FASB Simplifies the Accounting for Share-Based Payment Arrangements With Nonemployees
Background
On June 20, 2018, the FASB issued ASU 2018-07,1 which simplifies2
the accounting for share-based
payments granted to nonemployees for goods and services. Under the ASU, most of
the guidance on such payments to nonemployees would be aligned with the requirements for
share-based payments granted to employees.
Currently, share-based payment arrangements with employees are accounted for under ASC
718,3 while nonemployee share-based payments issued for goods and services are accounted
for under ASC 505-50. ASC 505-50, before the ASU’s amendments, differs significantly from
ASC 718. Differences include (but are not limited to) the guidance on (1) the determination
of the measurement date (which generally is the date on which the measurement of equity-classified
share-based payments becomes fixed), (2) the accounting for performance
conditions, (3) the ability of a nonpublic entity to use certain practical expedients for
measurement, and (4) the accounting for (including measurement and classification) share-based
payments after vesting. The ASU eliminates most of the differences, as further
described below.
Connecting the Dots
In the ASU’s Basis for Conclusions, the FASB discusses the issuance of the guidance
in ASC 505-50, noting that the differences between the accounting for employee and
nonemployee awards was originally based on “the view that there is a fundamental
difference between the relationship that employees and nonemployees have with
the entity granting the awards.” However, the Board concluded that awards granted
to employees are economically similar to awards granted to nonemployees and that
therefore two different accounting models were not justified.
Key Provisions of ASU 2018-07
Scope
The ASU supersedes ASC 505-50 and expands the scope of ASC 718 to include all share-based
payment arrangements related to the acquisition of goods and services from both
nonemployees and employees. As a result, most of the guidance in ASC 718 associated with
employee share-based payments, including most of its requirements related to classification
and measurement, applies to nonemployee share-based payment arrangements.
Connecting the Dots
Currently, ASC 505-50 provides guidance on the accounting for nonemployee share-based
payments both (1) issued by the grantor and (2) received by the grantee.
Under ASC 505-50, the grantor’s accounting is similar to that of the grantee (e.g.,
the determination of the measurement date). In addition to the accounting for
nonemployee share-based payments for goods and services, ASC 505-50 provides
guidance on the grantor’s accounting for share-based payments issued as sales
incentives to customers.
An entity applies ASC 606 (once adopted) to share-based payments received by a
vendor (grantee) from a customer (grantor) in a revenue transaction. Under ASC
606-10-32-21, an entity is required to measure the estimated fair value of noncash
consideration, including share-based payments, at contract inception. The ASU
amends the guidance in ASC 606-10-32-25 on consideration payable to a customer
to expand the scope of the form of consideration to include equity instruments
granted in conjunction with the sale of goods or services. Accordingly, the ASU
excludes share-based payments issued as sales incentives to customers from the
scope of ASC 718.
While ASC 606 addresses how to recognize equity instruments granted as
consideration payable to a customer, it does not provide guidance on the
measurement of such equity instruments (including the measurement date). At its
meeting on December 13, 2017, the FASB indicated that it will consider whether to
add such guidance as part of a technical corrections and improvements project. We
believe that in the absence of specific requirements, it is reasonable to apply, by
analogy, ASC 606-10-32-21 through 32-23, which address noncash consideration
received from a customer. In addition, under ASC 606-10-32-26, “[i]f consideration
payable to a customer is a payment for a distinct good or service from the customer,
then an entity shall account for the purchase of the good or service in the same way
that it accounts for other purchases from suppliers.” Accordingly, if share-based
payments are granted to a customer as payment for a distinct good or service
from the customer, an entity should apply the guidance in ASC 718 as amended by
the ASU.
Connecting the Dots
In the ASU’s Basis for Conclusions, the FASB clarified that ASC 718 applies to
“instruments granted for goods or services used or consumed in a grantor’s own
operations and does not apply to instruments granted essentially to provide
financing to the issuer.” The Board included this requirement as an anti-abuse
measure to prevent entities from structuring a share-based payment transaction
as a means of raising capital and accounting for it under ASC 718 (particularly its
classification guidance).
