The Board will hold an educational, non-decision-making session to 
      discuss topics that are anticipated to be discussed at the November 15, 
      2006 Board meeting and other future Board meetings. Those topics will be 
      posted to the FASB calendar four 
      days prior to the education session.
      
      Conceptual 
      framework. The Boards discussed:
      
        - Procedures for finalizing the common conceptual framework
        
        
 - Project status and near-term plans, with a focus on the elements and 
        recognition phase (Phase B)
        
        
 - Measurement bases in an introduction to Milestone I of the measurement phase (Phase C).
        
 
      The Boards agreed that each Board, within the context of its current 
      GAAP hierarchy, will finalize the common framework as parts (chapters) are 
      completed and noted that later parts may include consequential amendments 
      to earlier parts. The Boards noted that the decision of how to finalize 
      the joint framework may need to be readdressed when the Boards discuss the 
      placement of the framework within the IASB and FASB hierarchies.
      Regarding the elements and recognition phase (Phase B), the Boards 
      supported the staff’s plan to consult with selected informal technical 
      experts, as well as their Advisory Committees, concerning the definition 
      of an asset while at the same time continuing work on remaining milestones 
      within Phase B. The Boards were also updated on the status and near-term 
      plans for the framework project.
      The Boards discussed an inventory of current and proposed measurement 
      bases for assets and liabilities, including new or revised terminology and 
      definitions that might alleviate problems of communicating about 
      measurement bases during the conceptual framework project. The Boards 
      generally supported the staff’s work, but made no decisions about the 
      inventory or terminology. The staff will continue to work on the inventory 
      and terminology. Those items also will be included in the measurement 
      roundtable discussions scheduled for January and February 2007. After the 
      roundtables and further refinement by the staff, the material discussed at 
      the joint meeting will be taken to the Boards again for their 
      decisions.
      Insurance 
      contracts. The purpose of the meeting was informational. The IASB 
      staff provided an overview of decisions reached by the IASB in its project 
      on insurance contracts. The staff described the IASB’s plan to issue a 
      discussion paper for public comment in the first quarter of 2007. The FASB 
      affirmed its plans to issue an Invitation to Comment containing the IASB’s 
      discussion paper for comment by its constituents.
      October 24, 2006 FASB/IASB Joint Board Meeting
      Memorandum of 
      understanding. The Boards discussed progress toward achieving the 
      milestones described in the February 2006 "Memorandum of Understanding 
      between the FASB and the IASB." The meeting was informational; no 
      decisions were reached.
      Business 
      combinations. As part of their redeliberations of their June 2005 
      Exposure Draft, Business Combinations, the Boards discussed the 
      measurement attribute for assets acquired and liabilities assumed in a 
      business combination and how noncontrolling interests should be measured 
      in a less than 100 percent acquisition. No decisions were reached. 
      Instead, the Boards directed the staff to further explore directly 
      measuring the fair value of noncontrolling interests in a business 
      combination. The Boards also asked the staff to further explore the 
      measurement differences that might arise if the assets acquired and 
      liabilities assumed in a business combination are measured using the 
      guidance in FASB Statement No. 157, Fair Value Measurements, versus 
      using the definition of fair value in IFRS 3, Business 
      Combinations.
      Financial 
      statement presentation. The Boards continued their discussion of 
      the application of the working principles to the statements of financial 
      position, comprehensive income, and cash flows of a nonfinancial 
      institution.
      Financing Section and Investing Category
      The Boards decided that in addition to equity, the financing section 
      should include financial assets and financial liabilities (as defined in 
      the literature) that management views as part of the financing of the 
      entity’s business activities; those items are referred to as financing 
      assets and liabilities. Financing assets and related changes would be 
      classified in the financing asset category in each of the financial 
      statements. Financing liabilities and related changes would be classified 
      in the financing liability category in each of the financial 
      statements.
      The Boards decided that the investing category in the business section 
      should include assets and liabilities not classified in the financing 
      section that management views as not integral to the entity’s main 
      business activities (referred to as investing assets and 
      liabilities). Investing assets and liabilities and related changes 
      would be classified in the investing category in each of the financial 
      statements.
      The Boards directed the staff to develop similarly broad guidelines for 
      classifying assets and liabilities in the operating category in the 
      business section and decided that an entity should be required to explain, 
      as a matter of accounting policy, its basis (or bases) for classifying 
      assets and liabilities in the financing categories, the investing 
      category, and the operating category. Any change in the basis for 
      classification would be viewed as a change in accounting policy and would 
      be implemented through retrospective application to prior periods.
      The Boards decided that the financial statement presentation project 
      should address presentation issues related to postretirement benefits, 
      including pensions, based on the current net reporting requirements for 
      those benefits in both the statement of financial position and the 
      statement of comprehensive income. Thus, an entity’s net pension 
      obligation (or asset) would be classified in a single category in the 
