CA NeWs Beta*: FASB, PCC issue rules for private-company GAAP alternatives
FASB, PCC issue rules for private-company GAAP alternatives
The
rules for providing alternative financial reporting guidance for
private companies were formally established Monday when FASB and the
Private Company Council (PCC) issued their Private Company Decision-Making Framework: A Guide for Evaluating Financial Accounting and Reporting for Private Companies.
FASB
also issued its definition of a public business entity, clarifying
which entities are eligible for alternative guidance for
private
companies.
The framework
will assist FASB, the PCC, and the Emerging Issues Task Force in
determining whether and when to provide alternative recognition,
measurement, disclosure, display, effective date, or transition guidance
for private companies.
According to the
framework, five factors separate private companies from public companies
with respect to financial reporting. The factors are:
- The number of primary financial statement users and their access to management.
- The investment strategies of primary users.
- The ownership and capital resources.
- Accounting resources.
- The manner in which preparers learn about new financial reporting guidance.
Meanwhile, Accounting Standards Update No. 2013-012, Definition of a Public Business Entity: An Addition to the Master Glossary,
gives one definition of “public business entity” for use in future
standard setting. Existing requirements are not affected by the
definition.
An entity is a public business entity if it meets any of the following criteria:
- It files or is required to file financial statements with the SEC (including voluntary filers).
- It
is required to file financial statements with a foreign or domestic
regulator in preparation for selling or issuing securities that are not
subject to contractual restrictions on transfer.
- It has securities that are traded, listed, or quoted on an exchange or over-the-counter market.
- It
has one or more securities that are not subject to contractual
restrictions on transfer, and it is required by law, contract, or
regulation to prepare U.S. GAAP financial statements (including
footnotes) and make them publicly available on a periodic basis.
Employee benefit plans and not-for-profits are not considered business entities under the standard.
FASB expects to issue its first two GAAP exceptions
for private companies in January 2014. The exceptions will exempt
private companies from a requirement to perform goodwill impairment
tests following a business combination and will provide private
companies with a simplified hedge accounting approach for accounting for
certain interest rate swaps.