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Whither Pooling? - Part II.


The comment period on the FASB FASB

See: Financial Accounting Standards Board


FASB

See Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).
 proposal to eliminate pooling of interests Pooling of Interests

An accounting method, used in mergers and acquisitions, where the balance sheet items of the two companies are simply added together.

Notes:
The opposite of pooling of interests is the purchase acquisition method.
 in favor of purchase accounting for all business combinations just closed. Based on my sampling of the letters, this is going to be a tough debate; there are strong positions on both sides. CEOs and CFOs routinely cite mergers and acquisitions as top strategic priorities. Further, the record level of merger activity reflects its importance to corporate efficiency and competitiveness. The FASB is working toward issuing a final standard by year-end 2000, and will hold public hearings to discuss comments on the proposal on Feb. 3 and 4, 2000, in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , and Feb. 10 and 11 in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
.

Unfortunately, the FASB began the project with a faulty key premise -- that all business combinations are acquisitions. It claims, "an acquisition is an acquisition is an acquisition," and that it's difficult to make clear rules that identify the rare cases of a true merger. But I believe the elimination of pooling will prevent many true mergers that would be beneficial for the companies and their shareholders, as well as their global economic competitiveness. Imposing purchase accounting on such transactions will result in many distorted and largely ignored income statements overwhelmed o·ver·whelm  
tr.v. o·ver·whelmed, o·ver·whelm·ing, o·ver·whelms
1. To surge over and submerge; engulf: waves overwhelming the rocky shoreline.

2.
a.
 by purchase accounting charges for goodwill amortization.

Another false assumption of those who favor the abolition of pooling is that it doesn't reflect the merger cost to shareholders and their management teams. This view naively ignores what all good management teams know about the high cost of issuing stock: Management teams are increasingly focused on cash flow per share and earnings per share toward driving their shareholders' per-share value. Issuing stock dilutes the existing enterprise's per-share results. The earnings potential of the acquired company must be significant to cover that dilution. Buyers know when stock is issued, a large part of their own future and growth prospects goes to the seller. This important point is illustrated by the dramatically lower use of stock for acquisitions in the 1980s when equities were significantly undervalued Undervalued

A stock or other security that is trading below its true value.

Notes:
The difficulty is knowing what the "true" value actually is. Analysts will usually recommend an undervalued stock with a strong buy rating.
. The cost of issuing stock is real, large and actively considered in dealmaking.

We should retain both methods of accounting, but restrict pooling to those few mergers of equals (DaimlerChrysler and Citigroup, for example). A true merger -- where ownership interests are continued, no change in control of the company's assets or liabilities transpires, no culmination of an earnings process occurs, and risks and rewards of net assets Net assets

The difference between total assets on the one hand and current liabilities and noncapitalized long-term liabilities on the other hand.


net assets

See owners' equity.
 obtained are similar to those given up -- warrants pooling-of-interests accounting. Carrying over the historical cost statements of the companies involved is the best method for representing and tracking subsequent management performance.

The second part of this difficult debate centers on the goodwill amortization method and rate under purchase accounting. FASB members openly acknowledge that their proposed 20year maximum amortization period is arbitrary. Further, it's based on an assumption that goodwill is a depreciating de·pre·ci·ate  
v. de·pre·ci·at·ed, de·pre·ci·at·ing, de·pre·ci·ates

v.tr.
1. To lessen the price or value of.

2. To think or speak of as being of little worth; belittle.
 asset. This simply isn't economic reality. The growing disparity dis·par·i·ty  
n. pl. dis·par·i·ties
1. The condition or fact of being unequal, as in age, rank, or degree; difference: "narrow the economic disparities among regions and industries" 
 between book and market values in large part reflects goodwill actually appreciating. A leading finance authority, NYU's Prof. Baruch Lev lev-,
pref See levo-.
, repeatedly points out the growing -- in fact, compounding -- nature of the knowledge capital that is the bulk of goodwill. He favors no amortization of goodwill unless it's impaired. When the FASB began its deliberations, it recognized that a regular and fixed amortization rate for goodwill was not theoretically correct. It field-tested methodology that would adjust goodwill only upon impairment Impairment

1. A reduction in a company's stated capital.

2. The total capital that is less than the par value of the company's capital stock.

Notes:
1. This is usually reduced because of poorly estimated losses or gains.

2.
 of the asset. It concluded that such an approach may be too difficult for practical implementation, and abandoned it for the arbi trary 20-year life.

Goodwill should be recorded as outlined in the exposure draft, but not amortized on a straight-line, periodic basis as proposed. Goodwill should remain on the balance sheet and be adjusted only if the firm's overall enterprise value (whether from the stock market or from common valuation approaches) is clearly less than its book value capitalization. I believe management judgment and auditor review enable us to accurately and reliably report the proper carrying value Carrying Value

Also know as "book value," it is a company's total assets minus intangible assets and liabilities, such as debt.

Notes:
This is different than market value, as it can be higher or lower depending on the circumstances.
 of goodwill.

Stay tuned; this important debate will be lively. Please participate. Send a letter to the editor with your view.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Financial Executives International
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Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Livingston, Phil
Publication:Financial Executive
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2000
Words:682
Previous Article:Browsing.
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