Title: Asset Impairment, Idle Assets, and Insurance Recoveries
1GASB Update
Maryland GFOA Winter Conference January 21, 2005
2Comprehensive Implementation Guide (QA)
- Released in September 2004
- Updates the 2003 edition which consolidated the
existing guides - Statement 40 Guide incorporated
- 800 pages, includes 1,245 questions
- Exhibits and exercises
- Annual Updates
3Statement No. 40Deposit and Investment Risk
Disclosures
Issued March 2003 Effective for Periods
Beginning After June 15, 2004
4Deposits and Investments Risks
- Risks are the focus
- Fair value considers variabilities of cash flows
discounted for time value and risk
5Disclosures by Investment Type
General Principles
- Investments should be organized by investment
type, such as - U.S. Treasuries
- Corporate bonds
- Commercial paper
- Dissimilar investments should not be aggregated.
6Level of Detail
General Principles
- Generally, the disclosures should be made for
the primary government for which disclosures are
essential for fair presentation.
7Level of Detail
General Principles
- Risk disclosures should also be made for
governmental and business-type activities,
individual major funds, nonmajor funds in the
aggregate, or fiduciary fund types when the risk
exposures are significantly greater than the
deposit and investment risks of the primary
government.
8Level of DetailAn example
General Principles
- A capital projects fund, because of its
investment in one issuer of corporate bonds, is
exposed to a concentration of credit risk.
However, the primary governments total
investments might not indicate a concentration
risk. In this case, additional disclosure should
be made for the capital projects funds exposure
to a concentration of credit risk.
9Interest Rate Risk
- The risk that changes in interest rates may
adversely affect an investments fair value - Five methods identified, must choose one
- Specific identification
- Weighted average maturity
- Duration
- Simulation model
- Segmented time distributions
10Specific Identification
11Segmented Time Distribution Investment Maturities
(in Years)
12Highly Sensitive Investments
- A debt investment with contract terms that make
the investments fair value highly sensitive to
interest rate changes.
13Highly Sensitive InvestmentsExamples
- Inverse floaters
- Variable coupons with multiplier (for example,
coupon varies by 125 percent of London Interbank
Offered RateLIBOR) - Collateralized mortgage obligations, such as
interest-only or residual tranches
14Credit Risk
- Disclose credit quality as of year-end
- Includes corporate debt, state and local
governments, external investment pools - Exempt Debt investments with explicit guarantee
of US governmentGNMA - If not rated, indicate as much
15Custodial Credit Risk
- Disclose only Category 3
- Deposits that are uninsured and uncollateralized
- Uninsured investments that are either held by
the - Counterparty, or
- Counterpartys trust department, but not in the
name of the government
16Concentration of Credit Risk
- Defined as investments of more than 5 percent in
any one issuer - Excluded
- US government debt
- Debt explicitly guaranteed by the US government
- Pooled investments such as mutual funds or
external investment pools
17Foreign Currency Risk
- Applies to deposits and investments
- Disclose currency
- If debt security, disclose interest rate risk
18Deposit and Investment Policies
- Disclose only those policies that are relevant to
the risks that are disclosed. - In other words, if there is no risk disclosure,
no policy disclosure is required.
19Effective Date
- Fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2004
- Earlier application is encouraged
20Statement No. 42Impairment of Capital Assets
and Insurance Recoveries
Issued in November 2003
21Definition
- Asset impairment is a significant unexpected
decline in the service utility of a capital asset - Service utility is the usable capacity to provide
service - Service utility is NOT the same as utilization
22Identifying Impairments
- Events or changes in circumstance that indicate
impairment should be prominent - Generally expected to have prompted discussion by
governing board, management, or media
23Indicators of Impairment
- Evidence of physical damage
- Change in legal or environmental factors
- Technological development or evidence of
obsolescence - A change in the manner or expected duration of
usage of an asset - Construction stoppage.
24Impairment Test
- The magnitude of the decline in utility
- The unexpected nature of the decline in utility
25Has The Impairment Test Been Met?
