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.
July 20, 2011
FASB/IASB Joint Board Meeting
Leases.
The FASB and the IASB discussed lessor accounting, the accounting for lease
payments that depend on an index or a rate, and the accounting for embedded
derivatives in lease contracts.
Lessor
Accounting
The Boards tentatively decided that a lessor
should apply a "receivable and residual" accounting approach as follows:
- The lessor would recognize a right to receive lease payments and a
residual asset at the date of the commencement of the lease.
- The lessor would initially measure the right to receive lease payments at
the sum of the present value of the lease payments, discounted using the rate
the lessor charges the lessee.
- The lessor would initially measure the residual asset as an allocation of
the carrying amount of the underlying asset and would subsequently measure the
residual asset by accreting it over the lease term using the rate the lessor
charges the lessee.
- If profit on the right-of-use asset transferred to the lessee is
reasonably assured, the lessor would recognize that profit at the date of the
commencement of the lease. The profit would be measured as the difference
between (a) the carrying amount of the underlying asset and (b) the sum of the
initial measurement of the right to receive lease payments and the residual
asset.
- If profit on the right-of-use asset transferred to the lessee is not
reasonably assured, the lessor would recognize that profit over the lease
term. In that case, the lessor would initially measure the residual asset as
the difference between the carrying amount of the underlying asset and the
right to receive lease payments. The lessor would subsequently accrete the
residual asset, using a constant rate of return, to an amount equivalent to
the underlying asset´s carrying amount at the end of the lease term as if the
underlying asset had been subject to depreciation.
- If the right to receive lease payments is greater than the carrying amount
of the underlying asset at the date of the commencement of the lease, the
lessor would recognize, as a minimum, the difference between those two amounts
as profit at that date.
The Boards also tentatively decided that the
following should be excluded from the scope of the "receivable and residual"
approach to lessor accounting:
- Leases of investment property measured at fair value
- Short-term leases.
For those excluded leases, a lessor should (1)
continue to recognize and depreciate the underlying asset and (2) recognize
lease income over the lease term on a systematic basis.
Lease Payments That Depend on an Index or a
Rate
The Boards discussed the measurement of lease payments
that depend on an index or a rate included in the lessee´s liability to make
lease payments and the lessor´s right to receive lease payments and tentatively
decided that:
- Lease payments that depend on an index or a rate should be initially
measured using the index or rate that exists at the date of commencement of
the lease.
- Lease payments that depend on an index or a rate should be reassessed
using the index or rate that exists at the end of each reporting period.
- Lessees should reflect changes in the measurement of lease payments that
depend on an index or a rate (a) in net income to the extent that those
changes relate to the current reporting period and (b) as an adjustment to the
right-of-use asset to the extent that those changes relate to future reporting
periods.
The Boards will discuss at a future meeting how a lessor
should reflect changes in the measurement of lease payments that depend on an
index or a rate.
Embedded Derivatives in Lease
Contracts
The Boards tentatively decided that an entity
should assess whether a lease contract includes embedded derivatives that should
be bifurcated and accounted for in accordance with applicable U.S. GAAP and IFRS
guidance on derivatives.
Accounting
for financial instruments: impairment. The Boards continued to
discuss a "three-bucket" expected loss approach for the impairment of financial
assets. The guiding principle of the approach is to reflect the general pattern
of deterioration of credit quality of financial assets.
The Boards
discussed approaches to classify and transfer financial assets between the
buckets. The Boards agreed to pursue an approach based on credit risk management
systems, recognizing that credit risk management is a holistic process that
includes evaluating all available information.
The Boards considered
whether an "absolute" or a "relative" credit risk model should underpin the
transfer and classification of financial assets between the three buckets and
decided to develop the relative credit risk model. The overall objective of this
approach is to reflect the deterioration or improvement in the credit quality of
financial assets, thus making the maximum use of credit risk management
practices. Under this approach, all originated and purchased financial assets
would initially start in Bucket 1 and will move into Bucket 2 and Bucket 3 as
credit loss expectations deteriorate, affecting the uncertainty in
collectability of cash flows. Loans acquired at a discount because of credit
losses were outside the scope of the discussion and will be addressed at a
future meeting.
