discount rate | Visual Lease https://visuallease.com Lease Software By Lease Professionals Mon, 20 May 2024 14:12:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 What is GASB 87 & What Do I Need to Know https://visuallease.com/gasb-87-summary-page/ Wed, 26 Oct 2022 15:43:08 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=7627

GASB 87 effective date

Deadline for companies Fiscal years beginning after June15, 2021

GASB 87 Summary

Issued by the Governmental Accounting Standard’s Board, GASB 87 is the new lease accounting standard for US government entities. All entities that prepare financial statements in accordance with GASB standards must comply with GASB 87 for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2021.

Who is subject to GASB 87?

State, local and municipal governments

Public benefit corporations and authorities

Public employee retirement systems

Public utilities, hospitals and other healthcare providers

Public colleges and
universities

GASB 87 impacts lease accounting and reporting for both lessees and lessors as follows:

Lessees must recognize lease liabilities and intangible right of use (ROU) lease assets on their statements

Lessors must recognize lease receivables and deferred inflows of resources on their financial statements

Was GASB 87 postponed?

The Governmental Accounting Standards Board postponed the implementation date for GASB 87 back in May of 2020. The extension was implemented in order to give CPA firms and entities an opportunity to prepare to implement the new standard after disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic.

What does GASB 87 do?

In 2017, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) published the lease accounting standard GASB 87. The organization is the source of the accounting principles (GAAP) used by state and local governments in the United States.

GASB 87 was created to increase visibility into lease obligations and remove ambiguity around lease obligations in financial disclosures, particularly balance sheets and income statements.

What did GASB 87 replace?

GASB 87 replaces the current operating and capital lease categories with a single model for lease accounting based on a definition of leases as contracts that convey control of the right to use a non-financial asset. The new rules require lessees to recognize a lease liability and an intangible asset while lessors are required to recognize lease receivables and a deferred inflow of resources on their financial statements.

How Does GASB 87 Change the Balance Sheet?

GASB 87 requires organizations to now record most leases on the balance sheet.

For most organizations, this is a massive administrative lift. Leases are complex legal documents, sometimes hundreds of pages, which require trained professionals to negotiate and interpret; with countless obligations, clauses and critical dates to keep track of.

Leases are also dynamic. Terms change all the time as organizations take on new spaces, scale back or renegotiate, and you must account for every change under GASB 87.

To produce accurate lease accounting reports, the following information needs to be collected and tracked:

Lease terms

Discount rate

Rent payment amounts and dates

Lease option terms

Variable or percentage rent terms

Residual value guarantee terms

Definition of a Lease Under GASB 87

Under GASB 87, a lease is defined as a contract that conveys the right to use another entity’s nonfinancial asset for a period of time, including:

• The ability to obtain the present use of the asset as specified in the contract

• The right to control how the underlying asset is used

Common examples of leased assets recorded under GASB 87 are:

• Equipment for day-to-day operations (office equipment, medical equipment, telecommunications equipment, IT equipment)

• Vehicles (automobiles, vans, trucks)

• Real estate (property, buildings, offices, warehouses)

In addition, some leases are exempt under GASB 87, such as:

• Leases of certain types of intangible assets (e.g., patents, software licenses, the rights to explore for or exploit natural resources such as oil, gas, minerals and similar nonrenewable resources)

• Leases of biological assets, including timber, living plants and living animals

• Leases of inventory

• Service concession agreements

GASB 87 Compliance Software

Visual Lease’s GASB 87 lease accounting software is the perfect tool to keep all of your leases in one single location, while making sure you stay completely GASB 87 compliant.

GASB 87 Software Checklist

When planning and preparing for GASB 87 and evaluating lease accounting software, naturally you’ll want to look for a solution that specifically supports GASB 87, which requires all contracts that meet the definition of a lease to be recognized in financial statements and classified as a finance lease.

In addition, to ease the transition to GASB 87 and streamline the lease accounting process, you’ll want to look for a solution with the following capabilities and benefits.