26Temporary Impairments
- Impairments are assumed to be permanent, unless..
- Evidence is available to demonstrate impairment
is temporary - Temporary impairments should not be recorded
27Measurement of Impairment
- Assets that are continuing to be used by the
government - Restoration cost approach for assets with
physical damage - Service units approach for legal/ environmental
changes, technological obsolescence, change in
duration - Deflated depreciation replacement cost for assets
with a change in manner of use
28Measurement of Impairment
- Assets that are not being used and construction
stoppage - Lower of carrying value or fair value
29Reporting Impairment Losses
- As program expense, special item, or
extraordinary item per Statement 34 - Disclose amount and identity if not evident from
financial statements
30Assets That Do Not Meet Impairment Test
- If asset presents an indicator of impairment,
- but does not meet the magnitude test and is not
part of the normal lifecycle, - Reevaluate depreciation estimates
- Remaining useful life
- Salvage value
31Insurance Recoveries
- Net an impairment loss with insurance recovery
- Replacement/restoration of asset is a separate
transaction - Applies to all insurance recoveries, not only
those related to impairment
32Insurance Recoveries
- Governmental funds would not report an impairment
loss. Insurance recovery would be reported as an
Other Financing Source. Replacement would be
expenditure. - Government-wide, proprietary net impairment loss
with insurance recovery. Replacement is
capitalized.
33Effective Date
- Years beginning after December 15, 2004
- Retroactive implementation
34Other Postemployment Benefits
Statements 43 and 45
35Other Postemployment Benefits (OPEB)
- Refers to postemployment benefits other than
pensions. - OPEB includes
- Postemployment healthcare benefits (medical,
dental, vision, hearing, etc.) - Other forms of postemployment benefits when
provided separately from a pension plan (e.g.,
life insurance, long-term care, cash stipends if
compensation for services). - Also. . . . .
36Implicit Rate Subsidies
- Difference between premium charged and rate if
retirees rate calculated as separate group - Original ED proposed to not require measurement
if there is no explicit employer cash commitment - Board reversed its positionresulted in
reexposure in January 2004
37Other Postemployment Benefits (OPEB)
- OPEB does not include
- Termination offers and benefits
- for example, early retirement incentive programs
- Sick leave conversions
- treat as compensated absences under Statement 16
38Substance of the OPEB Transaction
- Postemployment benefits (pensions and OPEB) are
part of the compensation for services rendered by
employees (that is, are part of an exchange
transaction). - Benefits are earned, and obligations accrue or
accumulate, during employment. - Payment is deferred until after employment.
39Current OPEB Practice (Generally)
- Plans are financed on a pay-as-you-go basis.
- The measurement focus of financial reporting is
on contributions or benefits paidoutflows of
current financial resources. - Long-term financial implications of the OPEB
transaction, including the accrued obligation and
the potential demand on future cash flows, are
not reported. - And often have not been estimated
40Objectives of Developing an Accrual-Basis Standard
- Recognize OPEB cost (expense) systematically over
employees years of service - Provide relevant information about
- the accrued OPEB obligation
- the cost of services including the cost of OPEB
- the progress made in funding the plan
- Report pensions and OPEB consistently
41A GASB Statement 27 Approach
- All postemployment benefits (OPEB as well as
pensions) will be reported using the same general
approach. - May be characterized as funding friendly in
regard to OPEB because - It harmonizes financial reporting with funding to
the extent appropriate for accrual accounting
purposes. - An employer that chooses to fund OPEB, now or
later, need not use different measures for
financial reporting and funding.
42Measurement Approach
- Broad Steps
- Project cash outflows for benefits.
