PWC Derivative Hedge Accounting PDF
PWC Derivative Hedge Accounting PDF
PWC Derivative Hedge Accounting PDF
com
Derivatives
and hedging
October 2019
About this guide
PwC is pleased to offer our Derivative and hedging guide. It provides guidance on the accounting for
derivatives and hedging, and has been fully updated as of January 2018. Since then, certain sections
have been clarified.
The FASB first issued its comprehensive standard on the accounting for derivatives and hedging in
1998. Since then it has been amended numerous times, including a significant amendment issued in
August 2017.
□ DH 5 – DH 9 address the requirements for applying hedge accounting and provide guidance on
the specific requirements for hedges of financial, nonfinancial and foreign currency risk, and the
recognition and measurement of the hedged items and hedging instruments.
□ DH 12 discusses the effective date and transition of the August 2017 amendments.
This guide summarizes the applicable accounting literature, including relevant references to and
excerpts from the FASB’s Accounting Standards Codification (the Codification). It also provides our
insights and perspectives, interpretative and application guidance, illustrative examples, and
discussion on emerging practice issues.
This guide should be used in combination with a thorough analysis of the relevant facts and
circumstances, review of the authoritative accounting literature, and appropriate professional and
technical advice.
References to US GAAP
Definitions, full paragraphs, and excerpts from the FASB’s Accounting Standards Codification are
clearly labelled. In some instances, guidance was cited with minor editorial modification to flow in the
context of the PwC Guide. The remaining text is PwC’s original content.
This guide provides general and specific references to chapters in other PwC guides to assist users in
finding other relevant information. References to other guides are indicated by the applicable guide
abbreviation followed by the specific section number. The other PwC guides referred to in this guide,
including their abbreviations, are:
Chapter 1:
Introduction to derivatives
Introduction to derivatives
See DH 2 for information regarding the accounting definition of a derivative under ASC 815,
Derivatives and Hedging, and DH 3 for information on scope exceptions to derivative accounting
under ASC 815.
There are two broad categories of derivatives: option-based contracts and forward-based contracts.
Option-based derivative contracts provide the holder with the option, but not the obligation, to
exercise the contract. The party that sells the option may be referred to as the option writer; the party
that buys the option is the option holder. Typically, an option holder will exercise its option when it is
in the money (i.e., economically worthwhile), but not when it is out of the money. The following are
common types of option-based derivatives:
□ A call option gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy an asset at a specified price
(strike price or exercise price) on or before a maturity date (expiration date). For example, the
holder of a call option on crude oil may have the right to purchase 100,000 barrels of a specific
grade of crude oil for $62 per barrel within the next three months.
A call option is in the money when the price of the underlying asset is greater than the strike price
(exercise price) of the option.
□ A put option gives the holder the right, but not the obligation, to sell an asset at a specified future
price on or before a maturity date. For example, the holder of a put option on an equity security
may have the right to sell 700,000 shares of a publicly-traded stock at $100 per share within the
next year.
A put option is in the money when the price of the underlying asset is lower than the strike price
(exercise price) of the option.
□ A warrant is a call option written by a reporting entity on its own common or preferred equity
shares. It grants the holder the right, but not the obligation, to purchase the underlying shares at a
specified price on or before the maturity date. For example, the holder of a warrant may have the
right to purchase one thousand shares of the issuer’s common stock for $100 per share within two
years.
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Introduction to derivatives
Forward derivative contracts require the payment of the agreed-upon forward price in exchange for
the underlying asset on or before a maturity date. The following are common types of forward
derivatives:
□ Swap contracts are instruments that require the counterparties to exchange (or swap) cash flows
at specified intervals (e.g., every three months) on or before a maturity date. The underlying cash
flows can be based on interest rates, foreign currency exchange rates, or other assets or indices.
For example, in an interest rate swap, counterparties will exchange payments based on a specified
fixed interest rate and a variable interest rate, such as LIBOR.
□ Forward contracts are customized instruments to buy or sell an asset at a specified future date at a
predetermined price. For example a reporting entity may agree to purchase 1 million euros one
year from now at a fixed price of 1.25 million US dollars.
□ Futures contracts are standardized instruments to buy or sell an asset at a specified future date at
a predetermined price. For example, a reporting entity may enter into a futures contract to
purchase 1,000 barrels of a specific grade of crude oil one year from now at a fixed price of $62 per
barrel.
□ Centrally-cleared derivatives
□ Exchange-traded derivatives
Figure DH 1-1 summarizes the key differences between OTC derivatives, centrally-cleared derivatives,
and exchange-traded derivatives.
Figure DH 1-1
Differences between OTC, centrally-cleared, and exchange-traded derivatives
Centrally-cleared Exchange-traded
OTC derivatives derivatives derivatives
Trade negotiation Trades are bilaterally Trades are bilaterally Trades are executed on
negotiated between negotiated between the organized exchanges
the counterparties counterparties
Contract terms Customized contract Standardized contract Standardized contract
terms terms terms
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Introduction to derivatives
Centrally-cleared Exchange-traded
OTC derivatives derivatives derivatives
Collateral □ Posting of □ Requirements for □ Requirements for
requirements collateral is not initial margin are initial margin are
required unless set by the clearing set by the clearing
each party agrees house irrespective house irrespective
to it as a of the quality of of the quality of
requirement for the counterparty the counterparty
the trade.
□ Variation margin □ Variation margin
Collateral
is subject to daily is subject to daily
agreements are
movement movement
customized
OTC derivatives are traded and bilaterally negotiated directly between the counterparties, without
going through an exchange or other intermediary. OTC derivatives are customized contracts that allow
the counterparties to hedge their specific risks. Common OTC derivatives include swaps, forward rate
agreements, and options.
The OTC derivative market is the largest market for derivatives. Because the OTC derivative market
includes banks and other sophisticated entities, it is largely unregulated with respect to disclosure of
information between the parties. Given the limited regulations, OTC derivatives generally present
greater counterparty credit risk. To offset this risk, counterparties may negotiate collateral
requirements (sometimes referred to as “margin”). When margin is provided, the derivative contract is
considered collateralized; it is uncollateralized when there are no margin requirements.
An OTC derivative generally requires one contract (e.g., an ISDA agreement) between the two parties.
Figure DH 1-2 shows the direct relationship and flows of information and assets between
counterparties to OTC derivatives.
Figure DH 1-2
Parties to an OTC derivative
Centrally-cleared derivatives are negotiated between the counterparties but contain standardized
terms and are traded through a central clearing house. The use of standardized terms facilitates the
computation of required margin by the clearing house. Because the derivative counterparties are
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Introduction to derivatives
required to post collateral to satisfy the mandatory margin requirements, the counterparties are not
subject to counterparty credit risk; instead, they are subject to the credit risk of the clearing house.
Centrally-cleared derivatives offer certain advantages over OTC derivatives, including standardization,
liquidity, and the elimination of counterparty credit risk.
Reforms mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act require certain types of derivatives (e.g., interest rate
swaps, credit default swaps) to be processed through designated electronic trading platforms and
cleared through registered clearing houses. As a result, derivatives have increasingly been executed
through clearing houses rather than transacted bilaterally in an OTC market.
Centrally-cleared derivatives require multiple legal contracts between the various parties involved. The
parties involved in a centrally-cleared derivative include:
□ Swap execution facility – the trading system used to provide pre-trade information (i.e., bid and
offer prices) and the mechanism for executing swap transactions
□ Swap dealer – the market maker in swaps that regularly enters into swaps with counterparties
Figure DH 1-3 shows the relationships and flows of information and assets between parties to a
centrally-cleared derivative.
Figure DH 1-3
Parties in a centrally-cleared derivative
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Introduction to derivatives
While the objective of the collateralized-to-market and settled-to-market provisions are similar, the
nature of the rights and obligations between the counterparties are different. Centrally-cleared
derivatives require the out-of-the-money counterparty to periodically transfer variation margin equal
to the cumulative change in the fair value of the underlying asset of the derivative contract to the in-
the-money counterparty. The cash flows exchanged by the counterparties in collateralized-to-market
and settled-to-market derivatives are typically identical (and include both an initial and variation
margin) but the characterization of the variation margin differs. For collateralized-to-market
derivatives, the variation margin transferred is recorded as collateral with a receivable/ payable for the
eventual return of the collateral. For settled-to-market derivatives, the variation margin transferred is
recorded as a legal settlement of the derivative contract (the variation margin legally settles the
outstanding exposure, but does not result in any other change or reset of the contractual terms of the
derivative).
Exchange-traded derivatives are traded on specialized derivative exchanges or other exchanges that
act as the intermediary for the transactions. Similar to centrally-cleared derivatives, exchange-traded
derivatives have standardized terms and margin requirements governed by the clearing house.
Common exchange-traded derivatives include futures and options.
1.3.3.1 Margin
Clearing houses require margin to be posted to mitigate losses as a result of adverse price movements
or default by a clearing member or end-user. Initial margin is the amount required to be posted (per
trade) to begin transacting through the clearing house. It can consist of cash, securities, or other
collateral. Variation margin is the amount required to be paid or received periodically as dictated by
the clearing member and/or clearing house. In addition to the change in value of the derivative, a
clearing house may decide to incorporate additional amounts to be posted to mitigate nonpayment or
other risks. The periodic movements of variation margin are considered either (1) a payment of
collateral or (2) a settlement of an open position, depending on the legal determination under the
ISDA or other agreements. This is not an accounting election; it requires a legal assessment of the
specific terms of each trade and the legal relationship with the clearing member and clearing house.
The legal form of the variation margin, whether deemed to be collateral or a settlement payment, may
have accounting and reporting implications.
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Introduction to derivatives
affect the cash flows or value of other exchanges required by the contract in a manner similar to that of
a derivative.
Figure DH 1-4 shows examples of common embedded derivatives and host contracts.
Figure DH 1-4
Types of embedded features added to host contracts
See DH 4 for information on the identification of embedded derivatives as well as whether the
derivative should be separated from its host contract.
Some reporting entities may use derivatives to acquire risk or speculate on future price changes of an
underlying asset. Provided the value of the underlying asset moves as expected, the reporting entity
can profit from price changes without having to invest in the underlying asset itself. Reporting entities
can also enter into a combination of derivative transactions to take advantage of price differences
between two or more markets.
1-7
About this guide
This guide considers existing guidance as of January 31, 2018. Additional updates may be made to
future versions to keep pace with significant developments. Following is a summary of the noteworthy
revisions to the guide since it was last updated in full.
□ The content from former Chapter 13, Effective date and transition, was moved to chapter 12.
All chapters were updated to reflect the guidance in ASU 2017-12, Targeted Improvements to
Accounting for Hedging Activities, when applicable. Other significant changes are noted below.
DH 1, Introduction to derivatives
□ DH 1, Executive summary, in the prior version of this guide was deleted. This chapter is new
content.
DH 2, Definition of a derivative
□ The guidance in DH 2, Scope, in the prior version of this guide was split into two chapters, DH
2, Definition of a derivative, and DH 3, Scope exceptions.
DH 3, Scope exceptions
□ The guidance in DH 3, Scope exceptions, was moved from DH 2, Scope, in the prior version of
this guide.
□ Detailed discussion of contracts indexed to and settled in an entity’s own stock was moved to
FG 5.
DH 4, Embedded derivatives
□ The guidance in DH 4, Hedging strategies, in the prior version of this guide was moved to DH
6, Financial hedges, DH 7, Nonfinancial hedges, and DH 8, Foreign currency hedges.
□ DH 4.4.3 was updated for ASU 2016-06, Contingent Put and Call Options in Debt Instruments.
□ DH 4.5.1 was updated for ASU 2014-06, Determining Whether the Host Contract in a Hybrid
Financial Instrument Issued in the Form of a Share Is More Akin to Debt or to Equity.
□ Detailed discussion of contracts indexed to and settled in an entity’s own stock was moved to
FG 5.
DH 5, Introduction to hedging
□ The guidance in DH 5, Fair value hedges, in the prior version of this guide was moved to DH 6,
Financial hedges, DH 7, Nonfinancial hedges, and DH 8, Foreign currency hedges.
□ The guidance in DH 6, Cash flow hedges, in the prior version of this guide was moved to DH 6,
Financial hedges, DH 7, Nonfinancial hedges, and DH 8, Foreign currency hedges.
□ The guidance in DH 6.4.5.1 was updated for ASU 2013-10, Inclusion of the Fed Funds Effective
Swap Rate (or Overnight Index Swap Rate) as a Benchmark Interest Rate for Hedge
Accounting Purposes.
□ The chapter was updated for ASU 2016-01, Recognition and Measurement of Financial Assets
and Financial Liabilities.
□ The guidance in DH 6.4.7.3 was updated for ASU 2017-08, Premium Amortization on
Purchased Callable Debt Securities.
□ The guidance in DH 6.3.7 and DH 6.4.8 was moved from DH 9, Discontinuance and other
aspects of hedge accounting, from the prior version of this guide.
About this guide
□ The guidance in this chapter was moved from DH 4, Hedging strategies, DH 5, Fair value
hedges, and DH 6, Cash flow hedges.
□ The guidance in DH 7.3.7 and DH 7.4.4 was moved from DH 9, Discontinuance and other
aspects of hedge accounting, in the prior version of this guide.
□ DH 8.9 was updated for the issuance of final regulations in Internal Revenue Code Section 987.
DH 9, Effectiveness assessments
□ The guidance in DH 9.4.7 was updated for ASU 2016-05, Effect of Derivative Contract
Novations on Existing Hedge Accounting Relationships.
DH 10, Discontinuance
□ The guidance in DH 11 in the prior version of this guide pertained to the effective date of FAS
133 and its amendments was deleted.
□ This chapter was added. It was previously published in PwC Dataline 2014-06, Simplified
hedge accounting approach.
□ This chapter is new content. Some guidance in DH 12 related to disclosures prior to the
adoption of ASU 2017-12 was adapted from FSP 19.
Copyrights
This publication has been prepared for general informational purposes, and does not constitute
professional advice on facts and circumstances specific to any person or entity. You should not act
upon the information contained in this publication without obtaining specific professional advice. No
representation or warranty (express or implied) is given as to the accuracy or completeness of the
information contained in this publication. The information contained in this publication was not
intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for purposes of avoiding penalties or sanctions
imposed by any government or other regulatory body. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, its members,
employees, and agents shall not be responsible for any loss sustained by any person or entity that
relies on the information contained in this publication. Certain aspects of this publication may be
superseded as new guidance or interpretations emerge. Financial statement preparers and other users
of this publication are therefore cautioned to stay abreast of and carefully evaluate subsequent
authoritative and interpretative guidance.
The FASB Accounting Standards Codification® material is copyrighted by the Financial Accounting
Foundation, 401 Merritt 7, Norwalk, CT 06856, and is reproduced with permission.
Chapter 2:
Definition of a derivative
Definition of a derivative
When evaluating whether a contract or embedded component meets the definition of a derivative, a
reporting entity should assess whether a component is freestanding or embedded in another
instrument. See DH 4.2.1.1 for information on that determination.
All financial instruments that meet the definition and do not qualify for a scope exception are
accounted for as derivatives under ASC 815. There is no practicability exception that permits a
reporting entity to avoid calculating the required fair value measurements for derivative instruments;
the FASB has stated that it believes fair value is the only relevant measurement attribute for
derivatives.
ASC 815-10-15-9 specifies that two or more derivatives should be viewed as a unit if they are entered
into contemporaneously and in contemplation of each other, with the same counterparty, relating to
the same risk, with no economic or substantive business purpose for structuring them separately.
Therefore, if the two contracts together result in no net exposure, a reporting entity may have created a
combined financial instrument that is not in the scope of ASC 815 and its components cannot be
separated for hedging purposes.
ASC 815-10-15-83
A derivative instrument is a financial instrument or other contract with all of the following
characteristics:
a. Underlying, notional amount, payment provision. The contract has both of the following terms,
which determine the amount of the settlement or settlements, and, in some cases, whether or not a
settlement is required:
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Definition of a derivative
b. Initial net investment. The contract requires no initial net investment or an initial net investment
that is smaller than would be required for other types of contracts that would be expected to have a
similar response to changes in market factors.
c. Net settlement. The contract can be settled net by any of the following means:
3. It provides for delivery of an asset that puts the recipient in a position not substantially different
from net settlement.
The key terms within the definition are (1) underlying, (2) notional amount, (3) payment provision, (4)
initial net investment, and (5) net settlement.
2.3.1 Underlying
ASC 815-10-15-88
An underlying is a variable that, along with either a notional amount or a payment provision,
determines the settlement amount of a derivative instrument. An underlying usually is one or a
combination of the following:
An underlying may be the price or rate of an asset or liability but is not the asset or liability itself.
Accordingly, the underlying will generally be the referenced rate or index that determines whether or
not the derivative has a positive or negative value. For example, the underlying in a contract that
provides the holder an option to purchase a security is the price of the security.
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Definition of a derivative
An underlying equal to the prevailing market rate will result in the derivative instrument having little
to no value as the transaction will happen at the market rate.
The notional amount generally represents the second half of the equation that determines the
settlement amount under a derivative. Accordingly, the settlement amount of a derivative is often
determined by the interaction of the notional amount and the underlying. This interaction may consist
of simple multiplication, or it may involve a formula with leverage factors or other constants.
A requirements contract is defined in ASC 815-10-55-5 as a contract that requires one party to the
contract to buy the quantity needed to satisfy its needs. Although this type of contract is entered into
to meet the needs of one of the parties to the contract, it may meet the definition of a derivative. A
reporting entity will need to analyze the terms of the requirements contract to determine whether it is
a derivative instrument; that determination depends in part on whether the contract has a notional
amount.
The requirements contract guidance in ASC 815-10-55-5 through ASC 815-10-55-7 is only applicable in
cases when the seller is to supply all of the purchaser’s needs and the purchaser cannot buy excess
units for resale. In a requirements contract, the contract has a notional amount if it includes a reliable
means to determine a quantity. Settlement and default provisions may provide that means (e.g., a
specified minimum delivery amount based on three-year historical average usage).
In evaluating a requirements contract, there is no notional amount unless either the buyer or seller has
the right or ability to enforce a quantity at a specified level or the seller is compelled to perform due to
a material penalty provision. Provisions supporting the notional amount should be in the contract
itself or a legally-binding side agreement.
When the notional amount is not determinable, making the quantification of an amount highly
subjective and relatively unreliable (e.g., if a contract does not contain settlement and default
provisions that specifically reference quantities or provide a formula based on historical usage), the
contracts are considered to have no notional amount for purposes of applying ASC 815.
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Definition of a derivative
ASC 815-10-55-5 through ASC 815-10-55-7 provides guidance on how to evaluate whether a
requirements contract has a notional amount. See UP 3.2.1.1 for additional information on the
determination of the notional amount in requirements contracts.
In lieu of specifying a notional amount, some derivatives contain a payment provision, which is
defined in ASC 815-10-20.
For example, a contract might specify that a $5 million payment will be made if interest rates increase
by 200 basis points or if hurricane damage in Florida exceeds $300 million during the next 12 months;
the contract has a payment provision even though the settlement of the contract is driven by the
behavior of the underlying.
Many derivative-like instruments do not require an initial cash outlay. Others may require an initial
payment as compensation for time value (e.g., a premium on an option) or for terms that are more
favorable than market conditions (e.g., a premium on an in-the-money option).
ASC 815-10-15-94 through ASC 815-10-15-98 defines a derivative as either a contract that does not
require an initial net investment or a contract that requires an initial net investment that, when
adjusted for the time value of money, is less (“by more than a nominal amount”) than the initial net
investment that would be required to acquire the asset or incur the obligation related to the
underlying.
A derivative does not satisfy this criterion if the initial net investment is equal to the notional amount
(or the notional amount plus a premium or minus a discount) or is determined by applying the
notional amount to the underlying. See ASC 815-10-55-150, Case A, for an example of this concept.
Question DH 2-1
What amount is considered more than a nominal amount?
PwC response
The FASB did not provide a bright line for what constitutes a nominal amount. We believe its intention
is for an initial net investment that is less than 90% of the amount that would be exchanged to acquire
the asset or incur the obligation related to the underlying to be considered “less, by more than a
nominal amount.”
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Definition of a derivative
ASC 815-10-55-166 through ASC 815-10-55-168 provide an example that illustrates how to determine
the meaning of “less by more than a nominal amount.” The determination should be made on a case by
case basis considering the facts and circumstances.
Some derivatives might require a mutual exchange of assets at a contract’s inception, in which case the
initial net investment would be the difference between the fair values of the assets exchanged. An
exchange of currencies of equal fair values (e.g., in a currency swap contract) is not considered an
initial net investment; it is the exchange of one kind of cash for another kind of cash of equal value.
Another key concept in the definition of a derivative is whether a contract can be settled net, which
generally means that a contract can be settled at its maturity through an exchange of cash, instead of
through physical delivery of the referenced asset. A contract may be considered net settled when its
settlement meets one of the criteria in ASC 815-10-15-99.
ASC 815-10-15-99
A contract fits the description in paragraph 815-10-15-83(c) if its settlement provisions meet criteria
for any of the following:
Most futures, forwards, swaps, and options are considered derivatives because (1) their contract terms
call for a net cash settlement, or (2) a mechanism exists in the marketplace that makes it possible to
enter into closing contracts with a net cash settlement. Also included under the definition of a
derivative are commodity-based contracts that permit settlement through the delivery of either a
commodity or cash (e.g., commodity futures, options, swap contracts), commodity purchase and sales
contracts that require the delivery of a commodity that is readily convertible to cash (e.g., wheat, oil,
gold), and loan commitments from the issuer’s (lender’s) perspective that relate to the origination of
mortgage loans that will be held for sale.
Question DH 2-2 discusses whether a forward commitment meets the definition of a derivative.
Question DH 2-2
If a reporting entity enters into a forward commitment that obliges it to transfer financial assets to a
securitization structure for a specified period (e.g., a credit card securitization with a term of 60
months), does the forward commitment meet the definition of a derivative?
PwC response
Generally, no. Although the commitment has gains or losses based on changes in interest rates, it does
not have a net settlement provision or a means outside the contract to meet the net settlement
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Definition of a derivative
criterion. A commitment of this type is fulfilled by the transfer of financial assets, such as credit card
receivables. Because the financial assets to be delivered are not readily convertible to cash, the
commitment does not meet the net settlement criterion. If, however, a market develops, as set out in
ASC 815-10-15-118, for the underlying financial instruments, these commitments could meet the net
settlement criterion.
Contractual net settlement will most often be made in cash, but there are other forms of settlement.
Some of the other forms are discussed in the following sections.
The issuer of a contract that meets the definition of a derivative because of a net share settlement
provision may qualify for the scope exception for certain contracts involving an entity’s own equity in
ASC 815-10-15-74(a). See DH 3.3 for information on this scope exception.
Figure DH 2-1 summarizes key considerations in evaluating default provisions. See UP 3 for additional
information.
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Definition of a derivative
Figure DH 2-1
Evaluating whether default provisions constitute net settlement
□ Symmetrical default provisions that allow □ Asymmetrical default provisions that allow the
either party to the contract to unilaterally nondefaulting party to demand payment from
settle the contract in cash without penalty the defaulting party in the event of
nonperformance, but do not result in the
□ A variable penalty for nonperformance
defaulting party receiving payments for the
based on changes in the price of the
effects of favorable price changes
underlying (may be a form of net
settlement) □ A fixed penalty for nonperformance (as the
penalty does not change with changes in the
underlying)
□ A variable penalty for nonperformance based
on changes in the price of the underlying if it
also includes an incremental penalty of a fixed
amount (or fixed amount per unit) that is
expected to be significant enough at all dates
during the remaining term to make the
possibility of nonperformance remote
A symmetrical default provision requires an entity to pay a penalty for nonperformance that equals the
change in the price of the items that are the subject of the contract. It might be considered a net
settlement provision, depending on the specifics of the contract. For example, a liquidating-damages
clause that stipulates that if the seller fails to deliver a specified quantity of a particular commodity or
buyer fails to accept the delivery of that commodity, the party in an unfavorable position must pay the
other party an amount equal to the difference between the spot price on the scheduled delivery date
and the contract price, regardless of which party defaulted.
An asymmetrical default provision requires the defaulting party to compensate the nondefaulting
party for any incurred loss, but does not allow the defaulting party to benefit from favorable price
changes.
An asymmetrical default provision does not constitute net settlement. However, the presence of
asymmetrical default provisions applied in contracts between the same counterparties indicates the
existence of an agreement between those parties that the party in a loss position may elect the default
provision, thus incorporating a net settlement provision within the contract.
In addition, a pattern of settlements outside of physical delivery would call into question whether the
provision serves as a net settlement mechanism under the contract. It would also call into question
whether the full contracted quantity will be delivered under this and similar contracts.
Net settlement of a contract designated as normal purchases and normal sales would result in a
tainting event that would need to be evaluated to determine the impact on the contract itself and other
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Definition of a derivative
contracts similarly designated as normal. See DH 3.2.4 for information on the normal purchases and
normal sales exception.
A fixed penalty for nonperformance is not considered a net settlement provision because the amount
does not vary with changes in the underlying.
As discussed in ASC 815-10-15-103(c), a variable penalty for nonperformance is not a form of net
settlement if that penalty also contains an incremental fixed penalty in an amount that would be
expected to act as a disincentive for nonperformance throughout the term of the contract.
Structured settlement
In a structured payout, the payout of the net gain or loss is not made immediately. Instead, the holder
may receive a financial instrument (e.g., a receivable) whose terms pay out the gain or loss over time.
As discussed in ASC 815-10-15-104, a contract that provides for a structured payout of its gain or loss
meets the characteristic of net settlement if the fair value of the cash flows to be received or paid are
approximately equal to the amount that would have been received or paid if the contract had provided
for an immediate payout.
However, as discussed in ASC 815-10-15-105, a contract cannot be net settled if the holder is required
to invest funds in, or borrow funds from, the other party to obtain the benefits of a gain on the contract
over time as a traditional adjustment of either the yield on the amount invested or the interest element
on the amount borrowed. A fixed-rate mortgage commitment is an example of this type of contract. To
benefit from the gain on a loan commitment (due to an increase in interest rates), the holder of the
loan commitment must borrow money from the lender.
In contrast, when a contract requires an investment of funds in, or borrowing of funds from, the other
party so that the party in a gain position under the contract obtains the value of that gain only over
time through a nontraditional or atypical yield, net settlement does exist because the settlement is in
substance a structured payout of the contract’s gain. ASC 815-10-55-21 illustrates this concept.
Settlement of a debtor’s obligation to a creditor through exercise of a put or call option embedded
within the debt meets the net settlement criterion because neither party is required to deliver an asset
that is associated with the underlying. See DH 4.4.3 for additional information.
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Definition of a derivative
Net settlement can also occur when one of the parties to a contract is required to deliver an asset
associated with the underlying, but there is an established market mechanism that facilitates net
settlement outside the contract. That is, there is a market for the contract itself. For example, an
exchange that offers a ready opportunity to sell the contract or to enter into an offsetting contract is a
market mechanism.
ASC 815-10-15-118 requires that the assessment of whether a market mechanism exists be performed
at inception and on an ongoing basis throughout a contract’s life.
Market mechanisms may have different forms. Many derivatives are actively traded and can be closed
or settled before the contract’s expiration or maturity by net settlement in active markets. Reporting
entities should interpret the term market mechanism broadly to include any institutional arrangement
or other agreement having the requisite characteristics. For example, any institutional arrangement or
over-the-counter agreement that permits either party to (1) be relieved of all rights and obligations
under the contract, and (2) liquidate its net position in the contract without incurring a significant
transaction cost is considered a net settlement. Regardless of its form, an established market
mechanism must have all of the primary characteristics in ASC 815-10-15-111.
Additional factors that would indicate that the settlement method enables one party to readily
liquidate its net position include markets that provide access to potential counterparties regardless of
a seller’s size or market position, and if the risks assumed by a market maker as a result of acquiring a
contract can be transferred by a means other than by repackaging the original contract into a different
form.
2-10
Definition of a derivative
under the original contract have been relieved. This applies to contracts regardless of whether
either of the following conditions exists:
1. The asset associated with the underlying is financial or nonfinancial.
2. The offsetting contract is entered into with the same counterparty as the original contract or a
different counterparty (unless an offsetting contract with the same counterparty relieves the entity
of its rights and obligations under the original contract, in which case the arrangement does
constitute a market mechanism). (Example 6 [see paragraph 815-10-55-91] illustrates this
guidance.)
Generally, an offsetting contract does not replace an original contract’s legal rights and obligations.
See ASC 815-10-55-91 through ASC 815-10-55-98 (Example 6: Net Settlement Through a Market
Mechanism—Ability to Offset Contracts) and ASC 815-10-15-117.
Additional factors that indicate that a party to the contract can be fully relieved of its rights and
obligations under the contract include:
□ Multiple market participants that are willing and able to enter into a transaction at market prices
to assume the seller’s rights and obligations under a contract
□ Sufficient liquidity in the market for the contract, as indicated by the transaction volume and a
relatively narrow and observable bid/ask spread
d. Liquidation of the net position under the contract occurs without significant negotiation and due
diligence and occurs within a time frame that is customary for settlement of the type of contract. A
market mechanism facilitates easy and expedient settlement of the contract. As discussed under
the primary characteristic in (a), those qualities of a market mechanism do not preclude net
settlement in assets other than cash.