      statement of financial position (presumably the operating category) and 
      the related net pension cost and cash flows would be classified in that 
      same category in the statements of comprehensive income and cash flows, 
      respectively.
      Presenting Information about the Short- and Long-Term Nature of 
      Assets and Liabilities
      The Boards decided that an entity should be required to present short- 
      and long-term subcategories in each of the categories or sections on the 
      face of the statement of financial position. An asset or liability would 
      be classified as short term if the shorter of its (a) contractual maturity 
      or (b) expected realization or settlement is within one year. An entity 
      with an operating cycle longer than one year would be encouraged to 
      describe its operating cycle in the notes to financial statements.
      Given that decision, the Boards decided that no other information about 
      liquidity should be required to be presented in the notes to the financial 
      statements except for details of the maturities of long-term assets and 
      liabilities that have a contractual term (such as contractual receivables 
      and lease obligations). Total short-term assets, total long-term assets, 
      total assets, and similar totals for liabilities also would be disclosed 
      in the notes to financial statements.
      The Boards confirmed that deferred taxes would be classified as short- 
      or long-term based on the classification of the related asset or liability 
      (the approach used in FASB Statement No. 109, Accounting for Income 
      Taxes).
      Measurement
      The Boards agreed to proposed modifications to the project working 
      principle related to measurement. In applying that working principle, the 
      Boards decided that an entity should disclose in the summary of 
      significant accounting policies information about the measurement bases of 
      the assets and liabilities presented on the statement of financial 
      position. The Boards also decided that a line item in the statement of 
      financial position should not include assets or liabilities that are 
      measured differently.
      The Boards decided that the financial presentation standard should 
      include a general requirement that the notes to financial statements 
      describe any significant uncertainty in the current measure of assets and 
      liabilities and explain why the measured amount was selected.
      The Boards decided that the financial statements should provide 
      information that will allow a user to distinguish between the various 
      changes in assets and liabilities, noting that some are due to fair value 
      changes and changes in estimates (that is, remeasurements) while other 
      changes in assets and liabilities are not due to remeasurements, but are 
      due to cash transactions or accruals. The Boards directed the staff to 
      consider which types of changes should be presented separately, which 
      should be aggregated, and the manner in which that information should be 
      presented.
      Other Comprehensive Income and the Mechanism of Recycling
      The Boards decided that the project should develop a financial 
      statement presentation format that would accommodate their long-term goal 
      of other comprehensive income items being classified in the same manner as 
      all other changes in assets and liabilities. However, in the short term, 
      it may be necessary to keep other comprehensive income items in a separate 
      section of the statement of comprehensive income.
      The Boards decided that none of the subtotals in the statement of 
      comprehensive income should have a "timing" difference; that is, the 
      subtotals should be based on changes in assets and liabilities that have 
      occurred in the current period and, thus, the mechanism of recycling 
      should be eliminated. However, in the short term, the changes in assets 
      and liabilities that are currently reclassified (recycled) between other 
      comprehensive income and net income may need to be shown separately from 
      the current-period changes. The Boards acknowledged that given those 
      decisions and the proposed working format, there would not be a net 
      income subtotal in the statement of comprehensive income.
      Recognizing that changes to current standards that give rise to other 
      comprehensive income items will need to be made to achieve those long-term 
      goals, the Boards directed the staff to develop a presentation format that 
      can be used in the interim (until the long-term goal can be achieved). The 
      Boards also directed the staff to develop a plan for achieving that 
      long-term goal, such as whether those issues would be addressed in 
      separate projects or as part of the financial statement presentation 
      project.
      Revenue 
      recognition. The Boards affirmed their goal of issuing a due 
      process document on revenue recognition by the end of 2007. The Boards 
      decided that the due process document should explain, illustrate, and 
      compare both the customer consideration model and the fair value model. 
      They also agreed that the staff (in consultation with a small group of 
      Board members) should further develop both models before bringing them to 
      the Boards for evaluation, discussion, and possible additional 
      development.
      October 25, 2006 FASB Board Meeting
      Agenda 
      decision: Statement 155 implementation issues. The Board decided 
      to add a project to its agenda. The Board decided to:
      
        - Include a narrow scope exception for securitized interests that 
        contain only an embedded derivative that is tied to the prepayment risk 
        of the underlying prepayable financial assets. If a securitized interest 
        contains any other terms that affect some or all of the cash flows or 
        the value of other exchanges required by the contract in a manner 
        similar to a derivative instrument and if those terms create an embedded 
        derivative that requires bifurcation (ignoring the effects of the 
        embedded call options in the underlying financial assets), that 
        securitized interest would not meet the narrow scope exception and would 
        therefore be evaluated pursuant to FASB Statement No. 133, Accounting 
        for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities.
        
