AASB 16 Leases. Modifications and implementation. 23 October 2018

Similar documents
AASB 16 Leases A fundamental overhaul of lessee accounting effective 2019

Lease modifications. Accounting for changes to lease contracts IFRS 16. September kpmg.com/ifrs

Gearing up for change New IFRS on Leases

LEASES WHERE ARE WE? Steve Rathjen

IFRS 16 LEASES. Page 1 of 21

IFRS 16 Leases supplement

HKFRS 16 Leases. Disclaimer. Date 21 April 2017 Time 19:00 21:00 Venue Boys' and Girls' Clubs Association

Executive Summary. New leases standard Lessees

IFRS 16 Leases. PICPA IFRS: New Standards and Updates Dubai. 28 April 2017

Edison Electric Institute and American Gas Association New Lease Standard

IFRS 16: Lease Modifications: Lessee

LEASES CONTINUING FORWARD IFRS NEWSLETTER

In December 2003 the IASB issued a revised IAS 17 as part of its initial agenda of technical projects.

International Financial Reporting Standard 16 Leases. Objective. Scope. Recognition exemptions (paragraphs B3 B8) IFRS 16

2018 KPMG Lower Gulf Limited, operating in the UAE and Oman, member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG

Applying IFRS in consumer products and retail

Shipping insights briefing

In December 2003 the Board issued a revised IAS 17 as part of its initial agenda of technical projects.

IFRS Project Insights Leases

Sri Lanka Accounting Standard - SLFRS 16. Leases

Leases: Overview of the new guidance

Adviser alert Insights into IFRS 16 Understanding the discount rate

The New Lease Accounting Standard. Hunter Mink, CPA, CCIFP Brian Rosenberg, CPA, MBA

Leases ASU September 20, 2017

10 TH European IFRS power and utilities roundtable

IFRS 16 Lease overview and EY s enabling toolkit

FRS 116 Leases: Through the Eyes of Auditors. Ng Kian Hui, Head of Audit & Assurance BDO LLP

New leases standard ASC 842 Lessee - operating leases. Itai Gotlieb, Partner, Professional Practice July 2017

HKFRS 16 Leases sets out the principles for the recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosure

Real estate leases. The tenant perspective IFRS 16. October kpmg.com/ifrs

CPE regulations require online participants to take part in online questions

Implementing IFRS 16. Jianqiao Lu, IASB Member. Singapore, November International Accounting Standards Board, IFRS Foundation

AASB 16: Experience the Fundamental Overhaul of Lease Accounting for Lessees

Lease Accounti ng Standar

ASC Topic 842 Leases. September 25 &

Exposure Draft 64 January 2018 Comments due: June 30, Proposed International Public Sector Accounting Standard. Leases

IFRS 16 : Lease accounting

Major reforms to global lease accounting

Lease Accounting Standard

Defining Issues. FASB Completes Technical Redeliberations on Leases. October 2015, No Key Facts. Key Impacts

Applying IFRS. Presentation and disclosure requirements of IFRS 16 Leases. November 2018

GASB 87: Leases. Hosted By: Ben Lindekugel, Executive Director Association of Washington Public Hospital Districts

New Zealand Equivalent to International Financial Reporting Standard 16 Leases (NZ IFRS 16)

New on the Horizon: Leases

IFRS 16 Leases. An overview. March 9, kpmg.com/ca/leases

NOTICE TO MEMBERS NEW LEASE ACCOUNTING STANDARD-COMMENTARY

Summary of IFRS Exposure Draft Leases

Preparing for the new ASC 842 Leasing Standard Challenges and Solutions. August 24, 2017

Preparing for the new ASC 842 Leasing Standard Challenges and Solutions. August 24, 2017

The new accounting standard for leases. 27 March 2017

Lease Update. June 2017 Addison, Texas

IFRS 16: Leases; a New Era of Lease Accounting!

