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Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

Financial Reportingfor Leases

Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12

Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Page 2: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

2RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Learning objectives

1. The difference between capital leases and operating leases.

2. Lessee’s incentives to keep leases off the balance sheet.

3. The criteria used to classify leases on the lessee’s books.

4. The treatment of executory costs, residual values, and other aspects of lease contracts.

5. The effects of capital lease versus operating lease treatment on the lessee’s financial statements.

6. How analysts can adjust for ratio distortions from off-balance sheet leases when comparing firms.

Page 3: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

3RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Learning objectives:Continued

7. Lessor accounting rules and how the financial reporting incentives of lessors are very different from that of lessees.

8. The difference between sales-type, direct financing, and operating lease treatment by lessors.

9. How different lease accounting treatments can affect income and net asset balances.

10.Sale/leaseback arrangements and other special leasing situations.

11.How to use lease footnote disclosures.

Page 4: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

4RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lease contracts

A lease contract conveys the right to use an asset in exchange for a fee (the lease payment).

At its inception, a lease is a mutually unperformed contract meaning that neither party has yet performed all of the duties called for in the contract.

The accounting for unperformed contracts is controversial.

LesseeLessorWants to use the asset

Owns the asset

Right to use

Lease payment

Page 5: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

5RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Evolution of lease accounting:Overview of the two approaches

Page 6: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

6RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessee accounting:SFAS No. 13 criteria for capital lease treatment

If, at inception, the lease satisfies any one or more of the following criteria, it must be treated as a capital lease on the books of the lessee:

The lease transfers ownership of the asset to the lessee at the end of the lease term.

The lease contains a bargain purchase option.

The non-cancelable lease term is 75% or more of the estimated economic life of the leased asset.

The present value of the minimum lease payments equals or exceeds 90% of the current fair market value of the leased asset.

Page 7: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

7RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessee accounting:Capital lease treatment illustrated

SFAS No. 13 requires that the lease asset and liability initially be recorded at a dollar amount equal to the discounted present value of the minimum lease payments:

Page 8: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

8RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessee accounting:Effective interest method

Page 9: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

9RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessee accounting:Capital lease summary

Page 10: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

10RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessor accounting:Capital and operating leases

From the lessor’s perspective, a capital lease must both: Transfer property rights in the leased asset to the lessee, and Allow reasonably accurate estimates regarding the amount and

collectibility of the eventual net cash flows to the lessor.

When both conditions are not simultaneously met, the lease must be treated as an operating lease.

Lease

Sales-type Direct-financing Operating

Capital Operating

Page 11: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

11RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessor accounting:Expanded decision tree

Page 12: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

12RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Lessor accounting:Implied rate of return on direct-financing lease

Page 13: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

13RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Additional leasing aspects:Sale and leaseback

First Company gets a $1 million cash infusion and can treat the entire annual rental ($120,000) as a deductible expense for tax purposes.

The same SFAS No. 13 criteria are used to determine if the lease qualifies for capital or operating lease treatment.

SecondCompany

FirstCompany

“Sale” transaction transfers title to asset

“Lease back” allows use to be retained

Page 14: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

14RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Additional leasing aspects:Leveraged lease

Lessor borrows money from a third-party. This non-recourse loan provides the “leverage.”

Lessor then buys an asset and leases it.

A leveraged lease does not affect the lessee’s accounting.

The lessor must use the “direct-financing” approach and special details apply (SFAS No. 13).

Lessor Bank

Lessee

Non-recourse financing

Standardlease

contract

1

2

Page 15: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

15RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Summary

The treatment of leases in SFAS No. 13 represents a compromise between the “unperformed contracts” and “property-rights” approaches.

SFAS No. 13 adopts a middle-of-the-road approach and specifies precise intermediate circumstances under which leases are capitalized.

Several of the lease capitalization criteria are arbitrary, which allows lease contracts to be structured in ways that avoid required capitalization.

Because the proportion of operating lease payments to capital lease payments can vary greatly between firms in the same industry, analysts must often constructively capitalize operating leases to make valid comparisons.

Page 16: Financial Reporting for Leases Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 12 Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

16RCJM: Chapter 12 © 2009

Summary concluded

The FASB has issued 10 statements on leases subsequent to SFAS No. 13 and numerous interpretations of the original statement in an effort to close the loopholes for keeping leases off the balance sheet.

New loopholes are likely to be discovered and invented.

When lessors use the capital lease approach, income recognition is accelerated and financial statement ratios are improved. It is not surprising that capital leases appear frequently on lessor’s financial statements.