Measuring and Valuation of Asset: Accounting Theory Perspective
Ruswan Nurmadi
1
, Sumardi Adiman
1
, Iskandar Muda
1
and Syafruddin Ginting
1
1
Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Sumatera Utara, Medan -Indonesia
Keywords: Measuring of the asset, valuation of the asset, accounting theory
Abstract: This article defines that measurement and valuation of the asset in accounting are important, that draw
concern of the problems that related with measurement and valuation in practice. Firms usually use different
methods techniques of measurement, financial and non-financial, and apply mixed valuation methods,
which they consider the best for their firms. Considering many factors in measuring and valuation of assets
will make the company obtain maximum benefits and reduce the risk of future use of these assets. A lot of
literature reviews show that arguments made in accounting theory perspective and business perspective of
how firms use decision-useful of their asset measurement and valuation. The terminological change from
valuation to measurement increased attention to see what accounting could gain from the classical
measurement theory. This measuring and valuation in accounting cause theoretical basis and contemporary
dilemmas, by considering between bases non-basic-resources and resources, instrumental and economic
values, between measurements and estimates and between measurement and allocation, with the main
objective to make useful assessments of possible assets to achieve firms’ goals. Although firms will be
considered a business valuation framework for asset measurement that will suit their interests, accounting
theory perspective will be one of the bases of that decision making.
1 INTRODUCTION
The definition of an asset as a resource controlled by
the entity as a result of past events and from which
future economic benefits are expected to flow to the
entity (Financial Accounting Standards Board, 2010)
has been revised as a present economic resource
controlled by the entity as a result of past events. An
economic resource is a right that has the potential to
produce economic benefits (IFRS, 2018).
Assets can be known by several characteristics.
These characteristics are a differentiator with several
things. The characteristics of assets are: Assets are
economic benefits obtained in the future; Assets are
controlled by companies that are controlled by the
company; Assets are the result of transactions or
events that occurred in the past.
There are various types that makeup assets. This
is known as the elements that are able to compile
assets as they should. The asset elements are:
Current Assets (the definition of current assets is an
asset that is expected to be realized which results in
long-term benefits of around one year or within the
traditional operational cycle of the corporate. Assets
consist of cash, short-term investments, inventory,
accounts receivable, accrued income and other
accounts, and costs to be paid); Investment /
Participation (definition of investment is an asset
that is used for the growth of wealth through the
distribution of investment returns. The investments
made in these assets are also categorized into two
types. The types of investments in assets are short-
term investments and long-term investments) ; Fixed
Assets (definition of fixed assets is tangible assets
obtained in the form that is ready to be used or
functioned or built more deeply, which are
functioned in the operations of the company, are not
intended to be sold which aim at the existence of
normal company activities and have a useful life of
more than one year. Fixed assets consist of land,
buildings, long-term investments, and others),
Intangible Assets (the definition of non-referring
assets is fixed assets that are not intangible which
are beneficial by providing economic and legal
rights to an owner. Intangible assets have different
types of forms or forms such as goodwill,
1208
Nurmadi, R., Adiman, S., Muda, I. and Ginting, S.
Measuring and Valuation of Asset: Accounting Theory Perspective.
DOI: 10.5220/0009510912081212
In Proceedings of the 1st Unimed International Conference on Economics Education and Social Science (UNICEES 2018), pages 1208-1212
ISBN: 978-989-758-432-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
trademarks, copyrights, and franchises); Other
Assets (as for the other types of assets which are
other asset elements, it is described that the items
cannot be adequately classified into current assets,
investments, ownership, intangible assets, and fixed
assets).
From the definition, characteristics, and types of
asset, its important to manage assets. (The Institute
of Asset Management, 2012) stated that asset
management is more than doing things to assets. It is
about using assets to deliver value and achieve the
organization’s business objectives. Its also brings a
different approach and way of reflection and a
transformation of organizational alignment and
organizational culture. Each organization must
determine the best way to specify its value, and how
to determine the procedures for managing its assets
in order to obtain the best total value. Asset
management must relevant to all kinds of
organization or company, whether they are large,
small, private, public, government or not-for-profit.
There is growing evidence around the world that
effective asset management can improve an
organization’s reputation and its ability to operate
safely; fulfill its regulatory and statutory obligations;
significantly minimize the cost of managing assets
over their lives; and assess future business strategies
for the delivery of differing performance, cost and
tolerable risk profiles.