- Substantive plan continuation
- Periodic actuarial valuations
- Alternative measurement method
- 2. Discount projected benefits to present value
(PV). - Long-term earnings rate
- 3. Allocate the PV of projected benefits to
periods using an acceptable actuarial cost method
(choose from six methods). - ARCNormal cost, UAAL
43Recognition in Government-wide and Proprietary
Fund Financial Statements
- Employers should report OPEB expense in an amount
equal to annual OPEB cost for the period,
regardless of the amount paid - The cumulative difference between amounts
expensed and contributions or benefits paid
creates a liability (or asset) called the net
OPEB obligation
44RecognitionGovernmental Fund Financial Statements
- Employers should recognize as OPEB expenditures
the amount contributed to the plan or expected
to be liquidated with expendable available
financial resources (no change)
45Contributions
- An employer would be deemed to have contributed
to an OPEB plan if the employer - Made direct payments of benefits,
- Paid insurance premiums, or
- Irrevocably transferred assets to a dedicated
trust, or third party acting in that capacity, to
fund benefits as they come due in the future
46Frequency of Calculations
- Plans with total membership over 200
- actuarial valuations at least biennially
- Plans with total membership of 200 or
feweractuarial valuations at least triennially - Plans with total membership of 100 or
feweroption to use alternative calculation
method with certain simplifying assumptions
(defined and illustrated)
47Note Disclosure Changes (Highlights)
- Required note disclosure of the funded status of
single-employer and agent plans in which the
employer participates as of the most recent
actuarial valuation
48Note Disclosure Changes (Highlights)
- Expanded explanatory disclosures about actuarial
methods and assumptions in an attempt to make
information understandable to a wider range of
financial report users
49Required Schedule ofFunding Progress (RSI)
- Discloses multi-year trend information about the
UAAL and progress made in funding the plan, as
for pension plans, including - Actuarial accrued liability (AAL)
- Actuarial value of plan assetsgenerally
- a market related value
- UAAL (AAL minus plan assets)
50Required Schedule ofFunding Progress (RSI)
- Funded ratio (actuarial value of plan assets/AAL)
- Ratio of UAAL to covered payroll
- Notes to RSI regarding changes affecting the
interpretation of trends in the amounts reported
51Schedule of Funding Progress New Requirement
- An employer that uses the aggregate actuarial
cost method must prepare the Schedule of Funding
Progress using, as a surrogate, another actuarial
cost method (entry age) that separately measures
and amortizes an AAL.
52Implementation Provisions
- Prospective implementation
- Initial net OPEB obligation may be set at zero
however, preparers that have actuarial
information for prior years may calculate and
report a net OPEB obligation at transition.
53Effective Dates
- Phased implementation FYE 6/30/2008 to FYE
6/30/2010 - Based on same phase used for Statement 34
implementation
54Statement No. 44
- Economic Condition Reporting
- The Statistical Section
55The Statistical SectionObjectives
- For assessing economic condition
- Provide perspective, context, and detail relative
to the financial statements - Provide information (outside the financial
statements) about the demographic and economic
environment
56The Statistical Section
- Applicability
- Any government that provides a statistical
section - Focus
- On the primary government
- Status
- Supplementary information
57Types of Statistical Section Information
- Financial trends information
- Revenue capacity informationfactors affecting
ability to generate own-source revenues - Debt capacity information
- Demographic and economic information
- Understand socio-economic environment
- Facilitate comparisons over time and among
governments - Operating informationcontextual information
about operations and resources
58Transition Provisions
- Effective Date Periods Beginning after June 15,
2005 - Retroactive reporting encouraged, but not
required - Encouraged, but not required, to report
government-wide information retroactively to the
year Statement 34 was implemented
59Pollution Remediation Obligations
60Pollution Remediation Obligations
- What types of obligations are out there?
- Range from superfund sites to brownfields
- Issues to be addressed in the project
- What is the obligating event?
- How should the obligation be measured?
- Preliminary Views expected in Early 2005
61Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Scope
- Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Except Statement 18 (landfills)
- No asset retirement obligations
- No pollution prevention obligations
- Cost accumulation, not fair value
- Current cost, not present value
- Expected cash flow, not best estimate
62Two ContingenciesNeither is Probable
63Probable Together
64Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Recognition Triggersliability when.)
