Indefinite-Life Intangibles
No foreseeable limit on time the asset is expected to provide cash flows.
Must test indefinite-life intangibles for impairment at least annually.
No amortization.
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1 Describe the characteristics, valuation, and amortization of intangible assets.2 Describe the accounting for various types of intangible assets.3 Explain the accounting issues for recording goodwill.LEARNING OBJECTIVES4 Explain impairment procedures and presentation requirements for intangible assets.5 Describe accounting and presentation for research and development and similar costs.After studying this chapter, you should be able to:Intangible Assets12PREVIEW OF CHAPTER 12Intermediate Accounting16th EditionKieso ● Weygandt ● Warfield LO 1 Describe the characteristics, valuation, and amortization of intangible assets.CharacteristicsLack physical existence.Not financial instruments.Normally classified as long-term asset.Common types of intangibles:PatentsCopyrightsFranchises or licensesTrademarks or trade namesGoodwillINTANGIBLE ASSET ISSUESThe Coca-Cola Company’s success comes from its secret formula for making Coca-Cola, notits plant facilities.Purchased IntangiblesRecorded at cost.Includes all costs necessary to make the intangible asset ready for its intended use.Typical costs include:Purchase price.Legal fees.Other incidental expenses.ValuationINTANGIBLE ASSET ISSUESLO 1 ValuationGoogle expensed the R&D costs incurred to develop its valuable search engine.INTANGIBLE ASSET ISSUESInternally Created IntangiblesRecorded at cost.Generally expensed.Only capitalize direct costs incurred in developing the intangible, such as legal costs.LO 1 Amortization of IntangiblesLimited-Life IntangiblesAmortize to expense over useful life.Credit asset account or accumulated amortization.Useful life should reflect the periods over which the asset will contribute to cash flows.Amortization should be cost less residual value.Companies should evaluate the limited-life intangibles for impairment.INTANGIBLE ASSET ISSUESLO 1 Indefinite-Life IntangiblesNo foreseeable limit on time the asset is expected to provide cash flows. Must test indefinite-life intangibles for impairment at least annually.No amortization.INTANGIBLE ASSET ISSUESAmortization of IntangiblesLO 1 ILLUSTRATION 12-1Accounting Treatment for IntangiblesINTANGIBLE ASSET ISSUESAmortization of IntangiblesLO 1 Does it matter how a company builds brand value? In a word, yes. If the brand is internally developed, its value does not appear in the financial statements. This is the case for The Coca-Cola Company, whose brand value is estimated to be roughly worth $79.2 billion but its balance sheet values its “trademarks within definite-lives” (i.e., brands) at just $6.7 billion. As you are learning in this chapter, this reporting results because the accounting rules prohibit companies from recognizing brands and many other “intangible” assets if they created them themselves. In contrast, when Procter & Gamble (P&G) acquired Gillette in 2005, it realized an additional $24 billion in intangible assets on its balance sheet. That is, P&G paid $57 billion for Gillette andestimated the Gillette brand value to be worth $24 billion of the total paid. Some have criticized this inconsistency in accounting, noting that information about the value of a brand is important to investors in consumer-product companies. Those supporting the difference in accounting cite the difficulty in arriving at reliable estimates of internally generated intangible assets. This latter argument seems to be carrying the day in support of the current accounting, under which only purchased brands and other intangible assets are recognized in accounting reports. Source: “Untouchable Intangibles: Sometimes You See Brands on the Balance Sheet, Sometimes You Don’t,” The Economist (August 30, 2014).WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? ARE ALL BRANDS THE SAME?LO 1 Six Major Categories:Marketing-related.Customer-related.Artistic-related.Contract-related.Technology-related.Goodwill.TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 Describe the accounting for various types of intangible assets.Marketing-Related Intangible AssetsExamples: Trademarks or trade names, newspaper mastheads, Internet domain names, and non-competition agreements.In the United States trademarks or trade names have legal protection for indefinite number of 10 year renewal periods. Capitalize acquisition costs. No amortization.TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 Companies go to great extremes to protect their valuable intangible assets. Consider how the creators of the highly successful game Trivial Pursuit protected their creation. First, they copyrighted the 6,000 questions that are at the heart of the game. Then they shielded the Trivial Pursuit name by applying for a registered trademark. As a