Intuitive and easy to use

• Streamline lease data collection with other business applications, such as ERPs and accounts receivable

• Enable automated calculations and financial reports

• Support configurable data fields and reports to match your compliance requirements and organizational needs

• Centralize all your lease information within one system

Intuitive and easy to use

• Incorporate years of lease financial management experience built within each feature and functionality

• Prioritize future-readiness with ongoing investments in R&D

• Focus on data security and privacy

Intuitive and easy to use

• Provide data visualization for visibility into lease details and costs, enabling more informed business decisions

• Streamline lease detail management via system alerts for lease events and changes that could impact your ongoing financial reporting

Lease Accounting Calculations

Lease Accounting for Lessees

Under GASB 87, lessees must recognize a lease liability and a right to use asset for all qualified leases.

• The lease liability is generally calculated as the present value of payments the lessee expects to make during the lease term, including any contract renewal options the lessee is reasonably certain to exercise.

• The lease asset is calculated as the lease liability plus any prepayments or initial direct costs, minus any lease incentives at or before commencement of the lease.

As payments are made on the lease, the liability amount is reduced and interest expenses are recognized. The asset is amortized over the length of the lease term or over the life of the asset (whichever is shorter), unless the lease contains a purchase option that the lessee has determined is reasonably certain to be exercised, in which case, the lease asset should be amortized over the useful life of the underlying asset.

Lease Accounting for Lessors

Under GASB 87, lessors must recognize a lease receivable and a deferred inflow of resources on the financial statements. Just as with lessee schedules, the calculations can be complex.

• At the start of the contract, the lease receivable is generally calculated as the present value of lease payments the lessor expects to receive over the term of the lease, minus any provision for estimated uncollectible amounts.

• The deferred inflow is calculated as the lease receivable plus any payments made at or prior to the commencement of the lease.

As the lessor receives payments, the lease receivable amount is reduced and interest revenue is recognized. The deferred inflow continues to be recognized as revenue over the life of a lease.

Lease Accounting Remeasurements

Organizations remeasure the value of lease assets and liabilities when there is some significant event or material change in circumstances, including:

• Modification of a lease term, size or payment obligations — for example, the extension or expansion of a lease or the exercising of a lease option

• Lease contraction due to full or partial lease termination or abandonment — for example, when an abandoned space is sublet, causing the abandonment of the primary asset

• The full or partial impairment of a lease

Remeasurements type Description
Modification Any modification of lease term (i.e., change in payment term, extension of lease term, etc.)
Full Impairment Due to some event, the asset no longer has any value, but the organization still has obligation under the lease.
Partial Impairment Due to some event, the asset still has a value, but the value has been reduced by some amount or percentage.
Full Termination A lessee has ended the lease contract and no longer has the lease liability or asset on the books.
Partial Termination A lessee reduces the use of some portion of the asset (e.g., reduces total square footage of lease by terminating some portion), which reduces the amount of liability or asset on the books.
Full Abandonment A lessee decides to no longer use the entire asset as of some specific date; the lease contract is still in place and the asset remains as a liability on the financial statement.
Partial Abandonment A lessee decides to no longer use a portion of the asset as of some specific date; the asset remains as a liability on the financial statement.

Disclosure Reporting

For both lessees and lessors, GASB 87 now requires disclosure reports that provide aggregated totals and detailed supporting data such as:

• Qualitative and quantitative information about leases, including variable payments not included in measurement of liability

• Significant assumptions and judgments made when measuring leases

• The amounts recognized in financial statements

Lessee disclosure reports must provide:

• Fully detailed lease descriptions

• Amount of total leased assets — both gross and net figures

• Future lease payment schedules, including interest payments

Lessor disclosure reports must provide:

• General descriptions of all lease arrangements

• Inflows of resources, including lease and interest revenue recognized in the reporting period

• Revenue from variable payment components not included in the lease receivable

These new standards require organizations to gather and manage substantial amounts of data to generate disclosure reports related to real estate, equipment, vehicles, land and any other leases an organization holds.

What To Look For in Lease Accounting Software

Spreadsheets aren’t designed to handle the dynamics and complexity that impact the accounting calculations — lease transactions can result in hundreds of permutations and calculations. Most likely your current lease process has gaps that will need to be addressed when moving to adopt GASB 87. Many of these gaps can be addressed through the use of technology. Lease accounting software can help you meet GASB 87 requirements and maintain compliance beyond the initial reporting period.

Evaluating lease accounting technology

The right lease accounting software solution provides you with the proper tools to manage lease data and changes, perform the necessary calculations and generate reports according to GASB standards. In addition, choosing lease accounting and management software that has the capabilities described below will help to further streamline the accounting process and ensure ongoing GASB compliance.