Measurement Date
One of the more significant changes under the new guidance is related to the determination
of the measurement date, which is generally the date on which the measurement of equity-classified
share-based payments becomes fixed. The ASU eliminates the guidance in ASC
505-50 on determining the measurement date for nonemployee share-based payment
arrangements. Rather, for equity-classified awards, the measurement date would generally be
the grant date.
Connecting the Dots
Under ASC 505-50, the measurement date for nonemployee share-based payments
that are classified as equity is the earlier of the date as of which (1) a commitment
for performance by the counterparty to earn the equity instruments is reached
(a “performance commitment”) or (2) the counterparty’s performance is complete.
For a performance commitment to be reached, “sufficiently large disincentives for
nonperformance” must exist so that “performance by the counterparty to earn the
equity instruments is probable.” In practice, a performance commitment is often
not reached before the completion of performance, which delays the measurement
date until performance is complete (i.e., the nonemployee awards are remeasured
or “marked to market” each reporting period until they are vested). Under ASU
2018-07, the measurement of equity-classified nonemployee share-based payments
is generally fixed on the grant date, as defined in ASC 718. This requirement could
significantly affect the cost recognized for nonemployee awards issued for goods
and services.
Example 1
On January 1, 20X1, Entity A enters into an arrangement with an advertising company that
provides marketing services for the next two years in exchange for 1,000 equity-classified
warrants. The warrants vest at the end of two years (i.e., when the marketing services
are complete). In accordance with ASC 505-50, the measurement date is determined to
be the date that the advertising company completes the marketing services (December
31, 20X2) because sufficiently large disincentives for nonperformance do not exist. The
marketing services are provided ratably over the two-year period, and half of the services
have been provided as of December 31, 20X1.
The fair-value-based measure of the warrants on January 1, 20X1; December 31, 20X1;
and December 31, 20X2, is $10, $12, and $14, respectively. The following journal entries
illustrate the recognition under ASC 505-50 and ASU 2018-07:
The following table summarizes the annual and cumulative cost recognized under ASC
505-50 and ASU 2018-07:
Vesting Conditions
Amended Definitions
While most nonemployee awards are issued in exchange for services, there may be instances
in which such awards are issued for goods. Accordingly, ASU 2018-07 amends the definition
of “vest” to incorporate vesting conditions tied to the delivery of goods (in addition to services)
and uses the term “nonemployee vesting period” rather than “requisite service period” to
describe the period in which the required nonemployee goods or services are provided.
Connecting the Dots
When nonemployee awards are exchanged in a business combination, it is
important for an entity to determine what portion of the replacement awards is
attributed to “precombination vesting” (and therefore included in the consideration
transferred) and what portion is attributed to “postcombination vesting” (and
therefore recognized in the postcombination period). ASU 2018-07 includes
examples illustrating how an acquirer that has provided replacement awards
to nonemployees of an acquiree would attribute such replacement awards to
precombination vesting and postcombination vesting.
Under ASC 718, service and performance conditions are vesting conditions, while market
conditions are incorporated into the fair-value-based measurement of share-based payments.
ASU 2018-07 extends that guidance to nonemployee awards and modifies the definitions of
service and performance conditions to incorporate characteristics of nonemployee awards.
Accordingly, the ASU expands the definition of a service condition to include “a nonemployee
delivering goods or rendering services to the grantor over a vesting period” and the definition
of a performance condition to include the “performance of the grantee if such performance is
in accordance with the terms of the award and solely relates to the grantor’s own operations
(or activities).”
Connecting the Dots
While ASC 505-50 provides guidance on “counterparty performance conditions,” it
does not discuss or define service conditions. However, in recognizing the cost of
nonemployee goods or services under ASC 505-50, an entity may in practice treat
certain counterparty vesting conditions as service conditions if they are more similar
to service-type conditions than counterparty performance conditions. Because
the vesting conditions of nonemployee awards might not be similar to those of
employee awards (e.g., employment for a specified period), an entity must use
significant judgment to determine which conditions are more akin to service-type
conditions and which are more akin to performance-type conditions. For example,
vesting conditions for certain nonemployee awards may be tied to specific tasks
and activities (e.g., promoting the entity’s products at a defined number of events)
rather than to the provision of service for a specific period. In such circumstances,
those specific tasks and activities may represent service-type conditions instead
of counterparty performance conditions. As discussed below, the accounting
treatment of counterparty performance conditions under ASC 505-50 is significantly
different from that of service-type conditions.