The Boards also discussed the measurement of expected
loss on financial assets in Bucket 1. The Boards agreed to keep the calculation
of the impairment allowance for Bucket 1 operationally simple and directed the
staff to explore approaches that would calculate the allowance using 12 or 24
months´ worth of losses expected to occur. The Boards also agreed that the
calculation of 12 months´ worth of expected losses in Bucket 1 will be based on
an annual rather than an annualized loss rate (that is, looking to the losses
that are expected to occur in the next 12 months, as opposed to calculating the
lifetime losses and dividing by the number of years remaining). The same logic
would apply to a calculation based on 24 months.
July 21,
2011 FASB/IASB Joint Board Meeting
Leases.
The FASB and IASB discussed the presentation and disclosure requirements for
lessees, including presentation in the statement of financial position and on
the statement of cash flows.
Lessee Presentation and
Disclosure
The Boards discussed lessee disclosures and tentatively
decided that a lessee should disclose the following:
- A reconciliation of the opening and closing balance of right-of-use
assets, disaggregated by class of underlying asset.
- A reconciliation of the opening and closing balance of the liability to
make lease payments (unlike the Exposure Draft, a lessee would not be required
to disaggregate the reconciliation by class of underlying asset).
- A maturity analysis of the undiscounted cash flows that are included in
the liability to make lease payments. The maturity analysis should show, at a
minimum, the undiscounted cash flows to be paid in each of the first five
years after the reporting date and a total of the amounts for the years
thereafter. The analysis should reconcile to the liability to make lease
payments.
- Information about the principal terms of any lease that has not yet
commenced if the lease creates significant rights and obligations for the
lessee.
- Information required in paragraphs 73(a)(ii)-73(a)(iii) of the Exposure
Draft (the Boards will provide guidance, illustrations, or both about those
requirements).
- All expenses relating to leases recognized in the reporting period, in a
tabular format, disaggregated into (a) amortization expense, (b) interest
expense, (c) expense relating to variable lease payments not included in the
liability to make lease payments, and (d) expense for those leases for which
the short-term practical expedient is elected, to be followed by the principal
and interest paid on the liability to make lease payments.
- Qualitative information to indicate if circumstances or expectations about
short-term lease arrangements are present that would result in a material
change to the expense in the next reporting period as compared with the
current reporting period.
The Boards also tentatively decided that a
lessee should:
- Present or disclose separately interest expense and interest paid relating
to leases.
- Not combine interest expense and amortization expense and present
as lease or rent expense.
Additionally, the Boards tentatively decided
that a lessee is not required to disclose the following:
- The discount rate used to calculate the liability to make lease
payments.
- The range of discount rates used to calculate the liability to make lease
payments.
- The fair value of the liability to make lease payments.
- The existence and principal terms of any options for the lessee to
purchase the underlying asset, or initial direct costs incurred on a
lease.
- Information about arrangements that are no longer determined to contain a
lease.
With regard to future contractual commitments:
- The IASB tentatively decided that a lessee is not required to disclose the
future contractual commitments associated with services and other non-lease
components that are separated from a lease contract.
- The FASB tentatively decided that a lessee should disclose the future
contractual commitments associated with services and other non-lease
components that are separated from a lease contract.
Presentation:
Lessee Statement of Financial Position
The Boards discussed
presentation in the lessee statement of financial position and tentatively
decided that a lessee should:
- Separately present in the statement of financial position or disclose in
the notes to the financial statements right-of-use assets and liabilities to
make lease payments. If right-of-use assets and liabilities to make lease
payments are not separately presented in the statement of financial position,
the disclosures should indicate in which line item in the statement of
financial position the right-of-use assets and liabilities to make lease
payments are included.
- Present the right-of-use asset as if the underlying asset were owned.
The Boards also decided that it is not necessary to clarify whether
the right-of-use asset is a tangible or an intangible
asset.
Presentation: Lessee Statement of Cash Flows
The
Boards discussed the lessee´s statement of cash flows and tentatively decided
that a lessee should:
- Classify cash paid for lease payments relating to the principal within
financing activities.
