Business Combination-Date of Acquisition
Business Combination-Date of Acquisition
Introduction
As defined by PFRS 3, a business combination is a transaction or event in which an acquirer
obtains control of one or more businesses. In a business combination, one of the parties can always be
identified as the acquirer, being the entity that obtains control of the other business (the acquiree). The
core principle of PFRS 3 sets out that an acquirer of a business recognizes the asset acquired and
liabilities assumed at their acquisition-date fair values and discloses information that enable users to
evaluate the nature and financial effects of the acquisition.
THE SCOPE OF PFRS 3 (Use your textbook as a reference – CH1 and CH2)
As defined by PFRS 3 a business is an integrated set of activities and assets that is capable of
being conducted and managed for the purpose of providing a return in the form of dividends, lower cost
or other economic benefits directly to investors or other owners, members or participants.
An entity shall assess whether the group of assets acquired constitute a business. Applying the
guidance of PFRS 3 a business consists of inputs and processes applied to those inputs that have the
ability to create outputs. It have to be noted that output is not necessary for an integrated set to qualify
as business but the mere ability to produce outputs out of the existing processes and inputs.
These elements are defined as follows:
1. Inputs
2. Process
3. Output
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Defensive Techniques. Enumerate. (9)
1. Poison Pill
2. Greenmail
3. White Knight or White Squire
4. Pac-man Defense
5. “Selling the Crown Jewels” or “Scorched Earth”
6. Shark Repellant
7. Leveraged Buyouts
8. The Mudslinging Defense
9. The Defensive Acquisition Tactic
E. Control. An investor controls an investee if and only if the investor has all the following:
1. Power over the investee
2. Exposure, or rights, to variable returns
3. Ability to use power over the investee
F. Acquisition Date the date on which the acquirer obtains control of the acquiree.
G. Identifiable when: (1) the business combination occurs at the date of the assets
(2) the net assets are under the control of the acquirer
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H. Fair Value. market-based measure in a transaction between unrelated parties
I. Non-controlling Interest.
Non Controlling Interest is the “equity in a subsidiary not attributable, directly or
indirectly, to a parent”. Non Controlling Asset is also called “minority interest”
K. Contingent Consideration.
An add on to the base acquisition price that is based on events occuring or conditions being met
some time after the purchase takes place.
The acquirer is required to measure the assets acquired and liabilities assumed in a business
combination at its acquisition-date fair values, however, such information is not always available at that date
and the entity measures identifiable items at provisional amounts. Therefore, PFRS 3 allows a
measurement period which is a period after the acquisition date during which the acquirer may adjust the
provisional amounts recognized for a business combination.
N. Acquisition Costs. Acquisition costs are costs that the acquirer incurs to effect a business
combination.
COSTS TREATMENT
a. Direct and Indirect Expense
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Ex. DIRECT: Legal fees, finders and brokerage fee,
advisory, accounting, valuation and other
professional or consulting fees to effect the
combination. INDIRECT: General and
Administrative cost, overhead that are allocated to
the merger but would have existed in its absence
and other costs of which cannot be directly
attributed to the particular acquisition.
O. Measurement of Consideration
Consideration Measured at
1. Cash/Monetary
Face Value
2. Non-Monetary
Fair Value
3. Issuance of Stocks
Fair Value
4. Assume Liabilities
Fair Value
5. Contingent Consideration
6. Share-Based Payment
Market based
P. Levels of Ownership
a. Passive Investment
b. Strategic Investment 1. Influential
2. Controlling
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P/L P/L
Purchase Price xx Impairment Loss (-) Purchase Price xx Investment Inc +
Transaction Cost xx Dividend Inc +. Transaction Cost xx Impairment Loss (-)
Impairment Loss (xx) P/L xx Investment Income xx P/L xx
CV of Investment xx Dividend xx
Impairment Loss (xx)
CV of Investment xx
T. Theory in Consolidation
1. Entity Theory
2. Parent Theory
3. Proprietary Theory
Reverse Acquisition. Occurs when an enterprise obtains ownership of the shares of another
enterprise but, as part of the transaction, issues enough voting shares as consideration that
control of the combined enterprise passes to the shareholders of the acquired enterprise.
V. Define.
Investment Entities. An entity that obtains funds from one or more investors for the
purpose of providing those investor/s with investment management services. It also commits
to its investors that its business purpose is to invest fund solely for returns from capital
appreciation, investment income, or both; and measures and evaluates the performance of
substantially all of its investments on a fair value basis.
Variable Interest Entities. also known as structured entities. They set up the reporting
enterprise to perform a very specific and narrow function. Created simply by delegating
specific powers to certain individuals to act on behalf of the sponsoring corporation by
creating sort of “agency” relationship with individuals instead of corporate entities.
