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Basic Question 1 of 1

Which of the following statements is untrue regarding investments in equity securities?

A. If the investor owns more than 50 percent of the outstanding voting common stock, the financial statements are consolidated.
B. If the investor owns 20-50 percent of the outstanding voting common stock, the equity method always is required.
C. If the investor owns less than 20 percent of outstanding voting common stock, the securities generally are reported at their fair value.

User Contributed Comments 11

User Comment
juncfa2 Isn't C wrong too? the securities should be reported at cost.
robbe1 I guess if you're holding equities for trading purposes, you'd be required to report them at fair value.
NufaNka C would be reported at cost only for private company.
danlan2 Good comments, NufaNka.

Less than 20%, cost method for private company; market method (fair value) for public company.
jacobv The key words are:

B: "...always is required"
C: "...generally are reported"

That difference makes B the right answer
pochuevalex What's the trick with B? in the text it's clear stated that if you hold 20-50% then you should use equity method. I guess it's the amount of control that matters.
Cesarnew Without influence on operations, an ownership interest between 20 and 50% is considered an investment in financial assets.
quanttrader equity method only used if the investor can significantly affect operations and finances of investee--
diptaneal Is Consolidation Method of accounting same as acquisition method?
xieyutong 20% - 50% does not directly translate to significant impact. If there is evidence of significant impact, then the equity method should be used.
Freda829 i think yutong's explanation is the clearest one...yes for those with significant impact, equity method is required.
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Andrea Schildbach

Learning Outcome Statements

describe the classification, measurement, and disclosure under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) for 1) investments in financial assets, 2) investments in associates, 3) joint ventures, 4) business combinations, and 5) special purpose and variable interest entities;

distinguish between IFRS and US GAAP in their classification, measurement, and disclosure of investments in financial assets, investments in associates, joint ventures, business combinations, and special purpose and variable interest entities;

analyze how different methods used to account for intercorporate investments affect financial statements and ratios.

CFA® 2024 Level II Curriculum, Volume 2, Module 11.