Hello,
I am preparing a PRE-IPO biotech company's return. The audited financial statements are on GAAP basis. On the balance sheet, there are large amounts of prepaid and accrual expenses/liabilites. Most of the prepaids are prepaid rent, insurance, etc. The accruals include a lot of items such as accrual vacation and bonus; but the very large items come from journal entries like this:
Legal IP XXXXXX
Accrual Liability XXXXXX
Also, there are journal entries like this:
Stock basis compensation(FAS 123 R) XXXXXX
Paid in Capital XXXXXX
Consultant Service XXXXXX
Stock Granted for services(equity) XXXXXX
My co-worker told me that the prepaids are to amortized over 12 months. I disagree. He also told me that stock-basis compensation and all the accruals are not deductible. I am not very sure. For expenses that have the credit side as equity, he said not deductible either. I am just totally loss. I haven't done a M-1 reconciliation like this.
By the way, the accounting method as shown on the tax return is accrual.
As always, thanks in advance for your help.
Maria
I am preparing a PRE-IPO biotech company's return. The audited financial statements are on GAAP basis. On the balance sheet, there are large amounts of prepaid and accrual expenses/liabilites. Most of the prepaids are prepaid rent, insurance, etc. The accruals include a lot of items such as accrual vacation and bonus; but the very large items come from journal entries like this:
Legal IP XXXXXX
Accrual Liability XXXXXX
Also, there are journal entries like this:
Stock basis compensation(FAS 123 R) XXXXXX
Paid in Capital XXXXXX
Consultant Service XXXXXX
Stock Granted for services(equity) XXXXXX
My co-worker told me that the prepaids are to amortized over 12 months. I disagree. He also told me that stock-basis compensation and all the accruals are not deductible. I am not very sure. For expenses that have the credit side as equity, he said not deductible either. I am just totally loss. I haven't done a M-1 reconciliation like this.
By the way, the accounting method as shown on the tax return is accrual.
As always, thanks in advance for your help.
Maria
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