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A clear guide to minority interest, explaining how it represents ownership held by external shareholders in a subsidiary.
Minority interest, also known as non-controlling interest, represents the portion of a subsidiary company’s equity that is owned by shareholders other than the parent company. It reflects the share of net assets and earnings attributable to minority shareholders.
Definition
Minority interest is the ownership stake (less than 50%) that minority shareholders hold in a subsidiary that is majority-owned by a parent company.
When a parent company owns more than 50% but less than 100% of a subsidiary, it consolidates the subsidiary’s financial statements. Minority interest captures the share of equity and net income that does not belong to the parent.
For example, if the parent owns 80% of a subsidiary, the remaining 20% is minority interest—and this portion of equity and profit is attributed to non-controlling shareholders.
Minority interest is reported separately in the equity section of the balance sheet and as a portion of net income in the income statement.
If a parent company owns X% of a subsidiary, minority interest is:
Minority Interest (%) = 100% − Parent Ownership (%)
Value of minority interest:
Minority Interest = Subsidiary Equity × Minority Interest (%)
If a parent company owns 75% of a subsidiary with P40 million in equity:
Minority interest influences consolidation accounting, valuation of companies, and investor analysis. It impacts goodwill calculations, earnings per share (EPS), and enterprise value (EV).
It is treated as equity under IFRS and U.S. GAAP.
Yes, net income attributable to minority shareholders is excluded from EPS calculations.
Yes, minority shareholders may still influence key decisions depending on share structure.