The Board will hold an educational, non-decision-making session to 
      discuss topics that are anticipated to be discussed at the February 21, 
      2007 Board meeting. Those topics will be posted to the FASB calendar four 
      days prior to the education session.
      Representative members of the FASB and the IASB will meet with members 
      of the Joint Working Group on Lease Accounting to discuss issues related 
      to the accounting for leases.
      We request that those who plan to observe this meeting preregister. 
      Please complete and submit the Observer Registration Form on the IASB 
      website by noon on Wednesday, February 14, 2007. Observers will be 
      required to check in upon arrival at the meeting. The meeting will be 
      audio taped for later listening on the IASB website.
      
      Financial 
      statement presentation. The Board discussed issues related to 
      disaggregating information on the statement of comprehensive income. In 
      September 2006, the Board expressed a leaning toward presenting 
      information in the statement of comprehensive income by function, with 
      certain information further broken down by nature. Consistent with that 
      leaning, the Board decided that an entity would be required to present (1) 
      information based on the primary activities (functions) in which it 
      engages and (2) for each of those functions, information about the 
      significant related expenses (by their nature) that would provide 
      information useful in predicting future cash flows. The Board indicated a 
      preference for the by-nature expense information to be presented on the 
      face of the statement of comprehensive income but decided that if that was 
      impractical an entity could elect to present that information in the 
      notes. The Board also decided that an entity would be required to report 
      separately any expense that is important in understanding its operating 
      results that may not relate to a functional line item (for example, 
      impairment of goodwill).
      The Board decided that certain entities (for example, entities in a 
      service industry) would not be required to present information based on 
      functions at a more detailed level than is required by the functional 
      separation of operating, investing, and financing activities. Those 
      entities would present their significant expenses (by their nature) for 
      each of those higher-level activities. 
      
Postretirement 
      benefit obligations, including pensions. The Board discussed 
      comments received on proposed FSP FAS 158-a, "Conforming Amendments to the 
      Illustrations in FASB Statements No. 87, No. 88, and No. 106 and to the 
      Related Staff Implementation Guides," and directed the staff to proceed to 
      a draft of a final FSP for vote by written ballot. The final FSP will 
      conform the illustrations contained in the following appendixes to reflect 
      the provisions of FASB Statement No. 158, Employers’ Accounting for 
      Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans:
      
        - Appendix B of FASB Statement No. 87, Employers’ Accounting for 
        Pensions
        
        
- Appendix B of FASB Statement No. 88, Employers’ Accounting for 
        Settlements and Curtailments of Defined Benefit Pension Plans and for 
        Termination Benefits
        
        
- Appendix C of FASB Statement No. 106, Employers’ Accounting for 
        Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions.
        
The final FSP also will make conforming changes to the questions and 
      answers contained in the following FASB Special Reports and incorporate 
      them as new appendixes of Statements 87, 88, and 106, respectively:
      
        - A Guide to Implementation of Statement 87 on Employers’ 
        Accounting for Pensions
        
        
- A Guide to Implementation of Statement 88 on Employers’ 
        Accounting for Settlements and Curtailments of Defined Benefit Pension 
        Plans and for Termination Benefits
        
        
- A Guide to Implementation of Statement 106 on Employers’ 
        Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions.
        
Agenda decision: allowance for losses. The Board decided to add 
      a project to its technical agenda on allowance for credit losses related 
      to loans and finance leases (financing receivables). The Board directed 
      the staff to develop new disclosures and enhance current disclosures 
      related to the allowance for credit losses including, but not limited to, 
      information about credit quality in an entity’s portfolio, credit risk 
      exposures, and potentially more transparency within an entity’s accounting 
      policies.
      Agenda decision: implementation of AICPA SOP 05-1. The Board 
      considered whether to add a project to its agenda to delay the effective 
      date of AICPA Statement of Position 05-1, Accounting by Insurance 
      Enterprises for Deferred Acquisition Costs in Connection With 
      Modifications or Exchanges of Insurance Contracts, based on 
      implementation issues raised by constituents, including those discussed at 
      the January 8, 2007 FASB roundtable meeting. The Board decided not to add 
      a project to its agenda to delay the effective date of SOP 05-1.
      January 31, 2007 Board Meeting
      Convergence—income 
      taxes. The Board decided to:
      
        - Require that an asset acquired with a tax basis difference be 
        recorded at fair value rather than fair value (assuming full 
        deductibility for tax purposes). This decision clarifies the Board’s 
        previous decision from the April 2004 joint FASB/IASB meeting. In that 
        meeting, the Boards had tentatively concluded that when a temporary 
        difference is acquired in an asset acquisition, then (a) the asset 
        should be recognized at fair value (assuming full deductibility for tax 
        purposes), (b) the corresponding deferred tax asset or liability should 
        be recognized as the difference between the fair value of the asset and 
        its tax basis multiplied by the tax rate, and (c) any difference between 
        the consideration paid and the sum of the fair value of the asset and 
        the recognized deferred tax amount is recognized as a purchase discount 
        allowance on the deferred tax.
        
        
- Retain the guidance in FASB Statement No. 109, Accounting for 
        Income Taxes, by continuing to prohibit the recognition of a 
        deferred tax liability for the portion of goodwill for which 
        amortization is not deductible for tax purposes.
        
Business 
      combinations. The Board continued redeliberations of its June 2005 
      Exposure Draft, Business Combinations, focusing on the accounting 
      for income tax assets and liabilities in a business combination. The Board 
      decided that:
      
        - An acquirer would measure income tax assets and liabilities acquired 
        in a business combination in accordance with Statement 109 and related 
        interpretive guidance, including FASB Interpretation No. 48, 
        Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes [affirming the 
        Exposure Draft proposal].
        