third mode of protection, they obtained a design patent on the playing board’s design as a unique graphic creation. Another more recent example is the case of Converse and its efforts to protect its classic Chuck Taylor trademark. Converse (owned by Nike) accused 31 companies (including Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Kmart, and Skechers) of trademark infringement for co-opting its widely recognizable ChuckTaylor® sneakers. While Converse is suing for monetary damages, its main goal is to get these imposters off store shelves. The company went as far as filing a separate complaint with the International Trade Commission to stop any shoes considered to be counterfeit from entering the country. That Converse (Nike) is going to these ends to protect its trademark is understandable given the Nike reinvigorated the brand by expanding the franchise, introducing more colors and styles, and helping to push All Stars® into overseas markets.Source: “Converse Sues to Product Its Chuck Taylor All Stars,” The NewWork Times (October 14, 2014).WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? KEEP YOUR HANDS OFF MY INTANGIBLES?LO 2 Customer-Related Intangible AssetsExamples: Customer lists, order or production backlogs, and both contractual and non-contractual customer relationships.Capitalize acquisition costs. Amortized to expense over useful life.TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 Illustration: Green Market Inc. acquires the customer list of a large newspaper for $6,000,000 on January 1, 2017. Green Market expects to benefit from the information evenly over a three-year period. Record the purchase of the customer list and the amortization of the customer list at the end of each year.Customer List 6,000,000Jan. 12017 Cash 6,000,000Amortization Expense 2,000,000Dec. 31201720182019 Customer List * 2,000,000* or Accumulated Amortization TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 Artistic-Related Intangible AssetsExamples: Plays, literary works, musical works, pictures, photographs, and video and audiovisual material.Copyright granted for the life of the creator plus 70 years.Capitalize costs of acquiring and defending.Amortized to expense over useful life.Mickey MouseandTYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 Contract-Related Intangible AssetsExamples: Franchise and licensing agreements, construction permits, broadcast rights, and service or supply contracts.Franchise (or license) with a limited life should be amortized to expense over the life of the franchise.Franchise with an indefinite life should be carried at cost and not amortized.TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 Technology-Related Intangible AssetsExamples: Patented technology and trade secrets granted by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.Patent gives holder exclusive use for 20 years.Capitalize costs of purchasing a patent.Expense any R&D costs in developing a patent. Amortize over legal life or useful life, whichever is shorter.TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 The smartphone industry has been a patent battleground. For example, Nokia filed patent lawsuits against Apple (and Apple countersued) over cell phone features such as swiping gestures on touch screens and the “app store” for downloading software. Apple also targeted HTC for infringing on Apple’s patented feature that allows screens to detect more than one finger touch at a time. This facilitates the popular zoom-in and zoom-out capability. HTC, in turn, sued Apple for infringing on patented technology that helps extend battery life. The activity-tracker product space is another patent battleground. Competition in that market heated up when Under Armour recently paid $150 million to acquire MapMyFitness, which has 20 million people registered to use its websites and mobile applications to map, record, and share their workouts. To protect the value of the patent related to its miCoach fitness tracking system, adidas AG sued Under Armour. The lawsuit alleges that Under Armour infringed on 10 adidas patents, underscoring the growing importance of gadgetry and personal technology for sportswear makers that traditionally focused on shoes and apparel. Sources: J. Mintz, “Smart Phone Makers in Legal Fights over Patents,” Wisconsin State Journal (December 19, 2010), p. F4; and S. Germano, “Adidas Sues Under Armour Over Patents: Company Alleges Under Armour Infringes on 10 MiCoach Patents,” Wall Street Journal (February 4, 2014).WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? PATENT BATTLES?LO 2 Illustration: Harcott Co. incurs $180,000 in legal costs on January 1, 2017, to successfully defend a patent. The patent’s useful life is 12 years, amortized on a straight-line basis. Harcott records the legal fees and the amortization at the end of 2017 as follows.Patents 180,000Jan. 1 Cash 180,000Amortization Expense 