Question DH 2-3 asks whether an entity should determine if a market mechanism exists on an
individual contract basis.
2-11
Definition of a derivative
Question DH 2-3
Should a reporting entity determine whether a market mechanism exists on an individual contract
basis?
PwC response
Yes. This assessment should be performed on an individual contract basis, not on an aggregate
holdings basis. The lack of a liquid market for a group of contracts does not affect whether a market
mechanism exists that facilitates net settlement for an individual contract within that group.
Delivery of an asset that is readily convertible to cash puts the receiving party in a position that is
equivalent to a net settlement.
ASC 815-10-15-120
An example of a contract with this form of net settlement is a forward contract that requires delivery of
an exchange-traded equity security. Even though the number of shares to be delivered is the same as
the notional amount of the contract and the price of the shares is the underlying, an exchange-traded
security is readily convertible to cash. Another example is a swaption—an option to require delivery of
a swap contract, which is a derivative instrument.
When a contract is net settled, neither party accepts the risks and costs customarily associated with
owning and delivering the asset associated with the underlying (e.g., storage, maintenance, resale
costs). If the asset to be delivered is readily convertible to cash, those risks are minimal. Therefore, the
parties should be indifferent as to whether there is a gross physical exchange of the asset or a net
settlement in cash.
b. Quoted prices available in an active market that can rapidly absorb the quantity held by the entity
without significantly affecting the price.
Based on this concept, examples of assets that are readily convertible to cash include:
□ A unit of foreign currency that is readily convertible to the functional currency of the reporting
entity
2-12
Definition of a derivative
Conversely, securities that are not actively traded, or an unusually large block of thinly traded
securities, would not be considered readily convertible to cash in most circumstances, even though the
owner might be able to use such securities as collateral in a borrowing arrangement. Therefore, an
asset (whether financial or nonfinancial) is considered to be readily convertible to cash if the net
amount of cash that would be received from a sale of the asset in an active market is equal to or not
significantly less than the amount the entity would typically have received under a net settlement
provision. Parties generally should be indifferent as to whether they exchange cash or the assets
associated with the underlying.
A reporting entity must assess the estimated costs that would be incurred to immediately convert the
asset to cash. If those costs are significant, then the asset is not considered readily convertible to cash
and would not meet the definition of net settlement. Estimated conversion costs are considered
significant if they are 10% or more of the gross sales proceeds (based on the spot price at the inception
of the contract) that would be received from the sale of those assets in the closest or most economical
active market.
Question DH 2-4 discusses whether contracts that can be contractually settled in increments meets the
net settlement criterion.
Question DH 2-4
A reporting entity has an option to purchase one million shares of a publicly-traded stock, which can
be exercised in increments of 25,000 shares. To determine whether the shares can be rapidly absorbed
in the market without significantly affecting the price, should the reporting entity base its assessment
on the exercise of a 25,000 share increment?
PwC response
Yes. When determining whether the shares can be rapidly absorbed in the market without significantly
affecting the price, the reporting entity should base its assessment on the exercise of the smallest
increment (25,000 shares), not on the entire option’s notional amount (one million shares).
As discussed in ASC 815-10-15-131, publicly-traded shares of stock are not considered readily
convertible to cash when they are received through the exercise of a warrant issued by a reporting
entity on its own stock and cannot be sold or transferred (other than in connection with being pledged
as collateral) for a period of 32 days or more from the date the warrant is exercised.
2-13
Definition of a derivative
Whether a contract meets the definition of a derivative and, if it does, whether it qualifies for a scope
exception should be revisited each reporting period, unless otherwise provided in ASC 815-10-15. For
example, ASC 815-10-15-103(c) states that contracts with both variable and fixed nonperformance
penalties should be evaluated only at inception to determine whether the penalties constitute net
settlement.
Contract terms or customary practices may change, affecting the determination of whether a particular
contract meets the definition of a derivative instrument or qualifies for a scope exception.
A contract that subsequently meets the definition of a derivative (or no longer qualifies for a scope
exception) should be carried at fair value prospectively from the time it is determined to be a
derivative.
Question DH 2-5 asks how a reporting entity accounts for a contract that was not a derivative at
inception but later meets the definition of a derivative.
Question DH 2-5
How should a reporting entity account for a contract that was not a derivative contract at its inception
but later meets the definition of a derivative?
PwC response
ASC 815-10-15-3 requires a contract that meets the definition of a derivative subsequent to its
acquisition to be immediately recognized as a derivative. It should be recorded at its then current fair
value, with the offsetting entry recorded in earnings. Subsequently, the contract should be recorded at
its fair value each period with changes in its fair value recorded through earnings unless the
requirements for hedge accounting are met.
A contract that meets the definition of a derivative may not be within the scope of ASC 815. See DH 3
for information on ASC 815’s scope exceptions.
2-14
Definition of a derivative
Figure DH 2-2
Types of derivatives
Does the
contract Is the contract
Notional or Smaller meet the within the
payment initial net Net definition of scope of ASC
Contract Underlying? provision? investment? settlement? a derivative? 815?
2-15
Definition of a derivative
Does the
contract Is the contract
Notional or Smaller meet the within the
payment initial net Net definition of scope of ASC
Contract Underlying? provision? investment? settlement? a derivative? 815?
Option to Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes. The option No, unless there No Not typically. See
purchase or sell the real estate property premium is are explicit DH 3.2.7 for
real estate less than the market discussion of
value of the settlement scope exception
real estate. terms for contracts not
traded on an
exchange.
Option to Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes. The option Yes. The Yes Yes
purchase or sell the security number of premium is underlying is
an exchange- securities less than the readily
traded security value of the convertible to
security. cash as the
security is
traded on an
exchange.
Option to Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes. The option It depends on It depends on Yes, provided it
purchase or sell a the security number of premium is whether or not whether or not meets the
security not securities less than the the security can there is net definition of a
traded on an value of the be net settled settlement. derivative.
exchange security. through explicit
contract terms.
Employee stock Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes. The option It depends on It depends on Not typically. See
option the security number of premium is whether or not whether or not DH 3.3.1 for
securities less than the the security can there is net discussion of
value of the be net settled settlement. scope exception
security. through explicit for share-based
contract terms payments.
or is readily
convertible to
cash.
Futures contract Yes, the price of a Yes, a specified Yes Yes. A Yes Yes
commodity or quantity or face clearinghouse
financial amount (a market
instrument mechanism)
exists to
facilitate net
settlement.
Forward contract Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes It depends. The It depends on Not typically. If
to purchase or sell manufactured quantity contract may be whether or not the contract meets
manufactured goods net settled if it there is net the definition of a
goods contains settlement. derivative, it may
symmetrical qualify for the
default normal purchases
provisions and normal sales
and/or the or contracts not
manufactured traded on an
goods are exchange scope
readily exceptions. See
convertible into DH 3.2.4 and
cash. DH 3.2.7.
Nonexchange- Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes It depends on It depends on It depends. If the
traded forward the commodity quantity or face whether or not whether or not contract meets the
contract to amount the contracted there is net definition of a
purchase or sell a amount of the settlement. derivative, it may
commodity commodity is qualify for the
readily normal purchases
convertible to and normal sales
cash. scope exception.
See DH 3.2.4.
2-16
Definition of a derivative
Does the
contract Is the contract
Notional or Smaller meet the within the
payment initial net Net definition of scope of ASC
Contract Underlying? provision? investment? settlement? a derivative? 815?
Forward contract Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes It depends on It depends on Yes, provided it
to return the security number of whether or not whether or not meets the
securities under a securities or a the security can there is net definition of a
repurchase specified be net settled settlement. derivative and
agreement principal or through explicit does not qualify
accounted for as a face amount contract terms for the regular-
sale or is readily way security-trade
convertible to scope exception.
cash. See DH 3.2.3.
Forward contract No. The contract is No No No No No. In addition, if
to return to return a pledged the contract
securities under a asset. contains an
repurchase embedded
agreement derivative that is
accounted for as a an impediment to
secured sale accounting
borrowing (e.g., call option
allowing
transferor to
repurchase
transferred
assets), that
would also qualify
for a scope
exception. See DH
3.2.8.
Interest rate swap Yes, an interest Yes, a specified Yes Yes, periodic Yes Yes
rate amount on payments
which the
exchanged
interest rates
are based
Currency swap Yes, an exchange Yes, a specified Yes Yes Yes Yes
rate currency
amount
Forward starting Yes, the value of Yes, the Yes Yes. Settlement Yes Yes
swap or swaption the swap notional requires the
amount of the delivery of a
swap derivative (a
swap contract).
Stock-purchase Yes, the price of Yes, a specified Yes It depends on It depends on For the holder, it
warrant stock number of whether the whether or not is within the
shares warrant there is net scope of ASC 815
contains a net settlement. if it meets the
share or net definition of a
cash settlement derivative.
provision, can For the issuer,
be net settled even if it meets
through a the definition of a
market derivative, it may
mechanism or qualify for the
the underlying scope exception
shares are for certain
readily contracts
convertible to involving an
cash. entity’s own
equity.
See DH 3.3.
2-17
Definition of a derivative
Does the
contract Is the contract
Notional or Smaller meet the within the
payment initial net Net definition of scope of ASC
Contract Underlying? provision? investment? settlement? a derivative? 815?
Mortgage loan Yes, an interest Yes, principal Yes Yes, if the loan Yes For the lender,
commitment rate amount of the commitment yes, if the
loan can readily be originated loan
commitment settled net will be classified
through terms as held for sale.
outside of the See DH 3.2.11.
contract or is
readily
convertible into For the borrower,
cash no. See DH 3.2.11.
Traditional Yes, the Yes, contract Yes Yes Yes No. See DH 3.2.5
property/ occurrence of an value (i.e., the for discussion of
casualty identifiable insured the insurance
insurance insurable event amount) contracts scope
contract exception.
Traditional life Yes, the mortality Yes, contract Yes Yes Yes No. See DH 3.2.5
insurance of the insured value (i.e., the for discussion of
death benefit) the insurance
contracts scope
exception.
Financial Yes, failure by the Yes Yes Yes Yes It depends. See
guarantee debtor to make DH 3.2.6 for
contract — payment discussion of the
payment occurs if financial
a specific debtor guarantee scope
fails to pay the exception.
guaranteed party
Financial Yes, the decrease Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes. This type of
guarantee in specified contract does not
contract — debtor’s qualify for the
payment occurs if creditworthiness financial
there is a change guarantee scope
in another exception.
underlying such See DH 3.2.6.
as a decrease in a
specified debtor’s
creditworthiness
Credit-indexed Yes, the credit Yes, a specified Yes Yes, for the Yes Yes
contract — index or credit payment change in fair
payment occurs if rating amount that value
a credit index (or may (1) vary,
the depending on
creditworthiness the degree of
of a specified change or (2)
debtor) varies in a be fixed
specified way
Royalty Yes, the volume of Yes. Payment is Yes. Payment Yes Yes Not typically. A
agreement sales based on a occurs if sales royalty agreement
percentage of are made. usually qualifies
sales/output. for the
nonexchange
traded contract
scope exception.
See DH 3.2.7.3.
Interest rate cap Yes, an interest Yes, a specified Yes Yes Yes Yes
rate amount
Interest rate floor Yes, an interest Yes, a specified Yes Yes Yes Yes
rate amount
2-18
Definition of a derivative
Does the
contract Is the contract
Notional or Smaller meet the within the
payment initial net Net definition of scope of ASC
Contract Underlying? provision? investment? settlement? a derivative? 815?
Interest rate Yes, an interest Yes, a specified Yes Yes Yes Yes
collar rate amount
Synthetic Yes, the formula Yes, a specified Yes Yes Yes Yes
guaranteed- by which interest amount
investment is calculated
contracts
Nonexchange Yes, a climatic or Yes, a specified Yes. Payment Yes. Payment is Yes No. Climatic and
traded contract, geologic variable amount occurs if a made in cash. geologic variables
payment occurs if or other physical weather qualify for the
a weather attribute variable occurs. nonexchange
variable occurs traded contract
scope exception.
See DH 3.2.7.1.
2-19
Chapter 3:
Scope exceptions
Scope exceptions
Contracts that meet the definition of a derivative that do not qualify for a scope exception should be
recognized and subsequently measured on the balance sheet at fair value in accordance with ASC 820,
Fair Value Measurement. If a derivative is not designated as a hedge, changes in its fair value are
recorded in current earnings. The accounting treatment of a derivative designated as a hedge depends
on the type of hedging relationship.
Guidance specific to financial, nonfinancial, and foreign currency hedges are addressed in DH 6, DH 7,
and DH 8, respectively.
Figure DH 3-1
ASC 815 scope exceptions
Normal purchases and normal sales ASC 815-10-15-22 to ASC 815- DH 3.2.4
10-15-51 UP 3.3
Certain contracts that are not traded ASC 815-10-15-59 to ASC 815- DH 3.2.7
on an exchange 10-15-62 UP 3.3
3-2
Scope exceptions
The criteria for a contract to meet the definition of a derivative are the same for both parties to an
agreement. However, the scope exceptions are unique to each party. Therefore, while all of the parties
to an agreement should come to the same conclusion as to whether a contract meets the definition of a
derivative, they may arrive at different conclusions as to whether a scope exception under ASC 815
applies. For example, if the seller sold commodities that it produced in the normal course of business
and the buyer purchased them for trading purposes, a commodity contract may meet the normal
purchases and normal sales criteria for the seller, but not the buyer.
Reporting entities should revisit the use of a scope exception at each reporting period. The terms of the
contract or customary practices may change, thereby affecting the determination of whether a contract
meets a particular scope exception.
Figure DH 3-2 provides guidance for accounting for contracts that move in or out of the scope of ASC
815.
3-3
Scope exceptions
Figure DH 3-2
Revisiting scope exceptions
A contract is initially accounted for as The contract is initially recorded at fair value, with changes
a derivative, but subsequently meets in fair value recorded in earnings.
one of the scope exceptions in
When the contract qualifies for a scope exception, the fair
ASC 815
value at that date remains as an asset or liability and is
recognized in income when the items underlying the
contract are recognized in income.
The contract is subsequently accounted for in accordance
with applicable GAAP.
A contract that meets the definition of The contract is initially accounted for in accordance with
a derivative initially qualifies for a applicable GAAP.
scope exception in ASC 815. Upon
Once the contract no longer meets a scope exception, it is
reassessment, the contract no longer
recorded at fair value with changes in fair value recorded in
qualifies for a scope exception.
earnings (unless it is designated in a hedging relationship).
Regular-way security trades are contracts that provide for delivery of a security within the period of
time (after the trade date) generally established by regulations or conventions in the marketplace or
exchange in which the transaction is executed. These trades often are recorded as completed
purchases or sales of securities on the trade date.
Regular-way security trades are exempted from being accounted for as derivatives. The scope
exception is not elective. It applies to trades in securities that (1) require the delivery of securities that
are readily convertible to cash (this may be through a market mechanism outside of the contract) and
(2) customarily do not settle on the trade date but shortly thereafter, but still within a normal
settlement period.
Settlement periods vary depending on the instrument. A US government security trade typically settles
in one day and an equity security trade on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) settles within two
days, while a secondary market trade of an equity security in foreign markets settles in three to twenty
days. Contracts containing provisions that allow for settlement extending beyond the minimum period
for the applicable market would be considered derivatives that do not qualify for this scope exception.
This scope exception would also apply to forward purchases and sales of when-issued and other
securities that do not yet exist (to-be-announced or TBA securities) if a reporting entity is required to,
or has a continuing policy of, accounting for those contracts on a trade-date basis rather than a
settlement date basis (because it is required by other relevant GAAP, like an AICPA Industry
Accounting and Audit Guide). Thus, the reporting entity recognizes the acquisition or disposition of
3-4
Scope exceptions
the securities at the inception of the contract on a gross basis, with an offsetting payable for the
settlement amount.
The scope exception for forward purchases and sales is available to reporting entities that use
settlement-date accounting as long as the three requirements have been satisfied. Even though an
outright exception may not be available to a reporting entity because it is not required to account for
the contract on a trade-date basis, or does not have a policy of trade-date accounting, the contract may
still be eligible for this scope exception, provided that all of the following conditions are met: (1) there
is no other way to purchase or sell that security, (2) delivery of that security and settlement will occur
within the shortest period possible for that type of security, and (3) it is probable at inception and
throughout the term of the individual contract that the contract will not settle net and will result in
physical delivery of a security when it is issued. The reporting entity should document the basis for
concluding that it is probable that the contract will not settle net and will result in physical delivery.
A TBA security may be available under multiple settlement periods. As illustrated in Example 9
beginning in ASC 815-10-55-118, the regular-way security trade exception may be applied only to
forward contracts for the TBA security that requires delivery in the shortest period permitted for that
type of security. For example, if a TBA security provides for a choice of settlement dates in November,
December, and January, only the security that settles in November is eligible for the regular-way
security exception.
Net settlement
Net settling contracts that were previously considered eligible for this scope exception would call into
question application of the scope exception to other similar contracts.
Normal purchases and normal sales contracts provide for the purchase or sale of something other than
a financial instrument or derivative instrument that will be delivered in quantities expected to be used
or sold by the reporting entity over a reasonable period in the normal course of business. ASC 815
includes an elective scope exception for such contracts because they are viewed as similar to binding
purchase orders or other similar contracts to which the guidance in ASC 815 was not intended to
apply.
To designate one or more contracts as normal purchases or normal sales, the reporting entity should
evaluate the contracts within the context of its business and operational requirements. In addition,
each contract should be further evaluated to ensure that it meets the technical requirements for
designation under the scope exception. ASC 815-10-15-25 and ASC 815-10-15-26 summarize the key
elements needed to qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception, and discuss
the types of contracts that may have unique considerations. Figure DH 3-3 highlights these
requirements.
3-5
Scope exceptions
Figure DH 3-3
Requirements for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception
Normal terms □ The contract involves quantities that are expected to be used or sold by
(DH 3.2.4.1) the reporting entity in the normal course of business.
Clearly and closely □ Contract pricing is clearly and closely related to the asset being
related underlying purchased or sold.
(DH 3.2.4.2)
□ The criteria for clearly and closely related for the normal purchases
and normal sales scope exception are different than the clearly and
closely related criteria in an embedded derivative analysis (discussed in
DH 4).
Probable physical □ It is probable that the contract will gross physically settle throughout
settlement the term of the contract (no net cash settlement).
(DH 3.2.4.3)
□ Changes in counterparty credit should be considered in the ongoing
evaluation of whether gross physical delivery is probable.
□ Net settlement of a contract will result in loss of application of the
exception for that contract; it will also call into question whether other
similar contracts still qualify.
Type of contract □ The contract must be a forward contract without volumetric optionality
or a power purchase or sale agreement that meets certain criteria
All of the relevant criteria should be met to qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope
exception. Each is further discussed in the following sections.
To qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception, management should evaluate
the reasonableness of the contract quantities and terms in relation to the reporting entity’s underlying
business requirements. This evaluation requires judgment and a two-step conclusion that (1) the
reporting entity intends to take physical delivery and (2) the quantity delivered will be used in its
normal business activities.
3-6
Scope exceptions
ASC 815 provides a series of relevant factors that should be considered when making these
determinations.
ASC 815-10-15-28
In making those judgments, an entity should consider all relevant factors, including all of the
following:
a. The quantities provided under the contract and the entity’s need for the related assets
b. The locations to which delivery of the items will be made
c. The period of time between entering into the contract and delivery
d. The entity’s prior practices with regard to such contracts.
In addition to these factors, ASC 815-10-15-29 provides further examples of evidence that may assist in
identifying contracts that qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception,
including: past trends, expected future demand, other contracts for delivery of similar items, the
entity’s practice for acquiring and storing the related commodities, and operating locations.
To designate a contract under the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception, the reporting
entity should be able to assert that it is buying or selling goods as part of its normal business activities.
In making this assessment, a reporting entity should consider all of its sources of supply of the item
provided by the contract in relation to its needs for that item.
Another criterion in the evaluation of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception is that
the pricing in the contract must be indexed to an underlying that is clearly and closely related to the
asset that is being purchased or sold.
The guidance on clearly and closely related for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception
is included in ASC 815-10-15-30 through ASC 815-10-15-34 and requires both qualitative and
quantitative considerations. ASC 815-10-15-32 states that a pricing adjustment would not be clearly
and closely related to the asset being sold in certain specified circumstances.
ASC 815-10-15-32
The underlying in a price adjustment incorporated into a contract that otherwise satisfies the
requirements for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception shall be considered to be not
clearly and closely related to the asset being sold or purchased in any of the following circumstances:
a. The underlying is extraneous (that is, irrelevant and not pertinent) to both the changes in the cost
and the changes in the fair value of the asset being sold or purchased, including being extraneous
to an ingredient or direct factor in the customary or specific production of that asset.
b. If the underlying is not extraneous as discussed in (a), the magnitude and direction of the impact
of the price adjustment are not consistent with the relevancy of the underlying. That is, the
magnitude of the price adjustment based on the underlying is significantly disproportionate to the
impact of the underlying on the fair value or cost of the asset being purchased or sold (or of an
ingredient or direct factor, as appropriate).
3-7
Scope exceptions
c. The underlying is a currency exchange rate involving a foreign currency that meets none of the
criteria in paragraph 815-15-15-10(b) for that reporting entity.
ASC 815-10-15-33 provides further guidance for evaluating contracts in which the price adjustment
focuses on changes in the fair value of the asset being purchased or sold. In accordance with this
guidance, a price adjustment should be expected, at contract inception, to impact the price in a
manner comparable to the outcome that would be obtained if, at each delivery date, the parties were to
reprice under then-existing conditions. This guidance can be applied to the cost or fair value of the
asset being sold or purchased.
In addition to these pricing factors, ASC 815-15-15-10(b) states that the purchase or sale contract must
be denominated in a currency that is:
□ the currency used by a substantial party to the contract as if it were the functional currency
because the primary economic environment in which the party operates is highly inflationary.
A contract in any other currency is a compound derivative comprising (1) a functional currency
forward purchase of the commodity and (2) an embedded foreign currency swap. Since a compound
derivative cannot be separated into its components, the entire contract must be accounted for as a
single derivative under ASC 815 and is not eligible for the normal purchases and normal sales scope
exception.
Question DH 3-1 discusses the interpretation of clearly and closely related for embedded derivatives
and normal purchases and sales scope exception.
Question DH 3-1
How does the interpretation of clearly and closely related for embedded derivatives relate to the clearly
and closely related criterion applied in the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception?
PwC response
ASC 815-10-15-30 through ASC 815-10-15-34 establish a qualitative and quantitative approach for
assessing whether a pricing feature is clearly and closely related in application of the normal purchases
and normal sales scope exception. However, it also clarifies that the phrase conveys a different
meaning than in the embedded derivative analysis.
3-8
Scope exceptions
25-16 through 25-51 with respect to the relationship between an embedded derivative and the host
contract in which it is embedded.
In general, the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception establishes a more structured
approach compared to the analysis performed in the embedded derivative evaluation. Specifically, the
clearly and closely related analysis for purposes of applying the normal purchases and normal sales
scope exception requires a qualitative and quantitative analysis of pricing features within the contract.
To apply the exception, at contract inception the price adjustment should be expected to impact the
price in a manner comparable to the outcome that would be obtained if, at each delivery date, the
parties were to reprice the contract under then-existing conditions. In contrast, the analysis of
potential embedded derivatives (discussed in DH 4) does not require explicit comparison of the
pricing but instead focuses on the overall economic risks and characteristics of the potential embedded
derivative and the host.
Another criterion for application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception is that
physical delivery should be probable at inception and throughout the term of the contract. As a result,
this criterion should be evaluated at the time the contract is initially designated as a normal purchase
or normal sale as well as on an ongoing basis throughout the life of the contract. This section discusses
considerations in assessing physical settlement and the impact if net settlement occurs (referred to as
tainting).
Contract characteristics
Some contracts require physical delivery by their contract terms (i.e., those contracts meet the net
settlement criterion because they require delivery of an asset that is readily convertible to cash).
However, other contracts permit physical or financial settlement. Therefore, to qualify for the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception, ASC 815-10-15-35 has specific requirements for contracts
that meet the characteristic of net settlement because of the terms of the contract itself or because
there is a market mechanism to facilitate net settlement.
Specific consideration of physical delivery is required for these contracts because the parties to the
contract have alternative options for cash settlement (whether through the contract itself or through
the ability to be relieved of the contract rights and obligations through a market transaction).
See Subsequent accounting for discussion of the accounting implications if there is a change in the
assessment of whether a contract will be physically settled.
Question DH 3-2 discusses whether the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception is
available to commodity contracts that require periodic cash settlements of gains and losses.
3-9
Scope exceptions
Question DH 3-2
Is the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception available to commodity contracts that
require periodic cash settlements of gains and losses?
PwC response
No. ASC 815-10-15-36 states that the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception applies to
contracts that result in gross delivery of the commodity under the contract, but it should not be
applied to contracts that require periodic cash settlements of gains and losses. Futures contracts
traded on an exchange are examples of contracts that are derivatives that may result in physical
delivery of a commodity (i.e., the contract may be physically settled at termination). However, the
exchange typically requires daily cash settlements relative to the net gain or loss on the contract. Such
periodic settlements with the futures exchange preclude the contract from qualifying for the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception.
Question DH 3-3 discusses whether take-or-pay contracts qualify for the normal purchases and
normal sales scope exception.
Question DH 3-3
Can take-or-pay contracts qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception?
PwC response
Possibly. Each contract must be evaluated based on its own terms. A take-or-pay contract is one in
which an entity agrees to (1) purchase a commodity or service from another entity, and (2) pay for the
commodity or service even if the entity does not take delivery of the commodity or use the service.
When a take-or-pay contract meets the definition of a derivative, it may qualify for the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception if all of the criteria are met. For example, assume that a
contract provides for the delivery of a commodity in an amount that is expected to be used in the
normal course of business, and it is probable that the contract at inception and throughout its term
will physically settle (not net settle). To qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope
exception, the purchaser of the commodity must assert that it will both (1) accept the physical delivery
of the commodity and (2) use that commodity in the normal course of business.
Subsequent accounting
On an ongoing basis, a reporting entity should monitor whether it continues to expect contracts
designated under the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception to result in physical
delivery. ASC 815-10-15-41 discusses the impact of net settlement on the normal purchases and
normal sales designation.
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Scope exceptions
This section discusses factors to consider in monitoring the probability of physical delivery, the timing
of recognition if net settlement is expected to occur, and the subsequent accounting if there is a
tainting event.
One way to support the continued expectation that the transaction will result in physical delivery is to
perform back testing of contracts that settled during the period that were designated under the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception. Another approach is to review the forecast of production,
or physical purchases and sales, and compare the forecast to the current portfolio of contracts that are
designated under the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception. If a reporting entity has
multiple contracts for which the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception has been elected,
it should ensure that physical delivery of the volumes for all of those contracts is probable.
Factors that may change the assessment that a contract will result in physical delivery include:
The ongoing evaluation of whether physical delivery is probable should incorporate information about
any changes to the reporting entity’s business, net settlement of any contracts, changes in market
conditions, and other relevant factors.
Counterparty creditworthiness
Because gross physical delivery is required for the normal purchases and normal sales scope
exception, at inception and throughout the term of the contract, a reporting entity should assess the
creditworthiness of its counterparty. Poor counterparty credit quality at the inception of the
arrangement, or subsequent deterioration of the counterparty’s credit quality (which may result from
issues relating to the counterparty itself and/or broad economic factors) may call into question
whether it is probable that the counterparty will fulfill its performance obligations under the contract
(i.e., make physical delivery throughout the contract and upon its maturity). As a result, a reporting
entity should monitor and consider the impact of the counterparty’s credit risk, as well as its own
credit, in assessing whether physical delivery is probable.
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Scope exceptions
Once a reporting entity elects the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception, it is irrevocable.
However, if a reporting entity determines that it is no longer probable that a contract will result in
physical delivery, it may need to discontinue its application. Whether and when a reporting entity
should discontinue application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception partially
depends on the form of net settlement applicable to the contract.
Figure DH 3-4 shows the impact of the form of net settlement on the requirement or ability to
discontinue the application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception.
Figure DH 3-4
Impact of the form of net settlement on the requirement or ability to discontinue the application of the
normal purchases and normal sales scope exception
Net settlement under contract terms The normal purchases and normal sales scope exception
(ASC 815-10-15-99a) will cease to apply when physical delivery is no longer
probable; this could occur prior to the actual net
Net settlement through a market settlement.
mechanism (ASC 815-10-15-99b)
Net settlement by delivery of asset The normal purchases and normal sales scope exception
that is readily convertible to cash will continue to apply until the contract is financially
(ASC 815-10-15-99c) settled, even if management intends or otherwise knows
that physical delivery is no longer probable.
If a reporting entity determines it is no longer probable that a contract will result in physical delivery
and the contract allows for net settlement via the contract or through a market mechanism, the
reporting entity should immediately cease to apply the normal purchases and normal sales scope
exception to the contract. Once it is no longer able to make this assertion, the contract no longer meets
the criteria for the exception. Accordingly, the contract would be recorded at fair value in the financial
statements in the period in which it no longer meets the probability requirement, with an immediate
impact to earnings. In addition, subsequent changes in fair value of the derivative would also be
recognized in earnings.