Lessee and lessor accounting
Disclosure reporting capabilities
Automated calculations
Journal entries

Lease amortization schedule
Roll-forward reporting
Handling for regulated leases
Handling for short-term leases

Ongoing compliance via
modification, impairment,
termination capabilities

Compliance starts with a lease subledger

GASB 87 introduces a much higher level of scrutiny. Now, organizations have significantly more lease information to track, update, calculate and report on. Given the cross-functional, complex and evolving nature of lease language, any lease accounting solution should start with a strong lease management software to act as a single system of record for all lease data and lease financials.

Any sustainable solution should offer:

Configurable tools to handle any lease scenario across any asset type to maintain a reliable, up-to-date source for qualitative lease details such as terms, changes and dates

Integration capabilities to other cross-functional systems to maintain a single source of truth

A comprehensive audit trail to track and reconcile any changes

Defined user roles for anyone that touches leases and integrated guardrails to ensure any changes are in accordance with internal accounting procedures

A lease software solution helps to streamlines this very complex process by providing automated calculations and workflows to:

• Ensure that leases and the related assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses are accounted for consistently

• Eliminate human error and reliance on formulas and cumbersome spreadsheets • Ensure accuracy by having all data and calculations in one system

• Integrate leases and their pertinent data, such as liabilities, lease assets, interest expenses and revenue inflows, to the financial statements

• Automatically generate journal entries and lease amortization schedules using the system data

Lease reassessments and remeasurements

With the enhanced level of lease visibility that GASB 87 requires, an organization’s lease accounting must explain all lease changes on the financial statements. This includes additions or subtractions due to new leases, modifications, impairments and terminations, as well as regular amortization.

Accounting for lease remeasurement and reassessments is a common roadblock to sustainable compliance as accounting teams must rely on cross-functional stakeholders adhering to internal procedures as they manage lease modifications.

Using lease technology to organize, update and manage lease data allows you to integrate lease renewals and other modifications into your accounting process, ensuring they are captured accurately and reported in a timely manner.

Roll-forward reports are a valuable tool for meeting this requirement, providing a detailed disclosure of lease financials including period over period changes to lease assets and liabilities.

By choosing a technology platform that automates roll-forward reporting, your organization can streamline data gathering, calculations and reporting while ensuring that the process meets compliance and disclosure requirements.

Alerts, approvals, internal controls and audit trails

Given the cross-functional nature of lease management, defined user roles and alerts and comprehensive approvals hierarchies are critical to maintaining a single source of truth.

Look for systems that can streamline cross-functional workflows both internally and externally, with project management systems that can notify appropriate stakeholders when upcoming critical dates are near.

Auditability cannot be compromised. Approvals hierarchies are important to make sure that mistakes – or intentional malfeasance – are identified. Audit trails must be maintained to track every change.

The post What is GASB 87 & What Do I Need to Know first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>
Lease Accounting: Building confidence in compliance efforts https://visuallease.com/lease-accounting-building-confidence-in-compliance-efforts/ Tue, 24 May 2022 18:29:41 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=7095 On-demand webinar summary  Lease accounting is an incredibly time-consuming, complex endeavor that involves a lot of initial preparation, cross-departmental collaboration and ongoing maintenance. So, how can businesses ensure their lease...

The post Lease Accounting: Building confidence in compliance efforts first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>
On-demand webinar summary 

Lease accounting is an incredibly time-consuming, complex endeavor that involves a lot of initial preparation, cross-departmental collaboration and ongoing maintenance. So, how can businesses ensure their lease accounting remains reliable and accurate?  

In our recent webinar, Lease Accounting: Building confidence in compliance efforts, Joe Fitzgerald, SVP of Lease Market Strategy at Visual Lease, and Denise Hinkle, Principal of Business Development at Scribcor Global, covered how businesses can successfully prepare for lease accounting and offered tips about how to feel confident about compliance Many companies struggle to feel confident in their lease accounting compliance efforts with the new standards (ASC 842, IFRS 16 and GASB 87). 

High-level takeaways from the webinar include: 

What makes lease accounting so complex?

There are multiple factors that make lease accounting difficult to both achieve and maintain. Besides the complex calculations required, leases themselves are lengthy and intricate. Typically, lease contracts are detailed documents with critical information such as obligations, clauses, options and dates. If your lease contracts are in different offices or handled by different departments, they may be difficult to locate and identify. 

