Title: Financial Reporting for Leases
1Financial Reportingfor Leases
- Revsine/Collins/Johnson Chapter 12
2Learning objectives
- The difference between capital leases and
operating leases. - Lessees incentives to keep leases off the
balance sheet. - The criteria used to classify leases on the
lessees books. - The treatment of executory costs, residual
values, and other aspects of lease contracts. - The effects of capital lease versus operating
lease treatment on the lessees financial
statements. - How analysts can adjust for ratio distortions
from off-balance sheet leases when comparing
firms.
3Learning objectivesContinued
- Lessor accounting rules and how the financial
reporting incentives of lessors are very
different from that of lessees. - The difference between sales-type, direct
financing, and operating lease treatment by
lessors. - How different lease accounting treatments can
affect income and net asset balances. - Sale/leaseback arrangements and other special
leasing situations. - How to use lease footnote disclosures.
4Lease contracts
Right to use
Lessee
Lessor
Wants to use the asset
Owns the asset
Lease payment
- 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.
5Evolution of lease accountingOperating lease
approach
- SFAS No 13 spells out GAAP for leases. Before it
was issued in 1976, virtually all leases were
accounted for using the operating lease approach. - Heres an example
Month 1
Month 2
5 year term of lease
2,000 payment
Lease signed and Iris moves in
2,000 payment
6Evolution of lease accountingEntries for Iris
Company (lessee)
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
- At the end of each month
No Entry Executory (unperformed) contract
DR Rent expense
2,000 CR Lease liability
2,000 To accrue a liability for that portion of
the contract that has been performed.
DR Lease liability
2,000 CR Cash
2,000 To record the payment of the stipulated
rental fee at the end of the month.
7Evolution of lease accountingEntries for Crest
Company (lessor)
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
- At the end of each month
No Entry Executory contract
DR Cash
2,000 CR Rental
revenue
2,000 To record the rental payment
received each month.
DR Depreciation expense leased building
2,000 CR Accumulated depreciation
leased building 2,000 The building
remains an asset on the books, periodic
depreciation is recorded.
8Evolution of lease accountingWhy lessees like
the operating lease approach
- The operating approach does not reflect the
cumulative economic liability for all future
lease payments on the balance sheet. - Keeping the lease obligation (and asset) off of
the balance sheet may - Reduce the likelihood of debt covenant violation.
- Improve the ability to obtain additional loans in
the future. - Improve financial performance ratios like ROA
- However, GAAP does require footnote disclosure of
this off-balance sheet lease obligation.
NOPAT
ROA seems higher when leased assets are not
included here.
ROA
Average assets
9Evolution of lease accountingThe SECs
initiative
- The SEC issued ASR No. 147 in 1973 to improve
financial reporting for leases. - The SEC took a property rights approach to lease
accounting - The lease conveys property rights (an asset) to
the lessee. - The payment stream represents the lessees
liability. - Under this capital lease approach, the lessee
makes the following entry when the lease is
signed
DR Leased asset (to reflect the property right,
not ownership of the asset)
XXX CR Lease
obligation (to reflect the liability arising
from future lease payments)
XXX
10Evolution of lease accountingOverview of the
two approaches
11Lessee accountingSFAS 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.
12Lessee accountingCapital 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
13Lessee accountingCapital lease accounting
overview
- The balance sheet amount shown for the lease
asset and liability are equal only at the
inception and at the end of the lease - The leased asset is amortized over time using a
depreciation schedule for assets of this type. - The lease obligation is reduced in accordance
with the payment schedule once interest is
accrued using the effective interest method.
