International Financial Reporting Standards Der 16. IFRS Kongress 2017 in Berlin
IFRS 16 – Implementierung bei der Continental AG IFRS 16 in der Automobilzulieferindustrie Holger Siebenthaler Continental AG
Jochen Kirch Ernst & Young GmbH
Ihre Referenten
Holger Siebenthaler
Continental AG
Tel.: +49 (511) 938 1056
Senior Vice President Accounting
Vahrenwalder Str. 9
[email protected]
Jochen Kirch
Ernst & Young GmbH
Executive Director
Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft
IFRS Solutions Center GSA
Mergenthalerallee 3 – 5
30165 Hannover / Germany
65760 Eschborn/Frankfurt am Main
Financial Reporting, Year-End 2015
Tel.:
+49 (6196) 996 24240
Fax:
+49 (181) 3943 24240
Mobile: +49 (160) 939 24240
[email protected]
Agenda Page 3
1
Continental at a glance
2
Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
Continental Corporation Overview 2016 Sales by division in %
› Since 1871 with headquarters in Hanover, Germany
ContiTech 14%
Chassis & Safety 22%
› Sales of €40.5 billion › 220,137 employees worldwide › 427 locations in 56 countries
Tires 26%
Powertrain 18%
Interior 20%
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
Status: December 31, 2016
September 8, 2017 Holger Siebenthaler © Continental AG
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Continental Corporation Five Strong Divisions Chassis & Safety
Powertrain
Interior
Tires
ContiTech
Engine Systems
Instrumentation & Driver HMI
PLT, Original Equipment
Air Spring Systems
Fuel & Exhaust Management
Infotainment & Connectivity
PLT, Repl. Business, EMEA
Benecke-Kaliko Group
Hybrid Electric Vehicle
Intelligent Transportation Systems
PLT, Repl. Business, The Americas
Body & Security
PLT, Repl. Business, APAC
Elastomer Coatings
Commercial Vehicle Tires
Industrial Fluid Solutions
Vehicle Dynamics Hydraulic Brake Systems Passive Safety & Sensorics Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS)
Sensors & Actuators Transmission
Commercial Vehicles & Aftermarket
Two Wheel Tires
Compounding Technology Conveyor Belt Group
Mobile Fluid Systems Power Transmission Group Vibration Control
PLT – Passenger and Light Truck Tires
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Continental Corporation Distribution of Sales to Vehicle Manufacturers and Other Industries
Automotive original equipment 73%
Other industries 27%
Status: December 31, 2016
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Continental Corporation Key Figures for the Divisions in 2016 Sales in € millions
EBIT* in € millions
Adjusted EBIT** in € millions
Employees
Continental Corporation
40,549.5
4,095.8
4,341.2
220,137
Automotive Group
24,496.4
1,526.6
1,632.2
124,753
Chassis & Safety Powertrain
8,977.6 7,319.5
580.8 378.0
591.7 398.5
43,907 37,502
Interior
8,324.7
567.8
642.0
43,344
Rubber Group
16,097.6
2,688.6
2,828.4
94,966
Tires ContiTech
10,717.4 5,462.5
2,289.4 399.2
2,306.0 522.4
52,057 42,909
*Earnings **Before
before interest and taxes. amortization of intangible assets from PPA, changes in the scope of consolidation, and special effects.
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Continental Corporation Sales and Employees by Region in 2016 Sales by market in %
Employees by region in %
Other countries 3% North America 26%
Asia 21%
Other countries 4% Germany 21%
Europe (excluding Germany) 29%
Germany 26%
North America 19%
Europe (excluding Germany) 32%
Asia 19%
Worldwide: €40.5 billion
Worldwide: 220,137
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
Status: December 31, 2016
September 8, 2017 Holger Siebenthaler © Continental AG
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Corporation Highlights Sustainable Value Creation
21.6%
20.9% 21.1% 21.2%
20.0% 20.0% 19.0%
18,198
18,910
19,681
19,767
19,983
20,106
20,453
20,978
21,401
18.9%
17,510
19.5%
20.3%
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
2015
2016 Trailing OA 1 (mn €)
Q4
2017 Trailing ROCE2
1
Trailing operating assets are calculated as assets for the last twelve months (LTM)
2
Trailing ROCE is calculated as reported EBIT for the last twelve months (LTM) divided by trailing operating assets
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
Q3
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Indebtedness and Cash Flow Net Indebtedness and Gearing Ratio Net indebtedness (mn €) Gearing ratio
34%
34%
34%
26% 23%
24%
23%
4,296
3,542
3,083
3,446
3,298
2,798
2,768
3,469
18%
4,236
19%
4,099
27%
Q1
H1
9M
YE
Q1
H1
9M
YE
Q1
H1
2015
2016
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
9M
YE
2017
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Agenda Page 11
1 2
Continental at a glance Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
What will change for Group?
