Goodwill—should it be amortized or not? That is one of the questions the FASB has wrestled with over the last few years. Lucas Parris, senior member of Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Valuation Group, takes us through the changes to this system that are in the works, as the FASB Board made a few tentative decisions regarding the accounting for goodwill impairment for public and private entities. To read the full article in Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog, click: FASB Muses on Goodwill Impairments. This article is republished from Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog. It is reprinted with permission. To subscribe…
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Recently, the FASB issued exposure drafts of Accounting Standards Updates (ASUs) which propose reductions in the cost and complexity of accounting for intangible assets acquired by private companies, as well as subsequent testing for goodwill impairment. The proposed changes in the drafts involve alterations to Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic 85, Business Combinations, and Topic 350, Intanbigles—Goodwill and other. Among the suggested changes to Topic 85 is the proposal that a company involved in a business combination may elect (but would not be required) to recognize only the acquired intangible assets that are the direct result of contractual rights…
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In 2009 Duff & Phelps and the Financial Executives Research Foundation (FERF) first published the results of their comprehensive Goodwill Impairment Study. The 2009 Study examined U.S. publicly-traded companies’ recognition of goodwill impairment at the height of the financial crisis (the end of 2008 and the beginning of 2009), and featured a comparative analysis of the goodwill impairments for over 5,000 companies (by industry), as well as the findings of a survey of FEI members.
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FASB Approves Standard to Simplify Testing Goodwill for Impairment The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) approved a revised accounting standard intended to simplify how an entity tests goodwill for impairment. Per the FASB: “The Board’s decision today comes as a direct result of what we heard from private companies, which had expressed concerns about the cost and complexity of performing the goodwill impairment test,” states FASB member Daryl Buck. “The amendments approved by the Board address those concerns and will simplify the process for public and nonpublic entities alike.” The amendments will allow an entity to first assess qualitative factors…