Not-for-Profit Accounting and Auditing Supplement No. 1 2020...This update includes the more...
Transcript of Not-for-Profit Accounting and Auditing Supplement No. 1 2020...This update includes the more...
Not-for-Profit Accounting and Auditing Supplement No. 1–2020
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Chapter 1
Not-for-Profit Accounting and Auditing Supplement No. 1–2020
Introduction
This update includes the more significant accounting and auditing developments affecting the not-for-
profit industry from January 1, 2020 through March 31, 2020. Included in this update are standard-setting
and project activities of the Auditing Standards Board (ASB), Accounting and Review Services Committee
(ARSC), Professional Ethics Executive Committee (PEEC), and FASB.
These developments, although believed to be complete at the date at which they were prepared for this
course material, may not cover all areas within accounting and auditing relevant to all users of this
material.
This update may refer you to other sources of information, in which case, you are strongly encouraged to
review that information if relevant to your needs.
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Audit and accounting final and proposed standards
Final standards, interpretations, and regulations
AICPA
Auditing Standards Board
Statement on Auditing Standards
Statement on Auditing Standards No. 139, Amendments to AU-C Sections 800, 805, and 810 to Incorporate Auditor Reporting Changes From SAS No. 134
Issue date
March 2020
Main provisions and significant changes
The ASB issued SAS No. 139 to incorporate auditor reporting changes from SAS No. 134. That is, SAS
No. 139 updates the form and content of auditors’ reports addressed in the AU-C section 800 series to be
more consistent with the standards of the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board and
recent updates to PCAOB standards.1 The amendments also reflect the recent issuance of SAS No. 136,
Forming an Opinion and Reporting on Financial Statements of Employee Benefit Plans Subject to ERISA
and SAS No. 137, The Auditor’s Responsibilities Relating to Other Information Included in Annual Reports.
The following table describes the changes.
AU-C section Title Change
800 Special Considerations — Audits of Financial Statements Prepared in Accordance With Special Purpose Frameworks
Requires that a statement be added to the auditor’s report indicating that the financial statements may not be suitable for another purpose when a description of the purpose for which the financial statements are prepared or a reference to a note in the special purpose financial statements that contains that information is required. (This description is required when financial statements are prepared on a regulatory or contractual basis of accounting or an other basis of accounting, and the auditor is required to restrict use of the auditor’s report by paragraph .06a–b of section 905, Alert That Restricts the Use of the Auditor’s Written Communication.)
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1 See https://www.aicpa.org/content/dam/aicpa/research/standards/auditattest/downloadabledocuments/sas-
139-at-a-glance.pdf; accessed April, 23, 2020. 2 See footnote 1.
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AU-C section Title Change
805 Special Considerations — Audits of Single Financial Statements and Specific Elements, Accounts, or Items of a Financial Statement
Addresses factors to consider in determining whether a matter included in the auditor’s report on the complete set of financial statements is relevant in the context of an engagement to report on a single financial statement or a specific element of a financial statement.
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810 Engagements to Report on Summary Financial Statements
Adds application paragraphs to AU-C section 810 indicating that although the auditor is required to include a statement in the auditor’s report on the summary financial statements when the auditor’s report on the audited financial statements includes communication of one or more key audit matters, the auditor is not required to describe the individual key audit matters or repeat the corresponding text in its entirety in the auditor’s report on the summary financial statements
Effective date
SAS No. 139 is effective for periods ending on or after December 15, 2020. Early implementation is not
permitted.
Accounting and Review Services Committee
Statement on Standards for Accounting and Review Services
Statement on Standards for Accounting and Review Services No. 25, Materiality in a Review of Financial Statements and Adverse Conclusions
Issue date
February 2020
Statement on Standards for Accounting and Review Services (SSARS) No. 25 amends the following AR-C
sections:
60, General Principles for Engagements Performed in Accordance With Statements on Standards for Accounting and Review Services
70, Preparation of Financial Statements 80, Compilation Engagements 90, Review of Financial Statements
SSARS No. 25 further converges AR-C section 90 with International Standard on Review Engagements
(ISRE) 2400 (Revised), Engagements to Review Historical Financial Statements and minimizes differences
with the auditing standards regarding concepts that are consistent regardless of the level of service
performed on the financial statements.
