CH 15
CH 15
CH 15
Learning Objectives
1. Identify and describe the operational, financial, and tax objectives that motivate leasing. 2. Explain why some leases constitute lease agreements and some represent purchases/sales accompanied by debt financing. 3. Explain the basis for each of the criteria and conditions used to classify leases. 4. Record all transactions associated with operating leases by both the lessor and lessee. 5. Describe and demonstrate how both the lessee and lessor account for a capital lease. 6. Describe and demonstrate how the lessor accounts for a sales-type lease.
LEASES
Learning Objectives:
7. Explain how lease accounting is affected by the residual value of a leased asset. 8. Describe the way a bargain purchase option affects lease accounting. 9. Explain the impact on lease accounting of executory costs, the discount rate, initial direct costs, and contingent leases. 10. Explain sale-leaseback agreements and other special leasing arrangements and their accounting treatment.
11. Discuss the primary differences between U.S. GAAP and IFRS with respect to leases.
A lease is usually a non-cancelable agreement in which the lessor conveys the right to use property, plant, or equipment, usually for a stated period of time, to the lessee.
Lessee = USER of property Lessor = OWNER of property
Lessor Operating lease Capital lease Direct financing lease Sales-type lease
The issue of how to report leases is the case of substance versus form.
Lessee = USER of property; Lessor = OWNER of property
Although technically legal title may not pass, the benefits from the use of the property do.
Balance Sheet.
of the benefits and risks of property ownership, provided the lease is non-cancelable.
Leases that do not transfer substantially all of the benefits and risks of ownership are operating leases.
LEASES
We are tracking the question of LIABILITY and it is arising in connection with leases. Leases that produce such debtor/creditor relationships are referred to as capital leases by the lessee and as either direct financing or sales type leases by the lessor. Leases that do not produce debtor/creditor relationships, but instead are accounted for as rental agreements are designated as operating leases.
Advantages of Leasing
A. Leasing is used as a means of off-balance-sheet financing. 1. Can avoid negatively affecting the debt-asset ratio and other mechanical indicators of riskiness.
2. Market is naive, and is fooled by off-balance-sheet financing. B. Achieves operational objectives by facilitating asset acquisition to overcome: 1. Uncertainty or cash flow problems. 2. Fear of obsolescence. C. Achieves tax objectives: Lower lease payments for LESSEE if it allows the lessor to retain ownership and thus benefit from ITC and Depreciation deductions when: 1. The lessee has little or no taxable income and will get little benefit from depreciation deductions. 2. The lessee has sufficient taxable income to take advantage of the depreciation deductions, but is in lower tax brackets than lessor.
Leases that DO NOT meet any of the four criteria are accounted for as Operating Leases.
No No
Lease Term >= 75% PV of Payments >= 90%
No
Transfer of Ownership Bargain Purchase
No
O p e r a t i n g L e a s e
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Capital Lease
LO 2 Describe the accounting criteria and procedures for capitalizing leases by the lessee.
Capital Lease
Operating Leases
On January 1, 2011, Sans Serif Publishers, Inc., a computer services and printing firm, leased a color copier from CompuDec Corporation. The lease agreement specifies four annual payments of $100,000 beginning January 1, 2011, the inception of the lease, and at each January 1 thereafter through 2014. The useful life of the copier is estimated to be six years. Before deciding to lease, Sans Serif considered purchasing the copier for its cash price of $479,079. If funds were borrowed to buy the copier, the interest rate would have been 10%.
Operating Leases
How should this lease be classified?
We apply the four classification criteria: 1 Does the agreement specify that ownership of the asset transfers to the lessee? 2 Does the agreement contain a bargain purchase option? 3 Is the lease term equal to 75% or more of the expected economic life of the asset? {4 yrs < 75% of 6 yrs}
NO
NO NO NO
4 Is the present value of the minimum lease payments equal to or greater than 90% of the fair value of the asset?
Calculations: PV of MLP = $348,685 = $100,000 x 3.48685**
Lease present payments value ** present value of an annuity due of $1: n=4, i=10%
$348,685
Since none of the four classification criteria is met, this is an operating lease.
Operating Leases
At Each of the Four Payment Dates: Sans Serif Publishers, Inc. (Lessee) Prepaid rent Cash CompuDec Corporation (Lessor) Cash Unearned rent revenue At the End of Each Year: Sans Serif Publishers, Inc. (Lessee) Rent expense Prepaid rent CompuDec Corporation (Lessor) Unearned rent revenue Rent revenue Depreciation expense Accumulated depreciation
100,000 100,000
100,000 100,000
100,000 100,000
Leasehold Improvements
Sometimes a lessee will make improvements to leased property that reverts back to the lessor at the end of the lease. Like other assets, leasehold improvement costs are allocated as depreciation expense over its useful life to the lessee, which is to be the shorter of the physical life of the asset or the lease term.
