9.1 Overview and Sources of Guidance
Issuers of certain equity-classified instruments that are redeemable for
cash or other assets in circumstances not under their sole control must, in financial
statements filed with the SEC under Regulation S-X, (1) present such instruments in a
caption that is separate from both liabilities and stockholders’ equity on the face of the
balance sheet and (2) apply specific measurement and disclosure guidance to them.
Instruments presented in this manner are described as temporary (or “mezzanine”) equity
instruments.
Under the SEC’s temporary equity guidance, equity instruments that contain
terms that could force the issuer to redeem the instruments for cash or other assets are
presented separately from conventional equity capital, which does not contain such terms.
Temporary equity presentation highlights that the proceeds received from equity instruments
within the scope of the guidance may have to be repaid and thus may not be available to the
issuer as a permanent source of equity financing.
Terms and features that could trigger temporary equity classification are
not limited to those that are explicitly described as cash-settled redemption or put
features. For example, call, conversion, and liquidation features that could force the
issuer to redeem an equity instrument for cash or assets might necessitate such
classification. Accordingly, the SEC staff has advised issuers to “carefully consider all
contractual provisions of a security before determining how it should be classified in the
financial statements.”1
9.1.1 SEC Announcements, Speeches, and Discussions
Although there are many types of SEC guidance on the separate presentation and
disclosure of certain redeemable equity instruments (see Appendix B), the SEC staff announcement in ASC 480-10-S99-3A addresses the
classification and measurement requirements for redeemable equity securities
comprehensively. When applying the SEC’s temporary equity guidance, registrants should
consider these requirements as well as remarks made by the SEC staff in public speeches,
meetings with members of the accounting profession (including the CAQ’s SEC Regulations
Committee and its International Practices Task Force), and informal discussions about how
the staff expects registrants to apply the guidance.
For ease of reference, the FASB has included in the Codification certain portions of the SEC’s rules and guidance (e.g., excerpts from Regulation S-X and SABs). If any discrepancies exist (e.g., because of updates to the SEC’s guidance that the FASB has not yet reflected in the Codification), registrants should apply the text issued by the SEC rather than the version in the Codification. However, note that since the SEC does not separately publish staff announcements or observer comments made at EITF meetings, the Codification is the primary repository for that text.
9.1.2 SEC Rules and Policies
9.1.2.1 Regulation S-X
Regulation S-X, Rule 5-02 (reproduced in ASC 210-10-S99-1), contains
requirements related to what should appear on the face of the balance sheet and be
disclosed in related notes in financial statements filed with the SEC by all entities
except those specifically exempted. Rule 5-02.27 specifies the basic balance sheet
presentation and footnote disclosure requirements related to redeemable preferred stocks
classified as temporary equity. It requires an entity to present redeemable preferred
stocks separately from components of permanent equity on the face of the balance sheet
(see Section 9.8.1).
In presenting redeemable preferred stock separately under Regulation S-X,
registrants should consider the SEC’s additional guidance on this topic, in particular
the SEC staff announcement in ASC 480-10- S99-3A, and the GAAP requirements related to
what should be presented as liabilities or equity. For instance, while Regulation S-X,
ASR 268, CFRP 211, and SAB Topic 3.C focus on redeemable preferred stock, ASC
480-10-S99-3A clarifies that the SEC staff also expects registrants to apply the SEC’s
temporary equity guidance to other types of redeemable equity-classified instruments
(such as common stock and noncontrolling interests; see Section 9.3.1). Further, while Regulation S-X, ASR
268, and CFRP 211 suggest that the temporary equity guidance applies to stocks subject
to mandatory redemption requirements, the FASB has subsequently issued guidance that
requires certain financial instruments to be classified as liabilities even if they are
in the form of outstanding shares of stock (see Chapters 4 and 6). Accordingly, the SEC’s temporary equity guidance
does not apply to outstanding shares that must be classified as liabilities under
GAAP.
9.1.2.2 ASR 268
ASR 268 contains the amendments to Regulation S-X that the SEC adopted on July 27, 1979, when it first established separate presentation and disclosure requirements for redeemable preferred stocks. In addition, the supplementary information in ASR 268 discusses the SEC’s decision to require separate presentation and disclosure of redeemable preferred stocks. While the complete, original text of ASR 268 is not reproduced in the Codification, ASC 210-10-S99-1 contains excerpts from Regulation S-X that were amended by ASR 268. Further, ASC 480-10-S99-1 contains selected portions of the supplementary information in ASR 268 that the SEC incorporated into CFRP 211.
9.1.2.3 CFRP 211
The SEC codified selected portions of ASR 268 in CFRP 211 (also known as CFRR 211 or FRR 211). Reproduced in ASC 480-10-S99-1, CFRP 211 provides information about the SEC’s decision to require separate presentation and disclosure of redeemable preferred stocks in accordance with Regulation S-X. CFRP 211 does not contain the actual amendments to Regulation S-X, however, and omits portions of the supplementary information that was originally included in ASR 268, such as a brief discussion of comments the SEC received on the proposed rule that resulted in ASR 268 and the SEC’s observations about the FASB’s standard-setting activity at the time.
9.1.3 SEC Staff Accounting Bulletins
9.1.3.1 SAB Topic 3.C
SAB Topic 3.C (reproduced in ASC 480-10-S99-2) contains the SEC staff’s views on how redeemable preferred stock should be measured and how changes in the carrying amount should be treated in EPS and ratio calculations. The SEC staff announcement in ASC 480-10-S99-3A contains additional detailed guidance on these topics.
9.1.3.2 SAB Topic 14.E
SAB Topic 14.E (reproduced in ASC 718-10-S99-1) contains the SEC’s views on the
application of the temporary equity guidance to share-based payment arrangements with
employees. This Roadmap touches briefly on these topics (see Sections 9.3.9, 9.4.9, and 9.5.12). For a more detailed discussion, see
Deloitte’s Roadmap Share-Based
Payment Awards.
9.1.4 SEC Announcements and Observer Comments Made at EITF Meetings
9.1.4.1 SEC Staff Announcement: Classification and Measurement of Redeemable Securities
ASC 480-10 — SEC Materials — SEC Staff Guidance
SEC Staff Announcement: Classification and Measurement of Redeemable Securities
S99-3A(1) This SEC staff announcement provides the
SEC staff’s views regarding the application of Accounting Series Release No.
268, Presentation in Financial Statements of “Redeemable Preferred
Stocks.” FN1
__________________________________
FN1 ASR 268 (SEC Financial
Reporting Codification, Section No. 211, Redeemable Preferred
Stocks) is incorporated into SEC Regulation S-X, Articles 5-02.27,
7-03.21, and 9-03.19. Hereafter, reference is made only to ASR
268.
The SEC staff announcement in ASC 480-10-S99-3A (originally issued as EITF Topic
D-98) provides a comprehensive overview of the SEC staff’s views on the application of
the redeemable equity requirements in Regulation S-X and related guidance.
9.1.4.2 SEC Observer Comments — Sponsor’s Balance Sheet Classification of Capital Stock With a Put Option Held by an ESOP
The SEC staff observer comments in ASC 480-10-S99-4 discuss the application of
the SEC’s temporary equity guidance to equity instruments issued by a sponsor to an ESOP
in situations in which the instruments can be put to the sponsor for cash or other
assets (see Sections 9.3.8
and 9.5.11).
Footnotes
1
From remarks by then SEC Professional Accounting Fellow Dominick J.
Ragone III before the 2000 AICPA Conference on Current SEC Developments.