Recent Accounting Pronouncements
Adding to the challenges of reporting amidst economic and financial crises, a new wave of accounting standards is scheduled to take effect in 2009. This section contains summaries of FASB Statements and Interpretations that: (a) were issued in 2008 or the first quarter of 2009 or (b) were issued before April 1, 2009, and are effective for periods beginning after November 15, 2008, or later.
FASB Statements
- FASB
Statement No. 163 - Accounting for Financial Guarantee Insurance
Contracts
- FASB Statement No. 162 -
The Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
- FASB Statement No. 161 -
Disclosures About Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities
- FASB Statement No. 141
(revised 2007) - Business Combinations
- FASB Statement No. 160 -
Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements
- FASB Statement No. 158 -
Employers Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other
Postretirement Plans
- FASB Statement No. 157 -
Fair Value Measurements
- FASB Interpretation No. 48
- Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes
EITF Issues and Topics
-
Issue No. 07-1, “Accounting for the Conversion of an Instrument That
Became Convertible upon the Issuer’s
Exercise of a Call Option”
-
Issue No. 07-4, “Application of
the Two-Class Method under FASB Statement No. 128, Earnings per Share,
to
Master Limited Partnerships”
-
Issue No. 08-3, “Accounting by Lessees for
Maintenance Deposits Under Lease Arrangements”
- EITF Issue No. 07-5,
“Determining Whether an Instrument (or Embedded Feature) Is Indexed to
an Entity's Own
Stock”
-
Issue No. 08-4, “Transition Guidance for
Conforming Changes to Issue No. 98-5”
-
Issue No. 08-5, “Issuer’s Accounting for
Liabilities Measured at Fair Value With a Third-Party Credit
Enhancement”
- Issue No. 08-6, “Equity
Method Investment Accounting Considerations”
- Issue No. 08-7,
“Accounting for Defensive Intangible Assets”
-
Issue No. 08-8, “Accounting for an Instrument (or
an Embedded Feature) with a Settlement Amount that is Based
on the Stock of an Entity’s Consolidated Subsidiary”
-
Topic No. D-98, “Classification and Measurement of
Redeemable Securities”
FASB Staff Positions
- FSP
APB 14-1, “Accounting for Convertible Debt Instruments That May Be
Settled in Cash upon Conversion
(Including Partial Cash Settlement)”
-
FSP EITF 03-6-1, “Determining Whether Instruments Granted in Share-Based
Payment Transactions Are
Participating Securities”
-
FSP EITF 99-20-1, “Amendments to the Impairment Guidance of EITF Issue
No. 99-20”
-
FSP FAS 117-1, “Endowments of Not-for-Profit Organizations: Net Asset
Classification of Funds Subject to an
Enacted Version of the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional
Funds Act, and Enhanced Disclosures for All
Endowment Funds”
- FSP FAS
132(R)-1, “Employers’ Disclosures about Postretirement Benefit Plan
Assets”
-
FSP FAS 133-1 and FIN 45-4, Disclosures about Credit Derivatives and
Certain Guarantees: An Amendment of -
FASB Statement No. 133 and FASB Interpretation No. 45; and
Clarification of the Effective Date of FASB Statement
No. 161”
-
FSP FAS 140-3, “Accounting for Transfers of Financial Assets and
Repurchase Financing Transactions”
-
FSP FAS 140-4 and FIN 46(R)-8, “Disclosures by
Public Entities (Enterprises) about Transfers of Financial Assets
and Interests in Variable Interest Entities”
-
FASB Staff Position FSP FAS 142-3, “Determination
of the Useful Life of Intangible Assets”
- FSP SOP 07-1-1,
“Effective Date of AICPA Statement of Position 07-1-1”
- FSP SOP 90-7-1. “An
Amendment of AICPA Statement of Position 90-7”
- FSP SOP 94-3-1 and AAG
HCO-1, “Omnibus Changes to Consolidation and Equity Method Guidance for
Not-for-
Profit Organizations”
Summaries of Other Technical Resources
-
FASB Codification
-
FASB Convergence - 2008
Update of FASB Memorandum of Understanding with IASB
-
AICPA Guides - Airlines
Audit and Accounting Guide
-
AICPA Technical Practice
Aids
-
Other AICPA Releases
-
CAQ Alerts
-
XBRL US
-
GASB Pronouncements
FASB Statement No. 163
-
Accounting for Financial Guarantee Insurance Contracts
In May 2008, the FASB released Statement No.
163, Accounting for Financial Guarantee Insurance Contracts. This Statement
addresses the accounting for financial guarantee insurance contracts issued
by insurance companies. Examples of the types of financial obligations that
may be covered by financial guarantee contracts include municipal bonds and
asset-backed securities. The requirements of Statement 163 make significant
changes in the way insurance companies account for premium revenue and claim
liabilities.

As shown in Exhibit 1, Statement 163 is effective for financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008, and all interim periods within those years. Some disclosures took effect for third quarter 2008.
FASB Statement No. 162
-
The Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
The FASB issued Statement No. 162, The
Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, in May 2008. This
Statement redefines the framework for ranking the sources of generally
accepted accounting principles in order of authority (i.e., the GAAP
hierarchy), and it moves the hierarchy from the U.S. auditing literature to
the accounting literature.
The hierarchy established by Statement 162 consists of the following sources, ranked in order of authority from the most authoritative to the least authoritative sources:
FASB Statements of Financial Accounting Standards and Interpretations, FASB Statement 133 Implementation Issues, FASB Staff Positions, and American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) Accounting Research Bulletins and Accounting Principles Board Opinions that are not superseded by actions of the FASB.
FASB Technical Bulletins and, if cleared by the FASB, AICPA Industry Audit and Accounting Guides and Statements of Position. (Cleared means the FASB does not object to issuance.)
AICPA Accounting Standards Executive Committee Practice Bulletins that have been cleared by the FASB, consensus positions of the FASB’s Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF), and the Topics discussed in Appendix D of EITF Abstracts.
Implementation guides (Q&As) published by the FASB staff, AICPA Accounting Interpretations, AICPA Industry Audit and Accounting Guides and Statements of Position not cleared by the FASB, and practices that are widely recognized and prevalent either generally or in the industry.
Although not specifically mentioned in the hierarchy, SEC rules and interpretive releases are considered sources of category (a) accounting principles for SEC registrants. The SEC staff issue Staff Accounting Bulletins (SABs) that represent practices followed by the staff in administering SEC disclosure requirements, and they use EITF Appendix D Topics and Observer comments in EITF Issues to publicly announce their views on certain accounting issues for SEC registrants. In addition to the SEC staff, the FASB staff have used EITF D Topics to publicly announce their views on certain accounting issues. Both the SEC staff and the FASB staff announcements are considered category (c) accounting principles.
The FASB does not expect that Statement 162 will result in a change in current practice. But transition provisions are provided as a contingency for unexpected circumstances. The Statement was effective 60 days after the SEC’s approval of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board’s amendments to AU Section 411, “The Meaning of Present Fairly in Conformity With Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.” As indicated on Exhibit 1, the SEC approved the amendments on September 16, 2008.
FASB Statement No. 161
-
Disclosures About Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities
In March 2008, the FASB issued Statement 161,
Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities to help
investors cut through the complexities and better understand the effects of
certain derivative instruments on a company’s financial position, results of
operations and cash flows. These disclosures are extensive and are required
for interim or annual periods beginning after November 15, 2008. Some of the
more significant include:
Additional information about the qualitative disclosures, (i.e., the objectives for holding or issuing derivatives, the context needed to understand those objectives, and the strategies employed to achieve the objectives). These disclosures now should be distinguished by each instrument’s primary underlying risk exposure, (e.g., foreign exchange rate, interest rate, credit, interest rate and foreign exchange rate, or overall price). In addition, derivatives not designated as hedges under Statement 133 should be broken out between those used for risk management purposes and those used for other purposes. Finally, an entity should disclose information about the volume of its derivatives activity.
A table showing the location and fair value amounts of derivative instruments reported in the balance sheet. The fair value amounts should be separately disclosed for derivatives that qualify as hedges under Statement 133 and those that do not, and within each of those two broad categories further segregated by type of contract (e.g., foreign exchange contracts, interest rate contracts, equity contracts, commodity contracts or credit contracts).
A table showing the location and amount of gains and losses (including other comprehensive income, or OCI). Gains and losses should be presented separately for derivatives that qualify as fair value hedges and the related hedged items, that qualify as cash flow and net investment hedges, and that do not qualify for hedge accounting. The gains and losses on qualifying cash flow and net investment hedges should be further divided into the effective portion of gains and losses that is recorded in OCI, the amount reclassified from accumulated OCI to income, the amount of ineffectiveness and the amount excluded from the assessment of effectiveness. This information about gains and losses should be further segregated by type of contract, like the balance sheet amounts in the preceding bullet point.
