Chapter 1-Business Combination (Part 1)
Chapter 1-Business Combination (Part 1)
Chapter 1-Business Combination (Part 1)
Related Standards:
PFRS2 Business Combination
Section 19 of the PFRS for SMEs
Business Combination
- Occurs when one company acquires another or when two or more companies merge into one. After the
combination, one company gains control; over another.
- ”
Asset Acquisition
- The acquirer purchases the assets and assumes that the liabilities of the acquiree in exchange for cash or
other non-cash consideration.
- After the acquisition, the acquired entity normally ceases to exist as a separate legal or accounting entity.
- The acquirer records the assets acquired and liabilities assumed in the business combination in its book of
accounts.
Under Corporation code of the Philippines, Asset acquisition may be either:
1. Merger
- When two or more companies merge into single entity which shall be one of the combining sompanies.
Ex: A co + B Co. = A Co. or B Co.
2. Consolidation
- When two or more companies consolidate into single entity which shall be the consolidated company.
Example: A Co. + B. Co. = C Co.
Stock Acquisition
- The acquirer obtains control over the acquiree by acquiring a majority ownership interest (more than
50%) in the voting rights of the acquiree.
Two Partiess
Parent – acquirer
Subsidiary- acquiree
After the business combination, the parent and the subsidiary retain their separate legal existence.
However, for financial reporting purposes, both the parent and the subsidiary are viewed as a single
reporting entity.
The “parent” records the ownership interest acquires as “Investment in subsidiary” in its separate
accounting books. However, the investment is eliminated when the group prepares consolidated
financial statements
A business combination may also be described as:
1. Horizontal combination
- Business combination of two or more entities with similar businesses (bank acquires another bank)
- Manufacturer acquirers its suppliers
- Acquire competitor
2. Vertical combination
- Business combination of two or more entities operating at different levels in a marketing chain (a
manufacturer acquires its supplier of raw materials)
3. Conglomerate
- A business combination of two or more entities with dissimilar business (real estate developer acquires
a bank)
4. Concentric
- Companies in the same industry, but different stages of the supply chain
b. Synergy
- occurs when the collaboration of two or more entities results to greater productivity than the sum of the
productivity of each constituent working independently.
- Most commonly described as “ the whole is greater than the sum of its parts”
- Efficient management
Objectives of PFRS 3:
To enhance the relevance, reliability and comparability of an acquirer’s financial reporting by establishing
the recognition and measurement principles and disclosure requirements for a business combination.
BUSINESS
- An integrated set of activities and assets that is capable of being conducted and managed for the purpose
of providing goods or services to customers, generating investments income or generating other income
from ordinary activities.
Three (3) elements:
a) Input – any economic resource that results to an output when one or more processes are applied.
b) Process – any system, standard, protocol, convention or rule that when applied to an input, creates an
output
c) Output – the result of 1 and 2 provides goods or services to customers, investment income or other income
from ordinary activities. (finished product)
Who is larger?
Ans. The acquirer is usually between the combining entities
A negative amount resulting from the formula is called gain on bargain purchase (also called negative
goodwill)
CONSIDERATION TRANSFERRED
Measured at fair value
It is the sum of the acquisition-date fair values of the assets transferred by the acquirer, the
liabilities incurred by the acquirer to former owners of the acquiree and the equity interests issued
by the acquirer.
Examples
Cash
Non-cash assets
Equity instruments
A business or a subsidiary of the acquirer
Contingent consideration
NON-CONTROLLING INTEREST
Is the equity in a subsidiary not attributable, directly or indirectly, to a parent.
Also called MINORITY INTEREST
The acquirer measures its NCI in the acquiree either at
Fair value; or
The NCI’s proportionate share of the acquiree’s identifiable net assets
RESTRUCTURING PROVISIONS
Restructuring is a program that is planned and controlled by management, and materially changes either:
the scope of a business undertaken by an entity; or
the manner in which that business is conducted.
Restructuring provisions are generally not recognized as part of business combination unless the acquiree
has at the acquisition date an existing liability for restructuring that has been recognized in accordance with
PAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets.
A restructuring provision meets the definition of a liability at the acquisition date if the acquirer incurs a
present obligation to settle the restructuring costs assumed, such as when the acquiree developed a
detailed formal plan for the restructuring and raised a valid expectation in those affected that the
restructuring will be carried out by publicly announcing the details of the plan or has begun implementing the
plan on or before the acquisition date.
If the acquiree's restructuring plan is conditional on it being acquired, the provision does not represent a
present obligation, nor is it a contingent liability, at acquisition date.
Restructuring provisions that do not meet the definition of a liability at the acquisition date are recognized as
post-combination expenses of the combined entity when the costs are incurred.
1. OPERATING LEASES
Acquiree is the lessee
*lessee – tenant
*lesson- landlord
General rule:
The acquirer shall not recognize any assets or liabilities related to an operating lease in which the acquiree
is the lessee.
Exception:
The acquirer shall determine whether the terms of each operating lease in which the acquiree is the lessee
are favorable or unfavorable.
If the terms of an operating lease relative to market terms is:
Favorable — the acquirer shall recognize an intangible asset,
Unfavorable — the acquirer shall recognize a liability.
Acquiree is the lessor
If the acquiree is the lessor, the acquirer shall not recognize any separate intangible asset or liability
regardless of whether the terms of the operating lease are favorable or unfavorable when compared with
market terms.
2. INTANGIBLE ASSETS
The acquirer recognizes, separately from goodwill, the identifiable intangible assets acquired in a business
combination. An intangible asset is identifiable if it meets either the
(a) separability criterion or the
(b) contractual-legal criterion.
SEPARABILITY CRITERION
An intangible asset is separable if it is capable of being separated from the acquiree and sold, transferred,
licensed, rented or exchanged, either individually or together with a related contract, identifiable asset or
liability.
Furthermore, the separability criterion is met if there is evidence of exchange transactions for that type of
asset or an asset of a similar type, even if those transactions are infrequent and regardless of whether the
acquirer is involved in them.
The acquirer recognizes identifiable intangible assets acquired that meet the separability criterion even if the
acquirer does not intend to sell, license or otherwise exchange the identifiable intangible asset.
The following are examples of identifiable intangible assets acquired in a business combination that
normally meet either the separability or contractual-legal criterion and, depending on their substance, are
recognized separately from goodwill whether they were previously recognized by the acquirer as assets or
had charged them to expense because they were internally developed:
Marketing related intangible assets
Customer-related intangible assets
Artistic-related intangible assets
Contract-based intangible assets
The acquirer shall apply PFRS 3, rather than PAS 37 when accounting for contingent liabilities related to
business combinations.
Under PAS 37, a contingent liability is not recognized because it does not meet all of the recognition criteria
for a liability (i.e., meets the definition, probable, and measured reliably).
Under PFRS 3, a contingent liability assumed in a business combination is recognized if:
It is a present obligation that arises from past events and
Its fair value can be measured reliably.
So, contrary to PAS 37, a contingent liability with improbable outflow of resources embodying economic
benefits may nevertheless be recognized if both the conditions above are satisfied.