If, however, the contract meets the net settlement criterion of the definition of a derivative because it
requires delivery of an asset that is readily convertible to cash, then the contract will not be accounted
for as a derivative unless a financial settlement occurs. This type of contract requires gross physical
delivery under the contract terms; therefore, physical delivery is presumed in assessing whether the
normal purchases and normal sales scope exception applies. Because the normal purchases and
normal sales scope exception is irrevocable, a reporting entity cannot change the designation of a
contract even if it determines that physical delivery is no longer probable. However, if such a contract
is financially settled, it is immediately tainted and should be recorded at fair value through earnings.
If a reporting entity determines that one contract no longer qualifies for the normal purchases and
normal sales scope exception, this may call into question its ability to assert probable physical delivery
for other similar contracts or contracts within a group. It may also call into question the entity’s initial
election of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception.
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Scope exceptions
The normal purchases and normal sales scope exception applies solely to contracts that result in gross
physical delivery of nonfinancial items. Therefore, net settlement of a particular contract would
preclude application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception to that contract (i.e.,
the contract should be recorded at fair value in earnings at the time the exception is no longer
applicable. In addition, it may “taint” the ability to apply the normal purchases and normal sales scope
exception to other similar contracts and to the business in its entirety.
To assess whether net settlement of a contract taints other similar contracts, a reporting entity should
evaluate the reasons that led to the net settlement. Net settlement or cancellation of a contract as a
result of events that are reasonably unexpected at inception of the contract and outside the reporting
entity’s control (e.g., a force majeure event) likely would not taint other contracts unless they are
similarly impacted by the same event. In contrast, net settlement as a result of a discretionary decision
to net settle would result in tainting. For example, if a reporting entity decides to net settle a contract
to take advantage of a favorable price change, application of the normal purchases and normal sales
scope exception to other similar contracts would no longer be appropriate.
Reporting entities electing the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception should maintain
appropriate documentation to distinguish those contracts designated as normal purchases and normal
sales. In accordance with ASC 815-10-15-38, failure to comply with the documentation requirements
precludes application of the exception, even if the contract would otherwise qualify. ASC 815-10-15-37
specifies the minimum documentation requirements for a contract designated as a normal purchase or
normal sale.
ASC 815-10-15-37
For contracts that qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales exception under any provision of
paragraphs 815-10-15-22 through 15-51, the entity shall document the designation of the contract as a
normal purchase or normal sale, including either of the following:
a. For contracts that qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales exception under paragraph
815-10-15-41 or 815-10-15-42 through 15-44, the entity shall document the basis for concluding
that it is probable that the contract will not settle net and will result in physical delivery.
b. For contracts that qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales exception under paragraphs
815-10-15-45 through 15-51, the entity shall document the basis for concluding that the agreement
meets the criteria in that paragraph, including the basis for concluding that the agreement is a
capacity contract.
Designation method
ASC 815-10-15-38 specifies that the documentation required to designate a contract as normal
purchases and normal sales can be applied to individual contracts or to groups of contracts.
Designation of individual contracts may provide more flexibility; however, it also increases the
documentation requirements.
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Scope exceptions
Potential bases for global designation include chronology, time of year, and trading point. However,
the global designation policy should be based on objectively-determinable criteria with sufficient
specificity such that there is no ambiguity in the classification of a particular contract. A reporting
entity that applies a global methodology of electing contracts for the normal purchases and normal
sales scope exception should do so consistently for similar contracts.
The rationale a reporting entity uses in its grouping of contracts for purposes of designating the
normal purchases and normal sales scope exception is important because it could impact decisions
about tainting.
Timing of election
Although application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception is elective, once made,
the election is irrevocable.
In accordance with ASC 815-10-15-23, the assessment of whether a contract qualifies for the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception should be performed only at the inception of the contract;
however, a reporting entity may designate and document the exception at inception or a later date.
Although ASC 815 does not specify documentation requirements, we believe the documentation must
be completed contemporaneously with application of the exception.
Failure to complete the documentation requirements would preclude application of the scope
exception, even if the contract would otherwise qualify. If a reporting entity designates a contract
subsequent to inception, the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception will apply as of the
date of designation.
Question DH 3-4 discusses what the accounting is for the carrying value of a contract that is
designated under the normal purchases and normal sales scope exceptions on a date subsequent to
inception.
Question DH 3-4
What is the accounting for the carrying value of a contract that is designated under the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception on a date subsequent to inception?
PwC response
If a contract qualifies as a derivative and is designated as a normal purchase or normal sale subsequent
to the contract execution date, the reporting entity will have an asset or liability on its balance sheet
equal to the fair value of the contract on the date the election is made. After designation as a normal
purchase or normal sale, the contract will no longer be recorded at fair value. The pre-existing fair
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Scope exceptions
value, however, will remain as an asset or liability and should be recognized in income at the same
time as the items underlying the contract. The carrying value of the contract is subject to impairment
analysis to the extent it is recorded as an asset upon execution.
The accounting for the carrying value of the contract subsequent to election of the scope exception is
similar to the subsequent accounting for the fair value of nonderivative contract assets recorded as
part of a business combination.
Question DH 3-5 discusses whether the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception can be
elected for a contract that is not a derivative at inception but could be one in the future.
Question DH 3-5
Can the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception be elected for a contract that is not a
derivative at inception but could potentially become one in the future (conditional designation)?
PwC response
Yes. Provided the normal purchases and normal sales criteria are met, a contract could be designated
under the exception prior to the time it becomes a derivative.
From a practical perspective, often the reporting entity will not know the exact date a contract meets
the definition of a derivative. As a result, the contract could meet the definition of a derivative prior to
a contemporaneous election of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception. A conditional
designation avoids this issue and allows for continued accounting for the contract as an executory
contract. If a reporting entity conditionally designates one or more contracts, it should maintain
appropriate documentation to distinguish those contracts designated as normal purchases and normal
sales. In addition, all documentation requirements to qualify for the election should be met. Contracts
that are conditionally designated under this scope exception should not be net settled. Net settlement
of a conditionally-designated contract would result in the specific contract no longer qualifying for the
normal purchases and normal sales scope exception and could result in tainting of other designated
contracts that are considered similar.
Question DH 3-6 discusses whether a component of a contract that does not meet the definition of a
derivative in its entirety can qualify for the normal purchases and sales scope exception.
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Scope exceptions
Question DH 3-6
Can a component of a contract that does not meet the definition of a derivative in its entirety qualify
for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception?
PwC response
Yes. A contract that is not a derivative in its entirety should be assessed to determine if it includes
certain components that require separation and accounting as derivatives. An embedded derivative
should be separated from the host contract and accounted for as a derivative only if all of the criteria in
ASC 815-15-25-1 are met. One of these requirements is that a separate instrument with the same terms
as the embedded derivative would meet the requirements to be accounted for as a derivative. However,
a reporting entity may elect to apply the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception to an
embedded derivative if all of the criteria for election are met. The embedded derivative would not be
subject to the accounting requirements of ASC 815 if the reporting entity elects the normal purchases
and normal sales scope exception. See ASC 815-15-55-15 to ASC 815-15-55-22 for an example of the
application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception to an embedded derivative that
would otherwise require separation from the host contract.
3.2.4.5 Contracts that may qualify for normal purchases and normal sales
ASC 815-10-15-40 through ASC 815-10-15-51 describe the types of contracts that may qualify for the
normal purchases and normal scope exception, as summarized in Figure DH 3-5.
Figure DH 3-5
Applicability of normal purchases and normal sales scope exception to certain types of contracts
Freestanding option □ Not eligible except for the limited exception for power contracts
contracts as defined in ASC 815-10-15-45
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Scope exceptions
Forward contracts with □ Generally, contracts with volumetric optionality are not eligible
optionality features for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception,
except for the limited exception for power contracts, as defined in
ASC 815-10-15-45
□ Contracts with a cap or floor on the price, but in which delivery of
the originally-contracted quantity is always required may be
eligible
□ Contracts with other types of optionality (e.g., market price) may
be eligible for normal purchases and normal sales if the criteria
in ASC 815-10-15-42 through ASC 815-10-15-43 are met
□ Cannot separate a combined contract into the forward
component and the option component and then assert that the
forward component is eligible for normal purchases and normal
sales
□ If volumetric option features within a forward contract have
expired or been completely and irrevocably exercised (even if
delivery has not yet occurred), there is no longer any uncertainty
as to the quantity to be delivered, and the forward contract would
be eligible for normal purchases and normal sales, provided that
the other conditions are met, including full physical delivery of
the exercised option quantity
Power purchase or sale □ Due to unique characteristics in the electric power industry, ASC
agreements 815 provides a specific scope exception within the normal
purchases and normal sales scope exception for certain qualifying
power contracts (for both the buyer and the seller). Guidance on
application of the power contract exception is provided in ASC
815-10-15-45 through ASC 815-10-15-51 as well as ASC 815-10-
55-31
The considerations for applying the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception to each of
these types of contracts are discussed in UP 3.3.1.5.
This scope exception applies to certain insurance contracts. Generally, insurance contracts that are
within the scope of ASC 944, Financial Services—Insurance, would qualify. A contract is eligible for
this scope exception for both the issuer and the holder only if the holder is compensated as a result of
an identifiable insurable event (e.g., damage to insured property). ASC 815-10-15-52 provides
guidance for assessing whether an insurance contract meets this scope exception.
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Scope exceptions
ASC 815-10-15-52
A contract is not subject to the requirements of this Subtopic if it entitles the holder to be compensated
only if, as a result of an identifiable insurable event (other than a change in price), the holder incurs a
liability or there is an adverse change in the value of a specific asset or liability for which the holder is
at risk. Only those contracts for which payment of a claim is triggered only by a bona fide insurable
exposure (that is, contracts comprising either solely insurance or both an insurance component and a
derivative instrument) may qualify for this scope exception. To qualify, the contract must provide for a
legitimate transfer of risk, not simply constitute a deposit or form of self-insurance.
Traditional life insurance and traditional property and casualty contracts meet this scope exception.
A property and casualty contract that compensates the holder as a result of both an identifiable
insurable event and changes in a variable is in its entirety exempt from the requirements of ASC 815,
provided that all of the following conditions are met:
□ Benefits or claims are paid only if an identifiable insurable event occurs (e.g., theft or fire)
□ The amount of the payment is limited to the amount of the policyholder’s incurred insured loss
□ The contract does not involve essentially assured amounts of cash flows (regardless of the timing
of those cash flows) based on insurable events highly probable of occurrence because the insured
would nearly always receive the benefits (or suffer the detriment) of changes in the variable
□ The minimum payment cash flows are indexed to or altered by changes in a variable
□ The minimum payment amounts are expected to be paid either each policy year or on another
predictable basis
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Scope exceptions
Financial guarantee contracts are not subject to ASC 815 if they meet all of the conditions in
ASC 815-10-15-58.
A reporting entity should consider the following when assessing whether a financial guarantee
contract qualifies for this scope exception:
□ The contract must specify that the guaranteed party will be entitled to compensation as a result of
an identifiable insurable event, i.e., it is entitled to be compensated for failure to pay on specific
assets for which the holder is at risk, rather than as a result of a credit event. If the terms of the
contract require payment to the guaranteed party, irrespective of whether the guaranteed party is
exposed to a risk of non-payment on the reference asset, the contract will not qualify.
□ A guaranteed party must demand payment from the debtor prior to collecting any payment from
the guarantor.
□ The guarantor must either receive the rights to any payments subsequently advanced to the
guaranteed party or delivery of the defaulted receivable. A contract that promises to pay the
guaranteed party the difference between the post-credit-event fair value and the book value would
not qualify.
□ Financial guarantee contracts that guarantee performance under derivatives (e.g., as a result of a
decrease in a specified debtor’s creditworthiness) do not qualify for this scope exception.
Certain non-exchange-traded contracts are not subject to the requirements of ASC 815 if the
underlying on which settlement of the contract is based is any of the following:
□ The price or value of a nonfinancial asset that is not readily convertible to cash
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Scope exceptions
□ The price or value of a nonfinancial liability if the liability does not require delivery of an asset that
is readily convertible to cash
□ Specified volumes of sales or service revenues of one of the parties to the contract
This scope exception applies to non-exchange-traded contracts with an underlying based on a climatic,
geological, or other physical variable.
Physical variables include temperature, wind speed, or other weather-related factors. For example, a
power contract with pricing based on cooling-degree days would meet the exception. Market-related
volumes of a commodity (e.g., the total volume on NYMEX) would not qualify because the volume on
an exchange or other market is not a physical variable.
Figure DH 3-6 includes considerations on how to distinguish between physical and financial variables.
See additional discussion beginning in ASC 815-10-55-135.
Figure DH 3-6
Distinguishing between physical and financial variables
Physical and financial variable Contract contains two underlyings: physical variable
(occurrence of at least one hurricane) and financial
Contract specifies that the issuer will pay
variable (aggregate property damage exceeding a
the holder $10 million if aggregate
specified dollar limit).
property damage from all hurricanes in
Florida exceeds $50 million during 20X7. Because of the presence of the financial variable as an
underlying, the derivative does not qualify for the scope
exception in ASC 815-10-15-59(a).
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Scope exceptions
Weather contracts
The scope exception for non-exchange-traded contracts with an underlying based on a climatic or
geological variable includes weather-related contracts with pricing based on the number of cooling-
degree days. Consistent with this exception, derivative accounting is only applicable to weather-related
contracts traded on an exchange.
ASC 815-45 provides specific nonderivative guidance on accounting for non-exchange-traded weather
derivatives. The guidance includes two different accounting models, depending on the reporting
entity’s purpose for executing the contracts. The models are summarized in Figure DH 3-7.
Figure DH 3-7
Weather derivative contract accounting models
Nontrading Forward Typically no day one accounting Apply the intrinsic value method
activity contract (ASC 815-45-35-1)
Purchased Recognize an asset measured Use the intrinsic value method at each
option initially at the amount of measurement date
premium paid
Amortize the option premium to
(ASC 815-45-30-1)
expense in a rational and systematic
manner (ASC 815-45-35-4)
Trading or Forwards Account for all contracts as Recognize all subsequent changes in
speculative and options assets or liabilities at fair value fair value in earnings
activity (ASC 815-45-30-4) (ASC 815-45-35-7)
As illustrated in Figure DH 3-7, the accounting model applied largely depends on whether a non-
exchange-traded weather derivative was executed as part of a reporting entity’s trading activities.
ASC 815-45-55-1 through ASC 815-45-55-6 provides guidance on identifying trading activities relating
to weather derivatives, including fundamental and secondary indicators, and the entity’s intent for
entering into a weather derivative contract.
In general, nontrading purchased weather derivatives are accounted for using the intrinsic value
method described in ASC 815-45-35-2. ASC 815-45-55-7 through ASC 815-45-55-11 provide
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Scope exceptions
application examples, including sample calculations and accounting assuming that the contracts were
executed as part of a reporting entity’s nontrading operations. In addition, reporting entities should
recognize subsequent changes in the fair value of nontrading written option contracts instead of
following the intrinsic value method.
This scope exception applies to non-exchange-traded contracts with an underlying based on the price
or value of a nonfinancial asset or nonfinancial liability of one of the parties to the contract if the asset
is not readily convertible to cash.
This scope exception may apply to unique works of art or certain custom manufactured goods. As
markets evolve and new markets develop (e.g., online markets), the reporting entity’s determination
that an asset is not readily convertible to cash may change.
Question DH 3-7 discusses whether a fixed-price purchase option for a property underlying an
operating lease or a capital/finance lease is accounted for as a derivative.
Question DH 3-7
Is a fixed-price purchase option for a property underlying an operating lease or a capital/finance lease
accounted for as a derivative?
PwC response
Generally, no. ASC 815-10-15-59 through ASC 815-10-15-62 state that contracts that are not exchange
traded do not fall within the scope of ASC 815 when the underlying on which the settlement is based is
the price or value of a nonfinancial asset of one of the parties to the contract, provided that the asset is
not readily convertible to cash. In most situations of this kind, the contracts are not exchange traded,
and the property underlying the lease represents a nonfinancial asset that would not be considered
readily convertible to cash; therefore, such contracts are excluded from the scope of ASC 815.
This exception is intended to apply to contracts providing for settlements that are based on the volume
of items sold or services rendered (e.g., royalty agreements or leases stipulating that rental payments
be based on sales volume), not those based on changes in sales or revenues due to changes in market
prices.
This exception may also be extended to net income or EBITDA unless the income measure is due
predominantly to the movement of the fair value of a portfolio of assets. The exception is not intended
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Scope exceptions
to apply to contracts with settlements based on changes that are due principally to changes in market
prices. Accordingly, a contract to pay a counterparty 3% of its net sales of gold would qualify for the
scope exception, but a contract to pay a counterparty 3% of a price increase that raises the market
price of gold to above $1,000 per ounce would not qualify.
Royalties
Royalty agreements can vary significantly and may include any number of variables in the calculation
of the royalty payment. For instance, in the mining industry, royalties may be calculated as a
percentage of the total mineral extraction at a preset dollar rate per extraction unit. In other cases, the
rate that is to be applied to the percentage of the total extraction may be based on actual sales prices
for that mineral, making the royalty a function of the units extracted as well as a variable price. In the
technology industry, a royalty may be calculated as a stated percentage of sales (e.g., a combination of
units sold and the price per unit).
Question DH 3-8 discusses whether royalty payments that vary based on revenues qualify for the
specified volumes of sales or service revenue scope exception.
Question DH 3-8
Do royalty payments that vary based on revenues (that in turn vary because of movements in market
prices and the number of units sold) qualify for the specified volumes of sales or service revenues
scope exception?
PwC response
Yes. We believe that the conditions for this scope exception can be satisfied by royalty agreements that
provide for payments based on changes in either sales or revenues that are due to both changes in the
market price per unit and changes in the number of units. We believe that by including the phrase
“changes in sales or revenues due to changes in market prices,” the FASB did not intend to exclude
royalty agreements with payment based on changes in revenues due to changes in market prices when
those changes are applied to the volume of items sold or services rendered from the ASC 815-10-15-
59(d) scope exception.
The FASB’s intention was to prohibit entities from applying the scope exception to (1) contracts that
have as their sole variable the change in sales or revenues that is due to changes in market prices, and
(2) contracts that have variables based on (a) a change in market prices and (b) a trivial change in the
number of units. Reporting entities should consider the guidance in ASC 815-10-15-60 for contracts
with more than one underlying when evaluating the type of contract described in item (2). The
purpose of this guidance is to prevent entities from circumventing the requirements of ASC 815 merely
by establishing payment terms in their royalty agreements that are based predominantly on market
price with insignificant change in volume.
Many derivative contracts have more than one underlying. A derivative contract might have some
underlyings that qualify for a scope exception while also having other underlyings that do not qualify
(e.g., a structured insurance contract with an interest rate swap and a climatic variable). The guidance
in ASC 815-10-15-60 indicates that in a situation such as this, the holder of the derivative should
evaluate the contract based on its predominant characteristics. That is, if a derivative contract’s value,
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Scope exceptions
when considering the underlyings in combination, is expected to behave in a manner similar to how
the underlyings that do not meet the scope exception would behave, the derivative would not qualify
for the scope exception.
ASC 815-10-15-63 through ASC 815-10-15-64 provide a scope exception for certain instruments that
impede sale accounting. For example, if a call option were to prevent a transfer of receivables from
being accounted for as a sale under ASC 860, Transfers and Servicing, the call option would be
excluded from the scope of ASC 815 and accounted for under ASC 860 as a component of the
financing.
ASC 815-10-15-64 clarifies that a derivative held by a transferor that relates to assets transferred in a
transaction accounted for as a financing under ASC 860, but that does not itself serve as an
impediment to sale accounting, is not subject to ASC 815 if recognizing both the derivative and either
the transferred asset or the liability arising from the transfer would result in counting the same
transaction twice in the transferor’s balance sheet. However, if recognizing both the derivative and
either the transferred asset or the liability arising from the transfer would not result in counting the
same transaction twice in the transferor’s balance sheet, the derivative should be accounted for in
accordance with ASC 815.
The guidance in ASC 815-10-55-41 illustrates the application of this scope exception when the
transferor accounts for the transfer as financing.
ASC 815-10-15-67 addresses a scope exception for investments in life insurance. Under this guidance,
a policyholder’s investment in a life insurance contract (e.g., a corporate-owned life insurance policy)
that is accounted for under ASC 325-30, Investments—Other, Investments in Insurance Contracts, is
not subject to ASC 815. This scope exception is provided to the policyholder and does not affect the
accounting by the issuer of the life insurance contract.
ASC 815-10-15-68 provides a scope exception for certain investment contracts held by defined benefit
pension plans. Contracts that are accounted for under either ASC 960-325-35-1 (plan investments) or
ASC 960-325-35-3 (insurance contracts) are not subject to ASC 815. This scope exception applies only
to the party that accounts for the contract under ASC 960, Plan Accounting—Defined Benefit Pension
Plans.
ASC 815-10-15-69 through ASC 815-10-15-71 address a scope exception for certain loan commitments.
The ASC Master Glossary defines a loan commitment.
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Scope exceptions
Examples of loan commitments include residential mortgage loan commitments, commercial loan
commitments, credit card lines of credit, automobile financing, and subprime lending. Understanding
certain characteristics of loan commitments is necessary to apply this exception appropriately.
Questions that are useful to consider include:
□ Is the loan commitment related to loans that will be held for sale or held for investment?
Whether the commitment is accounted for as a derivative depends on the type of loan that will be
originated under the loan commitment and how the loan will be classified once it is originated.
Figure DH 3-8 summarizes which loan commitments are accounted for as derivatives by the issuer
(the potential lender) under the guidance in ASC 815. For the holder of a commitment to originate a
loan (the potential borrower), that commitment is not subject to the requirements of ASC 815.
Figure DH 3-8
Application of ASC 815 in the context of loan commitments
This scope exception does not affect the accounting for loan commitments to purchase or sell
mortgage loans (or other types of loans) at a future date. Such commitments must be evaluated under
the definition of a derivative to determine whether they should be accounted for in accordance with
ASC 815. If they do, they are not afforded any scope exception.
This scope exception is designed to be narrow and only applies to the simplest separations of interest
payments and principal payments if the instrument is not a derivative in its entirety. The exception is
limited to interest-only strips (IOs) and principal-only strips (POs) that (1) represent a right to receive
specified contractual interest or principal cash flows of a specific debt instrument and (2) do not
incorporate any terms not included in that debt instrument.
For example, the allocation of a portion of the interest and principal cash flows of a debt instrument to
compensate another entity for stripping (i.e., separating the principal and interest cash flows) or
servicing the instrument would meet the exception, as long as the servicing compensation was not
greater than “adequate compensation,” as defined in the ASC Master Glossary. If the allocation of a
portion of the interest or principal cash flows to provide for a guarantee or for servicing is greater than
adequate compensation, the IO/PO would not meet the exception.
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Scope exceptions
Leases
Per ASC 815-10-15-79, leases that are within the scope of ASC 840, Leases (ASC 842 after its effective
date) are not derivatives subject to ASC 815. However, a lease may contain an embedded derivative
feature that requires separate accounting under ASC 815-15-25-1. See a discussion of embedded
derivatives in lease hosts in DH 4.6.3.
A residual value guarantee is a guarantee made to a lessor that the value of an underlying asset
returned to the lessor at the end of a lease will be at least a specified amount. A residual value
guarantee contract meets the definition of a derivative because it:
□ calls for net settlement in that the insured (the lessor) will receive a net payment for any difference
between the residual value of the leased asset and the guaranteed amount.
However, ASC 815-10-15-80 exempts residual value guarantees that are subject to ASC 840 (ASC 842
after its effective date) from the requirements of ASC 815.
As stated in ASC 815-10-15-81, all other residual value guarantees need to be evaluated to determine
whether they (1) are derivatives and (2) qualify for any of the scope exceptions in ASC 815. Certain
residual value guarantee contracts issued by third-party guarantors, such as insurance companies,
may qualify for the financial guarantee contracts scope exception discussed in DH 3.2.6; however,
many may not meet the scope exception if they reference bluebook value or some other valuation not
specific to the asset. If the guarantee obligation is not accounted for as a derivative within the scope of
ASC 815, it is accounted for in accordance with ASC 460, Guarantees, which is discussed in FG 2.
Registration rights allow the holder to require that a reporting entity file a registration statement for
the resale of specified instruments. They may be provided to lenders in the form of a separate
agreement, such as a registration rights agreement, or included as part of an investment agreement,
such as an investment purchase agreement, warrant agreement, debt indenture, or preferred stock
indenture. These arrangements may require the issuer to pay additional interest if a registration
statement is not filed or is no longer effective.
To address this, the FASB provided a scope exception for such arrangements that are instead required
to be separately recognized and measured in accordance with ASC 450-20-25. This scope exception
applies to both the issuer of the arrangement and the counterparty. For further discussion of
registration payment arrangements, see FG 1.7.1.
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Scope exceptions
□ Contracts issued or held by that reporting entity that are both (1) indexed to its own stock and (2)
classified in stockholders’ equity in its balance sheet (FG 5)
□ Contracts issued by an entity that are subject to the share-based payment guidance in ASC 718,
Compensation – Stock Compensation, or ASC 505-50, Equity - Equity-Based Payments to Non-
Employees (DH 3.3.1)
□ Certain financial instruments within the scope of ASC 480, Distinguishing Liabilities From Equity
(DH 3.3.3)
These scope exceptions are available to the issuer of such contracts, provided certain criteria are met,
but do not apply to the counterparty to these contracts. For example, nonemployees who have received
stock options in exchange for goods and services would not be eligible for the share-based payment
scope exception under the exclusion in (b).
Share-based payments
Another scope exception applicable to contracts involving an entity’s own equity is for stock-based
compensation contracts accounted for in accordance with ASC 718 and ASC 505-50. Figure DH 3-9
summarizes guidance relating to assessing whether an instrument is within the scope of these
standards. Once a contract ceases to be subject to ASC 718 or ASC 505-50, it may be within the scope
of ASC 815.
This scope exception does not apply to the counterparty to the contract; for example, equity
instruments (including stock options) that are received by nonemployees as compensation for goods
and services in share-based payment transactions are subject to ASC 815.
Figure DH 3-9
Scope considerations for issuers of stock-based compensation
Instruments within the scope Instrument ceases to be within the scope of ASC 718 if the terms
of ASC 718 are modified when the holder is no longer an employee
(ASC 718-10-35-11), other than those instruments described in
ASC 718-10-35-10.
Subsequent to the modification, recognition and measurement of
the instrument should be determined through reference to other
applicable GAAP (e.g., ASC 480 or ASC 815).
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Scope exceptions
Instruments within the scope Nonemployee awards cease being subject to ASC 718 and
of ASC 505-50 ASC 505-50 after the counterparty’s performance is complete.
After the counterparty’s performance is complete, the instrument
becomes subject to other applicable GAAP (e.g., ASC 480 or
ASC 815).
Although the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-74(b) will no
longer apply once performance is complete, the issuer might still
qualify for the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-74(a) if the
instrument is indexed to the issuer’s own stock and classified in
stockholders’ equity.
Accounting matters relating to instruments within the scope of ASC 505-50 and ASC 718 are discussed
in PwC’s Stock-based compensation guide.
As of the content cutoff date of this guide (January 2018), the FASB has an active project on
nonemployee share-based payment accounting improvements that may impact this scope exception.
Financial statement preparers and other users of this publication are therefore encouraged to monitor
the status of the project and, if finalized, evaluate the effective date of the new guidance and its
implications
A contract between an acquirer and a seller to enter into a business combination at a future date is not
subject to ASC 815. However, an acquiree’s contracts need to be re-evaluated at the acquisition date to
determine if any contracts are derivatives or contain embedded derivatives that need to be separated
and accounted for as derivatives. This includes reviewing contracts that qualify for the normal
purchases and normal sales exception and documenting the basis for making such an election. The
determination is made based on the facts and circumstances at the date of the acquisition. Accounting
for business combinations is discussed in PwC’s Business combinations and noncontrolling interests
guide.
A forward repurchase contract that, by its terms, must be physically settled by delivering cash in
exchange for a fixed number of the reporting entity’s shares should be recorded as a liability under the
guidance in ASC 480-10.
The FASB considered such contracts to be more akin to a treasury stock purchase using borrowed
funds than a derivative and excluded them from the scope of ASC 815. However, if a reporting entity
either can or must settle a contract by issuing its own equity instruments, but the contract is indexed
to something other than the entity’s own stock (e.g., a warrant that is exercisable only if the S&P 500
increases by 5%), the contract should be accounted for as a derivative by the issuer and the holder.
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Chapter 4:
Embedded derivative
instruments
4-1
Embedded derivative instruments
Many instruments and contracts contain embedded components (e.g., termination options, variable
pricing provisions, conversion options) that need to be assessed to determine whether they meet the
definition of a derivative in ASC 815. If an embedded component is determined to be an embedded
derivative (and is not eligible for a scope exception), then a reporting entity should assess whether the
embedded derivative is clearly and closely related to its host instrument.
This chapter discusses the framework for determining whether an embedded component meets the
definition of a derivative within the scope of ASC 815 and how to determine whether it is clearly and
closely related to its host instrument. This chapter also discusses the accounting for embedded
derivatives that are separated from their host instruments.
