FASB plans new standards

The Financial Accounting Standards Board is making plans for its future projects, including digital assets, intangibles, government grants, and accounting for financial instruments with environmental, social and governance-linked features and regulatory credits. 

FASB’s parent organization, the Financial Accounting Foundation, released an annual report Wednesday on the work of both FASB and its sister organization, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board. FASB chair Richard Jones and other officials from FASB and the Securities and Exchange Commission discussed some of those upcoming standards Thursday during a conference hosted by the University of Southern California’s Leventhal School of Accounting.

FASB currently has approximately 20 projects on its agenda and some are nearing completion. “Some of the standards you’ll see us issuing in the near term include a disclosure standard related to supplier financing,” said Jones. “That’s something that we heard intense interest from investors wanting to understand those programs and the effects on the company’s liquidity. You’ll see that coming out this summer. You’ll also shortly see a final standard issued on restrictions and their effect on the valuation of equity securities. That’s something where there was diversity in practice throughout the financial reporting community and the standard will narrow some of that diversity in practice.”

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Panelists at the USC Leventhal School of Accounting conference include (from left to right) moderator Christine Davine of Deloitte & Touche; FASB chair Richard Jones, and Diana Stoltfus and Kevin Vaughn of the SEC Office of the Chief Accountant.

Later this year, FASB is planning to issue an exposure draft on its long-running segment project, where the board is responding to requests from investors for more detailed information on the costs that make up the segment profitability that the chief operating decision maker is using at a business.

FASB is also doing post-implementation reviews of how well some of its recent major standards worked. 

FASB recently added several new projects to its agenda, including ones related to ESG and digital assets such as cryptocurrency after issuing an invitation to comment last year to its stakeholders (see story). The SEC reviewed the feedback received by FASB and is encouraging the board to take on climate-related standards, as the SEC has been doing of late with its own proposals.

“We highlighted three particular areas where we thought accounting standard focus could be spent,” said Kevin Vaughn, senior associate chief accountant at the SEC’s Office of the Chief Accountant. “That’s disaggregation of the income statement, climate-related transactions and digital assets. I don’t think there’s any disagreement in terms of those being significant areas of feedback, and I think we’ve certainly already seen some of the activity happening and look forward to progress on those.”

The SEC proposed its own rule on climate-related disclosures in March and had to extend the comment period because of the widespread interest it was attracting. “Registrants would be required to disclose the impact of climate-related events and transition activities on the line items of a registrant’s consolidated financial statements,” explained Diana Stoltzfus, deputy chief accountant for the Professional Practice Group in the SEC’s Office of the Chief Accountant. “Also financial estimates and assumptions impacted by severe weather events or other natural conditions in transition activities would be required to be disclosed. Outside the financial statements, registrants would be required to disclose climate-related risks and their actual or likely material impacts on the registrant’s business, strategy and outlook. A registrant’s governance of climate-related risks and related risk management processes, information about climate-related targets and goals and transition plans, and disclosure of a registrant’s greenhouse gas emissions, which for accelerated and large accelerated filers with respect to certain emissions would be subject to assurance.”

In the climate area, FASB added a new project on environmental credits, but plans to steer clear of sustainability standards. “Our mission is focused on financial accounting and reporting that’s in the financial statements,” said Jones. “That’s the line that’s been drawn for us. There are lots of other areas in filing that the SEC has responsibility for and handles the rulemaking related to them. The whole topic of ESG and how it intersects or relates to financial accounting and reporting is one that I heard about from the day I started here back on July 1, 2020. One of the questions we kept getting is what is the FASB’s role in ESG and how does it intersect with financial accounting and reporting.”

The FASB staff issued an education paper that discussed that issue last year, but in response to its agenda consultation the board was asked to get more involved in several ESG areas, including environmental credits, such as carbon exchange and blended fuel credits.

“We didn’t have a specific accounting standard that talked through those different regimes and how to deal with them, and our board recently made a decision to add that project to our agenda,” said Jones. “You’ll see us develop an accounting standard as it relates to those items. That’s an area that while some companies may not have significant or material amounts of those today, it’s a trend we see building, and we thought it made sense to get out ahead of this from a standard-setting perspective.”

Stakeholders also indicated interest in the accounting for ESG-linked financial instruments.

“It might be that a company has borrowed money, and depending on their hiring goals or their emissions, they pay a different interest rate depending on whether they hit a goal or not,” said Jones. “What would be the best accounting for that? Is it really an embedded derivative accounting model, which some say may be appropriate today, or is it really more along the lines, as we heard from many investors, they would really like to understand what management really thinks is going to happen and the progress they’re making toward achieving those goals to better understand the financial risks. That’s something that’s still on our research agenda.”

The FASB staff will be coming back with more information for the board to see if there’s an achievable path to standard-setting on that project.

In terms of the new project on disaggregation of the income statement, investors are looking for more information about expenses. “The investors were clamoring for additional detail where they could see trends and make their own analysis of what is happening with the expenses,” said Jones. 

Investors are also looking for additional details on income taxes to understand the complex tax planning and tax position a company is taking.

“In other words, how are worldwide operations affecting their effective tax rate?” said Jones. “We’ve repositioned that project to focus on effective tax rate reconciliation. It’s one of the most useful tools for someone to use in understanding the tax position of a company. It’s not necessarily presented the exact same way when you go from company to company, and there are certain categories where there’s not a lot of detail about them.”

FASB also removed some projects from its agenda, including one on liabilities and equity and another on reorganizing its existing consolidation guidance, but decided its priorities were best spent on other initiatives. 

For its research agenda, FASB added projects on key performance indicators for businesses and accounting for government grants.

“We went through a record period of government stimulus and we don’t have a specific accounting standard for government grants,” said Jones. “One of the things we did as part of the research agenda was to add that to it, and we’re actually wrapping an international standard that many U.S. entities actually apply by analogy and we’re putting that out in an invitation to comment in the next few weeks to see if incorporating that would be a viable way to account for government grants.”

FASB heard overwhelming demand from its stakeholders for a project on digital assets as more companies have gotten involved in the cryptocurrency area.

“The single topic that drew the largest amount of responses was the accounting for digital assets,” said Jones. “I do think a lot of those responses were driven by a pretty high-profile tweet, so it’s probably the only time the FASB has ever trended on social media. But the feedback was very consistent, though. It was focused mostly on cryptocurrency and certain higher-profile cryptocurrencies and it was really asking if the indefinite-lived intangible model, which is what it falls into today, was that the best accounting model. I think it’s fair to say that model certainly wasn’t designed for something like Bitcoin. It was designed with very different assets in mind.”

It wasn’t clear which tweet he meant, but MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor did welcome FASB’s decision to add the project in a tweet in May, and Rep. Michael Emmer, R-Minnesota, a member of the House Financial Services Committee, urged SEC chair Gary Gensler last October to push FASB to prioritize crypto accounting standards.

In December, as the responses poured in to FASB’s invitation to comment, the board added a project on digital assets and exchange-traded commodities to its research agenda.

“Part of the reason for doing that was there seemed to be some similarities and some differences when you think about certain precious metals and the way they trade and the reason people may invest in those,” said Jones. “Was there an overlap there? Would there possibly be one model that would make sense for multiple types of assets, not just this subset of digital assets? We brought the results of that research back to our board. When our board looked at it, ultimately the majority of our board decided that while maybe at some point in time we should be looking at the accounting for some of those exchange-traded commodities, focusing on those digital assets really made the most sense, so we added it to our agenda.”

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Accounting Accounting standards FASB ESG Cryptocurrency
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