Under ASU 2018-07, an entity would still need to apply judgment in determining
whether a nonemployee vesting condition is a service condition or performance
condition. To meet the definition of a performance condition, the vesting
requirement must be related to the grantor’s operations or activities, not the
grantee’s. Therefore, certain tasks and activities that a nonemployee must perform
(e.g., quality-control services that include an assessment of a minimum number of
locations each year) to vest in awards may be characterized as service conditions
because they are not solely related to the grantor’s own operations or activities.
However, the significance of distinguishing between such conditions may not be as
great under the ASU as it is under current guidance since an entity that elects to
estimate forfeitures (see discussion below) would assess the probability that both
service and performance conditions will be met.
Example 2
Entity B grants 100 warrants to a distributor that is not a customer (i.e., it is a vendor). The
warrants will vest as long as the distributor provides B’s products at 20 of its locations
for two years. In addition, if the distributor generates $100 million in sales for B during
that two-year period, an additional 100 warrants will vest. While the maintenance of B’s
products at 20 of the distributor’s locations and the generation of $100 million in sales
for B are both related to the distributor’s performance, B would need to assess whether
each vesting condition is a service or performance condition. Under ASC 505-50, B may
reasonably conclude that maintaining its products at 20 of the distributor’s locations
is a service-type condition and that achieving $100 million in sales to earn additional
warrants is a counterparty performance condition. Under the ASU, B may reasonably
reach similar conclusions. While achievement of $100 million in sales for B is associated
with the distributor’s service and performance, such performance is related solely to B’s
own operations. By contrast, maintaining B’s products at 20 of the distributor’s locations
may not be related solely to B’s own operations and may therefore be treated as a service
condition.
Treatment of Performance Conditions
The treatment of nonemployee share-based payment performance conditions under ASU
2018-07 is significantly different from that under existing guidance. In recognizing the cost
of nonemployee awards, an entity generally is precluded by ASC 505-50 from considering
whether it is probable that the performance conditions will be met. Rather, if the quantity
and terms of nonemployee awards depend on counterparty performance conditions, the
entity measures any cost recognized on the basis of the “then-current lowest aggregate fair
value” of the awards as of each reporting period until the performance conditions are “known”
(i.e., achieved). This can often result in a scenario in which the lowest aggregate fair value is
zero and no cost is recognized until the performance conditions are achieved, even if the
performance conditions are expected to be met. Many stakeholders believe that such an
accounting outcome does not reflect the economics of share-based payment transactions and
that entities should recognize the costs when the related goods or services are provided and
the awards are expected to vest, in a manner similar to recognizing cost for a payment that
was made in cash. Under the ASU, the guidance on nonemployee awards with performance
conditions is aligned with that in ASC 718. Accordingly, an entity is required to recognize any
cost on the basis of the probable outcome of performance conditions.
Example 3
On January 1, 20X1, Entity C enters into a contract with an advertising company that provides
marketing services in exchange for a cash fee. The marketing services are completed on December
31, 20X1. The cost associated with the cash fee is recognized as the marketing services are
performed. In addition, if C achieves $100 million in sales over a one-year period after the services
are provided (January 1, 20X2, through December 31, 20X2), the advertising company will receive
100 equity-classified warrants. Entity C concludes that it is probable that it will achieve $100 million
in sales for the one-year period, and it achieves the sales target on December 31, 20X2. Under ASC
505-50, C will not recognize any cost associated with the warrants (the lowest aggregate fair value
is zero until the performance condition is achieved) when the marketing services are provided.
Rather, the cost of the warrants will be recognized when or if the sales level is achieved on the basis
of the fair-value-based measure of the warrants on the date of achievement. As a result, any cost
associated with the warrants is recognized after the marketing services have been provided. Under
the ASU, C recognizes the grant-date fair-value-based measure of the warrants earlier than it would
under current guidance since achievement of the sales target is probable. In addition, C would
generally recognize the cost as the marketing services are performed.
