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@9:42 there are still practice questions where they use the wording held-to-maturity. You are expected to know that this implies amortized cost valuation.
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Sir, if the accounting is done on equity method, and the investee subsequently acquire an asset, ( after the initial investment by investor , say last year) how will this new acquired asset be reflected under equity method in the books of investor. Thanks in advance.
Just wanted to say thank you for doing these.
Glad it helped! If you like our video lessons, it would be appreciated if you could take 2 minutes of your time to leave us a review here: trustpilot.com/review/analystprep.com
@9:42 there are still practice questions where they use the wording held-to-maturity. You are expected to know that this implies amortized cost valuation.
Thank you 🙏🏻
You’re welcome 😊 If you like our video lessons, it would be appreciated if you could take 2 minutes of your time to leave us a Google review using this link: g.page/r/CQIlM78xSg01EB0/review
Useful.
@20:10 If the investment was classified as amortized cost, why would we recognize a gain? Wouldn't the investment sit on the BS until it matured?
@3:25 isn't there a 5th reason for investing in other companies? To make use of excess cash.
Sir, if the accounting is done on equity method, and the investee subsequently acquire an asset, ( after the initial investment by investor , say last year) how will this new acquired asset be reflected under equity method in the books of investor.
Thanks in advance.
Good, can we download the files?
Amortized interest income boggles my mind, Is that a real life example