- Classify or disclose cash paid for lease payments relating to interest in
accordance with applicable IFRSs or U.S. GAAP on the statement of cash flows.
- Classify cash paid for variable lease payments not included in the
measurement of the liability to make lease payments as operating
activities.
- Classify cash paid for short-term leases not included in the liability to
make lease payments as operating activities.
The Boards tentatively
decided that a lessee should disclose:
- The expense recognized in the reporting period for variable lease payments
not included in the liability to make lease payments.
- The acquisition of a right-of-use asset in exchange for a liability to
make lease payments as a supplemental noncash transaction disclosure.
Insurance
contracts. The IASB and the FASB continued their discussions on
insurance contracts. They received an oral report on recent investor outreach
activities and considered when insurers should apply the premium allocation
approach to short-duration contracts. No decisions were
made.
Next Steps
Both Boards will
continue their discussion on insurance contracts in September
2011.
Balance
sheet—offsetting. The Boards discussed revisions to the proposed
offsetting disclosures. The Boards tentatively decided to:
- Retain the objective for the offsetting disclosures, namely, that an
entity should disclose information about rights of setoff and related
arrangements (such as collateral arrangements) associated with the entity´s
financial assets and financial liabilities to enable users of its financial
statements to understand the effect of those rights and arrangements on the
entity´s financial position
- Modify the scope of the disclosure requirements such that they apply only
to instruments under an enforceable master netting agreement or similar
arrangement (for example, derivatives, sale and repurchase agreements, reverse
sale and repurchase agreements, and securities lending arrangements)
- Clarify that an entity need not provide the required disclosures if the
entity has no qualifying assets or liabilities that are subject to a right of
setoff (other than collateral agreements) at the reporting date.
The
Boards also tentatively decided to require entities to disclose the following:
- The gross amounts of financial assets and financial liabilities
- The amounts of financial assets and financial liabilities offset in the
statement of financial position
- The net amount after taking in account (1) and (2) (which should be the
same as the amounts reported in the statement of financial position)
- The effect of rights of setoff that are only enforceable and exercisable
in bankruptcy, default, or insolvency of either party not taken into account
in arriving at the amounts presented in the statement of financial position
(including collateral)
- The net exposure after taking into account the effect of items (2) and
(4).
Financial statement disclosures. The
Boards discussed a report by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland
and the New Zealand Institute of Chartered Accountants on disclosures in
financial statements. This was an informational meeting only; no decisions were
reached.
Effective
dates and transition methods and Revenue
recognition. The Boards discussed the results of additional
outreach with software providers and investors as input in considering the
effective dates and transition methods for the four major projects—financial
instruments, insurance, leases, and revenue recognition. The FASB also discussed
the results of additional outreach with users and preparers of financial
statements of nonpublic entities (which include non-publicly-listed companies
and not-for-profit organizations).
The Boards discussed whether to
permit early application of the standards resulting from the four major
projects. The FASB agreed that early application generally should not be
permitted; however, when making a final decision the Board will consider the
facts and circumstances of each individual project. The IASB decided to permit
early application of new IFRSs by first-time adopters of IFRSs. The IASB will
consider the issue of early application by other entities on a
standard-by-standard basis.
The Boards then discussed effective date in
relation to the revenue recognition project. The Boards tentatively decided that
the effective date of the revenue recognition standard would be set to ensure
that the start of the earliest comparative period for an entity required to
present two comparative annual periods (in addition to the current annual
period) would be a few months after the standard is issued. The Boards noted
that based on their current timetable for the project, the effective date of the
standard would not be earlier than annual periods beginning on or after January
1, 2015.
The Boards discussed whether to permit early application of the
standard. The FASB tentatively decided that early application should not be
permitted, while the IASB tentatively decided that early application should be
permitted.
The IASB will discuss at a future meeting whether the
transition reliefs to retrospective application in the proposed standard should
be extended to first-time adopters of IFRSs.
Leases
Announcement
The Boards agreed unanimously to reexpose their
revised proposals for a leases standard.
Reexposing the revised
proposals will provide interested parties with an opportunity to comment on
revisions that the Boards have undertaken since the publication of the Exposure
Draft on leases in August 2010.