Consolidation of Financial statements 1. INTRODUCTION In business , consolidation or amalgamation is the merger and acquisition of many smaller companies into much larger ones. In the context of financial accounting , consolidation refers to the aggregation of financial statements of a group company as consolidated financial statements . The taxation term of consolidation refers to the treatment of a group of companies and other entities as one entity for tax purposes. Under the Halsbury's Laws of England , 'amalgamation' is defined as "a blending together of two or more undertakings into one undertaking, the shareholders of each blending company, becoming, substantially, the shareholders of the blended undertakings. There may be amalgamations, either by transfer of two or more undertakings to a new company, or to the transfer of one or more companies to an existing company". M.COM (ACCOUNTANCY): SEM 1 Page 1
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Consolidation of Financial statements
1. INTRODUCTION
In business, consolidation or amalgamation is the merger and acquisition of many
smaller companies into much larger ones. In the context of financial accounting,
consolidation refers to the aggregation of financial statements of a group company
as consolidated financial statements. The taxation term of consolidation refers to the
treatment of a group of companies and other entities as one entity for tax purposes.
Under the Halsbury's Laws of England, 'amalgamation' is defined as "a blending
together of two or more undertakings into one undertaking, the shareholders of each
blending company, becoming, substantially, the shareholders of the blended
undertakings. There may be amalgamations, either by transfer of two or more
undertakings to a new company, or to the transfer of one or more companies to an
4. COMPANIES ACT 2013 PROVISION RELATED TO CONSOLIDATION
The 2013 Act now mandates consolidation of financial statements for any company
having a subsidiary, associate or a joint venture [section 129(3)]. The manner of
consolidation is required to be in line with the requirements of AS 21 as per the draft
rules. Further, the 2013 Act requires adoption and audit of consolidation of financial
statements in the same manner as standalone financial statements of the holding company
[section 129(4)]. Apart from consolidation of financial statements, the 2013 Act also
requires a separate statement, containing the salient features of financial statements of its
subsidiary (ies) in a form as prescribed in the draft rules* [First proviso to section 129
(3)]. Further, section 137(1), also requires an entity to file accounts of subsidiaries outside
of India, along with the financial statements (including consolidation of financial
statements).
While section 129 of the 2013 Act, requires all companies to file a statement containing
salient features of the subsidiaries financial
Statements, in addition to the consolidation of financial statements, section 137 of the
2013 Act further requires entities with foreign subsidiaries to submit individual
Financial statements of such foreign subsidiaries along with its own standalone and
consolidated financial statements. There seems to
Be significant amount of overlap and additional burden on companies with respect to
these compliances.
To illustrate this point, in order to comply with these requirements, a company which has
a global presence, with subsidiaries both
Within as well as outside India will need to comply to the following:
Prepare its standalone financial statements [section 129(1) of the 2013 Act]
Prepare a consolidation of financial statements, including all subsidiaries, associates
and joint ventures (whether in India or outside) [section 129(3) of the 2013 Act]
Prepare a summary statement for all its subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures of
the salient features of their respective Financial statements [Proviso to section 129(3)
of the 2013 Act]
Submit the standalone financial statements of subsidiary(ies) outside India to the
Registrar of Companies (roc) [section 137(1) of The 2013 Act].
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This situation clearly indicates the extent of duplication and additional costs which will
be incurred by entities in order to provide the Same information in multiple forms or
formats.
Differing compliance requirements imposed by multiple regulators will lead to hardship as well increased cost of compliance for companies.
Also, the requirement for unlisted entities to prepare a CFS, would substantially increase the cost of compliance. Further, it does not serve a similar purpose as in the case of a listed entity.
Since there is already a requirement to attach a statement containing salient features of the financial statements of the subsidiary, associate and joint venture, preparation of a CFS will would lead to duplication of preparing and presenting the same information in different forms.
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Consolidation of Financial statements
5. APPLICABILITY
Applicability of Consolidated Financial Statement (CFS):
Private Limited Company
Public Unlisted Company and
Listed Company
Companies Act 2013 (‘the Act’), in terms of Section 129(3), establishes the requirement
for consolidated financial statements for Indian companies and provides that where a
company has one or more subsidiaries, it shall prepare a consolidated financial statements
of the parent company and its subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates.