Further, any changes within your leases must be represented on the balance sheet, or you risk misreporting your company’s lease information.  

Misreporting lease financials can result in increased audit fees and fines, along with damage to your company’s reputation and the risk of legal action. It’s important to keep this in mind as you prepare for lease accounting.

How to prepare for lease accounting success

There are steps you can take that have been proven to set you up for success. In this webinar, you will learn about each one, including but not limited to: 

  • Establishing a dedicated team 
    • Who needs to be involved? 
    • What are they responsible for?  
    • Which departments need to be consulted? 
  • Identifying your leases 
    • What are best practices to do this? 
    • Where do you begin? 
  • Determining a reliable process 
    • What will it take to adopt and maintain the lease accounting standard? 
    • What are the risks of your identified solution? 
    • What should you (and should you not) do? 
  • Creating a post-adoption plan 
    • How will you account for ongoing lease data maintenance? 
    • Who will be responsible, and for what? 
    • What will your processes look like? 

For more information about how to be confident in your lease accounting compliance efforts, view our on-demand webinar, Lease Accounting: Building confidence in compliance efforts.  

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How to optimize your equipment leases while accomplishing lease accounting compliance https://visuallease.com/how-to-optimize-your-equipment-leases-while-accomplishing-lease-accounting-compliance-on-demand-webinar/ Tue, 17 May 2022 17:40:29 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=7091 On-demand webinar summary  Do you know if you are overpaying for your leases? Unfortunately, many businesses are, but are not aware of it until after they begin tracking their lease...

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On-demand webinar summary 

Do you know if you are overpaying for your leases? Unfortunately, many businesses are, but are not aware of it until after they begin tracking their lease data to comply with the new lease accounting standards (ASC 842 and IFRS 16). This is often due to the lack of visibility into lease terms, such as expiration dates, options and more. 

In particular, businesses in the manufacturing industry often have a large volume (hundreds and thousands) of equipment leases that they lack visibility into. This lack of control often costs them a significant amount of money.  

In our recent webinar, How to optimize your equipment leases while accomplishing lease accounting compliance, Joe Fitzgerald, SVP of Lease Market Strategy at Visual Lease, and Jon Hunke, VP of Accounting and EIT at MDU Construction Services Group, shared why and how businesses should optimize their lease portfolios while accomplishing lease accounting.  

Some key takeaways from the webinar include: 

Lease optimization is the next logical step after lease accounting 

Although lease accounting is an elaborate and complex process, when done right, it can also provide additional advantages beyond compliance. In fact, in a recent VLDI report, 100% of surveyed senior finance and accounting professionals acknowledged that lease accounting compliance comes with real business benefits.   

This is because once all your lease data is in an easily accessible, reliable location, you’ll be in a better position to analyze your leases and identify new opportunities for savings. This is where lease optimization comes into play.  

Lease optimization will help you make strategic leasing decisions 

The process of lease optimization enables you to revisit existing leases and bridge gaps to make better informed business decisions, such as identifying an opportunity to purchase an existing lease rather than continuing to lease a particular asset or property. Optimizing your equipment leases also empowers your business to: 

  • Level-set lease rates across your lease portfolio, 
  • Improve vendor management, 
  • And more (further defined further in the webinar). 

Lease optimization leads to significant cost savings

Having visibility into your leases also enables you to identify areas where you may be overpaying for leases. Before businesses optimized their lease portfolio, many have found that they significantly overpaid for existing leases due to lack of awareness into the contract terms.  

In example, a large manufacturing company lost $105k because they did not realize that their lessor was continuing to bill expenses for surrendered property. 

For more insight about the steps you can take to optimize your lease portfolio, view our on-demand webinar, How to optimize your equipment leases while accomplishing lease accounting compliance 

The post How to optimize your equipment leases while accomplishing lease accounting compliance first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>
The impact of ASC 842 on lessees and lessors https://visuallease.com/the-impact-of-asc-842-on-lessees-and-lessors/ Fri, 06 May 2022 17:51:37 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=7081 The new lease accounting standards have radically changed the way private and public companies record leases on the balance sheet. Naturally, this had a direct impact on lessees, lessors and...

The post The impact of ASC 842 on lessees and lessors first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>

The new lease accounting standards have radically changed the way private and public companies record leases on the balance sheet. Naturally, this had a direct impact on lessees, lessors and how they classify lease agreements.

