Lecture 1-Post
Lecture 1-Post
ACCOUNTING STUDIES
Lecture 1
Business Combinations I: Basic Concepts
Angie Wang
School of Accountancy
Business Combinations
Acquirer obtains
CONTROL of
business acquired
Target is one or
more BUSINESSES
Business Combinations
❑ An investor controls an investee IF and ONLY IF the investor has all of the
following elements: [IFRS 10:7]
Power
Control
Ability
Returns
Business Combinations
❑Business combinations may take different forms; however, two characteristics are
present:
Target is one or
more BUSINESSES
Business Combinations
❑ A ‘business’ is NOT just a group of assets, rather, it is an integrated set of activities
and assets able to produce a return
❑ Substantive processes: depends on whether an acquired set of activities and assets
has outputs at acquisition date.
Business Combinations
❑Business combinations may take different forms; however, two characteristics are
present:
- That the business combinations involves entities or businesses under common control
- Common control: ultimately controlled by the same party or parties before and after the
combination
- Governed by accounting guidance AG5 Merger Accounting for Common Control Combination
- That the acquisition does not represent a business (i.e., acquisition of assets or groups of assets)
- Governed by accounting standard HKAS 16 Property, Plant and Equipment
Accounting for Business Combinations
❑ The required method of accounting for a business combination under paragraph 4
of HKFRS/IFRS 3 is the acquisition method.
❑ Acquisition method:
- Based on fair value principle
- Upon obtaining control of the subsidiary, the exchange transaction is measured
at fair value.
The Acquisition Method
❑ The key steps in the acquisition method are:
❑ General principle = the date on which the acquirer legally transfers consideration,
acquires the assets, and assume liabilities of the acquiree
❑ Determining the correct acquisition date is important as the following are affected
by the choice of acquisition date:
- The fair values of net assets acquired
- Consideration given, where the consideration takes a non-cash form
- Measurement of the non-controlling interest
The Acquisition Method
-Determine the acquisition date
❑ Example:
- Jan. 1, 2022: Directors of Entity A approached directors of Entity B with the
proposal for the acquisition of all the issued shares of Entity B.
- Mar. 3, 2022: Both parties agreed on the terms and signed contract.
- May 5, 2022: 20% of the consideration has been paid as deposit of the acquisition.
- Jan. 1, 2023: Entity A acquired the remaining 80% of shares.
When is the acquisition date?
The acquisition date is the date when entity A acquired the 80% interest. The 20%
share holding will be recorded as an asset in the records of entity A. At acquisition
date, the fair value of this investment is measured.
The Acquisition Method-recap
❑ The key steps in the acquisition method are:
Identifiable net assets (INA) must comply with two conditions to qualify for
recognition:
(1) INA must meet the definition of an asset or a liability in the conceptual framework
for financial reporting;
(2) INA must be priced into the consideration transferred and not a separate stand-
alone transactions.
The Acquisition Method
-Recognize and measure the identifiable assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed
❑ Principle 1: INA must meet the definition of an asset or a liability in the conceptual
framework for financial reporting.
ASSETS LIABILITIES
(A) It is probable that any future economic It is probable that there is an outflow of
Probability test benefit will flow to the entity future economic benefit from the entity
(B) The item has a cost or value that can be The item has a cost or value that can be
Measurement test reliably measured reliably measured
The Acquisition Method
-Recognize and measure the identifiable assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed
❑ For business combinations, the probability test in criteria (A) is unnecessary due to
the adoption of fair value approach:
- Probability being reflected by the fair value (i.e., fair value measure captures both
the amount of future economic benefits AND the probable likelihood of their
realisation.)
The Acquisition Method
-Recognize and measure the identifiable assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed
❑ Application of Principle (1): Intangible Assets
Potential contracts or contracts under negotiation × No: Fails separability or contractual-legal criterion
Opportunity gains from an operating lease in ✓ Yes: Meets the contractual-legal criterion
favorable market conditions
Customer and subscriber lists of acquiree ✓ Yes: Meets the separability criterion (show evidence
of exchange transactions for similar types of lists)
The Acquisition Method
-Recognize and measure the identifiable assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed
❑ Examples of intangible assets which can be recognised in a business combination:
❑ Applying the principle of disregarding the probability test with fair value approach
under HKFRS/IFRS 3 (Revised), contingent liability (b)(i) as at acquisition date can
be recognized in a business combination at its fair value.
❑ Applying Principle (1), contingent liability (a) & (b)(ii) fail to meet the definition of
liabilities and cannot be recognized in a business combination.
The Acquisition Method
-Recognize and measure the identifiable assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed
❑ Application of an EXCEPTION to Principle (1): Indemnification Assets
❑ Indemnification assets:
- Sellers of the acquiree may provide a contractual indemnity to the acquirer to
make good any loss arising from a contingency or an asset or a liability (i.e.,
protecting the acquirer from potential adverse effects of an unfavourable future
resolution and guaranteeing by the seller that the acquirer’s liability will not
exceed a specified amount).
- Acquirer then obtains an indemnification asset.
The Acquisition Method
-Recognize and measure the identifiable assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed
❑ Applying the principle of disregarding the probability test with fair value approach
under HKFRS/IFRS 3 (Revised), acquirer has to recognize an ‘indemnification
asset’ at the same time that the acquirer recognizes the indemnified asset or liability.
❑ The indemnification asset is measured on the same basis as the indemnified item.
❑In a business combination, NCI are recognized by the acquirer as equity based on the following equation
Rationale: To represent outside interests’ share in the net assets of the acquiree.
Carrying amount of
Carrying amount of
acquirer’s assets + Acquirer’s equity
acquirer’s liabilities
Acquisition date FV + NCI share of
+ Acquisition date
of acquiree’s equity of
of FV of acquiree’s
identifiable assets + acquiree
identifiable liabilities
Goodwill
The Acquisition Method-recap
❑ The key steps in the acquisition method are: