Document

Supplementary Financial Information

The Commission is proposing to reposition certain schedule information currently required under Rule 12-09 of Regulation S-X within a new Item 302(c) of Regulation S-K to specif...

Securities and Exchange Commission
  1. 17 CFR Parts 210, 229, and 249
  2. [Release Nos. 33-7793; 34-42354; File No. S7-03-00]
  3. RIN 3235-AH86

AGENCY:

Securities and Exchange Commission.

ACTION:

Proposed rule.

SUMMARY:

The Commission is proposing to reposition certain schedule information currently required under Rule 12-09 of Regulation S-X within a new Item 302(c) of Regulation S-K to specify the disclosures to be provided by registrants concerning changes in valuation and loss accrual accounts. The Commission also is proposing to add another new Item 302(d) of Regulation S-K to elicit certain information concerning tangible and intangible long-lived assets and related accumulated depreciation, depletion, and amortization. A new Item 8C also would be added to the recently revised Form 20-F. The rule proposals are intended to provide investors with more transparent, better detailed disclosures ( printed page 4586) concerning changes in valuation and loss accrual accounts and in the underlying accounting assumptions and more detailed information to assess the effects of useful lives assigned to long-lived assets.

DATES:

Comments should be received by April 17, 2000.

ADDRESSES:

Please send three copies of your comment letter to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549-0609. Interested persons also may submit comments electronically at the following e-mail address: . All comment letters should refer to File No. S7-03-00; please include this file number in the subject line if you use e-mail. Anyone can inspect and copy the comment letters in our Public Reference Room at 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549-0609. We will post electronically submitted comment letters on the Commission's Internet Web Site ( www.sec.gov).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

John W. Albert, Associate Chief Accountant, or Richard L. Rodgers, Professional Accounting Fellow, Office of the Chief Accountant, at (202) 942-4400, or Louise M. Dorsey, Assistant Chief Accountant, Division of Corporation Finance, at (202) 942-2960, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549-0609.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

The Commission is proposing to reposition certain schedule information currently required under Rule 12-09 of Regulation S-X [1] within a new Item 302(c) of Regulation S-K [2] to specify the disclosures concerning valuation and loss accrual accounts to be provided by registrants. The Commission also is proposing to add another new Item 302(d) of Regulation S-K [3] to elicit additional information concerning tangible and intangible long-lived assets and related accumulated depreciation, depletion, and amortization. The proposed addition of Item 302(c) is intended to provide investors with more transparent, better detailed disclosures concerning changes in valuation and loss accrual accounts and in the underlying accounting assumptions. Similarly, the proposed addition of Item 302(d) is intended to provide investors with more detailed information concerning the financial reporting effects of useful lives assigned to long-lived assets. Because of the repositioning of valuation and loss accrual account disclosure within proposed Item 302(c), Schedule II of Rule 5-04 (Applicable to Commercial and Industrial Companies) [4] and Schedule V of Rule 7-03 (Applicable to Insurance Companies) [5] would be eliminated. Also due to the proposed repositioning, a new Item 8C of Form 20-F [6] would be added to require presentation of supplementary financial information.

I. Background

Many participants in and observers of the financial reporting process, including the Commission, have noted an apparent increase in abusive “earnings management” by public companies.[7] While it is recognized that management may properly determine the timing of earnings recognition from certain arms-length transactions (such as the sale of an appreciated asset) or deferral of expense recognition (by delaying expenditures for advertising or maintenance), examples of abusive “earnings management” have been occurring with increased frequency. Some observers contend that the apparent increased incidence of “earnings management” is in response to an increased pressure to meet earnings estimates in today's markets. With current price-earnings ratios at an all-time high, failure to meet analysts' expectations by even small amounts can have a significant negative effect on market capitalization, which in turn can affect management's ability to retain key employees and grow and operate the business. In response to such factors, the Commission has initiated a series of coordinated actions to address issues related to earnings management. A key element of this action plan addresses the problems caused by a lack of transparency in some aspects of financial reporting.