3 See https://www.aicpa.org/Research/Standards/AuditAttest/DownloadableDocuments/AU-C-00800.pdf;
accessed April 23, 2020.
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Key provisions include the following:
Explicit requirement to determine materiality Allow for the expression of an adverse review conclusion when financial statements are materially
and pervasively misstated Required statement regarding independence in the accountant’s review report
Effective date
SSARS No. 25 is effective for engagements performed in accordance with SSARSs for periods ending on
or after December 15, 2021. Early implementation is permitted.
Technical Questions and Answers (Q&A) (Nonauthoritative)
Q&A Section 2210, Fixed Assets
Issue date
This Q&A was revised in March 2020 to reflect conforming changes necessary due to the issuance of
recent authoritative literature.
.28 Accounting for Certain Liquidated Damages
Inquiry — “Liquidated damages” represent contractual payments to a buyer of property, plant, and
equipment (PP&E) for the nondelivery or noncompletion of construction of PP&E by a stated completion
date. The amount is specified in advance by contract — for example, a stated amount per day of delay —
rather than a computation of actual losses of the buyer caused by the delay. Liquidated damages are
negotiated to represent compensation for a reasonable estimate of the buyer’s costs associated with a
delay. Liquidated damages are specified in advance in order to eliminate the need for possibly
contentious after-the-fact negotiations about actual costs incurred. How should a buyer of PP&E account
for liquidated damages, as defined above?
Reply — Because the buyer does not provide the payer of the damages with an identifiable benefit in
exchange for the payment, a buyer typically records liquidated damages as a reduction of the payments
it has made to the vendor for the PP&E (that is, a reduction of the cost of the PP&E). Amounts of
liquidated damages in excess of the total cost of PP&E would be recognized by the buyer as income.
The basis for this reply is FASB ASC 705-20. As stated in FASB ASC 705-20-25-1:
The entity shall account for consideration from a vendor as a reduction of the purchase price of
the goods or services acquired from the vendor unless the consideration from the vendor is one
of the following:
a. In exchange for a distinct good or service (as described in paragraphs 606-10-25-19 through 25-22) that the entity transfers to the vendor
b. A reimbursement of costs incurred by the entity to sell the vendor’s products c. Consideration for sales incentives offered to customers by manufacturers.
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Contracts between a buyer and provider of PP&E could be drafted in two ways — with a realistic
completion date and contract price with liquidated damages for late delivery, or with a pessimistic
completion date and a bargain contract price with a bonus for early delivery. The accounting for
liquidated damages, as noted in this reply, results in the same accounting for the buyer regardless of how
the contract is drafted.
Professional Ethics Executive Committee
PEEC did not issue any new or revised standards or interpretations during this period.
FASB
Accounting Standards Updates
Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2020-01, Investments—Equity Securities (Topic 321), Investments—Equity Method and Joint Ventures (Topic 323), and Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815)—Clarifying the Interactions between Topic 321, Topic 323, and Topic 815 (a consensus of the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force)
Issue date
January 2020
Major provisions and significant changes
FASB ASU No. 2020-01 is applicable to entities that 1) elect to measure equity securities without readily
determinable fair values using the measurement alternative in FASB Accounting Standards Codification
(ASC) 321, Investments—Equity Securities or 2) enter into certain contracts on debt and equity securities,
as described in FASB ASC 815-10-15-141.
The amendments to FASB ASC 321 clarify that an equity security should be remeasured in accordance
with FASB ASC 321-10-35 when an observable transaction results in application or discontinuance of the
equity method of accounting.
The amendments to FASB ASC 815, Derivatives and Hedging, clarify that for forward contracts and
purchased options, an entity should not consider whether, upon settlement of the contract or exercise of
the option, the underlying securities would be accounted for under (a) the equity method in accordance
with FASB ASC 323, Investments—Equity Method and Joint Ventures, or (b) the fair value option in
accordance with FASB ASC 825, Financial Instruments, if those securities otherwise would have been
accounted for under FASB ASC 323.
Effective date
This ASU is effective for public business entities for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2020, and
interim periods within those fiscal years. For all other entities, the ASU is effective for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2021, and interim periods within those fiscal years. Early adoption is
permitted. See the ASU for transition requirements.
