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To: Stu R who wrote (38807)2/1/2001 1:53:51 PM
From: BDR  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 54805
 
<<If someone has easy access to a link to the new rules I would like to read them and I would try to interpret them for you.>>

Looks like details will be available in a couple of weeks.

NEWS RELEASE 01/24/01

FASB Reconfirms Its Plans to Eliminate
Pooling-of-Interests Method of Accounting

Norwalk, CT, January 24, 2001—In continuing its redeliberations of the September
1999 proposed Statement, Business Combinations and Intangible Assets, the
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) tentatively decided at today’s public
meeting to eliminate the pooling-of-interests (pooling) method of accounting for
business combinations. All business combinations would be accounted for under a
single method - the purchase method. The pooling method would be eliminated
following issuance of a final Statement. The Board voted unanimously in favor of
this decision.

This is a reconfirmation of the FASB’s decision, contained in the proposed
Statement, to eliminate the pooling method. The FASB has received many
comments on this issue from a broad constituency. Based on thorough analysis and
public discussion of those comments, the FASB concluded that the transparency of
the reporting for business combinations would be greatly improved if all business
combinations were accounted for under the purchase method.

In commenting on today’s decision, Edmund L. Jenkins, Chairman of the FASB,
stated, "The purchase method, as modified by the Board during redeliberations,
reflects the underlying economics of business combinations by requiring that the
current values of the assets and liabilities exchanged be reported to investors.
Without the information that the purchase method provides, investors are left in the
dark as to the real cost of one company buying another and, as a result, are unable
to track future returns on the investment."

As part of its proposal on business combinations, the FASB made a tentative
decision in December of last year relating to accounting for purchased goodwill that
would require a nonamortization approach. Under that approach, goodwill would not
be amortized against earnings. Instead, it would be reviewed for impairment, that is,
written down and expensed against earnings only in the periods in which the
recorded value of goodwill is more than its fair value. In connection with that recent
decision, in mid-February the FASB will issue an Exposure Draft on the accounting
for goodwill, providing a 30-day comment period
.

After reviewing the comments received on the Exposure Draft and considering the
entire set of tentative decisions reached during its redeliberations, the FASB plans
to issue a final Statement on business combinations and intangible assets in late
June of this year. The purchase method of accounting would be required for all
business combinations initiated after the issuance of a final Statement. However,
the pooling method will continue to be used to account for certain business
combinations initiated prior to the issuance of the final Statement.

About the Financial Accounting Standards Board

Since 1973, the Financial Accounting Standards Board has been the designated
organization in the private sector for establishing standards of financial accounting
and reporting. Those standards govern the preparation of financial reports and are
officially recognized as authoritative by the Securities and Exchange Commission
and the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Such standards are
essential to the efficient functioning of the economy because investors, creditors,
auditors, and others rely heavily on credible, transparent, and comparable financial
information. For more information about the FASB, visit our Web site at
www.fasb.org.



To: Stu R who wrote (38807)2/2/2001 3:09:50 PM
From: Mike Buckley  Respond to of 54805
 
Stu,

Hopefuly someone has already provided a link to the FASB rules because I don't have one. The best I have are the following two Fool articles penned at the time the rules were being proposed:

fool.com

fool.com

--Mike Buckley