An explanation of the existence and nature of any contingent contractual features related to credit risk, including the circumstances in which those features could be triggered in derivative instruments that are in a net liability position at the end of the reporting period, and the fair value of those instruments. The amount of collateral already posted at the end of the reporting period and the additional amounts that would need to be posted as collateral or that would be necessary to settle the instruments, if the contingent features had been triggered at the end of the reporting period.
In addition, Statement 161 amends FASB Statement No. 107, Disclosure about Fair Value of Financial Instruments, to make it explicit that the disclosures of concentrations of credit risk should include derivative instruments. As shown on Exhibit 1, these disclosures are required for interim or annual periods beginning after November 15, 2008.
FASB Statement No. 141 (revised 2007)
-
Business Combinations
In December 2007, the FASB issued Statement
141R, Business Combinations. This Statement makes significant changes to the
accounting for mergers and acquisitions. Key areas of change include the
definitions of an acquirer and the acquisition date, along with the initial
and subsequent accounting by the acquirer for certain items acquired in the
business combination and the accounting for goodwill and gains resulting
from bargain purchases, as well as amendments to other accounting guidance.
Definitions. The Statement defines the acquirer as the entity that obtains control of one or more business in the business combination, and it establishes the acquisition date as the date that the acquirer achieves control.
Initial accounting. The accounting
requirements for acquirers are revised as follows:
- The acquirer must recognize the assets acquired, the liabilities
assumed and any noncontrolling interest in the acquiree at the
acquisition date, measured at their fair values as of that date, with
limited exceptions specified in the Statement.
- In a business combination achieved in stages (sometimes referred to as
a step acquisition), the acquirer must recognize the identifiable assets
and liabilities as well as the noncontrolling interest in the acquiree,
at the full amounts of their fair values (or other amounts determined in
accordance with the Statement).
- The acquirer must recognize contingent consideration arrangements as
of the acquisition date, measured at their acquisition-date fair values.
- Goodwill and bargain purchases. Statement 141R changes the
requirements for recognition and measurement of goodwill and gains from
bargain purchases as follows:
- The acquirer is required to recognize goodwill as of the acquisition
date, measured as a residual, which in most types of business
combinations will result in measuring goodwill as the excess of the
consideration transferred plus the fair value of any noncontrolling
interest in the acquiree at the acquisition date over the fair values of
the identifiable net assets acquired.
- A bargain purchase is defined as a business combination in which the
total acquisition-date fair value of the identifiable net assets
acquired exceeds the fair value of the consideration transferred plus
any noncontrolling interest in the acquiree, and requires the acquirer
to recognize that excess in earnings as a gain attributable to the
acquisition.
In April 2009, the FASB issued FSP FAS 141(R)-1, “Accounting for Assets Acquired and Liabilities Assumed in a Business Combination That Arise from Contingencies,” that generally restores the prior accounting from FASB Statement No. 141 for these items.
Statement 141R applies prospectively to business combinations for which the acquisition date is on or after the beginning of the first annual reporting period beginning on or after December 15, 2008. An entity may not apply it before that date. The effective date of this Statement is the same as that of the related FASB Statement No. 160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements.
FASB Statement No. 160
-
Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements
In December 2007, the FASB released
Statement 160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial
Statements. This Statement was issued concurrently with Statement 141R,
Business Combinations.
Statement 160 applies to all entities that prepare consolidated financial statements, except not-for-profit organizations. The changes introduced by Statement 160 will affect two types of entities: (1) those with an outstanding noncontrolling interest in one or more subsidiaries and (2) those that deconsolidate a subsidiary.
Statement 160 requires parent companies to:
Report a noncontrolling interest in a subsidiary as equity in the consolidated financial statements.
Report consolidated net income at amounts that include the amounts attributable to both the parent and the noncontrolling interest.
Disclose on the face of the consolidated statement of income the amounts of consolidated net income attributable to the parent and to the noncontrolling interest.
Account for changes in an ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result in deconsolidation as equity transactions if the parent retains its controlling financial interest in the subsidiary
Recognize a gain or loss in net income when a subsidiary is deconsolidated, including both the portion sold and the portion, if any, retained.
Make expanded disclosures in the consolidated financial statements that clearly identify and distinguish between the interests of the parent’s owners and the interests of the non-controlling owners of a subsidiary.
The expanded disclosures include a reconciliation of the beginning and ending balances of the equity attributable to the parent and the noncontrolling owners and a schedule showing the effects of changes in a parent’s ownership interest in a subsidiary on the equity attributable to the parent. BDO has published a separate Client Advisory on Statements 141R and 160.
FASB Statement No. 158
-
Employers Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement
Plans
In September 2006, the FASB
issued Statement 158, Employers Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and
Other Postretirement Plans.
Statement 158 requires that companies with single-employer defined benefit pension plans or other postretirement benefit plans recognize the funded status of their plans as a net asset or net liability. Prior to Statement 158, these amounts were reported in the footnotes to the financial statements. It also introduces added disclosure requirements.
The funded status is one of the most important pieces of information about retirement plans. It represents the difference between the fair value of a plan’s assets and its benefit obligation. Under the preceding balance sheet guidance in FASB Statements (No. 87 for defined benefit pension plans and No. 106 for other postretirement benefit plans), the prepaid asset or accrued liability on the balance sheet represented the cumulative difference between the expense under generally accepted accounting principles and the cash disbursements for funding a plan or paying benefits.
Because of the way expense was computed under Statements 87 and 106, the difference between the funded status and the amount on the balance sheet is made up of three items that may seem difficult to understand and less important than the funded status. The three items are:
Unrecognized (deferred) gains and losses from experience different from assumptions and from changes in assumptions.
Unrecognized prior service cost from plan amendments that give participants retroactive credit for prior years of employee service.
Unrecognized transition amounts from the adoption of Statement 87 or 106.
Statement 158 requires that these three items be shown instead on the balance sheet as adjustments to shareholders’ equity. A summary of the other key provisions and requirements of Statement 158 is provided in Table 1.
Subsequent Guidance
In February 2007, the FASB
issued FSP FAS 158-1, Conforming Amendments to the Illustrations in FASB
Statements No. 87, No. 88 and No. 106 and to the Related Staff
Implementation Guides. This FSP is effective as of the effective date of
Statement 158. It does not change any provisions of Statement 158 or provide
any additional implementation guidance. However, it updates the
illustrations in the appendices of Statements 87, 88 and 106 to conform with
the requirements of Statement 158 to recognize the funded status of defined
benefit postretirement plans in an employer’s balance sheet. It also amends
and supersedes the following Special Reports.
"A Guide to Implementation of Statement 87 on Employers’ Accounting for Pensions.”
“A Guide to Implementation of Statement 88 on Employers’ Accounting for Settlements and Curtailments of Defined Benefit Pension Plans and for Termination Benefits.”
“A Guide to Implementation of Statement 106 on Employers’ Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions.”
Portions with Delayed Effective
Dates
For employers without publicly
traded equity securities, the requirement to recognize the funded status of
a benefit plan and the disclosure requirements took effect in calendar year
2007.
The requirement to measure plan assets and benefit obligations as of the date of the employer's fiscal year-end statement of financial position (paragraphs 5, 6 and 9) is effective for fiscal years ending after December 15, 2008.
Statement No. 157
-
Fair Value Measurements
FASB Statement No. 157, Fair
Value Measurements, was issued in September 2006. Both before and after the
Statement was issued, the use of fair value in financial statements has
fostered much controversy over the why’s, how’s and what’s of its use.
Statement 157 introduced a major change in mindset about how to measure fair
value. This change has had far-reaching effects because it crosses many
areas of accounting and financial reporting for which accounting standards
permit or require fair value accounting.
Statement 157 does not extend the use of fair value to additional assets or liabilities beyond those required or permitted under other existing accounting standards. Examples of assets and liabilities for which measurement at fair value is currently required (or permitted) include the following:
Investment securities accounted for under FASB Statement No. 115.
Certain assets and liabilities acquired in a business combination.
Impaired assets, (e.g., those accounted for under FASB Statement No. 144).
Items not covered include share-based payment transactions and revenue recognition transactions that are measured based on vendor-specific objective evidence of fair value.
At the core of the new mindset is a uniform definition of fair value as the amount that would be received upon selling an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price). Within this definition, there are gradations of subjectivity and reliability. To help investors identify the level of subjectivity, Statement 157 requires that companies categorize fair value measurements according to a hierarchy of inputs. The three tiers are:
Level 1. The top level includes observable inputs that reflect quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets.
