Tentative Board Decisions
			
			  
			  
				Tentative Board decisions are provided for those interested in
 following the Board's deliberations. All of the reported decisions are 
tentative and may be changed at future Board meetings.
October 5, 2015 FASB Board Meeting
Revenue Recognition—Identifying Performance Obligations and Licenses. The Board met and redeliberated its May 2015 proposed Accounting Standards Update, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Identifying Performance Obligations and Licensing.
The Board affirmed most of the amendments in the proposed Update.  The 
Board also made additional decisions within the scope of the following 
topics:
    - Identifying performance obligations
 
    - Licensing.
 
Identifying Performance Obligations
The Board reached decisions about (1) identifying promised goods or 
services that would be subject to the separation guidance, (2) 
application of the distinct guidance, (3) accounting for shipping and 
handling activities, (4) the series provision, and (5) disclosure of the
 transaction price allocated to remaining performance obligations.
Promised Goods or Services
The Board affirmed its proposal that an entity is not required to 
identify goods or services promised to the customer that are immaterial 
in the context of the contract with a customer. Optional goods or 
services will continue to be accounted for in accordance with paragraphs
 606-10-55-41 through 55-45. An entity will not be required to 
accumulate goods or services assessed as immaterial in the context of 
the contract and assess their significance at the financial statement 
level. 
In addition, the Board decided that if, as a result of not identifying 
promised goods or services that are immaterial in the context of the 
contract, revenue is recognized before all of the good or services 
promised in the contract are transferred to the customer, the related 
costs to transfer those goods or services should be accrued.
Separately Identifiable (or "Distinct within the Context of the Contract")
The Board affirmed its previous decisions to:
    - Improve upon the articulation of the separately identifiable 
principle in paragraph 606-10-25-19(b) by clarifying in paragraph 
606-10-25-21 that the objective when assessing whether an entity's 
promises to transfer goods or services to the customer are separately 
identifiable is to determine whether the nature of the entity's overall 
promise in the contract is to transfer each of those goods or services 
or whether the promise is to transfer a combined item or items to which 
the promised goods or services are inputs.
 
    - Revise the factors in paragraph 606-10-25-21 to align those factors to the re-articulated separately identifiable principle.
 
    - Revise the existing illustrative examples and provide additional
 illustrative examples to clarify how the Board intends the guidance on 
identifying performance obligations to be applied.
 
Shipping and Handling Activities
The Board affirmed its decision to amend the guidance in Topic 606 as it
 applies to shipping and handling activities. The amendments to Topic 
606 will clarify that shipping and handling activities that occur before
 the customer obtains control of the related good are fulfillment 
activities. In addition, the amendments would permit an entity, as an 
accounting policy election, to account for shipping and handling 
activities that occur after the customer has obtained control of a good 
as fulfillment activities. 
The Board also decided that the guidance in Topic 606 should specify 
that, if revenue is recognized before contractually-agreed shipping and 
handling activities occur, the related costs of those shipping and 
handling activities should be accrued.
Series Provision
The Board decided not to make optional the guidance in paragraphs 
606-10-25-14(b) through 25-15 that requires an entity to account for a 
series of distinct goods or services as a single performance obligation 
if (1) each distinct good or service would be a performance obligation 
satisfied over time and (2) the same method would be used to measure the
 entity’s progress towards complete satisfaction of each distinct good 
or service (collectively, the "series provision").  Consequently, the 
series provision remains a requirement of Topic 606.
Disclosure of the Transaction Price Allocated to Remaining Performance Obligations
The Board decided not to amend the disclosure requirements in paragraphs
 606-10-50-13 through 50-14. Rather, the Board directed the staff to 
perform additional research about the effect of introducing an 
additional disclosure practical expedient that would permit entities to 
not provide the disclosures about transaction price required by 
paragraph 606-10-50-13 if doing so would require the entity to 
accumulate information solely for disclosure purposes when those amounts
 are not needed to recognize and measure revenue.  The Board asked the 
staff to report the results of the research separate from this 
Identifying Performance Obligations and Licensing project. 
Licensing
The Board reached decisions about (1) determining the nature of the 
entity's promise in granting a license, (2) when an entity should 
determine the nature of its promise in granting a license, (3) 
sales-based and usage-based royalties, and (4) contractual restrictions 
in licensing arrangements.
Determining the Nature of the Entity's Promise in Granting a License
The Board affirmed that an entity's promise to transfer a license to 
functional intellectual property (that is, intellectual property that 
has significant standalone functionality—for example, the ability to 
process a transaction, perform a function or task, or be played or 
aired) that is a separate performance obligation is satisfied at the 
point in time the license is granted unless both of the following 
criteria are met:
    - The functionality of the intellectual property to which the 
customer has rights is expected to substantively change during the 
license period as a result of activities of the entity that do not 
transfer a promised good or service to the customer.
 
