NEWS RELEASE 10/21/11
FASB Seeks Comments on Proposal on Accounting for Investment Property
Entities
Norwalk, CT, October 21, 2011—The Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) today issued a proposed Accounting Standards
Update intended to develop accounting guidance for investment property entities.
Comments on the proposal are requested by January 5, 2012.
This proposed
Update would require an entity that meets certain criteria to measure its
investment properties at fair value, rather than to apply lease accounting to
each individual lease. The proposed amendments also would introduce additional
presentation and disclosure requirements for an investment property entity.
This proposed Update is a result of the FASB´s efforts to align the
scope of entities that would apply the proposed lessor accounting model under
U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS) and to address the diversity in practice about the
accounting by real estate entities.
As part of the FASB and the
International Accounting Standard Board´s (IASB) joint project on accounting for
leases, the IASB decided that a lessor of an investment property would not be
required to apply the proposed lessor accounting requirements in the IASB´s
August 2010 Exposure Draft, Leases, if the lessor measures its
investment properties at fair value by electing the fair value model under IAS
40, Investment Property. Unlike IFRS, U.S. GAAP does not contain
specific accounting requirements for investment properties. As a result, an
entity that invests in real estate properties but is not an investment company
is required to measure its real estate properties at cost under Topic 360,
Property, Plant, and Equipment, and account for the leases separately. In
response to consistent investor input, the FASB decided to prescribe the
circumstances when fair value would be required, rather than introduce an
optional accounting practice into U.S. GAAP.
The proposed Update is
available at www.fasb.org.
About
the Financial Accounting Standards Board
Since 1973, the
Financial Accounting Standards Board has been the designated organization in the
private sector for establishing standards of financial accounting and reporting.
Those standards govern the preparation of financial reports and are officially
recognized as authoritative by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Such standards are essential
to the efficient functioning of the economy because investors, creditors,
auditors, and others rely on credible, transparent, and comparable financial
information. For more information about the FASB, visit our website at www.fasb.org.