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FAIR VALUE ACCOUNTING

FAIR VALUE ACCOUNTING. Grace A. Mullings, CPA Director, Accounting Policy Toyota Financial Services. Fair Value Accounting. Learning Objectives Understand the evolution of the fair value option

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FAIR VALUE ACCOUNTING

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  1. FAIR VALUE ACCOUNTING Grace A. Mullings, CPA Director, Accounting Policy Toyota Financial Services

  2. Fair Value Accounting Learning Objectives • Understand the evolution of the fair value option • Provide participants with an overview of important accounting developments, disclosures and issues pertaining to fair value accounting

  3. Agenda • FASB Statement No. 155 – Accounting for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments (“Statement 155”) • FASB Statement No. 157 – Fair Value Measurements (“Statement 157”) • FASB Statement No. 159 – The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities (“Statement 159”)

  4. FASB Statement No. 155 Accounting for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments

  5. Overview of Statement 155 • Permits fair value measurement for certain hybrid financial instruments that contain an embedded derivative that would otherwise require bifurcation under Statement 133. • Amends Statement 133 to require evaluation of all interests in securitized financial assets. thus eliminating the exemption in Statement 133 accounts for certain hybrid instruments. As a result, entities will have to determine if such interest may be: • Freestanding derivatives, • Hybrid financial instruments containing embedded derivatives requiring bifurcation, or • Hybrid financial instruments containing embedded derivatives that do not require bifurcation • Clarifies that only the simplest and most direct separation of interest and principal cash flows need not be evaluated for embedded derivatives

  6. Overview of Statement 155 (cont’d) • Clarifies that concentrations of credit risk in the form of subordination are not embedded derivatives. • Amends Statement 140 to allow a QSPE to hold passive derivative instruments that pertain to beneficial interest that are or contain a derivative financial instrument • Irrevocable election on an instrument by instrument basis with all changes in fair value recognized in earnings. • The fair value election should be made at the time the financial instrument is acquired, issued or there is a new basis in a previously recognized financial instrument. • Upon adoption, applies to existing hybrid financial instruments that had been bifurcated under the requirements of Statement 133. • Effective for fiscal years beginning after September 15, 2006.

  7. Hybrid Derivative Host Hybrid Financial Instruments • The combination of a “Host contract” and an “Embedded derivative” = Hybrid Financial Instrument • Any embedded feature that meets the bifurcation criteria must be bifurcated from the host and accounted for separately. Apply other applicable GAAP: historical cost accounting Apply Statement 133: mark-to-fair value through earnings; may qualify as a hedging instrument

  8. Bifurcate 3. Is it clearly and closely related to the Host contract? (Par 12a) 1.Is the hybrid carried at fair value through earnings? (Par 12b) 2. Would the embedded feature be a derivative if it was freestanding? (Par 12c) No No Yes Yes No Yes Do Not Bifurcate Hybrid Financial Instruments (cont’d) The Bifurcation Model Paragraph 12 of Statement 133:

  9. Double-Double Test (13b) Substantially All (13a) Investor may not recover substantially all of its initial investment any possible scenario (even if unlikely) 1. Double the investor’s initial rate of return on the host OR And 2. Double then-current market return for a contract with the same terms as the host and same credit quality at inception Hybrid Financial Instruments (cont’d) Bifurcate when interest rate indices not clearly and closely related Paragraph 13 of Statement 133

  10. Hybrid Financial Instruments (cont’d) Statement 133 Implementation Issue B39, “Embedded Derivatives: Application of Paragraph 13(b) to Call Options That Are Exercisable Only by the Debtor.” • Simple issuer call option is clearly and closely related • “When applying paragraph 13, the Board believes that certain embedded prepayment options in debt instruments would be unnecessarily bifurcated.” • If issuer controls when it pays a prepayment penalty, then investor cannot double its return.

  11. Impact of Statement 155 on Beneficial Interests • Nullified Issue D1 Application of Statement 133 to Beneficial Interests in Securitized Financial Assets. • Impact of Issue D1 was to defer the bifurcation requirements of Statement 133 • Holders of beneficial financial interests must analyze arrangements that govern the payoff structure and the subordination status of the financial instrument • Prepayment risks in such structures could result in meeting the 13(b) requirements of Statement 133 • Analyze the contractual terms of the interest in the securitized financial assets • Understand the nature and amount of assets and liabilities and other financial instruments comprising the securitization transaction. • Additionally, Statement 155 amended the comment section of example 6 in Statement 133 Implementation Issue No. B39, “Application of Paragraph 13(b) to Call Options That Are Exercisable by the Debtor.”

  12. Impact of Statement 155 on Beneficial Interests (cont’d) • Resulted in numerous requests to the FASB to provide guidance on the application of paragraph 13(b) to securitized interests in prepayable financial assets. • FASB responded by issuing Statement 133 Implementation Issue B40, “Embedded Derivatives: Application of Paragraph 13(b) to Securitized Interests in Prepayable Financial Assets.” • Provides a narrow scope exception tied only to the prepayment risk of the underlying prepayable financial assets • If a securitized interest contains any other terms that affect some or all of the cash flows or the value of other exchanges required by the contract in a manner similar to a derivative instrument, those securitized interests would be subject to the requirements of paragraph 13(b) of Statement 133 (for example, an inverse floater).

