Tentative Board Decisions
Tentative Board decisions are provided for those interested in
following the Board´s deliberations. All of the reported decisions are
tentative and may be changed at future Board meetings.
January 21, 2015 Joint FASB/IASB Videoconference Board Meeting
Leases. The FASB and the IASB (the Boards) continued redeliberating the proposals in the May 2013 Exposure Draft, Leases (the 2013 ED), specifically discussing lessee disclosure requirements.
Overall Disclosure Objective
The Boards decided that the final leases standard should include a
disclosure objective, which would be to enable users of financial
statements to assess the amount, timing, and uncertainty of cash flows
arising from leases. The Boards also decided to retain the 2013 ED
proposal requiring a lessee to consider the level of detail necessary to
satisfy the disclosure objective.
Quantitative Disclosure Requirements
The Boards decided not to retain the 2013 ED proposal requiring a lessee
to disclose a reconciliation of the opening and closing balances of its
lease liabilities. The IASB also decided not to retain the 2013 ED
proposal requiring a lessee to disclose a reconciliation of the opening
and closing balances of its right-of-use (ROU) assets.
The FASB decided to require a lessee to disclose the following quantitative items:
- Type A lease expense, segregated between amortization of ROU assets and interest on lease liabilities.
- Type B lease expense.
- Short-term lease expense, excluding expenses relating to leases with a lease term of one month or less.
- Variable lease expense.
- Sublease income.
- Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of lease
liabilities, segregated between operating and financing cash flows and
between Type A and Type B leases.
- Supplemental noncash information on lease liabilities arising
from obtaining ROU assets, segregated between Type A and Type B leases.
- Weighted-average remaining lease term, disclosed separately for Type A and Type B leases.
- Weighted-average discount rate for Type B leases as of the reporting date.
- Gains and losses arising from sale and leaseback transactions.
The FASB decided not to require a lessee to present lessee disclosures in a tabular format.
The FASB decided to clarify that the expense items disclosed would also
include any amounts capitalized as part of the cost of another asset.
The IASB decided to require a lessee to disclose the following quantitative items:
- Amortization of ROU assets, split by class of underlying asset.
- Interest on lease liabilities.
- Short-term lease expense, excluding expenses relating to leases with a lease term of one month or less.
- Small asset lease expense.
- Variable lease expense.
- Income from subleasing ROU assets.
- Total cash outflow for leases.
- Additions to ROU assets.
- Gains and losses arising from sale and leaseback transactions.
- Closing carrying amount of ROU assets, split by class of underlying asset.
The IASB decided to require a lessee to present all lessee disclosures
in a single note or separate section in its financial statements. The
IASB also decided to require a lessee to present the quantitative lessee
disclosures in a tabular format, unless another format is more
appropriate.
The FASB decided to retain the 2013 ED proposal for a lessee to disclose
a maturity analysis of its lease liabilities, showing the undiscounted
cash flows on an annual basis for a minimum of each of the first five
years and a total of the amounts for the remaining years, and
reconciling the undiscounted cash flows to the discounted lease
liabilities recognized in the statement of financial position.
The FASB decided not to retain the 2013 ED proposal requiring a lessee
to disclose a maturity analysis of commitments for nonlease components
related to a lease.
The FASB decided not to require a lessee to provide qualitative
disclosures about the existence, and terms and conditions, of
significant nonlease commitments it has taken on as a result of entering
lease contracts.
The IASB decided that a lessee should be required to disclose a maturity
analysis of its lease liabilities in accordance with paragraphs 39 and
B11 of IFRS 7, Financial Instruments: Disclosures. A lessee
would be required to disclose this maturity analysis separately from the
maturity analyses of other financial liabilities.
Qualitative Disclosure Requirements
The FASB decided to retain the qualitative disclosure requirements
proposed in the 2013 ED, requiring a lessee to disclose the following
qualitative items:
- Information about the nature of its leases (and subleases), including:
- A general description of those leases;
- The basis, and terms and conditions, on which variable lease payments are determined;
- The existence, and terms and conditions, of options to
extend or terminate the lease. A lessee should provide narrative
disclosure about the options that are recognized as part of the ROU
assets and lease liabilities and those that are not;
- The existence, and terms and conditions, of residual value guarantees provided by the lessee; and
- The restrictions or covenants imposed by leases.
- Information about leases that have not yet commenced but that create significant rights and obligations for the lessee.
- Information about significant assumptions and judgments made in
applying the requirements of the leases standards, which may include the
following:
- The determination of whether a contract contains a lease;
- The allocation of the consideration in a contract between leases and nonlease components; and
- The determination of the discount rate.
- The main terms and conditions of any sale and leaseback transactions.
- Whether an accounting policy election was made for the short-term lease exemption.
The FASB decided not to include disaggregation guidance, similar to the
guidance in Topic 606 on revenue from contracts with customers, when
describing the level of detail with which qualitative disclosures should
be presented.
The IASB decided not to retain the qualitative disclosure requirements
proposed in the 2013 ED and, instead, require a lessee to disclose
sufficient additional information to satisfy the overall disclosure
objective. The IASB decided to supplement this requirement with a list
of specific disclosure objectives and to include illustrative examples
in the final leases standard to demonstrate how a lessee might comply
with this requirement.
Nonpublic Business Entity Considerations
The FASB decided not to provide any specified reliefs from the
disclosure requirements for nonpublic business entities (that is, all
other entities besides public business entities). Therefore, the lessee
disclosure package is equally applicable to both public and nonpublic
business entities.
Next Steps
The Boards will continue their redeliberations at a future Board meeting.