SUMMARY OF BOARD DECISIONS
Summary of Board decisions are provided for the information and
convenience of constituents who want to follow the Board’s deliberations. All of
the conclusions reported are tentative and may be changed at future Board
meetings. Decisions are included in an Exposure Draft for formal comment only
after a formal written ballot. Decisions in an Exposure Draft may be (and often
are) changed in redeliberations based on information provided to the Board in
comment letters, at public roundtable discussions, and through other
communication channels. Decisions become final only after a formal written
ballot to issue an Accounting Standards Update.
March 17, 2010 FASB/IASB Joint Videoconference Board Meeting
Insurance
contracts. In this session the Boards discussed risk adjustments in
the proposed measurement of insurance contracts, including a brief analysis of
methodologies that could be used to calculate risk adjustments. To support this
discussion on risk adjustment, the Boards also discussed the role of risk
adjustments in option pricing models.
The purpose of this discussion was
educational. Consequently, no decisions were reached.
Next
Steps
The Boards will continue their discussion of this project at
their joint meeting on March 22.
Leases.
The Boards discussed:
- Lessee disclosure requirements
- Lessor transitional provisions
- Measurement at initial recognition
- Lessor accounting for residual value guarantees.
Lessee
Disclosure Requirements
The Boards tentatively approved a set of
disclosure requirements for the forthcoming Exposure Draft.
An entity
should disclose the quantitative and qualitative financial information that
identifies and explains the amounts recognized in its financial statements
arising from lease contracts. That disclosure should include:
- A general description of the lessee’s leasing activities, including
disaggregated information about its leasing activities (e.g., by nature or
function).
- If a lessee applies a simplified form of lease accounting for short-term
leases, that fact should be disclosed. The lessee should also disclose the
amounts recognized in the financial statements under the simplified model.
- If a lessee enters into a sale and leaseback transaction, the lessee
should disclose that fact, any material terms and conditions related to that
transaction, and any gains or losses arising from that transaction, separately
from other types of sales of assets.
- A lessee should provide a reconciliation between opening and closing
balances for its right-of-use assets and its obligation to pay rentals.
- A lessee should provide a narrative disclosure of its assumptions and
estimates on the amortization method used, options, contingent rentals,
residual value guarantees, and the discount rate used.
- A lessee should disclose a maturity analysis of the gross obligation to
pay rentals showing the remaining contractual maturities and total
obligations. The lessee would also have to reconcile the total gross
obligation to the total obligation to pay rentals presented in the financial
statements. In addition, the lessee would disclose a maturity analysis on an
annual basis for the first five years and a lump-sum figure for the remaining
amounts.
- A lessee should disclose the quantitative and qualitative financial
information that helps users to evaluate the nature and extent of the amount,
timing, and uncertainty of future cash flows arising from lease contracts, and
the way in which the lessee manages those uncertainties.
The Boards
also tentatively decided not to require the fair value disclosures of a lessee’s
obligation to pay rentals.
Lessor Transitional
Provisions
The Boards tentatively decided:
- To require a lessor to recognize and measure all outstanding leases as of
the date of initial application of the proposed new leases requirements using
a simplified retrospective approach. Under that approach, the lessor’s
receivable would be measured at the present value of the remaining lease
payments. The performance obligation should be measured on the same basis as
the receivable.
- The original rate that the lessor is charging the lessee should be used to
discount the lease payments.
- A lessor should reinstate previously derecognized leased assets at
depreciated cost, adjusted for impairment and revaluation (IFRS preparers
only).
- For IFRS preparers, transition disclosures should be required in
accordance with the guidance in IAS 8, Accounting Policies, Changes in
Accounting Estimates and Errors, without the disclosure of adjusted basic
and diluted earnings per share.
Measurement at Initial
Recognition
The Boards tentatively decided that initial measurement
of assets and liabilities arising in lease contracts should be determined at the
inception of the lease.
Lessor Accounting for Residual Value
Guarantees
The Boards tentatively decided that:
- The lease receivable recognized by the lessor would include amounts
payable under a residual value guarantee if the amount could be measured
reliably.
- The receivable would be measured using an expected outcome technique;
however, not every possible scenario would need to be taken into account when
measuring the receivable.
- The carrying amount of the receivable would be reassessed at each
reporting date if any new facts or circumstances indicate that there is a
material change in the receivable.
- Any change in the receivable arising from a change in amounts payable
under a residual value guarantee would be treated as an adjustment to the
lessor’s receivable and performance obligation, consistent with the Boards’
tentative decision on the accounting for contingent rentals.
- Residual value guarantees from an unrelated third party would be accounted
for in accordance with the accounting for other guarantees.