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International GAAP® 2019: Generally Accepted Accounting Practice under International Financial Reporting Standards

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by International GAAP 2019 (pdf)


  14 IASB Update, April 2017, IASB Update,

  Contingent consideration of an Acquiree (“pre-

  October 2017.

  existing contingent consideration”), p.3.

  15 ED/2016/1, pp.9-10.

  41 IASB Update, May 2013.

  16 IASB Update, June 2017.

  42 Put options written on non-controlling interests

  17 ED/2016/1, pp.11-12.

  (Proposed amendments to IAS 32), Project

  18 IASB Update, June 2017.

  news, IASB Website, 23 June 2014.

  19 ED/2016/1, p.9.

  43 IFRIC Update, November 2010.

  20 ED/2016/1, p.16.

  44 IASB Update, July 2016.

  21 ED/2016/1, p.9.

  45 IFRIC Update, March 2013.

  22 ED/2016/1, p.17.

  46 IFRIC Update, September 2011.

  23 IASB Update, June 2017.

  705

  Chapter 10

  Business combinations

  under common control

  1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 707

  1.1

  Common control transactions ............................................................................ 707

  1.2 Group

  reorganisations ........................................................................................ 708

  1.3

  Scope of this chapter .......................................................................................... 709

  2 THE IFRS 3 SCOPE EXCLUSION ................................................................... 710

  2.1

  Business combinations under common control ............................................. 710

  2.1.1

  Common control by an individual or group of individuals ........... 711

  2.1.2 Transitory control ................................................................................ 713

  3 ACCOUNTING FOR BUSINESS COMBINATIONS INVOLVING ENTITIES

  OR BUSINESSES UNDER COMMON CONTROL .............................................. 715

  3.1

  Pooling of interests method or acquisition method ...................................... 715

  3.2

  Application of the acquisition method under IFRS 3 .................................... 719

  3.3

  Application of the pooling of interests method .............................................. 721

  3.3.1

  General requirements .......................................................................... 721

  3.3.2

  Carrying amounts of assets and liabilities ........................................ 722

  3.3.3

  Restatement of financial information for periods prior to

  the date of the combination ............................................................... 724

  3.3.4

  Equity reserves and history of assets and liabilities carried

  over .......................................................................................................... 726

  3.3.5

  Acquisition of non-controlling interest as part of a

  business combination under common control ............................... 728

  4 ACCOUNTING FOR TRANSACTIONS UNDER COMMON CONTROL (OR

  OWNERSHIP) INVOLVING A NEWCO ........................................................... 730

  4.1

  Introduction ........................................................................................................... 730

  4.2

  Setting up a new top holding company ............................................................ 731

  706 Chapter

  10

  4.2.1

  Setting up a new top holding company: transactions

  effected through issuing equity interests ......................................... 732

  4.2.2

  Setting up a new top holding company: transactions

  involving consideration other than equity interests ...................... 734

  4.3

  Inserting a new intermediate parent within an existing group .................... 734

  4.4 Transferring

  businesses outside an existing group using a Newco ............. 736

  5 ACCOUNTING FOR TRANSFERS OF ASSOCIATES OR JOINT

  VENTURES UNDER COMMON CONTROL ..................................................... 738

  6 FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS ............................................................................. 741

  List of examples

  Example 10.1:

  Common control involving individuals ............................................ 712

  Example 10.2:

  The meaning of ‘transitory’ common control ................................. 714

  Example 10.3:

  Accounting for business combinations under common

  control – use of acquisition method? (1) ........................................... 717

  Example 10.4:

  Accounting for business combinations under common

  control – use of acquisition method? (2) ......................................... 718

  Example 10.5:

  Acquisition method – cash consideration less than the fair

  value of acquired business ................................................................. 720

  Example 10.6:

  Pooling of interests method – carrying amounts of assets

  acquired and liabilities assumed ........................................................ 723

  Example 10.7:

  Pooling of interests method – restatement of financial

  information for periods prior to the date of the

  combination (1) ...................................................................................... 725

  Example 10.8:

  Pooling of interests method – restatement of financial

  information for periods prior to the date of the

  combination (2) ..................................................................................... 726

  Example 10.9:

