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Finance and capital markets
Course: Finance and capital markets > Unit 6
Lesson 4: Corporate metrics and valuationAmortization
Introduction to amortization. Created by Sal Khan.
Want to join the conversation?
- @Sal says "it could be fees associated with financing", I just want to ask how would such fees amortized if they can't be an asset?...I mean you can't sell such "fees" the way you could possibly sell a patent. Another related question is, does amortization always entail claiming an "Asset" in the balance sheet? If yes, how this would work with things that really can not be sold but at the same time are used up over a number of years, such as fees paid for some consulting services? 7:26(6 votes)
- I don't disagree with you. I think it's a question of materiality. An actual conversation I had with my boss involved quarterly fees for some Letters of Credit. I initially expensed the fees, but was persuaded to post to prepaid and amortize. His view was that the cost should be matched with the benefit (even though it's a wash for the quarter).
Anyone else have a take on this?(4 votes)
- Do you have by any chance any videos on annuities? I wasn't able to find any, I really need a video about continous annuity(7 votes)
- Why do we need to make a distinction between depreciation and amortisation? They seem to have the same purpose, so why would you separate the tangible from the intangible assets and not just amortreciate all assets under one category?(4 votes)
- The general rule in financial analysis is that the more information, the better. Many investors like to see a distinction between tangible and intangible assets, in order to get a better picture of a company's finances.(4 votes)
- At, why is Sal assuming that a drug company's patent amortizes at a linear rate? Wouldn't the patent retain its full value until the day of its expiration? 6:00(2 votes)
- No, because at the beginning of its life the value is "17 years worth of exclusivity" and at the end of its life the value is "1 year of exclusivity". 17 years is worth a lot more than 1.(4 votes)
- How do a Corp amortize a thing whose degradation time is not predictable? Maybe, the thing has value forever & does not degrade. Do companies amortize expenses on R&D? 8:03(2 votes)
- Nothing has value forever. Usually R&D is expensed, not capitalized, but sometimes in an acquisition an account is created to capitalize and depreciate previous R&D. Companies and their accountants have to make estimates of the useful life, subject to generally accepted accounting principles.(3 votes)
- how can we calculate the value of an asset when its value is 0 after depreciation over a period of time?(1 vote)
- Can amortization be used for the cost of employee training lets say that the employee works for 5 years and then needs to be retrained on the new system to do their job(2 votes)
- Because we spread the expense on four years like in the video, does this mean the company will pay less taxes every year because of the reduced incomes or it will pay less taxes only the first year when it bought the machine?(2 votes)
- So do stakeholders amortize in their assets if they invest in a company?(1 vote)
- Is there any benefit, or reason, to calling virtually the same thing by two different names, albeit for two different types of assets? The only possible explanation that I could think of is that the tangible asset being depreciated can potentially be sold off to another, whereas an intangible asset such as a license, would probably be worthless to someone else. Am I missing something?(1 vote)
- Intangible assets are not at all the same thing as tangible assets.(1 vote)
Video transcript
In the depreciation video, we
saw that if a company had to buy some equipment for its
factory, let's say at the beginning of 2007, just based
on the cash that went out of the door, there might have been
this temptation to say, OK, in 2007, we had an
equipment expense. EQ expense. And they could have just
wrote, let's say that equipment cost $50,000. So they would have just put a
$50,000 expense right in 2007. I write it as a negative number
just because I like to remember it's an expense,
although normally people just write it as a positive expense,
but I always like to put a negative for an expense
to know that it's going to subtract from your revenue. So they would put that cash
expense there in 2007. And then in future years, maybe
2008, 2009, 2010, they would have no expense until
maybe they had to replace that machine or buy a new one. And we saw that that is one way
to account for things, but it really doesn't reflect the
reality of the business. The fact that this machine right
here that cost $50,000 is used for-- in this example,
in the depreciation video, it was usable for two years. Let's say in this example, it's
usable for four years. So what they do is, instead of
just expensing the cost of the machine, when the machine is
bought on the balance sheet at the beginning of 2007, they
say, we now have an asset called a machine. I'll just call it
M for machine. That's $50,000 at this point
right here, right when we bought the machine. Remember, balance sheets
are snapshots in time. And then instead of having an
