Jedi Accountant
In the meantime, most clients she got were rather straightforward to handle and she could let the more junior accountants handle it. Now, one of the more troublesome clients (a Manpha-based mom-and-pop HoloNet provider called Cogesco buying a retailer of HoloNet equipment, Securenet) landed in her office. Six years ago, Cogesco bought 75% of Securenet; the equity was 200k split equally between share capital and retained earnings. Securenet had no goodwill, and there were three assets requiring fair value adjustments, taxed at 30%:
Account | Book value | Fair value
Inventory | 70000 | 100000
Plant (cost 170000) | 150000 | 190000
Land | 50000 | 100000
But since there was no right whatsoever to assume that the non-controlling interests is just pro-rating the consideration transferred, thanks to the acquisition premium (VPN tended to instead buy troubled accounting firms at bargain prices), she had to try both approaches (IFRS permit both) to recording goodwill. Fair value is therefore, under the partial goodwill method, and assuming that the acquirer incurs all the tax consequences, thanks to Manpha not having an equivalent to Talz's Section 85:
BV: 200000
Inventory: 21000 = 70%*30000
Plant: 28000 = 70%*40000
Land: 35000 = 70%*50000
Total fair value = 284000
Under partial goodwill, 75% of the goodwill would be attributed to the parent, so 250000-(284000*75%) = 37000. If full goodwill is in use instead, the fair value of the NCI at that date was 90000, so the fair value is 340000, and the parent absorbs the full 56000 in goodwill.
Account | Book value | Fair value
Inventory | 70000 | 100000
Plant (cost 170000) | 150000 | 190000
Land | 50000 | 100000
But since there was no right whatsoever to assume that the non-controlling interests is just pro-rating the consideration transferred, thanks to the acquisition premium (VPN tended to instead buy troubled accounting firms at bargain prices), she had to try both approaches (IFRS permit both) to recording goodwill. Fair value is therefore, under the partial goodwill method, and assuming that the acquirer incurs all the tax consequences, thanks to Manpha not having an equivalent to Talz's Section 85:
BV: 200000
Inventory: 21000 = 70%*30000
Plant: 28000 = 70%*40000
Land: 35000 = 70%*50000
Total fair value = 284000
Under partial goodwill, 75% of the goodwill would be attributed to the parent, so 250000-(284000*75%) = 37000. If full goodwill is in use instead, the fair value of the NCI at that date was 90000, so the fair value is 340000, and the parent absorbs the full 56000 in goodwill.