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ASU No. 2020-02, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326) and Leases (Topic 842)—Amendments to SEC Paragraphs Pursuant to SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 119 and Update to SEC Section on Effective Date Related to Accounting Standards Update No. 2016-02, Leases (Topic 842) (SEC Update)
Issue date
February 2020
Major provisions and significant changes
Alignment of SEC Interpretative Guidance With FASB ASC
ASU No. 2020-02 adds an SEC paragraph pursuant to SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 119, which
updates portions of the interpretive guidance included in the staff accounting bulletin series to align the
staff’s guidance with FASB ASC 326, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (FASB ASC 326-20-S99-1). The
guidance addresses the following:
Measuring current expected credit losses Development, governance, and documentation of a systematic methodology Documenting the results of a systematic methodology
Effective date of FASB ASC 842
This ASU amends FASB ASC 842-10-S65-1 to reflect the deferral of the effective date, based on ASU No.
2019-10, and also adds SEC staff comments:
842-10-S65-1 Note: At the December 2019 AICPA National Conference on Current SEC and PCAOB
Developments, the SEC staff announced that it would not object to a public business entity that
otherwise would not meet the definition of a public business entity except for a requirement to
include or the inclusion of its financial statements or financial information in another entity’s filing
with the SEC adopting Topic 842, Leases, for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2020, and
interim periods within fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2021. Those dates are consistent
with the effective dates for Topic 842 as amended in Accounting Standards Update No. 2019-10,
Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326), Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815), and Leases
(Topic 842): Effective Dates.
ASU No. 2020-03, Codification Improvements to Financial Instruments
Issue date
March 2020
Major provisions and significant changes
The amendments in ASU No. 2020-03 update various FASB ASC topics and apply to entities within the
scope of those topics. FASB organized the updates into seven issues, which are summarized in the
following table.
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Issue Area of Improvement Summary of Amendments
1* Fair Value Option Disclosures The amendments clarify that all entities are required to
provide the fair value option disclosures in paragraphs 825-10-50-24 through 50-32.
2* Applicability of the portfolio
exception in FASB ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement to nonfinancial items
FASB ASC 820-10-35-2A(g) and 820-10-35-18L are amended to include the phrase nonfinancial items accounted for as derivatives under FASB ASC 815, Derivatives and Hedging, to be consistent with the previous amendments to FASB ASC 820-10-35 that were made by ASU No. 2018-09, Codification Improvements.
3† Disclosures for Depository and
Lending Institutions The amendments clarify that the disclosure requirements in FASB ASC 320, Investments—Debt and Equity Securities, apply to the disclosure requirements in FASB ASC 942, Financial Services—Depository and Lending, for depository and lending institutions.
4* Cross-reference to line-of-credit
or revolving-debt arrangements guidance in FASB ASC 470-50, Debt—Modifications and Extinguishments
The amendments improve the understandability of the guidance.
5* Cross-reference to net asset
value practical expedient in FASB ASC 820-10
The amendments improve the understandability of the guidance.
6‡ Interaction of FASB ASC 842,
Leases, and FASB ASC 326, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses
The amendments clarify that the contractual term of a net investment in a lease determined in accordance with FASB ASC 842 should be the contractual term used to measure expected credit losses under FASB ASC 326.
7‡ Interaction of FASB ASC 326 and
FASB ASC 860-20, Transfers and Servicing—Sales of Financial Assets
The amendments to FASB ASC 860-20 clarify that when an entity regains control of financial assets sold, an allowance for credit losses should be recorded in accordance with FASB ASC 326.
* The effective dates are as follows: Public business entities. Effective upon issuance of the ASU. All other entities. Effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2019, and interim periods within fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2020. Early application is permitted.
† The effective date is consistent with ASU No. 2019-04, Codification Improvements to Topic 326, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses, Topic 815, Derivatives and Hedging, and Topic 825, Financial Instruments.
‡ The effective date is consistent with ASU No. 2016-13, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments.
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ASU No. 2020-04, Reference Rate Reform (Topic 848): Facilitation of the Effects of Reference Rate Reform on Financial Reporting
Issue date
March 2020
Major provisions and significant changes
ASU No. 2020-04 is applicable to all entities who elect to apply the guidance and only to contracts or
other transactions that reference the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) or a reference rate that is
expected to be discontinued as a result of reference rate reform. The ASU provides optional elections and
expedients as an alternative to assessing whether the modifications of contracts within the scope of the
guidance result in the establishment of new contracts or the continuation of existing contracts.