Under ASC 842, lease agreements are defined as “a contract, or part of a contract, between a lessor and a lessee that conveys the right to control the use of identified property, plant, or equipment (an identified asset) to the lessee for a period of time in exchange for consideration.

Both the lessee and lessor are signatories to the agreement and must abide by its rules. Additionally, both parties will need to classify what kind of lease the agreement is, either finance or operating as defined under ASC 842.

What’s the difference between a lessor and a lessee?

Before we review how both parties classify a lease under ASC 842, let’s take a look at the definitions of a lessor and lessee.

The lessor is the party that either owns or leases and subleases the asset – which can range from property, vehicles or equipment.

The lessee is the party receiving the right to use the asset for a specified period of time, per the lease agreement.

Under ASC 842, the definitions of a lessor and lessee haven’t necessarily changed, however, both parties must change how they present leases in their financial statements.

For the first time, lessees must show all leasing obligations, including operating leases, on the balance sheet – and classify them either as operating or finance leases.

Before ASC 842, operating leases were not included in the balance sheet. This is one of the larger changes lessees must address under ASC 842. Luckily for lessors, this change isn’t as significant because they already had to make these classifications prior to the new lease accounting standard.

What’s the difference between an operating lease and a finance lease?

ASC 842 requires the classification of a lease at the commencement of the lease agreement, based on specified economic criteria. It’s important for both parties to understand these criteria as they determine differences between and classification of an operating lease and a finance lease.

Operating leases are contracts that permit the use of a certain asset without transferring the ownership of that asset for any less than a major part of the asset’s life. For example, the lessee uses the asset, while the lessor provides the maintenance or upkeep of the asset. Expenses related to operating leases were not previously recorded on a company’s balance sheet until ASC 842. The leased asset, along with the corresponding liabilities, are now presented on the balance sheet.

A finance lease is a contract that does not qualify as an operating lease; the risks and rewards associated with the leased asset get transferred to the lessee. In other words, they have full control of the asset. Under ASC 842, finance leases continue to be recorded on the lessee’s balance sheet as an asset with a corresponding liability.

The impact of ASC 842 and the importance of lease accounting software

Although lessees and lessors have not fundamentally changed under ASC 842, the impact of the new lease accounting standard has required both parties (especially lessees) to classify their leases with a higher degree of scrutiny.

Given the transparent nature of ASC 842, whether it’s a finance or operating lease, both parties need to ensure they are properly accounting for them on the balance sheet.

Lease classification is just one of the many complexities of ASC 842. To ensure your lease data and financial reports remain accurate, you’ll want to make sure your lease data is always up-to-date and organized in one centralized location. By utilizing lease management and lease accounting software such as Visual Lease, you’ll be able to leverage the platform as your single source of truth to manage and track your lease data.

Visit our blog to stay up to date on the latest news, trends and tips in lease accounting.

Looking for more information or have a lease accounting question? Get in touch with one of our lease accounting experts. Click here to schedule time with one now.

 

The post The impact of ASC 842 on lessees and lessors first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>
How to avoid lease accounting compliance risks https://visuallease.com/how-to-avoid-lease-accounting-risks/ Tue, 26 Apr 2022 20:59:13 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=7063 On-demand webinar summary  According to a recent VLDI survey, 35% of private companies were less than halfway through or had not yet started the process of gathering information needed to...

The post How to avoid lease accounting compliance risks first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>
On-demand webinar summary 

According to a recent VLDI survey, 35% of private companies were less than halfway through or had not yet started the process of gathering information needed to adopt ASC 842. This puts businesses in danger of misreporting lease financials, which exposes them to serious consequences, such as increased audit fees.  

In our recent webinar, How to Avoid Lease Accounting Compliance Risks, Rosemary CourtneyManager of Technical Accounting at Visual Lease, and Bill HarterPrincipal Solution Advisor at Visual Lease, discussed common challenges and risks associated with lease accounting compliance. They also provided tips to ensure you are set up for a successful audit post-adoption.  

As a result, you should have a better understanding of the risks of inaccurate lease financials and how to avoid these mistakes. Let’s take a closer look.  

Lack of processes

The new lease accounting standards require cross-functional collaboration in order to stay on top of any updates made to leases. Without clear responsibilities and defined processes, some critical lease updates may slip through the cracks – and put you at risk of inaccurate lease information. That’s why it’s important to develop defined, reliable processes that involve the right personnel while clearly identifying internal controls.  