Interaction with other accounting changes
Managing the expectations of stakeholders while simultaneously implementing various programs will be a challenge.
• The lessee will be required to recognize the majority of leases in its balance sheet. • Apart from some exemptions, the lessee will use a single accounting model for all leases. • Lessor accounting will remain essentially unchanged. • Disclosure requirements will increase significantly.
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Main hurdles within the IFRS 16 Project
I. Completeness ► Completeness with regard to ► All leases identified ► All lease date captured
II. System Implementation ► Identify the best system with regard to ► Current IT environment and integration requirement ► Integration Issues
III. Process Changes ► Future decisions versus lease or buy (will lease qualify as capital expenditure) ► Workflow needs to be adjusted in order to secure completeness at inception ► Workflow needs to consider regular revisits of assumptions made
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Typical Accounting Workstreams
Identification of a lease What contract types could possibly be identified as being a lease or containing a lease element? Defining criteria under which future contracts should be analyzed (or possibly be structured)
Workstep 1 Lessee / Lessor Accounting Decisions Definition of accounting rules specific for the company or group, including
Workstep 2
-
Scope of use of the standard
-
Use of practical expedients
-
Defining Accounting specific guidance on the application of the standard (lease term, interest, etc.)
Other Lease Topics Accounting for Intercompany Leases Accounting for Sale and Lease Back Transactions
Workstep 3
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High-level impact analysis for Continental AG based on the published financials as of 31 December 2016 current
Assets Liabilities
IAS 17
IFRS 16
new
Finance leases
Operating leases
All leases
High-level impact analysis
j G
–
jjvv GGG
+ EUR 1.085 m
$$
–
$$$$$$$
+ EUR 1.159 m
vv
Rights and off-balance sheet items
–
Revenue
X
X
X
X
Other expenses
–
Lease expenses
–
- EUR 256 m
j
G G
–
$$$$$
EBITDA Depreciation
Implications
+ EUR 256 m Depreciation
–
Depreciation
EBIT Finance cost
Retained earnings — EUR 74 m
- EUR 219 m + EUR 37 m
Interest
–
Interest
EBT
- EUR 35 m + EUR 2 m
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IFRS 16 - Project Procedure (until now)
1st & 2nd Quarter 2016
3rd & 4th Quarter 2016
1st Quarter 2017
2nd Quarter 2017
3rd Quarter 2017
Initiation phase
Understand Business
Market Screening
Posting concept
Sourcing process
› Define Stakeholders › Team / Steering formation › Accounting requirements
› › › ›
› Presentations by several IT
› Define short list of providers › Beauty Contest with
› Gathering information
› Basic posting logic › Intercompany leases › Consolidation logic
June 2016
1st & 2nd Quarter 2017
2nd Quarter 2017
3rd Quarter 2017
Kick Off IFRS 16 project
Develop future process
Practical expedients
Contract inventory
› › › ›
› Define future process for three data
› › › ›
› Collect Lease contracts › Scan to digital file › Maintain local lease archive
Excel Questionnaire (Cluster allowed) Trainings Actual process
tool providers
selected providers
Tooling in scope?
