FAR-F6-M2/M3-Leases Part 1 and 2 Flashcards
What are the three types of leases?
- Short term leases
- Operating leases
- Finance leases
What is a short term lease?
A short term lease is a lease of less than 12 months with no transfer of ownership of the asset.
What is an operating lease?
An operating lease is a lease of 12 months or longer but doesn’t qualify as a finance lease. There is NO TRANSFER of ownership of the asset. However, the lessee recognizes the leased asset on the balance sheet.
What is a finance lease?
A finance lease is a lease that is treated as if it were a sale. Ownership of the asset IS TRANSFERED and the lessee is recognizes the asset on their balance sheet and the lessor removes the asset from their balance sheet.
With a short term lease, does the lessee report the asset on its balance sheet? Does the lessor remove the asset from its balance sheet?
A short term lease is essentially renting an asset for less than 12 months. The lessee doesn’t list the asset being rented on their balance sheet, nor does the lessor remove the asset from their balance sheet, like they would with a finance lease.
What are the journal entries that a lessee should record for a short term lease? What are the journal entries that a lessor should record for a short term lease?
JE recorded by lessee on a monthly basis:
Dr. Lease Expense XXX
Cr. Cash or AP (XXX)
JE recorded by lessor on a monthly basis:
Dr. Cash XXX
Cr. Lease Revenue (XXX)
What is the criteria to determine whether a lease should be treated as a finance lease or an operating lease?
If ANY of the 5 criteria are met, then the lease should be classified as a finance lease by the lessee and a sales-type lease by the lessor.
Acronym - OWNES
- OWNERSHIP transfers to the lessee at the end of the lease term.
- The lease contains a WRITTEN purchase option that the lessee is reasonably certain to exercise.
- The NET PRESENT VALUE at the beginning of the lease term of the minimum lease payments AND any guaranteed residual value (by lessee) equals or exceeds the fair value of the leased property (generally 90% of the Fair value is the minimum threshold).
- The lease term is the major part (75% of more) of the estimated ECONOMIC LIFE of the leased property.
- The asset is SPECIALIZED that there is no alternative use to the lessor.
If none of the OWNES criteria are met or the lease is short term, then is the lease considered an operating lease by the lessee?
Yes, if NONE of the OWNES criteria are met or lease is short term then it is considered an operating lease by the lessee.
For the lessor, classification depends on whether BOTH criteria are met: acronym PC. If BOTH are met then it is considered a direct financing lease by the lessor. If 1 or none are met, then it is considered an operating lease by the lessor.
- PRESENT VALUE of the sum of the lease payments PLUS third party guaranteed residual value (not by the lessee) is equal to or exceeds underlying asset fair value.
- COLLECTION of the lease payments and any amounts necessary to collect residual value guarantees is probable.
When should the lessee begin the recognition of lease expenses?
The lessee should begin the recognition of lease expenses as of the commencement date.
In the calculation of lease payments, the lessee must include what?
Acronym REPORT.
In the calculation of lease payments, the lessee will include:
1. REQUIRED contractual fixed payments, less any lease incentives paid or payable to the lessee.
2. EXERCISE price of an option, if reasonably certain to be exercised by the lessee.
3. PURCHASE price at the end of the lease, if the LESSOR has the option to require the lessee to purchase the underlying asset.
4. ONLY indexed or rate variable payments.
5. RESIDUAL guarantees likely to be owed. The Lessee includes the full amount of the residual value guarantee at the end of the lease term in the present value test. Does not consider UNGUARANTEED residual value.
6. TERMINATION penalty. Any penalty due from the lessee upon lease termination.
Lessee lease payments MAY OR MAY NOT include the following based on the lessee’s option:
Acronym NGO:
1. NONLEASE components.
2.GUARANTEES of lessor debt by lessee.
3. OTHER variable lease payments.
What is a sale-lease back transaction?
A sale-leaseback transaction occurs when the seller that has control of an asset transfers it to another party (the buyer), (the buyer now has control of the asset), with a subsequent lease of the same asset where the seller becomes the lessee and the buyer becomes the lessor.
In a sale-leaseback transaction, can the seller of the asset account for the transaction as a sale?
The seller of the asset can only account for the transaction as a sale if the subsequent lease is considered an OPERATING LEASE.
In a sale leaseback transaction, if the subsequent lease is considered a finance lease, can the original seller of the asset still account for the transaction as a sale?
No. If the underlying lease in a sale-leaseback transactoin is a FINANCE LEASE, it is considered equivalent to a repurchase and will therefore be considered a FAILED SALE.
In a sale-leaseback transaction, if the criteria are met for a sale, each party must determine whether the transaction is at FAIR VALUE. How is this determined?
If the criteria are met for a sale, each party must determine whether the transaction is at fair value.
Step 1. Determine which of the 2 sets of info is more readily available.
Set 1: asset sale price and fair value (purchase price)
Set 2: PV of lease payments and PV of market rental payments.
**USUALLY, Set 1 is used for MCQs.
Step 2: Of the set that is more readily determinable, identify any difference between the 2 data points.
If a difference exists, this will require an adjustment to either the sales price or the purchase price. Any increases in the sales price or purchase price will be treated as prepaid rent via an adjustment to the ROU asset in the lease back, and any decreases in the sales or purchase price will be treated as additional financing provided by the buyer/lessor to the seller/lessee.
Ex. if Sales Price is LARGER than fair value, then seller/lessor is obtaining more cash than the asset is worth, which will need to be paid back to the buyer/lessor once the leaseback begins.
JE to record the sale by the sellor/lessee
Dr. Cash $208,000
Dr. Accumulated Depreciation $130,000
Cr. Equipment ($325,000)
Cr. Financing Liability ($6,000)
Cr. Gain on sale of equipment ($2,000)
If the sale-lease back criteria are not met, how will the seller/lessee and the buyer/lessor treat this transaction and record it on their books?
Both the seller/lessee and the buyer/lessor will treat this as FAILED SALE. This financing transaction will involve the seller/lessee recording a financing liability and the buyer/lessor recording a financing receivable. In regard to the asset, the seller/lessee will continue to recognize the asset and the buyer will NOT recognize the asset on its books.
Because essentially, the seller/lessee is repurchasing the asset back, therefore they’re not really sellling the asset in the first place.