As the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) lease accounting standards' effective date for U.S. publicly traded companies nears on Jan. 1, 2019, executives continue to indicate concern over their organizations' ability to comply, according to Deloitte's fifth lease accounting online poll since the standards' respective enactments in early 2016.
Deloitte's April 2018 poll of more than 2,170 C-suite and other executives shows confidence is declining as those feeling unprepared to comply (29.5 percent) nearly double those feeling prepared (15.6 percent). This represents a drop from January 2018 statistics: unprepared (22.4 percent) and prepared (19 percent). Moreover, nearly one-half of executives (49.3 percent) report they are either "very" or "somewhat" concerned about implementing on time—up from 47.1 percent in May 2017.
"Executives have become more acutely aware of the lease accounting compliance timeline pressure and complex implementation work ahead—I suspect it's keeping more than a few awake at night," said Sean Torr, Deloitte Risk and Financial Advisory managing director, Deloitte & Touche LLP. "Particularly for U.S. public company executives facing a quickly approaching effective date, it's critical to understand that compliance is nonnegotiable and many organizations still have a lot of work to do to achieve it. While there are those who expect software to expedite implementation, it's simply not a panacea."
Organizations pursue new lease accounting software
Just 28.5 percent of executive poll respondents intend to use prior leasing software solutions with little or no modification for lease accounting implementation.
"We continue to hear that many companies are pursuing new IT solutions for the leasing standards, despite the dual-lease model approved by the FASB and the recent changes to the standard designed to simplify transition. Many of the IT solutions in the marketplace aren't necessarily able to be implemented off-the-shelf and require customization, necessitating additional effort around readiness for implementation of the standard," said James Barker, senior consultation partner for lease accounting in the national office of the Audit & Assurance practice of Deloitte & Touche LLP.
Embedded leases, "hidden hazards"
One potential contributing factor to waning executive confidence and concern is embedded leases, lease agreements contained within larger contracts, which are difficult to identify.
"Companies are struggling with the treatment of various lease data inputs, particularly on how best to apply the new standard to embedded leases. Since embedded leases are not likely to be labeled as 'leases' within larger agreements, they can be tough to identify, centralize and calculate. They pose a particular challenge in services industries where, for example, IT service contracts may have embedded server leases or transportation contracts may have embedded leases for railcars," said Torr.
Barker added, "Embedded leases are not new, but the accounting and reporting consequences of failing to identify embedded leases is greater under the new rules given the on-balance sheet treatment of operating leases."