24.4 Intercompany Inventory, Debt, and Fixed Asset Eliminations
Key Takeaways
- Intercompany balances and transactions are eliminated in consolidation because the single reporting entity cannot owe itself, sell to itself, or earn profit from itself.
- Unrealized gross profit in ending inventory is deferred until the goods are sold to an outside customer, then the deferral reverses in the period of the outside sale.
- Intercompany fixed asset gains or losses are eliminated, and depreciation is adjusted back to the basis the asset would have had without the internal transfer.
- Intercompany debt eliminations remove reciprocal notes receivable/payable, interest income, and interest expense; buying an affiliate's bonds from outsiders creates a constructive retirement gain or loss.
- Upstream profit deferrals reduce subsidiary income and therefore affect income attributable to NCI, while downstream profits generally affect only the parent.
Intercompany Inventory, Debt, and Fixed Asset Eliminations
Intercompany eliminations are the engine of consolidation workpapers. The parent and subsidiary record transactions on their own books because they are separate legal entities. Consolidated statements then remove the effects of transactions within the group because, from the reporting entity's view, the group has not transacted with an outsider. The 2026 FAR blueprint emphasizes preparing consolidated statements, correcting errors, and agreeing consolidated amounts to source data - expect exhibit-heavy task-based simulations rather than a single isolated entry.
Universal Rule
The consolidated entity cannot make a profit from itself. It also cannot hold a receivable from itself, a payable to itself, interest income from itself, or a gain on selling an asset to itself. Workpaper eliminations remove those internal effects while preserving every transaction with outside parties.
| Intercompany item | Eliminate | Watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Inventory sales | Intercompany sales and cost of goods sold | Unrealized profit in ending inventory |
| Receivable / payable | Reciprocal receivable and payable | Cash-in-transit or timing differences |
| Bonds or notes | Investment in debt and debt payable | Constructive retirement gain or loss |
| Interest | Interest income and interest expense | Accrued interest receivable/payable |
| Fixed assets | Internal gain or loss | Depreciation on the stepped-up transfer price |
Inventory Profit
For intercompany inventory sales, eliminate the intercompany sale and the related cost of goods sold. If some inventory remains on hand at year-end, defer the unrealized gross profit; recognize it only when the inventory reaches an outside customer.
A downstream sale runs parent to subsidiary; unrealized downstream profit generally burdens the parent's income. An upstream sale runs subsidiary to parent; unrealized upstream profit reduces subsidiary income, so it changes the allocation between the controlling interest and the NCI.
Worked example. Parent sells inventory to Sub for $120,000 at a $30,000 gross profit (25% margin). At year-end Sub still holds one-third of those goods. Unrealized profit = $30,000 x 1/3 = $10,000, deferred from consolidated inventory and income until Sub sells to outsiders.
Inventory Workflow
- Identify seller, buyer, markup, and inventory still on hand.
- Eliminate the full intercompany sale and related cost of goods sold.
- Compute unrealized gross profit in ending inventory.
- Reduce ending inventory and consolidated income for the unrealized profit.
- Next period, reverse the deferral when the inventory is sold to outsiders (a beginning-inventory/retained-earnings adjustment).
- Allocate upstream profit effects to NCI when applicable.
Intercompany Debt
Debt eliminations range from simple to advanced. If Parent lends directly to Sub, eliminate the note receivable, note payable, interest income, interest expense, and any accrued interest. If one affiliate buys another affiliate's bonds from an outside party, consolidation treats the debt as constructively retired: the difference between the bond's carrying amount on the issuer's books and the price the affiliate paid is a constructive gain or loss recognized in consolidation, even though neither separate company records it.
Worked example. Sub's bonds carry a $500,000 book value; Parent buys them in the open market for $470,000. Consolidation eliminates the $500,000 payable against the $470,000 investment and records a $30,000 constructive gain (debt extinguished below carrying amount).
Fixed Asset Transfers
When one group company sells equipment or a building to another, the seller records a gain or loss and the buyer records the asset at the transfer price. Consolidation reverses the internal gain or loss and adjusts depreciation to what would have been recorded on the asset's original cost to the group. If the buyer depreciated the inflated transfer price, consolidated depreciation expense must be reduced each subsequent year. These corrections continue until the asset is sold to an outsider or fully depreciated.
Workpaper Discipline
A clean consolidation schedule ties each elimination to source support: invoices, inventory reports, fixed asset registers, debt amortization tables, interest accruals, and trial balances. Label each adjustment by purpose, not just debit and credit. The exam rewards candidates who can spot the one unsupported amount that keeps consolidated statements from agreeing.
Upstream vs. Downstream and the NCI Effect
The direction of an intercompany transaction matters only when there is an NCI. Downstream profit (parent to subsidiary) is deferred entirely against the parent's interest, because the parent earned it. Upstream profit (subsidiary to parent) reduces the subsidiary's income, so the deferral is shared between the controlling interest and the NCI in proportion to ownership.
Worked example. Sub (80% owned) sells inventory upstream to Parent, leaving $50,000 of unrealized profit in ending inventory. The full $50,000 is deferred, but the reduction in subsidiary income is allocated 80% ($40,000) to the controlling interest and 20% ($10,000) to NCI. Had the same sale been downstream, the entire $50,000 would burden the parent's income with no NCI effect.
Period-Two Reversals
Deferrals are timing differences. In the year after a sale, the prior unrealized profit becomes realized once the goods reach outsiders. The consolidation entry credits cost of goods sold (or adjusts beginning retained earnings and NCI) to recognize the previously deferred profit. Candidates often correctly defer in year one but forget to reverse in year two, understating consolidated income.
Workpaper Discipline
A clean consolidation schedule ties each elimination to source support: invoices, inventory reports, fixed asset registers, debt amortization tables, interest accruals, and trial balances. Label each adjustment by purpose, not just debit and credit. The exam rewards candidates who can spot the one unsupported amount that keeps consolidated statements from agreeing, and who can trace a consolidated balance back to the underlying separate-company figures plus eliminations.
Key Takeaways
Inventory eliminations target unrealized profit, debt eliminations target reciprocal balances and constructive retirement, and fixed asset eliminations target internal gain plus excess depreciation. Allocate upstream effects between the controlling interest and NCI, reverse deferrals when goods reach outsiders, and keep asking one question: what would the single consolidated entity report if the internal transaction had never happened?
Parent sells inventory to Sub for $120,000 at a gross profit of $30,000. At year-end, Sub still holds one-third of that inventory. What unrealized profit should be eliminated from consolidated ending inventory?
A subsidiary sells equipment to its parent at a gain, and the parent depreciates the equipment based on the inflated transfer price. What consolidation adjustment is generally required?