In discussing the measurement and valuation of
assets, we must have an understanding of some
terms used for the valuation of assets. Historical
Cost, as the quantity of cash that paid to acquire an
asset ; Current Replacement: The amount of cash
that would have been paid to acquire currently the
best asset available in the market; Net Realizable
Value: The amount of cash expected to be derived
from sale of an asset; Net Present Value: This is
equal to expected future cash inflows—cash
outflows i.e. net cash flows. Thus for the aim of
valuation of assets, we’ve got four bases and our
selection can rely on what explicit facet of the
quality is to be measured. For an accountant, for
example, a historical cost can be used to measure the
number of monetary units spent for obtaining the
asset, and present value or replacement value can be
used to measure the physical aspect of the asset or
its replacement aspect.
Valuation of Different Types of Assets: The
method of assigning monetary values to the assets, is
valuation. Historical cost used is most commonly
used bases in traditional accounting. Other bases like
current value, replacement value or net realizable
value have also included in the process of valuation
of the assets. Valuation of Tangible Fixed Assets:
Tangible fixed assets contain long-term assets which
provide services beyond one accounting period.
They are bought with the objective not to sell. Their
value depends upon future cash flows they are
adequate of generating. Valuation of Current Assets:
Current assets also noticeable as fluctuating or
circulating assets, as cash and other assets, which are
reasonably expected to be realized in cash,
consumed or sold through the normal operating
cycle of the business. Monetary assets as if Cash,
Bank, Debtors and Bill Receivables, can be valued
with more accuracy in comparison to non-monetary
assets like stocks. In a matter of non-monetary
assets, valuation relies upon a judgment of
accountants become a difficult assignment. As
valuation of Inventories, (IASB, 2016) has defined
inventories as “Inventories are assets: Held for sale
in the ordinary course of business; In the process of
production for such sale; In the form of materials or
supplies to be consumed in the production process or
in the rendering of the services.
A lot of literature reviews show that discussions
made in accounting theory perspective and business
perspective of how firms use decision-useful of their
asset measurement and valuation. (Amihud,
Mendelson and Pedersen, 2005) reviewing the
theory of liquidity and empirical studies that
examine these theories. The theory forecasts that
both the level of liquidity and liquidity are risky, and
the empirical risk factors for controlling asset risk
and asset characteristics.
(Acharya and Pedersen, 2005) said that their
paper solves explicitly a simple equilibrium model
with liquidity risk. In their liquidity-adjusted capital
asset pricing model, a security's required return
depends on its expected liquidity as well as on the
covariances of its own return and liquidity with the
market return and liquidity. In addition, a persistent
negative shock to a security's liquidity ends up in
low contemporaneous returns and high foretold
future returns. The model provides a unified
framework for understanding the varied channels
through that liquidity risk could have an effect on
quality asset costs.
(The Institute of Asset Management, 2012)
stated that asset can be managed by extracting value
more than what you do to assets, it is about using
assets to deliver value and reach the organization’s
business goals. This article explains the importance
of valuation and measurement of the asset in
accounting, that draw attention to the problems of
valuation and measurement in practice, based on
literature researches or studies.
Measuring and Valuation of Asset: Accounting Theory Perspective
1209
2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Main changes in the definition of an asset are (IFRS,
2018): separate definition of an economic
resource—to clarify that an asset is an economic
resource, not the ultimate inflow of economic
advantages; deletion of ‘expected flow’—it doesn’t
ought to make sure, or maybe seemingly, that
economic advantages can arise; an occasional
likelihood of economic advantages would possibly
have an effect on recognition decisions and the
measurement of the asset. (IFRS, 2018) also
describes measurement. Historical cost measurement
bases noted that historical cost provides information
derived, at least in part, from the price of the
transaction or other event that gave rise to the item
being measured, historical price of assets is reduced
if they become impaired and historical price of
liabilities is accumulated if they become
burdensome, a method to use a historical cost
measuring basis to monetary assets and monetary
liabilities is to live them at amortized value. Current
value measurement bases include fair value (the cost
that would be received to sell an asset, or paid to
transfer a liability, in a presentable transaction
between market participants at the measurement
date; reflects market participants’ current hopes
about the timing, amount, and uncertainty of future
cash flows), value in use for assets (reflects entity-
specific current hopes about the timing, amount, and
uncertainty of future cash flows) and current cost
(reflects the current amount that would be paid to
achieve an equivalent asset).
