Appendix A — Glossary of Selected Terms in ASC 205-20, ASC 360-10, and ASC 805-10
Appendix A — Glossary of Selected Terms in ASC 205-20, ASC 360-10, and ASC 805-10
ASC
205-20,
ASC
360-10,
and ASC 805-10 — Selected Glossary Terms
Asset Group
An asset group is the unit of accounting for
a long-lived asset or assets to be held and used, which
represents the lowest level for which identifiable cash
flows are largely independent of the cash flows of other
groups of assets and liabilities.
Business
Paragraphs 805-10-55-3A through 55-6 and
805-10-55-8 through 55-9 define what is considered a
business.
Component of an
Entity
A component of an entity comprises
operations and cash flows that can be clearly distinguished,
operationally and for financial reporting purposes, from the
rest of the entity. A component of an entity may be a
reportable segment or an operating segment, a reporting
unit, a subsidiary, or an asset group.
Corporate Joint Venture
A corporation owned and operated by a small group of entities
(the joint venturers) as a separate and specific business or
project for the mutual benefit of the members of the group.
A government may also be a member of the group. The purpose
of a corporate joint venture frequently is to share risks
and rewards in developing a new market, product or
technology; to combine complementary technological
knowledge; or to pool resources in developing production or
other facilities. A corporate joint venture also usually
provides an arrangement under which each joint venturer may
participate, directly or indirectly, in the overall
management of the joint venture. Joint venturers thus have
an interest or relationship other than as passive investors.
An entity that is a subsidiary of one of the joint venturers
is not a corporate joint venture. The ownership of a
corporate joint venture seldom changes, and its stock is
usually not traded publicly. A noncontrolling interest held
by public ownership, however, does not preclude a
corporation from being a corporate joint venture.
Disposal Group
A disposal group for a long-lived asset or
assets to be disposed of by sale or otherwise represents
assets to be disposed of together as a group in a single
transaction and liabilities directly associated with those
assets that will be transferred in the transaction. A
disposal group may include a discontinued operation along
with other assets and liabilities that are not part of the
discontinued operation.
Firm Purchase
Commitment
A firm purchase commitment is an agreement
with an unrelated party, binding on both parties and usually
legally enforceable, that meets both of the following
conditions:
-
It specifies all significant terms, including the price and timing of the transaction.
-
It includes a disincentive for nonperformance that is sufficiently large to make performance probable.
Joint Venture
An entity owned and operated by a small group of businesses
(the joint venturers) as a separate and specific business or
project for the mutual benefit of the members of the group.
A government may also be a member of the group. The purpose
of a joint venture frequently is to share risks and rewards
in developing a new market, product, or technology; to
combine complementary technological knowledge; or to pool
resources in developing production or other facilities. A
joint venture also usually provides an arrangement under
which each joint venturer may participate, directly or
indirectly, in the overall management of the joint venture.
Joint venturers thus have an interest or relationship other
than as passive investors. An entity that is a subsidiary of
one of the joint venturers is not a joint venture. The
ownership of a joint venture seldom changes, and its equity
interests usually are not traded publicly. A minority public
ownership, however, does not preclude an entity from being a
joint venture. As distinguished from a corporate joint
venture, a joint venture is not limited to corporate
entities.
Nonprofit
Activity
An integrated set of activities and assets
that is capable of being conducted and managed for the
purpose of providing benefits, other than goods or services
at a profit or profit equivalent, as a fulfillment of an
entity’s purpose or mission (for example, goods or services
to beneficiaries, customers, or members). As with a
not-for-profit entity, a nonprofit activity possesses
characteristics that distinguish it from a business or a
for-profit business entity.
Not-for-Profit
Entity
An entity that possesses the following
characteristics, in varying degrees, that distinguish it
from a business entity:
-
Contributions of significant amounts of resources from resource providers who do not expect commensurate or proportionate pecuniary return
-
Operating purposes other than to provide goods or services at a profit
-
Absence of ownership interests like those of business entities.
Entities that clearly fall outside this
definition include the following:
-
All investor-owned entities
-
Entities that provide dividends, lower costs, or other economic benefits directly and proportionately to their owners, members, or participants, such as mutual insurance entities, credit unions, farm and rural electric cooperatives, and employee benefit plans.
Operating
Segment
A component of a public entity. See Section
280-10-50 for additional guidance on the definition of an
operating segment.
Probable
The future event or events are likely to
occur.
Public Business
Entity
A public business entity is a business
entity meeting any one of the criteria below. Neither a
not-for-profit entity nor an employee benefit plan is a
business entity.
-
It is required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to file or furnish financial statements, or does file or furnish financial statements (including voluntary filers), with the SEC (including other entities whose financial statements or financial information are required to be or are included in a filing).
-
It is required by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Act), as amended, or rules or regulations promulgated under the Act, to file or furnish financial statements with a regulatory agency other than the SEC.
-
It is required to file or furnish financial statements with a foreign or domestic regulatory agency in preparation for the sale of or for purposes of issuing securities that are not subject to contractual restrictions on transfer.
-
It has issued, or is a conduit bond obligor for, securities that are traded, listed, or quoted on an exchange or an over-the-counter market.
-
It has one or more securities that are not subject to contractual restrictions on transfer, and it is required by law, contract, or regulation to prepare U.S. GAAP financial statements (including notes) and make them publicly available on a periodic basis (for example, interim or annual periods). An entity must meet both of these conditions to meet this criterion.
An entity may meet the definition of a
public business entity solely because its financial
statements or financial information is included in another
entity’s filing with the SEC. In that case, the entity is
only a public business entity for purposes of financial
statements that are filed or furnished with the SEC.
Reporting Unit
The level of reporting at which goodwill is
tested for impairment. A reporting unit is an operating
segment or one level below an operating segment (also known
as a component).
Settlement of a Pension
or Postretirement Benefit Obligation
A transaction that is an irrevocable action,
relieves the employer (or the plan) of primary
responsibility for a pension or postretirement benefit
obligation, and eliminates significant risks related to the
obligation and the assets used to effect the settlement.