entity’s own assumptions about the assumptions market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability developed based on the best information available in the circumstances. (FASB ) Things You Need to Know Return to menu

77 Statistics Measurement and Hierarchy  How do statistical concepts relate to the FASB’s fair-value hierarchy?  Would you generally expect the dispersion of experts’ estimates of fair values to be aligned with the hierarchy?  For example, would you expect the dispersion to be smaller for level 1 measures, wider for level 2 measures, and even wider for level 3 measures?  Would this alignment necessarily hold in all situations?  For example, can you think of situations where the dispersion could be less for level 3 estimates than for levels 1 and 2? Question Return to menu,,,,

88 Statistics, Measurement, and Hierarchy  When fair values are relevant to investors’ decisions, the fair value hierarchy and related disclosures can help them gauge the dispersion of related measures, which we have seen helps them make more informed decisions and assess the confidence they should have in these decisions.  The controversy regarding fair values was heightened by the financial crisis because fair value estimates became highly unreliable, regardless of whether they were measured using market prices for comparable assets or the discounted cash flow (DCF) model. Take Aways Return to menu

99 Closing Thoughts  Fair values were controversial before the financial crisis because of disagreement about their relevance to investors compared to the relevance of historical cost measures and value-in-use measures.  Thus, the earlier arguments centered on measurement objectives and the later on measurement reliability.  Proponents and opponents of fair value accounting often:  Muddle measurement objective arguments, which should center on what is being measured, with measurement reliability arguments, which should center on the availability and reliability of measurement techniques and benchmark data.  Are not contextual and, in particular, do not depend on users’ decisions and the measurement context. Return to menu