ASC 350 (Intangibles — Goodwill and Other)
Definition
The US GAAP standard governing the subsequent measurement of goodwill and other intangible assets after initial recognition in a business combination. ASC 350 requires annual impairment testing of goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets, permits an optional qualitative assessment before performing the quantitative impairment test, and provides guidance on the amortisation of finite-lived intangible assets. The 2017 simplification eliminated the second step of the goodwill impairment test, reducing complexity by measuring impairment as the excess of carrying amount over fair value of the reporting unit.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside ASC 350 (Intangibles — Goodwill and Other) in practice.
The mandatory annual assessment (and more frequent assessment when indicators exist) of whether the carrying amount of goodwill exceeds its recoverable amount. Under IAS 36, goodwill is tested at the cash generating unit level by comparing the unit's carrying amount (including allocated goodwill) with its recoverable amount.
A non-cash charge recorded when the carrying value of goodwill on the balance sheet exceeds its estimated recoverable amount. Goodwill impairment testing, required annually under IFRS and US GAAP, often signals that the intangible value anticipated at the time of acquisition — including synergies, customer relationships, and growth potential — has not been realised.
An approach to measuring goodwill in a business combination where goodwill is recognised for both the acquirer's share and the non-controlling interest's share, resulting in a higher total goodwill figure. Under ASC 805, the full goodwill method is mandatory for all business combinations.
The excess of the fair value of identifiable net assets acquired over the purchase consideration in a business combination, now termed a bargain purchase gain under current standards. Under IFRS 3, negative goodwill is recognised immediately in profit or loss after the acquirer reassesses the identification and measurement of all assets and liabilities.
An approach to measuring goodwill in a business combination where the acquirer recognises goodwill only in proportion to its ownership interest, rather than attributing goodwill to the non-controlling interest. Under IFRS 3, acquirers have a choice on a transaction-by-transaction basis to measure non-controlling interests either at fair value (full goodwill) or at the NCI's proportionate share of identifiable net assets (partial goodwill).
An intangible asset that arises when a company is acquired for more than the fair value of its net identifiable assets. Goodwill reflects factors such as brand value, customer loyalty, workforce expertise, and synergies that are expected to generate future economic benefits.
The US GAAP standard governing the recognition, measurement, and impairment of long-lived tangible and certain intangible assets. ASC 360 requires a two-step impairment test: first, a recoverability test comparing undiscounted future cash flows to carrying value; second, if impairment is indicated, measurement of the loss as the excess of carrying value over fair value.
The section of the UK and Republic of Ireland financial reporting standard that governs the recognition, measurement, and disclosure of intangible assets other than goodwill for entities not applying IFRS. Section 18 requires intangible assets to be measured at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses, with all intangible assets presumed to have a finite useful life.
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