In June 2016, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2016 – 13,
Financial Instruments – Credit Losses (ASC Topic 326). The update requires entities holding financial assets measured at amortized cost to measure credit losses using the new Current Expected Credit Loss model (CECL). Companies will be required to estimate credit losses over the entire contractual term from the date of initial recognition. They will record the initial measurement of expected credit losses as credit loss expense as well as any change after initial recognition. It is important to consider the impacts of this ASU to determine the overall effect on your company. While it is expected to have a lesser impact on the restaurant and franchising industries than other industries (like credit unions and banks), there will still be an impact that requires analysis. The impacts could be to the following accounts:
- Credit card receivables
- Third-party delivery receivables
- Royalty/advertising fund receivables
- Franchise fee receivables
- Tenant improvement allowance receivables
- Other trade receivables
- Notes receivable/financing receivables
- Loans to employees or officers of the Company
- Held-to-maturity debt securities
- Off-balance-sheet credit exposures (i.e., financial guarantees)
- Reinsurance recoverable
- Credit score
- Financial asset type
- Collateral type
- Size
- Effective interest rate
- Location
- Industry
- Historical patterns
Significant Shifts
The CECL model creates three significant shifts from the current incurred loss model:- First, the forward-looking analysis requires the utilization of future information/forecasts to estimate the allowance for loan losses
- Consider if an allowance is needed for receivables that are not past due
- Second, this new standard removes the probability threshold and requires you to evaluate the possibility that a loss exists or does not
- The guidance requires recognition of credit losses when the losses are “expected”
- Lastly, this changes the loss horizon from 12-18 months to view the life of the asset
- CECL requires a loss to be recognized earlier in the asset life