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Basic Question 20 of 20

The acquisition method:

A. Reports higher stockholder's equity than the equity method.
B. Reports the same net income as the equity method.
C. Reports the assets relating to the investment at fair market value.

User Contributed Comments 10

User Comment
rhardin I thought that the acquisition method reports assets at fair market value?
weiw why C is wrong, anyone?
quanttrader acquisition method, equity method and proportionate consolidation method all report same net income
arudkov confused with C ((((
ericczhang I think C is wrong because the acquisition method require the acquiring firm to report the fair market value of all the assets being acquired at the time of the acquisition. It doesn't force you to continually market-to-market those assets once you acquired them.
DCPWS I believe C would be right if the question were about consolidation. Since the acquisition is about a 20-50% investment, only the assets of the acquiree are marked to market. Am I right?
Teeto I second ericczhang. Once you acquire a company the acquired assets' FV becomes the new book cost on the acquirer's balance.
davidt876 i third ericczhang. as for DCPWS:

for a non-controlling significant influence (usually 20-50%):
1. equity method (which is also required for all joint ventures under both IFRS and GAAP)
2. proportional consolidation

for a controlling interest (usually >50%):
1. acquisition method (required by both IFRS and GAAP)
2. pooling (discontinued)

...point is you seem to have crossed some wires
ashish100 C reports asset related to investing in acquisition price. Which includes goodwill and the fmv value of asset

Idk wth everyone else is talking about up here but that's my understanding brah
Levancho Why note A? Per textbook, equity under the aquisition method is higher by the amount of minority interest.
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I used your notes and passed ... highly recommended!
Lauren

Lauren

Learning Outcome Statements

describe the classification, measurement, and disclosure under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) for 1) investments in financial assets, 2) investments in associates, 3) joint ventures, 4) business combinations, and 5) special purpose and variable interest entities;

distinguish between IFRS and US GAAP in their classification, measurement, and disclosure of investments in financial assets, investments in associates, joint ventures, business combinations, and special purpose and variable interest entities;

analyze how different methods used to account for intercorporate investments affect financial statements and ratios.

CFA® 2025 Level II Curriculum, Volume 2, Module 10.