Define main objective Team Commitment Workpackages Time Planning
input channels (paper contract, SAP PO, batch input)
› Define new role: Lease Manager › Input for ‘Request for Proposal’
Low value leases Short term leases Threshold 5.000 € …
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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IFRS 16 - Time Planning (until GoLive) 06/17
12/17
06/18
08/18
12/18
Project Work ‘Business’ • • • • •
Contract inventory Future lease process Implementation ‘Lease Manager’ role/function IFRS 16 expertise Posting and consolidation logics
Business Goal: IT solution can already support budget 2019 calculations and indicates the transition effect 1st January 2019
Sourcing phase • • • •
Beauty Contest with selected providers Price negotiation
RfP*
Sourcing decision Finalization contracting (until release PO) BAT *
Implementation phase • • • • • •
Data input / migration Interfaces to existing systems
› ›
Data input finished Valid calculations
Budget 2019
Actual figures 2019
Pilot / Roll-out concept Implementation on divisional level as well as on Corporate level (IT/data security, work council, support) Training concept (both: IT solution; IFRS 16) Change process
Go Live (incl. support) Opening Balance 2019
= Due Dates (fix)
= Internal Milestones RfP = Request for Proposal BAT = Business Acceptance Test
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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IFRS 16 - Context Diagram Data input by Corporate departments: › › ›
interest matrix useful lives FX rates
Input channels for lease documents › csv.- files (e.g. car leases) › SAP Purchase Order (e.g. forklift leases) › Digital contracts (e.g. property leases)
Interfaces › › ›
51 SAP-Systems Non SAP-Systems Diversity à EHP release status
Reporting follows our standards: Lease Engine à local systems à FIRE
Data input by local CUs
Lease Application External and internal lease transactions
Possibility for interfaces (e.g. to existing databases) Define Role & Authorization concept
›
Tires / ContiTrade
›
ContiTech
›
Automotive
›
Holdings
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
Reporting › Actual › Forecast › Budget (incl. 2019!)
Access to lease documents & ongoing tracking of lease contracts
September 8, 2017 Holger Siebenthaler © Continental AG
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Agenda Page 19
1
Continental at a glance
2
Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
Identifying a lease
Scope and scope exclusions
Scope: All leases (IFRS 16???) • … except • Leases to explore for or use natural resources (e.g., oil) • Leases of biological assets • Service concession arrangements • Licenses of intellectual property granted by a lessor • Rights held by a lessee under licensing agreements
• Intangible assets: Lessees have the option to apply this standard • Leased property that is subleased (investment property): Off-balance sheet recognition no longer an option
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Intangibles
Examples: › Leasing of SW licenses › Rights-of-use that could result from cloud service contracts
Arguments to exclude from IFRS 16 scope Transition date/Initial data migration: Less lease transactions to be considered
Accounting logic: Ongoing reporting: Less complex and therefore less workload for local lease responsible Step 1
Contract is a lease according to IFRS 16?
Step 2
If no: Distinction between „Service“ and „Intangible Asset“ according to IAS 38
›
Distinction between “service” and “lease” is challenging and must be taken contract-by-contract.
›
Simplification of process: Avoid Step 1 and enter directly into Step 2
Our assumption: Best practice on the market. Avoid ICO sub-leasing à Most contracts are signed by Corporate à Push down to companies
Decision à Exercise practical expedient and put leases of intangible assets out of scope of IFRS 16.
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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IFRS 16 — Definition of a lease
“A contract, or part of a contract, that conveys the right to use an asset (the underlying asset) for a period of time in exchange for consideration.”
No
Does the customer have the right to obtain substantially all of the economic benefits from use of the asset throughout the period of use (IFRS 16.B21 B23) ? Yes
Identified asset
Does the fulfilment of the contract depend on the use of an identified asset (IFRS 16.B13 - B20) ?
Does the customer have the right to direct how and for what purpose the asset is used throughout the period (IFRS 16.B25 - B30) ?
Supplier has the substantive right to substitute the asset throughout the period of use (IFRS 16.B14 - B19) ?
No Are the relevant decisions about how and for what purpose the asset is used predetermined?
No Supplier has the practical ability throughout the period of use ?
No
Yes
Yes Supplier would benefit economically from the exercise of it’s right to substitute ?
No
Yes
No lease (service)
Does the customer have the right to operate the asset (IFRS 16.B24b(i)) ? No Did the customer design the asset (IFRS 16.B24b(ii)) ?
