The average number of leases companies hold has returned to or exceeded pre-pandemic levels, according to the latest 2022 Lease Benchmark Report from accounting technology provider LeaseQuery. While the resurgence signals impressive resilience, companies are finding that the cost and liabilities of leases are on the rise amid an inflationary environment and lessors looking to recoup losses.
LeaseQuery’s expanded analysis of more than 2,000 public, private and nonprofit organizations found that average lease liabilities are up 38 percent from 2019. When it comes to lease types, equipment, land and vehicle leases are relatively steady, but building leases have not yet returned to 2019 levels.
“Headlines around the death of the office or storefront have been greatly exaggerated,” said Jennifer Booth, Vice President of Accounting at LeaseQuery. “But with hundreds of million square feet of office space expiring this year, we are only in the early days of the great reshuffle. As companies consider their footprint for the future, they will do so with new priorities of flexibility and diversification, but most will not disappear from the map altogether.”
Readying Lease Accounting Compliance
Amid major market change, private companies and nonprofits are also working to prepare for landmark accounting changes under ASC 842, which moves all leases onto the balance sheet. The deadline is here, and private companies must now navigate a 21 percent increase in lease liabilities on their balance sheet post-transition. Meanwhile, nonprofit organizations are experiencing a 4 percent increase in lease liabilities after their transition.
“While the lease accounting transition is a major hurdle for organizations in this challenging environment, those same challenges make it more important than ever to have visibility over the entire leasing portfolio,” Booth said. “Organizations can now use that insight to optimize operations, renegotiate, right-size and reimagine their leasing needs for the future.”
Industry Leasing Snapshot
LeaseQuery’s report also analyzes the “Tested 10” industries heavily impacted by lease accounting and market changes. While every industry is impacted differently, the common denominator in lease portfolios and cost trends is change.
Banking, energy, healthcare, higher education, professional services and restaurant leases are expanding over pre-pandemic levels. However, financial services, logistics and transportation, manufacturing and retail leases are flat or lower than pre-pandemic levels.
For individual industry lease trends and more information read the full report: 2022 Lease Benchmark Report.