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Goodwill Games: How to Tackle FASB's New Merger Rules

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Under FASB Statement 141, Business Combinations, and Statement 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets, management must identify reporting units that will test goodwill for impairment, allocate purchase prices of past acquisitions with existing goodwill to those units, and determine identifiable intangible assets separate from goodwill.

Under the FASB rules, most identifiable intangible assets will need to be amortized. In the past, companies simply aggregated goodwill and other intangibles into one line item and amortized it all together.

Consider the new two-step impairment test: Management calculates the fair value of each reporting unit and compares that to each reporting unit's book value. If the book value is determined to be below the fair value assessment, there is no impairment loss. But if the fair value is below book, this means that goodwill has been impaired, and a company needs to perform the second step.

The second step similarly takes the difference between the fair value of goodwill and its book value to determine how much a company will have to write off.

Companies will also have to develop methodologies and likely use costly outside valuation experts for the reporting unit and identifiable intangible asset appraisals lest they face a potential inquiry by the Securities and Exchange Commission or, worse, a restatement.

FEATURE ARTICLES
Cramming for the Final
Get up to speed on the latest accounting rule changes for treating goodwill and intangibles.
Four Ways to Say Goodbye to Goodwill Amortization
Expert tips for tackling the impairment test.
How to Survive the SEC's Second Guessing
New rules for recording goodwill and intangibles may inadvertently produce more restatements.
Intangibles Revealed
Once you identify them, how much will the fair value assessments cost?
Pool's Closed
FASB's new merger-accounting rules have already won some fans among deal makers.


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The Politics of Pooling
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Why J&J Jumped to Purchase Accounting
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Why Wachovia is Banking on Purchase Accounting
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Will FASB Finish on Time?
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Why Pepsi Loves Pooling
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Will FASB Kill the AmeriSource-Bergen Brunswig Deal?
Bergen CFO Dimick tells CFO.com why the new merger rules are essential.
FEI Responds to FASB
Letter specifies seven reasons why the Exposure Draft for goodwill falls short of expectations.
FASB's Goodwill Proposal Confounds Experts
Criticism is that intangible assets are subject to individual interpretation.

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