Yes
Yes
Right to control the use
Does the customer have the right to direct the use of the asset throughout the period of use (IFRS 16.B24 B30) ?
Yes
Lease
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22
Identifying a lease – practical expedient
IFRS 16.C3 allows companies to keep the current results under IFRIC 4
An entity is not required to reassess whether a contract is, or contains, a lease at initial application (IFRS 16.C3) • Contracts that have been identified as being, or containing, a lease are treated as a lease for transition purposes • Contracts that have been classified as not being, or not containing, a lease are treated as a service for transition purposes Problem: • Contracts may not have been classified correctly under IFRIC 4 • Mistake under IAS 17 was not relevant for the statement of earnings as an operating lease contract was accounted for like a service contract and the respective expense was shown in identical lines • Mistake relevant for disclosures as respective disclosures under IAS 17 were not made • Contracts need to be revisited if renewed or amended
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IFRS 16 - Status Quo
Push Down Accounting Leading system: HB II
Contract management in local responsibility
›
Identified leased assets: › Land use rights › Administration buildings › Production buildings › Sales outlets › Forklifts › Vehicles › Other equipment › Transportation pallets › and many more
›
Approximately 90% of outstanding obligation are property related.
›
More than 200 reporting units reported lease transactions.
Corporate Accounting = Sets framework and offers internal support
Reporting Unit Corporate Controlling = Internal support regarding leasevs-buy decision
No central contract database Not KPI driven
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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IFRS 16 - Tooling Standard Tooling Cases for Continental
Only very single exception cases
2 agreements
1 agreement
Sourcing/Supply Agreement
Sourcing/Supply Agreement
(Teileliefervertrag)
(Teileliefervertrag)
+ additional Tooling Agreement
without additional Tooling Agreement
(Werkzeugkaufvertrag)
(Kein Werkzeugkaufvertrag)
Transfer of legal ownership for the tool that is used for series pieces
No transfer of legal ownership for the tool that is used for series pieces
Benefit
Power
No IFRS 16
No IFRS 16
because this is a purchase transaction
because the customer does not have control over the use of the underlying tools
Similar to case ‘2 agreements’ but without transfer of legal ownership
(1)
Customer buys series pieces
(2)
Costumer pays an explicitly agreed price for a specific right to use the tool but that does not lead to a change of legal ownership)
Actual accounting: Specific right = ‘Intangible Asset’ according to IAS 38 within FS Item “Other Intangible Assets”. Future accounting: Analysis case per case if IFRS 16 is applicable.
(“no decision making rights”)
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Agenda Page 26
1
Continental at a glance
2
Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
Identifying a lease Short-term leases
Option to account for short-term leases: “Off-balance sheet” or “on-balance sheet” • Lease term of 12 months or less • Only applies to lessees! • Option must be exercised consistently for each class of underlying asset
Example: Lease with a term of nine months + four months option A: Exercise of option is reasonably certain = not short-term lease
Nine months
Four months
B: Exercise of option is not reasonably certain = short-term lease
Nine months
Four months
Non-cancellable lease term
Optional extension period
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Identifying a lease
Exemptions for small-ticket leases
Option to account for leases for which the underlying asset is of low value: “Off-balance sheet” or “on-balance sheet” • Definition according to IFRS 16.B5: • The lessee can benefit from use of the underlying asset on its own • The underlying asset is not highly dependent on, or highly interrelated with, other assets • Rough threshold: USD 5,000 ó ~ EUR 5,000 ó ~ GBP 5,000 • Off-balance sheet: No assets/no liabilities/straight-line expense • Anti-abuse rule on the “breakdown” of leases
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Identifying a lease
Portfolio approach for similar leases
Option to group individual leases in a portfolio (IFRS 16.B1) • Similar assets • Similar terms • If reasonably expects accounting for a portfolio of leases is not materially different to that for individual leases • Option to freely select portfolios Problem: • Treatment of early termination • Future changes in the portfolio
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Short-term Leases
›
Examples for identified items by our Excel-Questionnaire: gas bottles, storage equipment, parking, printers, employee houses etc.