Manual accounting calculations

Manual accounting calculations are not only time-consuming given the complexity of ASC 842, but they are also prone to human error. Automated technology significantly reduces both the risk of miscalculation and time spent on reporting

Lack of dedicated resources

It’s rare for companies to have a dedicated resource for lease accounting. So, how do you ensure you stay compliant amidst employee turnover? Our experts agree that naming a project lead in each functional area that contributes to the lease portfolio is the best approach, such as finance, real estate and legal.  

Lack of visibility into maintaining lease information

Leases change all of the time (i.e. extend, terminate) and each change needs to be accounted for on the balance sheet. It can be difficult to ensure your lease data is up to date if your leases are not in an accessible, centralized location.  

For more insight into how to prepare for lease accounting success, view our on-demand webinar “How to Avoid Lease Accounting Compliance Risks.   

Related Resources: 

Visual Lease is the #1 lease optimization software provider. We help organizations become compliant with FASB, IFRS and GASB lease accounting standards, while simultaneously improving the financial, legal and operational performance of their leases. Our easy-to-use SaaS solution has been used by over 1,000 companies with a 99% retention rate.   

 

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GASB 96: What You Need to Know https://visuallease.com/gasb-96-what-you-need-to-know/ Tue, 15 Feb 2022 21:35:31 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=6615

What is GASB 96?

In May of 2020, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, or GASB, finalized how SBITAs are recorded on financial statements through the issuance of GASB Statement No. 96.

GASB 96 requires all covered organizations or governmental entities to record a right-to-use subscription intangible asset and corresponding subscription liability. The standard also provides guidance in accounting for cash outlays such as implementation fees, related to SBITAs to prevent future disparities in how government entities report on non-subscription costs.

Who does GASB 96 apply to?

GASB 96 applies to all public sector entities that follow Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) in filing their annual financial statements, including state and local governments, school districts and public higher ed institutions.

What is a Subscription-Based Information Technology Arrangement (SBITA) under GASB 96?

Issued by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, GASB 96 defines Subscription-Based Information Technology Arrangements (SBITAs) and provides guidance on accounting and financial reporting for government entities. The statement was created to regulate the accounting and disclosure around subscription-based payments for cloud-based software agreements.

Under GASB 96, a SBITA is a contract that conveys control of the right to use another party’s (a SBITA vendor’s) IT software, alone or in combination with tangible capital assets (the underlying IT assets), as specified in the contract for a period of time in an exchange or exchange-like transaction.

For GASB 96 to be directly applicable, the organization must first determine that the contract is a SBITA. A crucial component in defining the subscription terms is the element of control over the underlying IT assets. An assessment must be made, and specific stipulations are required in understanding what rights your organization has regarding the present service capacity. Once this distinction is made, excluding certain exemptions, the subscription term is the noncancellable period of time that the government has the right to use the underlying IT asset.

What is an Example of a SBITA?

An example of a SBITA is a subscription-based software service, such as Software as a Service (SaaS) platforms. Some specific examples include Salesforce, Microsoft Teams, and Dropbox. These arrangements involve a contract between a government entity and another party, granting the right to use IT software for a period of time in exchange for a fee.

What contracts are exempt under GASB 96?

GASB 96 excludes contracts that only provide IT support services, but includes contracts providing IT support services in conjunction with the right to use a related IT asset. The following are also exempt from the scope of GASB 96:

  • Standalone IT services contracts that do not include the right to use an underlying IT asset
  • Agreements providing outside entities the right to use their own IT software and associated assets through an SBITA
  • Contracts that meet the definition of a lease under GASB 87, Leases
  • Contracts that fall under the scope of GASB 94, Public-Private and Public-Public Partnerships and availability Payment Arrangements
  • Contracts that fall under the scope of GASB 51, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Intangible Assets
  • Short-term SBITA contracts

What are short-term SBITAs?

GASB 96 provides exemptions for short-term SBITAs. Under GASB 96, a short-term SBITA has a maximum possible term of 12 months at the commencement of the subscription term. This includes any renewal or extension options regardless of whether the government is reasonably certain to exercise these options. The governmental entity is not required to recognize a subscription asset and liability for any short-term SBITA.