Level 2. The middle level includes inputs other than those in level 1 that reflect observable market data.
Level 3. The bottom level includes unobservable inputs, such as a company’s own data.
The Statement uses these levels as the basis for added disclosures about the reliability of fair value measures. It also introduces and redefines a number of key terms and adds a hierarchy of inputs to fair value measurement. This guidance forms the basis for the new disclosures about the reliability of the measures.
The key terms include fair value, market participants, orderly transaction and measurement date.
Fair value. Statement 157 defines fair value as “…the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date.” Note that fair value is measured based on an “exit value” perspective--how much would be received from selling an asset or how much would be paid to settle a liability.
Orderly transaction. An orderly transaction reflects the market conditions in place at the measurement date. It excludes forced sales, liquidation transactions and distress sales.
Market participants. The market participants are buyers and sellers in the principal (or the most advantageous) market for the asset or liability. The participants need to be knowledgeable parties who are willing and able to contract and who are not related parties.
Measurement date. The measurement dates are set by the existing accounting standards that require or permit the use of fair values. Currently, there are more than 40 standards of this type.
The new definition of fair value has some surprising effects on measurement, in particular immediate gains and losses on certain transactions. Under an “exit value” approach, fair value excludes transaction costs, so for assets measured at fair value, transaction costs are generally charged to expense as incurred rather than added to the asset. On the other side, a dealer in derivatives might enter into a derivative with a corporate customer based on pricing in the “retail” market and be able to receive a fee from assigning the derivative to another dealer in the dealer (“wholesale”) market. Under certain circumstances, the dealer could record an immediate gain from adjusting the derivative to the price at which it could be settled with another dealer.
Subsequent Guidance
As companies began to prepare to
apply this new standard, a number of implementation issues surfaced, leading
to subsequent deferrals and amendments that scale back the scope of the
standard and partially defer its effective date.
The FASB provided the following guidance and deferrals in 2007 and early 2008:
The paragraph 32 disclosures are not required for pension and other postretirement plan assets in employers’ financial statements. (Source: November 14, 2007 FASB Board meeting minutes.)
Leasing transactions covered by FASB Statement No. 13, Accounting for Leases, are excluded from the scope of Statement 157. (Source: FSP FAS 157-1, “Application of FASB Statement No. 157 to FASB Statement No. 13 and Other Accounting Pronouncements That Address Fair Value Measurements for Purposes of Lease Classification or Measurement under Statement 13.”)
The effective date is deferred by one year for nonfinancial assets and liabilities that are not recognized or disclosed on a recurring basis, such as the assets and liabilities acquired in a business combination. (Source: FSP FAS 157-2, “Effective Date of FASB Statement No. 157.”)
On September 30, 2008, in response to the deepening credit crisis, the SEC staff and FASB staff released an announcement acknowledging that the current environment has made questions surrounding the determination of fair value particularly challenging for preparers, auditors and users of financial information. In response, the two bodies issued a series of questions and answers (Q&As) designed to address practice issues where there is a need for immediate additional guidance.
The Q&As include the following:
Can management’s internal assumptions (e.g., expected cash flows) be used to measure fair value when relevant market evidence does not exist?
How should the use of “market” quotes (e.g., broker quotes or information from a pricing service) be considered when assessing the mix of information available to measure fair value?
Are transactions that are determined to be disorderly representative of fair value? When is a distressed (disorderly) sale indicative of fair value?
Can transactions in an inactive market affect fair value measurements?
What factors should be considered in determining whether an investment is other than temporarily impaired?
The Q&As were intended as a source of immediate guidance until the FASB could issue additional interpretive guidance on the application of fair value. The announcement concludes by emphasizing that fair value measurements and the assessment of impairment may require significant judgments. As a result, clear and transparent disclosures are critical to providing investors with an understanding of the judgments made by management. In addition to the disclosures required under existing U.S. GAAP, including Statement 157, the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance recently issued letters in March and September to provide realtime guidance for issuers to consider in enhancing the transparency of fair value measurements to investors.
The Q&As are available at http://www.fasb.org/news/2008- FairValue.pdf. The letters are available at http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/g uidance/fairvalueltr0308.htm and http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/g uidance/fairvalueltr0908.htm.
The FASB issued the additional guidance in October 2008 as FSP FAS 157-3, “Determining the Fair Value of a Financial Asset When the Market for That Asset is Not Active.” This FSP stresses the need for judgment and describes the key considerations in measuring the fair value of a financial asset when there is little or no market activity at the measurement date. The expectation is that the guidance will reduce the differences in opinion that have developed in the face of financial markets described as inactive, disorderly, dislocated and/or dysfunctional. It also provides interpretive guidance on consideration of observable transaction prices, acceptability of Level 3 inputs, and consideration of third-party pricing quotes.
In addition, in early 2008, the FASB had proposed changes to address concerns about the measurement of a liability in the absence of any observable markets or inputs. (Proposed FSP FAS 157-c, “Measuring Liabilities Under FASB Statement No. 157.”)
Despite the added guidance, the use of fair values remains a work in progress as it continues to stir controversy and to result in reporting challenges, particularly in inactive markets.
On December 30, 2008 the SEC staff issued the results of the Congressionally mandated study on mark-to-market accounting. Among other things, the study recommends that improvements could be made to the fair value standards. The areas for improvement include accounting for impairments, fair value measurements in inactive markets, further analysis of the utility of incorporating credit risk in fair value measurements of liabilities and presentation and disclosures.
In 2009, legislation was introduced in the US Congress to suspend the use of fair value. Amidst the continuing controversy, in April 2009 the FASB issued additional interpretive guidance on fair value accounting and other- than-temporary impairment in FSP FAS 157-4 and FSP FAS 115-2 and FAS 124-2.
The current status is that Statement 157 is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007, (i.e., 2008 for calendar year companies). The effective date of Statement 157 was deferred for one year for nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities that are not recognized or disclosed at fair value in the financial statements on a recurring basis, such as those acquired in a business combination. The Statement takes effect for these types of assets and liabilities for fiscal years beginning after Nov. 15, 2008. (See FSP FAS 157-2, “Effective Date of FASB Statement No. 157” as discussed above.) For more information, please read BDO's letter on Fair Value Measurements.
FASB Interpretation No. 48
-
Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes—an interpretation of FASB
Statement No. 109
In June 2006, the FASB issued
Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.
FASB Interpretation 48 defines a tax position as any position taken (or not taken) in a tax return (either previously filed or future) that affects the accounting for income tax assets and liabilities (either current or deferred).
Prior to the issuance of Interpretation 48, there was diversity in the way companies accounted for uncertain tax positions. Interpretation 48 (known as FIN 48) brings more consistency. It requires that companies recognize the benefit of a tax position only if it is “more likely than not” that the position will be sustained in a determination based solely on the technical merits of the position by a taxing authority with full knowledge of all relevant information.
FIN 48 also introduces added disclosure requirements.
Effective Date and Subsequent
Guidance
For public companies, the
Interpretation is effective for years beginning after December 15, 2006. For
nonpublic companies, the Interpretation is effective for years beginning
after December 15, 2008, with early adoption permitted. Subsequent to the
issuance of Interpretation 48 the FASB issued several FSPs related to the
standard:
FSP FIN 48-1
In June 2006, the FASB released
FSP FIN 48-1, “Definition of Settlement in FASB Interpretation No. 48.” This
FSP replaces the original FIN 48 term “ultimately settled” with the new term
“effectively settled” and clarifies its meaning. The FSP provides three
conditions that should be met for a tax position to be considered
effectively settled with the taxing authority:
The taxing authority has completed its examination procedures, including all appeals and administrative reviews that the taxing authority is required and expected to perform for the tax position.
The company does not intend to appeal or litigate any aspect of the tax position included in the completed examination.
The likelihood is remote that the taxing authority would examine or reexamine any aspect of the tax position.
In addition, the FSP reminds companies that if a taxing authority completes an exam and fails to identify an uncertain tax position in that year’s tax return, the potential settlement of the tax position for that tax year provides no new evidence about the technical merits of similar tax positions in other years’ tax returns. This guidance is effective upon initial adoption of FIN 48.
FSP FIN 48-2
In February 2008, the FASB
released FSP FIN 48-2, “Effective Date of FASB Interpretation No. 48 for
Certain Nonpublic Enterprises.” This FSP deferred the effective date of
Interpretation 48 for nearly all standalone nonpublic companies until annual
periods beginning after December 15, 2007.
FSP FIN 48-2 was effective upon issuance, and the effective date of Interpretation 48 was further extended by FSP FIN 48-3.
