Understanding Account Consolidations

This chapter provides an overview account consolidations and methods.

Click to jump to parent topicAccount Consolidations

The account consolidation programs enable you to group, or consolidate, business unit account balances for online review and reports, provided that the balances are in the same currency and all of the companies use the same fiscal date pattern.

The JD Edwards EnterpriseOne General Accounting system provides these methods of account consolidation:

The method that you choose depends on the availability of disk space. All methods use AAI items GLG6 (beginning revenue account) and GLG12 (ending income statement account) to distinguish between balance sheet and income statement accounts. When the system calculates cumulative balances, it adds the prior year-end cumulative balance to the year-to-date amount for accounts that are not income statement accounts.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicOnline Consolidation Method

With online consolidations, you can compare budget amounts to actual amounts for a group of business units for a specific company; you can also compare different budget ledgers, unit ledgers, and so on.

When you use online consolidations, you can consolidate business units and review account balances by:

By grouping business units, you can create consolidated trial balances, balance sheets, and income statements.

The advantages of the online consolidation method are:

The disadvantages of the online consolidation method are:

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicHigh-Volume Consolidation Method

Use high-volume consolidations to combine balances for online review and financial reporting. To use high-volume consolidations, you combine balances under a fictitious company that you create solely for this purpose. For example, you can use a fictitious company to consolidate actual balances for each region or division of your company.

Advantages of the high-volume consolidation method are:

Disadvantages of the high-volume consolidation method are:

Example: High-Volume Consolidation

In this example, these business units are grouped together under the West Region:

During high-volume consolidation, these two business units are consolidated into a fictitious business unit named 02W, where:

This graphic illustrates a high-volume consolidation that consolidates data by region using business unit category code 02:

High-volume consolidation by region

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicMultisite Consolidation Method

Many organizations with subsidiary or branch operations have JD Edwards EnterpriseOne systems running in multiple locations. Most of these organizations consolidate general ledger information at the headquarters level for statutory and management reporting. In many instances, organizations specify the account ranges in the corporate chart of accounts where information from subsidiary or branch operations must be consolidated. In other instances, organizations might have different charts of accounts for different subsidiaries or branches.

Multisite consolidations enable you to consolidate account balances at multiple locations so that you can send the information to a central location. At the central location, you process the resulting journal entries into the general ledger using batch journal entry processing. You can also process consolidated balances from non-EnterpriseOne sites.

The information that you consolidate at the central location is accessible to all standard JD Edwards EnterpriseOne programs.