See DH 2 for information on the ASC 815 definition of a derivative. See DH 3 for information on the
scope exceptions in ASC 815.
The host contract is the contract or instrument that contains the embedded derivative. Together, they
are considered a hybrid instrument. An example of a hybrid instrument is a structured note that pays
interest based on changes in the S&P 500 Index; the component of the contract that adjusts the
interest payments based on changes in the S&P 500 Index is the embedded derivative. The debt
instrument that pays interest (without the S&P 500 Index adjustment) and will repay the principal
amount is the host contract.
Sometimes, the determination of the host contract and embedded derivative will be straightforward.
More often, this will require judgment. Figure DH 4-1 lists some embedded components commonly
found in contracts and instruments.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Figure DH 4-1
Examples of embedded components that may be embedded derivatives
Question DH 4-1 discusses whether a reporting entity should assess contracts that are reported at fair
value with fair value recorded in earning to determine whether they contain an embedded derivative.
Question DH 4-1
Should a reporting entity assess contracts that are reported at fair value with changes in value
recorded in earnings to determine whether they contain embedded derivatives?
PwC response
No. A reporting entity does not have to assess whether contracts measured at fair value through
earnings contain embedded derivatives. Separating an embedded derivative from a host contract
measured at fair value through earnings is unnecessary since the hybrid instrument (which combines
the host contract and the derivative) is already reported at fair value through earnings.
Question DH 4-2 discusses if entity can separate a separately identifiable derivative from a contract
that meets the definition of a derivate in its entirety.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-2
Can a reporting entity separate a separately identifiable derivative from a contract that meets the
definition of a derivative in its entirety (i.e., can it separate a compound derivative into its
components)?
PwC response
No. ASC 815 does not allow a reporting entity to separate a compound derivative into its components.
The entire derivative should be measured at fair value through earnings.
Question DH 4-3 asks whether an entity can elect to separate an embedded derivative from a hybrid
instrument if ASC 815 does not require it to be separated.
Question DH 4-3
May a reporting entity elect to separate an embedded derivative from a hybrid instrument if ASC 815
does not require it to be separated?
PwC response
No. As discussed in ASC 815-15-25-1, an embedded derivative should be separated from its host
contract and accounted for as a derivative instrument “if and only if” all of the specified criteria are
met. Accordingly, a reporting entity may not separate an embedded derivative instrument from a
hybrid instrument unless the criteria for separation in ASC 815 are met. However, a reporting entity
may be allowed to apply the fair value option to the entire hybrid instrument. See DH 4.3.2.1 and FV 5
for information on the fair value option.
Determining whether a contract contains an embedded derivative, and the terms of that embedded
derivative, can be complicated. Because few contracts actually use the term “derivative,” a thorough
evaluation of the contractual and implicit terms of an instrument or contract is needed to determine
whether an embedded derivative exists. Certain terms and phrases, however, may indicate the
presence of an embedded derivative. Such terms and phrases include:
4-4
Embedded derivative instruments
One method of determining whether a contract has an embedded derivative is to compare the terms of
the contract (e.g., interest rate, maturity date, cancellation provisions) with the corresponding terms of
a similar, plain-vanilla version of the contract. This comparison may uncover one or more embedded
derivatives. However, even instruments with typical market terms may contain embedded derivatives.
A component can be embedded in a host instrument or contract that has economic value other than
the component (e.g., a debt instrument). Alternatively, an instrument can comprise only the
component, as is the case with a freestanding warrant. The term “freestanding” also applies to a single
financial instrument that comprises more than one option or forward component, for example, a
collar, which consists of a written put option and a purchased call option.
a. It is entered into separately and apart from any of the entity’s other financial instruments or equity
transactions.
b. It is entered into in conjunction with some other transaction and is legally detachable and
separately exercisable.
Next, a reporting entity should consider whether the components (1) may be legally transferred
separately, or (2) must be transferred with the instrument with which they were issued or associated.
Components that may be legally transferred separately are generally freestanding. However, a
component that must be transferred with the instrument with which it was issued or associated is not
necessarily embedded; it may merely be attached.
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Embedded derivative instruments
A reporting entity should also consider whether a right in a component (1) may be exercised separately
from other components that remain outstanding or (2) if once a right in a component is exercised, the
other components are no longer outstanding. Since separate exercisability invariably requires the
component to first be detached prior to exercise, this is a strong indicator that the component is
freestanding.
A host contract is the instrument or contract that would have been issued if the hybrid instrument did
not contain an embedded derivative. Each embedded derivative is compared to its host contract to
determine if it should be accounted for separately from the host instrument. Therefore, it is necessary
to determine the nature of the host contract based on its underlying economic characteristics and
risks.
Figure DH 4-2 lists some common host contracts and where they are discussed in this chapter.
Figure DH 4-2
Types of host contracts
Lease DH 4.6.3
Financial instruments classified as liabilities on the issuer’s balance sheet are generally debt hosts;
financial instruments classified as equity on the issuer’s balance sheet may be equity or debt hosts. See
DH 4.5.1 for information on determining whether an equity instrument is a debt or equity host.
ASC 815-15-25-1
An embedded derivative shall be separated from the host contract and accounted for as a derivative
instrument pursuant to Subtopic 815-10 if and only if all of the following criteria are met:
a. The economic characteristics and risks of the embedded derivative are not clearly and closely
related to the economic characteristics and risks of the host contract.
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Embedded derivative instruments
b. The hybrid instrument is not remeasured at fair value under otherwise applicable generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP) with changes in fair value reported in earnings as they
occur.
c. A separate instrument with the same terms as the embedded derivative would, pursuant to Section
815-10-15, be a derivative instrument subject to the requirements of this Subtopic. (The initial net
investment for the hybrid instrument shall not be considered to be the initial net investment for
the embedded derivative.)
Figure DH 4-3
Decision tree for determining whether or not to separate an embedded derivative from a hybrid
instrument
The following sections provide guidance on each of these criteria. For information on interest-only and
principal-only strips see DH 3.2.12.
An embedded derivative is clearly and closely related to its host contract when its underlying economic
characteristics and risks (i.e., the factors that cause a derivative to fluctuate in value) are clearly and
4-7
Embedded derivative instruments
closely related to the economic characteristics and risks of the host contract. That is, the clearly and
closely related criterion simply asks whether the attributes of a derivative behave in a manner similar
to the attributes of its host contract. For example, if an embedded component in a debt instrument
pays a rate of return tied to the S&P 500 Index, the economic characteristics of the embedded
derivative (e.g., equity-price risk) and the economic characteristics of the host contract (e.g., interest
rate risk and issuer credit risk) are not clearly and closely related.
The application of the phrase “clearly and closely related” in the context of an embedded derivative
analysis is different than it is in the context of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception.
See Question DH 3-1.
Question DH 4-4 discusses whether a reporting entity should consider whether an equity-linked
feature is considered clearly and closely related to an equity host when it is indexed to the entity’s own
stock.
Question DH 4-4
When evaluating whether an equity-linked feature is considered clearly and closely related to an equity
host, should a reporting entity consider whether the feature is considered indexed to the entity’s own
stock, as discussed in ASC 815-40-15-5 through 15-8?
PwC response
Yes. Although the guidance for determining whether an instrument is considered indexed to a
reporting entity’s own stock in ASC 815-40-15-5 through ASC 815-40-15-8 is not required to be used in
the assessment of clearly and closely related under ASC 815-15-25-1(a), it may provide additional
evidence for making the determination. We believe that when an embedded feature is considered
indexed to stock price, it may be considered clearly and closely related to the equity host contract for
the issuer.
It is not necessary to separate a hybrid instrument measured at fair value through earnings into
individual components that are both measured at fair value with changes in fair value reported in
earnings. This provision simplifies the impact of ASC 815 for reporting entities in certain specialized
industries (e.g., investment companies, pension plans, broker dealers). Since many of the instruments
in those industries are measured at fair value in their entirety, no further accounting is required for
embedded derivatives. This provision applies to:
□ Instruments for which the fair value option has been applied pursuant to ASC 815-15 or
ASC 825-10
The fair value option (FVO) for financial instruments under ASC 825-10 can generally be applied to
hybrid instruments, subject to certain limitations. In addition, ASC 815 provides an instrument-by-
instrument fair value election for hybrid financial instruments. Under either election, the hybrid
financial instrument is carried at fair value with the change in fair value recognized currently in
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Embedded derivative instruments
earnings, except for the effect of changes in own credit, which are recognized in other comprehensive
income. See FV 5 for information on the FVO.
ASC 815-15-25-4
An entity that initially recognizes a hybrid financial instrument that under paragraph 815-15-25-1
would be required to be separated into a host contract and a derivative instrument may irrevocably
elect to initially and subsequently measure that hybrid financial instrument in its entirety at fair value
(with changes in fair value recognized in earnings). A financial instrument shall be evaluated to
determine that it has an embedded derivative requiring bifurcation before the instrument can become
a candidate for the fair value election.
ASC 815-15-25-5
The fair value election shall be supported by concurrent documentation or a preexisting documented
policy for automatic election. That recognized hybrid financial instrument could be an asset or a
liability and it could be acquired or issued by the entity. The fair value election is also available when a
previously recognized financial instrument is subject to a remeasurement event (new basis event) and
the separate recognition of an embedded derivative. The fair value election may be made instrument
by instrument. For purposes of this paragraph, a remeasurement event (new basis event) is an event
identified in generally accepted accounting principles, other than the recording of a credit loss under
Topic 326, or measurement of an impairment loss through earnings under Topic 321 on equity
investments, that requires a financial instrument to be remeasured to its fair value at the time of the
event but does not require that instrument to be reported at fair value on a continuous basis with the
change in fair value recognized in earnings. Examples of remeasurement events are business
combinations and significant modifications of debt as defined in Subtopic 470-50.
The fair value election within ASC 815 is applicable only to a hybrid financial instrument in which both
the host contract and embedded derivative are financial instruments. Examples of financial
instruments include loans, securities, debt, foreign currency arrangements, and commodity contracts
that require cash settlement. Examples of instruments that do not meet the definition include
commodity contracts that allow settlement by delivery of the physical commodity, un-guaranteed lease
residual interests, lease residual values that were guaranteed after inception, treasury stock, sales tax
receivables, servicing rights, and unresolved legal settlements. In addition, the FVO is available only
for hybrid financial instruments that would be recognized on the balance sheet under GAAP.
Any hybrid financial instrument that contains an embedded derivative required to be separated from
the host contract can be accounted for by using one of the following methods.
□ Separate the embedded derivative and account for it as a derivative under the guidance in ASC 815
(i.e., measure it at fair value with changes in fair value recognized currently in earnings) and
account for the host contract based on GAAP applicable to similar instruments that do not contain
embedded derivatives (e.g., ASC 320-10, Investments—Debt Securities).
□ Irrevocably elect to apply the FVO and measure the entire hybrid financial instrument (including
the embedded derivative) at fair value with changes in fair value recognized currently in earnings,
except for the effect of changes in own credit, which are recognized in other comprehensive
income. This fair value election can be made only when the hybrid financial instrument is acquired
or issued or when it is subject to a remeasurement (i.e., new basis) event.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-5 discusses whether all hybrid financial instruments that meet the definition of a
financial instrument in their entirety are afforded the fair value option.
Question DH 4-5
Are all hybrid financial instruments that meet the definition of a financial instrument in their entirety
(i.e., both the host contract and the embedded derivative are financial instruments) afforded the fair
value option under ASC 815-15-25-4?
PwC response
No. ASC 815-15-25-6 scopes out those hybrid financial instruments described in ASC 825-10-50-8.
a. Employers' and plans' obligations for pension benefits, other postretirement benefits including
health care and life insurance benefits, postemployment benefits, employee stock option and stock
purchase plans, and other forms of deferred compensation arrangements (see Topics 710, 712, 715,
718, and 960)
b. Substantively extinguished debt subject to the disclosure requirements of Subtopic 405-20
c. Insurance contracts, other than financial guarantees (including financial guarantee insurance
contracts within the scope of Topic 944) and investment contracts, as discussed in
Subtopic 944-20
d. Lease contracts as defined in Topic 842 (a contingent obligation arising out of a cancelled lease
and a guarantee of a third-party lease obligation are not lease contracts and are subject to the
disclosure requirements in this Subsection)
e. Warranty obligations (see Topic 450 and the Product Warranties Subsections of Topic 460)
f. Unconditional purchase obligations as defined in paragraph 440-10-50-2
g. Investments accounted for under the equity method in accordance with the requirements of
Topic 323
h. Noncontrolling interests and equity investments in consolidated subsidiaries (see Topic 810)
i. Equity instruments issued by the entity and classified in stockholders' equity in the statement of
financial position (see Topic 505)
j. Receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swaps for which the simplified hedge accounting
approach is applied (see Topic 815)
k. Fully benefit-responsive investment contracts held by an employee benefit plan.
l. Investments in equity securities accounted for under the measurement guidance for equity
securities without readily determinable fair values (see Topic 321)
m. Trade receivables and payables due in one year or less
n. Deposit liabilities with no defined or contractual maturities.
o. Liabilities resulting from the sale of prepaid stored-value products within the scope of paragraph
405-20-40-3.
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Embedded derivative instruments
An embedded derivative meets the criterion in ASC 815-15-25-1(c) if it would meet the definition of a
derivative in ASC 815-10-15-83 and would not be subject to any of the scope exceptions in
ASC 815-10-15-13 or ASC 815-15-15-3 if it were a freestanding instrument. See DH 2 for information
on the definition of a derivative and DH 3 for information on the related scope exceptions.
While the analysis under ASC 815-15-25-1(c) is generally performed as if the embedded derivative is a
freestanding instrument, there is one important exception to this approach. ASC 815-15-25-14 clarifies
that the guidance in ASC 480-10-25-4 through ASC 480-10-25-14 for distinguishing liabilities from
equity should not be considered in determining whether an embedded derivative would be classified in
equity for purposes of applying the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-74(a). This is because ASC 480,
Distinguishing Liabilities from Equity, only applies to freestanding instruments. ASC 480 requires
certain instrument indexed to an issuer’s own stock to be accounted for as liabilities. See FG 5.5 for
information on the scope and application of ASC 480.
ASC 815-15-15-10
An embedded foreign currency derivative shall not be separated from the host contract and considered
a derivative instrument under 815-15-25-1 if all of the following criteria are met:
b. The host contract requires payment(s) denominated in any of the following currencies:
2. The currency in which the price of the related good or service that is acquired or delivered is
routinely denominated in international commerce (for example, the U.S. dollar for crude oil
transactions)
4. The currency used by a substantial party to the contract as if it were the functional currency
because the primary economic environment which the party operates is highly inflationary (as
discussed in paragraph 830-10-45-11).
c. Other aspects of the embedded foreign currency derivative are clearly and closely related to the
host contract.
The evaluation of whether a contract qualifies for the exception in this paragraph should be performed
only at inception of the contract.
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Embedded derivative instruments
ASC 815-15-15-11 clarifies that the determination of a counterparty’s functional currency should be
made “based on available information and reasonable assumptions about the counterparty;
representations from the counterparty are not required.” See ASC 815-15-55-213 through ASC 815-15-
55-215 for a case study illustrating this determination.
ASC 830-10-55-5 provides guidance on economic factors that should be considered when determining
the functional currency of a reporting entity. These include indicators relating to cash flows, sales
prices, sales market, expenses, financing, and intra-entity transactions and arrangements. A reporting
entity should not necessarily rely on a single indicator, such as the currency in which the
counterparty’s sales prices are denominated; all relevant available information should be considered
when determining the functional currency of a counterparty.
Question DH 4-6 discusses whether a guarantor is considered a substantial party to a contract under
ASC 815-15-15-10.
Question DH 4-6
Is a guarantor considered a “substantial party to a contract” under ASC 815-15-15-10?
PwC response
No. The implementation guidance in ASC 815-15-55-84 through ASC 815-15-55-86 clarifies that a
guarantor is not a substantial party to a contract even if the guarantor is a related party (e.g., parent
company). The evaluation of embedded derivatives should be conducted by the legal entity that is
party to the contract.
Question DH 4-7 discusses whether the fact that an index is quoted in a particular currency mean that
it is routinely denominated in the currency.
Question DH 4-7
Does the fact that an index is quoted in a particular currency mean that it is routinely denominated in
that currency? For example, if a coal index is quoted in US dollars, does that mean that coal is traded
primarily in US dollars?
PwC response
No. This analysis will involve more than reviewing in what currency the product or service is typically
quoted. Example 2 in ASC 815-15-55-96 clarifies that the phrase “routinely denominated in
international commerce” should be based on how similar transactions for certain products or services
are structured around the world, not in just one local area. If similar transactions for a certain product
or service are routinely denominated in international commerce in different currencies, the exception
in ASC 815-15-15-10 does not apply.
Question DH 4-8 asks if a reporting entity, that concludes that changes in its operations will result in a
change to its functional currency, should reassess its existing contracts to determine if an embedded
derivative feature should be separated.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-8
A reporting entity concludes that changes in its operations will result in a change to its functional
currency. Should the reporting entity reassess its existing contracts to determine if embedded
derivative features should be separated?
PwC response
No. ASC 815-15-15-10 states that the qualification for the scope exception should be performed only at
the inception of the contract. Although the change in functional currency is significant, we do not
believe it would require a reassessment of the contracts under ASC 815-15-15-10.
Example DH 4-1, Example DH 4-2, and Example DH 4-3 illustrate the analysis for determining
whether a contract contains an embedded foreign currency derivative.
EXAMPLE DH 4-1
Contract with payments linked to foreign-exchange rates
On August 1, 20X1, USA Corp enters into a contract for professional services denominated in USD.
The terms of the contract require quarterly payments in USD. The contract also requires a fixed
adjustment to the quarterly payment amount when the USD / Japanese yen (JPY) exchange rate
reaches a specified level.
Is there an embedded foreign currency derivative that must be separated from the host contract?
Analysis
The contract payment adjustment is an embedded foreign currency derivative that should be
separated from the professional services contract. Because the quarterly contract payments are not
denominated in JPY (nor is it in substance JPY denominated), but are instead simply indexed to JPY,
the embedded derivative does not qualify for the scope exception in ASC 815-15-15-10.
EXAMPLE DH 4-2
Foreign currency denominated lease guaranteed by parent
USA Corp is a US registrant that has a USD functional currency. Deutsche AG is a consolidated
subsidiary of USA Corp located in Germany, which has the euro as its functional currency.
Deutsche AG enters into a lease with Canadian Corp (which has a Canadian dollar functional
currency), which requires annual lease payments in USD. USA Corp guarantees Deutsche AG’s
payments on the lease.
Is there an embedded foreign currency derivative that must be separated from the host contract?
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Embedded derivative instruments
Analysis
The lease contains an embedded derivative that converts euro lease payments to USD that should be
separated by Deutsche AG and in the consolidated financial statements of USA Corp. The substantial
parties to the lease are Deutsche AG and Canadian Corp. Even though USA Corp guarantees the lease,
it is not a substantial party to the contract. Since the lease payments are not denominated in one of the
functional or local currencies of the substantial parties to the lease or a currency in which leases are
routinely denominated in international commerce, the embedded derivative does not qualify for the
scope exception in ASC 815-15-15-10.
EXAMPLE DH 4-3
Commodity contract
USA Corp enters into a contract to purchase a commodity from Britannia PLC, which has a British
pound sterling functional currency. The commodity purchase contract is denominated in euros.
The commodity underlying the contract is readily convertible to cash and USA Corp does not meet the
requirements for applying the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception.
Is there an embedded foreign currency derivative that must be separated from the host contract?
Analysis
Since the commodity contract meets the definition of a derivative (because the underlying commodity
is readily convertible to cash) and is not eligible for a scope exception, it should be accounted for as a
derivative in its entirety. Therefore, there is no embedded foreign currency derivative to be separated;
embedded derivatives are not separated from contracts that are accounted for as derivatives in their
entirety.
Generally, embedded derivatives in debt host contracts are not clearly and closely related if they
introduce risks that are not typical for debt instruments or if the return that investors may receive is
significantly leveraged (i.e., favorably or unfavorably impacted to a significant degree by the embedded
derivative). When applying the clearly and closely related criterion in ASC 815-15-25-1(a) to a debt
host, the focus should be on determining whether the economic characteristics and risks of the
embedded derivative have features unrelated to interest rates (e.g., equity-like or commodity-like
features). Alternatively, when the characteristics of the derivative are related to interest rates, the
focus should be on determining whether the features involve leverage or change in the opposite
direction as interest rates (e.g., an inverse floater).
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Embedded derivative instruments
Generally, an embedded derivative is clearly and closely related to a debt host if it is one of the
following.
□ An issuer-exercisable call or a holder-exercisable put that does not contain an embedded interest
rate derivative under the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26 and meets the requirements for not
separating put and call options in ASC 815-15-25-41 through ASC 815-15-25-42
ASC 815-15-25-23 through ASC 815-15-25-51 provides guidance on how to apply the clearly and closely
related criterion to different hybrid debt instruments with various embedded features.
See Question DH 4-9 for a question on a debt instrument containing an embedded derivative.
Question DH 4-9
If a debt instrument contains an embedded derivative that results in the interest payments being
indexed to the price of silver (or some other metal or commodity index) and they are settled in cash or
in a financial instrument or commodity that is readily convertible to cash, must the derivative be
separated from the host contract?
PwC response
Yes. In this situation, the issuer would be viewed as having (1) issued debt at a certain interest rate,
and (2) entered into a swap contract to convert the index that determines the rate of interest from an
interest rate index to a commodity index. The swap contract would not be considered clearly and
closely related to the host contract because its economic characteristics are linked to a commodity
index (rather than an interest rate index). Therefore, assuming the hybrid instrument is not being
carried at fair value with changes recognized in current earnings and a separate instrument with the
same terms as the embedded feature would be a derivative instrument under ASC 815, the embedded
derivative should be separated from the host contract and accounted for separately as a derivative.
When an embedded interest component alters the contractual interest on its host contract, it may not
be considered clearly and closely related even though they both have interest rate underlyings. For
example, a debt instrument that provides a return that is positively leveraged (i.e., favorably impacted
by the embedded derivative) to a significant degree may contain an embedded interest rate derivative
that should be accounted for separately.
ASC 815-15-25-26 provides guidance on evaluating whether an embedded interest rate derivative is
considered clearly and closely related to a debt host contract. This guidance should be applied if the
only underlying of the embedded component is interest rates.
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Embedded derivative instruments
ASC 815-15-25-26
For purposes of applying the provisions of paragraph 815-15-25-1, an embedded derivative in which
the only underlying is an interest rate or interest rate index (such as an interest rate cap or an interest
rate collar) that alters net interest payments that otherwise would be paid or received on an interest-
bearing host contract that is considered a debt instrument is considered to be clearly and closely
related to the host contract unless either of the following conditions exists:
a. The hybrid instrument can contractually be settled in such a way that the investor (the holder or
the creditor) would not recover substantially all of its initial recorded investment (that is, the
embedded derivative contains a provision that permits any possibility whatsoever that the
investor’s [the holder's or the creditor's] undiscounted net cash inflows over the life of the
instrument would not recover substantially all of its initial recorded investment in the hybrid
instrument under its contractual terms).
b. The embedded derivative meets both of the following conditions:
1. There is a possible future interest rate scenario (even though it may be remote) under which the
embedded derivative would at least double the investor’s initial rate of return on the host
contract (that is, the embedded derivative contains a provision that could under any possibility
whatsoever at least double the investor’s initial rate of return on the host contract).
2. For any of the possible interest rate scenarios under which the investor’s initial rate of return on
the host contract would be doubled (as discussed in (b)(1)), the embedded derivative would at the
same time result in a rate of return that is at least twice what otherwise would be the then-current
market return (under the relevant future interest rate scenario) for a contract that has the same
terms as the host contract and that involves a debtor with a credit quality similar to the issuer’s
credit quality at inception.
Although it could be argued that the decision to exercise a put or call option embedded in a debt
instrument is based on interest rates and credit, “plain vanilla” and “non-contingent” calls and puts
are considered to be solely indexed to interest rates, as contemplated in ASC 815-15-25-26.
ASC 815-15-25-29 clarifies that in the case of a put option that permits, but does not require, the
lender to settle the debt instrument in a manner that causes it not to recover substantially all of its
initial recorded investment, the guidance in paragraph (a) of ASC 815-15-25-26 does not apply. As
illustrated in Example 10 in ASC 815-15-55-128, provisions that allow the investor to choose to accept
a settlement that is substantially less than its initial investment do not conflict with
ASC 815-15-25-26(a).
ASC 815-15-25-37 and ASC 815-15-25-38 clarify that in the case of a call option that permits, but does
not require, the reporting entity to accelerate the repayment of the debt, the guidance in paragraph (b)
above is not applicable.
We believe “substantially all” means at least 90% of the investment. Therefore, if the embedded
component in a debt instrument could result in the lender receiving less than 90% of its initial
recorded investment, it likely creates an embedded interest rate derivative that should be accounted
for separately. This analysis should be performed on an undiscounted basis and consider all possible
events without regard to probability.
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Embedded derivative instruments
This test is commonly referred to as the double-double test. We believe the initial rate of return that
should be used in the double-double test is that of the host debt instrument without the embedded
derivative, not the combined hybrid instrument (debt instrument with the embedded derivative). The
initial rate of return on the host debt instrument may differ from the stated initial rate of return on the
hybrid instrument as the yield on the hybrid may be affected by the embedded derivative. The analysis
should be performed without regard to the probability of the event occurring.
When considering transactions with multiple elements, such as debt issued with warrants, the double-
double test should be performed after proceeds have been allocated to the individual transactions.
However, the terms of the combined transaction should be considered when performing the test. For
example, if upon the exercise of a put option embedded in a debt instrument issued with warrants, the
lender will receive par value for the combination of the debt and warrants, it is less likely to meet the
double-double test than if the lender would receive par value for the debt and the warrants remain
outstanding.
For convertible debt within the scope of the cash conversion guidance in ASC 470-20, the double-
double test should be performed before the bond is bifurcated, as described in FG 6.6.1. Therefore,
when evaluating whether an embedded derivative should be accounted for separately, the discount
created by separating the conversion option should not be considered.
See FG 1.6.1.3 for examples illustrating the application of the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26.
See Question DH 4-10 for a question on a variable rate debt instrument containing an interest rate
floor or cap.
Question DH 4-10
If a variable-rate debt instrument contains an interest rate floor or cap, such that the interest rate
could never fall below or exceed a specified level, would the issuer be required to separate the interest
rate floor or cap from the debt instrument?
PwC response
Probably not. ASC 815-15-25-32 clarifies that interest rate caps and floors are typically considered
clearly and closely related to a debt host contract. However, the analysis in ASC 815-15-25-26 should
be performed. If the provisions of either ASC 815-15-25-26(a) or (b) are met, then the interest rate
floor or cap must be separated from the debt instrument. In applying this guidance, caps are typically
considered clearly and closely related to a debt host contract; floors are generally considered clearly
and closely related to a debt host contract unless they are issued deeply in the money.
Question DH 4-11 discusses whether the economic characteristics and risks of a leveraged inflation
feature is considered clearly and closely related to the economic characteristics and risks of the host
contract.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-11
A reporting entity issues 10-year inflation-linked bonds that pay interest semiannually. The interest on
the bonds is set at a fixed rate. The principal amount on the bonds is indexed to a leverage-adjusted
Consumer Price Index (CPI) (the “leverage inflation feature”). That is, at the end of each semi-annual
period, the principal amount on the securities will adjust based on 1.5 times the published CPI for a
specific period. The interest payment is calculated by multiplying the adjusted principal by the
annualized interest rate. When the securities mature, the issuer pays the greater of the original or
adjusted principal.
The leveraged inflation feature is an embedded derivative because its explicit terms affect some of the
cash flows required by the contract in a manner similar to a derivative.
Are the economic characteristics and risks of the leveraged inflation feature considered clearly and
closely related to the economic characteristics and risks of the host contract as described in ASC 815-
15-25-1(a)? For purposes of applying the clearly and closely related criterion, may the criteria in ASC
815-15-25-26 be considered in the analysis?
PwC response
No. The economic characteristics and risks of the leveraged inflation feature are not considered clearly
and closely related to the economic characteristics and risks of the host contract. ASC 815-15-25-50
provides guidance on inflation-indexed contracts.
ASC 815-15-25-50
The interest rate and the rate of inflation in the economic environment for the currency in which a
debt instrument is denominated shall be considered to be clearly and closely related. Thus,
nonleveraged inflation-indexed contracts (debt instruments, capitalized lease obligations, pension
obligations, and so forth) shall not have the inflation-related embedded derivative separated from the
host contract.
This guidance applies to hybrid instruments that have either their principal amounts or periodic
interest payments referenced to an inflation index; however, the conclusion that an inflation provision
is considered clearly and closely related to a host debt instrument only applies to nonleveraged
inflation provisions. Since an inflation rate is not an interest rate, we do not believe a reporting entity
may consider the criteria in ASC 815-15-25-26 as support for not separating a leveraged inflation
feature from its host debt instrument.
Question DH 4-12, Question DH 4-13 and Question DH 4-14 ask whether a loan contains an embedded
derivative that should be separated from the host debt instrument.
Question DH 4-12
A reporting entity obtains a five-year loan that pays interest equal to the rolling average of one-month
LIBOR over the prior 12 months and resets every month. At inception of the loan, the interest rate for
one-month LIBOR is 2% and the twelve-month rolling average of one-month LIBOR interest rates is
also 2%.
