Post on 13-Apr-2017
YEAR END ACCOUNTINGSTANDARDS UPDATE
Janice Snyder, Partner
DISCLAIMERThe information contained in this presentation, both that contained in the slides and that expressed by the presenter, is not intended to be complete and comprehensive. To obtain a more detailed understanding of technical literature mentioned, please consult the full standards and interpretations.
WHAT’S NEW IN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS?•FASB Standards
•Code of Professional Conduct
•Not-for-Profit Accounting
•On the Horizon
FASB STANDARDSAccounting Standard Update
(ASU) #Transition Method Effective Date
Revenue from Contracts with Customers
2014-09 Retrospective Periods after 12/15/17 (public); 12/15/18
(private) Presentation of Financial Statements – Going Concern
2014-15 N/A Periods after 12/15/16Early Adoption
PermittedAccounting for Identifiable Intangible Assets in a Business Combination (PCC)
2014-18 Prospective Periods after 12/15/15Early Adoption
PermittedSimplifying the Presentation of Debt Issuance Costs
2015-03 Retrospective Periods after 12/15/15 Early Adoption
Permitted
FASB STANDARDSAccounting Standard Update (ASU) #
Transition Method Effective Date
Disclosures for Investments in Certain Entities that Calculate Net Asset Value per Share
2015-07 Retrospective Periods after 12/15/15 (public); 12/15/16 (private)
Early Adoption PermittedSimplifying the Measurement of Inventory 2015-11 Prospective Periods after 12/15/16 (public);
12/15/17 (private) Early Adoption Permitted
Plan AccountingPart I : Fully Benefit-Responsive Investment Contracts
2015-12 Retrospective Periods after 12/15/15Early Adoption Permitted
Part II : Investment Disclosures 2015-12 Retrospective Periods after 12/15/15Early Adoption Permitted
Part III: Measurement Date Practical Expedient 2015-12 Prospective Periods after 12/15/15Early Adoption Permitted
FASB STANDARDSAccounting Standard Update
(ASU) #Transition Method Effective Date
Debt Issuance Costs associated with Lines-of-Credit
2015-15 Retrospective Periods after 12/15/15 Early Adoption
PermittedBusiness Combinations: Simplifying the Measurement-Period Adjustments
2015-16 Prospective Periods after 12/15/15 (public); 12/15/16
(private) Early Adoption
PermittedBalance Sheet Classification of Deferred Taxes
2015-17 Prospective or Retrospective
Periods after 12/15/16 (public); 12/15/17
(private) Early Adoption
Permitted
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers• Ongoing project between IASB and FASB aimed at streamlining and converging
guidance on revenue recognition.• Final standard issued in May 2014, effective for public companies in 2018 and for
private companies in 2019. (ASU 2015-14 officially extended the dates!)• Most impact on companies that follow existing industry-specific guidance (software,
entertainment, healthcare, telecommunications, construction, etc.).• Additional disclosures - Must include sufficient information to enable users to
understand the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows.
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers• 5-step model• Step 1: Identify the Contract with a Customer• Step 2: Identify the Performance Obligations in the Contract• Step 3: Determine the Transaction Price• Step 4: Allocate the Transaction Price to the Performance Obligations
in the Contract• Step 5: Recognize Revenue When (Or As) the Entity Satisfies a
Performance Obligation.
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers
Potential Pitfalls • Step 1: Identify the Contract with a Customer• Requires approval, commitment, identification of rights, payment terms,
commercial substance• Collection must be PROBABLE! Consideration of only the customer’s ability and
intention to pay.• Self-pay revenue in healthcare• Returns
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers
Potential Pitfalls • Step 2: Identify the Performance Obligations in the Contract• The good or service is capable of being distinct and is distinct within the
context of the contract• Recognize revenue when the entity satisfies the performance obligation.• Revenue may be recognized over time if certain criteria are met (i.e.
percentage of completion).
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers
Potential Pitfalls • Step 3: Determine the Transaction Price• Refund liabilities – recognized if the entity receives consideration from a
customer and expects to refund some or all of that consideration (i.e. sales returns).• Variable consideration – recorded at the probable amount (expected
value or most likely value). • It must be probable the revenue will not be reversed.
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers
Potential Pitfalls • Step 4: Allocate the Transaction Price to the Performance Obligations in
the Contract• The entity must determine the standalone selling price at contract inception. • Must allocate the transaction price on a relative standalone selling price basis (3 Methods).
1. Adjusted Market Assessment Approach2. Expect cost plus margin approach3. Residual approach
• Onerous Contracts / Loss Contracts
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers
Potential Pitfalls • Step 5: Recognize Revenue When (Or As) the Entity Satisfies a Performance
ObligationItems to consider
• The entity has a present right to payment for the asset.• The customer has legal title to the asset.• The entity has transferred physical possession of the asset.• Customer receives and consumes the benefits.