equipment expense, instead of having that expense, they'll
have an equipment depreciation expense. And the difference here is
instead of saying that the entire expense was that machine
in just the first period, they're saying no,
we're using some of the machine in that period. And let's say we do a
straight-line depreciation, which means we essentially
depreciate the asset evenly over its lifespan. So in this case, we're assuming it's a four-year lifespan. So let me draw that out. So the asset should linearly
go to zero over these four years. So essentially, in the
first year, our expense would be what? It's $12,000. If you divide $50,000
by 4, it's $12,500. It would be minus $12,500 in
each year, depreciation expense, and we would account
for it on the balance sheet. Because remember, income
statements are just telling you how do you get from one
balance sheet to another. So expenses reduce the
value of your assets. So, for example, in this one,
at the beginning of the period, before the 2007
income statement, the asset was worth $50,000. We depreciated $12,500 from it,
so at this point in time, the balance sheet as of the end
of 2007 or the beginning of 2008, we're going to say
that our machine is now $12,500 less, so $47,500. And then at the end of 2008,
beginning of 2009, our balance sheet under the assets, the
machine, if they gave us that level of granularity, would
be $12,500 less than that. So that's what? $37,500. So then the machine
is $25,000. And then another $12,500
on the books. It'll say the machine
is worth $12,500. And then at the end of
2010, it'll say the machine is worth nothing. And if we did our depreciation
schedule right, or if the lifespan of this machine really
is four years, then it's time to go buy another
machine and start doing this all over again. This is all a review of the
depreciation video. Amortization is the exact same
thing, but it deals with intangible assets. What's an intangible? It's something you can't see,
touch, feel, smell, eat. Obviously , a machine you can't
do all of those things to it, but you can at least
touch it and possibly smell and taste it. So an intangible asset, we can't
do any of that stuff to, but it's the exact same idea. For example, let's say we are
some type of widget company. And let me write down
the years: 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010. And let's say that if we just
did it from a cash point of view, let's say we had
to buy a patent in order to make our widgets. So we could have said, oh, we
have to buy a patent expense. We had to buy a patent
from some brilliant inventor someplace. We could just say, oh,
you know what? The patent cost $4,000. So we could just put that there
even though the useful life of the patent might
be four years. And so it doesn't reflect the
fact that we still are using that patent in these years, and
we just take the hit here. So this income will look
unusually low, while these will look unusually high. It's not reflective of the fact
that you're using this patent that has four
years left on it. So instead of doing that, what
you do is, at the beginning of the period you say, we have
acquired a patent, an asset, that is worth $4,000, And then
every year over the life of the patent, we'd amortize a
fourth of it since it has a four-year life. So it would be patent
amortization. And there's all sorts of
intangible assets that you might amortize. And amortizing really just means
spreading out the cost of this asset, just like
depreciation was spreading out the cost of a physical asset. So patent amortization would be
$1,000 in this year, $1,000 in this year, $1,000 in this
year, and $1,000 in this year. And then our snapshot, or our
balance sheet at the end of 2007, will have on its
assets a patent that's now worth $3,000. And at the end of 2008,
it'll have a patent that's now worth $2,000. The end of 2009-- I think you
get the point-- you'll have a patent worth $1,000. And at the end of 2010, probably
because the patent is now expired and anyone can go
out and produce whatever that invention that was patented
without having the patent, we then say that the patent
is worthless. And a very relevant thing is if
you were a drug company and you were buying the patent to
some pharmaceutical that had four years left so that you
could have exclusive rights to develop that drug. and at this
point, all of a sudden, now anyone can develop the drug, so
that patent is worthless. So the balance sheet is really
trying to capture what your asset is worth at that
point in time. At this point in time, your
patent is arguably only worth $1,000, because you paid $4,000
for four years, and now you only have a year left. But that's all amortization
is. Nothing fancy. Really, in my mind, it's very
similar to depreciation. Depreciation is tangible. Amortization is intangible. It could be patents, it
could be licenses. It could be fees associated
with the financing. Let's say you have some debt
that you took from a company, and the debt is going to last
for 10 years, and you had to pay a one-time lump-sum
to the bank. Well, that one-time lump-sum fee
should probably be spread over the life of the debt, so
you would amortize that expense over its life. Anyway, see you in
the next video.