Title: Financial Accounting Standards Board
1Financial Accounting Standards Board
- Derivatives Hedging
- Accounting for Energy Derivatives Seminar
- September 25-26, 2008
- Kevin Stoklosa
2Disclaimer
- The views expressed in this presentation are my
own and do not represent positions of the
Financial Accounting Standards Board. - Positions of the FASB Board are arrived at only
after extensive due process and deliberations.
3Derivatives and Hedging
- Derivatives Disclosures Statement 161
- Disclosures about Credit Derivatives
- Hedging Project
4Derivatives Disclosures S161Background
- Statement 133 has been criticized by constituents
for lacking transparent disclosures. Sources of
criticism include - November 2004 Fitch Ratings Report
- Berkshire Hathaways 2002 Annual Report
- Numerous published articles
- Comments from Constituents
- The Board agreed to add a project to its agenda
at the March 9, 2005 Board meeting - Exposure Draft was issued on December 8, 2006
- Final Statement issued March 2008
5Derivatives Disclosures S161Objectives
- The Board decided that the disclosure
objectives are to provide an enhanced
understanding of - How and why an entity uses derivatives
- How derivatives and related hedged items are
accounted for under Statement 133 and its related
interpretations, and - How derivatives affect an entitys financial
position, results of operations, and cash flows.
6Derivatives Disclosures S161Scope
- The scope of the final Statement is limited to
all derivatives and all related hedged items
accounted for under Statement 133. - The Board decided not to add a fourth objective
to require information about an entitys risk
exposures and strategy for mitigating those risks
- The Board decided not to expand the scope to
include all financial instruments.
7Derivatives Disclosures S161Tabular
Disclosures
- Final Statement requires 2 tables
- Those 2 tables focus on (1) where in balance
sheet derivatives are located and what is the
fair value (balance sheet table) and (2) where in
income statement change in fair value is located
and what is the change in fair value (income
statement table) - Information on hedged items is required but does
not have to be part of the tabular format
8Derivatives Disclosures S161Other Required
Disclosures
- Final Statement requires disclosure of the
existence and nature of credit-risk-related
contingent features embedded in derivative
instruments - Disclosure must include the aggregate fair value
of derivative instruments that contain those
features - Disclosure must include the aggregate fair value
of assets posted as collateral, the aggregate
fair value of additional assets that would be
required to be posted as collateral and/or needed
to settle the instrument if the contingent
features were triggered - Final Statement requires entities to
qualitatively discuss, by underlying risk, its
objectives for holding or issuing derivative
instruments - Final Statement requires entities to provide
information that would enable users to understand
its volume of derivative activity
9Derivatives DisclosuresEffective Date
- The effective date for the final Statement is for
interim periods beginning after November 15, 2008
and fiscal years that include those interim
periods - In the first fiscal year this Statement is
applied, information related to interim periods
that began on or prior to November 15, 2008 may
be omitted. Periods covered must be identified - For example, March 31 fiscal year entity must
provide disclosures for its 4th Qtr interim
period ending 3/31/09 in its 2009 annual
financial statements
10Disclosures about Credit DerivativesBackground
- There is a current focus on credit default swaps
given turmoil in credit markets - 62 trillion estimated notional amount of
outstanding CDS - On actively traded names CDS volume is
substantially greater than outstanding debt
making it difficult to settle contracts - When Delphi defaulted - 28 billion outstanding
CDS against 5.2 billion of bonds
11Disclosures about Credit DerivativesObjectives
- Improve disclosures about credit derivatives and
guarantees to help users better understand their
impact on an entitys financial position,
financial performance, and cash flows - Close the gap in GAAP
- Align recognition/measurement and disclosures in
same standards
12Disclosures about Credit DerivativesGap in GAAP
- FIN 45 requires disclosures by guarantors for
guarantees within its scope, which includes some,
but not all, credit derivatives - S133 CDS for which the party purchasing the
protection owns the referenced obligation are
within the scope of FIN 45s disclosure
requirements - S133 CDS for which the party purchasing the
protection does not own the referenced obligation
are not within the scope of FIN 45s disclosure
requirements - Project would amend S133 and FIN 45 to result in
the disclosure requirements for all S133 credit
derivatives being included in S133 -
13Disclosures about Credit DerivativesScope
- Credit derivatives within Statement 133
- Hybrid instruments that have embedded credit
derivatives - Credit derivative is a derivative in which one or
more of its underlyings (1) is related to the
credit risk of a specified entity (or a group of
entities) or an index on a group of entities (2)
exposes the seller to potential loss from credit
risk-related events specified in the contract - Derivatives such as credit default swaps, credit
spread options included - Derivatives such as plain vanilla interest rate
swap not included - Guarantees within FIN 45
-
14Disclosures about Credit DerivativesProposed
Disclosures
- Disclosures for Sellers of Credit Derivatives
- The nature of the credit derivative, including
the approximate term of the credit derivative,
the events or circumstances that would require
the seller to perform under the credit
derivative, and the current status of the credit
derivative (for example, the current credit risk
of the referenced obligation). - The maximum potential amount of future payments
(undiscounted) the seller could be required to
make under the credit derivative. That maximum
potential amount of future payments shall not be
reduced by the effect of any amounts that may
possibly be recovered under recourse or
collateralization provisions in the credit
derivative (which are addressed below). If the
terms of the credit derivative provide for no
limitation to the maximum potential future
payments under the credit derivative, that fact
shall be disclosed. If the seller is unable to
develop an estimate of the maximum potential
amount of future payments under the credit
derivative, the seller shall disclose the reasons
why it cannot estimate the maximum potential
amount. -
15Disclosures about Credit DerivativesProposed
Disclosures Cont
- Disclosures for Sellers of Credit Derivatives
Cont - The fair value of the credit derivative.
