2.1 Instruments Potentially Indexed to, and Potentially Settled in, the Entity’s Own Equity
ASC 815-40
15-1 The guidance in this Subtopic applies to all entities.
15-2 The guidance in this
Subtopic applies to freestanding contracts that are
potentially indexed to, and potentially settled in, an
entity’s own stock.
15-2A
The scope of this Subtopic includes security price
guarantees or other financial instruments indexed to, or
otherwise based on, the price of the entity’s stock that are
issued in connection with a business combination and that
are accounted for as contingent consideration.
15-4 The guidance in this Subtopic
applies to derivatives embedded in contracts in analyzing the
embedded feature under paragraphs 815-15-25-1(c) and
815-15-25-14 as though it were a freestanding instrument (as
further discussed in paragraphs 815-40-25-39 through
25-40).
ASC 815-40 applies to both public business
entities (including SEC registrants) and private companies. The guidance focuses on
freestanding contracts (see Section 3.2) that
have the following characteristics (ASC 815-40-15-2):
Characteristic | ASC Reference | Roadmap Discussion |
---|---|---|
Potentially indexed to an entity’s own stock | ASC 815-40-15 provides guidance on determining whether an equity-linked
instrument is considered indexed to an entity’s own
stock. | |
Potentially settled in an entity’s own stock | ASC 815-40-25 provides guidance on whether an entity has the ability to settle
an equity-linked instrument in its own stock or could be
forced to net cash settle it. |
Unless a specific scope exception applies, therefore, the following types of
instruments would be within the scope of ASC 815-40:
-
A freestanding call option written by the entity that gives the holder a right to purchase equity shares of the entity.
-
A freestanding call option that gives the entity a right to repurchase outstanding shares.
-
A freestanding warrant issued by the entity to a shareholder giving it the right to subscribe to additional equity shares of the entity.
-
A freestanding put option that gives the entity the right to sell shares to the writer of the option.
-
A freestanding forward contract that commits the entity to issue additional equity shares or the resale of treasury shares.
-
Contracts issued as contingent consideration in a business combination that are indexed to, or otherwise based on, the price of the entity’s stock.
As noted in ASC 815-40-15-4, the indexation and equity classification guidance
in ASC 815-40 also applies to some embedded features that have all the
characteristics of a derivative instrument in an entity’s determination of whether
such features are exempt from bifurcation under ASC 815-15 (see Section 2.2).
ASC 815-40 does not directly apply to outstanding equity shares (e.g., common or
preferred equity securities). Nevertheless, some equity shares contain embedded
features that may require evaluation under the indexation and equity classification
guidance in ASC 815-40 (e.g., an equity conversion option in a convertible preferred
stock contract, provided the option has the characteristics of a derivative
instrument and is not clearly and closely related to the host contract; see Section 2.2).
ASC 815-40 does not apply to the counterparty of an equity-linked financial
instrument. From the counterparty’s perspective, the contract is not on its own
equity. For example, if an entity writes a call option on its own equity to a third
party, the holder of that call option would not apply ASC 815-40 to the contract
because from the counterparty’s perspective, the contract is indexed to another
entity’s equity. (See also ASC 815-10-15-75.) Because ASC 815-40 does not apply to
the counterparty of an equity-linked financial instrument, an “entity” in this
Roadmap refers to the reporting entity whose stock is the underlying instrument in
the contract.