---
name: managing-fair-value-measurement
language: en
description: Applies ASC 820 fair value framework with hierarchy classification and valuation technique documentation. Use when measuring fair values, classifying in the fair value hierarchy, or documenting valuation approaches.
tags:
  - management
  - accounting
  - valuation
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Financial Reporting
    - Audit
    - Accounting
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---
# Managing Fair Value Measurement

## When To Use

- Measuring fair value for financial instruments, intangible assets, contingent consideration, or impairment testing under ASC 820
- Classifying assets and liabilities within the three-level fair value hierarchy (Level 1, 2, or 3)
- Documenting valuation techniques and significant inputs for audit support or financial statement disclosures
- Evaluating whether a transfer between hierarchy levels has occurred during the reporting period
- Preparing or reviewing ASC 820 disclosure requirements for quarterly or annual filings

## Inputs To Gather

- **Asset/liability inventory**: Complete list of items requiring fair value measurement, with carrying amounts and measurement dates
- **Market data**: Observable quoted prices, broker quotes, benchmark yields, comparable transaction data, and index levels as of the measurement date
- **Valuation models**: Discounted cash flow models, option pricing models, or other techniques in use, including all key assumptions
- **Significant unobservable inputs**: Growth rates, discount rates, volatility assumptions, credit spreads, and probability weightings for Level 3 measurements
- **Prior-period classifications**: Previous hierarchy level assignments and any transfers noted in prior filings
- **Management representations**: Entity-specific assumptions, intended use or highest-and-best-use determinations, and restrictions on assets [VERIFY against entity's specific facts and circumstances]

## Workflow

1. **Scope the measurement population**
   - Identify every asset, liability, and equity instrument measured or disclosed at fair value
   - Distinguish between recurring measurements (e.g., trading securities, derivatives) and nonrecurring measurements (e.g., impaired assets, assets acquired in a business combination)
   - Confirm the unit of account — individual instrument vs. portfolio-level measurement where permitted

2. **Determine the principal (or most advantageous) market**
   - Identify the market with the greatest volume and activity for each item
   - If no principal market exists, identify the most advantageous market (highest price net of transaction costs)
   - Document the basis for market selection, especially when multiple venues exist [VERIFY that market assumptions reflect entity-specific access]

3. **Select and apply valuation techniques**
   - Choose among market approach, income approach, or cost approach based on data availability
   - Use multiple techniques where feasible and reconcile results to a single fair value conclusion
   - For the income approach, confirm discount rate components: risk-free rate, credit spread, liquidity premium, entity-specific risk adjustments
   - For the market approach, validate comparability of reference transactions or multiples

4. **Classify within the fair value hierarchy**
   - **Level 1**: Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets/liabilities — no adjustment permitted
   - **Level 2**: Observable inputs other than Level 1 prices — includes quoted prices for similar items, interest rates, yield curves, and implied volatilities
   - **Level 3**: Significant unobservable inputs — entity-developed assumptions reflecting market participant expectations
   - Classification is driven by the lowest-level input that is significant to the entire measurement
   - Document the rationale when judgment is applied to determine significance of an input

5. **Evaluate hierarchy transfers**
   - Assess whether changes in input observability require reclassification between levels
   - Record transfers as of the beginning or end of the reporting period per the entity's accounting policy [VERIFY entity's elected transfer timing policy]
   - Disclose the amounts and reasons for all transfers between Level 1 and Level 2, and separately for transfers into and out of Level 3

6. **Prepare Level 3 reconciliation (roll-forward)**
   - Build the opening-to-closing balance roll-forward: beginning balance, total gains/losses (realized and unrealized), purchases, sales, issuances, settlements, and transfers
   - Segregate unrealized gains/losses still held at the reporting date and identify where recognized in the income statement or OCI
   - Document sensitivity analysis for significant unobservable inputs — show how fair value changes if key assumptions shift within a reasonable range

7. **Compile disclosures and management report**
   - Draft quantitative disclosures: fair value amounts by hierarchy level, valuation techniques, significant inputs and ranges for Level 3
   - Draft qualitative disclosures: valuation processes, policies for determining transfers, sensitivity narratives
   - Prepare the management summary linking measurement conclusions to financial statement line items

## Output

- **Fair value measurement schedule**: Tabular summary of each item, its fair value, hierarchy level, valuation technique, and key inputs
- **Hierarchy classification memo**: Narrative supporting Level 1/2/3 assignment for each material position, with input significance analysis
- **Level 3 roll-forward**: Period-over-period reconciliation with gains/losses, volume activity, and transfers
- **Disclosure-ready content**: Draft language and tables suitable for inclusion in footnotes under ASC 820-10-50
- **Exception log**: Items requiring further management judgment, unresolved data gaps, or auditor attention flagged with [VERIFY]

## Quality Checks

- Confirm every item in the measurement population has been classified and no positions are omitted
- Validate that Level 1 measurements use unadjusted quoted prices — any adjustment forces reclassification to Level 2 or 3
- Verify discount rates and unobservable inputs are internally consistent across related measurements (e.g., same credit spread used for similar-risk instruments)
- Cross-check that the roll-forward arithmetic ties to the ending fair value balances on the measurement schedule
- Ensure transfer disclosures are complete and consistent with the entity's stated policy on transfer timing
- Review that sensitivity analysis covers all significant Level 3 inputs and uses ranges that reflect plausible market conditions [VERIFY ranges against current market environment]
- Confirm all disclosures address the specific requirements of ASC 820-10-50-1 through 50-8 [VERIFY applicability of any SEC-specific requirements for public registrants]