The fair-value-based measure of the warrants on January 1, 20X1; December 31, 20X1; and
December 31, 20X2, is $10, $12, and $14, respectively. The following journal entries illustrate the
recognition under ASC 505-50 and ASU 2018-07:
The following table summarizes the annual and cumulative cost recognized under ASC 505-50 and
ASU 2018-07:
Forfeitures
As in the case of employee awards, ASU 2018-07 permits an entity to make an entity-wide
policy election for all nonemployee awards to either (1) estimate forfeitures or (2) recognize
forfeitures when they occur. The policy election is independent of the entity’s policy election
for employee awards. If the entity elects to estimate forfeitures, it should recognize the cost of
nonemployee awards on the basis of its estimate of awards for which the goods are expected
to be delivered or the service is expected to be rendered, and the entity should revise its
estimate as appropriate.
Connecting the Dots
An entity’s forfeiture policy is associated solely with service conditions because the
entity must assess probability and may not make a policy election for performance
conditions.4 However, as noted above, unlike employee service conditions,
nonemployee vesting conditions might not be tied to the provision of service for
a specific period. An entity will need to use judgment to determine whether its
forfeiture policy applies to certain nonemployee vesting conditions, because it may
not be obvious whether such conditions are service or performance conditions. In addition, the number of nonemployee award grantees may not be significant
relative to employee award grantees (which often consist of large employee pools).
Consequently, there may be insufficient historical forfeiture data, which may make
it difficult for an entity to estimate how many nonemployee awards will be forfeited.
In such circumstances, an entity might conclude that each nonemployee will fulfill
its contract and that no awards are estimated to be forfeited. However, an entity
may reasonably estimate forfeitures on the basis of historical forfeiture data if the
volume of nonemployee providers is large and the nonemployees are similar. For
example, an entity may grant awards to employees of a third-party management
advisory company that vest if the grantees provide advisory services for a specified
period. In this situation the entity may be able to use historical forfeiture data to
estimate forfeitures if the grantees function in a manner similar to that of the entity’s
employees.
Manner and Period of Cost Recognition
Although the total cost recognized for nonemployee awards could change under ASU
2018-07, the manner of and period(s) for recognizing costs will not. The ASU incorporates
certain recognition guidance from ASC 505-50 into ASC 718; thus, any cost recognized for
nonemployee share-based payments will continue to be recognized under other applicable
accounting guidance as though the grantor paid cash. That is, ASC 718 under the ASU does
not prescribe the period(s) or the manner (i.e., capitalize or expense) in which nonemployee
share-based payments will be recognized. Rather, an entity should recognize an asset or
expense (or reverse a previously recognized cost) in the same period(s) and in the same
manner as though the entity had paid cash for the goods or services. Accordingly, an entity
recognizes the cost of nonemployee awards “when it obtains the goods or as services are
received.”
Connecting the Dots
Under ASC 718, compensation cost is generally recognized ratably over the requisite
service period (or ratably over multiple requisite service periods). Because of the
nature of nonemployee awards, ratable recognition over a service period may not
necessarily be appropriate. Accordingly, the ASU retains the principle in ASC 505-50
that any asset or expense should be recognized in the same period(s) and in the
same manner as though the grantor had paid cash. The Board decided that further
clarification or requirements related to attribution are not necessary because
“[f]eedback from outreach efforts indicated that this area did not pose a significant
concern or create a significant amount of confusion” and that “there is an absence of
this type of specific guidance for costs paid in cash.”
An entity must use judgment in determining the attribution of cost since it may not
tie directly to nonemployee vesting conditions. An entity could grant awards to a
vendor that provides services ratably but for which vesting is tied solely to the level
of performance. For instance, a vendor could provide services associated with a call
center ratably over time, but vesting of the awards could be tied to the resolution of
issues within a certain period. Similarly, awards could be provided to a nonemployee
for goods, but vesting may not be tied to the delivery of goods. For example, a
nonemployee award issued for goods may vest if less than 1 percent of all goods
delivered over a specified period are defective.