Impact of lease accounting changes to corporate real estate

Deeper Dive Leases. Overview

Exposure Draft. Indian Accounting Standard (Ind AS) 116 Leases. (Last date for Comments: August 31, 2017)

Lease Accounting Standard Update ASU Presented by: Nicholas Hoefel, CPA Manager, Audit Services Group

Is Your Operating Lease An Asset or Liability? It s Now Both

IFRS for mining. IFRS 16 Leases. Practical application guidance. February KPMG.com.au

Leases Discount rates

Headline Verdana Bold The evolutions of leases accounting under IFRS 16 Mariano Bruno, Carlo Laganà, Giuseppe Ambrosio, Deloitte & Touche S.p.A.

[TO BE PUBLLISHED IN THE GAZETTE OF INDIA, EXTRAORDINARY, PART II, SECTION 3, SUB-SECTION (i)]

Leases transition options

Technical Line FASB final guidance

IFRS 15 and IFRS 16 Webinar

IFRS Update Guy Thomas, CPA, CA

Implementing the New Lease Guidance

Measuring Lease Liabilities EQUIPMENT LEASING AND FINANCE ASSOCIATION

Example 1: Separating lease/non-lease elements

Leases: A Comprehensive Update on the Joint Project

IASB/FASB Exposure Draft on Leases. Accounting in the Retail Industry A new view of lease accounting emerges

Why IFRS 16 matters to the shipping industry

KPMG s CFO. Webcast. Administrative

Lease & Finance Accountants Conference. September The Westin Charlotte Charlotte, NC

Countdown to MFRS 16 Are you ready?

Lease payments. What s included in the lease liability? IFRS 16. November kpmg.com/ifrs

Leases. Tatsumi Yamada Board Member and Partner KPMG AZSA LLC (Former Board Member of the IASB)

Applying IFRS in Financial Services

On the Horizon: Leases and Fiduciary Responsibilities

Defining Issues. FASB and IASB Continue Discussions on Lease Accounting. Key Facts. June 2014, No

How the lease accounting proposal might affect your company

Lease Accounting and Loan Covenants: What is the Impact?

Accounting for revenue is changing

Accounting and Auditing Update. Staci L. Brogan, CPA, Shareholder Patricia R. Giudici, CPA, Senior Manager Schneider Downs & Co. Inc.

REAL ESTATE LEASE ACCOUNTING

Lease accounting scope & impacts

International GAAP Holdings Limited Model financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2017 (With early adoption of IFRS 16)

In-depth A look at current financial reporting issues

Intangible Assets IAS 38, IAS 36, IFRS 3

ACCOUNTING Wayne Basford Partner - BDO

Technical Line FASB final guidance

FRS 116: LEASES. Ng Eng Juan Professor and Head of Accountancy Program Singapore University of Social Sciences

A Review of IFRS 16 Leases By Tan Liong Tong

IFRS 15 Revenue from contracts with customers Presentation by: CPA Freda Mitambo Partner, Deloitte & Touche

In depth A look at current financial reporting issues

New IASB leases standard engineering and construction

Get ready for FRS 116: Leases

Applying IFRS. New IASB leases standard oilfield services. December 2016

IFRS 16 Leases: Overview

IFRS 16 Leases. Presented by Anton van Wyk M. Com CA (SA)

Real estate developers

Transcription:

AASB 16 Leases Modifications and implementation 23 October 2018

Your facilitators are Patricia Stebbens Hayley Pang Michael Voogt Daina Klunder 2

Setting the scene Date of initial application is almost upon us 1 January 2019. Overview (2016) Transition options (2017) Have you got its measure? (2017) More to consider On transition to the new standard and on an ongoing basis. 3

Transition for lessees - modifications Full retrospective Modified retrospective reconstruct ROUA Modified retrospective ROUA = lease liability Reconstruct modifications Reconstruct modifications Ignore prior modifications 4

Agenda Accounting for lease modifications, both lessees and lessors Disclosure requirements, on transition and ongoing Implementation insights 5