FSP FIN 48-3
In December, 2008, the FASB
released FSP FIN 48-3, “Effective Date of FASB Interpretation No. 48 for
Certain Nonpublic Enterprises,” This FSP delays the effective date of
Interpretation 48 for nonpublic companies within its scope to annual
financial statements for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008. The
scope excludes nonpublic companies that are consolidated entities of a
public company that applies US GAAP and those that have issued a full set of
annual financial statements before the issuance of the FSP using the
recognition, measurement and disclosure requirements of Interpretation 48.
Companies that elect to take the deferral made available by the FSP must disclose this fact and their accounting policies for evaluating uncertain tax positions for each set of financial statements to which the deferral applies. The intent of the deferral is to give the FASB time to develop additional guidance on the application of the Interpretation to pass-through entities and not-for-profit organizations.
Once effective, Interpretation 48 should be applied as of the beginning of the nonpublic company’s fiscal year. This includes the application of the Interpretation to acquired income tax positions in Statement 141, Business Combinations.
This section contains summaries of EITF Issues and Topics that: (a) were issued in 2008 or the first quarter of 2009, or (b) are effective for periods beginning after December 15, 2008 or later and (c) are not discussed elsewhere in this Financial Reporting letter.
Issue No. 07-1, “Accounting for the
Conversion of an Instrument That Became Convertible upon the Issuer’s
Exercise of a Call Option”
This Issue addresses the accounting for
arrangements in which entities seek partners to jointly develop and
commercialize intellectual property. Such collaborative arrangements are
common in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries and also exist in
other industries, such as the motion picture, software and computer hardware
industries.
Included in the scope of this Issue are collaborative arrangements that are conducted without the creation of a separate legal entity for the arrangement. For these types of arrangements:
The results of third-party transactions, (that is, revenue generated and costs incurred by participants from transactions with parties outside of the collaborative arrangement), should be reported gross or net on the appropriate line item in each participant's respective financial statements pursuant to the guidance in Issue 99-19, “Reporting Revenue Gross as a Principal versus Net as an Agent.”
The equity method of accounting under APB Opinion 18, The Equity Method of Accounting for Investments in Common Stock, should not be applied to an arrangement that is conducted by the participants without the creation of a separate legal entity for the arrangement.
The Issue also establishes annual disclosure requirements regarding such matters as the nature and purpose of a company’s collaborative arrangements, its rights and obligations under these arrangements, and the stage of the life cycle of the underlying endeavor, as well as information about income statement classification and amounts attributable to transactions between participants to the collaborative arrangement.
Issue No. 07-4, “Application of the Two-Class
Method under FASB Statement No. 128, Earnings per Share, to Master Limited
Partnerships”
This Issue addresses questions that arise
when calculating earnings per share (EPS) for master limited partnerships (MLPs)
using the two-class method. The two class method is a formula for allocating
earnings. Under this formula, EPS are determined for each class of common
stock and participating security according to dividends declared (or
accumulated) and participation rights in undistributed earnings.
Today’s publicly-traded MLPs often issue multiple classes of securities that may participate in partnership distributions according to a formula specified in the partnership agreement. Typically, the capital structure for an MLP consists of publicly-traded units held by limited partners, a general partner interest, and incentive distribution rights (IDRs).
A key issue is how the current period earnings of an MLP should be allocated to the general partner, limited partners, and, when applicable, holders of IDRs.
Issue 07-4 establishes these principles:
Undistributed earnings should be allocated to the general partner, limited partners and any holders of IDRs using the contractual terms of the partnership agreement.
When cash distributions are in excess of current- period earnings, net income (or loss) should be reduced (or increased) by distributions to the general partner, limited partners, and holders of IDRs. The resulting excess of distributions over earnings is allocated to the general partner and limited partners based on their respective sharing of losses (that is, the provisions for allocation of losses to the partners' capital accounts) specified in the partnership agreement.
EITF Issue No. 07-5, “Determining Whether an
Instrument (or Embedded Feature) Is Indexed to an Entity's Own Stock”
This Issue addresses questions that can arise
when determining whether an instrument (or an embedded feature) is indexed
to an entity's own stock. This determination is important because it is one
of several conditions that, when taken together, could result in a
conclusion that an instrument or embedded feature is not a derivative. As
compared to prior guidance, the consensus on Issue 07-5 will result in fewer
instruments being classified as equity and more being classified as
derivatives and as liabilities.
The Issue establishes that certain types of instruments are not considered indexed to the entity’s own shares, (i.e., instruments with a strike price denominated in a currency other than the issuer’s functional currency and market-based employee option valuation instruments, such as ESOARS.)
For other types of instruments, the EITF reached a consensus that entities should apply a two-step approach for determining whether the instrument or embedded feature is indexed to an entity's own stock.
Step 1. Evaluate the instrument's contingent exercise provisions, if any. When conducting this step, companies should look to the guidance in EITF Issue 01-6, “The Meaning of ‘Indexed to a Company’s Own Stock.’” This guidance provides conditions under which contingent exercise provisions preclude an instrument or embedded feature from being indexed to an entity's own stock. If this step does not indicate any precluding factors, then the analysis would proceed to Step 2.
Step 2. Evaluate the instrument's
settlement provisions taking into account several tests explained in the
Issue. If the instrument’s settlement provisions incorporate certain
inputs or contain features such as leverage factors, then the instrument
would not be considered indexed to the entity’s own shares. For example,
if an instrument has any of the following features that result in a
settlement price reset, the instrument will fail the second test of step
2 and will not be considered indexed to the company’s own stock:
- Settlement price resets for a decline in the stock price not directly
linked to a specific action by the
company.
- Settlement price resets as a result of company sale of common stock at
a lower price (that is equal to fair
value at the time of sale).
- Settlement price resets as a result of company failure to meet a
revenue milestone.
Issue No. 08-3, “Accounting by Lessees for
Maintenance Deposits Under Lease Arrangements”
This Issue addresses the accounting for
certain lease arrangements that require the lessee to pay maintenance
deposits to ensure that it properly maintains the leased asset. The
maintenance deposits in the scope of this Issue are refunded to the lessee
if the specified maintenance activities are performed.
The consensus reached by the EITF indicates that maintenance deposits in the scope of this Issue should be accounted for as a deposit asset. When the underlying maintenance is performed, the costs should be expensed or capitalized consistent with the lessee’s maintenance accounting policy.

Any amounts on deposit that are less than probable of being returned should be recognized as additional expense.
Issue No. 08-4, “Transition Guidance for
Conforming Changes to Issue No. 98-5”
This Issue amends EITF Issue No. 98-5,
“Accounting for Convertible Securities with Beneficial Conversion Features
or Contingently Adjustable Conversion Ratios” for changes made by EITF Issue
No. 00-27, “ Application of Issue No. 98-5 to Certain Convertible
Instruments,” and FASB Statement No. 150, Accounting for Certain Financial
Instruments with Characteristics of both Liabilities and Equity.
While Issue 00-27 and Statement 150 were issued several years ago, Issue 98-5 was never updated to reflect the effect of those two standards and some entities continued to apply the superseded guidance in Issue 98-5.
Issue No. 08-5, “Issuer’s Accounting for
Liabilities Measured at Fair Value With a Third-Party Credit Enhancement”
This Issue addresses questions about how to
measure the fair value of debt instruments with inseparable third-party
credit enhancements. For example, a company may issue debt with a
contractual guarantee by a third party to meet the payment obligations of
the issuer, if the issuer defaults. These guarantees are typically purchased
by the issuer who then combines them with the debt and issues the combined
securities to investors.
At issue is whether the fair value of the instrument should take into account the third-party credit enhancement--or if it should consider only the issuer’s risk of non-performance. Issue 08-5 establishes the following guidance:
The unit of accounting for the debt does not include the third-party credit enhancement, and the issuer of a liability with an inseparable third-party credit enhancement should not include the effect of the third-party credit enhancement in the fair value measurement of the liability.
An entity that has an outstanding liability within the scope of Issue 08-5 should disclose the existence of the credit enhancement.
This Issue does not apply to credit enhancements provided by the government or governmental agencies, (e.g., deposit insurance).
Issue No. 08-6, “Equity Method Investment
Accounting Considerations”
This Issue addresses questions about the
accounting for equity method investments. The questions arose following the
issuance in 2007 of FASB Statements No. 141R, Business Combinations, and No.
160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements--an
amendment of ARB No. 51.
Statements 141R and 160 do not directly address the accounting for equity method investments, but questions arose because the standards amended, (i.e., Statement 141 and ARB 51), contained certain provisions that were used in applying the equity method. Issue 08-6 provides the following clarifications:
The initial carrying value of an equity method investment should be measured at cost in accordance with paragraphs D3-D7 of Statement 141R.
