Definition: A contingent liability is defined as a liability which may arise depending on the outcome of a specific event. It is a possible obligation which may or may not arise depending on how a future event unfolds. A contingent liability is recorded when it can be estimated, else it should be disclosed.
Description: A contingent liability is a liability or a potential loss that may occur in the future depending on the outcome of a specific event. Potential lawsuits, product warranties, and pending investigation are some examples of contingent liability.
If the amount can be estimated, the company sets aside that amount separately to be paid out when the liability arises. Contingent liability as a term does not apply only to companies, but to individuals as well.
For example, if you took an educational loan of Rs 10,00,000 from your bank to fund your child’s higher studies. That amount could well become a contingent liability if your child fails to make monthly payments after getting a job. You might have to pay the amount because you have taken the loan from your bank.
Let’s understand contingent liability from a company’s point of view. Your company might be in the middle of a lawsuit and your lawyer thinks that the other party has a strong case which could potentially lead to damages worth Rs 10 crore.
In that case, the company would book that amount as contingent liability on its balance sheet. On the other hand, if the lawyer or the legal department thinks that the other party does not have a very strong case in hand. They would advise the firm not to make any provision of a contingent liability.
When the probability of a contingent liability is low then is no journal or even a disclosure is required in the books of accounts.
Indus Towers shares rise 2% after ITAT ruling reduces Rs 3,500 crore contingent liabilityIndus Towers' shares rose 2% after a favorable ruling from the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) on depreciation claims related to its merger with Bharti Infratel. The ITAT dismissed the tax department's objections, reducing the company's contingent liability by approximately ₹3,500 crore. This win allows Indus Towers to claim depreciation on merged assets, significantly improving its financial position.
Centre expects hit of over Rs 1 lakh crore from apex court order allowing retrospective mining leviesThe Centre expected mining companies to face a financial burden exceeding Rs 1 lakh crore due to a Supreme Court order allowing states to levy additional taxes retrospectively. The mining industry predicted even more substantial impacts, especially in Odisha and Jharkhand, with potential inflationary effects on the entire value chain.
View: Federal finance must globalise, with states allowed a bigger share of investmentsAs the world globalizes, the role of governments in national economies is rising. FPIs can invest in state government debt, but they do not. The Centre is hesitant to let state governments market their debt to migrants aggressively. Migrant workers have a calculus that is a little more generous than that of FPIs, when it comes to investing in their home states. Why prevent state governments from tapping into this fount of generosity?
ICICI Pru Life refutes GST dept contention of tax liability due to input tax credit claimsIn the absence of receipt of a formal show cause notice detailing the grounds and rationale on which the tax demand is proposed to be raised on the company, the company evaluated the possibility of a tax obligation, which as of now appears to be remote, it added. In September last year, the Mumbai unit of the DGGI had said that an ITC of Rs 824 crore had been availed by 16 insurance companies on the basis of fake invoices. Out of this, insurers had voluntarily paid Rs 217 crore after the DGGI investigation.
Lenders voice concerns over maturing letters of credit by PMC BankOne of the largest urban cooperative banks in the country, PMCB has been active in issuance of LCs. Among its regular clients was a Mumbai-headquartered steel company with which it shared a long relationship.
Lenders voice concerns over maturing letters of credit by PMC BankOne of the largest urban cooperative banks in the country, PMCB has been active in issuance of LCs. Among its regular clients was a Mumbai-headquartered steel company with which it shared a long relationship.