6. NON APPLICABILITY
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (‘MCA’) had also issued a couple of amendments
Companies (Accounts) Rules, 2014 to provide that preparation of consolidated financial
statement shall not be required by;
an intermediate wholly-owned subsidiary, other than a wholly-owned subsidiary
whose immediate parent is a company incorporated outside India
a company which does not have a subsidiary or subsidiaries but has one or more
associate companies or joint ventures or both for the financial year 2014-15
More recently, on 16 January 2015, the MCA issued another amendment that provides
that the requirements in respect of consolidation of financial statements shall not
apply to a company having subsidiary or subsidiaries incorporated outside India only
for the financial year commencing on or after 1 April 2014.
Apparently it seems that all unlisted companies with a foreign subsidiary are exempt
from preparing consolidated financial statements for the financial year 2014-15.
However, on a plain reading, it is not completely clear whether the exemption is
available if a company has at least one foreign subsidiary along with Indian
subsidiaries, or will be available if a company has only foreign subsidiaries but no
Indian subsidiaries.
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7. LIMITATIONS OF CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
While consolidated financial statements are useful, their limitations also must be kept
in mind.
Some information is lost any time data sets are aggregated; this is particularly
true when the information involves an aggregation across companies that have
substantially different operating characteristics.
Results of individual companies included in the consolidation are not
disclosed, thereby hiding poor performance.
Not all the consolidated retained earnings balance is necessarily available for
dividends of the parent
Financial ratios are not necessarily representative of any single company in the
consolidation
Similar accounts of different companies that are combined in the consolidation
may not be entirely comparable.
Additional information about companies may be needed for a fair
presentation, thus requiring voluminous footnotes
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8. CONCEPTS RELATING TO CFS
8.1 HOLDING COMPANY
A holding company is a company that owns other companies' outstanding stock.
The term usually refers to a company that does not produce goods or services
itself; rather, its purpose is to own shares of other companies to form a corporate
group. Holding companies allow the reduction of risk for the owners and can
allow the ownership and control of a number of different companies
DEFINITION OF 'HOLDING COMPANY:
A parent corporation, limited liability company or limited partnership that owns
enough voting stock in another company to control its policies and management.
A holding company exists for the sole purpose of controlling another company,
which might also be a corporation, limited partnership or limited liability
company, rather than for the purpose of producing its own goods or services.
Holding companies also exist for the purpose of owning property such as real
estate, patents, trademarks, stocks and other assets. If a business is 100% owned
by a holding company, it is called a wholly owned subsidiary.
Utilities:The Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 caused many energy companies to
divest their subsidiary businesses. Between 1938 and 1958 the number of holding
companies declined from 216 to 18. An energy law passed in 2005 removed the 1935
requirements, and has led to mergers and holding company formation among power
marketing and power brokering companies.
Personal holding company:In the United States, a personal holding company is defined in section 542 of
the Internal Revenue Code. A corporation is a personal holding company if both of
the following requirements are met
Gross income test: At least 60% of the corporation's adjusted ordinary gross
income is from dividends, interest, rent, and royalties.
Revenue profit is the difference between revenue incomes and revenue expenses. It
is earned in the ordinary course of the business. It results from the sale of goods and
services at a price more than their cost price. Revenue profit is he outcome of regular
transactions of the business. It is shown as gross profit and net profit in trading
and profit and loss accounts. It is available for the distribution to shareholders as
dividend or for creating reserve and fund for various purposes. It shows the efficiency
of the business. In fact, earning revenue profit is the main objective of every business.
In the income statement, there are four levels of profit or profit margins - gross profit, operating profit, pre-tax profit and net profit. The term "margin" can apply to the absolute number for a given profit level and/or the number as a percentage of net sales/revenues. Profit margin analysis uses the percentage calculation to provide a comprehensive measure of a company's profitability on a historical basis (3-5 years) and in comparison to peer companies and industry benchmarks.
Revenue profits comprises of;
Gross profit
Operating profit
Pre-tax profit
Net profit
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8.6 DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CAPITAL PROFITS
AND REVENUE PROFITS
Following are the main differences between capital profit and revenue profit.
Mode of Earning
Capital profit is earned by selling assets, shares and debentures at a price more than
their book value and face value. Revenue profit is earned in the ordinary course of the
business.
Distribution
Capital profit is not available for the distribution to shareholders as dividend. Revenue profit
is available for the distribution to shareholders as dividend.