Subsequent to the initial measurement, equity method investors are required to recognize their share of other- than-temporary impairments of equity method investments in accordance with APB Opinion 18. They are not required to do any separate impairment testing of the investee’s underlying assets (including its underlying indefinite-lived intangible assets). But they must also consider the effect, if any, of the impairment on the investor’s basis difference in the assets giving rise to the investee’s impairment charge.
If the equity method investee issues shares, the equity method investor should account for the issuance as if it had sold a proportionate share of its investment, with the resulting gain or loss recognized in earnings.
If the equity method investor changes to the cost method, it should continue to apply the guidance in paragraph 19(1) of APB Opinion 18 that addresses such changes.
Issue No. 08-7, “Accounting for Defensive
Intangible Assets”
This Issue addresses questions that have
arisen in anticipation of the complexities involved in applying Statements
141R and 157, Fair Value Measurements, to certain types of intangible assets
(known as defensive intangible assets) acquired in a business combination or
asset acquisition.
Defensive intangible assets are intangible assets that are not being actively used, but are held to prevent another entity from using them. An example might be a trade name of an acquired entity that the acquirer does not intend to use itself. An asset of this type is defensive because it is a “locked-up” asset. Such an asset is likely contributing to an increase in the value of other assets owned by the acquiring entity.
Typically, in the past, when a company acquired an asset of this type, it allocated little or no value to the asset. However, this practice will change when Statements 141R and 157 become effective and intangible assets must be recognized at a value that reflects the asset’s highest and best use based on market participant assumptions. The new standards have raised questions about how defensive assets should be accounted for subsequent to their acquisition. Issue 08-7 provides the following guidance:
A defensive asset should be accounted for as a separate unit of accounting. It should not be included as part of the cost of the acquirer’s existing intangible assets because the defensive asset is separately identifiable.
The useful life of the defensive asset should reflect the period over which the entity consumes the expected benefits of the asset, (i.e., by estimating the period over which the defensive intangible asset will diminish in fair value).
It would be rare for a defensive asset to have an indefinite life.
A defensive intangible asset cannot be considered immediately abandoned.
The scope of this Issue excludes all research and development intangible assets. These assets should be accounted for in accordance with paragraph 16 of Statement 142 as amended by Statement 141R.
Issue No. 08-8, “Accounting for an Instrument
(or an Embedded Feature) with a Settlement Amount that is Based on the Stock
of an Entity’s Consolidated Subsidiary”
This Issue addresses questions that have
arisen about the accounting for certain financial instruments following the
issuance of Statement 160. At issue are instruments (and embedded features)
for which the payoff to the counterparty is based, in whole or in part, on
the stock of a consolidated subsidiary. An example would be warrants to
purchase shares of a consolidated subsidiary.
The questions relate to consistency with current guidance. Currently, EITF Issue No. 00-6, “Accounting for Freestanding Derivative Financial Instruments Indexed to, and Potentially Settled in, the Stock of a Consolidated Subsidiary,” indicates that instruments issued by an entity based on the equity of one of the entity’s consolidated subsidiaries are not equity instruments of the consolidated entity, with the result that they are typically treated as derivatives and recognized at fair value each reporting period.
Some accountants have questioned whether the guidance in Issue 00-6 is consistent with that provided in Statement 160. After the effective date of Statement 160, the noncontrolling interest in a subsidiary’s stock will be classified in the equity of the consolidated entity. Therefore, instruments in the scope of Issue 08-8 will no longer be treated as derivatives, provided they are not required to be classified as liabilities, (e.g., under Statement 150 or Issue 00-19.) Issue 08-8 provides the following clarifications:
Instruments based on the stock of a subsidiary are not precluded from being considered indexed to the company’s own stock in the consolidated financial statements of the parent.
An equity-classified instrument within the scope of Issue 08-8 generally would be presented as a component of noncontrolling interest in the consolidated financial statements, whether the instrument was entered into by the parent or the subsidiary.
If an equity-classified instrument within the scope of Issue 08-8 is entered into by the parent and expires unexercised, the carrying amount of that instrument would be reclassified from the noncontrolling interest to the controlling interest.
As a result of these clarifications, certain instruments linked to subsidiary stock that were previously accounted for as derivatives may be included in equity consistent with FASB Statement 160, if they meet other requirements to be classified as equity, such as EITF Issue 00-19, and if the subsidiary is substantive.
Topic No. D-98, “Classification and
Measurement of Redeemable Securities”
During 2008, the SEC Observer made several
announcements resulting in revisions to Topic D-98. The revisions explain
the interaction between the SEC staff’s views on the classification and
measurement of redeemable securities (codified as EITF Topic D- 98) and
FASB’s releases on noncontrolling interests (Statement 160) and certain
convertible debt instruments (FSP APB 14-1).
(1) Noncontrolling Interests
The SEC staff revised Topic D-98 to conform
with FASB Statement No. 160, Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated
Financial Statements. Statement 160 requires noncontrolling interests in
consolidated subsidiaries to be classified and accounted for as equity in
the consolidated financial statements. The revisions clarify that Topic D-98
applies to redeemable noncontrolling interests and requires them to be
classified outside of permanent equity (temporary equity or mezzanine).
As revised, Topic D-98 provides guidance for situations where classification of an equity security in temporary equity is no longer required, (e.g., when the redemption feature expires or the terms of the security are modified). When this classification is no longer required, the equity security should be reclassified to permanent equity at its carrying amount on the date of reclassification. Reversals of previous adjustments to the carrying amount of the equity security would be inappropriate.
Additionally, the SEC staff revised Topic D-98 to provide guidance on measuring the gain or loss that is recorded when a parent deconsolidates a subsidiary. Previous adjustments to the carrying amount of noncontrolling interests should be eliminated by recording a credit to the parent’s equity (because the previous adjustments to the carrying amount were recorded as debits to the parent’s equity). This will have the effect of reducing the gain, or increasing the loss, upon deconsolidation. The SEC staff encourages disclosure of the amount credited to equity.
Finally, the SEC staff provided the following guidance for calculating the effect of redeemable noncontrolling interests on earnings per share:
For noncontrolling interests in the form of preferred shares, if the redemption feature is issued or guaranteed by the parent, the entire adjustment to the carrying amount of the noncontrolling interest reduces (or increases) income available to common shareholders of the parent.
For noncontrolling interests in the form of preferred shares, if the redemption feature is not issued or guaranteed by the parent, the adjustment to the carrying amount of the noncontrolling interest reduces (or increases) the subsidiary’s income available to common shareholders, which then affects parent company earnings per share.
For noncontrolling interests in the form of common shares redeemable at fair value, the carrying amount should be adjusted each period to the redemption amount, but the adjustments have no effect on earnings per share.
For noncontrolling interests in the form of common shares redeemable at other than fair value, the adjustments to the carrying amount may adjust: (a) net income attributable to the parent, or (b) income available to common shareholders of the parent.
(2) Convertible Debt
The SEC Observer announced the SEC’s views on
the interaction between Topic D-98 and the FASB’s recent guidance on certain
convertible debt provided in FSP APB 14-1, “Accounting for Convertible Debt
Instruments that may be settled in Cash upon Conversion (including Partial
Cash Settlement).”
If the equity-classified component of the instruments covered by the FSP is considered redeemable, then a portion of it would be classified as temporary equity. That portion is calculated as the excess of: (1) the amount of cash or other assets that would be required to be paid to the holder upon redemption or conversion, over (2) the current carrying amount of the liability-classified component of the convertible debt instrument.
This section contains summaries of FASB Staff Positions (FSPs) that: (a) were issued in 2008 or the first quarter of 2009, or (b) are effective for periods beginning after December 15, 2008 or later, and (c) are not discussed elsewhere in this Financial Reporting letter.
FSP APB 14-1, “Accounting for Convertible Debt
Instruments That May Be Settled in Cash upon Conversion (Including Partial
Cash Settlement)”
The FASB released FSP APB 14-1 on May 9, 2008. This FSP
changes the accounting for convertible debt instruments that permit or
require the issuer to pay cash upon conversion.
Under the FSP, the issuer will no longer account for the convertible debt entirely as a liability. Instead, the issuer will allocate the proceeds from the issuance of the instrument between liability and equity. The resulting debt discount, (i.e., the difference between the principal amount of the debt and the amount allocated to the liability component), is subsequently amortized to earnings over the instrument’s expected life using the interest method, (i.e., the discount is charged to interest expense).
In effect, this accounting treatment eliminates the perceived accounting benefits these instruments have enjoyed compared with similar instruments, namely lower interest expense and a less dilutive effect on earnings per share.
