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Basic Question 3 of 11
Unrealized holding gains and losses for securities to be held-to-maturity are ______
B. included in the determination of income from operations in the period of the change.
C. neither reported in the income statement nor on the balance sheet.
A. reported as a separate component of the shareholders' equity section of the balance sheet.
B. included in the determination of income from operations in the period of the change.
C. neither reported in the income statement nor on the balance sheet.
User Contributed Comments 10
User | Comment |
---|---|
danlan2 | A is wrong, it is not a seperate component of the equity section. |
chamad | As it's unrecognised, there is no need for report... |
cfairs | Unrecognized gains/losses from available-to-sale securities are recorded as extraordinary items Unrecognized gains/losses from trading securities are recorded against net income of income statement Unrecognized gains/losses from held-to-maturity securities are not reported either in income statement or balance sheet |
vi2009 | Premium paid or discount taken from Par value. These are amortized. I thought B was right...in that we subtract or add to the interest income any of these premiums / discount. Though they are never referred to as unrealized gains / losses. |
YOUCANDOIT | nice summary cfairs! |
rocyang | but the gain/loss when realized should go somewhere, comprehensive income I suppose? |
Nando1 | cfairs, your first statement is incorrect. It goes into comprehensive income not extraordinary items. |
johntan1979 | To be more precise "Other Comprehensive Income". |
Shaan23 | I dont think Unrealized gains from held to maturity goes to OCI. I dont know where it goes but when reading OCI it only mentioned unrealized gains/losses from AFS and derivative contract |
davidt876 | Shaan, when you price at cost there "can't" be unrealised gains/losses - only realised gains/losses in the form of amortisation or impairment. held-to-maturity is only an option for debt that will be held until maturity. at maturity you are 'guaranteed' to be repaid the par value. given that logic, the market value of the debt over the time its held is immaterial, because you're not going to sell the bond... you're going to wait to receive par. and if it becomes evident that the debt issuer is unlikely to be able to pay back the full par, then you realise an impairment at that point |
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Learning Outcome Statements
explain the financial reporting and disclosures related to financial instruments
CFA® 2024 Level I Curriculum, Volume 2, Module 3.