Consolidate

Consolidate

To consolidate (consolidation) is to combine assets, liabilities, and other financial items of two or more entities into one. In the context of financial accounting, the term _consolidate_ often refers to the consolidation of financial statements wherein all subsidiaries report under the umbrella of a parent company. In financial accounting, consolidated financial statements provide a comprehensive view of the financial position of both the parent company and its subsidiaries, rather than one company's stand-alone position. In financial accounting, the term _consolidate_ often refers to the consolidation of financial statements wherein all subsidiaries report under the umbrella of a parent company. Consolidation is also defined as a set of financial statements that presents a parent and a subsidiary company as one company.

To consolidate (consolidation) is to combine assets, liabilities, and other financial items of two or more entities into one.

What Does It Mean to Consolidate?

To consolidate (consolidation) is to combine assets, liabilities, and other financial items of two or more entities into one. In the context of financial accounting, the term consolidate often refers to the consolidation of financial statements wherein all subsidiaries report under the umbrella of a parent company. Consolidation also refers to the union of smaller companies into larger companies through mergers and acquisitions (M&A).

To consolidate (consolidation) is to combine assets, liabilities, and other financial items of two or more entities into one.
In financial accounting, the term _consolidate_ often refers to the consolidation of financial statements wherein all subsidiaries report under the umbrella of a parent company.
Consolidation also refers to the union of smaller companies into larger companies through mergers and acquisitions.

How Consolidation Works

The term consolidate comes from from the Latin consolidatus, which means "to combine into one body." Whatever the context, to consolidate involves bringing together some larger amount of items into a single, smaller number. For instance, a traveler may consolidate all of their luggage into a single, larger bag. In finance and accounting, consolidation has more specific nuance.

Consolidation in Finance

Consolidation involves taking multiple accounts or businesses and combining the information into a single point. In financial accounting, consolidated financial statements provide a comprehensive view of the financial position of both the parent company and its subsidiaries, rather than one company's stand-alone position.

In consolidated accounting, the information from a parent company and its subsidiaries are treated as though it comes from a single entity. The cumulative assets from the business, as well as any revenue or expenses, are recorded on the balance sheet of the parent company. This information is also reported on the income statement of the parent company.

Consolidated financial statements are used when the parent company holds a majority stake by controlling more than 50% of the subsidiary business. Parent companies that hold more than 20% qualify to use consolidated accounting. If a parent company holds less than a 20% stake, it must use equity method accounting.

The Consolidation of Businesses

In business, consolidation occurs when two or more businesses combine to form one new entity, with the expectation of increasing market share and profitability and the benefit of combining talent, industry expertise, or technology. Also referred to as amalgamation, consolidation can result in the creation of an entirely new business entity or a subsidiary of a larger firm. This approach may combine competing firms into one cooperative business.

For example, in 2015, Target Corp. moved to sell the pharmacy portion of its business to CVS Health, a major drugstore chain. As part of the agreement, CVS Health intended to rebrand the pharmacies operating within Target stores, changing the name to the MinuteClinic. The consolidation was friendly in nature and lessened overall competition in the pharmacy marketplace.

A consolidation differs in practical terms from a merger in that the consolidated companies may also result in a new entity, whereas in a merger, one company absorbs the other and remains in existence while the other is dissolved.

Consumer Debt Consolidation

Within the consumer market, consolidation includes using a single loan to pay off all of the debts that are part of the consolidation. This transfers the debt owed from multiple creditors, allowing the consumer to have a single point of payment to pay down the total.

Often, debt consolidation achieves more manageable monthly payments and may result in a lower overall interest rate. For instance, it may wrap a high-interest credit card payment into a more reasonable home equity line of credit.

Consolidation in Technical Analysis and Trading

Consolidation is also a technical analysis term referring to security prices oscillating within a corridor and is generally interpreted as market indecisiveness. Put another way, consolidation is used in technical analysis to describe the movement of a stock's price within a well-defined pattern of trading levels.

Consolidation is generally regarded as a period of indecision, which ends when the price of the asset moves above or below the prices in the trading pattern. The consolidation pattern in price movements is broken upon a major news release that materially affects a security's performance or the triggering of a succession of limit orders. Consolidation is also defined as a set of financial statements that presents a parent and a subsidiary company as one company.

Related terms:

Amalgamation

An amalgamation is a combination of two or more companies into a new entity. Amalgamation is distinct from a merger because neither company involved survives as a legal entity. read more

Asset

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more

Combined Statement

A combined statement aggregates information on a retail banking customer's accounts onto a single periodic statement. read more

Consolidated Financial Statements

Consolidated financial statements show aggregated financial results for multiple entities or subsidiaries associated with a single parent company. read more

Consolidation

Consolidation is a technical analysis term referring to security prices oscillating within a corridor and is generally interpreted as market indecisiveness. read more

Controlling Interest

A controlling interest is when a shareholder, or a group acting in kind, holds a majority of a company's voting stock. read more

Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)

Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) refers to the consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions. read more

Non-Controlling Interest

Non-controlling interest is an ownership position where a shareholder owns less than 50% of a company's shares and has no control over decisions. read more