1 / 32

INFORMATION FOR OBSERVERS IASB BOARD MEETING: 11 DECEMBER 2007, LONDON AGENDA PAPER 4B

INFORMATION FOR OBSERVERS IASB BOARD MEETING: 11 DECEMBER 2007, LONDON AGENDA PAPER 4B. Liabilities and Equity FASB Preliminary Views Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Equity.

conway
Download Presentation

INFORMATION FOR OBSERVERS IASB BOARD MEETING: 11 DECEMBER 2007, LONDON AGENDA PAPER 4B

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INFORMATION FOR OBSERVERS IASB BOARD MEETING: 11 DECEMBER 2007, LONDON AGENDA PAPER 4B Liabilities and Equity FASB Preliminary Views Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Equity This document is provided as a convenience to observers at IASB meetings, to assist them in following the Board’s discussion. It does not represent an official position of the IASB. Board positions are set out in Standards. These notes are based on the staff papers prepared for the IASB. Paragraph numbers correspond to paragraph numbers used in the IASB papers. However, because these notes are less detailed, some paragraph numbers are not used.

  2. Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Equity IASB Board Meeting December 11, 2007

  3. History of the Project • Added to agenda in 1986 • Resulting FASB documents • 1990 Discussion Memorandum • Statement 150 and follow on FSPs • ED proposing revisions to definitions in Concepts Statement No. 6 • Milestone Draft of Proposed Standard • 2007 Preliminary Views (PV) • Milestone draft based on ownership-settlement (O-S) approach • PV supports basic ownership approach

  4. Problems in Developing O-S Approach • Complexity • To achieve classification based on forms of settlement, the following concepts were needed • Perpetual, basic and indirect ownership instruments • Separation • Linkage • Substantive Features • Inconsistencies • Single and multiple component instruments classified first based on equity characteristics • Multiple component instruments measured first as debt; equity is the residual • Obligations first approach • May result in unrealistic numbers

  5. Problems in Developing O-S Approach • Opportunities for accounting arbitrage opportunities • Instruments with similar economic outcomes are classified differently if settled differently (e.g., physical versus cash settlement for options, SARS, and convertible debt) • Difficulty in developing Conceptual Framework definition of equity and liabilities • Equity includes (a) the most residual instruments, (b) other perpetual instruments, and (c) instruments that change in value because the value of the most residual instruments changes and in the same direction as the most residual interests and is settled with the most residual instrument • A liability is an obligation that is not equity

  6. Basic Ownership ApproachConceptual Reasons for PV • Equity includes the most residual instrument(s) even if redeemable for fair value or an approximation • Possible ways to define liabilities: • A present claim that an entity has little or no discretion to avoid and that has the potential to decrease the assets distributable to the most residual instruments • A present claim that the entity has little or no discretion to avoid and that is not the most residual instrument OR • A present obligation that will be settled with assets or equity • Does not work for perpetual preferred shares • Does not work for mandatorily redeemable shares

  7. Basic Ownership ApproachApplication Reasons for PV • Because settlement does not affect classification, there are fewer accounting arbitrage opportunities and no need to consider unstated cash settlement options • Fewer accounting arbitrage opportunities mean less need to apply the linkage requirements and little or no need to apply the substance requirements • Far fewer instruments are separated, which avoids most of the “obligation first” issues • Easier to craft a simple conceptual definition

  8. Potential Challenges in Acceptance of Basic Ownership Approach • Approach has a greater impact on the income statement • Changes accounting for stock options • Changes accounting for convertible debt Observation: Generally consistent with proposed accounting for puttable shares under IAS 32

  9. All Three Approaches Basic Ownership Instrument (BOI) • Most subordinate class or classes of instruments • Percentage of assets after all other claims that must be satisfied • Share must not be limited or guaranteed

  10. All Three Approaches Basic Ownership Instrument (BOI) • May be puttable or mandatorily redeemable for fair value or a book-value-based approximation • May be callable (at any price) • BOIs of subsidiaries are BOIs in consolidation (unless modified)