Modifications

Lease modification - definition Change in the: scope of a lease, or consideration for a lease that was not part of the original terms and conditions. 7

Lease modification examples Negotiate to reduce floor space from 4 floors to 3 floors. Receive a rent rebate for 2 years due to downturn in economy. Negotiate to increase lease term. Negotiate to increase the number of vehicles rented. 8

Lessee: modifications overview Decrease in scope Quantity of assets Increase in scope Change in consideration Lease term 9

Understanding modifications Reduce rent due to downturn in economy. Add to lease an extra floor of office space. Reduce the lease term for office space. Lease an additional 2 trucks as part of a master leasing arrangement that does not take a minimum quantity of trucks to be leased. Neither increase nor decrease in scope change in consideration Increase in scope increase in quantity of assets Decrease in scope Account for as a new lease 10

Examples Increase in scope: Lease term Increase in scope: Additional vessel Decrease in scope: Reduction in floor space 11

Example: Increase in scope lease term Scenario 20 year lease of an industrial area commences, no extension options Lease payments are $150,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Year 18 an extension is agreed for an additional 10 years No change in annual lease payments Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Y12 Y14 Y16 Y18 Y20 Y22 Y24 Y26 Y28 Y30 12

Example: Increase in scope lease term Scenario 20 year lease of an industrial area commences, no extension options Lease payments are $150,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Year 18 an extension is agreed for an additional 10 years No change in annual lease payments Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Y12 Y14 Y16 Y18 Y20 Y22 Y24 Y26 Y28 Y30 Effective date of modification Accounting for the modification: At end of Year 18 Revised term Y% Difference Lease liability $300,000 12 years $1,100,000 $800,000 ROUA $200,000 Remeasure lease liability: $1,100,000 Adjust ROU asset: $1,000,000 13

Example: Increase in scope quantity of assets Scenario 10 year lease of a vessel (vessel 1) Lease payments are $1,000,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Year 4 lessee signs an amendment to lease an additional vessel (vessel 2) for an $1,000,000 p.a. for 6 years Market rent for vessel 2 is $1,200,000 Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Effective date of modification Increase in lease payment is not commensurate with standalone price 14

Example: Increase in scope quantity of assets Scenario 10 year lease of a vessel (vessel 1) Lease payments are $1,000,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Year 4 lessee signs an amendment to lease an additional vessel (vessel 2) for an $1,000,000 p.a. for 6 years Market rent for vessel 2 is $1,200,000 Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Effective date of modification Increase in lease payment is not commensurate with standalone price Remeasurement: Remeasure lease liability (present value $2m for remaining 6 years at revised discount rate) 15

Example: Increase in scope quantity of assets Scenario 10 year lease of a vessel (vessel 1) Lease payments are $1,000,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Year 4 lessee signs an amendment to lease an additional vessel (vessel 2) for $1,200,000 p.a. for 6 years Market rent for vessel 2 is $1,200,000 Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Increase in lease payment is commensurate with standalone price 16

Example: Increase in scope quantity of assets Scenario 10 year lease of a vessel (vessel 1) Lease payments are $1,000,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Year 4 lessee signs an amendment to lease an additional vessel (vessel 2) for $1,200,000 p.a. for 6 years Market rent for vessel 2 is $1,200,000 Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 Increase in lease payment is commensurate with standalone price Separate lease: Recognise new lease liability (present value $1.2m for 6 years at revised discount rate) Vessel 1: No change 17

Additional considerations discount rates Estimate requires judgement Process in place? May require use of specialists 18

Example: Increase in scope forward starting Scenario 8 year lease of a building Lease payments are $400,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Y2 lease amended to include the rental of the underground car park from Y5 for $30,000 p.a. Relative stand alone prices are $375,000 for building rental and $75,000 for the car park Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y1 Y2 Y3 Y4 Y5 Y6 Y7 Y8 Effective date of modification Car park available for use 19