In addition, an entity is required under ASC 718 to elect, as its accounting policy for employee
awards that have graded vesting schedules and that only contain service conditions (i.e., no
performance or market conditions), to recognize compensation cost on a straight-line basis
over the requisite service period for either of the following:
- Each separately vesting portion of the award as if the award was, in substance, multiple awards.
- The entire award (i.e., over the requisite service period of the last separately vesting portion of the award).
Under the ASU, the policy election continues to be limited to employee awards.
Connecting the Dots
ASC 505-50 does not provide explicit guidance on the period(s) or manner of cost
recognition and consequently does not permit entities to make a similar policy
election for graded vesting awards. In practice, some entities may have analogized
to the guidance in ASC 718 and selected an accounting policy for nonemployee
awards with graded vesting schedules when such awards were for services (in a
manner similar to the policy election described above for employee awards). While
ASU 2018-07 limits the policy election to employee awards, it does not provide
prescriptive guidance on cost recognition for nonemployee awards. Accordingly,
an entity should carefully evaluate the facts and circumstances associated with its
nonemployee awards to determine the appropriate recognition of cost.
Fair-Value-Based Measurement
Under ASC 505-50, nonemployee share-based payment awards are measured at the fair value
of either the consideration received (i.e., fair value of the goods or services received) or the
equity instruments issued, whichever is more reliably measurable. In practice, such awards
generally are measured on the basis of the fair value of the equity instruments issued. Under
ASU 2018-07, nonemployee awards are always measured on the basis of the fair value5 of
the equity instruments issued, in a manner consistent with the measurement for employee
awards. That is, the fair-value-based measurement objective for nonemployee awards
would align with that for employee awards. However, in calculating the fair-value-based
measurement of nonemployee stock options and similar instruments, an entity can elect on
an award-by-award basis to use the contractual term as the expected term.
Connecting the Dots
Under ASC 718, an entity measures employee stock options by using an expected
term that takes into account the effects of employees’ expected exercise and
postvesting employment termination behavior. The expected term is used because
employee stock options differ from transferable or tradable options “in that
employees cannot sell (or hedge) their share options — they can only exercise
them; because of this, employees generally exercise their options before the end
of the options’ contractual term.” However, determining an expected term for
nonemployee awards could be challenging because entities may not have sufficient
historical data related to any early exercise behavior of nonemployees, particularly
if nonemployee awards are not frequently granted. In addition, nonemployee stock
option awards may not be exercised before the end of the contractual term if they
do not contain certain features typically found in employee stock option awards (i.e.,
nontransferability, nonhedgability, and truncation of the contractual term because
of post-vesting service termination). Because of these potential differences between
employee and nonemployee awards, the ASU allows an entity to elect on an award-by-award basis to use the contractual term as the expected term for nonemployee
awards. If an entity elects not to use the contractual term for a particular award,
the entity estimates the expected term. However, when estimating the expected
term, a nonpublic entity can make an accounting policy election to apply a practical
expedient to estimate the expected term for awards that meet certain conditions
(see discussion below). If the practical expedient is elected, the entity would apply
the policy to all qualifying awards for which the entity had first elected not to use the
contractual term as the expected term.
Nonpublic Entity Practical Expedients
Whereas ASC 505-50 does not offer nonpublic entities practical expedients for measuring
nonemployee awards, ASU 2018-07 permits such entities to use the same practical expedients
as those provided for employee awards.
Calculated Value
Under ASC 718, a nonpublic entity is required to use “calculated value” to measure its stock
options and similar instruments granted to employees if it is unable to reasonably estimate
the fair value of such awards because it is not practicable for it to estimate the expected
volatility of its stock price. Calculated value is a measure that uses the historical volatility
of an appropriate industry sector index instead of the expected volatility of the entity’s
stock price. Under the ASU, the practical expedient related to calculated value is extended
to nonemployee awards and needs to be consistently applied to both employee and
nonemployee awards.
Connecting the Dots
In practice, many nonpublic entities may not have used calculated value for their
employee awards since it is often practicable to estimate the expected volatility of a
nonpublic entity’s stock price on the basis of the expected volatilities of similar public
entities.