  Pooling of interests method – no restatement of financial

  information for periods prior to the date of the combination

  – impact of carrying over equity reserves and history .................... 727

  Example 10.10:

  Pooling of interests method – acquisition of non-

  controlling interest as part of a business combination

  under common control ........................................................................ 729

  Example 10.11:

  Newco inserted at the top of an existing group ............................. 732

  Example 10.12:

  Newco inserted at the top of entities owned by the same

  shareholders thereby creating a new reporting group .................. 733

  Example 10.13:

  Newco inserted as a new intermediate parent within an

  existing group ........................................................................................ 735

  Example 10.14:

  Newco created to take over a business of an existing group

  (spin-off) .................................................................................................. 736

  Example 10.15:

  Transfer of an associate within an existing group ........................ 740

  707

  Chapter 10

  Business combinations

  under common control

  1 INTRODUCTION

  1.1 Common

  control

  transactions

  Transactions between entities under common control (or common control transactions)

  occur frequently in
business. For example, many entities conduct their business

  activities through subsidiaries and there are often transactions between the entities

  comprising the group. It is also common for entities under common control, which are

  not a group for financial reporting purposes, to transact with each other.

  Examples of common control transactions include the sale of goods, property and other

  assets, the provision of services (including those of employees), leasing, transfers under

  licence agreements, financing transactions and the provision of guarantees.

  It cannot always be assumed that common control transactions are undertaken on an

  arm’s length basis or that equal values have been exchanged. Standard setters

  internationally have developed standards that require disclosures about related party

  transactions (which include common control transactions), rather than requiring the

  transactions to be recognised at an arm’s length price. The IASB also adopted this

  approach in IAS 24 – Related Party Disclosures – which is a disclosure standard and

  does not establish recognition or measurement requirements. Entities would need to

  account for such transactions in accordance with the requirements of any IFRS

  specifically applicable to that transaction. [IAS 8.7].

  In January 2018, the IFRS Interpretations Committee (or Interpretations Committee)

  confirmed that IFRSs do not provide a general exception or exemption from applying

  the requirements in a particular standard to common control transactions. The

  Interpretations Committee observed that ‘unless a Standard specifically excludes

  common control transactions from its scope, an entity applies the applicable

  requirements in the Standard to common control transactions’.1

  Nonetheless, IFRSs do not provide a complete framework and particular common

  control transactions may not be covered in any IFRS. Specific requirements may also

  be absent when common control transactions are excluded from the scope of a standard

  708 Chapter

  10

  that would otherwise apply. There is often more than one acceptable way of accounting

  for common control transactions which gives rise to an accounting policy choice.

  General guidance on accounting for transactions between a parent and its subsidiaries,

  or between subsidiaries within a group, is included in Chapter 8 at 4.

  One specific area where there is a scope exclusion for common control transactions is

  IFRS 3 – Business Combinations (discussed in Chapter 9). That standard addresses

  business combinations but excludes ‘a combination of entities or businesses under

  common control’ from its scope. [IFRS 3.2]. The IASB noted that current IFRSs do not

  specify how to account for business combinations under common control and is

  discussing whether it can develop requirements.2 The IASB’s research project, Business

  Combinations under Common Control (discussed at 6 below), is not limited to

  transactions that strictly satisfy the description of business combinations under

  common control currently excluded from the scope of IFRS 3. It also considers other

  types of group reorganisations where there is a lack of specific requirements.

  This chapter discusses the implications of the scope exclusion in IFRS 3 for business

  combinations under common control and the absence of guidance in IFRSs for certain

  types of group reorganisations, as well as the accounting treatments which may

  currently be adopted for such transactions.

  1.2 Group

  reorganisations

  Group reorganisations involve restructuring the relationships between entities or

  businesses within a group (or under common control) and can take many forms. They may

  be undertaken for various reasons, for example to reorganise activities with an aim to

  achieve synergies, to simplify a group structure, or to obtain tax efficiency (e.g. by creating

  a tax grouping in a particular jurisdiction). In some cases, a group reorganisation takes place

  to split an existing group into two or more separate groups or to create a single new

  reporting group, possibly as a prelude to a subsequent sale or initial public offering (IPO).