300,000
PV of MLP
300,000
PV of MLP
Payments and interest
Amortization
0
0
Inception
End of Lease
Inception
End of Lease
Lease Asset
Lease liability
14Lessee accountingEffective interest method
79,139.18-19,680.77
250,860.82 x 10
15Lessee accountingAnnual cost of leased asset
300,000 5 years
16Lessee accountingCapital lease journal entries
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
DR Leased asset capital lease
300,000 CR
Obligation under capital lease
300,000
PV of MLP
17Lessee accountingCapital lease summary
18Lessee accountingExecutory costs
- These are the costs of using the assetsuch as
maintenance, taxes, and insurance. - Accordingly, they are omitted when determining
minimum lease payments and the capitalized amount
shown for the leased asset. - Instead, they are charged to expense when
incurred
DR Obligation under capital lease
49,139.18 DR Interest expense
30,000.00 DR Miscellaneous lease expense
2,000.00 CR
Cash
81,139.18
Executory costs
19Lessee accountingResidual value guarantees
- Suppose Lessee Corp. guarantees that the asset
will be worth no less than 20,000 when the lease
ends. - Residual value guarantees of this sort protect
the lessor against two business risks - Unforeseen technological or marketplace changes
that erode asset value. - Possibility that the lessee does not take proper
care of the asset. - With this guarantee, the new present value of
minimum lease payments becomes
Without guarantee
With guarantee
20Lessee accountingResidual value guarantee
details
(312,418.40 - 20,000) 5 years
79,139.18 -26,452.11
264,521.06 x 10
21Lessee accountingResidual value guarantee
journal entries
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
- When Lessee Corp. returns the asset worth at
least 20,000 to the lessor
DR Leased asset capital lease
312,418.40 CR Obligation
under capital lease
312,418.40
DR Obligation under capital lease
20,000.00 CR Leased asset
capital lease
20,000.00
22Lessee accountingPayments in advance
- The lease contracts described thus far all
involve payments that occur at the end of each
period.
Inception
Year 1
Year 2
Term of lease
XX
XX
Present values
23Lessee accountingAmortization with payments in
advance
The payment is smaller than before because it is
made at the beginning of each period.
228,055 x 10
300,00 5 years
24Lessee accountingFinancial statement effects
Lessee Company Pattern of Expense Recognition
Capital Versus Operating
Rental payment
Interest plus depreciation
25Lessee accountingUse of operating and capital
leases
26Lessee accountingFootnote disclosure
Off-balance sheet obligation
Balance sheet liabilities
27Lessee accountingAdjusting income
28Lessee accountingBalance sheet and ratio effects
- Capital lease accounting can effect the current
ratio. Consider the Lessee Corp. lease at
inception (Exhibit 12.1)
Capital lease
Operating lease
Current assets Current liabilities
Current assets Current liabilities
Increased by 49,139
Unchanged
29Lessor accountingCapital and operating leases
Lease
Capital
Operating
Sales-type
Direct-financing
Operating
- From the lessors 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.
30Lessor accountingDecision tree
- Asset removed from books.
- Financing profit only
- Asset removed from books.
- Two profit streams
- Manufacturers/dealers profit
- Financing profit over time
- Asset remains on books.
- Rental income over time
31Lessor accountingSales-type lease example
Recognized over time as earned
Recognized at inception
32Lessor accountingDirect-financing lease example
Recognized over time as earned
33Lessor accountingSFAS No. 13 criteria for
capital lease treatment
Type 1 characteristics (at least one of these is
met)
Type 2 characteristics (and both of these are
met)
- Ownership is transferred to lessee by end of
lease term. - Lease contains a bargain purchase option.
- Noncancelable lease term is 75 or more of
estimated economic life. - Present value of minimum lease payments exceeds
90 of the FMV of the leased asset.
- Collectability of minimum lease payments is
reasonably assured. - There are no important uncertainties surrounding
the amount or unreimbursable costs yet to be
incurred by the lessor under the lease.
