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SEC Regulations Committee
June 18, 2015 - Joint Meeting with SEC Staff
SEC Offices – Washington DC
HIGHLIGHTS
NOTICE: The Center for Audit Quality (CAQ) SEC Regulations Committee meets periodically with the staff of the SEC to discuss emerging financial reporting issues relating to SEC rules and regulations. The purpose of the following highlights is to summarize the issues discussed at the meetings. These highlights have not been considered or acted on by senior technical committees of the AICPA and do not represent an official position of the AICPA or the CAQ. As with all other documents issued by the CAQ, these highlights are not authoritative and users are urged to refer directly to applicable authoritative pronouncements for the text of the technical literature. These highlights do not purport to be applicable or sufficient to the circumstances of any work performed by practitioners. They are not intended to be a substitute for professional judgment applied by practitioners.
In addition, these highlights are not authoritative positions or interpretations issued by the SEC or its staff. The highlights were not transcribed by the SEC and have not been considered or acted upon by the SEC or its staff. Accordingly, these highlights do not constitute an official statement of the views of the Commission or of the staff of the Commission.
As available on this website, highlights of Joint Meetings of the SEC Regulations Committee and the SEC staff are not updated for the subsequent issuance of technical pronouncements or positions taken by the SEC staff, nor are they deleted when they are superseded by the issuance of subsequent highlights or authoritative accounting or auditing literature. As a result, the information, commentary or guidance contained herein may not be current or accurate and the CAQ is under no obligation to update such information. Readers are therefore urged to refer to current authoritative or source material.
I. ATTENDANCE
SEC Regulations Committee
Securities and Exchange Commission
Observers and Guests
John May, Chair
Christine Davine, Vice-Chair Scott Bourgeois
Janie Copeland Brad Davidson Melanie Dolan Fred Frank
Liz Gantnier Greg Giugliano David Hilder Bridgette Hodges Steven Jacobs Jeff Lenz
Steve Mezzio Scott Pohlman Sharon Virag
Division of Corporation Finance (Division)
Mark Kronforst, Chief Accountant
Craig Olinger, Deputy Chief Accountant Nili Shah, Deputy Chief Accountant
Patricia Armelin, Associate Chief Accountant Jessica Barberich, Associate Chief Accountant* Jill Davis, Associate Chief Accountant*
Todd Hardiman, Associate Chief Accountant* Louise Dorsey, Associate Chief Accountant Patrick Gilmore, Associate Chief Accountant Cicely LaMothe, Associate Director
Austin Lee, Valuation Fellow
Ryan Milne, Associate Chief Accountant Mark Green, Senior Special Counsel
Angela Crane, Office Chief, Disclosure Standards Kevin L. Vaughn, Associate Chief Accountant
* Via Teleconference
Office of the Chief Accountant
Courtney Sachtleben, Professional Accounting Fellow
Annette Schumacher Barr, CAQ Observer
Todd Kosel, PwC
Brian Schramm, PwC
II. Division of Corporation Finance Personnel and Organizational update
The staff discussed an upcoming change within the Division’s Office of Chief Accountant (CF-OCA), noting that CF-OCA will be moving to a topical focus under which the Associate Chief Accountants will each be responsible for specific topical areas rather than being responsible for specific industries. Among other things, this will allow staff to develop expertise by subject area (e.g. revenue, S-X Rule 3-10). The change in CF-OCA’s internal service approach will not impact the way filings are reviewed by the Division’s twelve industry-based Assistant Director (“AD”) groups.
III. Current Financial Reporting matters
A. Division views regarding delinquent filings
The staff and Committee discussed situations in which a registrant seeks the staff’s accommodation to file a comprehensive Form 10-K instead of filing individual periodic reports that were required but not made (e.g., filings that were not made because the company was working on restatements of prior period financial statements). The staff is considering whether to revise section 1320.4 of the Division’s Financial Reporting Manual (FRM) regarding the need to write to CF- OCA about accommodation requests for delinquent filings.
B. Impact of adopting new accounting standards on previous significance tests
The staff and the Committee discussed the guidance in FRM 2410.8 which indicates that S-X Rule 3-09 significance tests relating to unconsolidated subsidiaries and equity method investees need to be reperformed in connection with a subsequent Form 10-K when historical financial statements have been revised to reflect either a retrospective change in accounting principle or a discontinued operation. The Committee shared its perspectives on a model similar to that found in FRM 2025.1 regarding S-X Rule 3-05 (i.e., no requirement to reperform significance tests for individual acquisitions). The staff indicated that the guidance cited in FRM 2410.8 above reflects the Division’s view, and that registrants are encouraged to contact the staff with specific facts and circumstances if application of existing rules yields an impractical answer.
C. Segment Reporting
The staff asked members of the Committee for their observations regarding recently issued comment letters and staff speeches on segment reporting. Specifically, the staff was interested in how registrants and/or accounting firms have responded to the recent staff speeches and if there has been any change in disclosure. Some members shared that discussions have increased on the topic, particularly in cases involving IPOs or internal reorganizations.
D. Update on SAB Topic 5.Z.7, Accounting for the spin-off of a subsidiary
Consistent with public comments previously made by members of the Commission’s Office of the Chief Accountant, the staff noted that they are continuing to evaluate potential changes to their guidance relating to treatment of a spin-off as a change in reporting entity (SAB Topic 5.Z.7). Additionally, the staff asked that registrants avoid analogizing to SAB Topic 5.Z.7 in situations not addressed by that literature (for example, in an issue related to the appropriateness of carve-out financial statements).
E. Requests to Division Staff for Reviews of Incomplete Filings
From time to time, registrants ask the SEC staff to perform their review of a registration statement when certain financial information called for by the form is not included in the filing. The staff indicated that the relevant AD group within the Division is responsible for deciding whether to perform the review of an incomplete filing. Requests to review incomplete filings should be made to those groups.
IV. Current practice issues
A. Pro forma reserves and SMOG data in connection with acquisitions and sales of oil and gas businesses
Publicly traded companies in the oil and gas industry are required to disclose in their historical financial statements supplemental information about reserve quantities and a standardized measure of oil and gas (SMOG), as required by Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) 932-235. FRM 2065.12 states that this information should also be provided in the historical financial statements of acquired oil and gas properties. Additionally, for a transaction that meets the definition of a roll-up transaction in Item 901 of Regulation S-K, Item 914 calls for specified pro forma information above and beyond that required by Article 11 of Regulation S-X, including a pro forma statement of cash flows, pro forma book value per share and pro forma oil and gas reserve data, if applicable. These requirements are discussed further in FRM 3140.1 and SAB Topic 2-D, Question 4.
The Committee asked the staff whether pro forma SMOG disclosures are required or expected in pro formas associated with significant acquisitions of oil and gas businesses (without regard to whether the transaction is a “roll-up”). The staff noted that they usually see pro forma reserve disclosures and pro forma SMOG disclosures in these filings and that it is consistent with their expectation. The staff did not specifically address practice issues related to dispositions. The Committee did not suggest that the staff needed to consider this further.
B. Date for assessing whether an acquiree meets the definition of a foreign business in Rule 1-02(l) of Regulation S-X
There are various financial reporting accommodations which may be available to registrants in connection with an acquisition when the acquiree is a foreign business as defined in Rule 1-02(l) of Regulation S-X. The Committee and the staff discussed what date an acquirer should use to determine whether an acquired business meets the definition of a foreign business. The staff indicated that there is no specified date in the SEC rules and registrants should use the date that makes the most sense based upon their individual facts and circumstances.
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