In push-down accounting, when a parent company acquires a subsidiary, the acquisition costs and the fair values of the subsidiary's assets and liabilities are recorded in the subsidiary’s financial statements rather than just in the consolidated statements of the parent company.
After the merger, the company applied push-down accounting to integrate the financials of the newly acquired entity into its books.
Deferred's AI 1031 Research Assistant is trained on 8,000+ pages of US tax law and outperforms human CPAs by 22%+
CHAT NOW