Measurability
Critical event
34Lessor accountingExpanded decision tree
35Lessor accountingDirect-financing lease
treatment illustrated
Also equals the present value of MLP plus GRV
36Lessor accountingImplied rate of return on
direct-financing lease
PV of MLP
PV of GRV
37Lessor accountingAmortization schedule for
direct-financing lease
258,699.85 x 11
79,189.18 - 22,881.94
38Lessor accountingJournal entries for
direct-financing lease
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
DR Gross investment in leased asset
415,695.90 CR Equipment
304,359.49 CR Unearned financing
income leases
111,336.41
39Lessor accountingJournal entries for an
operating lease
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
No Entry Asset remains on lessors books
40Lessor accountingComparison of operating and
direct-financing
79,139.18 - 56,871.90
41Lessor accountingJournal entries for sales-type
lease
- At inception, when the lease contract is signed
Manufacturers profit recognized at inception
DR Gross investment in leased asset
415,695.90 DR Cost of goods sold
240,000.00
CR Sales revenue
304,359.49
CR Unearned financing income leases
111,336.41 CR
Inventory
240,000.00
42Lessor accountingSales-type lease with
executory costs
- Suppose Lessor Company also promises to provide
maintenance services on the leased asset for an
additional annual fee of 2,000. - The gross investment calculation is now
43Additional leasing aspectsSale and leaseback
Sale transaction transfers title to asset
Second Company
First Company
Lease back allows use to be retained
- 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.
44Additional leasing aspectsSale and leaseback
(continued)
- However, First Companys gain cannot be
recognized immediately. - If it qualifies as a capital lease, First Company
would make the following entries at inception
- Amortized using the some rate and life used for
leased asset
200,000 deferred gain
200,000 deferred gain
- Amortized in proportion to rental payments
Capital lease
Operating lease
DR Cash (or receivable)
1,000,000 CR Plant and
equipment
800,000 CR Deferred gain
200,000 DR Leased asset capital
leases 1,000,000
CR Obligation under capital leases
1,000,000
45Additional leasing aspectsLeveraged 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 lessees
accounting. - The lessor must use the direct-financing
approach and special details apply (SFAS No. 13).
Non-recourse financing
Lessor
Bank
1
Standard lease contract
2
Lessee
46Additional leasing aspectsTax accounting
- U.S. income tax laws also distinguish between
operating leases and capital leases. - However, the tax criteria are not the same as
SFAS No. 13. - Firms often favor one treatment for tax purposes
and another treatment for financial reporting
purposes
Financial reporting
Income tax
Lessee
Operating
Capital
Lessor
Capital
Operating
Accelerates expense recognition
Delays revenue recognition
47Additional leasing aspectsLessors disclosures
48Additional leasing aspectsLessors disclosures
(concluded)
Expected cash flow
49Summary
- 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.
50Summary 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 lessors financial statements.
51AppendixConstructive capitalization
- Some companies structure lease contracts to evade
capital lease criteria, thereby keeping most of
their leases off the balance sheet. - Other companies have a large proportion of
capital leases. - The most straightforward method for making
balance sheet data comparable is to treat all
leases as if they were capital leases. This is
called constructive capitalization.
Operating leases
Capital leases
Firm 1
Firm 2
52AppendixOperating lease footnote
- To estimate the balance sheet liability that
would have been recorded under the capital lease
approach, we need to calculate the present value
of the MLP.
53AppendixDetermining the discount rate
- Two alternatives for determining the discount
rate can be used - The weighted-average discount rate implicit in
capital leases. - The weighted-average discount rate on long-term
debt. - Heres how to find the discount rate implicit in
capital leases - A similar approach is used to find the discount
rate on long-term debt
54AppendixEstimating payments beyond five years
Panel at bottom Page 664
55AppendixLease asset liability (payments at
year-end)
56AppendixLease asset liability (payments at
start of year)
57AppendixAlbertsons capitalized leased asset
- A footnote reveals that
- Applying this same proportion to the companys
operating leases yields
321 million
257
257 million
80
321
Net capital lease assets
Net capital lease obligations
80
1,920 million
1,536 million
Capitalized operating lease asset
Capitalized operating lease obligation
58AppendixFinancial statement impact
59AppendixFinancial ratio impact