FSP EITF 03-6-1, “Determining Whether Instruments Granted
in Share-Based Payment Transactions Are Participating Securities”
FSP EITF 03-6-1 was released on June 16, 2008. It clarifies
the conditions under which instruments granted in share- based payment
transactions can meet the definition of participating securities prior to
vesting. Instruments that meet this definition need to be included in the
earnings allocation under the two-class method of computing earnings per
share (EPS).
Participating securities are defined in FASB Statement No. 128, Earnings per Share, as “...securities that may participate in dividends with common stocks according to a predetermined formula…” The FSP clarifies that a share-based payment award could meet this definition prior to the requisite service having been rendered if it contains nonforfeitable rights to dividends or dividend equivalents. In contrast, awards would not meet the definition of a participating security if the holder will forfeit the rights to dividends or dividend equivalents if the award does not vest.
FSP EITF 99-20-1, “Amendments to the Impairment Guidance
of EITF Issue No. 99-20”
The FASB released FSP EITF 99-20-1 on January 12, 2009. This
FSP addresses concerns about losses recorded in illiquid markets by
companies with beneficial interests in securitized financial assets subject
to EITF Issue 99-20, “Recognition of Interest Income and Impairment on
Purchased Beneficial Interests and Beneficial Interests That Continue to Be
Held by a Transferor in Securitized Financial Assets.”
A key concern is the lack of comparability with the accounting for other instruments. In some cases, companies may have taken impairment losses that would not have been recorded if the securities had been subject to the impairment test in FASB Statement No. 115, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities.
This FSP is likely to affect banks more so than other companies.
FSP FAS 117-1, “Endowments of Not-for-Profit
Organizations: Net Asset Classification of Funds Subject to an Enacted
Version of the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act, and
Enhanced Disclosures for All Endowment Funds”
FSP FAS No. 117-1 was released on August 6, 2008. It affects
not-for-profit organizations. The FSP provides guidance on the net asset
classification of donor-restricted endowment funds under the Uniform Prudent
Management of Institutional Funds Act of 2006 (UPMIFA). It also requires
enhanced disclosures by all not-for-profit organizations that have
endowments (whether donor restricted or not). These disclosure requirements
apply regardless of whether the organization is currently subject to UPMIFA,
a model act that has not yet been adopted by all states.
FSP FAS 132(R)-1, “Employers’ Disclosures about
Postretirement Benefit Plan Assets”
FSP FAS 132(R)-1 was released on December 30, 2008. It
requires additional disclosures by employers that sponsor defined benefit
pension or other postretirement plans. The disclosures provide more
information about plan assets, investment decisions and related risks. The
specific added disclosure requirements include the following:
Information about how investment allocation decisions are made, including factors that provide an understanding of investment policies and strategies.
Information about asset categories, including significant concentrations of risk within plan assets.
Information about the fair value measurements of plan assets, including their levels within the fair value hierarchy and the effect of fair value measurements using significant unobservable inputs (level 3 measures) on changes in plan assets for the period, (that is, a roll forward of level 3 assets).
FSP FAS 133-1 and FIN 45-4, Disclosures about Credit
Derivatives and Certain Guarantees: An Amendment of FASB Statement No. 133
and FASB Interpretation No. 45; and Clarification of the Effective Date of
FASB Statement No. 161”
As the credit crisis deepened in 2008, the FASB issued FSP
FAS 133-1 and FIN 45-4, “Disclosures about Credit Derivatives and Certain
Guarantees,” on September 12, 2008. This FSP requires companies to provide
more information about events that will trigger payouts by sellers, and it
aligns the requirements for two similar kinds of contracts involving
guarantees: (a) contracts that meet the definition of a derivative or
embedded derivative, and (b) guarantee contracts that do not meet the
definition of a derivative. The specific disclosure requirements include:
An indication of the current status of the payment and performance risk associated with credit derivatives and guarantees.
Descriptions and explanations of events and circumstances that will trigger payments by sellers of derivatives in accordance with contractual requirements.
Information about the maximum amount of potential future payments, the fair values of the instruments and any related recourse or collateral provisions that would allow sellers to recover amounts previously paid in connection with credit derivatives.
The FSP also clarifies that the disclosures required by Statement 161 should be provided for any reporting period (annual or quarterly interim) beginning after November 15, 2008.
FSP FAS 140-3, “Accounting for Transfers of Financial
Assets and Repurchase Financing Transactions”
FSP FAS 140-3 was released on February 20, 2008. It
addresses questions that have arisen about the accounting for a repurchase
agreement that relates to a repurchase financing. Repurchase financings are
repurchase agreements that relate to a previously transferred asset, are
between the same counterparties, and are entered into contemporaneously
with, or in contemplation of, the initial transfer.

The FSP discusses transactions in which the initial purchase and repurchase agreements are treated separately and others in which the two transactions are linked and may meet the definition of a derivative under FASB Statement 133.
FSP FAS 140-4 and FIN 46(R)-8, “Disclosures by Public
Entities (Enterprises) about Transfers of Financial Assets and Interests in
Variable Interest Entities”
FSP FAS 140-4 and FIN 46(R)-8, “Disclosures by Public
Entities (Enterprises) about Transfers of Financial Assets and Interests in
Variable Interest Entities,” was released on December 11, 2008. It increases
the disclosure requirements for public companies. The full list of
requirements is extensive. Among other things, companies must provide
information about:
The assumptions used and judgments made in deciding whether to consolidate a variable interest entity (VIE).
The nature of any risks associated with the company’s involvement in VIEs, including information about events or circumstances that could expose a company to a loss and how the company calculates its maximum exposure to such losses.
FASB Staff Position FSP FAS 142-3, “Determination of the
Useful Life of Intangible Assets”
The FASB released FSP FAS 142-3 on April 25, 2008. This FSP
revises the factors that should be considered in developing renewal or
extension assumptions used to determine the useful life of a recognized
intangible asset under FASB Statement No. 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible
Assets.
A key concern involves the useful lives of longer-lived intangible assets with renewal or extension terms, particularly when the terms are not explicit in the arrangement.
The FSP indicates that companies should consider their own historical experience in renewing or extending similar arrangements. If there is no track record, then the company should consider the assumptions that market participants would make about renewal or extension. In either case, the results should be adjusted for certain company-specific factors outlined in Statement 142. The expectation is that this will result in greater consistency between the useful life of a recognized intangible asset under Statement 142 and the period of expected cash flows used to measure the fair value of the asset under Statement 141R, Business Combinations.
The FSP also establishes additional disclosure requirements.
FSP SOP 07-1-1, “Effective Date of AICPA Statement of
Position 07-1-1”
The FASB issued FSP SOP 07-1-1 on February 14, 2008 to delay
the effective date of SOP 07-1 for an indefinite period of time. The purpose
of the deferral is to allow more time for the resolution of implementation
issues.
The FSP does not affect FSP FIN 46(R)-7, “Application of FASB Interpretation No. 46(R) to Investment Companies.” FSP FIN 46(R) is effective only upon initial adoption of SOP 07-1.
FSP SOP 90-7-1. “An Amendment of AICPA Statement of
Position 90-7”
The FASB released FSP SOP 90-7 on April 24, 2008 to resolve
this conflict in the accounting literature between AICPA Statement of
Position (SOP) 90-7-1, “Financial Reporting by Entities in Reorganization
Under the Bankruptcy Code,” and the growing number of accounting standards
that expressly prohibit early adoption.
The FSP removes the requirement that entities must adopt concurrently with their adoption of fresh start accounting any changes in accounting principles that will be required within the twelve months following their adoption of fresh start accounting.
FSP SOP 94-3-1 and AAG HCO-1, “Omnibus Changes to
Consolidation and Equity Method Guidance for Not-for-Profit Organizations”
FSP SOP 94-3-1 and AAG HCO-1 was released on May 19, 2008.
It makes several changes to the guidance on consolidation and the equity
method of accounting in AICPA Statement of Position (SOP) 94-3, “Reporting
of Related Entities by Not-for-Profit Organizations,” and the AICPA Audit
and Accounting Guide, “Health Care Organizations.”
Summaries of Other Technical Resources
In addition to the pronouncements summarized herein, other technical resources may be helpful for purposes of financial reporting. Noteworthy resources issued in 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 are summarized below. This section includes documents issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), American Institute of CPAs (AICPA), Center for Audit Quality (CAQ), XBRL US organization, and Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB).