15,000Dec. 31 Patents (or Accumulated Amortization) 15,000TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 2 After several espionage cases were uncovered, the secrets contained within the Los Alamos nuclear lab seemed easier to check out than a library book. But The Coca-Cola Company has managed to keep the recipe for the world’s best-selling soft drink under wraps for more than 100 years. The company offers almost no information about its lifeblood, and the only written copy of the formula resides in a bank vault in Atlanta. This handwritten sheet is available to no one except by vote of Coca-Cola’s board of directors. Can’t science offer some clues? Coke purportedly contains 17 to 18 ingredients. That includes the usual caramel color and corn syrup, as well as a blend of oils known as 7X (rumored to be a mix of orange, lemon, cinnamon, and others).Distilling natural products like these is complicated since they are made of thousands of compounds. One ingredient you will not find, by the way, is cocaine. Although the original formula did contain trace amounts, today’s Coke doesn’t. When was it removed? That too is a secret. Some experts indicate that the power of the Coca-Cola formula and related brand image account for almost $79.2 billion, or roughly 43 percent, of Coke’s $182.2 billion stock value. Sources: Adapted from Reed Tucker, “How Has Coke’s Formula Stayeda Secret?” Fortune (July 24, 2000), p. 42; and “Best Global Brands 2011,” www.interbrand.com (accessed August 30, 2014).WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? VALUE OF SECRET FORMULA?LO 2 GoodwillConceptually, represents the future economic benefits arising from the other assets acquired in a business combination that are not individually identified and separately recognized.Only recorded when an entire business is purchased.Goodwill is measured as the ... excess of cost of the purchase over the FMV of the identifiable net assets (assets less liabilities) purchased.Internally created goodwill should not be capitalized.TYPES OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 3 Explain the accounting issues for recording goodwill.Illustration: Multi-Diversified, Inc. decides that it needs a parts division to supplement its existing tractor distributorship. The president of Multi-Diversified is interested in buying Tractorling Company. The illustration presents the statement of financial position of Tractorling Company.Recording GoodwillILLUSTRATION 12-3Tractorling Co. Balance SheetLO 3 Multi-Diversified investigates Tractorling’s underlying assets to determine their fair values.Recording GoodwillILLUSTRATION 12-4Fair Value of Tractorling’s Net AssetsLO 3 Tractorling Company decides to accept Multi-Diversified’s offer of $400,000. What is the value of the goodwill, if any?Recording GoodwillILLUSTRATION 12-5Determination of Goodwill—Master Valuation ApproachLO 3 Cash 25,000Accounts Receivables 35,000Inventory 122,000Property, Plant, and Equipment 205,000Patents 18,000Goodwill 50,000 Liabilities 55,000 Cash 400,000Multi-Diversified records this transaction as follows.Recording GoodwillLO 3 Example: Global Corporation purchased the net assets of Local Company for $300,000 on December 31, 2017. The balance sheet of Local Company just prior to acquisition is:FMV of Net Assets = $200,000Recording GoodwillLO 3 Book Value = $130,000Fair Value = $200,000Purchase Price = $300,000Revaluation$70,000Goodwill$100,000Example: Global Corporation purchased the net assets of Local Company for $300,000 on December 31, 2017. The value assigned to goodwill is determined as follows:Recording GoodwillLO 3 Recording GoodwillExample: Global Corporation purchased the net assets of Local Company for $300,000 on December 31, 2017. The value assigned to goodwill is determined as follows:LO 3 Journal entry recorded by Global:Cash 15,000Receivables 10,000Inventory 70,000Equipment 130,000Goodwill 100,000 Accounts Payable 25,000 Cash 300,000Example: Global Corporation purchased the net assets of Local Company for $300,000 on December 31, 2017. Prepare the journal entry to record the purchase of the net assets of Local.Recording GoodwillLO 3 Goodwill Write-OffGoodwill considered to have an indefinite life. Should not be amortized.Only adjust carrying value when goodwill is impaired.Bargain PurchasePurchase price less than the fair value of net assets acquired.Amount is recorded as a gain by the purchaser.GoodwillLO 3 Impairment of Limited-Life IntangiblesSame as impairment for long-lived assets in Chapter 11.If the sum of the expected future net cash flows (undiscounted) is less than the carrying amount of the asset, an impairment has occurred (recoverability test).The impairment loss is the amount by which the carrying amount of the asset exceeds the fair value of the asset (fair value test). The loss is reported as part of income from continuing operations, “Other expenses and