NEWS RELEASE 05/22/13
FAF COMPLETES POST-IMPLEMENTATION REVIEW OF FASB STANDARD ON BUSINESS
COMBINATIONS
Norwalk, CT, May 22, 2013—The Financial
Accounting Foundation (FAF) today announced the completion of the Post-Implementation
Review (PIR) of an accounting standard intended to improve the relevance,
representational faithfulness, and comparability of information that a company
or organization reports about a business combination and its effects.
FASB
Statement No. 141 (revised 2007), Business Combinations (Statement 141R)
(codified in Accounting Standards Codification Topic 805, Business
Combinations), requires an acquiring organization to recognize the assets
acquired, the liabilities assumed, and any noncontrolling interest in the
acquired organization at the acquisition date, measured at their fair values as
of that date, with limited exceptions.
The PIR found that Statement 141R
resolved some of the issues associated with the purchase method of accounting
for business combinations; that its principles and requirements generally are
understandable and can be applied as intended; and that investors generally find
the resulting information to be useful.
The review determined that some
investors question the reliability of reported information related to assets and
liabilities that are difficult to measure at fair value, that result in a
bargain purchase, or that may be asset purchases. The review also found that the
standard in certain areas introduced more costs and complexity to business
combination accounting than FASB had anticipated.
The review of Statement
141R was undertaken by an independent FAF team working under the oversight of
the FAF Board of Trustees. The team´s formal report is available at http://www.accountingfoundation.org/.
The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) also is conducting a
post-implementation review of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
3 (revised 2007), Business Combinations, which was issued concurrently
with Statement 141R.
"The PIR team performed a robust, independent
review of Statement 141R, and we believe that the findings and recommendations
will help improve the standard-setting process for the FASB," said FAF President
and Chief Executive Officer Teresa S. Polley. "We thank all of the stakeholders
from various backgrounds and industries who contributed important feedback to
the PIR team on the real-world technical application, operationality,
usefulness, and cost-effectiveness of the business combinations standard."
FASB Chairman Leslie F. Seidman said, "The post-implementation review
report on Statement 141R identified many positive aspects of the business
combinations standard, including the resolution of prior practice issues as well
as enhancements in the usefulness of information about a business combination.
The report also identified some stakeholder concerns, many of which the Board
has already begun to address, for example, push-down accounting and the
definition of a business. Because this is a converged standard, we plan to
coordinate our review efforts with the IASB."
The Statement 141R review
team received input from investors and other financial statement users;
preparers of various sizes, industries and levels of experience with the
standard; auditors; academics; and financial regulators. The review team reached
its conclusions using judgment, considering all the input received, and striving
to be objective and balanced. Based on its research, the review team concluded
that:
- Statement 141R resolved some of the practice issues associated with the
purchase method of accounting for business combinations. Some practice issues
remain unresolved, including identifying when a new basis of accounting is
appropriate and accounting for combinations between joint ventures and
organizations under common control. Additionally, Statement 141R is convergent
with IFRS 3 in many areas; however, some differences remain between the
requirements of Statement 141R and IFRS 3.
- Statement 141R´s principles and requirements are understandable and
generally can be applied as the FASB intended. The requirements in Statement
141R that stakeholders had the most difficulty applying relate to measuring
assets acquired and liabilities assumed using the fair value requirements in
FASB Statement No. 157, Fair Value Measurements; measuring the fair
value of contingent consideration; and determining whether a transaction is a
business combination or an asset purchase. Preparers for medium to small
organizations reported the most difficulty in applying the standard.
- Investors generally find the information resulting from application of
Statement 141R useful in understanding and analyzing most business combination
transactions, including the measurement of the transaction at fair value.
However, some review participants question the reliability or decision
usefulness of the reported information for business combinations that (a)
include assets and liabilities that are difficult to measure at fair value,
(b) result in a bargain purchase, or (c) in substance may be asset
purchases.
- The costs and complexity of applying Statement 141R are higher than the
FASB anticipated. Much of the complexity relates to the application of
Statement 157´s measurement requirements to certain items. The costs relate to
the extensive external valuation expertise being sought by both preparers and
auditors of financial statements. Smaller organizations may face additional
costs for timely access to external resources.
- Statement 141R achieved improvements in the relevance and completeness of
business combination information. Improvements in the area of comparability,
reliability, and representational faithfulness of that information were not
fully achieved in large part because of the questions about the reliability of
fair value measurement requirements.
The PIR team also recommended the
following improvements to the standard-setting process:
- Enhance and formalize the process for identifying, prioritizing, tracking,
and resolving significant financial reporting issues.
- Regularly report on and update the status of those issues and their
relative priorities.
- Clearly identify and document the need a project will address and how that
determination was made. When resuming a deferred project, document the FASB´s
reassessment of the need for the project.
- Consistently conduct key research (such as field work and reviewing
academic studies) as early as possible in the agenda-setting and deliberation
phases. In addition, fully identify, in a standard´s basis for conclusions,
any research and/or economic principles relied upon when concluding on a
significant issue.
The FAF also announced today that the PIR
team will start a review of Statement 157, which defines
fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and expands
disclosures about fair value measurements. Stakeholders who would like the
opportunity to participate in a PIR survey on Statement 157, conducted by an
independent survey firm on behalf of the Financial Accounting Foundation, should
register
online.
About the Financial Accounting Foundation
The FAF is responsible for the oversight, administration, and
finances of both the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) and the
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). The Foundation is also responsible
for selecting the members of both Boards and their respective Advisory
Councils.
About the Financial Accounting Standards
Board
Since 1973, the Financial Accounting Standards Board has
been the designated organization in the private sector for establishing
standards of financial accounting and reporting. Those standards govern the
preparation of financial reports and are officially recognized as authoritative
by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants. Such standards are essential to the efficient
functioning of the economy because investors, creditors, auditors, and others
rely on credible, transparent, and comparable financial information. For more
information about the FASB, visit our website at http://www.fasb.org/.