FASB
Codification
The FASB’s Accounting Standards Codification is expected to go live on July
1, 2009. The Codification reorganizes the thousands of US GAAP
pronouncements into approximately 90 topics. This new online system will
supersede the existing collection of FASB Statements, Interpretations, Staff
Positions, and Technical Bulletins, APB Opinions, AICPA Statements of
Position, EITF consensuses, and related literature and will be recognized as
the single source of authoritative nongovernmental U.S. GAAP, (excluding
guidance issued by the SEC). While the substantive requirements will be the
same, the form and organization will be radically different. Once the
Codification is live, all accounting standards (other than SEC guidance to
be included in the content) will be superseded and any accounting literature
not included in the Codification will be considered nonauthoritative (with
the exception of the SEC and any grandfathered guidance). To review the
Codification, register at
http://asc.fasb.org.
The MoU is based on these principles:
Convergence of accounting standards can best be achieved through the development of high-quality, common standards over time.
Trying to eliminate differences between two standards that are in need of significant improvement is not the best use of the FASB’s and IASB’s resources. Instead, the Boards should focus on the development of new common standards.
Replacing standards in need of improvement with new jointly developed standards will serve the needs of investors.
The MoU contains a listing and status report of major projects and estimated completion dates. It is available at http://www.fasb.org/intl/MOU_09-11-08.pdf.
AICPA Guides - Airlines Audit and Accounting Guide
The Guide also includes separate chapters dedicated specifically to air cargo and regional carriers.
TIS 1100.15.
Liquidity Restrictions
This TPA provides examples of potential accounting implications that may
arise as a result of the placement of restrictions by a fund or its trustee
on an entity’s ability to withdraw funds from a money market fund or other
short- term investment vehicle. The accounting implications include a
potential change in the balance sheet classification of the assets and the
triggering of additional disclosure requirements.
TIS 1900.01
Condensed Interim Financial Reporting by NonIssuers
This TPA states that, in the absence of established accounting principles
for form and content in preparing condensed interim financial statements,
nonissuers may analogize to the guidance in Article 10 of SEC Regulation
S-X. The condensed interim financial statements should include a note saying
the financial information should be read in conjunction with the entity’s
latest annual financial statements, and the latest annual financial
statements should either accompany the condensed statements or be made
readily available by the entity.
TIS 6300.36.
Prospective Unlocking
This TPA states that insurance companies are not permitted to “unlock”
certain assumptions made in FASB Statement 60, Accounting and Reporting by
Insurance Enterprises, except in the premium deficiency situations described
in Statement 60.
In response to a specific question about premium rate increases, the TPA indicates that such increases after the inception of the contract would not be a valid reason to unlock the assumptions.
TPA
6910.25-.28. Investment Companies TPAs
In May 2008, the AICPA issued a series of TPAs related to Investment
Companies. The TPA numbers and titles are as follows:
6910.25, "Considerations in Evaluating Whether Certain Liabilities Constitute 'Debt' for Purposes of Assessing Whether an Investment Company Must Present a Statement of Cash Flows."
6910.26, "Additional Guidance on Determinants of Net Versus Gross Presentation of Security Purchases and Sales/Maturities in the Statement of Cash Flows of a Nonregistered Investment Company."
6910.27, "Treatment of Deferred Fees."
6910.28,
"Reporting Financial Highlights, Net Asset Value (NAV) Per Share, Shares
Outstanding, and Share
Transactions When Investors in Unitized Nonregistered Funds Are Issued
Individual Classes or Series of Shares."
TPA 6910.29.
Allocation of Unrealized Gain (Loss), Recognition of Carried Interest, and
Clawback Obligation
This TPA deals with financial statements of investment partnerships in
which capital is reported by investor class. The TPA indicates that, if a
nonregistered investment partnership reports capital by investor class,
cumulative unrealized gains (losses), carried interest, and clawback
provisions would be reflected in the equity balances of each class of
shareholder or partner at the balance sheet date, as if the investment
company had realized all assets and settled all liabilities at the fair
values reported in the financial statements, and allocated all gains and
losses and distributed the net assets to each class of shareholder or
partner at the reporting date consistent with the provisions of the
partnership’s governing documents.
TPA 6995.
Credit Unions
TPA 6995.01 addresses accounting questions related to certain actions
taken by the National Credit Union System and National Credit Union Share
Insurance Fund in January 2009. The actions were taken to stabilize the
corporate credit union system. Among other things, these actions involve the
assessment of an insurance premium. The TPA considers when and how the
obligation for the insurance premium should be recognized for financial
reporting purposes.
TPA 6995.02 addresses how a corporate credit union should evaluate its membership capital shares and paid-in capital in the U.S. Central Federal Credit Union for other-than-temporary impairment at December 31, 2008.
Draft Issues
Paper on Valuation of Interests in Alternative Investments
In January 2009, the AICPA’s Accounting Standards Executive Committee
and the Alternative Investments Task Force issued a nonauthoritative draft
Issues Paper on FASB Statement No. 157, Valuation Considerations for
Interests in Alternative Investments. The paper focuses on issues related to
estimating fair value for investments that are not traded in active markets,
including how the following should be considered in estimating fair value:
Net asset values.
Transactions in principal-to-principal or brokered markets.
Features of the alternative investment, such as lock-up periods, holdbacks, and the lack of a redemption option.
Expected future cash flows.
The Center for Audit Quality (CAQ) was created in January 2007 as a policy and information forum to foster confidence in the audit process and to aid investors and the capital markets. The Center is affiliated with the AICPA and issues periodic alerts, some of which are available to the general public. For more information, visit http://thecaq.aicpa.org/.
Highlights of the CAQ’s publicly available alerts are summarized below.
CAQ Alert No.
2009-08. Frequent SEC Comment Letter Issues for Smaller Registrants
In January 2009, the CAQ issued an Alert describing aspects of financial
reporting that are frequently incorporated in SEC comment letters to smaller
registrants. According to the alert, the areas of accounting that are
frequent subjects of comment letters include:
Disclosures, including revenue recognition policy disclosures, compliance with EITF Issue No. 00-21, “Revenue with Multiple Deliverables,” and compliance with EITF Issue No. 99-19, “Reporting Revenue Gross as a Principal versus Net as an Agent.”
Business combinations, including classification of transactions as acquisitions of business or assets, purchase price allocations under FASB Statement No. 42, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets, reverse acquisitions and recapitalizations, entities under common control, separate financial statements of an acquired business, and disclosures under Statement 141, Business Combinations.
Fair value determination, and disclosures regarding fair value.
Embedded conversion options and warrants.
US GAAP
Taxonomy
In November 2008, the XBRL US organization released for public comment a
draft of the 2009 release of the US GAAP Taxonomy. The first release was
issued in April 2008.
XBRL stands for eXtensible Business Reporting Language, a computer format that facilitates a form of reporting the SEC calls interactive data. The US GAAP Taxonomy is intended for use with the SEC requirements for XBRL reporting.
The SEC’s final rule, “Interactive Data to Improve Financial Reporting,” was released on January 30, 2009 and will take effect in 2009 for certain public companies according to a phased-in schedule.
The largest companies who file using U.S. GAAP with a public float above $5 billion will be required to provide interactive data reports starting with their first quarterly report for fiscal periods ending on or after June 15, 2009. This will cover approximately 500 companies.
The remaining companies who file using U.S. GAAP will be required to file with interactive data on a phased-in schedule over the next two years.
Companies reporting in IFRS issued by the International Accounting Standards Board will be required to provide their interactive data reports starting with fiscal years ending on or after June 15, 2011.
The US GAAP taxonomy will enable public companies to make quarterly and annual financial reports available in interactive data form instead of text form. This will allow investors and analysts, as well as the companies themselves to more easily locate and analyze desired information. The comment period for the 2009 US GAAP taxonomy ended on January 15, 2009.
This section contains selected releases of the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB).
GASB
Statement No. 43, Financial Reporting for Postemployment Benefit Plans Other
Than Pension Plans
Statement 43 establishes accounting guidance for OPEB plans that are
included as trust funds in the financial reports of plan sponsors or
employers, or issued in standalone financial reports.
GASB
Statement No. 45, Accounting and Financial Reporting by Employers for
Postemployment Benefits Other Than Pensions
Statement 45 provides guidance on how to account for and report the costs
and obligations related to postemployment healthcare and other forms of
OPEB. The accounting requirements are based on actuarial-determined amounts
similar to requirements for pensions. The OPEB cost is generally the
actuarial-determined amount that, if paid on an ongoing basis, would provide
sufficient resources to pay benefits as they come due.
GASB
Statement No. 47, Accounting for Termination Benefits
Statement 47 establishes accounting standards for termination benefits.
Key points:
In financial statements prepared on the accrual basis of accounting, employers should recognize a liability and expense for voluntary termination benefits (for example, early-retirement incentives) when the offer is accepted and the amount can be estimated.
