Examples of discontinued operations in the following topics:
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- Irregular items require special reporting procedures, and include discontinued operations, extraordinary items, and the reporting of the resultant EPS.
- Two examples of irregular items are discontinued operations and extraordinary expenses.
- Discontinued operation is the most common type of irregular item.
- Shifting business location(s), stopping production temporarily, or changes due to technological improvement do not qualify as discontinued operations.
- Income tax is allocated to income from continuing operations before tax, discontinued operations and extraordinary items.
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- Discontinued operations are the most common type of irregular items and must be shown separately.
- A discontinued operation is a component of an enterprise that either has been disposed of or is classified as "held for sale," and:
- represents a separate major line of business or geographical area of operations; and
- Shifting business location(s), stopping production temporarily, or changes due to technological improvement do not qualify as discontinued operations.
- Differentiate among discontinued operations, extraordinary items, and changes in accounting principles
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- Other expenses include SG&A, depreciation, amortization, R&D, finance costs, income tax expense, discontinued operations expenses.
- General expenses- general operating expenses and taxes that are directly related to the general operation of the company, but don't relate to the other two categories.
- Discontinued operations are the most common type of irregular items.
- Shifting business location(s), stopping production temporarily, or changes due to technological improvement do not qualify as discontinued operations.
- Discontinued operations must be shown separately.
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- Other expenses or losses not related to primary business operations (e.g., foreign exchange loss).
- Discontinued operations is the most common type of irregular items.
- Shifting business location(s), stopping production temporarily, or changes due to technological improvement do not qualify as discontinued operations.
- Discontinued operations must be shown separately.Disclosures
- Explain the difference between the operating and non-operating section of the income statement
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- Revenue - Cash inflows or other enhancements of assets of an entity during a period from delivering or producing goods, rendering services, or other activities that constitute the entity's ongoing major operations.
- Other expenses or losses - not related to primary business operations, (e.g. foreign exchange loss).
- Discontinued operations is the most common type of irregular items.
- Shifting business location(s), stopping production temporarily, or changes due to technological improvement do not qualify as discontinued operations.
- Discontinued operations must be shown separately.
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- Analysts often use "Operating Income" as a proxy for EBIT when complex accounting situations, such as discontinued operations, changes in accounting principle, extraordinary items, etc., are reported in a company's financial statements.
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- It then calculates operating expenses which, when deducted from the gross profit, yield 'income from operations. ' The difference of other revenues and expenses is then applied to the income from operations.
- It excludes operating costs such as selling, administration, advertising, or R&D.
- Other expenses or losses: Expenses or losses not related to primary business operations (foreign exchange loss).
- Discontinued operation is the most common type of irregular item.
- Shifting business locations, stopping production temporarily, or changes due to technological improvement do not qualify as discontinued operations, which must be shown separately.
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- In the United States, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) requires that companies' income statements report EPS for each of the major categories of the income statement: continuing operations, discontinued operations, extraordinary items, and net income.
- The EPS formula does not include preferred dividends for categories outside of continued operations and net income.
- Earnings per share for continuing operations and net income are more complicated; any preferred dividends are removed from net income before calculating EPS.
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- Shaping is a method of operant conditioning by which successive approximations of a target behavior are reinforced.
- In his operant-conditioning experiments, Skinner often used an approach called shaping.
- As the subject moves through each behavior trial, rewards for old, less approximate behaviors are discontinued in order to encourage progress toward the desired behavior.
- In this way, shaping uses operant-conditioning principles to train a subject by rewarding proper behavior and discouraging improper behavior.
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- Using this idea, differentiation becomes a function of functions: The derivative is an operator whose domain is the set of all functions that have derivatives at every point of their domain and whose range is a set of functions.
- If we denote this operator by $D$, then $D(f)$ is the function $f'(x)$.
- The operator $D$, however, is not defined on individual numbers.