Example 2– Fair value of contract liability when Customer has paid up-front
On January 1, Year 1, Target enters into a two-year service contract with Customer that will be satisfied ratably over time. Target concludes the contract does not have a significant financing component. Customer pays Target the full contract price of $1,000 at contract inception.
On January 2, Year 1, Parent acquires Target, before any performance under the contract.
The following additional facts are relevant. Effects of discounting are ignored for simplicity.
- Contract price (fully deferred by Target at the date of acquisition): $1,000
- Contract market price: $1,000 (for simplicity, assumed to be the same as the contract price)
- Expected fulfillment cost: $750 (market participant view)
- Reasonable profit on expected fulfillment costs: $150 (market participant view)
- Selling efforts plus a reasonable profit: $100 (market participant view)
On January 2, Year 1, Parent records a contract liability at fair value for $900 in its acquisition accounting.
Fair value of the assumed contract liability is determined using either:
- the top-down method: contract market price ($1,000) less selling efforts plus a reasonable profit ($100); or
- the bottom-up method: expected fulfillment costs ($750) plus a reasonable profit margin ($150). Costs incurred by the acquiree as part of selling activities completed before the date of acquisition are excluded.
In Year 1 and Year 2, Parent recognizes $450 ($900 / 2 years) as revenue for this contract. Absent the acquisition, Target would have recognized $500 ($1,000 / 2 years) each year.