  13. Statement 155 Financial Statement Disclosures

  14. FASB Statement No. 157 Fair Value Measurements

  15. Overview of Statement 157 • Creates a singular definition of fair value • Allows increased consistency and comparability in fair value measurements • Clarifies that the exchange price is the price in an orderly transaction between market participants • Expectation that fair value reflects market-based conclusions • Prioritizes the information hierarchy that should be used in developing assumptions to establish fair value • Another step in international convergence • Effective for fiscal years beginning after September 15, 2007

  16. Investment securities – Statement 115 Derivatives – Statement 133 “Short sales” of securities – AICPA Audit Guides for certain industries Investments carried at fair value by investment companies Certain assets and liabilities measured at fair value in a business combination – Statement 141: Intangible assets In process R&D Assets measured at fair value for an impairment test – Statements 142 and 144: Long-lived assets held for sale Reporting units Goodwill Statement 157 – Scope All accounting pronouncements that require or permit fair value measurement and include such items as:

  17. Differences Between Statement 157 and Current Practice SOURCE: DELOITTE

  18. Differences Between Statement 157 and Current Practice SOURCE: DELOITTE

  19. Fair Value Hierarchy Level 3 Model-based Level 1 Market- based Statement 157 – Valuation Problem Statement 157 provides three main approaches to measuring fair value. Objective Subjective

  20. Statement 157 – Financial Statement Disclosures • Requires expanded disclosures about fair value measurements designed to provide users of financial statements with additional transparency regarding: • Extent to which fair value is used to measure assets and liabilities • The inputs and assumptions used in measuring fair value • The effect of fair value measurements on earnings

  21. Statement 157 – Financial Statement Disclosures (Cont’d) • Nature and extent of disclosure requirements vary depending on whether the subsequent fair value measurements are made on a recurring or nonrecurring basis. • Fair Value Measurement on a Recurring Basis: • Disclose the level within the fair value hierarchy in which the fair value measurement falls. • Reconcile the beginning and ending balances for any recurring fair value measurements that utilize significant unobservable inputs (i.e. Level 3 inputs). • Fair Value Measurement on a Nonrecurring Basis: • Disclose for assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis the reason for the fair value measurement during the period.

  22. Statement 157 – Major Issues for Consideration • Determining primary or most advantageous market • Assigning and Monitoring Statement 157 hierarchy levels • Transaction costs • Whole loans and other receivables • Credit risk in valuing liabilities

  23. FASB Statement No. 159 The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities

  24. Overview of Statement 159 • Allows entities to voluntarily choose to measure eligible financial instruments at fair value (the “fair value option”) • Changes in fair value recognized in earnings. • Election made on an instrument-by-instrument basis • Irrevocable

  25. Overview of Statement 159 (cont’d) FASB issued the FVO to: • Provide an opportunity to mitigate volatility in earnings caused by a mixed attribute accounting model • Reduce the need for applying complex hedge accounting provisions • Expand the use of fair value measurements • International convergence

  26. Statement 159 – Scope • Recognized financial assets and liabilities • Firm commitments that would otherwise not be recognized at inception and that involve only financial instruments • Written loan commitments • Certain rights and obligations under insurance contracts or warranty obligations • A financial host contract in a nonfinancial hybrid instrument • Nonfinancial assets and liabilities

  27. Statement 159 – Exclusions • Investments in consolidated entities • Financial obligations for items such as pension benefits and other deferred compensation arrangements • Income tax assets and liabilities • Financial assets and liabilities recognized under leases as defined in Statement 13 • Deposit liabilities, withdrawals on demand, of depository institutions • Financial instruments that are, in whole or in part, a component of shareholder’s equity

  28. Statement 159 – FVO Election • Election must be documented: • On election date or • Via a pre-existing policy • Eligible election dates: • The entity first recognizes the eligible item • The entity enters into an eligible firm commitment • Specialized accounting rules requiring fair value cease to apply to the financial asset • Investment in an entity ceases to be consolidated or becomes subject to equity method accounting • An event that requires item to be measured at fair value, excluding impairments

  29. Requires extensive disclosure requirements, objective is to allow for comparability: Between entities with similar financial assets and liabilities Between assets and liabilities of an entity that selects different measurement attributes Statement 159 – Financial Statement Disclosures

  30. Statement 159 – Major Issues for Consideration • Cost and fees – cannot be deferred under FVO • Premium and discount not considered cost and fee • Interest Income and Expense – no guidance on determining or presenting interest income or expense for items under the FVO • Statement 159 vs. Statement 133 • Debt covenants that may be based on equity or debt ratios • No Statement 5 reserves for items carried under FVO

  31. Questions and Answers

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