  11. All Three Approaches Measurement & Presentation • Initial measurement at transaction price • Mandatorily redeemable/puttable equity presented separately from other equity • Presentation in P&L not yet addressed

  12. Ownership-Settlement Approach Classification • BOIs and BO components are equity • Other perpetual instruments are equity • Certain indirect ownership instruments are equity • All others are liabilities or assets

  13. Ownership-Settlement Approach Indirect Ownership Instruments • Not perpetual • Fair value or cash flows linked to a BOI; changes in same direction • No contingent exercise based on: • A price not the price of the underlying BOI • A price index not related solely to the reporting entity’s operations

  14. Ownership-Settlement Approach Indirect Ownership Instruments • Written call options • Purchased put options • Debt convertible to BOIs • Forward contracts to issue BOIs • Stock appreciation rights (on BOIs) • Warrants on BOIs

  15. Ownership-Settlement Approach Indirect Ownership Instruments Classified as Equity • Settlement with the same BOI to which its value is linked

  16. Ownership-Settlement Approach Indirect Ownership Instruments Classified as Equity • Physically settled written call options or warrants on BOIs • Written call options settled net with BOIs • Forward contracts to issue BOIs

  17. Ownership-Settlement Approach Indirect Ownership Instruments Not Classified as Equity • Written call options net settled in cash • Net cash settled forward contracts

  18. Ownership-Settlement Approach Separation • Two or more alternative or separate outcomes; some equity and some not equity • Settlements in different forms are separate outcomes • Remaining outstanding is an outcome • Only two components even if more outcomes

  19. Ownership-Settlement Approach Obligation First Approach • Asset/liability components measured at the fair value of a comparable freestanding instrument that is 100% likely to be settled • Remainder of the transaction price allocated to the equity component

  20. Ownership-Settlement Approach Instruments Separated • Debt convertible to BOIs • BOI puttable at a fixed price

  21. Ownership-Settlement Approach Remeasurement • Mandatorily redeemable or puttable BOIs at redemption value; changes in equity • Liabilities/assets with cash flows or fair values that vary with prices of BOIs at fair value; changes in P&L • Same as current GAAP for others

  22. Ownership-Settlement Approach Settlement, Expiration, Forgiveness, or Conversion • Special provisions for accreted cost instruments and components not settled as assumed in the initial measurement • Expiration or delayed settlement may change classification, separation, or accretion

  23. Ownership-Settlement Approach Substance • Ignore settlement provisions with remote probability or minimal effect • Consider unwritten (cash) settlement alternatives with more than remote probability and more than minimal effect

  24. Ownership-Settlement Approach Linkage • Multiple instruments linked (accounted for as if a single instrument) if part of the same arrangement • Issued near the same time with same counterparty; interacting payoff structures • Interdependent; e.g., contractual link

  25. REO Approach • BOIs and components (BOCs) are equity • Other ownership instruments (preferred shares, etc) are liabilities • Equity derivatives/hybrids separated into BOCs and debt using option pricing models • Remeasurement/reseparation at each measurement date; changes in P&L

  26. Basic Ownership Approach Classification • BOIs and BOCs are equity • All other financial instruments are assets or liabilities

  27. Basic Ownership Approach Instruments Classified as Assets or Liabilities • Convertible debt of all types • Options and forwards of all types • Puttable shares (unless BOIs) • Preferred stock (and any other shares that are not BOIs)

  28. Basic Ownership Approach Separation • Only if a BOI remains outstanding after a required settlement (Probably rare) • Obligation first approach

  29. Basic Ownership Approach Instruments Separated • BOI with a “make whole” requirement • BOI with a registration rights penalty

  30. Basic Ownership Approach Instruments Not Separated • Convertible debt • Puttable or callable stock

  31. Basic Ownership Approach Remeasurement • Mandatorily redeemable or puttable BOIs at redemption value; changes in equity • Liabilities/assets with cash flows or fair values that vary with prices of BOIs at fair value; changes in P&L • Other liabilities/assets same as current GAAP

  32. Basic Ownership Approach Instruments at Fair Value through P&L • Convertible debt • Stock options • Puttable stock (if not a basic ownership instrument)

More Related