A capital lease must meet one of four criteria: Ownership transfers to the lessee at the end of the lease term, or . . .
A bargain purchase option (BPO) exists, or . . . The non-cancelable lease term is equal to 75% or more of the expected economic life of the asset, or . . . The PV of the minimum lease payments (MLP) is 90% or more of the fair value of the asset.
Leases that DO NOT meet any of the four criteria are accounted for as Operating Leases.
No No
Lease Term >= 75% PV of Payments >= 90%
No
Transfer of Ownership Bargain Purchase
No
O p e r a t i n g L e a s e
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Capital Lease
LO 2 Describe the accounting criteria and procedures for capitalizing leases by the lessee.
At the inception of the lease, the difference between the option price and the expected FMV must be large enough to make the exercise of the option reasonably assured.
Example: Lease Honda Accord for $599/Month for 40 months with an option to purchase for $100 at the end of the 40th month when the estimated FMV then is $3000. => Clearly a BARGAIN *Difficult to determine what is a BARGAIN: BOA or HERTZ
A major exception to the 75% rule is when the inception of the lease occurs during the last 25% of the assets life. When this occurs the 75% test should not be used.
Minimum rental payment Guaranteed residual value Penalty for failure to renew Bargain purchase option
Executory Costs:
A guaranteed residual value affects the lessees computation of the minimum lease payments and, therefore, the amounts capitalized as a leased asset and a lease obligation. The lessor assumes the residual value will be realized at the end of the lease term whether guaranteed or unguaranteed.
For example, if the lessee depreciated the asset down to its residual value of $8,000 but the fair market value of the residual value was $4,000, the lessee would have to record a loss of $4,000.
If the fair market value of the asset exceeds the $8,000, a gain may be recognized.
Lessee computes the present value of the minimum lease payments using its incremental borrowing rate, with one exception.
If the lessee knows the implicit interest rate
computed by the lessor and it is less than the lessees incremental borrowing rate, then lessee must use the lessors rate.
Since the lease term is equal to the expected useful life of the copier (>75%), the transaction must be recorded by the lessee as a capital lease.
Effective Interest $
Decrease in Balance
$ 100,000 37,908 62,092 31,699 68,301 24,869 75,131 17,355 82,645 9,090 * 90,910 $ 120,921 $ 479,079
79,847
A sales-type lease involves a manufacturers or dealers profit, and a direct-financing lease does not.
LO 4 Identify the classifications of leases for the lessor.
A lessor may classify a lease as an operating lease but the lessee may classify the same lease as a capital lease.
LO 4 Identify the classifications of leases for the lessor.
Lessees Determination of Lease liability and asset: $100,000 4,79079* = $479,079 lessees cost
*PV of an annuity due of $1: n = 6, I = 10%
Effective Interest $
Decrease in Balance
$ 100,000 37,908 62,092 31,699 68,301 24,869 75,131 17,355 82,645 9,090 * 90,910 $ 120,921 $ 479,079
Sales-Type Leases
If the lessor is a manufacturer or dealer, the fair value of the leased asset generally is higher than the cost of the asset.
At inception of the lease, the lessor will record the Cost of Goods Sold as well as the Sales Revenue (PV of payments).
In addition to interest revenue earned over the lease term, the lessor receives a manufacturers or dealers profit on the sale of the asset.
Sales-Type Leases
On January 1, 2011, Sans Serif Publishers, Inc., leased a copier from CompuDec Corp. at a price of $479,079. The lease agreement specifies annual payments of $100,000 beginning January 1, 2011 (the inception of the lease), and at each December 31 thereafter through 2015. The six year lease term ending December 31, 2016, is equal to the estimated useful life of the copier. CompuDec manufactured the copier at a cost of $300,000. CompuDecs interest rate for financing the transaction is10%.
Sales-Type Leases
Lease Classification
1. The lease term (6-years) is equal to 100% of the useful life of the copier, and 2. Fair market value is different from cost of the leased asset. 3. CompuDec is certain about the collectibility of the lease payments, and 4. No costs are to be incurred by CompuDec relating to the lease agreement,
SO
The lease agreement is classified as: -a Sales-Type lease from the viewpoint of CompuDec (lessor) and -a capital lease from the viewpoint of Sans Serif Publishers (lessee).