Use
Capital profit is transferred to capital reserve and used for meeting capital losses. Revenue
profit is used to distribute dividend and create reserve and fund for various purposes.
Treatment
Capital profit is shown on the liabilities side of the balance sheet as capital reserve. Revenue
profit is shown as debit balance on the debit side of the trading and profit and loss
accounts and on asset side of the balance sheet as accumulated loss.
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9 ACCOUNTING STANDARD 21- BASIC PRINCIPLES
OF CONSOLIDATION
Comparative international standards and highlights
Key objective: To provide for preparation and presentation of consolidated financial
statements in the books of a holding company
Related accounting standards
• Investments in associates
• Investments in Joint ventures
• Comparison between IAS and AS
Scope
• Two types of accounts of holding companies
– Group financial statements Group financial statements
Consolidating financial statements of subsidiaries
– Separate financial statements
Key definitions
Subsidiaries and parents
o Subsidiary is one which is “controlled” by a parent
o Need not be a company
o Subsidiary can be any type of organization
Control
– Ownership, directly or indirectly through one or more subsidiaries, of more than
half of voting power of an enterprise more than half of voting power of an enterprise
– Controlling composition of board of directors in case of a company or governing
council so as to obtain economic benefits from the enterprise.
Analysis of definition of control Analysis of definition of control
– Deliberately set so as to avoid conflict with Companies Act definition
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Subsidiaries under Companies Act
– Are these examples of subsidiaries?
• A controls B
• A controls B, B controls C
• A controls B and C. B and C together control D
Exceptions to consolidation
There are two exceptions:
- Where control is temporary
- Subsidiary operates under long term restrictions which significantly
impair its ability to transfer funds
What if activities of the subsidiary are totally different
from the parent?
– Not a valid ground for not doing consolidation
Consolidation procedure
Line by line consolidation of assets/liabilities/incomes and expenses of
the subsidiary
– Investment of the parent in the capital of the subsidiary (A), and parent’s portion of
equity of the subsidiary (B) , should be eliminated.
• If is A is more than B, A-B is goodwill
• If B is more than A, B-A is capital reserve
• This determination is done on the date of investment in the subsidiary.
–Minority interest in the net income of the subsidiary should be adjusted against
group income
– Minority interest in the net assets should be identified and reflected separately from
the liabilities and equity of the parent
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– Intra-group balances and intra group transactions, and any unrealised profits should
be eliminated completely
• Unrealised losses are also eliminated, but may reflect impairment
– Financial statements are drawn up to the same date
• However, if it is not practical to prepare on the same date, a gap of not more than 6
months is permissible
– Uniform accounting policies
De-subsidiarisation
• From the date on which the holding-subsidiary relation ceases, the difference
between the relation ceases, the difference between the proceeds of investment, and
the carrying amount of net assets on the balance sheet of
the parent, is recognised as profit/loss
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10 CONSOLIDATION OF FINANCIAL INFORMATION
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD allows reporting for businesses
combined using the acquisition method. The acquisition method embraces a fair value
measurement attribute.
* Adoption of this attribute reflects the FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
BOARD’s increasing emphasis on fair value for measuring and assessing business
activity.
* In the past, reporting standards embraced the cost principle to measure and report the
financial effects of business combinations.
Expansion Through Corporate Takeovers
Reasons for firms to combine:
1. Vertical integration of one firm’s output and another firm’s distribution or further
processing.
2. Cost savings through elimination of duplicate facilities and staff.
3. Quick entry for new and existing products into domestic and foreign markets.
4. Economies of scale allowing greater efficiency and negotiating power.
5. The ability to access financing at more attractive rates. As firm size increases,
negotiating power with financial institutions can increase also.
6. Diversification of business risk.
7. Continuous expansion of the organization, often into diversified areas (creating
conglomerates).
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11 TYPES OF CONSOLIDATION
The consolidation of financial information into a single set of statements become
necessary when the business combination of two or more companies creates a single
economic entity – FASB ASC (810-10-10-1)
* “There is a presumption that consolidated financial statements are more meaningful
than separate financial statements and that they are usually necessary for a fair
presentation when one of the entities in the consolidated group directly or indirectly has
a controlling financial interest in the other entities.”
* Business combination: refers to a transaction or other event in which an acquirer
obtains control over one or more businesses.