- Imminent endangerment compels action
- Named as responsible party
- Named in lawsuit to enforce action
- Cleanup or containment commenced
- Recognize component when measurable (Benchmarks
approach)
65Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Current Cost based on reasonable and supportable
assumptions about future events - laws expected to be in effect
- technology expected to be used
66Pollution Remediation Obligations
- What costs are to be included in liability?
- Pre-cleanup site assessment, feasibility study,
design, etc. - Cleanup, containment, disposal activities
- Oversight and enforcement costs
- Operation and maintenance of the remedy and
monitoring - Entity must decide whether to include indirect
and non-incremental costs
67Pollution Remediation Obligations
- What is the debit entry?
- Generally expense
- Can defer expense under FASB Statement 71
- Capitalize in certain situations
- Do NOT record liabilities for capitalizable costs!
68Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Capitalize if
- Cleanup to prepare property for sale (limited to
FV) - Polluted property bought and cleaned for service
(cap) - Asset impaired and cleanup restores lost service
utility (cap) - -Capitalize if incurred within a reasonable
period
69Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Recoveries--net against Expense
- Recoveries from Other Parties
- Recognize consistent with liability (expected
cash flow technique) - Insurance Recoveries
- Recognize as separate recovery assets when
realized or realizable - If not realized or realizableoffset against
liabilities
70Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Accretion
- Adjust liability annually for changes
- Inflation or deflation
- Price increases/decreases for specific cost
elements - Changes in technology
- Changes in laws or regulations
- Same as Statement 18
71Pollution Remediation Obligations
- Timetable
- Preliminary ViewsMarch 2005
- Exposure DraftDecember 2005
- StatementFall-Winter 2006
72Statement 46-- Net Assets Restricted byEnabling
Legislation
73Background
- Statement 34 identifies three sources of
restrictions on net assetsexternal parties,
constitutional provisions, and enabling
legislation - Enabling legislation is a type of legislation
that authorizes the raising of a new revenue
(i.e., it does not earmark existing revenues) and
that contains a legally enforceable restriction
on the purpose for which those revenues can be
used
74Objectives
- Statement 46 is intended to address difficulties
some governments were having interpreting the
legal enforceability requirement - Statement 46 also specifies how net assets should
be reported when the circumstances surrounding
enabling legislation change
75Legal Enforceability
- Legal enforceability means that an external
partysuch as citizens, a public interest group,
or the judiciarycan compel a government to abide
by the restriction - Legal enforceability remains a matter of
professional judgment, which may include
reviewing determinations for similar legislation,
obtaining the advice of legal counsel, or other
actions
76Legal Enforceability
- Statement 46 emphasizes that restrictions should
be reviewed on a case-by-case basis - If a restriction is found to no longer be legally
enforceable, a government may reevaluate the
legal enforceability of similar restrictions, but
should not necessarily conclude that all such
restrictions are unenforceable - Prohibitions against one legislature binding a
subsequent legislature generally are not, on
their own, sufficient basis for determining a
restriction is not enforceable
77Changes in Circumstances
- If new enabling legislation is passed to replace
prior enabling legislation, or if resources are
used for purposes not specified by enabling
legislation, a government should review the legal
enforceability of the restriction - Statement 46 specifies the conditions under which
net assets should be reported as restricted or
unrestricted and provides illustrative scenarios
78Reporting Requirement
- Statement 46 requires that the portion of net
assets restricted by enabling legislation should
be disclosed in the notes to the financial
statements - The Exposure Draft proposed to require separate
display of enabling legislation restrictions on
the face of the statement of net assets, but the
Board changed the requirement to disclosure in
response to the public comments it received
79Effective Date
- Statement 46 is effective for periods beginning
after June 15, 2005
80Other Projects
- TB 2004-2, Recognition of Pension and Other
Postemployment Benefit Expenditures/Expenses and
Liabilities by Cost-Sharing Employers - Accounting for Termination Benefits, ED released
December 10, 2004, comments due by March 11, 2005 - Derivatives and Hedging
- Sales and Pledges of Receivables and Future
Revenues
81Questions
- Ken Schermann
- Telephone(203) 956-5206
- E-mail krschermann_at_gasb.org
- Web sitewww.gasb.org