dmodmoad
Jan 16, 2013, 11:27 PM
Hi,
Obviously when a subsidiary is consolidates it's income statement and balance sheet are consolidated and minority interest is the line that reconciles the portion the company does not actually have claims on.
What about the cash flow statement? A company gets to operating cash flow from net income, adding back D+A, change in working capital, adjusting for cash taxes, etc. And that gives you operating cash flow, but is that actually cash that belongs to the company, or does part of that cash flow belong to the subsidiaries minority holder? I really don't know how subsidiaries are accounted for on the cash flow statement and could use some help here. There is no clear explanation for finding how much cash on the cash flow statement doesn't belong to the company, or if only the cash to the company is accounted for on the cash flow statement, where is the reconciliation in instances of working from net income into operating cash flow?
Thanks.
Obviously when a subsidiary is consolidates it's income statement and balance sheet are consolidated and minority interest is the line that reconciles the portion the company does not actually have claims on.
What about the cash flow statement? A company gets to operating cash flow from net income, adding back D+A, change in working capital, adjusting for cash taxes, etc. And that gives you operating cash flow, but is that actually cash that belongs to the company, or does part of that cash flow belong to the subsidiaries minority holder? I really don't know how subsidiaries are accounted for on the cash flow statement and could use some help here. There is no clear explanation for finding how much cash on the cash flow statement doesn't belong to the company, or if only the cash to the company is accounted for on the cash flow statement, where is the reconciliation in instances of working from net income into operating cash flow?
Thanks.