In: Accounting
Al Essa Manufacturing holds a large portfolio of debt and equity investments. The fair value of the portfolio is greater than its original cost, even though some investments have decreased in value. Rakan Al Shaalan, the financial vice president, and Fhad Al Shamrani, the controller, are near year-end in the process of classifying for the first time this investment portfolio in accordance with IFRS. Al Shaalan wants to classify those investments that have increased in value during the period as trading investments in order to increase net income this year. He wants to classify all the investments that have decreased in value as non-trading (the equity investments) and as held-for-collection (the debt investments).
Al Shamrani disagrees. He wants to classify those investments that have
decreased in value as trading and those that have increased in value as
non-trading (equity) and held-for-collection (debt). He contends that
the company is having a good earnings year and that recognizing the
losses will help to smooth the income this year. As a result, the
company will have built-in gains for future periods when the company
may not be as profitable.
Instructions
Answer the following questions.
a. Will classifying the portfolio as each proposes actually have the
effect on earnings that each says it will?
b. Is there anything unethical in what each of them proposes? Who
are the stakeholders affected by their proposals?
c. Assume that Shaalan and Al Shamrani properly classify the entire
portfolio into trading, non-trading, and held-for-collection
categories. But then each proposes to sell just before year-end the
investments with gains or with losses, as the case may be, to
accomplish their effect on earnings. Is this unethical?