Abstract

ABSTRACT Students are placed in the role of a new employee in the mergers and acquisitions division of a regional accounting firm performing due diligence on a potential acquisition target for their client. Their task is to determine the fair value of a group of unusual nonfinancial assets, the horses owned by the target company, an equine training business. Students evaluate the horse’s highest and best use, identify market participant assumptions, create valuation models, determine the exit price, and perform a sensitivity analysis. Appendix A describes the equine industry and provides a source for many of the necessary valuation assumptions. This case study is complementary to cases where students calculate fair values in more traditional settings and is designed to push them outside their comfort zone while emphasizing that the same familiar concepts apply. The case is recommended for use in advanced financial accounting courses at the undergraduate or master’s levels. JEL Classifications: M41.

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