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III. Proportionate Share in Identifiable CONSOLIDATED TOTAL ASSETS
Net Assets of the Subsidiary
Total Assets of Parent @BV xx
Total Assets of Subs. @FV xx
Goodwill xx
FV of Net Assets x NCI%= INAS Direct cost (if paid) (xx)
Indirect cost (if paid) (xx)
Cost to issue or register (if paid) (xx)
TOTAL ASSETS xx
PROBLEM-SOLVING
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I – Statutory Merger versus Stock Acquisition
Valuation of assets and liabilities acquired, stock acquisition, goodwill, stock price contingency
Below is the condensed balance sheet of Sons, Inc., along with estimates of fair values. Pop, Inc. is
planning to acquire Sons by issuing 100,000 shares of its P1 par value common stock (market value P8/share) in
exchange for all the outstanding common stock of Sons. Pop also guarantees the value of its shares issued. The
expected present value of this stock price contingency is P200,000.
Required:
1. Statutory Merger
2. Stock Acquisition
II - Assets and Liabilities Acquired, Goodwill and Bargain Purchase Gain, Contingent Consideration,
Changes in Contingent Consideration
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1Here are the pre-acquisition balance sheets of Pop Company and Sicle Company on December 31, 20x5:
In addition to the above, Sicle Co. has identifiable intangibles with a fair value of P5,000,000, not
recognized on its books but appropriately capitalized by Pop.
On January 1, 20x6, Pop issues 400,000 shares of its stock, with a par value of P10/share and a market
value of P100/share, to acquire Sicle Company’s assets and liabilities. SEC registration fees are P1,100,000, paid
in cash.
Required:
1. Determine the following:
(a) Total assets;
(b) Total liabilities;
(c) Additional paid-in capital (share premium);
(d) Retained earnings (accumulated profit or loss); and
(e) Stockholders’/Shareholders’ equity;
2. Assume Pop issued 90,000 shares of stock at a market value of P100 per share with contingent cash
consideration amounted to P500,000 that is present obligation and reliably measureable, expected
present value of earnout agreement of P200,000 and probability present value of stock price contingency
agreement of P300,000. The following out-of-pocket costs in relation to acquisition are as follows:
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(c) Additional paid-in capital (share premium);
(d) Retained earnings (accumulated profit or loss); and
(e) Stockholders’/Shareholders’ equity;
3. Now assume that Pop issues 100,000 shares for all of Sicle’s shares, as in requirement (1) above, and
Pop agrees to pay cash to Salt’s previous owners if the combined earnings of Pop and Sicle exceed a
certain threshold over the next two years. The expected present value of the earnings contingency is
P8,000,000. Determine the amount of goodwill (bargain purchase gain or gain on acquisition).
4. Assume the same facts as in requirement (3). Before the contingency period is over, the estimated value
of the earnings contingency declines to P7,800,000. Prepare Pop’s entry to reflect the change in
value of the earnings contingency, if
(a) the value decline occurs within the measurement period, or
(b) the value decline is due to events occurring subsequent to acquisition.
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III –Valuation of Assets acquired and Liabilities assumed, Measurement of Consideration Transferred,
Change in value of Assets acquired, Pre-acquisition Contingency, In-process R&D
Sandy-Dr(Cr)
Cash and receivables………………………………………………………….. P200,000,000
Inventories………………………………………………………………………… 600,000,000
Property, plant and equipment, net…………………………………………. 7,500,000,000
Current liabilities………………………………………………………………….. (400,000,000)
Long-term debt…………………………………………………………………… (7,200,000,000)
Capital stock………………………………………………………………………. (7,200,000)
Retained earnings……………………………………………………………….. ( 25,000,000)
Accumulated other comprehensive income……………………………… (5,000,000)
An analysis of Sandy’s assets and liabilities reveals that book values of some reported items do not reflect their
market values at the date of acquisition:
Inventories are overvalued by P200,000,000
Property, plant and equipment is overvalued by P2,000,000,000
Long-term debt is undervalued by P100,000,000
In addition, the following items are not currently reported on Sandy’s balance sheet:
Customer contracts, valued at P25,000,000
Skilled work force, valued at P45,000,000
In-process research and development, valued at P300,000,000
Potential contracts with prospective customers, valued at P15,000,000
Sandy has not recorded expected future warranty liabilities with a present value of
P10,000,000
On January 2, 20x5, Velasco issues new stock with a market value of P700,000,000 to acquire the assets
and liabilities of Sandy. Stock registration fees are P100,000,000, paid in cash. Consulting, accounting, and legal
fees connected with the merger are P150,000,000, paid in cash. In addition, Velasco enters into an earnings
contingency agreement, whereby Velasco will pay the former shareholders of Sandy an additional amount if
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Sandy’s performance meets certain minimum levels. The present value of the contingency is estimated at
P50,000,000.
Required:
1. Determine the amount of goodwill.
2. Assume that during March, 20x5, new information comes in regarding the value of Sandy’s property, plant
and equipment at the date of acquisition. It is determined that the property was actually worth P1,500,000
less than previously estimated. Make the entry to record this new information.
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