XML 87 R14.htm IDEA: XBRL DOCUMENT v2.4.0.6
Acquisitions and Divestitures
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2012
Business Combinations [Abstract]  
Acquisitions and Divestitures

6. Acquisitions and Divestitures

2011 Transaction

On June 29, 2011, the Company sold its Affinity business for $15.2 million in cash. Affinity designed and manufactured high precision, specialty engineered temperature-control equipment for semiconductor, pharmaceutical, life sciences and industrial applications. The Company recorded a gain on sale, net of transaction costs and income taxes, of $3.9 million. The Consolidated Financial Statements reflect Affinity as a discontinued operation for all periods presented.

The following table is a summary of the results of discontinued operations:

December 31,
In thousands 2012 2011 2010
Net sales $ $ 13,255 $ 21,894
Income before income taxes 1,374 1,155
Income tax expense 499 415
Income from discontinued operations 875 740
Gain on sale of discontinued operations, net of tax of $2,229 3,857
Income from discontinued operations, net of tax $ $ 4,732 $ 740

2010 Transaction

On June 30, 2010, the Company divested its electrical papers product line business, included in the Performance Materials segment, for total consideration of $5.8 million, of which $4.8 million was paid on June 30, 2010, and the remaining $1.0 million paid on July 2, 2012. This transaction contained multiple deliverables, some of which were delivered on June 30, 2010, while others were delivered in subsequent periods. As part of the sale transaction, the Company transferred its electrical paper products customer list to the buyer, agreed not to compete (the “Non-Compete Agreement”) with the buyer with respect to the manufacture and sale of electrical insulating products for use in the transformer industry for a period of ten years, entered into a contract manufacturing agreement (the “Manufacturing Agreement”) with the buyer pursuant to which the Company was obligated to manufacture and sell electrical paper products to the buyer for a two-year period, and entered into a process technology license agreement (“License Agreement”). Pursuant to the License Agreement, the Company granted the buyer the right to use certain process technology and agreed to provide certain services to the buyer to facilitate the transfer of know-how for the manufacture of electrical paper products.

Gain Recognition

The Company recorded a gross gain on sale of $2.5 million, or a net gain on sale of $1.7 million, after a write-off of $0.8 million of goodwill that was allocated to the electrical papers product line, related to the delivered elements during the quarter ended June 30, 2010, and deferred a gain of $3.2 million as of June 30, 2010. The deferred amount was recognized as income as services under the License Agreement were delivered in periods subsequent to the sale, including the recognition of the remainder of the gain of $0.8 million during 2012, as the Company satisfied its obligations. The Company recognized $1.6 million and $0.8 million of gain during 2011 and 2010, respectively.

This transaction contained multiple deliverables, some of which were delivered on June 30, 2010, while others were delivered in subsequent periods. The Company concluded that on June 30, 2010 it had delivered a customer list and the Non-Compete Agreement, and that future services under the License Agreement remained undelivered. The Company adopted Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) No. 2009-13, Multiple-Deliverable Revenue Arrangements (“ASU 2009-13”) effective January 1, 2010, which changed the requirements for establishing separate units of accounting in a multiple element arrangement and required the allocation of the arrangement consideration to each deliverable to be based on the estimated selling price, if neither vendor-specific objective evidence nor third-party evidence is available. The Company retroactively applied these standards to the beginning of 2010 for new and materially modified arrangements originating after December 31, 2009. The Company concluded that the customer list and the Non-Compete Agreement together represented one unit of accounting with stand-alone value to the buyer and that the License Agreement represented a separate unit of accounting.

The significant factors and estimates used to determine the estimated selling price of the separate units of accounting included existing and projected cash flows received by the Company from sale of the electrical paper products prior to the transaction. On June 30, 2010, the Company concluded that the estimated selling price of the customer list and the Non-Compete Agreement unit of accounting to be approximately $2.6 million and the License Agreement unit of accounting to be approximately $3.2 million. As a result, the Company recorded a gross gain of $2.6 million related to the delivered elements during the quarter ended June 30, 2010 and deferred $3.2 million, with the deferred amount recognized in income as services under the License Agreement are delivered in subsequent periods. Based upon the terms of the License Agreement, the Company recorded income on a straight-line basis from July 1, 2010 through June 30, 2012 as there was no better discernible pattern of when services will be provided to the buyer.

Under the Manufacturing Agreement the buyer was obligated to purchase its requirements of the electrical paper products from the Company with the exception that the buyer may itself manufacture the products at its own facilities. The Manufacturing Agreement was a separate unit of accounting with stand-alone value and the Company recognized revenue as the Company delivered the products to the buyer.