In the guidance that follows the bidding company will be
referred to as the ’acquirer’ and the company that it
wishes to acquire as the ‘target’.
The expenses incurred by both sides in a takeover,
particularly when such is contested, can be very substantial; at
times running into tens of millions. Both sides may seek to deduct
some or all of the costs. In the majority of cases the bidding
company’s expenditure is disallowable on the grounds that it
is capital. That the takeover may, in the event, be unsuccesful
does not change matters. Abortive expenditure on a takeover would
be capital following the ECC Quarries case - see
BIM35325.
During a takeover bid costs are incurred on many different
types of service. These may be bought in or undertaken by the
company’s own staff. These costs may be charged under a
number of different heads in the accounts. The costs may include
some or all of the following:
The acquirer’s costs will normally be capital expenditure;
the cost of acquiring a capital asset.
The target’s costs may be:
The guidance that follows covers:
| BIM38265 | General approach |
| BIM38270 | Nature of company incurring expenditure |
| BIM38275 | Trading companies |
| BIM38280 | Evidence |
| BIM38285 | Group situations |
| BIM38290 | Expenses recharged to trading subsidiaries |
| BIM38295 | Other grounds for disallowance |
| BIM38297 | Investment companies |