
Held-For-Trading Security
A held-for-trading security is a debt or equity investment that investors purchase with the intent of selling within a short period of time, usually less than one year. A debit to the account of securities fair value adjustment from an increase in the security's fair value requires a credit to record the unrealized gain that adds to net income. Conversely, a credit to the account of securities fair value adjustment from a decrease in the security's fair value requires a debit to record the unrealized loss that reduces net income. A debit or a credit to the account of securities fair value adjustment is an accumulation or deficit, respectively, to the fair value of the trading security. Given the original value of $1,000, the trading-security account for this particular security ends the period with a fair value of $1,200.

What Is a Held-For-Trading Security?
A held-for-trading security is a debt or equity investment that investors purchase with the intent of selling within a short period of time, usually less than one year. Within that time frame, the investor hopes to see appreciation in the value of the security and sell it for a profit.
Because of accounting standards, companies have to classify investments in debt or equity securities when they are purchased. Other than held-for trading, other options include held-to maturity or available for sale.





Understanding a Held-For-Trading Security
Held-for-trading securities can generate a profit from short-term price changes when investors sell them in the near term. They are short-term assets, and their accounting reflects that fact; the value of these investments is reported at fair value, and unrealized gains and/or losses are included as earnings.
The initial cost basis of these investments equals their fair value at the time of purchase. Over time, the market value of trading securities changes, and investors must report any unrealized gains and/or losses as earnings. The calculation of those gains and losses involves comparing a trading security's fair market value to its original purchase cost basis.
Held-for-trading securities are classified as current assets since they will be sold within a year and the cash flows from these securities are considered operating cash flows. Cash flows from held-to-maturity and available for sale securities are cash flows from investing.
Held-For-Trading Security and Fair Value Adjustment
Any increase or decrease in the fair value of a held-for-trading security requires an accounting adjustment. One must add or subtract the change from the security's previously reported value on the financial statements.
An accountant achieves this by debiting an increase or crediting a decrease in the fair-value change to an account called "securities fair value adjustment (trading)," which is a sub-account of the asset account for trading securities. A debit or a credit to the account of securities fair value adjustment is an accumulation or deficit, respectively, to the fair value of the trading security.
Changes in the fair value of a held-for-trading security from one period to another become an unrealized gain or loss to earnings.
A debit to the account of securities fair value adjustment from an increase in the security's fair value requires a credit to record the unrealized gain that adds to net income. Conversely, a credit to the account of securities fair value adjustment from a decrease in the security's fair value requires a debit to record the unrealized loss that reduces net income.
Example of a Held-For-Trading Security
Suppose that Company ABC purchased a security with the intent of selling it within a year. That security was recorded at its purchase costs when it was bought.
Now suppose that nine months have gone by and the security had a fair value of $1,000 as last reported on its financial statements. In the following quarter, by the end of the current accounting period, the security is trading for $1,200 in the market, which is the fair value of the security.
Per accounting standards, the company will have to record the new fair value of the security in its quarterly reporting. The fair-value-adjustment accounting requires a debit of $200 to the securities-fair-value-adjustment account.
Given the original value of $1,000, the trading-security account for this particular security ends the period with a fair value of $1,200. The $200 is also an unrealized gain that is reflected in earnings.
When the next accounting period arrives and the updated fair value of the security needs to be recorded, the calculation determining an increase or decrease will start from $1,200.
Related terms:
Accounting Standard
An accounting standard is a common set of principles, standards, and procedures that define the basis of financial accounting policies and practices. read more
Accounts Payable (AP)
"Accounts payable" (AP) refers to an account within the general ledger representing a company's obligation to pay off a short-term debt to its creditors or suppliers. read more
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
Accumulated other comprehensive income includes unrealized gains and losses reported in the equity section of the balance sheet. read more
Available-for-Sale Security
An available-for-sale security is a security procured with the plan to sell before maturity or to hold it for a long period if there is no maturity date. read more
Cash Flow From Operating Activities (CFO)
Cash Flow From Operating Activities (CFO) indicates the amount of cash a company generates from its ongoing, regular business activities. read more
Cash Flow From Investing Activities
Cash flow from investing activities reports the total change in a company's cash position from investment gains/losses and fixed asset investments. read more
Comprehensive Income
Comprehensive income is the change in a company's net assets from non-owner sources. read more
Credit
Credit is a contractual agreement in which a borrower receives something of value immediately and agrees to pay for it later, usually with interest. read more
Current Assets
Current assets are a balance sheet item that represents the value of all assets that could reasonably be expected to be converted into cash within one year. read more