Problems attributable to lack a transparency noted by observers of the financial reporting process include, but are not limited to:

II. Proposed Rule Changes

The proposed amendments would create a new Item 302(c) of Regulation S-K to clarify and expand the supplemental disclosure requirements concerning activity involving valuation and loss accrual accounts so as to improve the transparency of financial reporting by registrants. The proposed requirements are patterned after Rule 12-09 of Regulation S-X which currently requires schedule disclosure of activity in an entity's valuation and qualifying accounts and reserves. The schedule (Schedule II) is structured to show beginning and ending account balances as well as activity, including any adjustments, during the year for individually significant valuation and qualifying accounts and reserves. However, compliance with the schedule requirements appears to be mixed, possibly due to a lack of general agreement as to what constitutes a valuation or reserve account. Also, diversity in practice has resulted from varying approaches to combining individually insignificant account balances.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board's Concepts Statements define a valuation account as a separate item that reduces or increases the carrying amount of an asset or liability. Examples cited include an estimate of uncollectible amounts that reduces receivables to the amount expected to be collected, or a premium on a bond receivable that increases the receivable to its amortized cost or present value. Valuation accounts are part of the asset or liability to which they relate and are neither assets nor liabilities in their own right.[8]

In addition to detailed disclosures concerning valuation and qualifying accounts, Schedule II also currently requires disclosure of activity concerning balances in “reserve” accounts. Because the term “reserve” is ( printed page 4587) not defined in the authoritative accounting literature, its references within the Commission's rules may have confused certain preparers and contributed to diverse reporting practices. As a result of this confusion, reporting by registrants about activity involving these accounts has been mixed, with certain registrants providing more complete disclosures than others in similar circumstances. To avoid future confusion, the Commission proposes to revise the supplemental disclosure requirements to refer to the term “loss accrual” thereby appropriately focusing on accruals for loss contingencies.

To reduce the existing diversity in practice and provide a more “level playing field,” proposed Item 302(c) sets forth a list of commonly reported loss accrual and/or valuation accounts that the Commission would expect registrants to present within that Item. The list, which was extracted from the SEC reporting guidelines of certain major accounting firms, is suggestive rather than all-inclusive and includes the following accounts:

Footnotes

6.  17 CFR 249.220f. Form 20-F was revised significantly as explained in Release No. 33-7745 (September 28, 1999). These amendments will be effective as of September 30, 2000. The proposed amendments would be incorporated into the revised Form 20-F, Item 8C.

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7.   See Remarks by SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt, “The Numbers Game,” to the NYU Center for Law and Business, New York, NY, September 28, 1998.

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8.  Paragraph 34 of Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts No. 6, Elements of Financial Statements.

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9.  Use of an inventory valuation allowance to reflect a writedown of inventory to the lower of cost or market at the close of a fiscal period establishes a new cost basis that cannot be marked up based on subsequent changes in market. See Accounting Research Bulletin No. 43, Chapter 4, Statement 5.

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10.  The FASB's Emerging Issues Task Force reached a consensus at its January 19, 1995 meeting on the criteria that must be met for an employer to recognize a liability for the costs of employee termination benefits provided to involuntarily terminated employees and other costs to exit an activity. EITF Issue 94-3, “Liability Recognition For Certain Employee Termination Benefits and Other Costs to Exit an Activity (including Certain Costs Incurred in a Restructuring).”

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11.  Similar to the resolution concerning restructuring-related costs, the EITF reached a consensus at its meetings of July 20-21, 1995 on the conditions under which the costs of a plan to (1) exit an activity of an acquired company, (2) involuntarily terminate employees of an acquired company, or (3) relocate employees of an acquired company should be recognized as liabilities. EITF Issue 95-3, “Recognition of Liabilities in Connection with a Purchase Business Combination.”

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12.  Staff Accounting Bulletin 99, “Materiality” (August 12, 1999), provides guidelines for assessing materiality thresholds. It emphasizes that the exclusive use of numerical or percentage tests to make materiality determinations is not acceptable. 64 FR 45150 (August 19, 1999).

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13.  Release 33-7118, Financial Statements of Significant Foreign Equity Investees and Acquired Foreign Businesses of Domestic Issuers and Financial Schedules (December 13, 1994) [59 FR 65632].

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14.  Letter to Lynn Turner, Chief Accountant, Securities and Exchange Commission from the Financial Accounting Policy Committee of the Association for Investment Management and Research dated October 19, 1998.

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15.  Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 12, Omnibus Opinion—1967 addresses, among other topics, Disclosure of Depreciable Assets and Depreciation (see paragraphs 4 and 5).

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16.  See paragraph 30 of APB Opinion No. 17.

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17.  For example, disclosure may be provided that an entity's amortization of goodwill attributable to various business acquisitions ranges from five to forty years. Analysis of the impact of the selection of specific useful lives would be improved if details were provided as to which specific goodwill allocations fell on which end of the range.

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18.  Pub. L. No. 104-121, 110 Stat. 857 (1996) (codification in various sections of 5 U.S.C. and 15 U.S.C. and a note to 5 U.S.C. 601).

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[FR Doc. 00-1969 Filed 1-28-00; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 8010-01-U

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65 FR 4585

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“Supplementary Financial Information,” thefederalregister.org (January 31, 2000), https://thefederalregister.org/documents/00-1969/supplementary-financial-information.