ASU 2014-09Revenue from Contracts with Customers
Other Considerations• Warranties• Principal versus Agent• Licensing• Returns
ASU 2014-15Disclosure of Uncertainties About an Entity’s Ability to Continue as a Going Concern• Management must evaluate if there are conditions that raise
substantial doubt about the entity’s ability to continue as a going concern within one year after the date that the financial statements are issued.
• Substantial doubt exists when it is probable that the entity be unable to meet its obligations as they become due within one year after the date that the financial statements are issued.
ASU 2014-15Disclosure of Uncertainties About an Entity’s Ability to Continue as a Going Concern• If management concludes that substantial doubt exists, which is
not alleviated, disclosures indicating substantial doubt about the entity’s ability to continue as a going concern are required.
• If the substantial doubt is alleviated, management still must disclose:o Conditions or events that raised substantial doubt.o Management’s evaluation of the conditions or events.o Management’s plans that alleviated the doubt.
ASU 2014-18Accounting for Identifiable Intangible Assets in a Business Combination (PCC)• Applies to private companies (public entities and NFPs are excluded)• An entity can elect not to recognize certain intangibles separately from goodwill:
o Customer-Related Intangibles – only recognized separately if capable of being sold or licensed independently from other assets of a business.
o Non-Competition Agreements• An entity that elects this standard must also amortize goodwill under ASU 2014-02.
ASU 2015-03Simplifying the Presentation of Debt Issuance Cost• Focuses on the different balance sheet presentation requirements for debt issuance
costs, premiums and discounts.• Requires debt issuance costs to be presented in the balance sheet as a direct
deduction from the carrying amount of the debt liability. • The debt issuance costs will not be classified as an asset (deferred charge or deferred
credit).•Amortization of debt issuance costs will be recorded as interest expense.
ASU 2015-03
ASU 2015-07Disclosures for Investments in Certain Entities that Calculate Net Asset Value per Share• Removes the requirement to categorize within the fair value hierarchy all
investments for which fair value is measured using the net asset value (NAV) per share practical expedient.
• Investments using NAV as the practical expedient should not be categorized in the fair value hierarchy (Level 1, 2 or 3).
• A reporting entity should continue to disclose information on investments for which fair value is measured at net asset value.
• Reconciliation of the fair value of investments included in the fair value hierarchy to the line items presented in the statement of financial position is still required.
ASU 2015-07
ASU 2015-11Simplifying the Measurement of Inventory • To simplify the measurement of inventory, the Board proposes that inventory should
be measured at the lower of cost and net realizable value. • Net realizable value is defined as the “estimated selling prices in the ordinary course
of business, less reasonably predictable costs of completion, disposal, and transportation.”
• Eliminates the requirement of a reporting entity to consider the replacement cost of inventory and the net realizable value of inventory, less an approximately normal profit margin.
• Closely aligns to the IFRS definition.• LIFO and Retail Methods are specifically excluded.
Plan AccountingPart I: Fully Benefit-Responsive Investment Contracts• Fully benefit-responsive investment contracts will be measured,
presented, and disclosed only at contract value.
Part II: Plan Investment Disclosures• Investments (both participant-directed and nonparticipant-directed
investments) of employee benefit plans be grouped only by general type, eliminating the need to disaggregate the investments in multiple ways.
• Eliminates disclosures of investments over 5% of net assets.
ASU 2015-12Plan AccountingPart III: Measurement Date Practical Expedient• Provides a practical expedient to permit plans to measure
investments and investment-related accounts as of a month-end date that is closest to the plan’s fiscal year-end, when the fiscal period does not coincide with month-end.
• If a plan applies the practical expedient and a contribution, distribution, and/or significant event occurs between the alternative measurement date and the plan’s fiscal year-end, the plan would be required to disclose the amount of the contribution, distribution, and/or significant event.
ASU 2015-15Debt Issuance Costs associated with Lines-of-Credit
o SEC Contento Addresses presentation and subsequent measurement of debt
issuance costs associated with line of credit arrangements.o “The SEC staff would not object to an entity deferring and presenting
debt issuance costs as an asset and subsequently amortizing the deferred debt issuance costs ratably over the term of the line-of-credit arrangement, regardless of whether there are any outstanding borrowings on the line-of-credit arrangement.”
o Accounting remains the same for LOC arrangements.
ASU 2015-16Business Combinations: Simplifying the Measurement-Period Adjustments• Applies to all entities that have reported provisional amounts for items in a
business combination for which the accounting is incomplete by the end of the reporting period.
