Intangible Assets
Goodwill
The Company’s Goodwill was $628 million as of January 31, 2026 and February 1, 2025.
The Company performed its qualitative goodwill impairment assessments as of January 31, 2026 and February 1, 2025 and determined that it was not more likely than not that fair value was less than carrying value (including goodwill) as of both dates.
Trade Name
The Company’s Trade Name was $165 million as of January 31, 2026 and February 1, 2025.
The Company performed its impairment assessments of the Trade Name as of January 31, 2026 and February 1, 2025, utilizing the relief from royalty method under the income approach, and determined that its fair value was greater than its carrying value as of both dates.

Historical Timeline

Fiscal YearFiled
2026Mar 12, 2026Showing above
2025Mar 14, 2025

About Goodwill & Intangibles Disclosures

Goodwill and intangible asset disclosures reveal the premium paid in acquisitions and how management assesses whether that premium retains its value. Since goodwill is no longer amortized under US GAAP, the annual impairment test is the only mechanism that adjusts carrying values downward — making the assumptions behind that test critically important for investors.

Key signals: a history of goodwill impairments suggests management consistently overpays for acquisitions. Watch the gap between reporting unit fair value and carrying amount — when fair value exceeds carrying amount by less than 10-20%, a small decline in business performance could trigger a write-down. For finite-lived intangibles, examine useful life assumptions across customer relationships, technology, and trade names; aggressive estimates inflate near-term earnings. Compare total intangibles-to-total-assets ratios against peers to assess acquisition dependency. Rising goodwill as a percentage of equity can signal balance sheet fragility.