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Chapter 1 Business Combinations

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Title: Chapter 1 Business Combinations


1
Chapter 1 Business Combinations
  • Accounting Standards
  • ARB 40, Business Combinations
  • ARB 48, Business Combinations
  • APB Opinion 16, Business Combinations
  • Restricted the application of Pooling of
    interests by requiring meeting 12 conditions( 2
    conditions for attributes of the Combining
    Companies, 7 conditions for agreement on how
    interests are to be combined and 3 conditions for
    absence of planned transactions)

2
Current Accounting Standard for Business
Combinations
  • FASB Statement 141 (issued in 2002)
  • Pooling of interests is prohibited
  • All combinations must be accounted for by the
    purchase methods

3
Accounting for Goodwill
  • FASB 142, Accounting for Intangible Assets
  • Goodwill from business combinations will no
    longer be amortized, but subject to annual
    impairment test. If impaired, goodwill must be
    written down and charged off as a separate item
    in income statement as part of operating expenses

4
Goodwill impairment test
  • Two-step impairment test shall be used to
    identify potential goodwill impairment and
    measure the amount of goodwill impairment loss to
    be recognized
  • 1st step to identify potential impairment by
    comparing the fair value of a reporting unit with
    its carrying amount, including goodwill.
  • 2nd step to measure the amount of impairment
    loss by comparing the implied fair value of
    reporting unit goodwill with the carrying amount
    of that goodwill.

5
Type of Business Combinations
  • Statutory Merger
  • Only the acquiring company survives the acquired
    company is dissolved.
  • Statutory Consolidation
  • New company is formed to take over
  • Stock Acquisition
  • One company acquires the voting shares of another
    company and the two companies continue to operate
    as a separate entities.

6
Recent Mergers and Acquisitions
  • PG to acquire Gillette 55
    billion
  • SBC to acquire ATT 16 billion
  • Sprint to buy Nextel Communications 35
    billion
  • Johnson Johnson to acquire Guidant 25
    billion
  • Symantec to buy Veritas
    13.5 billion
  • Oracle acquired PeopleSoft 10.5 billion
  • J.P. Morgan Chase bought Bank One 60
    billion

7
Purchase Accounting
  • Situation 1
  • Purchase price is greater than the fair market
    value of the identifiable net assets acquired
  • All assets and liabilities are recorded at the
    fair market value and goodwill is recorded
  • Goodwill is the excess of purchase price over the
    fair market value of identifiable net assets

8
Purchase Accounting (continued)
  • Situation 2
  • Purchase price is less than the fair market value
    of identifiable net assets
  • The negative goodwill is reduced from the
    non-priority assets and priority net asses are
    recorded at their fair market values.
  • If all non-priority assets are reduced to zero,
    then the remaining amount is reported as an
    extraordinary gain to be reported in the period

9
Accounting for business combination expenses
  • Direct acquisition costs (legal fees, finders
    fee, etc)---- As the direct acquisition costs
    to the price paid for the acquired company
  • Indirect acquisition cost (allocated internal
    costs)--- Expensed when incurred
  • Stock issuance cost--- Deduced from the value
    assigned to equity securities issued ( that is a
    reduction from APIC)

10
Recording a purchase
  • (1) Investment in ABC Stock XXX
  • Common stock XXX
  • APIC XXX
  • (2) Investment in ABC(direct cost) XX
  • APIC (stock issuance costs) XX
  • Cash
    XX

11
Recording purchase
  • If the acquired company is dissolved
  • Net assets (at fair market value) XXX
  • Investment in ABC stock XXX

12
Contingent consideration in a purchase agreement
  • Contingent consideration based on
    earnings------Treated as additional acquisition
    cost (normally, this will result in an increased
    amount of goodwill)
  • Contingent consideration based on issuers
    security prices(The purchaser guarantee the total
    value of the securities on a given
    value)----Treated as a reduction from APIC

13
Disclosure Requirements
  • The name and a brief description of the acquired
    company
  • A statement that purchase treatment has been used
  • Information on the total cost incurred in making
    the purchase
  • The portion of the year for which operating
    results of the acquired company have been
    included
  • Information on any contingent payment or
    commitments and their treatment

14
Example Case (a)
  • 1. Investment in Sells Corp. 1,250,000
  • Capital stock

    500,000
  • Additional paid-in capital

    750,000
  • 2. Investment in Sells Corp. 70,000
  • Additional paid-in capital
    25,000
  • Cash

    95,000

15
(continued)
  • 3. Cash
    20,000
  • Receivable
    70,000
  • Inventory
    210,000
  • P E
    600,000
  • Land
    200,000
  • Goodwill
    320,000
  • Liabilities
    100,000
  • Investment in Sells Corp.
    1,320,000

16
Case (b)
  • 1. Investment in Sells Corp.
    750,000
  • Capital stock

    500,000
  • Additional paid-in capital
    250,000
  • 2. Investment in Sells Corp.
    70,000
  • Additional paid-in capital
    25,000
  • Cash

    95,000

17
(continued)
  • 3. Cash
    20,000
  • Receivable
    70,000
  • Inventory
    210,000
  • P E (600,000-135,000) 465,000
  • Land (200,000- 45,000) 155,000
  • Liabilities
    100,000
  • Investment in Sells Corp.
    820,000
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