losses” section.IMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 4 Explain impairment procedures and presentation requirements for intangible assets.Illustration: Lerch, Inc. has a patent on how to extract oil from shale rock. Unfortunately, several recent non-shale oil discoveries adversely affected the demand for shale-oil technology. As a result, Lerch performs a recoverability test. It finds that the expected future net cash flows from this patent are $35 million. Lerch’s patent has a carrying amount of $60 million. Discounting the expected future net cash flows at its market rate of interest, Lerch determines the fair value of its patent to be $20 million. Perform the recoverability test.Expected future net cash flows $ 35,000,000Carrying value 60,000,000Asset impaired $ (25,000,000)IMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 4Illustration: Perform the fair value test and the journal entry (if any) to record the impairment of the asset. Carrying amount of patent $ 60,000,000Fair value 20,000,000Loss on impairment $ 40,000,000Loss on Impairment 40,000,000 Patents 40,000,000Companies may not recognize restoration of the previously recognized impairment loss.IMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 4Impairment of Indefinite-Life Intangibles Other than GoodwillShould be tested for impairment at least annually.Impairment test is a fair value test.If the fair value of asset is less than the carrying amount, an impairment loss is recognized for the difference.Recoverability test is not used.IMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 4Illustration: Arcon Radio purchased a broadcast license for $2,000,000. Arcon Radio has renewed the license with the FCC twice, at a minimal cost. Because it expects cash flows to last indefinitely, Arcon reports the license as an indefinite-life intangible asset. Recently the FCC decided to auction these licenses to the highest bidder instead of renewing them. Arcon Radio expects cash flows for the remaining two years of its existing license. It performs an impairment test and determines that the fair value of the intangible asset is $1,500,000. IMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSILLUSTRATION 12-7Computation of Loss on Impairment of Broadcast LicenseLO 4Impairment of GoodwillTwo Step Process:Step 1: If fair value is less than the carrying amount of the net assets (including goodwill), then perform a second step to determine possible impairment.Step 2: Determine the fair value of the goodwill (implied value of goodwill) and compare to carrying amount.IMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 4Illustration: Kohlbuy Corporation purchased one division, Pritt Products, four years ago for $2 million. Kohlbuy management is now reviewing the division for purposes of recognizing an impairment. Illustration 12-8 lists the Pritt Division’s net assets, including the associated goodwill of $900,000 from the purchase.ILLUSTRATION 12-8Net Assets of Pritt Division, Including GoodwillAssume that the fair value of the Pritt Division is $1,900,000. Impairment of GoodwillLO 4Illustration: Prepare the journal entry (if any) to record the impairment.Step 1: The fair value of the reporting unit is below its carrying value. Therefore, an impairment has occurred. Step 2:Loss on Impairment 500,000 Goodwill 500,000$ 1,900,0001,500,000400,000900,000$ (500,000)ILLUSTRATIONS 12-9 and 12-10Impairment of GoodwillLO 4Impairment SummaryILLUSTRATION 12-11Summary of Intangible Asset Impairment TestsIMPAIRMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETSLO 4As shown in the chart below, goodwill impairments spiked in 2008 and 2009, coinciding with the stock market downturn in the wake of the financial crisis.WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? IMPAIRMENT RISKLO 4Balance SheetIntangible assets shown as a separate item. Reporting is similar to the reporting of property, plant, and equipment. Contra accounts are not normally shown for intangibles.Companies should report as a separate item all intangible assets other than goodwill.Presentation of Intangible AssetsLO 4Income StatementReport amortization expense and impairment losses in continuing operations.Goodwill impairment losses should also be presented as a separate line item in the continuing operations section, unless the goodwill impairment is associated with a discontinued operation.Presentation of Intangible AssetsLO 4Presentation of Intangible AssetsILLUSTRATION 12-12Intangible AssetLO 4LO 5 Describe accounting and presentation for research and development and similar costs.Frequently results in something that a company patents or copyrights such as:new product, process, idea, formula, composition, orliterary work.Research and development (R&D) costs are not in themselves intangible assets.RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSCompanies must expense all research and development costs when