Does the loan contain an embedded derivative that should be separated from the host debt
instrument?
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Embedded derivative instruments
PwC response
Probably. A full analysis of ASC 815-15-25-26(b) would need to be performed to determine if the
embedded derivative should be separated.
This debt instrument is indexed to the LIBOR curve and has a variable interest rate that resets
monthly. The host contract can be viewed as a five-year loan with a rate of one-month LIBOR that
resets every month. Because the interest rate on the loan is an average of twelve one-month LIBOR
rates, the interest rate on the loan will lag the movement in one-month LIBOR. Over the term of the
loan, it is possible that one-month LIBOR interest rates could rise to 6% and eventually the rate on the
loan would reach 6% (e.g., if rates remained at 6% for a period of twelve months). If suddenly one-
month LIBOR interest rates over a two-month period then dropped to 2%, the rate on the loan would
be approximately 5.3%, which would be twice the initial rate of return of the host contract of 2% while
at the same time twice the then current one-month LIBOR market rate of 2%. Based on an analysis of
ASC 815-15-25-26(b), this twelve-month moving average feature would not be clearly and closely
related to the debt host. Assuming the other criteria in ASC 815-15-25-1 are met, the embedded
derivative (i.e., an interest rate swap) would have to be accounted for separately under ASC 815.
Question DH 4-13
A reporting entity obtains a five-year loan with an interest rate that resets every three months based on
the five-year Constant Maturity Swap (CMS) index, less a constant spread. Does the loan contain an
embedded derivative that should be separated from the host debt instrument?
PwC response
Probably. A full analysis of ASC 815-15-25-26(b) would need to be performed to determine if the
embedded derivative should be separated.
In this loan, the CMS index is essentially the indicated rate in effect at any point in time for the five-
year point on the LIBOR swap curve. Because the debt instrument is indexed based on the LIBOR
curve and has a variable interest rate that resets quarterly, the host contract may be considered to be a
five-year loan with an interest rate based on three-month LIBOR that resets every three months. If the
yield curve steepens sharply whereby the short-end of the LIBOR curve drops to 1% while the mid to
long-end of the LIBOR curve increases to 10% or more, there could be a scenario in which the interest
rate on the loan would be double the investor’s initial rate of return and at the same time be twice the
then market rate of return of the host contract. Based on an analysis of ASC 815-15-25-26(b), it would
appear that the CMS index feature would not be clearly and closely related to the debt host. Assuming
the other criteria in ASC 815-15-25-1 are met, the embedded derivative (i.e., the interest rate swap)
would have to be accounted for separately under ASC 815.
Question DH 4-14
A reporting entity enters into a five-year note that has an interest rate based on the ten-year Constant
Maturity Treasury (CMT) index, which resets every 90 days. Does the note contain an embedded
derivative that should be separated from the host debt instrument?
PwC response
Probably. A full analysis of ASC 815-15-25-26(b) would need to be performed to determine if the
embedded derivative should be separated.
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Embedded derivative instruments
The host contract in this note is a five-year debt instrument with a rate that resets every 90 days.
Because the yield curve that the ten-year CMT index is based on may be flatter or steeper than the 90-
day CMT index, there is a possibility that the investor will double their initial rate of return and the
embedded derivative could also result in a return that is twice the then-current market return.
Some have argued that the embedded derivative in this type of structure does not meet the ASC 815-15-
25-26(b) criterion by analogy to Case C in ASC 815-15-55-176 through ASC 815-15-55-178. Case C has a
very similar instrument (i.e., a de-levered floater) but clearly indicates that “there appears to be no
possibility of the embedded derivative increasing the investor’s rate of return on the host contract to an
amount that is at least double the initial rate of return on the host contract [see ASC 815-15-25-26(b)].”
The conclusion in Case C was based on the specific facts in Case C (i.e., it was assumed that it was not
possible for the investor to double its initial rate of return). However, when there is a possibility of the
investor doubling its initial rate of return while at the same time doubling the then-current rate of
return, a CMT index feature would not be clearly and closely related to the debt host; assuming the
other criteria in ASC 815-15-25-1 are met, the embedded derivative (i.e., the interest rate swap) would
have to be accounted for separately under ASC 815.
Put features allow the debt holder to demand repayment, and call features allow the issuer to
repurchase the debt. It should be noted that in the context of debt instruments, puttable debt (i.e., that
the holder may require to be repaid early) is often referred to in practice as callable, although callable
debt theoretically is prepayable only at the issuer’s option. Generally, a put or call option is considered
clearly and closely related to its debt host unless it is leveraged (i.e., it creates more interest rate
and/or credit risk than is inherent in the host instrument). For example, debt issued at par value that
is puttable at two times the par value upon the occurrence of a specified event may have an embedded
component that is not clearly and closely related to its debt host instrument.
Figure DH 4-4 illustrates the analysis to determine whether a put or call option is clearly and closely
related to its debt host instrument. If the put or call option is not considered clearly and closely related
to its host debt instrument based on this analysis, it should be separately accounted for as a derivative
under the guidance in ASC 815.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Figure DH 4-4
Determining whether an embedded put or call option is clearly and closely related to its host debt
instrument
See FG 1.6 for further guidance on put and call options embedded in debt instruments, including
illustrative examples. Example DH 4-4 illustrates the different analyses for a put option and a term
extension option.
EXAMPLE DH 4-4
Analysis of put options and options to extend debt
Investor Corp purchases two bonds: Bond A and Bond B. Both bonds are issued by the same issuer at
par and have a coupon rate of 6%.
Bond A has a stated maturity of ten years, but the investor can put it back to the issuer at par after
three years.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Bond B has a stated maturity of three years, but after three years the investor can extend the maturity
to ten years (i.e., seven more years) at the same initial interest rate (i.e., neither the interest rate nor
the credit spread are reset to the then-current market interest rate).
Scenario 1: The issuer’s interest rate for seven-year debt is at 8%. The investor will put Bond A back
to the issuer and reinvest the par amount of the bond at 8%. The investor will not extend the maturity
of Bond B and instead will reinvest the principal at 8%.
Scenario 2: The issuer’s interest rate for seven-year debt is at 4%. The investor will not put Bond A
back to the issuer and instead will continue to receive 6% for the next seven years. The investor will
extend the term of Bond B and continue to receive 6% for the next seven years.
Analysis
Although in both scenarios the issuer and Investor Corp are in the same economic position with
respect to Bond A and Bond B, ASC 815 may require that they be treated differently.
An analysis of ASC 815-15-25-37 through ASC 815-15-25-41 would indicate that the put option in Bond
A should not be separated because calls and puts in debt hosts are generally clearly and closely related
to the host contract, unless they meet the conditions in ASC 815-15-25-42 or ASC 815-15-25-26.
On the other hand, ASC 815-15-25-44 would indicate that the term-extending option in Bond B may
not be clearly and closely related to its debt host because its interest rate and credit spread are not
reset to the then-current market interest rate when the option is exercised. However, only term-
extending options in debt hosts that cause an investor to potentially not recover substantially all of its
recorded investment (i.e., lose principal) would be considered not clearly and closely related. Since the
term extension option is within the control of the investors, they could not be forced into a term
extension in which (on a present value basis) they would not be recovering substantially all of their
initial net investment so the term-extending option embedded in Bond B is clearly and closely related.
For host contracts other than debt hosts, ASC 815-15-25-45 requires an analysis to determine whether
term extension options should be separated. Notwithstanding the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-44 and
ASC 815-15-25-45, many term-extending options will not meet the definition of derivatives because
they cannot be net settled. Additionally, from the perspective of the issuer of the loan agreement, a
term-extending option when only the issuer/borrower has the right to extend the agreement would be
considered a loan commitment and meet the scope exception for loan commitments, as described in
ASC 815-10-15-69 through ASC 815-10-15-71. Therefore, many term-extending options will not have to
be separated from the host debt instrument, even though they may not be clearly and closely related to
their host contracts because a freestanding instrument with the same terms would not meet the
definition of a derivative or would be eligible for a scope exception.
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Embedded derivative instruments
The reporting entity should first determine whether exercise of the put or call option accelerates the
repayment of principal on the debt. ASC 815-15-25-41 provides guidance on put and call options that
do not accelerate the repayment of the debt.
ASC 815-15-25-41
Call (put) options that do not accelerate the repayment of principal on a debt instrument but instead
require a cash settlement that is equal to the price of the option at the date of exercise would not be
considered to be clearly and closely related to the debt instrument in which it is embedded.
If exercise of a put or call option accelerates the repayment of the debt, further analysis is required to
determine whether the put or call option is clearly and closely related to its debt host.
The reporting entity should determine if the amount paid upon exercise of a put or call option is based
on changes in an index rather than simply being the repayment of principal at par or at a fixed
premium or discount. For example, a put option that entitles the holder to receive an amount
determined by the change in the S&P 500 index (i.e., par value of the debt multiplied by the change in
the S&P 500 Index over the period the debt is outstanding) is based on changes in an equity index. On
the other hand, debt callable at a fixed price of 101% is not based on changes in an index. Debt callable
at a price of 108% at the end of year 1, 106% at the end of year 2, and 104% at the end of year 3 is also
not based on changes in an index because the premium changes simply due to the passage of time.
If the amount paid upon exercise of a put or call option is based on changes in an index, then the
reporting entity should determine whether the index is an interest rate index or credit index
(specifically, the issuer’s credit). If the index is not an interest rate or credit index, the put or call
option is not clearly and closely related to the debt host instrument and should be separately
accounted for as a derivative under the guidance in ASC 815.
If the amount paid upon exercise of the put or call option is (1) not based on changes in an index, or
(2) based on changes in an interest rate or related to the issuer’s credit, further analysis is required to
determine whether the put or call option is clearly and closely related.
Question DH 4-15 discusses if an embedded put or call option, that allows the lender or reporting
entity to receive the fair value of the debt upon exercise, is considered clearly and closely related to its
host.
Question DH 4-15
Is an embedded put or call option that allows the lender or reporting entity to receive the fair value of
the debt upon exercise considered clearly and closely related to its host?
PwC response
Maybe. There are circumstances when a fair value put or call option may not be considered clearly and
closely related to its debt host. However, the option generally would not have a material value because
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Embedded derivative instruments
its strike price is equal to the underlying’s fair value. The purpose of the option is to provide liquidity
to the option holder.
Practice generally considers a discount or premium equal to or greater than 10% of the par value of the
host debt instrument to be substantial. Similarly, a spread between the debt’s issuance price and the
price at which the put or call option can be exercised that is equal to or greater than 10% is also
generally considered substantial. However, 10% is not a bright-line; all relevant facts and
circumstances should be considered to determine whether the discount or premium is substantial. A
put or call option that requires a debt instrument to be repaid at its accreted value is generally not
considered to involve a substantial discount or premium.
If the put or call involves a substantial premium or discount, then it should be evaluated to determine
whether it is contingently exercisable. If it does not involve a substantial premium or discount, it
should be evaluated to determine whether it contains an embedded interest rate derivative that should
be separated. See DH 4.4.2 for information on how to determine whether a debt host contract contains
an embedded interest rate derivative.
The reporting entity should then determine whether the put or call option is contingently exercisable.
A debt instrument that an issuer can call upon a commodity price level reaching a specified price,
bonds puttable if interest rates reach a specified level, and bonds puttable upon a change in control are
examples of instruments with put and call options that are contingently exercisable. A put or call is
considered contingently exercisable whether or not the contingency has occurred.
If the put or call is contingently exercisable and meets the other requirements shown in Figure DH 4-
4, the put or call is not clearly and closely related to its host debt instrument. If it is not contingently
exercisable, then it should be evaluated to determine whether it contains an embedded interest rate
derivative that should be separated. See DH 4.4.2 for information on how to determine whether a debt
host contract contains an embedded interest rate derivative.
Convertible debt is a hybrid instrument composed of at least (1) a debt host instrument and (2) one or
more conversion features (i.e., a written call option requiring delivery of company stock upon exercise
of the conversion option by the holder). Many convertible debt instruments contain a conversion
option with several settlement features that are interrelated. If, after performing the analysis of one
settlement feature, it is determined that it should be separately accounted for as a derivative, then the
entire conversion option should be separated and accounted for as a single derivative. The debt may
also contain other embedded derivatives (e.g., puts and calls, contingent interest, make-whole
provisions, other interest features). See DH 4.8.3 for information on multiple derivative features
embedded in a single hybrid instrument.
When considering whether an embedded equity-linked component is clearly and closely related to its
host instrument, a reporting entity should first determine whether the host is an equity host or a debt
host. Instruments classified as debt, such as convertible debt instruments, are considered debt hosts.
An embedded equity-linked component is generally not considered clearly and closely related to a debt
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Embedded derivative instruments
host. See DH 4.5.1 for information on determining whether an equity instrument is a debt or equity
host.
An issuer should next determine whether the embedded conversion option meets the definition of a
derivative. When evaluating whether an equity-linked component meets the definition of a derivative,
the net settlement provision in ASC 815-10-15-83(c) often receives the most attention; the provisions
in ASC 815-10-15-83(a) and ASC 815-10-15-83(b) are generally met. To determine whether the net
settlement criterion in ASC 815-10-15-83(c) is met, a reporting entity should first determine whether
gross physical settlement is required. Gross physical settlement occurs when the asset to be delivered
in settlement is both (1) related to the underlying and (2) delivered in quantities equal to the equity
component’s notional amount. If gross physical settlement is required, a reporting entity should
analyze whether the asset to be delivered at settlement (e.g., shares) is readily convertible to cash. The
following considerations are typically relevant to that analysis.
□ Whether the number of shares to be exchanged is large relative to the daily transaction volume
□ The effect of any restrictions on the future sale of any shares received
A reporting entity should also consider the appropriate unit of account when determining whether the
asset to be delivered at settlement is readily convertible to cash. In assessing whether a contract that
can contractually be settled in increments meets the definition of net settlement, a reporting entity
must determine whether or not the quantity of the asset to be received from the settlement of one
increment is considered readily convertible to cash. If the contract can be settled in increments and
those increments are considered readily convertible to cash, the entire contract meets the definition of
net settlement.
If gross physical settlement is not required, an equity-linked component may nevertheless meet the
net settlement provisions in ASC 815-10-15-83(c)(1) or ASC 815-10-15-83(c)(2). See DH 2 for further
information on how to determine whether a contract meets the definition of a derivative.
If the conversion option meets the definition of a derivative, it would still be outside the scope of ASC
815 if it qualifies for the scope exception for certain contracts involving a reporting entity’s own equity
in ASC 815-10-15-74(a).
An embedded component is considered indexed to a reporting entity’s own stock if it meets the
requirements specified in ASC 815-40-15. See FG 5.6.2 for information on these requirements.
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Embedded derivative instruments
An embedded component that involves a reporting entity’s own equity would be classified in
shareholders’ equity if it meets the requirements for equity classification in ASC 815-40-25. See FG
5.6.3 for information on these requirements.
See FG 6.5.1 for information on the derecognition of convertible debt with a separated conversion
option.
ASC 815-15-35-4 provides guidance that addresses a reporting entity’s accounting for a previously
separated conversion option that no longer meets the criteria for separate accounting.
ASC 815-15-35-4
If an embedded conversion option in a convertible debt instrument no longer meets the bifurcation
criteria in this Subtopic, an issuer shall account for the previously bifurcated conversion option by
reclassifying the carrying amount of the liability for the conversion option (that is, its fair value on the
date of reclassification) to shareholders’ equity. Any debt discount recognized when the conversion
option was bifurcated from the convertible debt instrument shall continue to be amortized.
ASC 815-15-40-1 and ASC 815-15-40-4 address a reporting entity’s accounting upon conversion or
extinguishment of an instrument which has previously been separated.
ASC 815-15-40-1
If a holder exercises a conversion option for which the carrying amount has previously been
reclassified to shareholders’ equity pursuant to paragraph 815-15-35-4, the issuer shall recognize any
unamortized discount remaining at the date of conversion immediately as interest expense.
ASC 815-15-40-4
If a convertible debt instrument with a conversion option for which the carrying amount has
previously been reclassified to shareholders’ equity pursuant to the guidance in paragraph 815-15-35-4
is extinguished for cash (or other assets) before its stated maturity date, the entity shall do both of the
following:
a. The portion of the reacquisition price equal to the fair value of the conversion option at the date of
the extinguishment shall be allocated to equity.
b. The remaining reacquisition price shall be allocated to the extinguishment of the debt to
determine the amount of gain or loss.
Many securitization transactions involve the transfer of financial assets to a limited-purpose entity
through one or more steps. The securitization entity issues various interests in security form (hence
the term “securitization”) to third parties that entitle the holders to the cash flows generated by the
entity’s underlying financial assets. These interests are commonly referred to as “beneficial interests”
in those assets. ASC 860, Transfers and Servicing, defines beneficial interests.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Beneficial interests can take many different forms, ranging from debt securities to equity interests
issued by a limited partnership or limited liability company. Examples of beneficial interests in
securitizations include mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities, credit-linked notes,
collateralized debt obligations, and interest-only (IO) or principal-only (PO) strips. The primary
investors in beneficial interests in securitizations are insurance companies, banks, broker-dealers,
hedge funds, pension funds, and other individuals or companies that maintain a significant
investment or trading portfolio. Corporate treasury groups may also invest in beneficial interests. For
example, many corporations invest in mortgage-backed securities issued by government-sponsored
enterprises, such as Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae. The entity selling assets in a securitization
transaction often retains interests in the assets sold. Commonly referred to as retained interests, these
are also regarded as forms of beneficial interests.
Figure DH 4-5 provides an overview of the process of applying ASC 815 to beneficial interests in
securitizations. See ASC 815-15-55-137 through ASC 815-15-55-156 for examples of how to apply the
clearly and closely related criterion to beneficial interests.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Figure DH 4-5
Decision tree for application of ASC 815 to beneficial interests in securitizations
Beneficial interests should be evaluated to determine whether they meet the definition of a derivative
in ASC 815. See DH 2 for information on the definition of a derivative. If the beneficial interest is an IO
or PO strip it may qualify for a scope exception; see DH 3.2.12 for information on the scope exception
for certain IOs and POs.
Certain beneficial interests in securitizations (that are not derivatives within the scope of ASC 815) are
accounted for like debt securities under ASC 320, as detailed in ASC 860-20-35-2. See LI 3.2.2.1 for
information on these instruments.
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Question DH 4-16 discusses how a reporting entity should interpret the criterion for beneficial
interests in determining whether an instrument meets the definition of a derivative.
Question DH 4-16
Part of the definition of a derivative requires a derivative to have “an initial net investment that is
smaller than would be required for other types of contracts that would be expected to have a similar
response to changes in market factors.” How should a reporting entity interpret the criterion for
beneficial interests?
PwC response
To determine whether this criterion has been met, a reporting entity should consider whether the
investment amount reflects the fair value of the expected cash flows of the beneficial interest or
represents some other amount (e.g., is equivalent to an option premium for a residual interest that will
have a payoff only if the performance of the underlying assets is other than expected). An initial net
investment equal to the fair value of the expected cash flows of a beneficial interest would generally
not be considered to have “an initial net investment that is smaller than would be required for other
types of contracts that would be expected to have a similar response to changes in market factors,” but
an initial net investment that is less than that amount may be.
If a beneficial interest meets the definition of a derivative in its entirety and does not qualify for a
scope exception, it must be accounted for as a derivative under ASC 815. It should be initially recorded
at its fair value and subsequently measured at fair value each reporting period with changes in fair
value recognized in earnings.
Beneficial interests that are not derivatives in their entirety should be evaluated to determine whether
they contain embedded derivatives that should be accounted for separately. As discussed in
ASC 815-15-25-12, that determination should be based on an analysis of the contractual terms of the
beneficial interest, which requires an understanding of the nature and amount of assets, liabilities, and
other financial instruments that comprise the entire securitization transaction. It also requires that the
reporting entity obtain information about the payoff structure and the payment priority of the
instrument.
The evaluation of the clearly and closely related criterion in ASC 815-15-25-1(a) can be more
complicated for beneficial interests because the contractual terms might not explicitly acknowledge
the presence of embedded derivatives. Therefore, a more holistic analysis of whether the securitization
vehicle has entered into contracts that introduce new risks not inherent in the asset portfolio or how
the terms of the beneficial interest relate to the assets and liabilities of the securitization vehicle will be
required. ASC 815-15-55-222 through ASC 815-15-55-226A provide examples of how to apply the
clearly and closely related criterion to beneficial interests in securitized assets. The evaluation of
embedded credit derivative features differs from other risks, as discussed in DH 4.4.6.3.
Following is a list of frequently identified potential embedded derivatives found in beneficial interests
that require additional analysis. Interest rate and prepayment features are the most common types of
embedded derivatives in investments in securitized financial assets.
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Embedded derivative instruments
□ Embedded put and call options permitting the investor, transferor, or servicer to redeem the
beneficial interests
□ Options that allow the servicer to purchase loans from the securitization trust (e.g., removal of
account provisions)
□ Certain explicit derivatives that the securitization vehicle enters into, such as written credit default
swaps embedded in synthetic collateralized debt obligation structures
In addition, there may be implicit embedded derivatives when the following exist in the beneficial
interests:
□ Basis risk from the interest payments of the assets of a securitization entity being based on interest
rates (e.g., adjustable rate mortgage based on Treasury rates) that are different from the interest
rate underlying the beneficial interests issued (e.g., LIBOR plus a fixed spread)
□ Notional mismatches creating basis risk between the balances of assets and liabilities of the
securitization vehicle and derivatives the securitization vehicle has entered into may occur as the
underlying mortgage loans are prepaid
□ Differences in the foreign exchange rates associated with the underlying collateral assets and
beneficial interests issued
If there is any potential shortfall of cash flows that will be generated by the assets and derivatives held
by a trust funding the payment of the beneficial interests (excluding certain credit losses), no matter
how remote, the beneficial interest would contain an embedded component that should be evaluated
to determine whether it is a derivative that should be separated. A shortfall may occur if the
contractual cash flows from the financial instruments in the vehicle (excluding certain credit losses)
could be insufficient to fund the payments to the beneficial interest holders. Provided the only
underlying risk is interest rate risk, these embedded components should be analyzed under ASC 815-
15-25-26(a) to determine whether the cash flow shortfall could result in the investor not recovering
substantially all of its initial recorded investment. Similarly, beneficial interests with positive leverage
resulting from incremental trust cash flows (i.e., doubling of the initial and the then-market rates of
return) should be analyzed under the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26(b). See DH 4.4.2 for information
on the embedded interest rate derivative guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26.
The analysis required by ASC 815-15-25-26 is based on the recorded basis of the instrument. When
investors purchase prepayable beneficial interests at a substantial premium, it becomes more likely
that the securities contain an embedded derivative that should be accounted for separately because the
hybrid financial instrument is more likely to be contractually settleable in a way that the investor
would not recover substantially all of its initial recorded investment.
Question DH 4-17 discusses whether an option in an embedded derivative should be accounted for
separately.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-17
A mortgage-backed security (MBS) issuer has the option to call the securities once the number of
underlying loans falls below 200. Is the option an embedded derivative that should be accounted for
separately?
PwC response
Probably not. ASC 815-15-25-37 through 15-39 states that an option that only provides the issuer the
right to accelerate the settlement of the debt does not require an assessment under
ASC 815-15-25-26(b). Additionally, the option would not be considered an option that is only
contingently exercisable under ASC 815-15-25-41 as the number of loans underlying the MBS will
eventually reduce to below 200 over the term of the security. As a result, this option would not need to
be assessed under the embedded derivative guidance in ASC 815-15 unless the instrument was
purchased at a significant premium to the redemption price. In that case, it becomes more likely that
the securities contain an embedded derivative that should be accounted for separately based on the
guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26(a) because the hybrid financial instrument is contractually settleable in
a way that the investor would not recover substantially all of its initial recorded investment.
Question DH 4-18 discusses whether beneficial interests contain embedded derivatives that should be
accounted for separately.
Question DH 4-18
A reporting entity issues an “inverse floater.” A special purpose entity holding $100 fixed-rate non-
prepayable loans issues a $60 Class A beneficial interest that pays floating-rate interest based on
LIBOR (with limited exposure to credit losses on the fixed-rate loans) and a $40 Class B residual
interest. Do the beneficial interests contain embedded derivatives that should be accounted for
separately?
PwC response
The Class A beneficial interest can be viewed as a floating-rate security with an interest rate cap (the
return of this Class A beneficial interest is capped by the fixed rate on the prepayable loans). Since the
floating rate is capped, it is not likely that the Class A beneficial interest contains an embedded
derivative under the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26.
The Class B beneficial interest has an embedded interest rate swap in which it receives a fixed rate and
pays a floating rate on the liabilities issued by the SPE (i.e., floating rate beneficial interests). This
embedded interest rate swap should likely be separated from the host beneficial interest based on the
guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26. If the floating rate rises, it is possible that the cash flows generated by
the loans will not support the terms of the Class A beneficial interests. In that case, the Class B
investors would not recover all of their principal. In addition, there are interest rate scenarios that
could result in investors doubling both their initial rate of return and the market rate of return for the
host beneficial interest.
Question DH 4-19 discusses whether a security with a prepayment feature contains an embedded
derivative that should be accounted for separately.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-19
An investor purchases an agency asset-backed security with a par amount of $100 for $115. The
mortgage loans underlying the security are prepayable at par ($100). Does the security contain an
embedded derivative that should be accounted for separately?
PwC response
Yes. If the borrowers in the mortgage loans owned by the securitization entity elect to prepay their
mortgages (at par of $100) the day after the investor purchases the asset-backed security, the investor
would receive approximately 87% of its initial recorded investment of $115. In that case, an embedded
interest rate derivative should be separated based on the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26(a) because the
investor would not receive substantially all of its initially recorded investment. The likelihood that the
borrowers will elect to prepay the mortgage loans on the next day is irrelevant to the analysis.
Question DH 4-20 discusses whether a securitized interest contains an embedded derivative that
should be accounted for separately.
Question DH 4-20
An investor pays $115 for a securitized interest with a remaining term of four years, par value of $100
and an interest rate of 7% at a time when market rates for instruments of this credit type are 2%. The
assets underlying the securitized interest are not prepayable. Does the security contain an embedded
derivative that should be accounted for separately?
PwC response
No. Since the assets are not prepayable, the investor is guaranteed (absent a default, which should not
be taken into account when performing the analysis in ASC 815-15-25-26(a)) to receive its recorded
investment of $115 (through the interest and principal payments) by the maturity of the securitized
interest.
ASC 815-15-25-33 exempts certain beneficial interests from the ASC 815-15-25-26(b) leverage tests
(the double-double test). This exception only applies to embedded derivatives that are tied to the
prepayment risk of the underlying prepayable financial assets.
ASC 815-15-25-33
A securitized interest in prepayable financial assets would not be subject to the conditions in
paragraph 815-15-25-26(b) if it meets both of the following criteria:
a. The right to accelerate the settlement of the securitized interest cannot be controlled by the
investor.
b. The securitized interest itself does not contain an embedded derivative (including an interest-rate-
related derivative instrument) for which bifurcation would be required other than an embedded
derivative that results solely from the embedded call options in the underlying financial assets.
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Embedded derivative instruments
The application of the guidance in ASC 815-15-25-33 depends on when the beneficial interest was
issued or acquired. If it was issued or acquired after June 30, 2007 (date specified in DIG Issue B40),
then the guidance should be applied regardless of the value the other embedded derivative (other than
the prepayment option) is expected to have over its life.
If the beneficial interest was acquired before January 1, 2007, the beneficial interest would be
grandfathered from being assessed under ASC 815-15-25-26(b). If the beneficial interest was issued
after January 1, 2007 but before June 30, 2007, then the criterion in ASC 815-15-25-33(b) would not
be applicable if the other embedded derivative will have a greater than trivial fair value only under
extremely remote scenarios (e.g., embedded derivative only has value when an interest rate index
reaches a remote level).
Reporting entities are required to evaluate credit derivative features embedded in beneficial interests
in securitized financial assets to determine whether they should be separately accounted for.
ASC 815-15-15-9 provides a limited scope exception for embedded credit derivative features created by
the transfer of credit risk between tranches as a result of subordination.
ASC 815-15-15-9
The transfer of credit risk that is only in the form of subordination of one financial instrument to
another (such as the subordination of one beneficial interest to another tranche of a securitization,
thereby redistributing credit risk) is an embedded derivative feature that shall not be subject to the
application of paragraph 815-10-15-11 and Section 815-15-25. Only the embedded credit
derivative feature created by subordination between the financial instruments is not subject to the
application of paragraph 815-10-15-11 and Section 815-15-25. However, other embedded credit
derivative features (for example, those related to credit default swaps on a referenced credit) would be
subject to the application of paragraph 815-10-15-11 and Section 815-15-25 even if their effects are
allocated to interests in tranches of securitized financial instruments in accordance with those
subordination provisions. Consequently, the following circumstances (among others) would not
qualify for the scope exception and are subject to the application of paragraph 815-10-15-11 and
Section 815-15-25 for potential bifurcation:
a. An embedded derivative feature relating to another type of risk (including another type of credit
risk) is present in the securitized financial instruments.
b. The holder of an interest in a tranche of that securitized financial instrument is exposed to the
possibility (however remote) of being required to make potential future payments (not merely
receive reduced cash inflows) because the possibility of those future payments is not created by
subordination. (Note, however, that the securitized financial instrument may involve other
tranches that are not exposed to potential future payments and, thus, those other tranches might
qualify for the scope exception.)
c. The holder owns an interest in a single-tranche securitization vehicle; therefore, the subordination
of one tranche to another is not relevant.
