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Fair Value Measurements
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2012
Disclosure Text Block  
Fair Value Measurements

3. Fair Value Measurements

 

As of June 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, TDS did not have any financial assets or liabilities that were required to be recorded at fair value in its Consolidated Balance Sheet in accordance with GAAP. However, TDS has applied the provisions of fair value accounting for purposes of computing the fair value of financial instruments for disclosure purposes as displayed below.

 

Under the provisions of GAAP, fair value is a market-based measurement and not an entity-specific measurement, based on an exchange transaction in which the entity sells an asset or transfers a liability (exit price). The provisions also establish a fair value hierarchy that contains three levels for inputs used in fair value measurements. Level 1 inputs include quoted market prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets. Level 2 inputs include quoted market prices for similar assets and liabilities in active markets or quoted market prices for identical assets and liabilities in inactive markets. Level 3 inputs are unobservable. A financial instrument's level within the fair value hierarchy is based on the lowest level of any input that is significant to the fair value measurement. A financial instrument's level within the fair value hierarchy is not representative of its expected performance or its overall risk profile and, therefore, Level 3 assets are not necessarily higher risk than Level 2 assets or Level 1 assets.

   Level within June 30,  December 31, 
   the Fair Value 2012  2011 
   Hierarchy Book Value  Fair Value  Book Value  Fair Value 
(Dollars in thousands)                 
Cash and cash equivalents1 $613,764  $613,764  $563,275  $563,275 
Short-term investments (1)(2)                 
 Certificates of deposit1        27,444   27,444 
 Government-backed securities (3)1  150,921   150,921   218,829   218,829 
Long-term investments (1)(4)                 
 Government-backed securities (3)1  55,468   55,468   45,138   45,310 
Long-term debt (5)                 
 Publicly traded 1  983,250   1,048,431   983,250   1,043,549 
 Non-public 2  542,301   549,233   542,398   543,309 

  • Designated as held-to-maturity investments and recorded at amortized cost in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
  • Maturities are less than twelve months from the respective balance sheet dates.
  • Includes U.S. treasuries and corporate notes guaranteed under the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program.
  • At June 30, 2012, maturities range between 12 and 21 months.
  • Excludes capital lease obligations and current portion of Long-term debt.

 

The fair values of Cash and cash equivalents and Short-term investments approximate their book values due to the short-term nature of these financial instruments. The fair values of Long-term investments were estimated using quoted market prices for the individual issuances. The fair value of Long-term debt, excluding capital lease obligations and the current portion of such Long-term debt, was estimated using market prices or through a discounted cash flow analysis. For its Publicly traded debt, which included the 7.0% Senior Notes, 6.875% Senior Notes and 6.625% Senior Notes, and U.S. Cellular's 6.95% Senior Notes, TDS estimated the fair value using market prices. TDS estimated the fair value of its Non-public debt through a discounted cash flow analysis using the interest rates or estimated yield to maturity for each borrowing, which ranged from 0.0% to 6.75%.

 

As of June 30, 2012 and December 31, 2011, TDS did not have nonfinancial assets or liabilities that required the application of fair value accounting for purposes of reporting such amounts in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.