Business combinations are formed by a wide variety of transactions or events with
various formats:
1. Statutory merger – Any business combination in which only one of the original
companies continues to exist.
a. One company obtains the assets, and often the liabilities, of another company in
exchange for cash, other assets, liabilities, stock, or a combination of these.
b. The second organization normally dissolves itself as a legal corporation.
c. One company obtains all of the capital stock of another in exchange for cash, other
assets, liabilities, stock, or a combination of these. After gaining control, the acquiring
company can decide to transfer all assets and liabilities to its own financial records.
d. The second company dissolves. However, because stock is obtained, the acquiring
company must gain 100% control of all shares before legally dissolving the
subsidiary.
2. Statutory Consolidation – Business combination that has united two or more
existing companies under the ownership of a newly created company.
e. Two or more companies transfer either their assets or their capital stock to a newly
formed corporation.
f. Both original companies are dissolved, leaving only the new organization in
existence.
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3. Acquisition of more than 50% of voting stock
g. One company achieves legal control over another by acquiring a majority of voting
stock. Although control is present, no dissolution takes place; each company remains
in existence as an incorporated operation.
Separate incorporation is frequently preferred to take full advantage of any
intangible benefits accruing to the acquired company as a going concern.
h. Because the assets and liability account balances are not physically combined as in
statutory mergers and consolidations, each company continues to maintain an
independent accounting system.
Maintaining an independent information system for a subsidiary often enhances
its market value for an eventual sale or IPO as a stand-alone entity.
To reflect the combination, the acquiring company enters the takeover transaction
into its own records by establishing a single investment asset account. The newly
acquired subsidiary omits any recording of this event; its stock is just simply
transferred to the parent firm the subsidiary’s shareholders (no direct effect of the
takeover).
4. Control of variable interest entity (VIE) – Establishes contractual control over a VIE
to engage in a specific activity.
i. Does not involve a majority voting stock interest or direct ownership or assets.
j. Sponsoring the firm and becomes its “primary beneficiary” with rights to its
residual profits.
k. Can take the form of leases, participation rights, guarantees, or other interests.
Control
The definition of control is central to determining when two or more entities become
one economic entity and therefore one reporting entity.
* Control of one firm by another is most often achieved through the acquisition of
voting shares. Accordingly, GAAP traditionally has pointed to a majority voting share
ownership as a controlling financial interest that requires consolidation.
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12 CONSOLIDATION PROCESS
Consolidation Process- Overview
Starting point: Separate financial statements of the companies involved.
Separate statements are added together, after some adjustments and eliminations, to
generate consolidated statements.
– Adjustments and eliminations relate to intercompany transactions and
holdings.
.
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Parent
Subsidiary
Consolidation of Financial statements
Inter corporate Stockholdings
– Common stock of the parent is held by those outside the consolidated entity and is
viewed as the common stock of the entire entity.
– Common stock of the subsidiary is held entirely within the consolidated entity and is
not stock outstanding from a consolidated viewpoint.
– Note: A company cannot report in its financial statements an investment in itself
– Parent’s retained earnings (less the unrealized intercompany profit) remain as the only
retained earnings figure in the consolidated balance sheet.
Intercompany Receivables and Payables
– A single company cannot owe itself money, that is, a company cannot report (in its
financial statements) a receivable to itself and a payable to itself.
– Therefore, an intercompany receivable/payable is eliminated from both receivables
and payables in preparing the consolidated balance sheet
Intercompany Sales
– The sale should be removed from the combined revenues because it does not
represent a sale to an external party.
Difference between Fair Value and Book Value
Fair value of the consideration given usually reflects the fair value of the acquired
company and differs from its book value.
An acquiree’s assets and liabilities must be valued based on their acquisition-date fair
values, and any excess of the consideration given over the fair values of the net assets
is considered goodwill.
Single-Entity Viewpoint
• To understand the adjustments needed, one should focus on:
• identifying the treatment accorded a particular item by each of the separate companies
and
• identifying the amount that would appear in the financial statements with respect to
that item if the consolidated entity were actually a single company.
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13 Mechanics of the Consolidation Process
A worksheet is used to facilitate the process of combining and adjusting
the account balances involved in a consolidation.
While the parent company and the subsidiary each maintain their own
books, there are no books for the consolidated entity.