A liability and expense for involuntary termination benefits (for example, severance benefits) should be recognized when three conditions are met: (a) a plan of termination has been approved by those with the authority to commit the government to the plan, (b) the plan has been communicated to the employees, and (c) the amount can be estimated.
In financial statements prepared on the modified accrual basis of accounting, liabilities and expenditures for termination benefits should be recognized to the extent the liabilities are normally expected to be liquidated with expendable available financial resources.
Health care-related termination benefits that are provided as the result of a large-scale, age-related program, (e.g., an early-retirement incentive program that affects a significant portion of employees), should be measured at their discounted present values based on projected total claims costs (or age-adjusted premiums approximating claims costs) for terminated employees, with consideration given to the expected future health care cost trend rate.
GASB
Statement No. 49, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pollution
Remediation Obligations
Statement 49 provides guidance on the accounting for pollution
remediation obligations. These are obligations to address the current or
potential detrimental effects of existing pollution by participating in
remediation activities, such as site assessments and cleanups.
The Statement establishes five events and circumstances that obligate the government to analyze its expected future outlays for pollution remediation and consider which components should be set up as liabilities.
The triggering factors include being compelled to take action because of an imminent endangerment, violating a pollution prevention-related permit or license, being named as a responsible party or potentially responsible party, being named in a lawsuit to compel participation in pollution remediation, and commencing or legally obligating itself to commence pollution remediation.
Pollution remediation outlays may be capitalized in limited circumstances under the standard, but most pollution remediation outlays will not qualify for capitalization and should be accrued as a liability.
GASB
Statement No. 50, Pension Disclosures—an amendment of GASB Statements No. 25
and No. 27
Statement 50 more closely aligns the financial reporting requirements
for pensions with those for other postemployment benefits (OPEB) and
requires the disclosure of additional information in notes to financial
statements or in a presentation of required supplementary information (RSI)
by pension plans and by employers that provide pension benefits. The
disclosure requirements include the following information:
Notes to financial statements should disclose the funded status of the plan as of the most recent actuarial valuation date. Defined benefit pension plans also should disclose actuarial methods and significant assumptions used in the most recent actuarial valuation in notes to financial statements instead of in notes to RSI.
If the aggregate actuarial cost method is used to determine the annual required contribution of the employer (ARC), notes to financial statements should disclose the funded status of the plan, and a schedule of funding progress should be presented as RSI, using the entry age actuarial cost method. Plans and employers also should disclose that the purpose of doing so is to provide information that serves as a surrogate for the funded status and funding progress of the plan.
Notes to financial statements should include a reference linking the funded status disclosure in the notes to financial statements to the required schedule of funding progress in RSI.
If applicable, notes to financial statements should disclose legal or contractual maximum contribution rates. In addition, if relevant, they should disclose that the maximum contribution rates have not been explicitly taken into consideration in the projection of pension benefits for financial accounting measurement purposes.
If an actuarial assumption is different for successive years, notes to financial statements should disclose the initial and ultimate rates.
GASB
Statement No. 51, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Intangible Assets
Statement 51 establishes accounting and financial reporting requirements
for intangible assets to reduce diversity in practice. It requires that:
All intangible assets not specifically excluded by its scope provisions must be classified as capital assets.
An intangible asset should be recognized in the statement of net assets only if it is considered identifiable.
Outlays associated with the development of internally-generated intangible assets should be expensed as incurred rather than capitalized until certain criteria are met.
Statement 51 also establishes guidance for amortization of intangible assets, including guidance on determining the useful lives of intangible assets whose lives are limited by contractual or legal provisions. If there are no factors that limit the useful life of an intangible asset, the Statement provides that the intangible asset should be considered to have an indefinite useful life. Intangible assets with indefinite useful lives should not be amortized unless their useful life is subsequently determined to no longer be indefinite due to a change in circumstances.
GASB
Statement No. 52, Land and Other Real Estate Held as Investments by
Endowments
Statement 52 establishes consistent standards for the reporting of land and
other real estate held as investments by essentially similar entities. It
requires endowments to report their land and other real estate investments
at fair value. Governments also are required to report the changes in fair
value as investment income and to disclose the methods and significant
assumptions employed to determine fair value, as well as other information
that they currently present for other investments reported at fair value.
GASB
Statement No. 53, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Derivative
Instruments
Statement 53 addresses the recognition, measurement and disclosure of
information regarding derivative instruments entered into by state and local
governments. Its main requirements:
Substantially all derivatives within the scope of the Statement must be reported at fair value. An exception is made for synthetic guaranteed investment contracts that are fully benefit-responsive.
Changes in fair value of derivative instruments that are used for investment purposes, or that are reported as investment derivative instruments because of ineffectiveness, are reported within the investment revenue classification.
Changes in fair value of derivative instruments that are classified as hedging derivative instruments are reported in the statement of net assets as deferrals. By definition, derivative instruments associated with hedgeable items that are determined to be effective in reducing exposures to identified financial risks are considered hedging instruments. The Statement also provides guidance on how to evaluate the effectiveness of hedges and establishes disclosure requirements.
GASB Concepts
Statement No. 5, Service Efforts and Accomplishments Reporting
Concepts Statement 5 amends Concepts Statement No. 2, Developing
Reporting Standards for SEA Information, to reflect the results of research
conducted by the GASB and others into the practice of reporting service
efforts and accomplishments (SEA).
SEA reporting refers to the communication of selected measures of a government’s performance results. The reporting of SEA performance information is viewed as an important method of demonstrating accountability for the resources raised by a government. Currently, such reporting is voluntary rather than required. Proponents of SEA say it does a better job than traditional financial statements of providing decision-useful information about a government’s efficiency and effectiveness in providing services to its citizens.
The GASB expects this updated Concepts Statement will be helpful in establishing proposed suggested guidelines for voluntary reporting of SEA performance information by state and local governmental entities.
GASB
Technical Bulletin No. 2004-2, Recognition of Pension and Other
Postemployment Benefit [OPEB]
Expenditures/Expense and Liabilities by Cost-Sharing Employers
Technical Bulletin 2004-2 provides guidance on questions that may arise in
applying GASB Statements 27, Accounting for Pensions by State and Local
Governmental Employers, and 45 to cost-sharing employers. Cost-sharing
refers to the practice of pooling by employers of their benefit obligations
and assets under a pension or OPEB plan.
GASB
Technical Bulletin No. 2006-1, Accounting and Financial Reporting by
Employers and OPEB Plans for Payments from the Federal Government Pursuant
to the Retiree Drug Subsidy Provisions of Medicare Part D
Technical Bulletin 2006-1 provides guidance on questions that may arise
in connection with the accounting for a retiree drug subsidy (RDS) received
under the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003. The payments are made by the federal Department of Health and Human
Services to the employer (in the case of a single- employer plan) or the
plan (in the case of a multiemployer arrangement). The Technical Bulletin
clarifies that an RDS should be accounted for as a voluntary nonexchange
transaction, with an asset and revenue recognized in accordance with GASB
Statement No. 33, Accounting and Reporting for Nonexchange Transactions.
GASB
Technical Bulletin No. 2008-1, Determining the Annual Required Contribution
Adjustment for Postretirement Benefits
Technical Bulletin 2008-1 clarifies the requirements for calculating the
annual required contribution adjustment under GASB Statement No. 27,
Accounting for Pensions by State and Local Governmental Employers and GASB
Statement No. 45, Accounting and Financial Reporting by Employers for
Postemployment Benefits Other Than Pensions.
Guide to
Implementation of GASB Statements 43 and 45 on Other Postemployment Benefits
This GASB’s Implementation Guide on Statements 43 and 45 on Other
Postretirement Benefits provides the answers to over 250 questions. Topics
include:
Differences between OPEB benefits and other forms of employee benefits, such as compensated absences, termination benefits, and pensions.
The timing and frequency of actuarial valuations associated with OPEB, selection of methods and assumptions, and application of criteria related to the projection of benefits for employers that participate in community-rated plans.
Treatment of implicit rate subsidies that arise when retirees are insured in a group with current employees. The guide also includes questions and answers, along with expanded illustrations, for certain employers and plans with small plan memberships.
Financial Reporting News is provided by Somerset’s Assurance Team for our clients and other interested persons upon request. For additional information on the issues discussed, please contact us. Since technical information is presented in generalized fashion, no final conclusion on these topics should be made without further review.
These articles were written by and published herein with the permission from professionals of BDO Seidman, LLP. Somerset is a member of the BDO Seidman Alliance, a nationwide association of independently owned accounting and consulting firms.
Somerset CPAs,
P.C.
3925 River Crossing Parkway, Third Floor
Indianapolis, Indiana 46240
317.472.2200 • 800.469.7206 • FAX 317.208.1200
www.somersetcpas.com

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