Abstract

This paper aims at studying the impact of the accounting treatment of goodwill on the mandatory disclosure required by the International Accounting Standard (IAS) 36 on the impairment test of goodwill. We use a sample comprising 79 companies listed on Brussels stock exchange to show that there is a great heterogeneity in current accounting treatment of goodwill. We identify two groups of companies: those that display the goodwill on a separate line in their balance sheet and those that integrate it in their intangible assets. For the later, the only way to notice the presence of goodwill is by looking at the financial statement’s notes presumably because those notes are expected to receive less scrutiny. Even if the compliance is not complete, the first group complies more with the paragraph 134 of IAS 36 than the other. Moreover, companies with a significant goodwill compared to both total assets and intangible assets are more compliant with IAS 36. The findings finally reveal that the notices issued by the Financial Service and Markets Authority (FSMA) have a limited impact on the disclosure level. There are some areas of improvement but others such as goodwill allocation to cash generating unit, determination of the recoverable amount, description of key hypothesis and the sensitivity test need more effort on compliance.

Highlights

  • Since January 1st, 2005, all listed companies in the European Union must have been preparing their consolidated financial statements in accordance with the International Accounting Standards (IAS) which are International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)

  • We offered a deep analysis of the accounting practices of goodwill and its disclosure level under IAS 36

  • The paper addresses the question of compliance with the paragraph 134 of IAS 36 and its relationship with the accounting treatment

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Summary

Introduction

Since January 1st, 2005, all listed companies in the European Union must have been preparing their consolidated financial statements in accordance with the International Accounting Standards (IAS) which are International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). In the discussion paper issued in July 2014 by the Accounting Standard Board of Japan (ASBJ), the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) and the Italian Standard Setter (OIC), alternative approaches to the impairment test are explored such as a reintroduction of the amortization. This analysis could be of interest to auditors, financial advisors and researchers in order to improve the quality of goodwill‘s disclosure and to discuss on policy‘s recommendation and potential rules‘ improvements.

Literature Review
Disclosure of Goodwill
Summary of Previous Research
Data and Methodology
Data Collection and Description of the Samples
The Disclosure Index
Descriptive Statistics
Accounting Practices of Goodwill
Evaluation of the Disclosure Index of Goodwill under IAS 36
Findings According to the Accounting Practices of Goodwill
Sensitivity test
Comparison with FSMA Findings and Recommendations
Discount rate*
Conclusion
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