Consolidated Financial Statements CPA FAR: Acquisition Method
Consolidated Financial Statements for the CPA FAR Exam: The Acquisition Method Explained
Consolidations are the FAR simulation candidates call the hardest on the exam. Here is how the acquisition method works, how goodwill is measured at acquisition, the elimination entries examiners test, and a worked example you can follow line by line.
By CA Vicky Sarin (ICAI), founder of Eduyush · Last updated 2 July 2026 · Mapped to the AICPA 2026 FAR Blueprint
Consolidated financial statements present a parent and its subsidiaries as one economic entity. Under the acquisition method (ASC 805), the parent records the subsidiary's identifiable assets and liabilities at fair value at the acquisition date, recognises goodwill as the excess of consideration plus noncontrolling interest over that fair value, and eliminates all intercompany balances and transactions. Consolidation is required when the parent controls the subsidiary — usually more than 50% of voting shares.
- Control — normally over 50% of voting interest — triggers consolidation. Ownership of 20–50% typically means the equity method instead, not consolidation.
- The subsidiary is consolidated 100%, even at 80% ownership. The outside shareholders' share appears as noncontrolling interest (NCI) in equity.
- Goodwill = consideration transferred + NCI at fair value − fair value of identifiable net assets acquired.
- The mark-earning work is elimination: the investment account, intercompany sales and receivables, and unrealised profit in inventory must all be removed.
- FAR tests core consolidation. Variable interest entities and foreign currency translation now sit in the BAR Discipline under the 2026 Blueprint.
Why consolidations sit at the top of the FAR difficulty list
A consolidation simulation is not one question — it is a chain of five or six dependent calculations where an early error cascades. You must identify control, measure fair values at acquisition, compute goodwill, post elimination entries and derive NCI, all inside one TBS. Candidate forums consistently rank it the hardest FAR simulation, and review providers place it alongside the statement of cash flows as the most frequently tested.
The concept underneath is simple: the parent and subsidiary keep separate books, but the group reports as if it were one company. Everything that happened between group members must vanish; only transactions with outsiders survive. Every elimination entry follows from that single idea.
When consolidation is required
| Ownership level | Presumed relationship | Accounting treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Over 50% voting interest | Control | Consolidate |
| 20%–50% | Significant influence | Equity method — one-line investment |
| Under 20% | Passive investment | Fair value through net income (equity securities) |
Control can also arise without majority voting interest through a variable interest entity, where the primary beneficiary consolidates. Under the 2026 Blueprint, VIE analysis and foreign currency consolidation are tested in BAR, not FAR. For FAR, focus on voting-interest consolidation and the acquisition method mechanics below.
The acquisition method in five steps
Worked example: computing goodwill and NCI
Parent Co pays 800 for 80% of Sub Co. The fair value of the NCI is 190. Sub Co's identifiable net assets have a fair value of 900 at the acquisition date (book value 750). This is the exact shape a FAR simulation takes.
| Component | Logic | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Consideration transferred | Cash paid for the 80% stake | 800 |
| NCI at fair value | Fair value of the 20% not acquired | +190 |
| Total | Value of 100% of Sub Co | 990 |
| Fair value of identifiable net assets | Not book value of 750 — fair value | −900 |
| Goodwill | Excess of total over net assets | 90 |
Two traps live inside this one calculation. First, candidates use the book value of net assets (750) instead of fair value (900) — a 150 error that flows straight into goodwill. Second, they compute goodwill on the parent's 80% only, forgetting NCI. Under US GAAP the full goodwill method is mandatory: always add NCI at fair value before subtracting net assets.
Elimination entries: where the simulation marks are
After acquisition, each period's consolidation worksheet removes everything internal to the group. Three eliminations account for most FAR simulation marks.
Worked example: unrealised profit in inventory
Parent sells goods costing 60 to Sub for 100. At year end, Sub still holds all of them. Group profit of 40 is unrealised — no outsider has bought anything.
| Line | Before elimination | After elimination |
|---|---|---|
| Consolidated revenue | Includes 100 intercompany sale | Sale removed |
| Inventory on the balance sheet | 100 (Sub's carrying amount) | 60 (original group cost) |
| Group profit | Overstated by 40 | Unrealised 40 removed |
The AICPA's favourite variant: only part of the intercompany goods remain in inventory. If Sub has sold 70% to outsiders, only 30% of the profit is unrealised — eliminate 12, not 40. Read the stem for the words "remaining in ending inventory" and apply the fraction before you post the entry.
The consolidation trap table
These are the errors that decide a consolidation TBS. Bookmark this table and test yourself against it before exam day.
| Trap | Wrong instinct | Correct treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Net assets measured at book value | Use the subsidiary's carrying amounts | Fair value at acquisition date, including unrecorded intangibles |
| Goodwill on parent's share only | Consideration − 80% of net assets | Full goodwill: consideration + NCI at fair value − 100% of net assets |
| Acquisition costs capitalised | Add legal and advisory fees to the investment | Expense as incurred under ASC 805 |
| Consolidating only the parent's % | Include 80% of each subsidiary line | Consolidate 100% of every line; show NCI in equity |
| Intercompany profit left in inventory | Eliminate only the sale and purchase | Also remove unrealised profit from inventory and cost of sales |
| Bargain purchase forced to zero | Treat negative goodwill as nil | Reassess, then recognise the gain in income |
Work consolidation problems in the same order every time: goodwill first, NCI second, eliminations third, then assemble the statements. A fixed sequence stops the cascade — one wrong number early no longer means rebuilding the whole worksheet under exam pressure.
How Indian candidates should approach this topic
CA Final FR and ACCA SBR candidates already know consolidation mechanics — the group concept, eliminations and unrealised profit transfer directly. The US-specific relearning is narrow but must be precise: NCI is mandatorily at full fair value (no IFRS-style proportionate option), acquisition costs are always expensed, and the FAR/BAR split means the deeper VIE and foreign currency work you may remember from CA Final belongs to the Discipline stage, not here.
Surgent's simulation bank drills consolidation as a worksheet, not a formula sheet — the goodwill computation, the investment elimination and the partial unrealised-profit variant appear in the same dependent-chain format the AICPA uses. Its ReadySCORE shows whether consolidation is a genuine strength or a masked weakness before you book the exam. See the platform in our Surgent CPA Review India guide, or start with the Surgent CPA course.
Consolidation rewards process over memory. Goodwill, NCI, eliminations — in that order, every time. Candidates who fix the sequence stop fearing the topic; candidates who improvise rebuild the worksheet twice and run out of clock.
Frequently asked questions
Talk to someone who passed the same exam — an Eduyush CPA advisor can build a plan around the simulations you find hardest.
Chat on WhatsApp → +91 96433 08079
Leave a comment