May, 1 2011
Any public or private company with goodwill on its balance sheet will be affected if new goodwill impairment guidelines proposed by FASB on April 22, 2011 are enacted.
Accounting Standards Update: Intangibles, Goodwill and Other (ASC 350): Testing Goodwill for Impairment would change, among other things, the first step in the two-step goodwill impairment test. Read on to learn how the proposal would impact valuation processes related to goodwill impairment testing.
Background
Goodwill impairment occurs when the carrying amount of goodwill on the books exceeds its implied fair value. Since goodwill can’t be measured directly, the implied fair value of it must be backed into.
Under ASC 350, testing for goodwill impairment is a two-step process that is required to be performed at least on an annual basis, but also in an interim period if there are indications that goodwill is impaired:
Step 1:
Determine whether the fair value of a reporting unit is less than its carrying amount. If it is, then Step 2 is required.
Step 2:
Determine the implied fair value of goodwill by assigning the fair value of the reporting unit determined previously in Step 1 to the assets and liabilities of the reporting unit, and compare that amount with the carrying amount of goodwill to determine the extent of any impairment.
Under existing rules, indications that goodwill might be impaired include, but are not limited to, the following (ASC 350-20-35-30):
- A significant adverse change in legal factors or in the business climate
- An adverse action or assessment by a regulator
- Unanticipated competition
- Loss of key personnel
- A more-likely-than-not expectation that a reporting unit, or substantial portion thereof, will be sold or otherwise disposed of
- Macroeconomic conditions (i.e., deterioration in general economic conditions, limitations on accessing capital, fluctuations in foreign exchange rates, or other developments in equity and credit markets)
- Industry and market considerations (i.e., deterioration in the environment in which an entity operates, an increased competitive environment, a decline (both absolute and relative to its peers) in market-dependent multiples or metrics, a change in the market for an entity’s products or services, or a regulatory or political development)
- Increases in raw materials, labor, or other costs that have a negative effect on earnings
- Overall financial performance, such as negative or declining cash flows or a decline in actual or planned revenue or earnings
- Other relevant entity-specific events, such as changes in management, key personnel, strategy or customers; contemplation of bankruptcy, or litigation
- Events affecting a reporting unit, such as a change in the carrying amount of its net assets, a more-likely-than-not expectation of selling or disposing all or a portion of a reporting unit, the testing for recoverability of a significant asset group within a reporting unit, or recognition of a goodwill impairment loss in the financial statements of a subsidiary that is a component of a reporting unit
- If applicable, a sustained decrease (both absolute and relative to its peers) in share price.