Reporting entities should still evaluate other derivatives embedded in beneficial interests to determine
whether they should be separated, including instances in which the beneficial interest has an
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Embedded derivative instruments
embedded derivative feature relating to another type of risk (e.g., interest rate risk) or, including
another type of credit risk. The embedded derivative analysis should be based on both the contractual
terms of the interest in securitized financial assets and the activities of the securitizing entity. This
analysis requires an understanding of the nature and amount of assets, liabilities, and other financial
instruments that compose the securitization, as well as the payoff structure and priorities, as discussed
in ASC 815-15-25-12 and ASC 815-15-25-13.
However, as it relates to credit risk, a reporting entity should first look into the securitization vehicle to
identify whether there are any credit derivatives. If a new credit risk is added to a beneficial interest by
a written credit derivative in the securitization structure (e.g., as is the case with a collateralized debt
obligation), the related embedded credit derivative feature is not clearly and closely related to the host
contract. We believe the requirement to look into the securitization vehicle applies beyond credit risk;
it also applies to any derivative that introduces additional risk to the securitization rather than
managing a risk that already exists in the securitization structure.
We believe securitization vehicles that do not contain any derivatives are not affected by this guidance,
as illustrated by Case Y in ASC 815-15-55-226, in which the special-purpose entity holds a portfolio of
loans that commingle different credit risks. However, there may be embedded derivatives related to
non-credit risks that may have to be separated under other provisions in ASC 815.
Question DH 4-21 discusses whether a cash collateralized debt obligation with repayment terms based
upon the performance of debt securities contains an embedded credit derivative that should be
accounted for separately.
Question DH 4-21
In a cash collateralized debt obligation (CDO), a securitization entity issues interests to third parties.
The repayment of the principal on the notes is based on the performance of debt securities held by the
securitization entity. Does the security contain an embedded credit derivative that should be
accounted for separately?
PwC response
Maybe. Since ASC 815-15-15-9 states that credit concentrations in subordinated interests should not
be recognized as embedded derivatives, many cash CDOs will not contain an embedded credit
derivative because the principal repayment is directly linked to the loans held by the securitization
entity (i.e., repayment is based on the credit risk of the loans held by the securitization entity).
Reporting entities should analyze the specific facts and circumstances of their arrangements to
determine whether there is an embedded credit derivative that requires separate accounting. In
addition, an assessment of other embedded derivatives, such as interest and prepayment risk, should
be performed.
Question DH 4-22 and Question DH 4-23 discuss whether a synthetic CDO contains an embedded
derivative.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-22
In a synthetic CDO, a securitization entity issues interests to third parties. The securitization entity
holds highly-rated financial instruments (e.g., US Treasury securities), writes a credit default swap
(CDS), and issues notes to third parties. The repayment of principal and interest on the notes is based
on the performance of the CDS (and the underlying collateral). Does the security contain an embedded
credit derivative that should be accounted for separately?
PwC response
Yes. A credit derivative written by a securitization entity would not be considered clearly and closely
related to its host beneficial instrument; therefore, it should be separated by the holder. In addition,
an assessment of other derivatives, such as interest and prepayment risk, should be performed.
Question DH 4-23
A reporting entity issues a synthetic CDO. The reporting entity holds $100 of highly-rated collateral,
writes a CDS with a notional amount of $20 on referenced credits, and issues notes with a notional
amount of $100. Does the security contain an embedded credit derivative that should be accounted for
separately?
PwC response
Yes. The extent of synthetic credit is not relevant to the analysis of embedded credit derivatives. See
Case AA in ASC 815-15-55-226C and Case AB in ASC 815-15-55-226D for similar examples.
Question DH 4-24 discusses whether a financial guarantee contract is eligible for the scope exception
under ASC 815-10-15-58.
Question DH 4-24
A reporting entity issues a credit-linked note (CLN) through a synthetic securitization transaction (the
securitization entity holds highly-rated financial instruments, writes a credit default swap, and issues
notes to third parties.) A guarantor provides a financial guarantee contract guaranteeing the payment
of principal and interest of the CLN. If there is a credit event, the financial guarantor will step in and
make payments to the note holders. Is that financial guarantee contract eligible for the scope exception
under ASC 815-10-15-58?
PwC response
No. A CLN issued as part of a synthetic securitization contains an embedded derivative requiring
separate accounting. Since the financial guarantee contract provides coverage on a derivative
instrument, it would not be eligible for the exception in ASC 815-10-15-58.
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Embedded derivative instruments
To determine its nature, the reporting entity needs to consider the host contract’s underlying
economic characteristics and risks. Whether a host instrument is an equity or debt host is not
determined by its balance sheet classification. An instrument may be classified as equity, but may be
considered a debt host contract for purposes of evaluating embedded components.
Determining whether a hybrid instrument that is legally an equity instrument (e.g., a preferred share)
is a debt or equity host contract requires judgment. As discussed in ASC 815-15-25-17A, all of the
contractual and implied terms of the preferred share, such as the existence of a redemption feature or
conversion option, should be considered when determining the nature of the host instrument as debt
or equity.
ASC 815-15-25-17A
For a hybrid financial instrument issued in the form of a share, an entity shall determine the nature of
the host contract by considering all stated and implied substantive terms and features of the hybrid
financial instrument, weighing each term and feature on the basis of the relevant facts and
circumstances. That is, in determining the nature of the host contract, an entity shall consider the
economic characteristics and risks of the entire hybrid financial instrument including the embedded
derivative feature that is being evaluated for potential bifurcation. In evaluating the stated and implied
substantive terms and features, the existence or omission of any single term or feature does not
necessarily determine the economic characteristics and risks of the host contract. Although an
individual term or feature may weigh more heavily in the evaluation on the basis of the facts and
circumstances, an entity should use judgment based on an evaluation of all of the relevant terms and
features. For example, an entity shall not presume that the presence of a fixed-price, noncontingent
redemption option held by the investor in a convertible preferred stock contract, in and of itself,
determines whether the nature of the host contract is more akin to a debt instrument or more akin to
an equity instrument. Rather, the nature of the host contract depends on the economic characteristics
and risks of the entire hybrid financial instrument.
a. The characteristics of the relevant terms and features themselves (for example, contingent versus
noncontingent, in-the-money versus out-of-the-money)
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Embedded derivative instruments
b. The circumstances under which the hybrid financial instrument was issued or acquired (for
example, issuer-specific characteristics, such as whether the issuer is thinly capitalized or
profitable and well-capitalized)
c. The potential outcomes of the hybrid financial instrument (for example, the instrument may be
settled by the issuer issuing a fixed number of shares, the instrument may be settled by the issuer
transferring a specified amount of cash, or the instrument may remain legal-form equity), as well
as the likelihood of those potential outcomes. The assessment of the potential outcomes may be
qualitative in nature.
Figure DH 4-6 shows some common attributes that should be analyzed to determine the nature of the
host contract. None of these factors alone is determinative of the nature of a host contract; the terms
and conditions as a whole should be evaluated. ASC 815-15-25-17D provides additional guidance on
assessing each of these attributes.
Figure DH 4-6
Analyzing the nature of the host contract
Redemption provision ✓
Conversion option
✓
Cumulative or mandatory fixed dividends
✓
Discretionary dividends based on earnings ✓
Voting rights ✓
Collateral requirement ✓
Participation in the residual equity of the issuer ✓
Preference in liquidation ✓
Put features allow an equity holder to require the issuer to reacquire the equity instrument for cash or
other assets; call features allow the issuer to reacquire the equity instrument.
As discussed in ASC 815-15-25-20, put and call features are typically not considered clearly and closely
related to equity hosts and should be accounted for separately as a derivative provided the other
requirements in ASC 815-15-25-1 are met. However, if the issuer concludes that the embedded feature
meets the requirements for the scope exception for certain contracts involving an entity’s own equity
in ASC 815-10-15-74(a) (i.e., the put or call option would be classified in equity), then the put or call
option would not have to be separated (because it wouldn’t be accounted for as a derivative if it were
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Embedded derivative instruments
freestanding). For example, a call option that allows the issuer of an equity instrument (such as
common stock) to reacquire that equity instrument may meet this exception; if the call option were
embedded in the related equity instrument, it would not be separated from the host contract by the
issuer.
An executory contract may meet the definition of a derivative in its entirety; in that case, the contract
would not be assessed under ASC 815-15-25-1 to determine whether it contains embedded derivatives
that should be accounted for separately. If an executory contract, such as a purchase-and-sale
agreement, meets the definition of a derivative in its entirety, the parties to the contract may elect to
assess the contract under the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception in
ASC 815-10-15-22. Alternatively, the parties to the contract could account for it as a freestanding
derivative. However, executory contracts often do not contain net settlement provisions and therefore
may not meet the definition of a derivative in their entirety. In such instances, executory contracts
must still be evaluated for embedded features (e.g., caps, and floors) that may need to be separated.
See DH 2 for information on the definition of a derivative and DH 3 for information on scope
exceptions.
Executory contracts for the purchase and sale of raw materials, supplies, and services that are not
derivatives in their entirety may include a variety of embedded derivatives, such as:
□ Foreign-currency swaps (with a settlement in a currency other than the functional currency of
either party to the transaction)
□ Commodity forwards (agreements to transact a fixed quantity on a specified future date at a fixed
price) and options
□ Purchase-price caps and floors (i.e., the purchase price may not exceed a cap or fall below a floor)
□ Price adjustments (i.e., the price stated in the contract is adjusted based on a specified index)
ASC 815-15-25-19 provides guidance on the economic characteristics of price caps and floors
embedded in purchase contracts.
ASC 815-15-25-19
The economic characteristics and risks of a floor and cap on the price of an asset embedded in a
contract to purchase that asset are clearly and closely related to the purchase contract, because the
options are indexed to the purchase price of the asset that is the subject of the purchase contract. See
Example 6 (paragraph 815-15-55-114) for an illustration of such options.
However, if the price in the contract is referenced to an underlying that is extraneous to the asset or
the underlying is leveraged (i.e., the magnitude of the price adjustment based on the underlying is
significantly disproportionate to the relationship of the underlying to the asset), then the embedded
derivative is not considered clearly and closely related and may have to be separated.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Insurance contracts may also contain embedded derivatives. If an insurance policy contains an
embedded derivative instrument, it may have to be separated if the embedded derivative is not clearly
and closely related to the insurable risk that is covered under the insurance contract. Contracts such as
equity-indexed annuities, equity-indexed life insurance, and dual-trigger property/casualty
reinsurance that do not meet the requirements in ASC 815-10-15-55 may contain embedded
derivatives.
ASC 815-10-15-67 provides a scope exception for investments in a life insurance contract that falls
within the scope of ASC 325-30. This scope exception also applies to embedded derivative-like
provisions that would otherwise have to be accounted for separately under ASC 815. Such insurance
contracts include corporate-owned life insurance, bank-owned life insurance, and life settlement
contracts. However, it should not be applied by analogy to contracts other than life insurance contracts
subject to the provisions of ASC 325-30. In addition, the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-67 applies
only to the policyholder and does not affect the insurer’s accounting. See DH 3.2.9 for information on
the scope exception for investments in life insurance contracts and LI 5.4 for the information on the
accounting for investments in life insurance contracts.
Question DH 4-25 discusses whether certain embedded derivatives should be separated from the host
insurance contracts.
Question DH 4-25
Should embedded derivatives in the following contracts be separated from the host insurance
contracts?
□ A traditional whole life insurance contract in which insurance may be kept in force for a person’s
entire life
□ A traditional universal life contract under which (a) premiums are generally flexible, (b) the level
of death benefits may be adjusted, and (c) mortality, expenses, and other charges may vary
PwC response
No. The contracts have two components, a death benefit and a surrender benefit. The payment for the
death-benefit component is based on an insurable event that is eligible for the scope exception in
ASC 815-10-15-52. The cash surrender value payment is generally based on interest rates and is
considered clearly and closely related to the debt host. In the case of whole life insurance, there is no
interest rate explicitly provided—just surrender value—which fluctuates in value based primarily on
interest rates and is therefore regarded as clearly and closely related. In the case of universal life
insurance contracts, a minimum interest rate is usually stipulated (that is not above then-current
market rates at issuance), above which additional interest payments are discretionary. Given the
nature of interest features in traditional universal life contracts, they are generally regarded as clearly
and closely related.
In contrast, nontraditional universal life contracts with guaranteed minimum benefits may have
embedded derivatives requiring separation.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-26 discusses whether certain insurance products contain an embedded credit
derivative that should be accounted for separately.
Question DH 4-26
Insurance Co issues a traditional variable-annuity product that contains a provision under which
benefit payments will vary according to the investment experience of the separate accounts to which
the premium deposits are allocated. Does the insurance product contain an embedded credit
derivative that should be accounted for separately?
PwC response
No. The traditional variable annuity component of the product, as described in ASC 815-15-55-54 and
ASC 815-15-55-55 and in ASC 944-20-05-18, contains no embedded derivatives. This component is
not considered a derivative because of the unique attributes of traditional variable annuity contracts
issued by insurance companies, as further described in ASC 944-815-25-1 through ASC 944-815-25-4.
However, variable-annuity products may contain nontraditional features, such as guaranteed
minimum accumulation benefits and guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefits. These features would
typically constitute embedded derivatives requiring separate accounting under ASC 815, as further
described in ASC 944-815-25-5. In such instances, the variable annuity host contract would continue
to be accounted for under existing insurance accounting guidance.
Question DH 4-27 discusses whether an equity-indexed annuity contract is a hybrid instrument that
should be separated.
Question DH 4-27
Is an equity-indexed annuity contract a hybrid instrument that should be separated?
PwC response
Yes. The host is an investment contract under ASC 944 (i.e., a debt host) with multiple embedded
derivatives (a contract holder prepayment option and a contingent equity-return feature). The
prepayment option would typically require payment of the contract account balance less a specified
non-indexed surrender charge to the contract holder, and thus would generally be clearly and closely
related to the debt host, provided it does not contain an embedded interest rate derivative under the
guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26. However, the contingent equity-return feature is not clearly and closely
related to the debt host; therefore, the embedded equity derivative must be separated from the host
contract.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-28
Does a property/casualty insurance contract under which the payment of benefits is the result of an
identifiable insurable event (e.g., theft or fire), with payments based on both changes in foreign
currency (or another index) and insurable losses contain an embedded derivative that should be
separated?
PwC response
Maybe. ASC 815-15-55-12 specifies that dual-trigger contracts under which the insurable loss is highly
probable to occur do not meet the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-52. Therefore, the embedded
derivative must be separated if the insurable loss is highly probable and the other criteria in
ASC 815-15-25-1 are met. In addition, if payments could be made without the occurrence of an
insurable event or in excess of the actual loss, the entire contract may be a derivative or may contain
embedded derivatives that would require separate accounting.
Question DH 4-29 discusses if a disaster bond with a contingent payment feature contains an
embedded derivative that requires separate accounting.
Question DH 4-29
Does a disaster bond with a payment feature that is contingent on specific insurable losses of the
issuer contain an embedded derivative that requires separate accounting? Would the answer change if
the disaster bond had a payment feature indexed to industry loss experience measured as if it were a
dollar-based index?
PwC response
The disaster bond with a payment feature that is contingent on specific insurable losses does not
contain an embedded derivative that should be separately accounted for as a derivative. Although the
payment feature is not clearly and closely related to the debt host, the payment feature is contingent
on an insurable event and meets the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-52. In such instances, the
investor is essentially providing a form of insurance or reinsurance coverage for the issuer.
However, the answer would change if the payment feature was indexed to industry loss experience.
Then the payment feature would not be contingent on insurable losses of the issuer so would not be
clearly and closely related. Therefore, it would not qualify for the ASC 815-10-15-52 scope exception.
As a result, the embedded derivative must be separated from the host contract if the other criteria of
ASC 815-15-25-1 are met.
Question DH 4-30 discusses if a modified coinsurance arrangement with specified terms contains an
embedded derivative that should separately accounted.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Question DH 4-30
Does a modified coinsurance arrangement in which the terms of the ceding company’s payable provide
for the future payment of a principal amount plus a return based on a specified proportion of the
ceding company’s return on either its general account assets or a specified block of those assets (such
as a specific portfolio of its investment securities) contain an embedded derivative that should be
separately accounted for?
PwC response
Yes. In accordance with ASC 815-15-55-108, the return on the receivable by the assuming company is
not clearly and closely related to the host because the yield is based on a specific proportion of the
ceding company’s return on a block of assets. Some contend that modified coinsurance arrangements
are insurance contracts and therefore should be exempt from ASC 815 under the
ASC 815-10-15-52 exception. However, as described in ASC 815-10-15-54, insurance contracts can
have embedded derivatives that need to be separated. ASC 815-15-55-108 notes that whether the host
contract is considered to be an insurance contract or the modified coinsurance receivable/payable
component of the arrangement, the embedded derivative provisions of ASC 815 are still applicable.
The approach for determining whether an embedded derivative is clearly and closely related to a lease
host is similar to the approach used for a debt host. As discussed in ASC 815-15-25-21 through ASC
815-15-25-22, an embedded derivative that alters lease payments is considered clearly and closely
related to the lease host if (1) there is no significant leverage factor and (2) the underlying is an
adjustment for inflation on similar property or an interest rate index.
In assessing if there is significant leverage relating to an underlying that is an interest rate index, the
guidance in ASC 815-15-25-26 should be assessed. See DH 4.4.2 for additional information.
Oftentimes, embedded derivatives in lease agreements qualify for the scope exception in ASC 815-10-
15-59 for contracts not traded on an exchange. For example, an operating lease that requires lease
payments that vary based on sales by the lessee (e.g., rent payable at a base of $10,000 plus 3% of the
lessee’s sales each month) would not have to be separated because the embedded feature in the lease
qualifies on a standalone basis for the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-59(d) applicable to a non-
exchange-traded contract whose underlying is specified volumes of sales by one of the parties to the
contract. Similarly, an option embedded in an operating lease agreement on an office building that
gives the lessee the option of buying the leased asset would qualify for the ASC 815-10-15-59(b)(2)
scope exception on a standalone basis because the settlement is based upon the leased asset, which is a
nonfinancial asset of one of the parties. The same would apply to more complex lease arrangements,
such as an operating lease with a terminal rental adjustment clause indexed to the specific asset under
lease, assuming the lease is not exchange-traded and the subject of the lease is a nonfinancial asset or
liability of one of the parties that is not readily convertible to cash, as discussed in ASC 815-10-15-119.
Example DH 4-5 and Example DH 4-6 illustrate the analysis of embedded features in lease
agreements.
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Embedded derivative instruments
EXAMPLE DH 4-5
Purchase option and option to extend lease embedded in a finance lease
Lessee Corp enters into a property lease (land and building) with Lessor Corp. The following table
summarizes information about the lease and the leased asset.
Purchase option Lessee Corp has an option to purchase the property at the
end of the lease term for $1,000,000 when the expected fair
value at the end of year ten is $1,500,000.
Annual lease payments The annual lease payments are $600,000, with increases of
3% per year thereafter.
Lessee Corp concludes that the lease is a finance lease under the guidance in ASC 842, Leases, because
at lease commencement the fixed price purchase option available to Lessee Corp at the end of the
initial lease term (i.e., after 10 years) is reasonably certain to be exercised by Lessee Corp. As a result,
Lessee Corp has effectively obtained control of the underlying asset.
Under the guidance in ASC 842, Lessee Corp would record a lease liability and a right of use asset at
the present value of the lease payments plus the present value of the option purchase price using its
incremental borrowing rate. See LG 4 for information on the accounting for leases under ASC 842.
Is either the renewal option or purchase option an embedded derivative that should be separated from
the lease contract?
Analysis
A right to extend a finance lease is a right to extend the maturity of the lease liability. This extension
option does not meet the definition of a derivative because it does not contain a net settlement
provision. Since the option to extend the lease would not be accounted for as a derivative if it were
freestanding, it does not meet the requirement in ASC 815-15-25-1(c) and should not be separated
from the lease host contract.
If Lessee Corp exercises its purchase option, it would recognize this as an extinguishment of the lease
liability. The repayment of debt at maturity is not a derivative.
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Embedded derivative instruments
EXAMPLE DH 4-6
Purchase option and option to extend lease embedded in an operating lease
Lessee Corp leases an automobile from Lessor Corp. The following table summarizes information
about the lease and the leased asset.
Purchase option Lessee Corp has the option to purchase the automobile for
$20,000 upon expiration of the lease.
Lessee Corp concludes that the lease is an operating lease because none of the criteria in
ASC 842-10-25-2 and ASC 842-10-25-3 to classify a lease as a finance lease have been met.
Is either the renewal option or purchase option an embedded derivative that should be separated from
the lease contract?
Analysis
A right to extend an operating lease beyond the lease term is a right to acquire the use of a
nonfinancial asset for an additional period. The extension option in this case does not meet the
definition of a derivative because it simply provides the right to execute a new lease and does not
contain a net settlement provision. Since the option to extend the lease would not be accounted for as
a derivative if it were freestanding, it does not meet the requirement in ASC 815-15-25-1(c) and should
not be separated from the lease host contract.
The purchase option does not meet the definition of a derivative because it does not contain a net
settlement provision.
□ To exercise the option, Lessee Corp must pay the purchase price in cash, and Lessor Corp must
deliver the asset. This is done on a gross basis, and there is no provision in the contract that would
permit net settlement.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Since the purchase option would not be accounted for as a derivative if it were freestanding, it does not
meet the requirement in ASC 815-15-25-1(c) and should not be separated from the lease host contract.
When an embedded derivative is separated from a hybrid instrument, the accounting for the host
contract should be based on the accounting guidance that is applicable to similar contracts that don’t
contain the embedded derivative. The separated derivative would be accounted for as a derivative
instrument under ASC 815 (i.e., classified on the balance sheet as an asset or liability at fair value with
any changes in its fair value recognized currently in earnings), consistent with the accounting for a
freestanding derivative. The embedded derivative can be designated as a hedging instrument, provided
that the hedge accounting requirements have been met.
If a reporting entity is unable to reliably identify and measure the embedded derivative instrument for
purposes of separating that instrument from the host contract, the entire contract (i.e., the hybrid
instrument) would have to be measured at fair value with gains and losses recognized in current
earnings. If this practicability exception is invoked, the hybrid instrument may not be designated as a
hedging instrument because nonderivative instruments generally do not qualify as hedging
instruments.
ASC 815-15-30-2 provides guidance on allocating the carrying amount of the hybrid instrument
between the host contract and the embedded derivative when an embedded derivative is separated.
The embedded derivative should be recorded on the balance sheet at its fair value at inception and the
carrying value assigned to the host contract is calculated as the difference between the previous
carrying amount of the hybrid instrument and the fair value of the derivative (i.e., the with-and-
without method). Therefore, there is no immediate earnings impact associated with the initial
recognition and measurement of an embedded derivative that is separated from a hybrid instrument.
When separating an embedded forward derivative (i.e., a non-option derivative) from the host
contract, ASC 815-15-30-4 states that the terms of the embedded derivative should be determined in a
manner that results in a fair value that is generally equal to zero at the inception of the hybrid
instrument. That is, the explicit terms of a forward-based embedded derivative that requires separate
accounting should be adjusted to equal market terms so that the derivative has a zero fair value at
inception. This is illustrated in Example 12 beginning at ASC 815-15-55-160.
However, if the embedded instrument is an option, ASC 815-15-30-6 allows the embedded option-
based derivative to have a value other than zero at the inception of the contract. Accordingly, the terms
of an embedded option should not be adjusted from its stated terms to result in the option’s being at-
the-money at the inception of the hybrid instrument. In the case of a debt host contract, this will result
in an additional debt discount or premium equal to the initial fair value of the separated option.
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Embedded derivative instruments
Figure DH 4-7 illustrates the provisions of ASC 815-15-30-4 through ASC 815-15-30-6 that relate to
the separation of hybrid instruments containing option-based and non-option-based embedded
derivatives.
Figure DH 4-7
Separating option-based and non-option-based embedded derivatives
Type of
embedded Codification Timing of Holder/ Fair value of embedded
derivative reference assessment issuer derivative
A reporting entity should make sure that economic characteristics are not lost or double counted in the
process of separating the instrument. Proper identification of the host and embedded features may
affect several aspects of the accounting analysis, including the determination of whether the feature is
clearly and closely related, whether it meets the net settlement criteria or qualifies for a scope
exception, and how it is potentially measured.
When separating an embedded derivative from a debt host, a reporting entity should use the stated or
implied terms of the hybrid instrument, as discussed in ASC 815-15-25-24. For example, a fixed-rate
S&P 500 indexed bond (pays a fixed rate of interest plus a coupon linked to the return on the S&P 500
Index) should be separated into a fixed-rate bond and a derivative linked to the S&P 500 Index.
However, it may be difficult to determine the stated or implied terms of some hybrid instruments,
particularly those with embedded interest rate derivatives. ASC 815-15-25-25 provides guidance on
determining the characteristics of a debt host in that circumstance.
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Embedded derivative instruments
ASC 815-15-25-25
In the absence of stated or implied terms, an entity may make its own determination of whether to
account for the debt host as a fixed-rate, variable-rate, or zero-coupon bond. That determination
requires the application of judgment, which is appropriate because the circumstances surrounding
each hybrid instrument containing an embedded derivative may be different. That is, in the absence of
stated or implied terms, it is appropriate to consider the features of the hybrid instrument, the issuer,
and the market in which the instrument is issued, as well as other factors, to determine the
characteristics of the debt host contract. However, an entity shall not express the characteristics of the
debt host contract in a manner that would result in identifying an embedded derivative that is not
already clearly present in a hybrid instrument. For example, it would be inappropriate to do either of
the following:
a. Identify a variable-rate debt host contract and an interest rate swap component that has a
comparable variable-rate leg in an embedded compound derivative, in lieu of identifying a fixed-
rate debt host contract
b. Identify a fixed-rate debt host contract and a fixed-to-variable interest rate swap component in an
embedded compound derivative in lieu of identifying a variable-rate debt host contract.
Once the terms of the embedded and the host components have been determined, they cannot be
changed to another acceptable alternative at a later date.
Although the requirement to separate an embedded derivative from a host contract applies to both
parties to a contract (i.e., both the issuer and the holder of a hybrid instrument), the two parties might
reach different conclusions. The following sections discuss transactions when this asymmetry is likely
to occur.
An investor that holds a debt security that is convertible into shares of a public company’s common
stock must separate the embedded conversion option from the host contract because it would be
subject to the requirements of ASC 815 if it were a freestanding derivative. However, the issuer may
qualify for the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-74(a) for certain contracts involving an issuer’s own
equity. In that case, the issuer would not have to separate the embedded conversion option. See DH
3.3 and FG 5 for information on the scope exception for certain contracts involving an issuer’s own
equity.
An equity-indexed life insurance contract links term-life coverage with an investment feature. The
surrender feature provides the policyholder with a contingent equity return that is not clearly and
closely related to the host contract, as discussed in ASC 815-15-55-75; therefore, the insurance
4-47
Embedded derivative instruments
company would have to separately account for the embedded derivative. However, if the holder
accounts for an equity-indexed life insurance contract under the guidance in ASC 325-30,
Investments—Other, Investments in Insurance Contracts, it is not subject to ASC 815 and therefore
the holder would not separate the embedded derivative. See DH 3.2.9 for information on the scope
exception for investments in life insurance contracts and LI 5.4 for information on the accounting for
investments in life insurance contracts.
The analysis of whether an embedded derivative is clearly and closely related to its host contract is
generally performed either on the date that the hybrid instrument is issued or on the date that the
reporting entity acquires the instrument. An investor that acquires a hybrid instrument in the
secondary market or in a business combination could potentially reach a different conclusion with
regard to the separation of an embedded derivative than the issuer or the original investor, since each
may perform their respective analyses on different dates and under potentially different market
conditions. For example, the initial investor of the instrument at par may reach a different conclusion
than a reporting entity that acquires a hybrid instrument in the secondary market at a premium or
discount with regard to the leverage tests required in ASC 815-15-25-26 when assessing an interest
rate host with embedded interest rate features. That is, the initial investor may have concluded that an
embedded derivative was clearly and closely related to the host contract, whereas a subsequent holder
may conclude otherwise, or vice versa.
While the analyses of the clearly and closely related criterion in ASC 815-15-25-1(a) and the embedded
foreign currency derivative guidance in ASC 815-15-15-10 are generally one-time assessments for each
holder of the hybrid instrument, the remaining criteria in ASC 815-15-25-1 require an ongoing
assessment by each holder each reporting period. Because ASC 815-15-25-1(c) requires a decision
about whether a separate instrument with the same terms as the embedded derivative would qualify as
a derivative, it follows that the assessment of whether an embedded derivative should be separated
must also be applied at the inception of the hybrid instrument and over its life. Although a similar
reassessment argument may be made regarding the criterion in ASC 815-15-25-1(b), it is uncommon
for the measurement attribute of a hybrid instrument to change absent a change in accounting
principle that provides specific transition guidance.
