FASB ISSUES UPDATE FOR PRIVATE COMPANIES ON CONSOLIDATION OF VARIABLE INTEREST ENTITIES
Norwalk, CT, March 20, 2014—The Financial Accounting
Standards Board (FASB) today issued guidance intended to improve private company
financial reporting regarding consolidation of lessors in certain common control
leasing arrangements. FASB Accounting Standards Update No. 2014-07,
Applying Variable Interest Entities Guidance to Common Control Leasing
Arrangements, is based on a consensus reached by the Private Company
Council (PCC).
Under current U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP), a company is required to consolidate the financial reporting from an
entity in which it has a controlling financial interest. The assessment of
controlling financial interest is performed under either a voting interest model
or a variable interest entity (VIE) model. In a VIE model, the company has a
controlling financial interest when it has (a) the power to direct the
activities that most significantly affect the economic performance of the
entity, and (b) the obligation to absorb losses or the right to receive benefits
of the entity that could be potentially significant to the entity.
To
determine which model applies, a company preparing financial statements must
first determine whether it has a variable interest in the entity being evaluated
for consolidation and whether that entity is a VIE.
The new guidance
allows a private company to elect—when certain conditions exist—not to apply VIE
guidance to a lessor under common control. Instead, the private company would
make certain disclosures about the lessor and the leasing arrangement.
"The disclosures under this alternative provide useful lessor-related
information for users of private company financial statements, while reducing
costs and complexity for private company lessees that apply VIE guidance," said
FASB Chairman Russell G. Golden. "Therefore, the alternative meets the overall
objective of the Private
Company Decision-Making Framework for addressing the needs of private
company stakeholders."
Under the amendments in this Update, a private
company lessee could elect an alternative not to apply VIE guidance to a lessor
when:
- The private company lessee and the lessor are under common control,
- The private company lessee has a leasing arrangement with the lessor,
- Substantially all of the activity between the private company lessee and
the lessor is related to the leasing activities (including supporting leasing
activities) between those two companies, and
- If the private company lessee explicitly guarantees or provides collateral
for any obligation of the lessor related to the asset leased by the private
company, then the principal amount of the obligation at inception does not
exceed the value of the asset leased by the private company from the
lessor.
If elected, the accounting alternative should be applied to all
leasing arrangements meeting the above conditions. The alternative should be
applied retrospectively to all periods presented, and is effective for annual
periods beginning after December 15, 2014, and interim periods within annual
periods beginning after December 15, 2015. Early application is permitted for
all financial statements that have not yet been made available for issuance.
More information on the standard, including a video and FASB
In Focus, is available on the FASB
website and on the PCC
website.
About the Financial Accounting Standards
Board
Since 1973, the Financial Accounting Standards Board has
been the designated organization in the private sector for establishing
standards of financial accounting and reporting. Those standards govern the
preparation of financial reports and are officially recognized as authoritative
by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants. Such standards are essential to the efficient
functioning of the economy because investors, creditors, auditors, and others
rely on credible, transparent, and comparable financial information. For more
information about the FASB, visit our website at http://www.fasb.org/.