incurred.Companies spend considerable sums on research and development.RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSILLUSTRATION 12-13R&D Outlays, as a Percentage of SalesLO 5Identifying R & D ActivitiesResearch ActivitiesPlanned search or critical investigation aimed at discovery of new knowledge.ExamplesLaboratory research aimed at discovery of new knowledge; searching for applications of new research findings.Development ActivitiesTranslation of research findings or other knowledge into a plan or design for a new product or process or for a significant improvement to an existing product or process whether intended for sale or use.ExamplesConceptual formulation and design of possible product or process alternatives; construction of prototypes andoperation of pilot plants.RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSLO 5Accounting for R & D ActivitiesCosts Associated with R&D Activities:Materials, Equipment, and Facilities.Personnel.Purchased Intangibles.Contract Services.Indirect Costs.RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSLO 51. Investment in a subsidiary company.2. Timberland. 3. Cost of engineering activity required to advance the design of a product to the manufacturing stage.4. Lease prepayment. 5. Cost of equipment obtained.6. Cost of searching for applications of new research findings.ItemClassificationE12-1: Indicate how items on the list below would generally be reported in the financial statements. Long-term investmentsPP&ER&D expenseRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSPrepaid rentPP&ER&D expenseLO 5Cost incurred in the formation of a corporation.Operating losses incurred in the start-up of a business.Training costs incurred in start-up of new operation.Purchase cost of a franchise.Goodwill generated internally.Cost of testing in search of product alternatives.ExpenseRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSItemClassificationOperating lossExpenseIntangibleNot recordedR&D expenseLO 5Goodwill acquired in the purchase of a business.Cost of developing a patent.Cost of purchasing a patent from an inventor.Legal costs incurred in securing a patent.Unrecovered costs of a successful legal suit to protect the patent.IntangibleRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSItemClassificationR&D expenseIntangibleIntangibleIntangibleLO 5Cost of conceptual formulation of possible product alternatives.Cost of purchasing a copyright.Research and development costs.Long-term receivables.Cost of developing a trademark.Cost of purchasing a trademark.R&D expenseRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSItemClassificationIntangibleR&D expenseLong-term investmentExpenseIntangibleLO 5Costs Similar to R & D CostsStart-up costs for a new operation.Initial operating losses.Advertising costs.Computer software costs.RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSLO 5 Cost of equipment acquired that will have alternative uses in future R&D projects over the next 5 years. Materials consumed in R&D projects Consulting fees paid to outsiders for R&D projects Personnel costs of persons involved in R&D projects Indirect costs reasonably allocable to R&D projects Materials purchased for future R&D projects$280,00059,000100,000128,00050,00034,000$56,00059,000100,000128,00050,0000R&D Expense$393,000$280,000 ÷ 5 = $56,000 E12-17: Compute the amount to be reported as research and development expense.RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COSTSLO 5For many companies, developing a strong brand image is as important as developing the products they sell. Now more than ever, companies see the power of a strong brand, enhanced by significant and effective advertising investments. As the following chart indicates, the value of brand investments is substantial. Apple heads the list with an estimated brand value of about $119 billion.WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? BRANDEDLO 5Occasionally you may find the value of a brand included in a company’s financial statements under goodwill. But generally you will not find the estimated values of brands recorded in companies’ balance sheets. The reason? The subjectivity that goes into estimating a brand’s value. In some cases, analysts base an estimate of brand value on opinion polls or on some multiple of ad spending. For example, in estimating the brand values shown to the left, Interbrand Corp. estimates the percentage of the overall future revenues the brand will generate and then discounts the net cash flows, to arrive at a present value. Some analysts believe that information on brand values is relevant. Others voice valid concerns about the reliability of brand value estimates due to subjectivity in the estimates for revenues, costs, and the risk component of the discount rate. For example, another brand valuation firm, Millward Brown, ranks Apple as number one with an estimated brand value of $183 