In many PE-backed and international middle-market transactions, integration of the target’s operational accounting into the acquirer’s group accounting environment is often an overlooked PMI task. Common challenges include incomplete opening balance sheet information, inconsistent accounting policies, and fragmented post-acquisition reporting procedures, which frequently result in adjustments, reporting delays and audit findings during the first reporting cycles after closing.
Policy Alignment
local finance teams continuing seller accounting policies after closing (e.g., revenue cut-off / Incoterms, inventory valuation, accrual and provisions, etc.),
customer rebate accruals booked after initial purchase price allocation procedures,
acquired entities continuing local chart of accounts structures after acquisition that do not provide sufficient granularity for the accounting policies of the acquirer,
intercompany partner transactions not identified and properly coded, and
cash-basis or local tax-driven accounting practices continuing after integration into group reporting.
These situations often create recurring reconciliation differences, inconsistent KPI reporting and significant manual adjustments during consolidation.
Practical considerations: Newly acquired entities should complete standardized reporting packages, intercompany mappings, revenue cut-off procedures and balance sheet reconciliations before inclusion into group consolidation and also implement temporary integration controls until ERP harmonization and accounting policy alignment are completed. Clear reporting timelines between transaction advisors, local finance teams and Group Accounting functions also become critical during the first reporting periods after acquisition.
Earn-Outs
Earn-out structures and contingent consideration arrangements frequently become one of the most judgmental areas of post-acquisition accounting, particularly where management retention and acquisition consideration overlap economically. In practice, recurring operational issues include:
earn-out clauses linked to “adjusted EBITDA” without clear definition of normalization adjustments,
revenue or EBITDA targets measured using different GAAP frameworks across entities,
management-prepared forecasts not updated after restructuring or integration activities,
discount rates and probability assumptions remaining unchanged despite deteriorating performance, and
overlap between retention bonuses and contingent purchase consideration.
These issues frequently create recurring audit discussions, valuation disputes and post-acquisition earnings volatility.
Practical considerations: Groups should formally document EBITDA definitions, normalization adjustments, forecast assumptions, discount rates, payment triggers and remeasurement procedures at acquisition date. Clear separation between contingent purchase consideration and management retention arrangements is often critical during post-acquisition reporting.
Financing
Structure
Profit and loss transfer agreements and intercompany financing arrangements frequently become operationally complex in international groups, particularly where acquisitions involve multiple holding entities, shareholder structures or foreign subsidiaries. In practice, recurring issues commonly include:
intercompany loans without formal repayment schedules,
interest rates inconsistent with transfer pricing documentation or transfer prices not yet available,
one entity booking interest income while the counterparty capitalizes balances,
foreign exchange remeasurements recorded inconsistently across entities, and
shareholder financing booked through operational current accounts rather than formal financing structures.
These situations frequently create accounting, transfer pricing and consolidation issues during audit and reporting procedures.
Practical considerations: Groups should maintain signed agreements covering repayment schedules, interest calculations, foreign exchange treatment, transfer pricing support and reporting responsibilities along with periodic intercompany balances reconciliation against legal agreements and local statutory reporting.
Conclusion
In practice, many acquisition accounting issues arise from inconsistent integration processes, delayed valuation updates and unclear contractual arrangements between transaction, legal and finance teams. Earn-out calculations, opening balance sheet adjustments, intercompany financing structures and post-acquisition reporting procedures frequently become significant sources of audit adjustments during the first reporting cycles after closing.
For international and PE-backed groups, disciplined acquisition accounting procedures, standardized integration reporting and early alignment between transaction and Group Accounting teams often become critical as acquisition activity increases.
About Group Accounting Partner
Group Accounting Partner is a modern, AI-enabled accounting advisory boutique specializing in group accounting, consolidation, and financial reporting for PE/VC-backed companies and international mid-market groups.