News Release 08/13/18
FASB Proposes Narrow-Scope Improvements to Accounting for
Lessors
Norwalk, CT, August 13, 2018—The Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) today
issued a
proposal that would reduce costs and ease implementation of the Leases
standard for financial statement preparers. The proposal would also clarify a
specific requirement in the standard related to lessor accounting. Stakeholders
are encouraged to review and provide comment on the proposal by September 12,
2018.
In 2016 the FASB issued Accounting
Standards Update (ASU) No. 2016-02, Leases (Topic 842), that
establishes the principles to report transparent and economically neutral
information about the assets and liabilities that arise from leases. Since that
time the FASB has been assisting stakeholders with implementation questions and
issues as organizations prepare to adopt the new lease requirements.
"Through our implementation process on the Leases standard,
stakeholders informed us that lessors face certain issues in accounting for
sales and other similar taxes, certain lessor costs, and certain requirements
related to variable payments in contracts," said Russell G. Golden, FASB
chairman. "This proposed accounting standard provides financial statement
preparers relief and clarity in these areas and should help them implement the
Leases standard."
Specifically, this proposed ASU addresses the
following issues facing lessors when applying the Leases standard:
- Sales taxes and other similar taxes collected from
lessees. The guidance would permit lessors, as an accounting policy
election, to not evaluate whether these taxes are costs of the lessor or costs
of the lessee. Instead, the lessor would account for them as costs of the
lessee and exclude the amounts from lease revenue and the associated
expense.
- Certain lessor costs paid directly by lessees. The
guidance requires lessors to exclude those costs from variable payments, and,
therefore, from variable (lease) revenue and the associated expense when the
amount of those costs is not readily determinable by the lessor.
- Recognition of variable payments for contracts with lease and
nonlease components. The guidance requires lessors to allocate
(rather than recognize as currently required in the new Leases standard)
certain variable payments to the lease and nonlease components when the
changes in facts and circumstances on which the variable payment is based
occur. After the allocation, the amount of variable payments allocated to the
lease component would be recognized in accordance with the new Leases
standard, while the amount allocated to nonlease components would be
recognized in accordance with other accounting guidance (such as revenue from
contracts with customers).
More information about the
proposed ASU can be found at http://www.fasb.org/.
About
the Financial Accounting Standards Board
Established in 1973,
the FASB is the independent, private-sector, not-for-profit organization based
in Norwalk, Connecticut, that establishes financial accounting and reporting
standards for public and private companies and not-for-profit organizations that
follow Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). The FASB is recognized
by the Securities and Exchange Commission as the designated accounting standard
setter for public companies. FASB standards are recognized as authoritative by
many other organizations, including state Boards of Accountancy and the American
Institute of CPAs (AICPA). The FASB develops and issues financial accounting
standards through a transparent and inclusive process intended to promote
financial reporting that provides useful information to investors and others who
use financial reports. The Financial Accounting Foundation (FAF) supports and
oversees the FASB. For more information, visit http://www.fasb.org/.