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Obtaining Capital: Methods of Long-Term Financing
Leasing
Finance Textbooks Boundless Finance Obtaining Capital: Methods of Long-Term Financing Leasing
Finance Textbooks Boundless Finance Obtaining Capital: Methods of Long-Term Financing
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Concept Version 8
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Impact of Leasing on the Income Statement

Leasing assets, both as lessee or lessor, has significant impacts on various financial statements.

Learning Objective

  • Identify the income statement implications of leasing an asset, both as lessor and lessee


Key Points

    • Leasing is an alternative approach to buying an asset required for operation or selling an unused asset.
    • The lessee, or the individual renting the asset, benefits from leasing through incurring lower costs (albeit consistently over time). The lessor benefits by procuring a return on a previous under-utilized investment.
    • Capital leases usually transfer ownership of the leased item to the lessee at the end of the contract, while operating leases generally just represent utilization of the asset (and not eventual ownership).
    • Capital leases and operating leases have different accounting implications for both the lessee and the lessor. Capital leases, due to the transfer of an asset, have a greater impact on the balance sheet.

Terms

  • capital lease

    A capital lease is usually quite long, perhaps even the entire duration of the life of the asset being leased. A capital lease has balance sheet implications, as the asset itself may be transferred at the end of the contract.

  • operating lease

    An operating lease is usually short compared to the life of the asset being leased, and does not result in a change of ownership at the end of the lease.


Full Text

Leasing is an alternative approach to buying or selling a given asset or real estate location. The lessee will pay the lessor for the rights to utilize a given asset (i.e. the lessor is the owner of the asset, the lessee is renting it over a fixed time frame). For each respective organization, leasing will have significant impacts on financial statements during the accounting process. Understanding the accounting implications for each organization (lessee and lessor) is useful for accurate reporting on both the income statement and the balance sheet.

Capital and Operating Leases

In accounting, leases can be considered either operating leases or capital leases (also called financial leases). An operating lease is not reported as an asset or a liability (i.e. not represented on the balance sheet) and is expensed via the income statement as payments are incurred. A capital lease, on the other hand, is recorded as both asset and liability calculated as the present value of the cumulative rental payments (but never more than the overall fair market value of the underlying asset). 

Capital Lease Criteria

When determining whether a lease is capital or operating, the following criteria are useful considerations:

  • The lessee gains ownership of the asset at the conclusion of the lease
  • The lessee is offered a bargain purchase contract at the end of the lease. This means the lessee can purchase the lease from the lessor at a price below the fair market price
  • The life of the lease is equal to or greater than 75% of the economic life of the asset
  • The present value of the minimum lease payments (MLP) is equal to or greater than 90% of the fair market value of leased property

If any one of these criteria are accurate in a given leasing contract, the lease is considered a capital lease and thus will impact the assets and liabilities of the balance sheet. Otherwise, it is seen as an expense and filed as an operating lease on the income statement.

Lessee Accounting

The lessee records rent expense (debit) over the lease term, and a credit to either cash or rent payable when on an operating lease. From an income statement perspective, the expense incurred is equivalent to the cumulative rent being paid over the reporting period.

With a capital lease, the lessee does not record rent as an expense. However, due to the classification of the leased asset, there are interest and depreciation alterations to be made via the income sheet when applicable. Over time, the depreciation and interest will equate to the value of the underlying rent payments.

From the lessee's perspective, there are some situations where accountants must be aware of altercations to the asset and/or existing contract with the lessor:

  • Improvements: If improvements are made, they should be capitalized and depreciated over the lease life. If the lessor gives the lessee a cash allowance for improvements, this is treated as a reduction of rent and amortized over the lease term.
  • Percentage Rent: Some contracts have a percentage kick-back to the lessor in instances where sales reach a certain volume (common in retail leases). For example, the lessor decides that if the shop sells over $100,000, any sales past that point are subject to a 10% kick back to the owner of the property.

Lessor Accounting

For an operating lease - the ownership of the asset is maintained by the lessor and must be represented on the balance sheet as an asset. Rent revenue is credited with a corresponding debit to cash/cash receivables.

For a capital lease - the lessor debits the receivable account for the present value of the rents and credits any owned assets. Cash is debited upon payment while the receivable is credited, and unearned (interest) income is credited as well.

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