ASU No. 2020-04 adds a new topic, FASB ASC 848, Reference Rate Reform, to the FASB ASC. The new
FASB ASC topic includes the following subtopics:
10, Overall 20, Contract Modifications 30, Hedging—General 40, Fair Value Hedges 50, Cash Flow Hedges
Effective date
The ASU is effective for all entities as of March 12, 2020 through December 31, 2022. See the ASU or the
applicable subtopic for transition requirements. Readers are encouraged to view the ASU in its entirety at
fasb.org.
Proposed standards, interpretations, and regulations
AICPA
Auditing Standards Board
Statements on Auditing Standards
No proposed statements were issued in this period.
Statements on Standards for Attestation Engagements
No proposed statements were issued in this period.
Accounting and Review Services Committee
Statements on Standards for Accounting and Review Services
ARSC did not issue any proposed standards or interpretations in this period.
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Professional Ethics Executive Committee
PEEC did not issue any proposals during this period.
FASB
Proposed Accounting Standards Updates
Proposed ASU, “Not-for-Profit Entities (Topic 958), Presentation and Disclosures by Not-for-Profit Entities for Contributed Nonfinancial Assets”
Issue date
February 2020
Comment deadline
April 10, 2020
Issued to increase the transparency of contributed nonfinancial assets for not-for-profit entities, this
exposure draft proposes enhancements to presentation and disclosure guidance in FASB ASC 958,
Not-for-Profit Entities.
The exposure draft seeks stakeholder feedback on six questions. On March 9, 2020, the Financial
Reporting Executive Committee (FinREC) of the AICPA provided comments on the exposure draft. The
following table identifies the six questions and summarizes FinREC’s comments.4
Question No. Exposure draft question FinREC’s summarized response
1 Are the amendments in this proposed Update operable? If not, which proposed amendment or amendments pose operability issues and why?
We believe that the standard is broadly written in a way that would permit flexibility in implementation, but that there are some areas where the intent of the standard is unclear, which would lead to continued diversity in practice rather than transparency.
4 See https://www.aicpa.org/content/dam/aicpa/advocacy/financialreporting/downloadabledocuments/finrec-
comment-letters/20200309-finrec-cl-nfp.pdf; accessed April 23, 2020.
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Question No. Exposure draft question FinREC’s summarized response
2 Should the scope of the presentation and disclosure requirements apply to all contributed nonfinancial assets? If not, what types of nonfinancial contributions should be excluded from the scope and why? Should the scope of the presentation and disclosure requirements be extended to business entities? If yes, why?
We noted that certain disclosure requirements in these amendments were written to apply only to NFPs while others apply to all entities. We believe that consistent application of requirements for contributions received to be the better approach.
Therefore, we recommend that this proposed standard, which addresses a specific type of contribution, apply to all entities to maintain alignment with the requirements in FASB ASU No. 2018-08 and other existing provisions in the FASB ASC regarding contributions received.
3 Should the disclosure requirements in paragraph 958-605-50-1A(c) be required for each category of contributed nonfinancial assets? If not, please explain why.
The requirement to disclose the principal (or most advantageous) market used in determining fair value would be unique to contributions of nonfinancial assets to NFPs. While this might be relevant information to users of financial statements prepared for NFPs that have material amounts of pharmaceuticals and medical equipment, it would not be cost beneficial for the vast majority of nonfinancial asset contribution transactions. We recommend that this requirement be made optional for contributions of nonfinancial assets other than pharmaceuticals and medical equipment.
4 Would retrospective application of the proposed amendments be operable and would that application provide decision-useful information? If not, please explain why and what you would recommend.
We believe that retrospective application would be operable, given sufficient time for information gathering to allow comparative financial statement presentation.
5 How much time would be needed to adopt the proposed amendments? Should early adoption be permitted?
We believe that 2 years would be sufficient to allow NFPs to implement any changes needed to collect data and to allow preparation of comparative financial statements. We believe that early adoption should be permitted.
6 Is education or implementation guidance needed on the valuation of contributed nonfinancial assets? If yes, what type of guidance or additional education should be developed?
We believe that NFPs would benefit from FASB Staff Q&As that address the process of valuation and include examples of both simple and complex transactions to reduce overall diversity in practice.
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