        
 - Have the guidance’s effective date prior to the reporting deadline 
        of periods ending December 31, 2006.
        
        
 - Address early adoption of FASB Statement No. 155, Accounting for 
        Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments, in the following ways:
        
        
          - For entities that early adopted Statement 155 and did not 
          bifurcate embedded prepayment derivatives (consistent with the 
          tentative decisions), no transition provisions are required. However, 
          the Board’s guidance will specifically address this scenario to ensure 
          that there is no confusion over the possibility of restating prior 
          financial statements.
          
          
 - For entities that early adopted Statement 155, identified embedded 
          derivatives that would otherwise be included in the proposed scope 
          exception, and that elected to measure the entire hybrid instrument at 
          fair value, the Board’s guidance should be applied retrospectively. 
          The company will be provided with the opportunity to elect any 
          appropriate FASB Statement No. 115, Accounting for Certain 
          Investments in Debt and Equity Securities, classification as part 
          of that retrospective application. If the company elects a trading 
          classification under Statement 115, no adjustment to the changes in 
          fair value previously recorded in the income statement is required. 
          However, if the company elected a classification of 
          available-for-sale, the retrospective application would result in a 
          reclassification from the income statement to accumulated other 
          comprehensive income.
          
          
 - For entities that early adopted Statement 155 and identified and 
          bifurcated embedded derivatives that would otherwise be included in 
          the proposed scope exception, the Board’s guidance should be applied 
          retrospectively. This would result in the reversal of any changes in 
          the fair value of the embedded derivative that were recorded in income 
          during the prior interim period(s). The combined instrument should be 
          recorded, both initially and subsequently, based on the Statement 115 
          classification previously elected for the host instrument.
          
 
         - Issue the tentative guidance as a Statement 133 Implementation Issue 
        with a 30-day public comment period.
        
 
      CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK—MEASUREMENT
ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSIONS
      The FASB and IASB will hold roundtable discussions on measurement in 
      conjunction with their joint conceptual framework project in three 
      locations during January and February 2007, as follows:
      January 16–17, 2007—Hong Kong, PRC
January 29, 2007—London, 
      UK
February 1, 2007—Norwalk, Connecticut, USA
      Objective
      The objective of these roundtables is threefold:
      
        - To hear the views of representative IASB and FASB constituents on 
        measurement early in the measurement phase of the conceptual framework 
        project. The discussion around this objective will be unstructured. Any 
        views on measurement that constituents wish to express are welcome.
        
        
 - To discuss whether the list of measurement issues identified in the 
        plan for the measurement phase of the conceptual framework project is 
        appropriate and substantially complete.
        
        
 - To discuss whether the initial inventory of potential measurement 
        bases prepared by the project staff and the terminology associated with 
        that inventory is substantially complete and understandable.
        
 
      Participation
      In contrast to roundtables previously held by the Boards, these 
      roundtables are not based on a due process document for which public 
      comment has been invited and comment letters have been received. Those who 
      would like to participate in one of the measurement roundtable discussions 
      are asked to register by clicking on this registration link. Participants will be selected 
      from those who register so as to provide as broad a representation of 
      constituent groups as possible. Prospective participants are asked to 
      register no later than November 17, 2006. Those selected to participate 
      will be notified by email by November 27, 2006.
      Observers
      The roundtables will be open to observation by the press and public and 
      will be audio taped for later listening on the IASB and FASB websites. As 
      space for observers may be limited, those who would like to observe a 
      roundtable session are asked to register by clicking on this observer link.
      Background material
      No background material will be provided to participants in relation to 
      the first objective of the roundtables. The expression of any view about 
      measurement as it relates to the joint conceptual framework project (in 
      contrast to measurement issues in particular standards or standards 
      projects) will be welcomed. Limited background material will be prepared 
      to support the second and third objectives of the roundtables. These 
      materials will be distributed to participants and made available on the 
      IASB and FASB websites by the end of November 2006.
      Date and location details
      Hong Kong, PRC
      The following is a list of open meetings tentatively scheduled through 
      December. 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.