The balances of the accounts are taken at the end of each period from the
books of the parent and the subsidiary and entered in the consolidation
work paper.
Where the simple adding of the amounts from the two companies leads to
a consolidated figure different from the amount that would appear if the
two companies were actually one, the combined amount must be adjusted
to the desired figure.
This is done through the preparation of eliminating entries.
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14 Objective of consolidation
To report the financial position, results or operations, and cash flows from the
combined entity.
For statutory merger or statutory consolidation, when the acquired
company (or companies) is (are) legally dissolved, only one accounting
consolidation ever occurs.
On the data of the combination, the surviving company simply records
the various account balances from each of the dissolving companies.
After this, the financial records of the acquired companies are closed
out as part of the dissolution.
When all companies retain incorporation, a different set of
consolidation procedures is appropriate.
They maintain their own independent accounting systems. Thus, no
permanent consolidation of the account balances is ever made. Rather,
the consolidation process must be carried out anew each time the
reporting entity prepares financial statements for external reporting
purposes.
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15 What is to be consolidated?
If dissolution takes place, appropriate account balances are physically
consolidated in the surviving company’s financial records.
If separate incorporation is maintained, only the financial statement information
(not the actual records) is consolidated.
16 When does the consolidation take place?
If dissolution takes place, a permanent consolidation occurs at the date of the
combination.
If separate incorporation is maintained, the consolidated process is carried out at
regular intervals whenever financial statements are to be prepared.
17 How are the accounting records affected?
If dissolution takes place, the surviving company’s accounts are adjusted to
include appropriate balances of the dissolved company. The dissolved company’s
records are closed out.
If separate incorporation is maintained, each company continues to retain its own
records. Using worksheets facilitates the periodic consolidation process without
disturbing the individual accounting system.
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18 Non-controlling Interest
For the parent to consolidate the subsidiary, only a controlling interest is needed not be
100% interest
Non controlling interest or minority interest refers to the claim of these shareholders on
the income and net assets of the subsidiary
Computation of income to the non controlling interest: In uncomplicated situations, it is a
simple proportionate share of the subsidiary’s net income.
Those shareholders of the subsidiary other than the parent are referred to as “non -
controlling” or “minority” shareholders.
Presentation: FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD 160 requires that
the term “consolidated net income” be applied to the income available to all stockholders,
with the allocation of that income between the controlling and non controlling
stockholders shown.
The non controlling interest’s claim on the net assets of the subsidiary was previously
shown between liabilities and stockholders’ equity in the consolidated balance sheet.
-Some firms reported minority interest as a liability, although it did not meet the
definition of a liability
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD 160 makes clear that the
non controlling interest’s claim on net assets is an element of equity, not a liability
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19 Combined Financial Statements
Financial statements are also prepared for a group of companies when no one
company in the group owns a majority of the common stock of any other company
in the group.
Combined financial statements are those that include a group of related companies
without including the parent company or other owner.
– Procedures are essentially the same as those used in preparing consolidated
financial statements.
20 Special Purpose Entities
Corporations, trusts, or partnerships created for a single specified purpose.
Usually have no substantive operations and are used only for financing
purposes.
Used for several decades for asset securitization, risk sharing, and taking
advantage of tax statutes
Qualifying SPEs
– Types of SPEs widely used for servicing financial assets and meet very
restrictive conditions established by financial accounting standards board 140.
– Conditions generally require that the SPE be “demonstrably distinct from the
transferor,” its activities be significantly limited, and it hold only certain types
of financial assets.
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21 Variable Interest Entities
A legal structure used for business purposes, usually a corporation, trust, or
partnership, that either:
– Does not have equity investors that have voting rights and share in all profits
and losses of the entity.
– Has equity investors that do not provide sufficient financial resources to
support the entity’s activities
FIN 46 (an interpretation of ARB 51) uses the term variable interest entities to
encompass SPEs and other entities falling within its conditions.
– Does not apply to entities that are considered SPEs under FASB 140.
FIN 46R defines a variable interest in a VIE as a contractual, ownership (with or
without voting rights), or other money-related interest in an entity that changes with
changes in the fair value of the entity’s net assets exclusive of variable interests.
22 Different Approaches to Consolidation
Theories that might serve as a basis for preparing consolidated financial
statements:
– Proprietary theory
– Parent company theory
– Entity theory
With the issuance of FASB 141R, the FASB’s approach to consolidation has
moved very much toward the entity theory.
