Balance SheetIntermediate📖 10 min read

Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets

Acquired Intangibles and Excess Purchase Price in Business Combinations

Classification
Non-Current Assets
Goodwill
Indefinite life; not amortized; annual impairment test
Finite Intangibles
Amortized over useful life
Standards
ASC 350/805 (US GAAP); IFRS 3/IAS 38
Impairment
Tested when indicators exist (finite also amortized)

Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets is a non-current asset category that combines goodwill (the excess of purchase price over fair value of net identifiable assets in a business acquisition) with separately identifiable intangible assets acquired in the same or other transactions. These assets lack physical substance but provide future economic benefits through rights, relationships, or competitive advantages.

Table of Contents

Breakdown of the Category

This line item aggregates two distinct components:

Goodwill

  • Arises only in business combinations
  • Purchase price > fair value of net identifiable assets
  • Represents synergies, workforce, future growth

Other Intangible Assets

  • Separately identifiable (contractual or separable)
  • Finite life: Customer relationships, patents, trademarks, technology
  • Indefinite life: Certain trademarks/brands (not amortized)
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Internally developed intangibles are generally expensed (except certain software costs).

Common Types of Other Intangible Assets

  • Customer lists/relationships/contracts
  • Patents, copyrights, and technology
  • Trademarks, trade names, brands
  • Licenses and franchises
  • Non-compete agreements
  • Order backlog
  • Developed software (acquired or certain capitalized)

Useful lives range from 2-20+ years for finite assets.

Accounting Treatment

Key differences:

Goodwill

  • Indefinite useful life
  • Not amortized
  • Annual impairment test (or when triggers exist)
  • Quantitative test: Compare carrying value to fair value of reporting unit

Finite-Life Intangibles

  • Amortized systematically (usually straight-line)
  • Residual value typically zero
  • Impairment if carrying > recoverable amount

Indefinite-Life (non-goodwill)

  • No amortization
  • Annual impairment test

Impairment losses on goodwill are never reversed (US GAAP/IFRS).

Balance Sheet Presentation

Under non-current assets as:

  • 'Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets'
  • Often split: 'Goodwill' and 'Other Intangible Assets, net'
  • Gross amount less accumulated amortization (for finite)
  • Goodwill shown at cost less accumulated impairments

Footnotes detail major classes, amortization periods, and impairment testing.

Why Companies Have These Assets

  • Growth through acquisitions (primary source of goodwill)
  • Purchase of brands, technology, or customer bases
  • Strategic M&A for market share or capabilities
  • Synergies and going-concern value in combinations

Analytical Implications

This category affects analysis by:

  • Increasing asset base (often major in tech/media/pharma)
  • Amortization expense reduces earnings (finite intangibles)
  • Impairment risk signals overpayment or underperformance
  • Goodwill intensity indicates acquisition-driven growth
  • Net tangible assets = Total assets minus goodwill/intangibles/liabilities
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High goodwill relative to market cap can indicate overvaluation or impairment risk.

Key Takeaways

1

Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets combine acquisition premium (goodwill) and identifiable intangibles.

2

Goodwill: Indefinite, not amortized, annual impairment test.

3

Finite intangibles: Amortized over useful life.

4

Indefinite non-goodwill: Tested for impairment.

5

Primary from business combinations; internally developed usually expensed.

6

Significant in acquisition-heavy or brand/tech-focused companies.

Related Terms

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