Arguments to exclude short-term assets from IFRS 16 accounting Transition date/Initial data migration: Less lease transactions to be considered Ongoing reporting: Less complex and therefore less workload for local lease responsible Assumption: Best practice on the market
Decision à Exercise practical expedient for all short-term leased assets (no distinction between asset classes).
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Small-ticket Leases › › ›
The threshold of 5.000 USD, mentioned by IASB, has to be taken seriously and is not directly linked to the size of an entity. A future revision of threshold due to inflation and FX-development is applicable. In general the threshold will be stable as long as there are no significant economic reasons for a revision. ‚Threshold concept‘ vs ‚Cluster concept‘ à Assumption: Threshold reduces workload especially with focus to assignment of assets to clusters.
Arguments to exclude small-ticket leases from IFRS 16 accounting Transition date/Initial data migration: Less lease transactions to be considered
.
Ongoing reporting: Less complex and therefore less workload for local lease responsible Assumption: Best practice on the market.
Decision à Exercise practical expedient for all leased assets of low value (5.000 EUR when new).
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients
Our mindset regarding the threshold of 5.000 USD mentioned by IASB: à What will be best market practice? Assumption: 5 k€ à Higher thresholds will set signals to the market. à To „double“ the IASB-recommendation up to 10 k€ is not applicable.
Cluster Forklifts
Cluster Hardware Server
Forklifts
Enclosures
20 k€ - 30 k€
30 k€ - 80 k€
Cluster Copier / Printer
„Schlepper“ 10 k€ - 15 k€
10 k€ „(Hoch-)Hubwagen“ 5,5 k€ - 9 k€
5 k€
Stand-alone servers
Multi-functional
2,5 k€ - 8 k€
2,5 k€ - 9 k€
Simple „Ameisen“
Office printers
< 4,5 k€
~ 500 €
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Portfolios
Arguments to consider leases on a lease-by-lease basis Completeness and correctness of data: › Current general accounting approach: Accounting for each single asset Practical challenges: › Asset Categories must be created › Movements within portfolios must be defined (e.g. impairments, disposals, transfers) › Assignment of RoU assets to a portfolio leads to distinction issues. Tracking-Process: › Portfolios must be reassessed recurrently by responsible Portfolio-Manager.
Decision for an accounting lease-by-lease
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Lessee accounting Quantitative disclosures
Carrying amount of right-of-use assets (by class)
Amortization expense for right-of-use assets
Short-term lease expense
Small ticket lease expense
Variable lease expense
Income from subleases
Interest on lease liabilities
Gains and losses from sale and leaseback transactions
Maturity analysis of lease liabilities
Cash outflow for leases
Additions to right-of-use assets
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Agenda Page 35
1
Continental at a glance
2
Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
Identifying a lease
Separating lease from non-lease components
Servicing
Paper, toner, servicing
• Lease and non-lease components must be separated • Exemption for lessees: Option to combine both components and account for them as a single lease component • The option applies for each class of underlying asset • Amounts payable to the lessor for administrative tasks are not separate components
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Identifying a lease
Allocating contract consideration
Servicing
Consideration
Lease
20% 80%
• Lessees • Allocate consideration on the basis of the relative stand-alone price • If an observable stand-alone price is not readily available, the stand-alone price is estimated • Maximize the use of observable information • Apply estimation methods in a consistent manner • Lessors allocate consideration in accordance with the provisions of IFRS 15 • Reallocation of consideration necessary in some cases
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Components
Our Concept:
› › ›
Insignificance: If there are very small non-lease components included in the contract or if service component is not readily determinable: à For simplification purposes, companies will be allowed to combine non-lease component with lease component. Determinability: If service components are not readily determinable: à It is applicable to combine non-lease component with lease component. Approach for all other leased assets: à Separate non-lease component from lease component
• • •
Equipment: In most of our equipment lease cases the price components are well-known (e.g. vehicle leasing). Property: Service parts are well-known in most of property leases. Corporate favors the separation of components to ensure comparability. Amount and content of service components could differ significantly. Assumption: Lessor community will ‘react’ on this IFRS 16 requirement.
