Gain/Loss on Sale of Asset
Say you sell an asset for $100 that had a book value of $80, how would that affect the 3 statements? (40% tax rate)
Thanks
Gain on the Sale of an Asset Affect to the Financial Statements
Overall, the impact can be summarized by the below picture which we will explain further below.
Sale Impact on the Income Statement
On the income statement, the gain (or loss) is recorded in the one time expense / revenue section and then adjusted for the effect of tax. Here since the asset was on the books for $80 and sold for $100 dollars there was a $20 gain on the asset. Then after subtracting out taxes (assuming a 40% tax rate) net income should be up by $12.
Statement of Cash Flows Asset Sale Affect
On the cash flow statement, net income (+$12) flows onto the top of the statement of cash flows. Then you need to subtract out the impact of the gain since it is a non-cash benefit (-$20). Then you need to add back the entire sale of the asset (+$100). The net change in cash is $92.
Sale of an Asset Impact on Balance Sheet
Finally, on the balance sheet - cash is up $92 from the balance sheet. The PP&E that was sold needs to be written off the books (-$80). Overall, the assets side of the balance sheet is up $12. The liabilities and equity side of the balance sheet is up by $12 as net income flows into the retained earnings on the equity side of the balance sheet.
This process would be exactly the same for an asset sale that resulted in a loss.
Preparing for investment banking interviews?
The WSO investment banking interview course is designed by countless professionals with real world experience, tailored to people aspiring to break into the industry. This guide will help you learn how to answer these questions and many, many more.
Assuming cash purchase, cash taxes
Income statement Income from investments up by $20 Tax up by $8 Net income up by $12
Balance sheet Assets down by $80 Cash up by $92 Retained earnings up by $12
Cash flows Cash flow from investments up by $92
This is what I was thinking. So is the $92 that cash is up just $12 from increase in Net Income + $80 from selling asset?
Thanks for your help.
No, it's $100 from selling the asset less $8 in taxes, which is effectively the same thing.
I/S:
$20 gain on the asset. EBIT is $20 higher. 20 * .4 = 8 Taxes are $8 higher. Net income is $20 - $8 = $12 higher.
Balance sheet:
Cash up by $100 PPE down by $80 Taxes payable up by $8 Equity up by $12
Cash flow:
Decrease in PPE added back to operating cash flows: $80 - (perhaps wrong about where this exactly goes, but regardless, the change in the book value of the asset drives the impact to the cash flow statement) Gain on sale of asset (cash flows from investing): $20
Deleted
But you haven't paid the taxes yet, so on a cash basis it's $100. The $8 in taxes is only a liability at this point.
I gave the statements at the end of the period and assumed the taxes were paid in cash, at which point the liability is irrelevant and the cash effect has gone through (assuming zero NOLs, etc).
So is the $92 that cash is up just $12 from increase in Net Income + $80 from selling asset?
Any gain (loss) on sale of asset has to be deducted (added) to net income on the CFS to get to CFO. In this scenario,
Net Income +12 Gain on sale of asset -12 Cash taxes paid -8 Proceeds from sale of asset +100 Net change in cash +92
This is the right answer
Call me the next time you or anyone you know pays taxes in cash when incurred. Casinos don't count.
I wasn't, I was giving the change in statements at year-end. It's an example. Your answer would be correct if you were giving the change at point of sale.
Even year end the taxes aren't paid yet
x
Technically you must make estimated tax payments at the end of every quarter on income that does not have taxes withheld. But at the very least you accrue the tax expense and setup a tax payable account.
Guys, stop being so asinine with when the taxes are actually paid. That's not the point of the question.
Yea, we really needed someone to come out and let us know four months after the fact.
the prior post is the best explanation because it accounts for the fact that we add back the gains from asset sale in the CFO section, and then account for the whole thing in the CFI section. But he meant to write CFO decreases by $8 rather than $18, simple typo
Can you pls explain why $20 in CFO would be subtratced out? Thx!
$20 Gain on Sale is an "accounting gain", which is not actual cash. It's the difference between the proceed of disposition and the NBV ($100-80). Therefore it's added back.
On SCFs under investing, you'll see the actual $100 proceeds on disposal (POD) added in to reflect the amount received on the sale.
It's a recategorization. It's not an operational item (part of the business's core profitability)
Quia aspernatur officiis nemo sit nihil quis. Voluptatibus dicta quas aspernatur eum. Rem nemo voluptas cupiditate sed sit.
Quidem illo molestiae quia cumque temporibus enim. Inventore aut voluptas qui atque nemo hic quaerat. Deserunt maiores qui dolores quam. Consequatur recusandae eum iste debitis nobis eligendi ea. Dolorum cum ea non natus quasi accusantium aperiam veniam. Laudantium consequuntur qui vitae facere.
See All Comments - 100% Free
WSO depends on everyone being able to pitch in when they know something. Unlock with your email and get bonus: 6 financial modeling lessons free ($199 value)
or Unlock with your social account...
Ipsam qui consequatur neque sed quos. Tempore vel aut et ut quam rerum. Totam quos odio libero quisquam consequuntur autem. Dolores quidem voluptate voluptas dolor. Reiciendis eos minus natus.
Dolores at ut beatae id dolor. Nihil voluptate quos et vel reprehenderit et. Omnis sequi sed consectetur earum. Rerum illo temporibus autem inventore facilis.