        
- An acquirer would recognize any changes in its 
        deferred tax assets that result from a business combination in profit 
        and loss or equity as of the acquisition date [affirming the Exposure 
        Draft proposal].
        
        
- An acquirer would apply the measurement period guidance in 
        accounting for changes to acquired deferred tax assets after the 
        acquisition. That is,
        
         
          - A change to a deferred tax asset valuation allowance within the 
          measurement period that results from new information about facts and 
          circumstances that existed as of the acquisition date would be 
          recognized through a corresponding adjustment to goodwill. However, 
          once goodwill is reduced to zero, an acquirer would recognize any 
          additional decreases of the valuation allowance as a reduction of 
          income tax expense.
          
          
- An acquirer would recognize all other changes in a deferred tax 
          asset valuation allowance through a corresponding adjustment to income 
          tax expense [affirming the Exposure Draft proposal, with slight 
          modifications].
          
 
- An acquirer would recognize changes to acquired income tax 
        uncertainties after the acquisition similarly to the accounting for 
        changes in acquired deferred tax assets. That is,
        
         
          - A change to an acquired income tax uncertainty within the 
          measurement period that results from new information about facts and 
          circumstances that existed as of the acquisition date would be 
          recognized through a corresponding adjustment to goodwill. However, 
          once goodwill is reduced to zero, an acquirer would recognize any 
          additional increases of the recognized income tax uncertainty as a 
          reduction of income tax expense.
          
          
- All other changes in the acquired income tax uncertainties would 
          be accounted for in accordance with Interpretation 48.
          
 
The Board also considered but rejected a suggestion made by some 
      respondents to the Exposure Draft that it make an exception to the 
      comprehensive recognition of deferred taxes for indefinite-lived 
      intangible assets [affirming the Exposure Draft proposal].
      The staff reported that the IASB had reached the same conclusions when 
      it discussed these issues at its January 2007 meeting, with the exception 
      of acquired income tax uncertainties. Because the IASB is developing 
      proposals for the treatment of tax uncertainties in the short-term 
      convergence project on income taxes, the IASB decided that, pending those 
      proposals, no changes should be made to IAS 12, Income Taxes, 
      relating to tax uncertainties.
      Statement 133 
      Implementation Issue—clarification of the application of the shortcut 
      method. The Board decided to proceed with the exposure of a 
      proposed Statement 133 Implementation Issue on the application of the 
      shortcut method. The proposed Implementation Issue will provide guidance 
      on the following practice issues on the application of the shortcut method 
      in paragraph 68 of FASB Statement No. 133, Accounting for Derivative 
      Instruments and Hedging Activities.
      
        - Amortizing debt—This hedge relationship meets the requirement in 
        paragraph 68(a) provided that the notional amount of the swap matches 
        the principal amount of the debt throughout the hedging relationship.
        
        
- Zero coupon debt—This hedge relationship violates paragraphs 68(a) 
        and 68(e) and, thus, does not qualify for the shortcut method.
        
        
- Trade date/settlement date—Changes in value of the swap between the 
        trade date of the swap (commitment date of the debt) and the settlement 
        date of the debt would not disqualify the hedging relationship from 
        applying the shortcut method, provided the timing difference was no more 
        than the typical settlement period seen in the market.
        
        
- Market convention rounding—In instances where the fair value of debt 
        at issuance differs slightly from its par amount due to a rounding down 
        of the coupon rate due to normal market conventions, the shortcut method 
        would be allowed.
        
        
- Paragraph 68(e)—The application of paragraph 68(e) will be clarified 
        to indicate that terms must neither be atypical nor invalidate the 
        assumption of no ineffectiveness to meet the paragraph’s criteria.
        
        
- Late hedging—Hedging relationships entered into subsequent to the 
        issuance of debt would fail the criteria in paragraph 68(e).
        
Transition guidance will resemble the approach found in Statement 133 
      Implementation Issue K5, "Transition Provisions for Applying the Guidance 
      in Statement 133 Implementation Issues." The Board directed the staff to 
      proceed to a draft of a proposed Implementation Issue for vote by written 
      ballot. The Board also directed the staff to research additional practice 
      issues in hedge accounting outside the scope of the shortcut method to be 
      discussed at a future Board meeting.
      FUTURE OPEN MEETINGS
      The following is a list of open meetings tentatively scheduled through 
      March. Because schedules may change, please check the FASB calendar before 
      finalizing your plans. Revisions to this list since the last issue of 
      Action Alert are highlighted in bold.
      Wednesday, February 21, 2007—FASB Board Meeting
Wednesday, February 
      21, 2007—FASB Education Session
Wednesday, February 28, 2007—FASB Board 
      Meeting
Wednesday, February 28, 2007—FASB Education 
      Session
Wednesday, March 7, 2007—FASB Board Meeting
Wednesday, March 
      7, 2007—FASB Education Session
Wednesday, March 14, 2007—FASB Board 
      Meeting
Wednesday, March 14, 2007—FASB Education Session
Thursday, 
      March 15, 2007—Emerging Issues Task Force Meeting
Tuesday, March 20, 
      2007—Financial Accounting Standards Advisory Council Meeting
Wednesday, 
      March 21, 2007—FASB Board Meeting
Wednesday, March 21, 2007—FASB 
      Education Session
Tuesday, March 27, 2007—Not-for-Profit Roundtable 
      Meeting
Wednesday, March 28, 2007—FASB Board Meeting
Wednesday, 
      March 28, 2007—FASB Education Session