Friday, December 3, 2010

Taking the "ease" out of Lease

Operating Leases- A thing of the past- What the future holds…

By doing away with operating leases, new accounting rules could bring billions of dollars back onto balance sheets.
Accounting-standards setters are under fire, again. The new leasing standard, proposed jointly by the Financial Accounting Standards Board and the International Accounting Standards Board, has been characterized as naïve, lacking value, and in need of serious reevaluation. The outcry comes not from a handful of opponents but from companies on both sides of common lease contracts — those that rent office space, copiers, or airplanes and those that own the assets.
At the center of the maelstrom is the “right-to-use” asset concept, the accounting mechanism that places leased assets and liabilities on the balance sheets of lessees, as if they owned the assets. That would essentially eliminate operating leases. Credit Suisse estimates that, within the S&P 500 alone, the volume of assets returning to balance sheets could surpass $550 billion.
Read entire article http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14540137/2/c_14540453?f=most_read

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