Intrinsic Value
Under the ASU, the accounting policy election permitting nonpublic entities to measure
all liability-classified share-based payment awards at intrinsic value instead of fair value is
extended to nonemployee awards. If an entity has already elected to apply the practical
expedient to employee awards, that election would also apply to nonemployee awards (i.e.,
this practical expedient must be consistently applied to both employee and nonemployee
awards). The election should be made upon adoption of the ASU.
Expected Term
As previously noted, the ASU allows an entity to make an award-by-award election to use
the contractual term as the expected term. If an entity does not elect to use the contractual
term, it estimates the expected term. However, as in the case of employee awards, the ASU
allows a nonpublic entity to elect, as a practical expedient, to estimate the expected term
for nonemployee stock options and similar awards that meet the conditions in ASC 718-10-30-20B.6 The practical expedient is an entity-wide accounting policy election that must be
consistently applied to both employee and nonemployee awards. In addition, if elected, the practical expedient must be applied to all nonemployee awards that meet the conditions in
ASC 718-10-30-20B and for which the entity did not elect to use the contractual term as the
expected term. Under the practical expedient, the expected term is generally estimated as the
midpoint between the nonemployee vesting period and the contractual term of the award.7
Example 4
Entity D enters into a contract with an advertising company that provides marketing services in
exchange for warrants. In accordance with the terms of the award, the number of warrants earned
will depend on the market price of D’s common shares when the marketing services are completed.
For this award, D elects not to use the contractual term as the expected term. In addition, D has
made an entity-wide accounting policy election to use the practical expedient to estimate the
expected term for awards that meet the required conditions. Therefore, D reviews the guidance
in ASC 718-10-30-20B to determine whether it should use the practical expedient to estimate the
expected term. Because the warrants include a market condition, the practical expedient cannot be
applied, and D must estimate the expected term.
Classification
The guidance in ASC 718 on the classification of employee share-based payment awards also
applies to nonemployee awards under ASC 505-50 before they vest. However, under ASC
505-50, nonemployee awards become subject to other guidance in U.S. GAAP that generally
applies to financial instruments (e.g., ASC 815) once performance is complete (i.e., the awards
are vested). By contrast, employee awards remain within the scope of ASC 718 (even after
they vest) unless they are modified after the holder ceases to be an employee (except under
an equity restructuring that meets certain criteria). Since ASU 2018-07 aligns the classification
treatment of employee and nonemployee awards, nonemployee awards will generally
remain within the scope of ASC 718 unless they are modified after the awards vest and the
nonemployee is no longer providing goods and services (except under an equity restructuring
that meets certain criteria). An exception, however, is a nonemployee award that is granted in
the form of a convertible instrument and was originally within the scope of ASC 718. Such an
award is subject to other guidance in U.S. GAAP once it vests, including ASC 470-20.
Connecting the Dots
Under current U.S. GAAP, certain nonemployee awards that are classified as equity
under ASC 505-50 meet the definition of a derivative financial instrument under
ASC 815. Accordingly, once performance is complete, they would be classified as
a derivative liability and remeasured at fair value through earnings each reporting
period. Under the ASU, such awards generally continue to be classified as equity
unless modified as described above.
Disclosure
The FASB decided not to add specific disclosure requirements for nonemployee share-based
payment arrangements because the existing disclosures in ASC 718 are sufficient. Separate
disclosures would be required “to the extent that the differences in the characteristics of the
awards make separate disclosure important to an understanding of the entity’s use of share-based
compensation.”
Effective Date
For public business entities,8 the amendments in ASU 2018-07 are effective for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2018, including interim periods within those fiscal years. For
all other entities, the amendments are effective for fiscal years beginning after December
15, 2019, and interim periods within fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2020. Early
adoption is permitted if financial statements have not yet been issued (for public business
entities) or have not yet been made available for issuance (for all other entities), but no earlier
than an entity’s adoption date of ASC 606. If early adoption is elected, all amendments in the
ASU that apply must be adopted in the same period. In addition, if early adoption is elected in
an interim period, any adjustments should be reflected as of the beginning of the fiscal year
that includes that interim period.
