New lease Accounting Standard

New lease Accounting Standard

International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) published the new lease accounting standard

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According to KPMG International, the new standard brings added transparency to the balance sheet.

On 13 January the new lease accounting standard was published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). The new standard requires companies to bring most leases on-balance sheet, recognising new assets and liabilities. At present, many analysts adjust financial statements to reflect lease transactions that companies hold off-balance sheet.

On 13 January the new lease accounting standard[1] was published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). The new standard requires companies to bring most leases on-balance sheet, recognising new assets and liabilities. At present, many analysts adjust financial statements to reflect lease transactions that companies hold off-balance sheet.

Commenting on the new standard, Kimber Bascom, KPMG's global IFRS leasing standards leader, said: "All companies that lease major assets for use in their business will see an increase in reported assets and liabilities. This will affect a wide variety of sectors, from airlines that lease aircraft to retailers that lease stores. The larger the lease portfolio, the greater the impact on key reporting metrics."

Companies are currently required to disclose details of their off-balance sheet leases and analysts use this information to adjust published financial statements. Bascom continued: "Current lease accounting requires financial statement users to adjust for off-balance-sheet leases. The key change will be the increase in transparency and comparability. For the first time, analysts will be able to see a company's own assessment of its lease liabilities, calculated using a prescribed methodology that all companies reporting under IFRS will be required to follow."

The impacts are not limited to the balance sheet. "For example, certain Russian companies may be impacted by the changes in the criteria used to determine whether a contract contains the elements of lease. In particular some services or goods supply contracts which are currently accounted for as lease may be excluded from the scope of the new standard," says Aram Asatryan, IFRS Partner, KPMG in Russia and the CIS.

The new standard takes effect in January 2019. Before that, companies will need to gather significant additional data about their leases, and make new estimates and calculations that will need to be updated periodically. Brian O'Donovan of KPMG's International Standards Group commented: "The new requirements are less complex and less costly to apply than the IASB's earlier proposals. However, there will still be a compliance cost. For some companies, a key challenge will be gathering the required data. For others, more judgemental issues will dominate - for example, identifying which transactions contain leases."

The accounting changes do not affect cash flows directly. However, given the scale of the accounting change, KPMG expects that companies will be keen to understand the size of the lease liabilities arising from transactions they enter into between now and 2019. O'Donovan continued: "No one wants to see accounting drive business behaviours - the tail shouldn't wag the dog. But if accounting consequences are in the mix when a company is considering a deal, then the mix will change. For example, this standard essentially kills sale-and-leaseback as an off-balance-sheet financing proposition."

Some key impacts cannot yet be quantified. O'Donovan continued: "Companies won't have the full picture until other accounting and regulatory bodies have responded. For example, the new accounting could prompt changes in the tax treatment of leases. And a key question for the financial sector is how the prudential regulators will treat the new assets and liabilities for regulatory capital purposes."

The US Financial Accounting Standards Board (the FASB) will publish a new US GAAP standard on lease accounting shortly. Although the IASB and FASB worked together on lease accounting for years, their final standards feature different lessee accounting models. Bascom concluded: "It's ironic that the outcome of this long-running convergence project will be divergence in accounting for common lease types. The new IFRS and US GAAP standards will introduce differences in the profile and presentation of annual lease expense where none currently exist, reducing comparability between the two major accounting frameworks."

 

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