billion (or about one-third of Apple’s market value). These data support the highly subjective nature of brand valuation estimates.Sources: “Best Global Brands 2014,” www.interbrand.com; and S. Vranica and J. Hansegard, “Ikea Discloses an $11 Billion Secret,” Wall Street Journal (August 9, 2012).WHAT DO THE NUMBERS MEAN? BRANDEDLO 5Presentation of Research and Development CostsILLUSTRATION 12-16Income Statement Disclosure of R&D CostsLO 5RELEVANT FACTSSimilaritiesLike GAAP, under IFRS intangible assets (1) lack physical substance and (2) are not financial instruments. In addition, under IFRS an intangible asset is identifiable. To be identifiable, an intangible asset must either be separable from the company (can be sold or transferred) or it arises from a contractual or legal right from which economic benefits will flow to the company. Fair value is used as the measurement basis for intangible assets under IFRS, if it is more clearly evident.LO 6 Compare the accounting for intangible assets under GAAP and IFRS.RELEVANT FACTSSimilaritiesIFRS and GAAP are very similar for intangibles acquired in a business combination. That is, companies recognize an intangible asset separately from goodwill if the intangible represents contractual or legal rights or is capable of being separated or divided and sold, transferred, licensed, rented, or exchanged. In addition, under both GAAP and IFRS, companies recognize acquired in-process research and development (IPR&D) as a separate intangible asset if it meets the definition of an intangible asset and its fair value can be measured reliably. As in GAAP, under IFRS the costs associated with research and development are segregated into the two components. Costs in the research phase are always expensed under both IFRS and GAAP.LO 6RELEVANT FACTSDifferencesIFRS permits revaluation on limited-life intangible assets. Revaluations are not permitted for goodwill and other indefinite-life intangible assets.IFRS permits some capitalization of internally generated intangible assets (e.g., brand value) if it is probable there will be a future benefit and the amount can be reliably measured. GAAP requires expensing of all costs associated with internally generated intangibles. IFRS requires an impairment test at each reporting date for long-lived assets and intangibles, and records an impairment if the asset’s carrying amount exceeds its recoverable amount. The recoverable amount is the higher of the asset’s fair value less costs to sell and its value-in-use. Value-in-use is the future cash flows to be derived from the particular assets, discounted to present value. Under GAAP, impairment loss is measured as the excess of the carrying amount over the asset’s fair value.LO 6RELEVANT FACTSDifferencesIFRS allows reversal of impairment losses when there has been a change in economic conditions or in the expected use of limited-life intangibles. Under GAAP, impairment losses cannot be reversed for assets to be held and used; the impairment loss results in a new cost basis for the asset. IFRS and GAAP are similar in the accounting for impairments of assets held for disposal.Under IFRS, costs in the development phase of a research and development project are capitalized once technological feasibility (referred to as economic viability) is achieved.LO 6ON THE HORIZONAt one time, the IASB and FASB identified a project that would consider expanded recognition of internally generated intangible assets. As indicated, IFRS permits more recognition of intangibles compared to GAAP. Thus, it will be challenging to develop converged standards for intangible assets, given the long-standing prohibition on capitalizing internally generated intangible assets and research and development in GAAP. At present, this project is not active.LO 6IFRS SELF-TEST QUESTIONSResearch and development costs are:expensed under GAAP.expensed under IFRS.expensed under both GAAP and IFRS.None of the above.LO 6IFRS SELF-TEST QUESTIONSA loss on impairment of an intangible asset under IFRS is the asset’s:carrying amount less the expected future net cash flows.carrying amount less its recoverable amount.recoverable amount less the expected future net cash flows.book value less its fair value.LO 6IFRS SELF-TEST QUESTIONSRecovery of impairment is recognized for all the following except:patent held for sale. patent held for use. trademark.goodwill.LO 6“Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted in Section 117 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act without the express written permission of the copyright owner is unlawful. Request for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his/her own use only and not for distribution or resale. The Publisher assumes no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages, caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein.”COPYRIGHT
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