There are a number of circumstances under which a reporting entity should reassess embedded
derivatives in a hybrid instrument. These include the following:
□ A public offering of equity instruments may cause an embedded conversion option related to that
instrument to have the characteristic of net settlement because the underlying instrument is
readily convertible to cash pursuant to ASC 815-10-15-119.
□ The classification of an embedded derivative may no longer meet the ASC 815-10-15-74(a) scope
exception because of a change in circumstances causing the embedded derivative, if freestanding,
to be reclassified to a liability from equity under the guidance in ASC 815-40.
□ A hybrid instrument may be legally modified in a manner that triggers a new basis event.
ASC 815-15-25-7 provides guidance on separating multiple embedded derivatives from a single hybrid
instrument (e.g., a call option and a conversion option from a convertible debt security).
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Embedded derivative instruments
ASC 815-15-25-7
If a hybrid instrument contains more than one embedded derivative feature that would individually
warrant separate accounting as a derivative instrument under paragraph 815-15-25-1, those embedded
derivative features shall be bundled together as a single, compound embedded derivative that shall
then be bifurcated and accounted for separately from the host contract under this Subtopic unless a
fair value election is made pursuant to paragraph 815-15-25-4.
Separating embedded derivatives from a hybrid instrument often becomes more complex when there
is more than one embedded derivative. Embedded derivatives that are clearly and closely related (and
as a result are not separated) may have an impact on the valuation of the embedded features that are
separated. Those embedded derivatives should not be included in the compound embedded derivative
instrument that is separated from the hybrid instrument. The host contract and the remaining
embedded derivatives should be accounted for based on GAAP applicable to similar host contracts of
that type.
Each embedded derivative should be analyzed separately; however, there may be circumstances in
which it is reasonable to analyze multiple embedded derivatives together. Regardless of the approach
taken, we believe that a reporting entity should (1) contemporaneously document the method selected
and the factors considered in electing that method and (2) consistently apply that method over time.
Once a conclusion is reached that multiple derivative features must be separated, the value of the
compound derivative must be based on one unit of account rather than determining separate fair value
measurements for each embedded derivative component and adding them together. A separate unit of
account method is inconsistent with ASC 815-15-25-7 and may produce an inaccurate valuation result,
since multiple derivatives within a single hybrid instrument likely affect each other’s fair values.
Question DH 4-31 discusses whether the sum of the fair values of a separated embedded derivative
and the remaining host contract equal an amount that is greater or less than the fair value of the
hybrid instrument taken as a whole.
Question DH 4-31
Can the sum of the fair values of a separated embedded derivative and the remaining host contract
equal an amount that is greater or less than the fair value of the hybrid instrument as a whole?
PwC response
No. The sum of the values of the separated embedded derivatives and the remaining instrument
should equal the value of the hybrid instrument as a whole.
4-49
Chapter 5:
Introduction to hedging
1
Introduction to hedging
Guidance specific to financial, nonfinancial, and foreign currency hedges are addressed in DH 6, DH 7,
and DH 8, respectively. Assessing the effectiveness of hedging relationships is addressed in DH 9.
ASC 815’s requirement to reflect changes in the fair value of a derivative in the income statement each
period may create volatility. If certain qualifying criteria are met, reporting entities can use hedge
accounting to minimize this volatility in the financial statements. The benefit of hedge accounting is
that it reduces the earnings volatility that would otherwise result from recording changes in the fair
value of the derivative in one period and the income statement impact of the hedged risk in another
period. In other words, there is a matching in the income statement. (For fair value hedges, there may
be some mismatch, as explained in DH 5.4.)
The accounting for changes in the fair value of a derivative for a given period will depend on the
intended use of the derivative, whether it qualifies for hedge accounting, and what type of hedge it is.
ASC 815 divides hedges into categories with specific accounting guidance for each. That guidance
determines how the matching is achieved. Figure DH 5-1 summarizes the treatment of a derivative
that qualifies as a hedging instrument in each type of hedge.
Figure DH 5-1
Recognition of hedging instruments by type of hedge
1 There is a simplified approach available for certain private company hedging relationships that results in measurement of a
derivative at settlement value if certain criteria are met. This is discussed in DH 11.
5-2
Introduction to hedging
The unit of account in ASC 815 is generally the individual derivative. Hedge accounting guidance
requires a reporting entity to designate hedging relationships at a transaction level and limits the
degree to which transactions can be grouped or aggregated. This may be different from how some
reporting entities manage their risk mitigation activities, which may consider the risks of a portfolio or
the net risk after offsetting certain positions.
The primary purpose of cash flow hedge accounting is to link the income statement recognition of a
hedging instrument and a hedged transaction whose changes in cash flows are expected to offset each
other. For a reporting entity to achieve this offsetting or “matching” of cash flows, the change in the
fair value of the derivative (or in some cases, a portion of the change in fair value) designated as a cash
flow hedge is initially reported as a component of other comprehensive income (OCI) and later
reclassified into earnings in the same period(s) when the hedged transaction affects earnings (e.g.,
when a forecasted sale occurs). This reclassification is reported in the same income statement line item
in which the hedged transaction is reported.
Example DH 5-1 illustrates a cash flow hedge used to offset the volatility in future interest payments.
5-3
Introduction to hedging
EXAMPLE DH 5-1
Cash flow hedge of floating interest payments
DH Corp issues debt with a term of 10 years. The debt requires DH Corp to make monthly interest
payments based on LIBOR. DH Corp manages the uncertainty associated with changes in LIBOR with
a swap in which it pays a fixed rate and receives the LIBOR rate.
The LIBOR payments DH Corp receives from the swap counterparty (C) will offset the payments it
needs to make on its debt (A), and as a result, the net of payments and receipts on the swap and the
debt will be fixed (B).
Analysis
If the swap qualifies as a cash flow hedge of the variability in the contractually specified interest rate,
DH Corp would reflect the change in fair value of the swap in OCI and reclassify a portion to earnings
when each applicable interest payment is made. The net result would reflect interest expense after
consideration of the hedging transaction. In other words, “net” interest expense would reflect the fixed
rate.
If the hedging relationship does not qualify for hedge accounting, DH Corp would reflect changes in
the fair value of the swap in earnings each reporting period. This amount would include the changes in
fair value of the swap stemming from estimated cash flows over the full 10-year term.
If a derivative qualifies as a fair value hedging instrument, the portion of the gain or loss on the
derivative designated as a fair value hedge will still be recognized in earnings currently. However, a
reporting entity would also recognize in earnings the changes in the value of the hedged asset, liability,
or firm commitment due to the hedged risk through a basis adjustment to the hedged item. These two
changes in fair value would offset one another in whole or in part and are reported in the same income
statement line item as the hedged risk.
5-4
Introduction to hedging
EXAMPLE DH 5-2
Fair value hedge of a fixed-rate loan
DH Corp invests in a fixed-rate loan that will be due in 10 years. It will be entitled to monthly interest
payments at a fixed rate.
As market interest rates move over the term of the loan, the fair value of the loan will change. DH Corp
is hedging LIBOR as a benchmark interest rate (see DH 6.4.5.1). All else being equal, as LIBOR
decreases, the value of its investment will increase because the contractual fixed interest payments will
be above market. Similarly, all else being equal, if LIBOR increases, the value of its investment will
decrease. DH Corp is exposed to the risk of changes in the benchmark interest rate (LIBOR).
To manage its exposure to changes in the fair value of its investment caused by changes in LIBOR, DH
Corp enters into a receive-LIBOR and pay-fixed swap.
The fixed payments it receives from its investment (A) will be offset by the fixed payments it needs to
make to the swap counterparty (C). Its net position will be the right to receive monthly LIBOR
payments (B).
Analysis
DH Corp would recognize the changes in fair value of the derivative directly in earnings in the periods
in which they occur. If DH Corp qualifies and elects to apply fair value hedge accounting, it would
record a basis adjustment on the debt equal to the change in fair value of the debt that is attributable
to the changes in the benchmark interest rate (LIBOR). The changes in the value of the derivative and
the changes in the value of the hedged item would be reported in interest income, offsetting each other
to the extent the hedge is effective.
Had DH Corp not elected or qualified for hedge accounting, it would not record the basis adjustment
on the investment, and there would be more volatility in earnings because the change in fair value of
the derivative would not be offset.
5-5
Introduction to hedging
A net investment hedge allows a reporting entity to hedge its investment in a foreign operation, which
is comprised of the assets and liabilities of the foreign operation with dissimilar risks, as a single
hedged item. This would not otherwise be permitted under cash flow or fair value hedge accounting
guidance. The change in the fair value of the hedging instrument (or in some cases, a portion)
designated as a net investment hedge is recognized in cumulative translation adjustment (CTA) within
OCI and held there until the hedged net investment is sold or liquidated; at that point, the amount
recognized in CTA is reclassified to earnings and reported in the same line item as the gain or loss on
the liquidation of the net investment.
Figure DH 5-2 illustrates the overlap between fair value, cash flow, and foreign currency hedges,
including a hedge of the net investment in a foreign operation.
Figure DH 5-2
Interaction between fair value, cash flow, and foreign currency hedges
5-6
Introduction to hedging
Figure DH 5-3
Considerations in qualifying for hedge accounting
The risk associated with the hedged item or transaction must qualify for hedge accounting. The risks
eligible to be hedged depend on whether it is a fair value, cash flow, or foreign exchange hedge and
whether the hedged item is a financial or nonfinancial instrument.
The hedged risk must result in exposure to a change in fair values or cash flows that could affect
reported earnings.
5-7
Introduction to hedging
Reporting entities can hedge recognized assets and liabilities, firm commitments, and forecasted
transactions to reduce their exposure to changes in the fair value or cash flows associated with
recognized balances and future transactions.
Generally, only a derivative instrument as defined in ASC 815 can qualify as a hedging instrument, but
there are limited circumstances (discussed in DH 8) related to foreign currency hedging when a
nonderivative instrument is eligible to be used.
To qualify for hedge accounting, the hedging instrument must be highly effective at offsetting the
specified risk during the period the hedge is designated. Effectiveness is addressed in DH 9.
At hedge inception, ASC 815-20-25-3(b) indicates that public business entities, public not-for-profit
entities, and financial institutions need to document:
□ The risk management objective and strategy for undertaking the hedge, including identification of:
▪ If the risk is interest rate risk, the benchmark interest rate or the contractually specified
rate
o The method that will be used to assess hedge effectiveness retrospectively and prospectively,
whether qualitative or quantitative (see DH 9)
5-8
Introduction to hedging
□ A reasonable method for recognizing in earnings the gain or loss on a hedged firm commitment
□ For a last-of-layer hedging relationship, an analysis to support that the hedged item is anticipated
to be outstanding as of the hedged item’s assumed maturity date
We believe that the reporting entities should also contemporaneously document the method of
calculating changes in fair value due to the hedged risk and the reporting entity’s policy for amortizing
basis adjustments. See DH 6.3.1.2 and 7.2.1.3.
For a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction, the following must be documented:
□ Either (1) the expected currency amount for foreign currency hedges or (2) the quantity of the
forecasted transaction for hedges of other risks
□ The current price of a forecasted transaction (to satisfy the criterion in paragraph
ASC 815-20-25-75(b) for offsetting cash flows)
□ If the hedged risk is the variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a contractually specified
component in a forecasted purchase or sale of a nonfinancial asset, the contractually specified
component
□ If the hedged risk is the variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a contractually specified
interest rate for forecasted interest receipts or payments on a variable-rate financial asset or
liability, the contractually specified interest rate
If a forecasted sale or purchase is being hedged for price risk, the hedged transaction should not be
specified (1) solely in terms of expected currency amounts or (2) as a percentage of sales or purchases
during a period.
As discussed in DH 6.3.3.4 for hedges of financial items and 7.3.2.1 for hedges of nonfinancial items,
the hedged forecasted transaction needs to be described with sufficient specificity so that when a
transaction occurs, it is clear whether that transaction is or is not the hedged transaction.
5-9
Introduction to hedging
Question DH 5-1
Can a derivative be designated retroactively as a hedge?
PwC response
No. Designation of a derivative as a hedge should be consistent with management’s intent; therefore,
the designation must take effect prospectively, beginning on the date that management has indicated
(and documented) that the derivative is intended to serve as a hedging instrument. Absent this
requirement, a reporting entity could retroactively identify hedged items, transactions, or methods of
measuring effectiveness to achieve a desired accounting result.
Economic hedging refers to the use of a derivative that mitigates risk without applying hedge
accounting. An entity choosing to treat a transaction as an “economic” rather than an “accounting”
hedge will bear the volatility of changes in the fair value of the derivative instrument in its income
statement.
If the risk that is economically hedged pertains to an item that is reported at fair value through
earnings based on other applicable GAAP, the effect of measuring the derivative and the hedged item
will offset in the income statement (to the extent effective). This accounting is common for
instruments such as debt securities classified as trading securities and other balances that are recorded
at fair value under GAAP. In these cases, hedge accounting would generally not be available. It is also
common for hedges of the foreign exchange risk on foreign currency-denominated monetary assets
and liabilities, which are measured at the end of each reporting period using the exchange rate at that
date with the resulting transaction gains and losses recorded in current earnings.
ASC 815-15-25-4 and ASC 825-10-15-4 provide an elective fair value option for certain hybrid financial
instruments and certain financial assets and liabilities, respectively. Reporting entities may wish to
elect fair value treatment for eligible items to offset the changes in fair value of the derivative
instrument serving as an economic hedge.
5-10
Chapter 6:
Hedges of financial assets,
liabilities, and forecasted
transactions
4-1
Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
This chapter disaggregates hedges of financial instruments based on whether the coupons are fixed or
variable rate and provides the eligibility criteria and recognition guidance for each type of hedge. This
chapter also addresses the last-of-layer method for hedges of closed portfolios of prepayable financial
assets. Finally, it addresses the interaction between the application of hedge accounting and
impairment for both fixed-rate and variable-rate financial instruments.
The concepts within this chapter should be applied in conjunction with information in other chapters
in this guide, including:
□ Introduction to hedge accounting and documentation requirements for all hedges (DH 5)
The risk associated with the hedged item or transaction must qualify for hedge accounting. The basic
risks reporting entities may address when designating hedging transactions are:
□ Credit risk
ASC 815 focuses on these four risks because a change in the price associated with one of those risks
will ordinarily have a direct effect on the fair value of an asset or liability in a determinable or
predictable manner. The hedged risk must result in exposure to a change in fair values or cash flows
that could affect reported earnings, which is a requirement for all hedge accounting relationships.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Figure DH 6-1 illustrates the risks eligible for hedge accounting in a financial instrument.
Figure DH 6-1
Four eligible hedged risks in financial instruments
In practice, credit risk has proven to be difficult for reporting entities to designate within an effective
hedging relationship. The terms of hedging instruments available in the marketplace generally do not
correspond precisely to the default risk of an individual issuer, and the basis difference between the
credit risk in the derivative market and the credit spread of the hedged item may create a mismatch
between the hedged item and the hedging instrument. For example, a downgrade in the credit rating
of an individual security may trigger a payment under a credit derivative but may not offset the
expected variability in cash flows of the hedged item to the same degree.
Figure DH 6-2 details different financial instruments and whether they may be hedged for each of the
four eligible risks.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Figure DH 6-2
Eligibility of financial instruments as hedged items
Trading1 No No No No
1 An asset or liability that is measured using the fair value option in ASC 825-10 or ASC 815-15, a debt security that is classified
as trading, or an equity security not measured using the measurement alternative in ASC 321-10-35-2 do not qualify as
hedged items under ASC 815 since the instrument is remeasured with changes in fair value reported currently in earnings.
ASC 815 allows reporting entities to designate as being hedged certain portions, or components, of the
total risk within the hedged item. In these situations, when determining how effective a hedging
relationship is, a reporting entity may compare the changes in the value (or cash flows) of the
derivative to just the changes in the component that it is managing, rather than needing to compare
the derivative to the entire risk exposure, thereby achieving an accounting outcome that better reflects
the risk management objective of the arrangement. For example, a reporting entity may invest in
fixed-rate debt (i.e., it is the lender). As the market interest rate increases, the value of the investment
decreases. The value of the investment may also decrease for other reasons (e.g., as the
creditworthiness of the issuer declines). Rather than managing the total risk associated with all
changes in the value of the debt, including creditworthiness and other factors, the reporting entity may
wish to manage just the component of the risk driven by changes in the benchmark interest rate, and
may enter into a derivative linked to just that risk.
For variable-rate instruments, the component risk can be the change in cash flows due to the
contractually specified interest rate. Rather than managing the total risk associated with all changes in
the cash flows on a hedged item, the reporting entity may wish to manage just the component of the
risk driven by changes in the contractually specified interest rate, and may enter into a derivative
linked to just that risk.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Hedging interest rate risk in variable-rate instruments and fixed-rate instruments is addressed in
DH 6.3.5 and DH 6.4.5, respectively.
ASC 815 requires each designated risk to be accounted for separately. Reporting entities most
commonly hedge multiple risks in financial instruments when they want to mitigate the impact of
fluctuations in both foreign exchange rates and interest rates, as discussed in DH 8.2.1.2. ASC 815
permits a reporting entity to simultaneously hedge the fair value and cash flow exposures of a financial
instrument. Since ASC 815 requires each designated risk to be accounted for separately, simultaneous
hedging of the fair value and cash flow exposures associated with different risks of a financial
instrument is not precluded. As originally described in paragraph 423 of FAS 133, Accounting for
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, which was codified in ASC 815, in certain
circumstances it would be reasonable to hedge an existing asset or liability for a fair value exposure to
one risk and a cash flow exposure to another risk. For example, a reporting entity might decide to
hedge both the interest rate risk associated with a variable-rate financial asset (i.e., a cash flow hedge)
and the credit risk associated with that same asset (i.e., a fair value hedge). However, simultaneous fair
value and cash flow hedge accounting is not permitted for simultaneous hedges of the same risk
because there is only one earnings exposure. Each risk can be hedged only once.
Once the change in the value of a hedged item that is attributable to a particular risk has been offset by
the change in the value of a hedging derivative, another derivative cannot be an effective hedge of the
same risk. However, if a reporting entity were to hedge only 75% of a designated risk with one
derivative, it could use a second derivative to hedge the remaining 25% of the designated risk.
Reporting entities can hedge a single recognized asset or liability (fair value or cash flow hedge), a firm
commitment (fair value hedge), or a forecasted transaction (cash flow hedge) or a proportion of any
one of these to reduce their exposure to changes in the fair value or cash flows associated with
recognized balances and future transactions.
There are certain general principles regarding what is eligible to be a hedged item, as discussed in
DH 6.2, and other criteria that are dependent on the type of hedge (cash flow, fair value, or foreign
currency), as discussed in DH 6.3.3, DH 6.4.3, and DH 8, respectively.
ASC 815-20-25-43(b)(1) precludes an investment accounted for under the equity method under ASC
323, Investments—Equity Method and Joint Ventures, or under ASC 321, Investments—Equity
Securities, from being a hedged item. The Board explained in the Basis for Conclusions to FAS 133 that
hedge accounting for an equity method investment conflicts with the accounting in ASC 323.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
In addition to the conceptual issues, the Board thought it might be difficult to develop a method of
implementing hedge accounting for equity method investments and that the results of any method
may be difficult for users of financial statements to understand. An exception applies to a net
investment hedge of an equity investment in a foreign operation (see DH 8).
For reasons similar to those related to equity method investments, ASC 815-20-25-43(b)(2) precludes
a noncontrolling interest in a consolidated subsidiary from being a hedged item and ASC 815-20-25-
43(c)(5) states that a hedged item in a fair value hedge cannot be a firm commitment to enter into a
business combination or to acquire or dispose of a subsidiary, a noncontrolling interest, or an equity
method investee.
As an alternative to hedge accounting, ASC 825-10-15-4(a) allows reporting entities to elect the fair
value option for eligible financial assets, including equity method investments.
The guidance permits use of a dynamic hedging strategy, either (1) increasing or decreasing the
quantity of hedging instruments necessary to achieve the hedging objective or (2) changing the
percentage of the hedged item that is designated. For example, a reporting entity may hedge the
interest rate risk on 80% of a debt issuance and adjust the hedge strategy so that 100% of it is hedged
in the following period. However, the reporting entity could never designate more than 100% of the
hedged item. The use of dynamic hedging strategies may require dedesignation and redesignation of
hedging relationships and may create additional complexities.
Generally, only a derivative instrument as defined in ASC 815 can qualify as a hedging instrument, but
there are limited circumstances discussed in DH 8 related to foreign currency hedging when a
nonderivative instrument is eligible to be used.
ASC 815 indicates that a reporting entity may designate all or a proportion of a derivative or a group of
derivatives as the hedging instrument in one or more hedging relationships. ASC 815-20-25-45
requires that the proportion of the derivative being designated be expressed as a percentage of the
entire derivative notional amount over the entire term so that the profile of risk exposures in the
hedging portion of the derivative will be the same as that for the entire derivative.
In some instances, that percentage may not be explicitly documented. If (1) the designated proportion
of the notional amount and (2) the total notional amount of the derivative hedging instrument are
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
documented in such a way that the percentage can be calculated, then the hedge designation would
meet the requirement. We believe that the term “expressed as a percentage” was meant to emphasize
that the proportion of the derivative designated as the hedging instrument needs to have the same
profile of risk exposures as that of the entire derivative. For example, consider two $1 million interest-
bearing assets being hedged with a single derivative that has a $2 million notional amount.
Documentation that identifies the first asset designated as being hedged with $1 million of the
derivative and the second asset designated as being hedged with $1 million of the derivative would
comply with the requirements because there is no uncertainty about what is being hedged (i.e., it is
clear what proportion of the $2 million derivative is intended to hedge each asset).
If different portions of the same derivative are in separate hedging relationships, each one would have
to be assessed separately to determine whether it meets the requirements for hedge accounting. For
example, if a reporting entity has a ten-year interest rate swap with a notional amount of $500 million,
it could designate 20% of the swap as a hedge of $100 million ten-year, fixed-rate debt and designate
the remaining 80% of the swap as a hedge of another $400 million ten-year, fixed-rate debt, if all of
the other qualifying criteria are satisfied. The remaining 80% of the swap is not required to be
designated in a hedging relationship, and may be recognized at fair value through earnings as a
derivative with no hedge designation.
Separating a derivative into components representing different risks so that a component can be
designated as a hedging instrument is not permitted. For example, if a reporting entity were to enter
into a cross-currency interest rate derivative (e.g., one party receives a fixed amount of foreign
currency and pays a variable amount denominated in US dollars), the entity would not be permitted to
separate the interest rate swap component to solely hedge interest rate risk. This would not be a
proportion of a total derivative. However, the reporting entity is permitted to designate the cross-
currency swap as a fair value hedge of both the interest rate and foreign-currency risk in foreign-
currency-denominated debt. See DH 8.
Multiple derivatives, whether entered into at the same time or at different times, may be designated as
a hedge of the same item. ASC 815-20-25-45 clarifies that two or more derivatives may be viewed in
combination and jointly designated as the hedging instrument. For example, a reporting entity can
designate two purchased options as a hedge of the same hedged item even if the options are acquired
at different times. Multiple derivatives can be used to hedge the same risk or different risks, provided
that all of the other hedge criteria are met and there is no duplicate hedging of the same risk.
Question DH 6-1 discusses whether a reporting entity can enter into multiple derivatives to hedge
variable-rate debt.
Question DH 6-1
DH Corp has variable-rate debt that is based on a bank’s prime rate and would like to hedge the
variability in the interest payments, but it would be more expensive to obtain a prime-rate-to-fixed-
rate swap of the appropriate term. Could DH Corp enter into (1) a prime-to-LIBOR (pay-LIBOR,
receive-prime) interest rate basis swap and (2) a LIBOR-to-fixed (pay-fixed, receive-LIBOR) interest
rate swap and qualify for cash flow hedge accounting?
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
PwC response
Yes, assuming that DH Corp satisfies all of the hedge criteria. ASC 815-20-25-45 clarifies that two or
more derivatives or proportions of derivatives may be viewed in combination and jointly designated as
the hedging instrument. Accordingly, the two swaps jointly designated would achieve DH Corp’s
objective of hedging the variability of its contractually specified interest payment cash flows on the
prime-based debt.
A written option requires the seller (writer) of the option to fulfill the obligation of the contract should
the purchaser (holder) choose to exercise it. In return for providing that option to the holder, the
writer receives a premium from the holder. For example, a written call option provides the purchaser
of that option the right to call, or buy the commodity, financial or equity instrument at a price during
or at a time specified in the contract. The writer would be required to honor that call. As a result,
written options provide the writer with the possibility of unlimited loss, but limit any gain to the
amount of the premium received. In other words, written options can have the opposite effect of what
a hedge is intended to accomplish. Thus, they are generally not permitted to be used as hedging
instruments.
However, there are circumstances when a written option may be a more cost-effective strategy for
entities than using other instruments—for example, when used to hedge the call option feature in
fixed-rate debt rather than issuing fixed-rate debt that is not callable. If a reporting entity wishes to
use a written option as a hedging instrument, the instrument must pass the “written option test.” The
test includes a requirement to ensure that, when considering the written option in combination with
the hedged item, the “upside” potential (for gains or favorable cash flows) is equal to or greater than
the “downside” potential (for losses or unfavorable cash flows), as described in ASC 815-20-25-94.
The written option test applies specifically to recognized assets, liabilities, or unrecognized firm
commitments. As a result, we do not believe that a written option (or a net written option) can qualify
as a hedging instrument in a hedge of a forecasted transaction.
ASC 815-20-25-94
If a written option is designated as hedging a recognized asset or liability or an unrecognized firm
commitment (if a fair value hedge) or the variability in cash flows for a recognized asset or liability or
an unrecognized firm commitment (if a cash flow hedge), the combination of the hedged item and the
written option provides either of the following:
a. At least as much potential for gains as a result of a favorable change in the fair value of the
combined instruments (that is, the written option and the hedged item, such as an embedded
purchased option)as exposure to losses from an unfavorable change in their combined fair value
(if a fair value hedge)
b. At least as much potential for favorable cash flows as exposure to unfavorable cash flows (if a cash
flow hedge).
The combined position’s relative potential for gains and losses is only evaluated at hedge inception. It
is based on the effect of a change in price, and the possibility for upside should be as great as the
possibility of downside for all possible price changes.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815-20-25-96 allows a reporting entity to exclude the time value of a written option from the
written option test, provided that the entity also specifies that it will base its assessment of
effectiveness only on the changes in the option’s intrinsic value.
Covered calls
ASC 815-20-55-45 precludes hedge accounting for “covered call” strategies. In writing a covered call
option, a reporting entity provides a counterparty with the option of purchasing an underlying (that
the entity owns) at a certain strike price. In some cases, the reporting entity may then purchase an
option to buy the same underlying at a higher strike price. A reporting entity may enter into this type
of structure to generate income by selling some, but not all, of the upside potential of the securities
that it owns. Often, the net written option in this situation is not designated as a hedging instrument.
Under such a strategy, the net written option does not qualify for hedge accounting because the
potential gain is less than the potential loss.
Combination of options
Hedging strategies can include various combinations of instruments (e.g., forward contracts with
written options, swaps with written caps, or combinations of one or more written and purchased
options). A derivative that results from combining a written option and a non-option derivative is
considered a written option. Reporting entities considering using a combination of instruments that
include a written option as a hedging derivative should evaluate whether they have, in effect, a net
written option, and therefore, are required to meet and document the results of the written option test.
ASC 815-20-25-89 outlines certain requirements for a combination of options to qualify as a net
purchased option or zero-cost collar, in which case the written option test is not required.
ASC 815-20-25-89
For a combination of options in which the strike price and the notional amount in both the written
component and the purchased option component remain constant over the life of the respective
component, that combination of options would be considered a net purchased option or a zero cost
collar (that is, the combination shall not be considered a net written option subject to the
requirements of 815-20-25-94) provided all of the following conditions are met:
b. The components of the combination of options are based on the same underlying.
c. The components of the combination of options have the same maturity date.
d. The notional amount of the written option component is not greater than the notional amount of
the purchased option component.
ASC 815-20-25-89 applies only when the strike price and the notional amount in both the written and
purchased option components of a combination of options remain constant over the life of the
respective components. If either or both the strike price or notional amounts change, the assessment
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
to determine whether the combination of options is a written option is evaluated with respect to each
date that either the strike price or the notional amount changes.
If a combination of options fails to meet all of the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-89, it cannot be
considered a net purchased option and is subject to the written option test. For example, if a collar
includes a written floor based on the three-month Treasury rate and a purchased cap based on three-
month LIBOR, the underlyings of the components are not the same, and therefore, the collar would be
considered a net written option subject to the written option test.
Under certain circumstances, a reporting entity that has combined two options might be able to satisfy
the requirement that the hedge provides as much potential for gains as it does for losses. However, the
entity would not be permitted to apply hedge accounting to the combined position unless it were to
satisfy this requirement for all possible price changes.
Question DH 6-2 asks if a noncancelable swap with no other embedded option would be considered a
written option.
Question DH 6-2
If a noncancellable swap with no other embedded options has an initial value of $100,000, would it be
considered a written option?
PwC response
No. The $100,000 received at the initiation of the contract is not a premium received for a written
option. The swap contract does not contain an option element. Rather, the initial value of $100,000 is
an indication that the contract is off-market. The counterparty to the contract is paying for this initial
value and expects to be repaid through future periodic settlements.
