What do you call the combined financial statements of a parent company and its subsidiaries?

Consolidated financial statements are the general-purpose financial statements of a parent company that has one or more subsidiaries. In certain circumstances, parent company-only financial statements may be required in addition to consolidated financial statements. The existence of preferred stockholders, loan or other agreements, or other special requirements (e.g., reporting requirements for not-for-profit entities such as healthcare providers and statutory reporting requirements for downstream noninsurance holding companies) may necessitate the preparation of financial statements for the parent company on a stand-alone basis. Additionally, as further discussed below, Regulation S-X Rule 5-04 requires parent company financial statements (Schedule I) when certain conditions are met.

Parent company financial statements should not be used as a substitute for consolidated financial statements. Parent company financial statements should generally be presented in the same report with the reporting entity’s consolidated financial statements (e.g., SEC filings). ASC 810-10-45-11 provides the authoritative basis for parent company financial statements under US GAAP:

ASC 810-10-45-11

In some cases parent-entity financial statements may be needed, in addition to consolidated financial statements, to indicate adequately the position of bondholders and other creditors or preferred shareholders of the parent. Consolidating financial statements, in which one column is used for the parent and other columns for particular subsidiaries or groups of subsidiaries, often are an effective means of presenting the pertinent information. However, consolidated financial statements are the general-purpose financial statements of a parent having one or more subsidiaries; thus, parent-entity financial statements are not a valid substitute for consolidated financial statements.

Regulation S-X Rule 5-04 requires parent company financial statements (Schedule I) when the restricted net assets of consolidated subsidiaries exceed 25% of consolidated net assets as of the most recent fiscal year end. When the significance threshold is met, SEC registrants should present condensed financial information as prescribed by Regulation S-X Rule 12-04 for the parent company in Schedule I as of the same dates and for the same periods as the consolidated financial statements. SEC FRM 2810.1 stipulates that “registrants should present the information required by S-X 12-04 as an S-X schedule, except bank holding companies, which must present the S-X 12-04 information in the financial statement footnotes.” Irrespective of the presentation alternative, the parent company-only financial statements should be audited. Refer to SEC FRM 2810 for additional guidance.

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Consolidated Financial Statements vs. Combined Financial Statements: Which Should I Use for My Business? by Ronna L. DeLoe, Esq.

Consolidated and combined financial statements are two different types of statements that help the public know whether it's worth investing in your company. Learn the difference between these statements and why you would pick one over the other.

by Ronna L. DeLoe, Esq.
updated May 02, 2022 ·  3min read

If you are an owner of a parent corporation, it's important to understand your corporation's options when it comes to financial statements and reporting. You need to know what the financial statements show about your corporation and the subsidiary companies that the parent corporation controls. The more you know about financial statements, the more likely you'll be a savvy corporate owner.

Consolidated Financial Statements

A consolidated financial statement takes the financial results of the subsidiaries and includes them in a single financial statement for the parent company, as if the parent company and the subsidiaries were one entity.

While the subsidiaries operate separately from the parent company, a consolidated financial statement reports on the enterprise as a whole, with the parent company and subsidiaries together making up the financial picture of the entity.

An investor, or potential investor, can look at a consolidated financial statement and see that the combined entity is financially sound. The benefit of a consolidated financial statement is that it shows the overall economic wealth of the parent company and its subsidiaries together. This allows the parent company to show how much money it controls.

For example, if the parent company doesn't bring in as much money as its subsidiaries, together the parent company and its subsidiaries show how much more this conglomerate is worth than the parent company is worth alone.

Accountants prepare consolidated financial statements pursuant to generally accepted accounting principles. If the parent company owns more than 50 percent of a subsidiary, the accountant must prepare a consolidated financial statement, rather than a combined financial statement.

Combined Financial Statements

A combined financial statement is different from a consolidated financial statement in that it treats each subsidiary as a separate entity on paper, as it is in actual life. The combined financial statement reports the finances of the subsidiaries and the parent company separately, but combined into one document. Within the one document, the parent's and subsidiaries' financial statements still remain distinct.

Combined financial statements are generally easier to prepare than consolidated financial statements.

The benefit to investors or potential investors is that they can see how each company—parent and subsidiaries, which may include corporations, LLCs, or both—is doing. This breakdown is not so apparent with a consolidated financial statement. If an investor wants to know how each individual subsidiary is doing, it is helpful for the investor to see a combined financial statement, rather than a consolidated statement.

Which Type of Financial Statement to Use

When deciding whether to file a consolidated financial statement or a combined financial statement, it's a good idea to check with your financial advisor or accountant as to which he or she recommends. When, however, the parent company owns more than 50 percent of a subsidiary, you will have no choice—you must file a consolidated financial statement.

If you are a director of the parent corporation or LLC, and the general public knows your parent company and its brand better than it knows the subsidiaries, consider filing a consolidated financial statement.

After all, if the public hasn't heard of your subsidiaries, but they can sing the jingle to your parent company or recite the commercial word for word, the investing public won't be as concerned about the subsidiaries as separate entities. The investor just needs to know that the parent company is healthy and economically viable.

If it's more important to be able to assess each entity or company on its own merits—instead of as part of the unified whole—then the combined financial statement may be more suitable.

As stated earlier, the combined statement is much easier to prepare, since it simply requires a separate financial statement for each entity. A combined statement also makes sense in the event that two or more entities are under common control, but there is no actual parent company.

As with much of the reporting that is done specific to a business, which story you're wanting to tell—in this case, assessing the parent and subsidiaries as a whole vs. assessing the individual components—will help you determine which financial statement format is better for presenting your information.

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