• An acquirer is required to recognize adjustments to provisional amounts that are identified during the measurement period in the reporting period in which the adjustment amounts are determined.
• Requires an entity to present separately on the face of the income statement or disclose in the notes the portion of the amount recorded in current-period earnings by line item that would have been recorded in previous reporting periods if the adjustment to the provisional amounts had been recognized as of the acquisition date.
ASU 2015-17Balance Sheet Classification of Deferred Taxes• Current GAAP requires current and noncurrent deferred tax assets and
liabilities.• This standard requires that deferred tax liabilities and assets be classified
as noncurrent in a classified statement of financial position.• By tax jurisdiction, all current deferred tax liabilities and assets shall be
offset and presented as a single amount and all noncurrent deferred tax liabilities and assets, shall be offset and presented as a single noncurrent amount.
• An entity shall not offset deferred tax liabilities and assets attributable to different tax-paying components of the entity or to different tax jurisdictions.
WHAT’S NEW IN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS?• FASB Standards
• Code of Professional Conduct
• Not-for-Profit Accounting
• On the Horizon
CODE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCTA revised Code was approved on January 28, 2014, to be effective December 15, 2014. • New conceptual frameworks and related interpretations will not be effective until
December 15, 2015 • Revised code launched on June 2, 2014, with early adoption encouraged.
CODE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT• Incorporate references to division’s non-authoritative guidance•Physically different – Separate parts
• Part 1: Members in public practice• Part 2: Members in business• Part 3: All Other Members
•On-line Codification with enhanced functionality
CODE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCTSignificant changes in the revised code include• Organization: • The prior code was organized by rule, with chronological listing of
interpretations and rulings (if any).• The revised code is organized more intuitively
• Separates guidance by line of business, then by topic• Where necessary, Topics are broken into subtopics and sections
CODE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCTSignificant changes in the revised code include
• Conceptual Framework• Incorporate a “Threats and Safeguards” approach, designed to assist users in
analyzing relationships and circumstances that the code does not specifically address• Under this approach, users:
• Identify threats to compliance with the rules• Evaluate the significance of those threats to determine if it is at an acceptable level• If not at an acceptable level, users apply safeguards to eliminate the threats or reduce
them to an acceptable level
AICPA – CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
WHAT’S NEW IN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS• FASB Standards
• Code of Professional Conduct
• Not-for-Profit Accounting
• On the Horizon
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGED- Presentation of Financial Statements of Not-for-Profit Entities(comment deadline of 8/20/15)Affects Not-for-Profit Entities (958) and Health Care Entities (954)
Balance Sheet• 2 classes of restrictions –
(1) net assets with donor restrictions and (2) net assets without donor restrictions
Operating Performance• Focused on availability for use for Mission• Expenses by function and nature• Excludes investment income and financing activities• Board restricted items (quasi endowment funds) will be shown separately
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGED - Presentation of Financial Statements of Not-for-Profit Entities (comment deadline of 8/20/15)Affects Not-for-Profit Entities (958) and Health Care Entities (954)
Cash Flow• Requires Direct method cash flow statement• Classify as operating cash flows:
(1) Purchases of long-lived assets(2) Contributions restricted to acquire long-lived assets, and (3) Sales of long-lived assets.
LiquidityDisclosures around how the Organization manages liquidity and future cash flow needs.
More disclosures, more disclosures, more disclosures!
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGED - Presentation of Financial Statements of Not-for-Profit Entities (comment deadline of 8/20/15)Comment Letters• HFMA – Views proposed changes are creating further deviation
between for-profit and not-for-profit healthcare entities• General agreement with 2 classes of net asset (as opposed to 3
classes)• General disagreement with NFPs leading the way to more clearly
define operating and non-operating activities.• Liquidity disclosures and self-defined time horizons by the
Organization are causing some concern and will bring more judgment into the financial statements.
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGUniform Administrative Guidance• Administrative and cost principal changes applicable for new awards and additional
funding increments of existing awards made after December 26, 2014.• Procurement is the only area with a time extension for implementation of one
year.•Audit changes effective for fiscal years beginning on or after December 26, 2014.
• i.e. Years ending December 31, 2015, June 30, 2016, etc.
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGUniform Administrative Guidance
• Moved from the Audit Requirement in A-133 to Uniform Guidance• Organizations MUST establish and maintain effective internal controls over
federal awards to provide reasonable assurance that awards are being managed in compliance with laws and regulations
• SHOULD be in compliance with COSO• Control Environment, Risk Assessments, Control Activities,
Information/Communication, and Monitoring
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGUniform Administrative GuidanceCONTROL ENVIRONMENT
Yes/No Examples• Sets the tone at the top• Establishes ethical standards of conduct• Evaluates adherence to ethical standards of conduct• Addresses deviations or violations from the code of conduct in a timely manner• Whistleblower program is in place and communicated throughout the organization• Reducing improper payments is a top management priority
Principle 1. The organization demonstrates a commitment to integrity and ethical values.