(IFRS, 2018) express that the factors to be
considered when selecting a measurement basis are
relevance and faithful representation because the
purpose is to supply information that is useful to
lenders, investors, and other creditors. Relevance of
information supplied by a measurement basis is
influenced by characteristics of the asset or liability
(the variability of cash flows; sensitivity of the value
to market factors or other risks; for example,
amortized cost cannot provide relevant information
about a derivative) and contribution to future cash
flows (whether cash flows are generated directly or
indirectly in combination with alternative economic
resources; the character of the entity’s business
activities; as an example, if assets are utilized in
combination to provide products or services,
historical value can offer relevant information about
margins achieved in a period). Whether a
measurement basis can offer a faithful representation
is affected by: measurement inconsistency (if
financial statements content measurement
inconsistencies (accounting mismatch), those
financial statements may not faithfully represent
some aspects of the entity’s financial position and
financial performance) and measurement uncertainty
(does not necessarily avoid the use of a
measurement basis that provides relevant
information ; but if too high might make it necessary
to consider selecting a different measurement
basis.is essentially a process that is marked by
changes in a person.
In accounting theory perspective, it can not be
separated from the Agency Theory (Jensen, M., &
Meckling, 1976). Jensen and Meckling their paper
reveal the integrate factors from the theory of
agency, the theory of property rights and the theory
of finance to construct a theory of the ownership
structure of the firm. They establish the concept of
agency costs, indicate its relationship to the control
and separation issue, inspect the nature of the agency
costs produces by the existence of debt and outside
equity, show who endures these costs and why, and
inspect the Pareto optimality of their presence. They
also give a new definition of the firm and show how
their analysis of the factors affecting the creation
and issuance of debt and equity claims is a special
case of the provisioning aspect of the completeness
of markets drawback. In various cases, company
directors are managers who are also interested in
their money, not just other people's money, so that
they cannot be fully expected, that they must watch
company directors with the same vigilance as
partners in personal business who often oversee
themselves. There is a tendency to make it easier to
get things without the proper process. This results in
negligence in the process of managing corporate
affairs. To avoid this, management must take full
responsibility in managing the company's finances.
This means that management is responsible for
managing the balance of assets, debt, and capital to
achieve the goals of companies and investors. In this
case, of course, includes the valuation and
measurement of assets.
(Barberis, Huang and Santos, 2001) reveal their
research about asset prices in an economy where
investors acquire direct utility not only from
consumption but also from
fluctuations in the
worth of their financial wealth. They are loss refuse
over these
fluctuations, and the degree of loss
aversion relies on their prior investment
performance. They find that their framework can
help clarify the excess volatility, high mean and
predictability of stock returns, as well as their low
correlation with consumption growth. The design of
their model is influenced by prospect theory and by
experimental evidence on how prior outcomes affect
risky choice.
UNICEES 2018 - Unimed International Conference on Economics Education and Social Science
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3 RESEARCH METHOD
This article uses literature reviews to explain about
the essence and the importance of measurement and
valuation of the asset in accounting, that draw
concern of the problems that related with
measurement and valuation in practice.
4 ANALYSIS AND RESULTS
(Riahi-Belkaoui, 2005) said that there are alternative
asset-valuation and income-determination models.
There are four attributes of assets and liabilities that
may be quantified: historical cost, current entry
price, current exit price, capitalized or the present
value of expected cash flows. Two units of measure
may be used to measure assets and liabilities: money
and purchasing power. Asset valuation and financial
gain determination models: Historical-cost
accounting, Replacement-cost accounting, Net-
realizable-value accounting, Present-value
accounting, General price-level accounting, General
price-level replacement cost accounting, General
price-level net realisable-value accounting, General
price-level present-value accounting.
(Riahi-Belkaoui, 2005) expressed that in
measuring of asset, although theoretically
considered the best accounting models, present-
value models have recognized practical deficiencies
: they require the estimation of future net cash
receipts also the temporal order these receipts, as
well as the selection of the appropriate discount rates
; when applied to the valuation of individual assets,
they require the arbitrary allocation of estimated
future net cash receipts and the timing of those
receipts as well as the selection of the appropriate
discount rates; when applied to the valuation of
individual assets, they need the discretionary
allocation of calculable future net benefit receipts
among the individual assets.
