FASB Proposes Effective Date Delay for All Insurance Companies Applying
Standard on Long-Duration Contracts
Norwalk, CT, August 21, 2019—The Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) today
issued a proposed
Accounting Standards Update (ASU) that would grant all insurance companies
that issue long-duration contracts, such as life insurance and annuities,
additional time to apply a standard that addresses this area of financial
reporting. Stakeholders are encouraged to review and provide comment on the
proposed ASU by September 20, 2019.
On August 15, 2018, the FASB issued
Accounting
Standards Update No. 2018-12, Financial Services—Insurance (Topic 944):
Targeted Improvements to the Accounting for Long-Duration Contracts. The
ASU made targeted amendments to improve, simplify, and enhance the financial
reporting requirements for long-duration contracts issued by insurance
companies.
Since that time, the FASB received an agenda request to delay
its effective date by one year. In response, FASB members and staff conducted
outreach with numerous insurance companies that issue and/or reinsure
long-duration contracts to better understand their implementation challenges and
progress.
Furthermore, last week, the FASB issued a proposed
ASU that describes a new
FASB philosophy for determining how effective dates for major standards are
staggered between larger public companies and all other entities. Under this
philosophy, a major standard would first be effective for larger public
companies; effective dates for all other public and private companies and
organizations would be staggered at least two years later. Generally, it is
expected that early application would continue to be permitted for all
entities.
“Based on what we observed while monitoring implementation
of the long-duration insurance standard—and consistent with our new
philosophy to stagger effective dates between large publicly traded companies
and all other companies and organizations—the FASB has proposed to grant all
insurance companies at least one additional year to apply the standard,” stated
FASB Chairman Russell
G. Golden. “We believe it will result in a higher quality implementation for
all.”
The proposed ASU would amend the effective dates for the
long-duration insurance standard as follows:
The proposed
ASU is available at http://www.fasb.org/.