- The nature of (1) any recourse provisions that
would enable the seller to recover from third
parties any of the amounts paid under the credit
derivative and (2) any assets held either as
collateral or by third parties that, upon the
occurrence of any specified pre-agreed event or
condition under the credit derivative, the seller
can obtain and liquidate to recover all or a
portion of the amounts paid under the credit
derivative. The seller shall indicate, if
estimable, the approximate extent to which the
proceeds from liquidation of those assets would
be expected to cover the maximum potential amount
of future payments under the credit derivative.
In its estimate of potential recoveries, the
seller of credit protection should consider the
effect of any purchased credit protection with an
identical underlying(s). -
16Disclosures about Credit DerivativesTiming
- Exposure Draft of an FSP issued in May 2008 with
30 day comment period. - 16 comments letters received
- Redeliberations completed
- Final FSP expected to be issued in September 2008
- Effective for reporting periods (annual or
interim) ending after November 15, 2008 -
17Hedging Project
- Project Objectives
- Simplify accounting for hedging activities
- Improve the financial reporting of hedging
activities to make the accounting model and the
associated disclosures easier to understand for
financial statement users - Resolve hedge accounting practice issues that
have arisen under Statement No. 133 - Address differences in the accounting for
derivative instruments and hedged items or
transactions
18Hedging Project
- The hedge accounting approach would establish a
fair value methodology to hedge accounting. The
approach would eliminate many elements that exist
under the current hedge accounting model,
including bifurcation-by-risk, the shortcut
method, critical terms match, and the requirement
to quantitatively assess effectiveness in order
to qualify for hedge accounting - The items and transactions currently eligible for
hedge accounting would continue to be eligible
under this approach.
19Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Hedge Effectiveness
- Qualitative instead of Quantitative
- Reasonably effective
- No ongoing effectiveness testing unless
circumstances suggest no longer reasonably
effective - No effectiveness testing at all was considered
20Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Dedesignation
- Discontinuation of hedge accounting only if
hedging relationship is terminated - Discontinuation of hedging relationship by merely
dedesignating is not permitted
21Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Hedged Risk
- General model is that the designated hedged risk
must be all changes in fair value or variability
in cash flows (bifurcation-by-risk not permitted) - Two exceptions
- Foreign exchange rate risk can be designated as
the hedged risk - Interest rate risk can be designated as the
hedged risk in a hedge of an entitys own debt at
inception of the debt
22Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Measurement of Hedged Item in Fair Value Hedges
- Hedged item and derivative hedging instrument
must be independently measured for changes in
fair value - Not permitted to take the change in fair value of
the derivative, change the sign and apply it to
the hedged item - All of contractual cash flows of the entire
hedged item must be included in calculating the
fair value - Adjust the carrying value of hedged item for
changes in fair value during the hedge period
23Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Measuring and Reporting Ineffectiveness in Cash
Flow Hedges - Compare change in fair value of the actual
derivative and the present value of the
cumulative change in expected future cash flows
on the hedged transaction - For example, an entity could compare the change
in fair value of the actual derivative with the
change in fair value of a derivative that would
mature on the date of the forecasted transaction,
be priced at market, and provide cash flows that
would exactly offset the hedged cash flows - The difference would be reported in earnings as
ineffectiveness - Nonperformance risk must be considered when
calculating the fair value of the derivative
hedging instrument - Permitted to use the same credit adjustment in
the derivative that would exactly offset the
hedged cash flows as used in the actual derivative
24Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Measuring and Reporting Ineffectiveness in Cash
Flow Hedges - Hedging with purchased options
- When a purchased option contract is used as the
hedging instrument to provide only one-sided
protection, a purchased option derivative that
would mature on the date of the forecasted
transaction and provide cash flows that would
exactly offset the one-sided change in the hedged
cash flows could be used for calculating
ineffectiveness. - Ineffectiveness can be measured using all changes
in the options cash flows
25Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Measuring and Reporting Ineffectiveness in Cash
Flow Hedges - Hedging groups of transactions first 100M in
sales for January - Compare actual derivative to derivative that
settles within a reasonable period of time of
cash flows on forecasted transactions - Reasonable if the difference in forward rates
between that derivative and derivative(s) that
would exactly offset cash flows is minimal
26Hedging ProjectMajor Changes
- Disclosures
- For hedged items in fair value hedges - table
showing amount reported in balance sheet,
Statement 133 adjustment, Other fair value
adjustments, amount excluding those adjustments - Hedging interest rate risk in issued debt how
hedging derivative(s) changes maturity and
interest rate on debt
27QUESTIONS