Disclosures under IFRS 3: Understanding the requirements
AuditThis article covers IFRS 3's disclosure requirements.

Some transactions that should be accounted for separately (referred to here as separate transactions) are included in the purchase agreement, an example being an agreement by the vendor to reimburse the acquirer’s transaction costs. More often, identifying a separate transaction and its accounting consequences requires a careful analysis of the overall arrangement and circumstances and their substance. Many transactions that, from a commercial perspective, are consequential or integral to a business combination are not necessarily part of the accounting for the combination for IFRS 3 purposes.
As mentioned in our article Insights into IFRS 3 – Consideration transferred, accounting for a separate transaction often involves adjusting the contractual purchase price in order to obtain the right amount of consideration transferred. Only consideration transferred in exchange for the acquiree is considered in the calculation of goodwill (or gain on a bargain purchase). Payments that, in substance, relate to separate transactions are not included in consideration transferred for the business combination transaction and may give rise to a separate gain, loss, liability or asset. This article discusses such transactions.
Identifying separate transactions; Settlement of pre-existing relationships; Employee compensation arrangements; Acquisition costs and Share-based payment awards.
We hope you find the information in this article helpful in giving you some insight into IFRS 3. If you would like to discuss any of the points raised, please contact us.
This article covers IFRS 3's disclosure requirements.
IFRS 3 ‘Business Combinations’ contains the requirements for these transactions, which are challenging in practice. While not a new Standard, it is still highly referred to in practice. This article discusses accounting after the acquisition date.
This article discusses how goodwill, or a gain from a bargain purchase is initially recognized and measured under IFRS 3, which represents the final step of applying the acquisition method.
This article discusses the IFRS 3 requirements when the business combination accounting is incomplete at the reporting date.
This article discusses the main practical issues affecting consideration transferred, one of the critical steps that an acquirer has to go through when accounting for a business combination.