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Key concepts Lease term
• Non-cancellable periods are always part of the lease term • Optional periods are only part of the term if it is “reasonably certain” that the option will be exercised • “Reasonably certain” has the same meaning as in IAS 17 • Assessment criteria, e.g.: • Price of options • Termination penalities • Leasehold improvements • Other leases • Reassessment of lease term required? • Lessees – upon the occurrence of significant events or significant changes in circumstances within the lessee’s control • Lessors – no requirement to reassess
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Key concepts Lease payments
Lease payments
Fixed payments
Purchase options* (exercise price)
Residual value guarantees
Termination option penalties*
Variable lease payments that depend on an index or rate
* Include only if reasonably certain of exercise.
• Fixed payments also include variable payments which are in-substance fixed, e.g., • Minimum payments or minimum purchase volumes • Penalties for failure to meet minimum purchase volumes, minimum amounts, etc. • For residual value guarantees, Lessees use the amounts they expect to pay. Lessors include any guarantee
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40
Key concepts Discount rate
• Discount rate: • Rule: Interest rate implicit in the lease (IRR) • If no IRR can be readily determined: Incremental borrowing rate (lessees only)
• IRR = interest rate at which: Present value of lease payments + Present value of residual value
Fair value of underlying asset
=
+ Initial direct costs
• IBR = lessee’s incremental borrowing rate • The rate of interest that a lessee would have to pay to borrow over a similar term, and with a similar security, the funds necessary to obtain an asset of a similar value to the right-of-use asset in a similar economic environment.
• Lessees reassess the discount rate upon: • Lease modification • Change to lease term • Changes in estimation whether the lessee will exercise a purchase option • Change in lease payments resulting from a change in floating interest rates
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Discount Rate
Our Concept:
• • • •
Information will be provided by Corporate Department Finance & Treasury IT Tool: Data must be provided centrally à Interest matrix by Corporate Lease term congruence à Adjustment based on yield-curves (Interpolation) Country specific adjustments to the discount rate
Hierarchy: (1) If interest rate is explicitly defined by contract: Interest rate implicit in the lease (2) If interest rate is not explicitly defined but readily determinable: Best Estimate* (3) If interest rate of the contract can’t be readily determined: Continental’s incremental borrowing rate (Interest matrix) (4) If lease contract can’t be linked to interest matrix: Workaround Concept
*Only applicable if calculation can be performed directly in the IT solution. A separate calculation tool must be avoided. IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Agenda Page 43
1
Continental at a glance
2
Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
Special topics Subleases
“Head lease”
Owner
“Sub lease”
Lessee/sublessor
Sublessee
• Head lease (as lessee) and sublease (as lessor) are generally accounted for as two separate leases • Underlying asset of the sublease: ROU asset • Balance sheet presentation: No offsetting of lease assets and liabilities • Income statement presentation: Intermediate lessors’ revenue is generally presented gross • Additional disclosure requirements
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IFRS 16 – Intercompany Leases Our concept: › No adjustment to our management approach. Steering by Operating assets
› Posting and consolidation logics must be on-hand.
› Interdivisional lease transactions
Profit Center distribution of underlying leased asset
Divisions = Segments
must be analyzed in detail.
› Materiality determinations and impact on our segment report
Requirements of IFRS 8 Materiality: Only single cases of interdivisional leases
Sharing within a ‚Zebra‘ is not a lease.
› Lease engine must support ICO ICO leases bases on ‘Service Agreements’ Allocations à No specific lease contract
Lease term?
leases
Tendency today: Lease rate?
