IFRS 16 (Leases)

Definition

The IFRS standard that requires lessees to recognise nearly all leases on the balance sheet as a right-of-use asset and a corresponding lease liability, eliminating the previous distinction between operating and finance leases for lessees. IFRS 16 significantly impacts reported assets, liabilities, and financial ratios, and has implications for enterprise value calculations and purchase price allocations where material lease portfolios exist.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside IFRS 16 (Leases) in practice.

ASC 842 (Leases)

The US GAAP standard on lease accounting that, like IFRS 16, requires lessees to recognise right-of-use assets and lease liabilities for most leases. ASC 842 retains a distinction between operating leases (straight-line expense) and finance leases (front-loaded expense) on the income statement, unlike IFRS 16 which treats all leases similarly.

IFRS 3 (Business Combinations)

The International Financial Reporting Standard governing the accounting treatment of mergers and acquisitions. IFRS 3 requires acquirers to identify and separately recognise intangible assets at fair value as part of purchase price allocation, which often reveals significant off-balance-sheet value in areas such as customer relationships, technology, and brand.

IFRS 13 (Fair Value Measurement)

The International Financial Reporting Standard that defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring it, and requires disclosures about fair value measurements. IFRS 13 introduces a three-level hierarchy based on observable market inputs and is foundational to the valuation of intangible assets in financial reporting.

Net Working Capital Adjustment

A mechanism in M&A transactions that adjusts the purchase price based on the difference between actual working capital at closing and a pre-agreed target level. Net working capital adjustments ensure the buyer receives the agreed level of operating liquidity and are a standard feature of enterprise value to equity value bridge calculations.

Deferred Tax (in Business Combinations)

The tax effect arising from temporary differences between the fair values assigned to assets and liabilities in a purchase price allocation and their corresponding tax bases. Under IAS 12 and ASC 740, deferred tax liabilities are recognised on the step-up in fair value of acquired intangible assets (which typically have zero tax basis), while deferred tax assets may arise on assumed liabilities.

Purchase Price Allocation (PPA)

The process of allocating the total consideration paid in a business combination to the identifiable tangible and intangible assets acquired and liabilities assumed, with any residual assigned to goodwill. PPA is required under IFRS 3 and ASC 805 and is the primary mechanism through which acquired intangible assets are recognised on the balance sheet.

Acquisition Method

The required accounting method for business combinations under IFRS 3 and ASC 805, which involves identifying the acquirer, determining the acquisition date, recognising and measuring the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed at fair value, and recognising goodwill or a gain from a bargain purchase. The acquisition method replaced the previously permitted pooling of interests method and ensures that all identifiable intangible assets are separately recognised at fair value on the acquirer's balance sheet.

Completion Mechanism

The contractual framework in an M&A transaction that determines how the final purchase price is calculated and adjusted to reflect the financial position of the target at closing. The two principal mechanisms are completion accounts (which adjust the price post-closing based on actual financial metrics at the completion date) and locked box (which fixes the price based on a historical balance sheet date with no post-closing adjustment).

Put this knowledge to work

Use Opagio's free tools to measure and grow the intangible assets that drive your business value.