The New Rules from the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
Those terms and classifications are at the heart of the change in GAAP accounting standards. The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) began the transition in 2018 from ASC-840, which much like its predecessor FAS-13, had four tests for operating leases and listed them as footnotes rather than balance sheet entries. Under ASC-842, all leases show up on the balance sheet, and the new rules also determine how those leases are listed.
In general, the new rules mean:
- All leases longer than 12 months are on balance sheet
- Present Value of the lessee’s lease payments are recognized as either debt for finance leases or other liabilities for operating leases.
- Service contracts are off balance sheet
“With a finance lease, the liability is classified as a debt obligation and impacts the leverage ratio” Georgelas explains. “The lease payment for a finance lease is reflected in the financial statements as principal and interest, tantamount to a term loan.”
An operating lease, on the other hand, is not reflected as a financial asset & liability, but under a section titled “lease obligation,” so it doesn’t impact the leverage ratio. “Also, under the right-of-use portion of the operating lease, an end-of-term residual, that's not a payment obligation, is not reflected in the financial statements, only the rent is,” Georgelas notes. “There's a real benefit, especially on assets that have long economic life and value, in how that impacts not only the balance sheet, but the P&L and what the client is required to report.”
Weighing the options
When determining the proper structure for equipment financing, Georgelas suggests weighing a client’s liquidity preference and tax optimization strategy along with balance sheet and financial metrics. He starts with three questions:
- What is the best structure from both a Tax and GAAP Accounting standpoint?
- What are the drivers the client is most interested in?
- What are they really focused on? Enhancing return on equity, enhancing return on investment, and/or managing leverage ratios and financial covenants?
"If one of your primary covenants is funded debt to EBITDA, you may not want an operating lease, because it may act counter to that specific formula," he explains. "If your primary driver is fixed charge coverage, liquidity or managing leverage, then the operating lease can provide tremendous value.”
Contact a U.S. Bank Equipment Finance specialist for more information.