Deferred tax assets

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What are deferred tax assets? When and how do deferred tax assets occur, and how do you account for deferred tax assets? Which type of items create deferred tax assets? What is a Deferred Tax Asset impairment? All of this and more is covered in this short video.

⏱️TIMESTAMPS⏱️
0:00 Introduction to deferred tax assets
0:32 Corporate income tax expense
1:19 Net operating loss carry-forward
2:14 Deferred tax assets on the balance sheet
3:08 How deferred tax assets get created
3:43 Deferred tax asset impairment

With a term like deferred tax assets, the first logical step to take is to look at the meaning of each of the words. Tax indicates that we are dealing with the topic of taxation. Deferred means that something has been postponed, and assets means that we own it, we have ownership. Keep that in mind when we explore deferred tax assets in more depth.

Before we discuss deferred tax assets, let’s make sure that we have the same basic understanding of how taxation journal entries are recorded under normal circumstances, when a company is profitable. A company with revenue of $1 million, and costs of $900,000, has an Earnings Before Taxes of $100,000. At a 35% tax rate, the income tax expense will be $35,000, and the Net Income $65,000. The journal entry for recording the income tax expense is debit income tax expense in the income statement, and credit income tax payable on the balance sheet. When the tax payable is subsequently transferred to the tax authorities, you debit income tax payable and credit cash. So far, so good.

But what if you are a start-up company that does not generate profit yet? StartUp Inc has not generated any revenue in its first year, but it did incur costs, and therefore has a negative Earnings Before Tax of $100,000. The income tax expense on that Earnings Before Taxes is negative $35,000, and Net Income negative $65,000. The CEO of StartUp Inc sends a message to the IRS to ask for a cash refund of the $35,000, which the tax officer finds very amusing. He responds that as StartUp Inc has not paid any tax in the past, he cannot provide a refund. However, what he can do is provide a “rain check”: giving StartUp Inc the right to come back on another day to receive what they could not get today. The technical term for the raincheck is “Net Operating Loss Carry-Forward”, and that is where the deferred tax asset comes in!

The way the negative income tax expense gets booked is: credit income tax expense in the income statement, debit Deferred Tax Assets on the balance sheet. Deferred tax assets reduce taxes paid in future periods.

StartUp Inc goes into its second year of operation, and carries over that Deferred Tax Asset on the balance sheet into the new year. StartUp Inc now generates $1 million of revenue, and $100,000 Earnings Before Tax. On this Earnings Before Tax, we record an income tax charge of $35,000. In terms of journal entries, we now debit income tax expense in the income statement, and rather than crediting income tax payable on the balance sheet, we can credit and deplete the deferred tax asset. StartUp Inc has offset its year 1 loss against year 2 profits.

Which type of items create deferred tax assets? Annual reports of companies listed on the stock market provide good insights on that. The common denominators are that there are temporary (timing) differences between “tax” and “book” (or GAAP) accounting, and that a deferred tax asset occurs when taxable income is higher than “book” income. Some of the items that companies mention as creators of deferred tax assets are pension, employee benefits plans, non-deductible reserves, accruals, and many more.

The next question to answer is: what is a Deferred Tax Asset impairment? Such a decrease of the balance sheet asset occurs when there is a tax rate change, or when the likelihood of being able to recover deferred tax assets against future sources of taxable income changes.

Philip de Vroe (The Finance Storyteller) aims to make strategy, finance and leadership enjoyable and easier to understand. Learn the business vocabulary to join the conversation with your CEO at your company. Understand how financial statements work in order to make better stock market investment decisions. Philip delivers training in various formats: YouTube videos, classroom sessions, webinars, and business simulations. Connect with me through Linked In!
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What you explain in 4 minutes took our professor a week. Nice job and thank you\\

jacobs
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I find it easy to understand DTL, but not DTA, thanks for help, a clearer picture now, blessing from Hong Kong !

conniecheung
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This video is a gem. Thank you finance storyteller, you made this accounting concept so much clearer for me.

skipeboi
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*Wow! Clearly a nice and amusing video on DTA.* _Tysm._

jamesperry
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Excellent example for deferred tax asset.Many day I was expended but I did not understand deferred tax asset.This video is very useful for deferred tax asset.

mdkamalhossain
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Thank you so much. Your video much better than my professor's presentation.

loganyang
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Precise explanation. Its just perfect.

tiktoklifestyle
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The tutorial for how to make a ide show video is the perfect one ihave searched for for a while. Thank you!

isaacthompson
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Better explanation than my tuition lecturer😆..Keep up the brilliant work.

muhammedwasim
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Helpful for something that came up today at work. thanks.

schoolvideoshare
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Thankyou for making understanding what deffered tax asset is

rishirabindranath
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I wish my professor would’ve explained it as clearly as this

chris
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A lot of help from your video, thanks for sharing

vedsharma
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i have read a book on deferred tax assets. never understood what it is. until i watch this video.

iskandarzulkarnain
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Thank you a lot that was simple and smooth

khalid
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This is very helpful! Thank you so much! 👍👍👍

chinmeeyap
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So the reason General Motors, for example, found it less profitable to continue taking deferred tax assists was because, when the tax bill lowered the corporate tax rate from 35 to 21%, the amount they owed was lowered from a 35% rate to a 21% rate? I just want to make sure I'm understanding this.
Are deferred tax assets then paid back at a later time? And, if so, when are they paid back? Does the corporation decide when to pay it back?

NeillGuitars
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Where did you come across the accounting term "deferred tax assets"? Let me know by commenting below!

TheFinanceStoryteller
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Very well explained, thank you very much!

luxxnn
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This is fairly helpful! Thank you sir!

rosewong