Another approach carried out by (Barberis,
Huang and Santos, 2001). They suggest a new
framework for pricing assets, derived in part from
the traditional consumption-based approach, but
which also incorporates two long-standing ideas in
psychology: the prospect theory of Kahneman and
Tversky - 1979 (Kahneman and Tversky, 1979), and
the evidence of Thaler and Johnson - 1990 (Thaler
and Johnson, 1990) and others on the influence of
previous outcomes on risky alternative. Consistent
with prospect theory, the investor in their model
derives utility not only from consumption levels but
also from changes in the value of his financial
wealth. He is rather more sensitive to reductions in
wealth than to will increase, the "loss-aversion"
feature of prospect utility. Moreover, according to
with experimental proof, the utility he receives from
gains and losses in wealth depends on his prior
investment outcomes; prior gains cushion
subsequent losses -- the so-called "house-money"
result -- whereas previous losses intensify the pain
of ulterior shortfalls (Barberis, Huang and Santos,
2001). They study asset prices in the presence of
agents with preferences of this type and find that our
model reproduces the high mean, volatility, and
predictability of stock returns. The key to our result
is that the agent's risk-aversion changes over time as
a operate of his investment performance. This makes
costs rather more volatile than underlying dividends,
and along with the investor's loss-aversion, results in
large equity premia. Their results obtain reasonable
values for all parameters (Barberis, Huang and
Santos, 2001).
(Chordia, Huh and Subrahmanyam, 2009) link
valuation of the asset with liquidity. They said that
many proxies of illiquidity have been used in the
kinds of literature and studies that connects
illiquidity to asset prices. These proxies have been
motivated from an empirical viewpoint. In their
research, they approach liquidity estimation from a
theoretical perspective. Their method explicitly
acknowledges the analytic dependence of illiquidity
on more primitive drivers such as information
asymmetry and trading activity. The empirical
results offer evidence that theory-based estimates of
illiquidity are priced in the cross-section of expected
stock returns, even after accounting for risk factors,
firm characteristics are known to influence returns,
and other illiquidity proxies prevalent in the
literature (Chordia, Huh and Subrahmanyam, 2009).
(Duffie, 2010) stated Dynamic Asset Pricing
Theory on the theory of asset pricing and portfolio
selection in multiperiod settings under uncertainty.
The asset pricing results are built upon the three
more and more restrictive assumptions: absence of
arbitrage, single-agent optimality, and equilibrium.
These results are unified with two key ideas, state
prices, and martingales. Technicalities are given
comparatively very little pressure, so as to draw
connections between these concepts and to make
plain the similarities between discrete and
continuous-time models. The new chapter is on
corporate securities that offer alternative approaches
to the valuation of corporate debt (Duffie, 2010).
(Simpson, 2010) notes cover old and new
investment methods, regulatory and legal
developments and the role of technology as a game
changer in asset management. The discussion offers
constant weight to the theoretical and practical
aspects of asset management. The focus is on
Measuring and Valuation of Asset: Accounting Theory Perspective
1211
portfolio constructions, asset pricing on the
theoretical facet. It contains an asset management
industry overview, introduce to data analytics,
blockchain, and crypto-currency, demographics and
technology (Simpson, 2010).
The opinions of the researchers about the
measurement, valuation, and management of assets
that may be different, still have the same purpose,
namely to provide a view of the importance of the
value of assets to the company as a whole.
5 CONCLUSIONS
This article reviews the views of researchers
regarding assets and how to measure and evaluate
assets, from the point of view of accounting theory.
Clearly, the importance of asset management is
clearly seen. With good asset management,
companies can guarantee the survival of their
company, by choosing the best capital structure for
the company, maintaining a balance between debt
and capital, and understanding and optimizing the
value of assets.
The process of valuing assets in providing an
estimate of economic value, both tangible assets and
intangible assets, based on the results of analysis of
objective and relevant facts using valuation
techniques, methods and principles apply.
Along with the times, of course, measurement
and valuation of assets will experience changes and
developments. But the point is, how can we use our
assets as optimally as possible to achieve our
company's goals. This will not happen without good
measurement, assessment and asset management.
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