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Consolidation of Financial statements
Recognition of Subsidiary Income
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Consolidation of Financial statements
Proprietary Theory
– Views the firm as an extension of its owners.
– Assets and liabilities of the firm are considered to be those of the owners.
– Results in a pro rata consolidation where the parent consolidates only its
proportionate share of a less-than-wholly owned subsidiary’s assets, liabilities,
revenues and expenses.
Parent Company Theory
– Recognizes that though the parent does not have direct ownership or responsibility, it
has the ability to exercise effective control over all of the subsidiary’s assets and
liabilities, not simply a proportionate share
– Separate recognition is given, in the consolidated financial statements, to the non
controlling interest’s claim on the net assets and earnings of the subsidiary.
Entity Theory
Focuses on the firm as a separate economic entity, rather than on the
ownership rights of the shareholders.
Emphasis is on the consolidated entity itself, with the controlling and non
controlling shareholders viewed as two separate groups, each having an equity
in the consolidated entity.
All of the assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses of a less-than-wholly
owned subsidiary are included in the consolidated financial statements, with
no special treatment accorded either the controlling or non controlling interest.
Current Practice
• FASB 141R has significantly changed the preparation of consolidated financial
statements subsequent to the acquisition of less-than-wholly owned subsidiaries.
– Under FASB 141R consolidation follows largely an entity-theory approach.
– Accordingly, the full entity fair value increment and the full amount of
goodwill are recognized.
• Current approach clearly follows the entity theory with minor modifications aimed at
the practical reality that consolidated financial statements are used primarily by those
having a long-run interest in the parent company.
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23 Financial Reporting for Business Combinations
> Current financial reporting standards require the acquisition method to account for business
combinations. Appling the acquisition method typically involves recognizing and measuring:
1. The consideration transferred for the acquired business and any non controlling interest.
a. Measured at FV and is equal to the sum of the acquisition-date FV or the assets transferred
by the acquirer, the liabilities incurred by the acquirer to former owners of the acquire, and
the equity interest issued by the acquirer (FASB ASC 805-30-30-7).
2. The separately identified assets acquired and liabilities assumed.
3 Goodwill, or a gain from a bargain purchase.
* FV is defined as the price that would be received to sell an asset to pay to transfer a liability
in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date (market value).
* Contingent consideration is an additional element of consideration transferred. Can be
useful in negotiations when two parties disagree on each other’s estimates of future cash
flows for the target firm or when valuation uncertainty is high.
> Fundamental principle of the acquisition is that the acquirer must identify the assets
acquired and the liabilities assumed in the business combination (then the acquirer must
measure them).
To estimate the FV, 3 sets of valuation techniques are typically employed:
1. Market approach – recognizes that FV can be estimated using other market transactions
involving similar assets or liabilities.
2. Income approach – relies on multi-period estimates of future cash flows that are projected
to be generated by an asset.
a. Projected cash flows are then discounted at a required rate of return that reflects the time
value of money and the risk associated with realizing the future estimated cash flows.
b. Useful for obtaining FV estimates of intangible assets and acquired in-process R&D
3. Cost approach – estimates fair values by reference to the current cost of replacing an asset
with another of comparable economic utility.
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Consolidation of Financial statements
c. The cost to replace a particular asset reflects both its estimated replacement cost and the
effects of obsolescence
d. Widely used to estimate FV from many tangible assets acquired in business combinations
such as PP&E.
Goodwill, and gains on bargain purchases
* For combinations resulting in complete ownership by the acquirer, the acquirer recognizes
the asset goodwill as the excess of the consideration transferred over the collective FV of the
net identified assets acquired and liabilities assumed.
* Conversely, if the collective FV of the net identified assets acquired and liabilities assumed
exceeds the consideration transferred, the acquirer recognizes a “gain on bargain purchase.”
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Consolidation of Financial statements
24 Procedures for Consolidating Financial Information
✪ Acquisition Method When Dissolution Takes Place
* Typically records the combination recognizing:
* The FV of the consideration transferred by the acquiring firm to the former owners of the
acquire
* The identified assets acquired and liabilities assumed at their individual FV
Consideration Transferred Equals Net FV of Identified Assets Acquired and Liabilities
Assumed:
* The book values are ignored and the acquiring firm records a consolidation entry in its