Example: Buildings, furniture and fixtures, and equipment are fixed assets.
| Fiscalyear, Fiscal Policy | |
| Fixed Bid, Fixed Expenses |
On this page
Barron's Real Estate Dictionary:
Fixed asset |
| Fiscalyear, Fiscal Policy | |
| Fixed Bid, Fixed Expenses |
|
Featured Videos:
|
Barron's Accounting Dictionary:
Fixed asset |
| Fixed (FACTORY) Overhead, Fishbone Diagrams, Fiscal Year | |
| Fixed Asset Turnover, Fixed Asset Unit, Fixed Asset-To-Equity Capital Ratio |
West's Encyclopedia of American Law:
Fixed Asset |
Property, such as machinery or buildings, utilized in a business that will not be used or liquidated during the current fiscal period.
Investopedia Financial Dictionary:
Fixed Asset |
A long-term tangible piece of property that a firm owns and uses in the production of its income and is not expected to be consumed or converted into cash any sooner than at least one year's time.
Fixed assets are sometimes collectively referred to as "plant".
Investopedia Says:
Buildings, real estate, equipment and furniture are good examples of fixed assets.
Generally, intangible long-term assets such as trademarks and patents are not categorized as fixed assets but are more specifically referred to as "fixed intangible assets".
Related Links:
Learn this easy-to-understand technique of analyzing a company's financial statements and reports. Introduction To Fundamental Analysis
Asset performance shows how what a company owes and owns affects its investment quality. Testing Balance Sheet Strength
Learn what it means to do your homework on a company's performance and reporting practices before investing. Advanced Financial Statement Analysis
Learn about the components of the statement of financial position and how they relate to each other. Reading The Balance Sheet
Catering to seniors is big business, but state regulators could pull the plug. Certified Senior Designations Under Scrutiny
Companies make choices and assumptions in calculating depreciation, and you need to know how these affect the bottom line. Appreciating Depreciation
Wikipedia on Answers.com:
Fixed asset |
|
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2011) |
Fixed assets, also known as a non-current asset or as property, plant, and equipment (PP&E), is a term used in accounting for assets and property which cannot easily be converted into cash. This can be compared with current assets such as cash or bank accounts, which are described as liquid assets. In most cases, only tangible assets are referred to as fixed.
Moreover, a fixed/non-current asset can also be defined as an asset not directly sold to a firm's consumers/end-users. As an example, a baking firm's current assets would be its inventory (in this case, flour, yeast, etc.), the value of sales owed to the firm via credit (i.e. debtors or accounts receivable), cash held in the bank, etc. Its non-current assets would be the oven used to bake bread, motor vehicles used to transport deliveries, cash registers used to handle cash payments, etc. Each aforementioned non-current asset is not sold directly to consumers.
These are items of value which the organization has bought and will use for an extended period of time; fixed assets normally include items such as land and buildings, motor vehicles, furniture, office equipment, computers, fixtures and fittings, and plant and machinery. These often receive favorable tax treatment (depreciation allowance) over short-term assets. According to International Accounting Standard (IAS) 16, Fixed Assets are assets whose future economic benefit is probable to flow into the entity, whose cost can be measured reliably.
It is pertinent to note that the cost of a fixed asset is its purchase price, including import duties and other deductible trade discounts and rebates. In addition, cost attributable to bringing and installing the asset in its needed location and the initial estimate of dismantling and removing the item if they are eventually no longer needed on the location.
The primary objective of a business entity is to make profit and increase the wealth of its owners. In the attainment of this objective it is required that the management will exercise due care and diligence in applying the basic accounting concept of “Matching Concept”. Matching concept is simply matching the expenses of a period against the revenues of the same period.
The use of assets in the generation of revenue is usually more than a year- that is long term. It is therefore obligatory that in order to accurately determine the net income or profit for a period depreciation is charged on the total value of asset that contributed to the revenue for the period in consideration and charge against the same revenue of the same period. This is essential in the prudent reporting of the net revenue for the entity in the period.
Net book value of an asset is basically the difference between the historical cost of that asset and it associated depreciation. From the foregoing, it is apparent that in order to report a true and fair position of the financial jurisprudence of an entity it is relatable to record and report the value of fixed assets at its net book value. Apart from the fact that it is enshrined in Standard Accounting Statement (SAS) 3 and IAS 16 that value of asset should be carried at the net book value, it is the best way of consciously presenting the value of assets to the owners of the business and potential investor.
Depreciation is, simply put, the expense generated by the use of an asset. It is the wear and tear of an asset or diminution in the historical value owing to usage. Further to this; it is the cost of the asset less any salvage value over its estimated useful life. It is an expense because it is matched against the revenue generated through the use of the same asset. Depreciation is usually spread over the economic useful life of an asset because it is regarded as the cost of an asset absorbed over its useful life. Invariably the depreciation expense is charged against the revenue generated through the use of the asset. The method of depreciation to be adopted is best left for the management to decide in consideration to the peculiarity of the business, prevailing economic condition of the assets and existing accounting guideline and principles as implied in the organizational policies.
It is worth noting that not all fixed assets depreciate in value year-over-year. Land and buildings, for example, may often increase in value depending on local real-estate conditions.[1]
A long-term tangible piece of property that a firm owns and uses in the production of its income and is not expected to be consumed or converted into cash any sooner than at least one year's time.
Fixed assets are sometimes collectively referred to as "plant".
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Fixed Asset Unit (in accounting) | |
| Capital Expenditure (in accounting) | |
| wasting asset |
| What Types of fixed asset? Read answer... | |
| What are the Examples of fixed assets? Read answer... | |
| What is the book value of a fixed asset? Read answer... |
| Are fixed assets and immaterial assets part of the current assets? | |
| Fixed assets to current asset ratio? | |
| Why fixed assets are profitable then current assets? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Barron's Real Estate Dictionary. Dictionary of Real Estate Terms. Copyright © 2008 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Barron's Accounting Dictionary. Dictionary of Accounting Terms. Copyright © 2010 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() |
![]() | West's Encyclopedia of American Law. West's Encyclopedia of American Law. Copyright © 1998 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more |
![]() | Investopedia Financial Dictionary. Copyright ©2010, Investopedia.com - Owned and Operated by Investopedia US, A Division of ValueClick, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() |
![]() | Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Fixed asset. Read more |
Mentioned in