479,079 300,000
100,000
100,000
Exercise 5 HW:
Exercise 10 (JEs & F/Ss)
In a bargain purchase option (BPO) lessee depreciates the asset using its useful life and NOT Lease Life.
Exercise of BPO at the end of the lease term: $54,542 10% = $5,458* $60,000 BPO payment - $5,458 = $54,542
60,000
54,582 5,458
Sometimes the lease agreement includes a guarantee by the lessee that the lessor will recover a specified residual value when custody of the asset reverts back to the lessor at the end of the lease term. This not only reduces the lessors risk but also provides incentive for the lessee to exercise a higher degree of care in maintaining the leased asset to preserve the residual value.
Residual Value
On January 1, 2011, Sans Serif Publishers, Inc., leased a color copier from CompuDec Corporation at a price of $479,079. The lease agreement specifies annual payments beginning January 1, 2011, the inception of the lease, and at each December 31 thereafter through 2016. The estimated useful life of the copier is seven years. At the end of the six year lease term, ending December 31, 2016, the copier is expected to be worth $60,000.
CompuDec manufactured the copier at a cost of $300,000 and its interest rate for financing the transaction is10%.
Lessee's calculation of PV of MLP: PV of periodic payments $ 92,931 Plus: PV of residual value 60,000 PV of MLP
PV factor of an annuity due of $1: n=6, i=10%
Exercise of GRV at the end of the lease term: $54,542 10% = $5,458* $60,000 GRV payment - $5,458 = $54,542
479,079
CompDec Corporation (Lessor) Lease receivable Cost of goods sold Sales revenue Inventory of equipment
479,079 300,000
479,079 300,000
92,931 92,931
92,931
13,407 79,524
As a result, the present value of the minimum lease payments recorded as a leased asset and a lease liability is simply the present value of periodic rental payments ($445,211). The same is true when the residual value is guaranteed by a third-party guarantor such as an insurance company.
No Yes Yes
No Yes No
Executory Costs
One of the responsibilities of ownership that is transferred to the lessee in a capital lease is the responsibility to pay for maintenance, insurance, taxes, and any other costs associated with ownership. These are referred to as executory costs.
Case: NeedsSpace
Discount Rate
One rate is implicit in the lease agreement. This is the effective interest rate the lease payments provide the lessor over and above the price at which the asset is sold under the lease. It is the desired rate of return the lessor has in mind when deciding the size of the lease payments. Usually the lessee is aware of the lessors implicit rate or can infer it from the assets fair value. When the lessors implicit rate is unknown, the lessee should use its own incremental borrowing rate. This is the rate the lessee would expect to pay a bank if funds were borrowed to buy the asset.
Sales-Type Leases The initial direct costs are expensed at the inception of the lease.
Since the usual reason for a sales-type lease is for a manufacturer or a dealer to sell its product, its reasonable to recognize the costs of creating the transaction as a selling expense in the period
Contingent Rentals
Sometimes rental payments may be increased (or decreased) at some future time during the lease term, depending on whether some specified event occurs. Contingent rentals are not included in the minimum lease payments. However, they are disclosed in the notes to the financial statements.
Lease Disclosures
Lease disclosure requirements are quite extensive for both the lessor and lessee. Virtually all aspects of the lease agreement must be disclosed. For all leases (a) a general description of the leasing arrangement is required as well as (b) minimum future payments, in the aggregate and for each of the five succeeding fiscal years.
Lease Disclosures
The lessor must disclose its net investment in the lease. This amount is the present value of the gross investment in the lease, which is the total of the minimum lease payments (plus any unguaranteed residual value). Other required disclosures are specific to the type of lease and include: residual values, contingent rentals, sublease rentals, and executory costs.
Conceptual Issues:
Characteristics of an asset:
(a) The entity controls an economic resource or benefit. (b) It arises out of a past event. (c) Future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity.
Characteristics of a liability:
(a) There exists a present obligation of the entity. (b) The obligation arises out of a past event. (c) The obligation is expected to result in an outflow of economic benefits.
The board tentatively decided that in a simple lease the lessee obtains a right to use a property (the leased item) that meets the definition of an asset and a liability. Consequently, the boards tentatively decided to adopt a new accounting model for leases that results in recognizing: (a) an asset representing its right to use the property (leased item) for the lease term (b) a liability for its obligation to pay rentals. This is a significant departure from the current basis of transferring substantially all the risk and rewards of ownership.