Example: Increase in scope forward starting Scenario 8 year lease of a building Lease payments are $400,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% End of Y2 lease amended to include the rental of the underground car park from Y5 for $30,000 p.a. Relative stand alone prices are $375,000 for building rental and $75,000 for the car park Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y1 Y2 Y3 Y4 Y5 Y6 Y7 Y8 Effective date of modification Car park available for use Poll question: When is the car park component recognised? a) At the effective date of the modification, the end of year 2 b) At the effective date of the modification, the start of year 5 c) When the car park is made available for use, 20 the start of year 5

Example: Increase in scope forward starting Allocation of consideration: Observable stand-alone price: building A $375,000 Observable stand-alone price: car park B $75,000 Total C = A+B $450,000 Building component as % of total observable prices D = A/C 83% Car park component as % of total observable prices E = B/C 17% Allocation of consideration to building lease D x $430,000 $357,000 Allocation of consideration to car park lease E x $430,000 $73,000 21

Example: Increase in scope forward starting Y0 Y1 Y2 Y3 Y4 Y5 Y6 Y7 Y8 Remeasure building lease: Recognise car park lease: Lease liability: $1,700,000 - $200,000 = $1,500,000 ROU asset: $1,600,000 - $200,000 = $1,400,000 Lease liability: $300,000 ROU asset: $300,000 22

Example: Decrease in scope Scenario 10 year lease for right to use 10,000m 2 warehouse space Lease payments are $100,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% Contract modified to lease 7,500m 2 for last 4 years Lease payments are $85,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 10,000m 2 7,500m 2 Lease payments $100,000 Lease payments $85,000 23

Example: Decrease in scope Scenario 10 year lease for right to use 10,000m 2 warehouse space Lease payments are $100,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% Contract modified to lease 7,500m 2 for last 4 years Lease payments are $85,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 10,000m 2 7,500m 2 Lease payments $100,000 Lease payments $85,000 Step 1: Remeasure lease liability and ROUA. Recognise gain or loss: P&L impact Step 2: Remeasure lease liability and ROUA for revised lease payments 24

Example: Decrease in scope Scenario 10 year lease for right to use 10,000m 2 warehouse space Lease payments are $100,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% Contract modified to lease 7,500m 2 for last 4 years Lease payments are $85,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 10,000m 2 7,500m 2 Lease payments $100,000 Step 1: Remeasure lease liability and ROUA. Recognise gain or loss: P&L impact Step 2: Remeasure lease liability and ROUA for revised lease payments Step 1 At end of Year 6 Lease payments $85,000 75% (25% partial termination) ROUA $280,000 $210,000 Difference $70,000 (Cr) Lease liability $340,000 $255,000 $85,000 (Dr) $15,000 (CR P&L) 25

Example: Decrease in scope Scenario 10 year lease for right to use 10,000m 2 warehouse space Lease payments are $100,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is X% Contract modified to lease 7,500m 2 for last 4 years Lease payments are $85,000 p.a. Incremental borrowing rate is Y% Y0 Y2 Y4 Y6 Y8 Y10 10,000m 2 7,500m 2 Lease payments $100,000 Step 1: Remeasure lease liability and ROUA. Recognise gain or loss: P&L impact Step 2: Remeasure lease liability and ROUA for revised lease payments Step 2 At end of Year 6 Lease payments $85,000 Revised lease payments ROUA $210,000 $230,000 Difference $20,000 (Dr) Lease liability $255,000 $275,000 $20,000 (Cr) 26

Lessee: modification accounting complexities Multiple elements Modification Y0 Y1 Y2 Y3 Y4 Y5 Y6 Car 1 5 year lease term Car 1 Car 2 1 year lease term 3 year lease term 27

Lessee: modification accounting complexities Multiple elements Modification Y0 Y1 Y2 Y3 Y4 Y5 Y6 Car 1 5 year lease term Car 1 Car 2 1 year lease term 3 year lease term Poll question: Is there a gain or loss to be recognised? a) Yes, there is a decrease in lease term for car 1 b) No, there is an overall increase in lease term 28

