Purchase Price Allocation
Purchase Price Allocation
If, for instance, if Company A were to purchase Company 1, then PPA would
assign a fair value to all of Company 1’s assets and liabilities since in this
example, it is the target or acquired company. PPA is a critical part of accounting
when an acquisition or merger is complete. The same would also apply if
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Company A and Company 1 merged to form company A1, whether the new entity
would be a private company or not.
During this process, it’s likely there will be some unallocated value. That’s
typically the result of goodwill and the assembled workforce.
Write Up
A write-up is an adjustment increase to an asset’s book value if the asset’s
carrying value is less than its current fair market value. That write-up amount is
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determined by an independent business valuation specialist. They complete a fair
market value assessment on all of the target assets, and that assessment
determines when write-ups are necessary, and what the write-up amount should
be.
Goodwill
Basically, goodwill is the excess amount paid over the target company’s net value.
It may also sometimes be referred to as residual purchase consideration. It’s the
difference between an acquired company’s purchase price and the fair market
value of its assets and liabilities.
Any acquisition-related costs, such as consulting fees, advisory costs, legal fees,
etc. aren’t part of PPA. Accounting standards mandate that an acquirer has to
expense the costs whenever they’ve been charged, while the services are
provided.
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based and provides an estimate of the preliminary values of each intangible asset.
The last step is to determine whether the relative asset values and the resulting
goodwill is reasonable based on the purchase price paid, the nature of the
target’s business, financial forecast, and market expectation.
The book value of Company 1’s assets is $7 billion. The book value of liabilities is
$3 billion. Since $7 billion – $3 billion is $4 billion, then that $4 billion is the net
identifiable assets.
Finally, Company A has to record goodwill because the actual price paid for the
company ($5 billion) exceeds the sum of the net identifiable assets and the write-
up (4 billion + 2 billion = $6 billion). Therefore, Company A has to recognize $1
billion ($6 billion – $5 billion as goodwill.
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merger or acquisition environment when a shareholder purchases more equity
and then has enough to take controlling interest within a company.
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What if there’s a contingent consideration?
If a portion of the consideration is contingent upon achieving particular
milestones, known as earnouts, it will be included in the fair value of the purchase
consideration. The financial forecast is used to value both the contingent
consideration and the identifiable tangible assets, there will be similarities
between the two, so no special adjustments should be necessary.
Generally speaking, the higher quality valuations and the more experience an
appraiser has, the lower the cost for the acquirer. As such, businesses looking to
acquire other companies should seek highly experienced appraisers who are well
versed in ASC 805. Failure to do so means the business will spend more time and
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money in the long term.
PPA is a highly complex process that requires financial experts and business
experts with deep understanding of business plans and various accounting
principles.
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