MONITORING ACTIVITIES
Yes/No Examples• Performs monitoring through direct observations• Uses knowledgeable personnel• Integrates with business processes• Objectively evaluates, considers scope and frequency
Principle 16.The organization selects, develops, and performs ongoing and/or separate evaluations to ascertain whether the components of internal control are present and functioning.
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGUniform Administrative GuidanceGood News - Grace period of one full fiscal year that begins on or after December 26,
2014• i.e. December 31, 2015, June 30, 2016, etc.
Organizations Must:• Have written procurement policies• Engage in full and open competition• Ask for actual or potential conflicts of interest (written)• Maintain records for all procurement activity
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGProcurement Levels Thresholds
1. Micro Purchases Less than $3,000
2. Small Purchases Up to $150,000
3. Sealed Bids Greater than $150,000
4. Competitive Proposals Greater than $150,000
5. Sole Source (Noncompetitive) Unique, Public Emergency
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTING
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTINGUniform Administrative Guidance• Audit Threshold increases from $500,000 to $750,000 of federal funds
• Still required to make records available for review/audit by Federal Agencies, pass-through entities, and the GAO
• Change in audit coverage amounts• Low-Risk Auditee = 20% (previously 25%)• Non Low-Risk Auditee = 40% (previously 50%)
• Audit Finding threshold is raised to $25,000• Single Audit Report will now be posted publicly on the Federal Audit Clearinghouse
NOT-FOR-PROFIT ACCOUNTING
1. Reimbursement for more of your Direct Costsa) More costs are reimbursable as direct costs (i.e. secretarial staff)
2. Reimbursement for Indirect Costsa) De minimus of 10% of the modified total direct costs
b) Or may negotiate a higher ratec) Government entities may no longer limit payments to nonprofits under grants and contract to
only direct costshttps://www.councilofnonprofits.org/sites/default/files/documents/know-your-rights-and-how-to-protect-them.pdf
WHAT’S NEW IN ACCOUNTING STANDARDS?• FASB Standards
• Code of Professional Conduct
• Not-for-Profit Accounting
• On the Horizon
ON THE HORIZONLeases• Ongoing joint project of FASB/IASB.• Most recent exposure draft (May 2013) continues to be re-deliberated. • Nearly all leases will be recorded on the balance sheet!• FASB supports a dual model
• Type A – applies to almost all leases – record asset, liability, amortization and interest expense.
• Type B – only applies to certain leases of buildings – record single line lease expense.
ON THE HORIZONLeases (continued)
Balance Sheet Income Statement Cash FlowsAssets - Record ROU Asset (increases long-term assets)
Liabilities - Record NPV of lease payments as a long-term liability (increases liabilities)
Expenses – Increases interest and amortization expense
Operating – Cash payments for interestCash payments for Type B leases.
Financing – Cash payments for principal portion of the lease liability
ON THE HORIZONLeases (continued)
Decisions reached to date:• Inclusion of extension options in term if “significant economic incentive to exercise”.• Exemption for short-term leases (12 months or less).• Includes all related party leases at legally enforceable terms.• Incremental borrowing rate of lessee or implicit rate in the lease (nonpublic entities
can use risk-free rate)
Final Standard Expected in Q1 2016!
ON THE HORIZONExposure Draft Topic Issue date
Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Identifying Performance Obligations and Licensing
5/12/15
Investments—Equity Method and Joint Ventures (Topic 323): Simplifying the Equity Method of Accounting
6/5/15
Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Principal versus Agent (Reporting Revenue Gross versus Net)
8/31/15
Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting Chapter 3: Qualitative Characteristics of Useful Financial Information
9/24/15
Notes to Financial Statements (Topic 235): Assessing Whether Disclosures Are Material 9/24/15Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Narrow-Scope Improvements and Practical Expedients
9/30/15
Intangibles—Goodwill and Other (Topic 350), Business Combinations (Topic 805), Consolidation (Topic 810), and Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815): Effective Date and Transition Guidance (a proposal of PCC)
9/30/15
Disclosure Framework—Changes to the Disclosure Requirements for Fair Value Measurement
12/3/15
QUESTIONS
Janice Snyder•McKonly & Asbury•Partner•CPA• jsnyder@macpas.com
QUESTIONS
Janice Snyder•McKonly & Asbury•Partner•CPA• jsnyder@macpas.com