Lessor: modifications to an operating lease Account for as a new lease taking into account prepaid/accrued lease payments. Classify new lease as operating or finance, depending on terms. Amortise prepaid/accrued lease payments over new lease term 29

Lessor: modifications to a finance lease Increase in scope is at the standalone price, account for a separate lease 30

Lessor: modifications to a finance lease Increase in scope is at the standalone price, account for a separate lease OR If not a separate lease reassess lease classification Operating lease Finance lease Terminate original lease, create a new lease Carrying amount of underlying asset = net investment of original lease immediately before modification effective date Apply AASB 9: Consider is the modification to the lease receivable substantial? Apply modification of financial asset accounting 31

Implementation insights

Lease term assessment - penalties Lessee and the lessor each have the right to terminate the lease without permission from the other party with no more than an insignificant penalty Lease is no longer enforceable 33

Example: Lease term assessment - penalties 5 year lease of a warehouse Lessee uses the warehouse as a furniture showroom Fit-out costs are incurred Lessee and lessor each have the right to terminate the lease after 6 months Penalty should be applied broadly, and includes economic disincentives to exercise a termination option 34

Poll question: Example: Lease term assessment - penalties applied? Can the short-term lease exemption be a) Yes b) No c) Further information is required 5 year lease of a warehouse Lessee uses the warehouse as a furniture showroom Fit-out costs are incurred Lessee and lessor each have the right to terminate the lease after 6 months Penalty should be applied broadly, and includes economic disincentives to exercise a termination option 35

Lease term assessment - penalties Economic disincentives that may create a penalty : Economic value of leasehold improvements Cost to dismantle leasehold improvements Cost to restore the warehouse to its original condition Potential impact of early termination on customer relationships 36

Transition disclosures 1 2 Retrospective approach Early adoption Practical expedients for lease definition Modified retrospective approach Early adoption Practical expedient for lease definition Practical expedients relating to operating leases Weighted-average incremental borrowing rate Differences between operating lease commitments and lease liabilities 37

Go forward disclosures 1 Mandatory quantitative information specific disclosures Lease costs and sub-lease income Maturity analysis of lease commitments Reconciliation of ROU assets by major class of underlying assets Total cash outflows for leases Lease expense for low value leases Lease expense for short term leases 2 Additional entity-specific information Extension and termination options Variable lease payments Residual value guarantees Sale & leaseback transactions 38

Overview of Key Operating Decisions Procurement and approval process Budgeting and forecasting process Changes to KPIs Impact on debt covenants New leasing systems to capture data and perform calculations for statutory reporting purposes Go forward processes and controls 39

Key points to remember 1 2 3 4 The lease liability and ROUA are required to be remeasured when there is a lease modification. There may be a gain or loss if there is a decrease in scope. For a multiple element modification, each element is separately addressed. Disclosures are required for leases not on balance sheet. There could be significant impacts on the business on transition to AASB 16. 40

KPMG Resources IFRS 16 Leases standard core concepts Leases Transition to AASB 16 AASB 16 Leases Do you have its measure? 41

Thank you

kpmg.com.au 2018 KPMG, an Australian partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative ( KPMG International ), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. The KPMG name and logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of KPMG International. Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation. The information contained in this document is of a general nature and is not intended to address the objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular individual or entity. It is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute, nor should it be regarded in any manner whatsoever, as advice and is not intended to influence a person in making a decision, including, if applicable, in relation to any financial product or an interest in a financial product. Although we endeavour to provide accurate and timely information, there can be no guarantee that such information is accurate as of the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future. No one should act on such information without appropriate professional advice after a thorough examination of the particular situation. To the extent permissible by law, KPMG and its associated entities shall not be liable for any errors, omissions, defects or misrepresentations in the information or for any loss or damage suffered by persons who use or rely on such information (including for reasons of negligence, negligent misstatement or otherwise).