- The ED had scoped out (excluded) leases with bargain purchase options and ownership transfers (also called "in-substance purchases") from the new lease accounting standard, stating that they should be treated as a sale & purchase and handled according to the revenue recognition standard (which is also at the ED stage). However, this decision was left over from when the boards had briefly planned to treat all lessor leases according to the "performance obligation" model, which would have been inappropriate for these transactions. With a derecognition model for lessors now in place, the need to separate out these types of leases is less evident. The boards agreed that leases with a bargain purchase option should be returned to the scope of the leases standard. It's not yet clear if leases with ownership transfer will be considered leases or sales.
- Relatedly, the boards are adjusting the treatment of purchase options. In the ED, these did not need to be accounted for until exercised. Now, they must be accounted for if there is a "significant economic incentive" to exercise them. It remains to be determined how the accounting will work if the conclusion of a significant economic incentive changes in the middle of the life of the lease (in either direction), though the boards concluded that they would not permit a switch between the "finance" and "other than finance" categories they set up last month.
- Short-term leases: The boards have decided that leases with a maximum lease term of 12 months or less, including renewal options, can be treated like current operating leases. They will not be shown on the balance sheet for lessees; income and expense will be shown on the income statement as currently (with rent leveling as needed). This will be an option; lessees & lessors can choose to treat short-term leases like other leases. However, the option must be chosen for all leases in an asset class, rather than lease by lease.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Purchase options and short-term leases
2015 implementation?
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
They hear you
Thursday, February 17, 2011
"More likely than not" is dead
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
ED response reviews
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Death knell for "more likely than not"?
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
EZ13 data entry tips #2
See yesterday’s blog entry for information on how to copy a lease, create escalating rents, or create the full series of rents for level principal payments.
Date entry
While you can enter a date by typing it in with slashes, exactly as shown, there are other options.
- Click on the down arrow next to a date to display a calendar (on the calendar, click on the month or year to change them, or the left or right arrow to go back or forward a month).
- Click on one portion of the date (month, day, year) and press + or – to add or subtract one to that number (note: this cycles without affecting the rest of the date, so if you highlight the day on 1/31/2011 and press +, the date changes to 1/1/2011, not 2/1/2011).
- You can enter just the last two digits of the year; EZ13 guesses the century, based on the setting for your computer. By default, the window is 1930-2029. You can change it in the Regional Options of Control Panel. (Control Panel, Regional & Language Options, click on Customize, click on the Date tab, change the end date of the window.)
- You can use letters with the same meaning as Quicken/Quickbooks assigns to them:
Y, R - beginning or end of YeaR
M, H - beginning or end of MontH
T - Today
F - Forward one day
B - Back one day
All of these (except T) are cumulative: for instance, if you press Y when at the beginning of a year, the date moves to the beginning of the prior year.
F and B are different from Quicken, which uses + and - for the same purpose.
Help
Context-sensitive help is available throughout EZ13. If the cursor is in a field when you press F1, you get a description of the field and what to enter there. If a different window is displayed, information about that window is provided. Virtually the entire manual is found in the help screens.