How to recognize and measure an SBITA?

If an SBITA is identified, government entities recognize a subscription liability and a subscription asset at the beginning of the subscription term of the SBITA, which occurs when the government entity obtains control of the right to use the underlying IT asset.

The subscription term is the period that the government has the noncancellable right to use the underlying IT assets, plus the following periods, if applicable:

  • Periods covered by a government’s extension option if it is reasonably certain that the government will exercise that option
  • Periods covered by a government’s termination option if it is reasonably certain that the government will not exercise that option
  • Periods covered by a vendor’s extension option if it is reasonably certain that the SBITA vendor will exercise that option
  • Periods covered by a vendor’s termination option if it is reasonably certain that the vendor will not exercise that option

What Are the Footnote Disclosure Requirements for a SBITA?

  • Description of the SBITA: This should include the basis, terms, and conditions on which variable payments are not included in the measurement of the subscription liability.
  • Sum of subscription-based assets and related accumulated amortization: This should be disclosed separately from other capital assets.
  • Outflow of resources recognized in the reporting period: This should include variable payments not previously included in the measurement of the subscription liability, as well as other payments such as termination penalties.
  • Principal and interest requirements to maturity: This should be presented separately for the subscription liability for each of the five subsequent fiscal years and in five-year increments thereafter.
  • Details of SBITAs that have been committed but not yet commenced: This should include the basis, terms, and conditions of the arrangement, as well as the estimated amount of the subscription liability.
  • Components of any loss associated with an impairment: This should include the amount of the loss, as well as the factors that contributed to the impairment.
  • Balance restatement details for the fiscal year 2023 only: This should include the reason for the restatement, as well as the impact on the financial statements.

What are the stages of SBITA?

The amortization of the subscription asset should be recognized as an outflow of resources over the term of the subscription. Activities associated with a SBITA are grouped into stages:

Stage
Preliminary project
Initial implementation
Operation and additional implementation

Activities
The decision to obtain technology
Design, configure, code, test, and install
Maintenance, troubleshooting, ongoing access

Cost treatment
Expensed as incurred
Capitalized
Capitalized or expensed as incurred

  • Preliminary project stage: This stage includes activities associated with an entity’s decision to obtain the technology provided by the SBITA. Any cost incurred in the preliminary project stage will be expensed as incurred.
  • Initial implementation stage: This stage includes activities related to designing, configuring, coding, testing, and installing the subscription assets. These charges are capitalized as part of the subscription asset.
  • Operation and additional implementation stage: This stage includes activities that relate to maintenance, troubleshooting, and other activities associated with ongoing access to the underlying IT assets. Activities in this stage may be capitalized as part of the subscription asset.

What is a subscription asset?

In addition to the subscription liability, the government must recognize a subscription under GASB 96. The subscription asset is measured as the initial value of the subscription liability plus:

  • Payments made to the vendor at the commencement of the subscription term
  • Capitalizable initial implementation costs
  • Minus any vendor incentives received at the commencement of the subscription term

The government entity will need to amortize the subscription asset systematically and rationally over the shorter of the subscription term or the useful life of the underlying IT asset. Amortization of the subscription asset begins at the commencement of the subscription term and is reported as an outflow of resources by the governmental entity.

What is a subscription liability?

The initial subscription liability is measured as the present value of the total subscription payments expected to be made to the vendor during the subscription term. The total future payments are discounted using the interest rate the vendor charges the government, which may be the interest rate implicit in the SBITA. If the implicit interest rate is not readily determinable, the government may use an estimated incremental borrowing rate for the present value calculation.

GASB 96 outlines that the payments included in the present value calculation of the subscription liability should include the following:

  • Fixed payments
  • Variable payments based on an index or a rate, measured using the index or rate as of the commencement of the subscription term
  • Variable payments that are fixed in substance
  • Termination penalties, if the subscription term reflects the government exercising either an option to terminate the agreement or a fiscal funding or cancellation clause
  • Incentives receivable from the vendor
  • Other payments the government is reasonably certain will be required to be made to the vendor

In subsequent periods, the government will accrue interest on the remaining subscription liability at the applicable discount rate. The subscription payments will be allocated first to the accrued interest, and then to reduce the outstanding subscription liability.

What are the outlays under GASB 96?