  Group reorganisations involve transferring entities or businesses between existing or

  newly formed entities under common control. From the perspective of the controlling

  party, the transfer does not affect the entities or businesses that party holds. In principle,

  such changes should have no impact on the consolidated financial statements of an

  existing group, provided there are no non-controlling interests affected. This is because

  the effects of transactions within an existing group are generally eliminated in full (see

  Chapter 7 at 2.4). Alternatively, some reorganisations may involve transferring entities

  or businesses outside the existing group (e.g. demergers).

  Transfers of entities or businesses between existing or newly formed entities under

  common control may be in exchange for cash or shares. Other transfers may be without

  any consideration, such as a distribution by a subsidiary to its parent or a contribution

  by a parent to its subsidiary. There can also be legal arrangements that have similar

  effect, including reorganisations sanctioned by a court process or transfers after

  liquidation of the transferor (i.e. the transferring entity). In addition, some jurisdictions

  allow a legal merger between a parent and its subsidiary to form a single entity.

  From the perspective of the transferee in the reorganisation (i.e. the receiving entity),

  there may well be a business combination that needs to be accounted for. This business

  Business combinations under common control 709

  combination would be excluded from the scope of IFRS 3 if it satisfies the description

  of a business combination under common control. Alternatively, the transaction may

  not represent a business combination as defined in IFRS 3 because the assets acquired

  and liabilities assumed do not constitute a business (i.e. asset acquisitions) or because

  neither of the combining entities can be identified as the acquirer (e.g. in some situations

  where a newly formed entity is involved). The accounting by transferees in group

  reorganisations is often not covered in existing IFRSs.

  The transferor in the reorganisation will need to account for its part of the transaction

  in its own financial statements. The relevant requirements for transferors are discussed

  in other chapters, as set out at 1.3 below.

  1.3

  Scope of this chapter

  This chapter deals with common control transactions that involve the transfer of

  control over one or more businesses (as defined in IFRS 3) and focuses on the

  perspective of the receiving entity. That receiving entity may or may not be identifiable

  as the acquirer if IFRS 3 were applied to the transaction (see Chapter 9 at 4.1). If the

  entity or net assets being transferred do not meet the definition of a business (see

  Chapter 9 at 3.2), the transaction represents an asset acquisition. The accounting for

  acquisitions of (net) assets under common control is discussed in Chapter 8 at 4.4.2.D.

  This chapter consecutively addresses:

  • the scope exclusion in IFRS 3 for business combinations under common control

  (see 2 below);

  • the accounting for business combinations
under common control excluded from

  the scope of IFRS 3 (see 3 below);

  • the accounting for transactions under common control (or sometimes common

  ownership) involving a newly formed entity (see 4 below);

  • the accounting for transfers of investments in associates or joint ventures from

  entities under common control (see 5 below); and

  • the status of the IASB’s research project on business combinations under common

  control (see 6 below).

  Although the discussion at 3 and 4 below (particularly the examples contained therein)

  generally refers to ‘consolidated financial statements’ and transfers of ‘entities’, the

  accounting may be equally applicable to the separate or individual financial statements

  of an entity that receives the net assets of a business (rather than the shares in the entity

  holding that business) in a common control transaction. In contrast, if the receiving

  entity obtains control over a business housed in a separate legal entity, it would

  recognise an investment in a subsidiary in accordance with IAS 27 – Separate Financial

  Statements in its separate financial statements (and individual financial statements are

  not applicable). This is consistent with business combinations that are in the scope of

  IFRS 3. That standard specifies only to which transactions it applies, but not to which

  financial statements (e.g. consolidated, separate, individual).

  This chapter, however, does not specifically deal with the accounting for common

  control transactions in separate or individual financial statements, which is covered

  710 Chapter

  10

  in Chapter 8 at 4. Chapter 8 also discusses the accounting for legal mergers between a

  parent and its subsidiary (at 4.4.3.B).

  Although control is not obtained by the receiving entity, this chapter does address the

  transfer of an investment in an associate or joint venture from an entity under common

  control (at 5 below). The issue is whether the scope exclusion in IFRS 3 for business

  combinations under common control can be applied by analogy to this scenario.

  The transferor that loses control over an entity or business in a common control

  transaction will also need to account for the transaction in its own financial statements.

  In doing so, it will need to consider the requirements of other relevant IFRSs, in

 

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