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Lease Audit Articles

New Lease Accounting Standards Are Evolving - Read our article as published in the recent Corporate Real Estate Journal


New Lease Accounting Standards Are Evolving:  Is there a scary monster under the bed and will it affect lease versus buy or other CRE decisions?

The new lease accounting standards will change some of CRE’s business practices, but not the ones most have previously imagined.  Why?  What has changed?  Very recently the accounting boards (FASB and IASB) made significant changes to the proposals they originally released in August of 2010.  These changes served to alter the impact the original proposals were expected to have on CRE business practices and strategy.  Thankfully, both for CRE and their counterparts in corporate finance, the changes adopted over just the past few months mean some of the most controversial aspects of the new lease accounting standards have been moderated such that they will not have as material of an impact as originally envisioned.  While all leases will still be capitalized with a front-loaded impact on the tenant’s P&L, the revisions to how renewal options and contingent rents are to be accounted for, among other important changes, result in a smaller impact on the corporate balance sheet and income statement – provided CRE professionals understand the newly revised proposals.  Importantly the revised proposals mean CRE’s lease versus buy decisions should not be impacted, but other business practices will be affected.  So while the new lease accounting standards represent a monster hiding under CRE’s bed, this paper explains why the monster is not as scary as most originally envisioned. 

Continue to full article, as published in Corporate Real Estate Journal, Volume 1 Number 3.
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