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D Invests's avatar

Thankyou for the article. However, goodwill is not amortised. Goodwill stays in the acquirers balance sheet and is tested annually for impairment.

Clear View Equity Research's avatar

Clear article highlighting important concepts - thankyou! For me there is a lot of relationship with this concept and ROIC - See's is a more attractive business because they generate the same amount of earnings from a lower base of tangible assets (i.e. higher ROIC) when compared to business A. There is a misconception that accounting goodwill is a "red flag" however this is clearly not always the case. The only thing I dont agree with is the following sentence "Thereafter, accounting principles make companies amortize the acquisition through the income statement until the goodwill is driven to 0." - under accounting rules you are not able to amortize goodwill only impair it.

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