Transition and Related Disclosures
ASU 2018-07 generally requires an entity to use a modified retrospective transition approach,
with a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings as of the beginning of the fiscal year,
for all (1) liability-classified nonemployee awards that have not been settled as of the adoption
date and (2) equity-classified nonemployee awards for which a measurement date has not
been established. In the application of a modified retrospective transition approach:
- The ASU’s transition provisions do not apply to equity-classified awards for which a measurement date was previously established under ASC 505-50 because of the existence of a performance commitment or because performance was complete.
- It may be difficult for some entities to determine the grant-date fair-value-based measure of nonemployee equity-classified awards. The ASU therefore requires equity-classified awards (for which a measurement date has not been previously established) to be remeasured on the basis of their adoption-date fair-value-based measure.
- An entity applies the guidance on modifications of an award from liability to equity classification (i.e., the unsettled liability award as measured on the adoption date would be reclassified to equity) to determine the cumulative-effect adjustment to equity for unsettled awards that are currently classified as a liability but will be classified as equity under the ASU.
- An entity should not adjust the basis of assets that include nonemployee share-based payment costs if the assets are completed (e.g., finished goods inventory or fixed assets for which amortization has commenced).
However, if a nonpublic entity changes its measurement of nonemployee awards to calculated
value instead of a fair-value-based measure, the ASU requires the entity to use a prospective
approach.
Connecting the Dots
In applying a modified retrospective transition approach, an entity is required to
adjust the basis of any assets that include nonemployee share-based payment costs
if the assets are not completed. For example, any change in nonemployee share-based
payment costs resulting from adoption of ASU 2018-07 that are capitalizable
as part of assets under construction or in progress will require an entity to adjust
those asset balances. In addition, while a change in measurement associated with the use of a calculated
value is applied prospectively, an entity should apply other changes to its
measurement approach by using a modified retrospective transition approach.
For example, a nonpublic entity that has elected to apply the practical expedient in
determining expected term should apply that revised measurement approach when
measuring the awards subject to transition on the effective date.
In the first interim and fiscal year of adoption, an entity is required to disclose the following:
- The nature of and reason for the change in accounting principle.
- The cumulative effect of the change on retained earnings (or other components of equity or net assets) in the statement of financial position as of the beginning of the period of adoption.
Footnotes
1
FASB Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2018-07, Improvements to Nonemployee Share-Based Payment Accounting.
2
The ASU was issued as part of the FASB’s simplification initiative, which is intended to reduce the cost and complexity of current
U.S. GAAP while maintaining or enhancing the usefulness of the related financial statement information. In March 2016, the Board
issued ASU 2016-09, Improvements to Employee Share-Based Payment Accounting, also as part of the initiative, to simplify several
aspects of the accounting for employee share-based payment arrangements. It is assumed in this Heads Up that an entity has
adopted ASU 2016-09.
3
For titles of FASB Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) references, see Deloitte’s “Titles of Topics and Subtopics in the FASB
Accounting Standards Codification.“
4
In the Basis for Conclusions of ASU 2016-09, the FASB states, “The Board concluded that the accounting policy election for
forfeitures only applies to service conditions. For an award with a performance condition, an entity would continue to assess at each
reporting period whether it is probable that the performance condition will be achieved.”
5
In certain circumstances, nonpublic entities are permitted to use calculated value or intrinsic value. See discussion below of
nonpublic entity practical expedients.
6
ASC 718-10-30-20B states that a “nonpublic entity that elects to apply the practical expedient . . . shall apply the practical expedient
to a share option or similar award that has all of the following characteristics:
- The share option or similar award is granted at the money.
- The grantee has only a limited time to exercise the award (typically 30–90 days) if the grantee no longer provides goods or terminates service after vesting.
- The grantee can only exercise the award. The grantee cannot sell or hedge the award.
- The award does not include a market condition.“
7
An exception to using the midpoint is an award that has an implicit vesting period and a performance condition that is not probable
of being met. In this circumstance, the expected term is the contractual term.
8
The FASB retained the current definitions in ASC 718 of a “public entity” and a “nonpublic entity” for use in the determination of
whether a nonpublic entity practical expedient can be elected. However, an entity will determine the ASU’s effective date on the
basis of whether it meets the ASC master glossary’s definition of a “public business entity.”