There may be cash outlays for other activities associated with SBITAs under GASB 96. The type and timing of the activity dictates the accounting treatment of these cash outlays; other activities associated with SBITAs are grouped into three stages:

1.Preliminary project stage

The preliminary project stage includes costs associated with activities such as evaluating alternatives, determining needed technology, and selecting an SBITA vendor. Outlays in this stage should be expensed as incurred.

2.Initial implementation stage

The initial implementation stage includes all ancillary charges necessary to place the subscription asset into service. Outlays in this stage generally should be capitalized as an addition to the subscription asset.

3.Operation and additional implementation stage

The operation and additional implementation stage, includes activities such as subsequent implementation activities, maintenance, and other activities for ongoing operations related to a SBITA. Outlays in this stage should be expensed as incurred unless they meet specific capitalization criteria.

What are the disclosure requirements under GASB 96?

A government entity should disclose the following information about its SBITAs (which may be grouped for purposes of disclosure) in notes to financial statements:

  1. A general description of its SBITAs, including the basis, terms, and conditions on which variable payments not included in the measurement of the subscription liability are determined
  2. The total amount of subscription assets, and the related accumulated amortization, disclosed separately from other capital assets
  3. The amount of outflows of resources recognized in the reporting period for variable payments not previously included in the measurement of the subscription liability
  4. The amount of outflows of resources recognized in the reporting period for other payments, such as termination penalties, not previously included in the measurement of the subscription liability
  5. Principal and interest requirements to maturity, presented separately, for the subscription liability for each of the five subsequent fiscal years and in five-year increments thereafter
  6. Commitments under SBITAs before the commencement of the subscription term
  7. The components of any loss associated with an impairment

Ready for GASB 96

Meeting the compliance standards for GASB 96 requires consistency, accuracy and the collection of your portfolio data — specifically information surrounding SBITAs. At the same time, evaluating accounting software solutions will allow you to implement a solution that will allow you to meet the standards outlined in GASB 96.

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How to Apply the ASC 842 Discount Rate Update for Private Companies and Nonprofits https://visuallease.com/how-to-apply-the-asc-842-discount-rate-update-for-private-companies-and-nonprofits/ Tue, 25 Jan 2022 15:48:10 +0000 https://visuallease.com/?p=6595 The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) recently issued an update to ASC 842 that addresses complexities associated with discount rate calculations. In this blog, we share how this update affects private...

The post How to Apply the ASC 842 Discount Rate Update for
Private Companies and Nonprofits
first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) recently issued an update to ASC 842 that addresses complexities associated with discount rate calculations. In this blog, we share how this update affects private companies and nonprofits.       

What does the discount rate update mean for private companies? 

The update to ASC 842 simplifies the way private companies, nonprofit organizations and employee benefit plans are required to determine the present value of lease payments. Under the new update, these businesses can elect risk-free rates by class of underlying asset, rather than at the entity wide level.  

This update replaces the previous rules within ASC 842 for how private companies and nonprofits handled discount rates to comply with the lease accounting standard.  

 Why was the discount rate update proposed? 

Prior to the update, companies ran into similar challenges when determining the discount rate and present value of lease payments. They had to use the rate implicit in the lease to calculate the right of use (ROU) asset and lease liability. However, the rate implicit in the lease isn’t always accessible. 

Given the difficulties private companies were experiencing, FASB recognized a need to streamline calculation guidance – and in response, proposed and issued this discount rate update.  

 How do private companies apply the new discount rate guidance? 

Organizations may now make a policy election to use a risk-free rate as the discount rate for all leases. This calculation is much easier to run, which helps businesses save time and lowers the impact on the balance sheet.  

 Are you set up to account for lease accounting guidance updates? 

The discount rate update issued by FASB to ASC 842 is just one example of why private companies and nonprofit organizations can benefit from lease accounting technology. Beyond providing lease accounting automation, ASC 842 software like Visual Lease is equipped to seamlessly adapt to changes to the lease accounting standards or a lease portfolio.  

It can also streamline your lease accounting process by automatically generating audit-ready journal entries, disclosures and reports that you need to achieve and sustain compliance.  

Additionally, the right solution will provide you with the visibility you need to thoroughly understand your lease data and use that information to make better informed operational decisions.  

Interested in learning more? See how lease accounting software like Visual Lease can help. 

 

The post How to Apply the ASC 842 Discount Rate Update for
Private Companies and Nonprofits
first appeared on Visual Lease.]]>