Minority Interest

Companies make frequent investments in other companies. Recall our earlier discussion of three accounting methods through which corporations record them:

  1. Cost or market method: Typically used for investments comprising less than 20% ownership stake in another business entity. These investments are represented on the balance sheet as an asset line item called “Investments in Securities.”

  2. Equity method: Typically used for investments comprising a 20% to 50% ownership interest in another company, recognizing a certain level of operational and strategic control. Represented on the balance sheet as an asset line item called “Investment in Affiliates.”

  3. Consolidation method: Used for investments of greater than 50% in another business entity to reflect the investing company’s virtually complete operational and strategic control of the entity.

    • All financial reports of these majority-owned investments are consolidated into the parent company’s financial statements.

    • Note that even if a company does not own the entire subsidiary, but owns more than 50% of it, the company still consolidates all of the subsidiary’s assets and liabilities.

    • The company accounts for the portion of the subsidiary that it does not own in a line item called “Minority Interest.”

Companies that hold a majority ownership of more than 50% but less than 100% must account for minority interest they do not own. Minority interest represents ownership by the subsidiary’s shareholders who hold the remaining minority ...

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