› Keep existing processes › Be prepared in case of changes due to materiality
2 legal entities needed for a lease contract
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
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Agenda Page 46
1
Continental at a glance
2
Project Overview
3
Identification of a Lease
4
Practical Expedients
5
Key Lease Concepts
6
Special Accounting Matters
7
Transition and Impact on KPI´s
Effective date and transition Overview
• Effective date: 1 January 2019 – earlier application is permitted if IFRS 15 is also applied Transition requirements: • Lessor: Continues to apply existing lease accounting • Lessee: • Existing finance leases: • Generally continues to apply existing accounting (some exceptions, e.g. Index linked leases) • Existing operating leases: • Lessees are permitted to choose either full retrospective or modified retrospective approach • Applied consistently across entire portfolio of former operating leases • Definition of a lease in IFRIC 4 can be retained for existing leases
16. IFRS Kongress 2017
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Effective date and transition Overview of transition options
FY 18 and prior
FY 19
Legacy GAAP
Legacy GAAP
FY 20
FY 21 onwards
New GAAP
New GAAP
Before adoption
Reporting under IAS 17/IFRIC 4 Reporting Footnotes
Legacy GAAP and IAS 8 disclosures
Full retrospective After adoption
Reporting
Legacy GAAP
New GAAP
IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors
Footnotes
Enhanced
Enhanced
After adoption
Modified retrospective Reporting
Legacy GAAP
Legacy GAAP
Footnotes
New GAAP
New GAAP
Enhanced
Enhanced
Further details: ► Either the fully retrospective or modified retrospective transition approach is selected, and is applied to all leases ► Under both options: ► ►
►
There is no requirement to reassess on transition whether a contract contains a lease Disclosures required in accordance with IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors, with certain revisions Entities would not reassess historical sale and leasebacks to determine whether a sale occurred in accordance with IFRS 15 16. IFRS Kongress 2017
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Effective date and transition
Modified Retrospective transition approach Modified Retrospective Approach For existing operating leases Requirements
Practical Expedients
No restatement of comparatives
Single discount rate can be used for portfolio of assets
Cumulative effect of adoption recognised in retained earnings Exemption for leases ending 12 months from the date of initial application
Use incremental borrowing rate as discount rate at date of initial application (1 October 2019)
Exclude initial direct costs from the measurement of ROU asset
Lease liability = PV of remaining lease payments Modified Retrospective Approach A (“ModA”): ROU asset = as if standard always applied
Modified Retrospective Approach B (“ModB”):
Choice on a lease-bylease basis
ROU asset = lease liability, plus adj.
Adjust ROU asset for previously recognised onerous lease provisions, instead of impairment review
Use hindsight, such as in determining the lease term if the contract contains options to extend or terminate
Modified Retrospective Approach for existing finance leases: Carry over existing balances at the date of initial application of the new standard, with the fixed asset balance being reclassified to a ROU asset. The asset and corresponding lease liability are then accounted for under IFRS 16 from the date of initial application
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IFRS 16 - Practical Expedients: Modified retro. transition method
In transition to IFRS 16 a lease asset can be recognized in the B/S: 1. At the value of the corresponding liability 2. As if the contract had been considered under IFRS 16 since it’s commencement date. This option would result in a lower RoU Asset at the time of first recognition.
›
Option 2 would trigger an investigation of each single leasing contract. Especially property leasing contracts are expected to be complex and have a long history.
Decision: Option 1 à Avoid high transition efforts and reduce complexity
Initial recognition Year
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Lease liability Asset recognized as if IFRS 16 from beginning Asset recognized at value of liability
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
September 8, 2017 Holger Siebenthaler © Continental AG
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IFRS 16 – KPIs & Reporting Key figures
Expected effect
Explanation
B/S: Assets
Operate Leasing is not applicable anymore for lessees. Almost all lease contracts have to be accounted for on-balance à Additions for right of use assets (RoU-Assets).
B/S: Liabilities
Corresponding Lease Liabilities for the present value of future lease payments have to be recognized.
Gearing ratio
Net indebtedness Equity
Key figure is used to assess the financing structure. Lease Liabilities = Interest bearing financial liabilities = Part of net indebtedness
P&L: EBIT
Interest expenses are shown below EBIT.
Operating Assets
The assignment of RoU-Assets and of the Lease Liabilities to Operating Assets will be decided in course of the ongoing project work.
ROCE CVC
EBIT / (OAQ1+OAQ2+OAQ3+OAQ4) 4 (ROCE – WACC) * OA
ROCE (return on capital employed) describes the economic efficiency of operations. CVC (Continental Value Contribution) is the absolute amount of value achieved.
IFRS 16 Implementierung bei der Continental AG Public
September 8, 2017 Holger Siebenthaler © Continental AG
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Vielen Dank für Ihre Aufmerksamkeit!!
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