    - The customer is contractually or practically required to use the updated intellectual property resulting from criterion (1).
 
The Board also affirmed that an entity's promise to transfer a license 
to symbolic intellectual property (that is, all intellectual property 
that does not have significant standalone functionality) is satisfied 
over time because the entity's promise to the customer includes 
continuing to support or maintain the intellectual property to which the
 customer has rights.  
The Board decided not to enact a provision that would recognize licenses
 of symbolic intellectual property at the point in time the license is 
granted if it is reasonably certain the entity will not undertake any 
activities to support or maintain the intellectual property during the 
license period.
When an Entity Should Determine the Nature of Its Promise in Granting a License 
The Board affirmed its decision to clarify that, in some cases, an 
entity would need to determine the nature of its promise in granting a 
license that is not a separate performance obligation in order to 
appropriately apply the general guidance on whether a performance 
obligation is satisfied over time or at a point in time and/or to 
determine the appropriate measure of progress for a combined performance
 obligation that includes a license. 
Sales-Based and Usage-Based Royalties
The Board affirmed its decision to clarify the scope and applicability 
of the implementation guidance on sales-based or usage-based royalties 
promised in exchange for a license of intellectual property as follows:
    - An entity should not split a single royalty into a portion 
subject to the sales-based and usage-based royalties recognition 
exception and a portion that is not subject to the exception (and, 
therefore, would be subject to the general guidance on variable 
consideration, including the constraint on variable consideration).
 
    - The sales-based and usage-based royalties exception should apply
 whenever the predominant item to which the royalty relates is a license
 of intellectual property.
 
In addition, the Board decided all of the following:
    - To clarify application of the sales-based and usage-based 
royalties exception to performance obligations satisfied over time 
through revisions to the relevant examples and the basis for conclusions
 of the final Accounting Standards Update
 
    - Not to expand the scope of the royalties exception to include sales of intellectual property
 
    - An entity should not attempt to discern whether a license to 
intellectual property is an "in-substance sale" of that intellectual 
property in deciding whether or not the royalties exception applies.
 
Contractual Restrictions in Licensing Arrangements
The Board decided to affirm its decision to clarify in Topic 606 that 
contractual restrictions of the nature described in paragraph 
606-10-55-64 are attributes of a license and, consequently, do not 
define whether the entity satisfies its performance obligation at a 
point in time or over time or change the number of promises in the 
contract. The Board also affirmed its view that differentiating 
attributes of a promised license from other promises to the customer in 
the contract often will require judgment.
Next Steps
The Board directed the staff to draft a final Accounting Standards Update for vote by written ballot.
Accounting for Income Taxes—Intra-entity Asset Transfers and Balance Sheet Classification of Deferred Taxes. The Board discussed the comments received on the two January 22, 2015 proposed Accounting Standards Updates: Income Taxes (Topic 740): I. Intra-Entity Asset Transfers and II. Balance Sheet Classification of Deferred Taxes, and made the following decisions. 
Intra-Entity Asset Transfers
The Board directed the staff to perform additional research and outreach on issues raised by stakeholders.  
Balance Sheet Classification of Deferred Taxes
The Board affirmed the proposal to require that all deferred income tax 
assets and liabilities be presented as noncurrent in a classified 
statement of financial position.
Transition Method
The Board decided that entities should have a choice of applying the 
amendments either prospectively or retrospectively to all periods 
presented.
Transition Disclosures
If an entity applies the amendments prospectively, the entity should 
disclose in the first interim and annual period of change (1) the nature
 of and reason for the change in accounting principle and (2) a 
statement that prior periods were not adjusted. If an entity applies the
 amendments retrospectively, the entity should disclose in the first 
interim and annual period of change (1) the nature of and reason for the
 change in accounting principle and (2) quantitative information about 
the effects of the accounting change to prior periods.
Effective Date and Early Adoption
The Board affirmed the proposal that public business entities would be 
required to apply the amendments in annual reporting periods beginning 
after December 15, 2016, including interim reporting periods within 
those annual reporting periods.
The Board affirmed the proposal that entities other than public business
 entities would be required to apply the amendments in annual reporting 
periods beginning after December 15, 2017, and interim reporting periods
 within annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2018. 
The Board decided to allow earlier adoption for all entities as of the beginning of any interim or annual reporting period.
Permission to Ballot
The Board decided that it has received sufficient information and 
analysis on the proposed amendments to make an informed decision on the 
issues presented and that the expected benefits of those amendments 
justify the perceived cost of change. The Board directed the staff to 
draft a final Accounting Standards Update for vote by written ballot.