In essence, the swap contract contains a financing element. If it is more than insignificant, a reporting
entity needs to consider ASC 815-10-45-11 through ASC 815-10-45-15. If the $100,000 financing
element is significant enough to disqualify the entire swap contract from meeting the definition of a
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
derivative, then the contract should be accounted as a debt host and evaluated for whether it contains
an embedded derivative that should be bifurcated (see DH 4 for a discussion of embedded derivatives).
In addition to the guidance in DH 6.2.3 through DH 6.2.3.4, ASC 815-20-25-71(a)(3) through ASC
815-20-25-71(a)(5) list certain instruments ineligible for designation as the hedging instrument in any
hedge.
□ A hybrid financial instrument that is measured in its entirety at fair value under the fair value
option
□ A hybrid financial instrument that would have an embedded derivative separated from it but it
cannot be reliably measured
□ Any of the individual components of a compound embedded derivative that is separated from the
host contract
In a qualifying cash flow hedge, a derivative’s entire gain or loss included in the assessment of
effectiveness is recorded through OCI. ASC 815-30-35-3(b) indicates that the amounts in AOCI related
to the fair value changes in the hedging instrument are released into earnings when the hedged item
affects earnings. This is to align the earnings impact of the hedged item and the hedging instrument.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
1c. The cumulative change in fair value of an excluded component for which changes in fair value are
recorded currently in earnings in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-83B.
2. [Subparagraph superseded by Accounting Standards Update No. 2017-12].
In determining how to reclassify amounts in AOCI into earnings, reporting entities should consider
both the amount and timing of reclassification. ASC 815-30-35-3(b) notes that the amount of AOCI
should equal the cumulative gain or loss on the hedging instrument since hedge inception, less (1)
previously reclassified gains and losses, and (2) amounts related to excluded components already
recognized in earnings.
Figure DH 6-3
Components related to hedging in AOCI
When an economic hedging relationship continues even though hedge accounting was not permitted
in a specific period (e.g., because the retrospective effectiveness assessment for that period indicated
that the relationship had not been highly effective), the cumulative gains or losses under ASC 815-30-
35-3(b) excludes the gains or losses occurring during that period. That situation may arise if the
reporting entity had previously determined that the hedging relationship would be highly effective on
a prospective basis.
The amounts deferred in AOCI related to the fair value changes in the hedging instrument are
generally released into the reporting entity’s earnings when the hedged item affects earnings.
The timing of reclassification may also vary depending on the nature of the hedged item. Reporting
entities need to consider when the hedged item will affect earnings when determining the appropriate
timing to release the amounts in AOCI.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
When a purchased option (including a combination of options that comprise either a net purchased
option or a zero-cost collar) is used as a hedging instrument and a reporting entity assesses
effectiveness using the total change in the option’s cash flows, a question arises as to how to reclassify
amounts in AOCI to earnings.
ASC 815-30-35-41B explains that the fair value of a cap at inception of a hedge relationship that is
hedging multiple payments should be allocated to the respective caplets at inception of the hedging
relationship. Further, each respective allocated fair value amount should be reclassified to earnings
from AOCI when each of the hedge transactions impacts earnings. This is referred to as the “caplet”
method. It applies to a purchased option regardless of whether it is at the money, in the money, or out
of the money at hedge inception.
The caplet method is an appropriate way to reclassify the amounts out of AOCI when the entire change
in cash flows of an option is used to assess effectiveness, but not when time value is excluded, as
discussed in Amortizing time value in hedges of interest rate risk in DH 6.3.1.2.
Assessing effectiveness of a hedging relationship based on the entire change in the option’s cash flows
(i.e., focusing on the terminal value, the expected future pay-off amount at maturity) is discussed in
DH 9.6.
As part of its risk management strategy, a reporting entity may exclude certain components of a
hedging instrument’s change in fair value from the assessment of hedge effectiveness. ASC 815-20-25-
82 indicates that these include:
□ For forwards and futures contracts (and swaps) when the spot method is used:
o The change in the fair value of the contract related to the changes in the difference between
the spot price and the forward or futures price (sometimes referred to as forward points)
□ For currency swaps (designated in fair value and cash flow hedges):
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
o The portion of the change in fair value of a currency swap attributable to a cross-currency
basis spread
o Time value (the difference between the change in fair value and the change in undiscounted
intrinsic value)
o Volatility value (the difference between the change in fair value and the change in discounted
intrinsic or minimum value)
▪ Volatility (vega)
A reporting entity must elect a policy for recognizing excluded components that is consistently applied
for similar hedges. There are two choices for recognition: an amortization approach (ASC 815-20-25-
83A) or a mark-to-market approach (ASC 815-20-25-83B). The amortization approach is the default
method, and the mark-to-market approach is the alternative.
ASC 815-20-25-83A
For fair value and cash flow hedges, the initial value of the component excluded from the assessment
of effectiveness shall be recognized in earnings using a systematic and rational method over the life of
the hedging instrument. Any difference between the change in fair value of the excluded component
and amounts recognized in earnings under that systematic and rational method shall be recognized in
other comprehensive income. … [Emphasis added.]
ASC 815-20-25-83B
For fair value and cash flow hedges, an entity alternatively may elect to record changes in the fair value
of the excluded component currently in earnings. …
The initial value attributable to an excluded component depends on the type of derivative. When the
time value of an option contract is the excluded component, the time value generally is the option
premium paid (provided the option is at or out of the money at inception). The value attributable to
forward points in a forward contract is the undiscounted difference between the market forward rate
and the spot rate. The fair values of the excluded components change over time as markets change but
must converge to zero by the maturity of the hedging instrument. Because of that, the FASB permits a
systematic and rational amortization method.
When a reporting entity excludes all or a portion of the time value in an option-based derivative, such
as a cap or floor, from the assessment of effectiveness, and elects to recognize it using an amortization
approach, it must determine a systematic and rational method for recognizing the time value in
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
earnings. We believe that the caplet method, which is used when the total changes in fair value of a
cap/floor is used to assess hedge effectiveness (i.e., time value is not an excluded component), is not
an appropriate method.
The caplet method allows the time value associated with each caplet to be deferred through OCI until
each caplet’s respective hedged item occurs. The guidance that describes the caplet method links to the
general guidance on reclassifying gains or losses on derivatives in cash flow hedges to income when
the forecasted transactions impact earnings. In contrast, when the time value is excluded, the guidance
on reclassifying the amounts deferred in AOCI to income is in ASC 815-20-25-83A. In other words, the
reporting entity needs to use a systematic and rational approach for recognizing the excluded amounts
in earnings. Further, the reporting entity needs to recognize the excluded components over the life of
the hedging relationship. Thus, waiting until the forecasted transaction impacts earnings to begin
amortization, as is done under the caplet method when the time value is not excluded, is not
appropriate.
We believe a systematic and rational method for recognizing time value must result in a portion of the
excluded component being recognized in earnings during each reporting period between the hedge
designation date and the occurrence of the hedged transaction. Because the caplet method allows for
the time value of each caplet to be reclassified from AOCI only during the period in which the hedged
transaction occurs, we do not believe it to be a systematic and rational method to recognize time value
when it is excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness.
We believe that, in certain circumstances, recognizing the total premium paid for a cap/floor on a
straight-line basis may be a systematic and rational method to recognize time value when it is
excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness.
Example DH 6-1 illustrates the accounting for an excluded component recognized using an
amortization approach.
EXAMPLE DH 6-1
Excluded component recognized through an amortization approach
On June 1, 20X1, DH Corp, a USD-functional currency entity, designated a three-year euro/US dollar
forward contract with a fair value of zero to sell 100 million euro on June 30, 20X4 as a cash flow
hedge of the first 100 million of 1 billion in forecasted euro revenues to be received on June 30, 20X4.
The current spot rate for 1 euro is $1.3597 and the forward rate to June, 30 20X4 for 1 euro is $1.3892.
The spot rate at June 30, 20X4 is $1.1427.
DH Corp demonstrated that the sales were probable based on historical experience, detailed sales
forecasts for each quarter for the next three years, and long-range plans that support the probability of
ongoing activities in Europe. The counterparty to the forward contract is of high credit quality.
DH Corp elects to exclude the forward points from the assessment of effectiveness and recognize them
through an amortization approach. At June 1, 20X1, the undiscounted forward points have an initial
value of $2,950,000. That is, the contracted forward rate of $1.3892 minus the trade-date spot rate of
$1.3597 times 100 million euro notional equals $2,950,000 of initial value for the forward points.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
How should DH Corp recognize the forward points under an amortization approach?
Analysis
DH Corp chose to use a straight-line approach as its systematic and rational amortization method for
the initial value of the forward points. DH Corp would record the following journal entries in 20X1 and
June 20X4. Entries for 20X2, 20X3, and March 20X4 would follow the same approach and use the
amounts in the above table.
To record amortization of the initial value of the forward points ($2,950,000 × 1/37 months)
in the same line as the euro revenue
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
To record amortization of the initial value of the forward points ($2,950,000 × 3/37 months)
in the same line as the euro revenue
To record amortization of the initial value of the forward points ($2,950,000 × 3/37 months)
in the same line as the euro revenue
To record amortization of the initial value of the forward points ($2,950,000 × 3/37 months)
in the same line as the euro revenue
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
To recognize euro sales on account of 100 million based upon the spot rate at the date of the
sales transaction (100 million × spot rate of 1.1427)
To release amounts deferred in AOCI to the income statement line item where the hedged item
is recognized when the hedged item affects earnings
At the conclusion of the hedging relationship, prior to the reclassification of the derivative gain from
AOCI to earnings, the balance in AOCI is the spot-to-spot change on the hedging instrument,
$21,700,000. When combined, the $114,270,000 of sales and $21,700,000 reclassification from AOCI
to earnings results in a total revenue amount of $135,970,000, which is equal to 100 million euro
remeasured at the spot rate on June 1, 20X1, the inception date of the hedging relationship. The initial
value of the forward points of $2,950,000 was amortized to revenue over the life of the hedging
instrument.
ASC 815-20-25-15(j) permits a reporting entity to hedge any of the following risks in a cash flow hedge.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
If the risk is not the change in total cash flows as listed in ASC 815-20-25-15(j)(1), a reporting entity
can jointly designate two or more of the other risks in ASC 815-20-25-15(j).
ASC 815-20-25-15(f) and ASC 815-20-25-43(d) provide guidance on eligible hedged risks for held-to-
maturity debt securities.
ASC 815-20-25-15(f)
If the variable cash flows of the forecasted transaction relate to a debt security that is classified as held
to maturity under Topic 320, the risk being hedged is the risk of changes in its cash flows attributable
to any of the following risks:
1. Credit risk
2. If variable cash flows of the forecasted transaction relate to a debt security that is classified as
held-to-maturity under Topic 320, the risk of changes in its cash flows attributable to interest rate
risk
The notion of hedging the interest rate risk in a security classified as held-to-maturity is inconsistent
with the held-to-maturity classification under ASC 320, which requires the reporting entity to hold the
security until maturity regardless of changes in market interest rates.
However, hedging credit risk is permitted. It is not viewed as inconsistent with the held-to-maturity
assertion since ASC 320 permits sales or transfers of a held-to-maturity security in response to
significant deterioration in credit quality of the security.
Hedge accounting may be applied to cash flow hedging relationships when they fulfill the relevant
general qualifying criteria discussed in DH 6.2 and the criteria specific to cash flow hedges in ASC 815-
20-25-13 through ASC 815-20-25-15.
One of the criteria specific to cash flow hedges is that the forecasted transaction presents an earnings
exposure. Without an “earnings exposure” criterion, there would be no way to determine the period in
which the derivative gain or loss should be included in earnings. The earnings exposure criterion
specifically precludes hedge accounting for derivatives that are used to hedge:
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
□ Forecasted stock issuances that are related to a stock option plan for which no compensation
expense (based on changes in stock prices) is recognized
ASC 815-20-25-15(d) and ASC 815-20-25-15(e) state that the hedged item/transaction cannot be a
forecasted acquisition of an asset or incurrence of a liability that subsequently will be remeasured at
fair value or a forecasted transaction that relates to an asset or liability that is remeasured with
changes in fair value reported currently in earnings. ASC 815 does not permit hedge accounting for
these items because the gains or losses on the hedging instrument and the offsetting losses or gains on
the hedged item both would be recorded in the income statement under other GAAP and would tend
to naturally offset each other.
Cash flow hedge accounting is appropriate only when there is a hedgeable risk arising from a
transaction with an external party (although certain intercompany hedges for foreign currency
exposures are permitted). Accounting allocations or intercompany transactions, in and of themselves,
do not give rise to economic exposure, and therefore, do not qualify as hedgeable forecasted
transactions.
Question DH 6-3 discusses the accounting by the parent and its subsidiary, on a consolidated and
standalone basis, of an interest rate swap which was designated in the consolidated financial
statements as a cash flow hedge.
Question DH 6-3
A subsidiary entered into an interest rate swap that was designated in the consolidated financial
statements as a cash flow hedge of forecasted LIBOR-based interest payments on variable-rate debt
issued by the parent company. If the hedging relationship is designated and qualifies under ASC 815,
how should the parent and the subsidiary account for the interest rate swap on a consolidated and
standalone basis, respectively?
PwC response
Because the interest rate swap was designated to hedge a risk exposure (variable-rate interest rate
payments) at the consolidated reporting level, hedge accounting may be applied on a consolidated
basis and the interest rate swap would be measured at fair value with changes recorded through OCI.
The subsidiary does not have the risk exposure at its reporting level; therefore, the swap would not
qualify for hedge accounting and should be reported in the subsidiary’s standalone financial
statements at fair value with changes in fair value recorded in earnings. If the subsidiary had an
exposure to interest rate risk at its reporting level, the subsidiary could designate this interest rate
swap as a hedge of that exposure if it met the ASC 815 hedge accounting criteria. It is possible to have
one derivative hedge two different exposures at different reporting levels.
This conclusion would not necessarily extend to a foreign currency hedge because special rules apply
to them. See DH 8.7 for information on hedging the foreign currency risk in intercompany
transactions.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 6-4 discusses whether ASC 815 permits an item to be initially designated as a hedged
item in a cash flow hedge and later designated as a hedged item in a fair value hedge.
Question DH 6-4
Does ASC 815 permit an item to be initially designated as a hedged item in a cash flow hedge and later
designated as a hedged item in a fair value hedge?
PwC response
Yes, ASC 815 permits an item to be initially designated as a hedged item in a cash flow hedge and later
designated as a hedged item in a fair value hedge as long as the transaction or item that is being
hedged meets the respective criteria for either type of hedge. For example, a reporting entity could (1)
designate a derivative as a hedge of interest payments related to an issuance of fixed-rate debt that is
forecasted to take place within six months, (2) terminate the hedge when the debt is issued six months
later, and (3) designate another derivative as a hedge of the fair value exposure of the fixed-rate debt.
Under these circumstances, the deferred gains or losses on the cash flow hedge would remain in AOCI
until earnings are impacted by the originally forecasted interest payments each period, even though
the related debt will have subsequently been designated as a hedged item in a fair value hedge. See DH
6.6.1 for discussion of a hedge of the forecasted issuance of fixed-rate debt.
ASC 815-20-25-15(a)
The forecasted transaction is specifically identified as either of the following:
1. A single transaction
2. A group of individual transactions that share the same risk exposure for which they are designated
as being hedged. A forecasted purchase and a forecasted sale shall not both be included in the
same group of individual transactions that constitute the hedged transaction.
The term “forecasted transaction” is not intended to include transactions that qualify as firm
commitments even though the settlement of such transactions occurs in the future.
Hedges of forecasted transactions (which involve variability in cash flows) are considered cash flow
hedges since the price is not fixed. Forecasted transactions may be designated as hedged transactions
in cash flow hedges, provided the following additional criteria in the standard are met.
Specific identification
When identifying the hedged item in a cash flow hedge, it is necessary to provide sufficient specificity
about the hedged item so that there is no doubt as to what is being hedged. For example, if a reporting
entity is hedging a future interest payment, it must specify the exact time period—for instance, “the
first $1 million in variable interest payments in the month of December 20XX,” or “the $1 million of
interest payments to be paid on December 15, 20XX on Debt Instrument X.” It would be insufficient to
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
identify the hedged item in this scenario as “interest payments to be paid in December 20XX,” or “the
last interest payments to be made on Debt Instrument X in the fourth quarter of 20XX.”
By designating the “first x dollars” of interest payments during the period, the reporting entity will not
be locked into a specific date, and if for some reason the interest payment does not occur on that date,
it will have more flexibility in assessing whether the forecasted transaction occurred.
ASC 815-20-55-80 illustrates the requirement that the hedged transaction be specifically identified.
In this situation, the first issuance of the specified bonds may qualify as a hedged item even though the
precise timing of issuance has not been determined. For further guidance regarding a forecasted
transaction that is expected (probable) to occur on a specific date but whose timing involves some
uncertainty within a range, see ASC 815-20-25-16(c) and the illustrative example in ASC 815-20-55-
100 through ASC 815-20-55-104.
A transaction is “probable” when “the future event or events are likely to occur.” The term requires
that the likelihood of occurrence be significantly greater than “more likely than not.”
Assessing the probability that a forecasted transaction will occur requires judgment. While ASC 815
and ASC 450 do not establish bright lines, we believe that a transaction may be considered probable of
occurring when there is at least an 80% chance that it will occur on the specified date or within the
specified time period. There should be compelling evidence to support management’s assertion that it
is probable that a forecasted transaction will occur, and, in compiling that evidence, management
should bear in mind that this assertion is more difficult to support than an assertion that it is more-
likely-than-not that a transaction will occur.
ASC 815-20-55-24 provides the following additional guidance on determining the probability of a
forecasted transaction.
ASC 815-20-55-24
An assessment of the likelihood that a forecasted transaction will take place (see paragraph 815-20-25-
15(b)) should not be based solely on management’s intent because intent is not verifiable. The
transaction’s probability should be supported by observable facts and the attendant circumstances.
Consideration should be given to all of the following circumstances in assessing the likelihood that a
transaction will occur.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
b. The financial and operational ability of the entity to carry out the transaction
d. The extent of loss or disruption of operations that could result if the transaction does not occur
e. The likelihood that transactions with substantially different characteristics might be used to
achieve the same business purpose (for example, an entity that intends to raise cash may have
several ways of doing so, ranging from a short-term bank loan to a common stock offering).
Further, as discussed in ASC 815-20-55-25, both (1) the length of time that is expected to pass before a
forecasted transaction is projected to occur and (2) the quantity of products or services that are
involved in the forecasted transaction are considerations in determining probability. The guidance
indicates that the more distant a forecasted transaction is or the greater the physical quantity or future
value of a forecasted transaction, the less likely it is that the transaction would be considered probable
and the stronger the evidence that would be required to support the assertion that it is probable.
In addition to the impact on qualifying for hedge accounting, the assessment of whether the forecasted
transaction is probable of occurring also impacts potential discontinuance of the hedge and whether to
reclassify amounts deferred in AOCI. See DH 10.4.8.1 for further information.
Documentation
In its formal hedge documentation, management should specify the circumstances that were
considered in concluding that a transaction is probable. If a reporting entity has a pattern of
subsequently determining that forecasted transactions are no longer probable of occurring, the
appropriateness of management’s previous assertions and its ability to make future assertions
regarding forecasted transactions may be called into question. See DH 10.4.
Counterparty creditworthiness
Reporting entities should also consider the guidance in ASC 815-20-25-16(a). In addition to requiring
entities to continually assess the likelihood of the counterparty’s compliance with the terms of the
hedging derivative, they are required to perform an assessment of their own creditworthiness and that
of the counterparty (if any) to the hedged forecasted transaction to determine whether the forecasted
transaction is probable.
This assessment should be performed at least quarterly at the time of hedge effectiveness testing. If the
probability of the forecasted transaction changes as a result of a change in counterparty
creditworthiness, the reporting entity would need to evaluate whether it continues to qualify for hedge
accounting.
When designating a forecasted transaction in a cash flow hedge, there may be a specific date on which
the transaction is expected to occur (e.g., a forecasted interest payment will be made on December 15,
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
20X2). However, in many cases, a transaction may be expected to occur in a defined period rather
than on a specific date. ASC 815-20-25-16 provides guidance on uncertainty of timing within a range.
Uncertainty within a time period does not preclude hedge accounting as long as the forecasted
transaction is identified with sufficient specificity. The reporting entity should continue to monitor the
expected timing of the forecasted transaction. If there is a change in the timing of the forecasted
transaction such that it is no longer probable of occurring as originally documented, in general, the
hedge should be discontinued. ASC 815-30-40-4 provides guidance on the treatment of derivative
gains/losses deferred in AOCI when it is still probable or reasonably possible that the transaction will
occur within two months of the originally specified time period.
If it is determined that the forecasted transaction has become probable of not occurring within the
documented time period plus a subsequent two-month period, then the hedging relationship should
be discontinued and amounts previously deferred in AOCI should be immediately reclassified to
earnings. See DH 10.4 for further information on discontinuance of cash flow hedges.
Question DH 6-5 discusses whether the designation of a five-year interest rate swap as a hedge of the
variable-rate interest payments for the first five years of a fifteen-year debt instrument qualifies for
cash flow hedge accounting.
Question DH 6-5
Would the designation of a five-year interest rate swap as a hedge of the variable-rate interest
payments for the first five years of a fifteen-year debt instrument qualify for cash flow hedge
accounting?
PwC response
Yes. Each of the designated variable cash flows from the financial instrument would be considered a
separate hedged forecasted transaction. The swap eliminates the variability in cash flows for each
individual forecasted transaction.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
This view would be used for both the assessment of effectiveness and the accounting for the cash flow
hedge.
Question DH 6-6 discusses whether an entity can designate a forward starting swap as a cash flow
hedge of the variability of interest cash flows with variable-rate debt expected to be issued in
conjunction with an acquisition.
Question DH 6-6
DH Corp is contemplating the acquisition of 100% of Company X. In conjunction with the anticipated
acquisition, DH Corp is planning to issue variable-rate debt to fund the acquisition. To mitigate its
future exposure of its forecasted debt issuance to changes in interest rates, DH Corp enters into a
forward starting interest rate swap through which DH Corp receives a variable rate (six-month
LIBOR) and pays a fixed rate starting at the time the debt is expected to be issued and continuing over
the expected term of the debt. At inception, the critical terms of the interest rate swap are expected to
match all of the critical terms of the variable rate debt expected to be issued.
May DH Corp designate the forward starting swap as a cash flow hedge of the variability of interest
cash flows associated with its variable-rate debt, which is expected to be issued in conjunction with the
acquisition of Company X?
PwC response
Generally, no. In this case, the forecasted transactions (the future interest payments associated with
DH Corp’s expected issuance of variable-rate debt) are contingent on the consummation of a business
combination; that is, DH Corp will not incur the debt if the business combination is not consummated.
Although the forecasted transactions do not directly impact the purchase accounting associated with
the acquisition and there should be no significant difficulty in determining when to reclassify the gain/
loss on the derivative, the forecasted transactions must also be considered probable of occurring.
In assessing the probability of the interest costs associated with the financing of a proposed
acquisition, an assessment of the likelihood that the business combination will be completed within
the prescribed timeframe is necessary. In almost all cases, business combinations will have too many
contingencies to assert that the forecasted transactions are probable at the date of announcement.
These contingencies may include regulatory approval, shareholder approval, completion of due
diligence, availability of financing, likelihood of competing offers, and the nature of contractual
provisions that enable one of the parties to back out.
Additionally, the length of time until consummation of the transaction would need to be considered.
Even when contingencies do not exist, if there is more than a very short time period (e.g., more than a
week) between hedge execution and the expected closing date of the transaction, it may not be possible
to assert that the business combination is probable due to potential changes in market conditions or
other factors.
Many times, a reporting entity may enter into the derivative before being able to demonstrate that the
forecasted interest payments are probable of occurring. As a result, if they are later able to
demonstrate that the forecasted transaction is probable, the hedging relationship may not be perfectly
effective because the derivative is off-market at the hedge designation date.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 6-7 asks if a forecasted purchase of a marketable debt security can be a hedged
transaction.
Question DH 6-7
Can the forecasted purchase of a marketable debt security be a hedged transaction?
PwC response
Yes, if it is probable. ASC 815-20-25-16(b) requires the forecasted acquisition of a marketable debt
security to be probable for it to be a hedged item in a cash flow hedge. ASC 815-20-25-16(b)
specifically addresses how to evaluate probability when an option is the hedging instrument. That
guidance indicates that the evaluation of whether the forecasted transaction is probable of occurring
should be independent of the terms and nature of the derivative designated as the hedging instrument.
That is, the probability of the marketable debt security being acquired should be evaluated without
consideration of whether the option has an intrinsic value other than zero.
ASC 815-20-55-22 indicates that a group of transactions, such as forecasted variable-rate debt interest
payments, may be designated as the hedged item in a cash flow hedge.
For fair value hedges, ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(1) also requires that the individual hedged items in a
hedged group share the same risk exposure for which they are as being hedged. In addition, ASC 815-
20-55-14 provides guidance for the quantitative evaluation of whether a portfolio of assets or liabilities
share the same risk exposure in a fair value hedge. This quantitative test, known as the “similar
assets/liabilities test,” is specific to fair value hedges. ASC 815-20-25-15 does not specifically require
reporting entities to perform this test for cash flow hedges of groups of individual transactions.
However, we believe that in most circumstances a quantitative test is needed for cash flow hedges
when the hedged item is a portfolio of forecasted transactions that are similar but not identical.
In certain limited circumstances when the terms of the individual hedged items in the portfolio are
aligned, a qualitative similar assets/liabilities test may be appropriate. For example, if a reporting
entity intends to hedge a group of variable-rate nonprepayable financial assets together in a single
hedging relationship when those financial assets all have the same contractually specified interest rate
index and all reset and pay on the same dates, it may be able to qualitatively support that the
individual items in the portfolio share the same risk exposure for which they are designated as being
hedged. The determination of whether a quantitative or qualitative analysis is sufficient is judgmental
and will depend on the nature of the items being hedged.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
When facts and circumstances regarding the portfolio change, we expect a reporting entity to
reconsider its similar assets/liabilities test. When changes are significant such that the original
conclusion is no longer valid without additional support, we would expect a new comprehensive
analysis to be performed at that time.
Consistent with the requirement for hedges of individual forecasted transactions, when hedging a
group of forecasted transactions, the forecasted transactions need to be identified with sufficient
specificity to make it clear whether a particular transaction is a hedged transaction when it occurs. For
example, a reporting entity that expects to receive variable interest may identify the hedged forecasted
transaction as the first LIBOR-based interest payments received during a four-week period that begins
one week before each quarterly due date for the next five years on its $100 million LIBOR-based loan.
When the hedged risk is the total variability in cash flows, as permitted by ASC 815-20-25-15(j)(1), the
reporting entity needs to compare the total change in cash flows on the hedged item/transaction to the
change in fair value of the hedging instrument. This may result in less effective hedges than those
hedged for just interest rate risk, as discussed in DH 6.3.5, although the entire gain/loss on the
derivative may be deferred through OCI if the hedge is highly effective.
The Master Glossary defines interest rate risk differently for variable-rate and fixed-rate instruments.
For variable-rate instruments, interest rate risk is defined as the change in cash flows due to the
change in the contractually specified interest rate.
When designating the risk of changes in a hedged item’s cash flows attributable to changes in the
contractually specified interest rate, any cash flows related to the credit spread or changes in the
spread over the contractually specified interest rate are excluded from the hedging relationship.
For example, in a cash flow hedge of a pool of prime-rate loans, differences between the spreads above
the prime rate for the loans that are being hedged would not impact the eligibility of the hedging
relationship.
See example 6: Cash Flow Hedge of Variable-Rate Interest-Bearing Asset, in ASC 815-30-55-24 for
an illustration of the accounting for a cash flow hedge.
There is a general principle in hedge accounting that a hedge needs to be dedesignated when any of the
critical terms of the hedging relationship change. The guidance provides an exception if the change
relates solely to the hedged risk in a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction and the revised
hedging relationship remains highly effective.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815-30-35-37A
If the designated hedged risk changes during the life of a hedging relationship, an entity may continue
to apply hedge accounting if the hedging instrument is highly effective at achieving offsetting cash
flows attributable to the revised hedged risk. The guidance in paragraph 815-20-55-56 does not apply
to changes in the hedged risk for a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction.
Reporting entities would have to assess effectiveness of the revised hedging relationship before
continuing to apply hedge accounting.
Auction rate securities have their coupons determined by means of a Dutch auction, typically every 35
days or less. An issuer may structure a cash flow hedge of forecasted interest payments. The Basis for
Conclusions in ASU 2017-12, Targeted Improvements to Accounting for Hedging Activities, specifies
that a variable rate set via an auction process can be considered a contractually specified interest rate
when it is the rate that is explicitly referenced in the variable-rate financial instrument being hedged.
If the Dutch auction fails, the reporting entity must ensure that the hedging strategy documented at
inception of the hedging relationship is still valid. If the effect of the failed Dutch auction is that the
hedged risk no longer exists (e.g., the interest rate on the auction rate security is now fixed) or that the
hedging relationship is no longer highly effective, hedge accounting should be discontinued. See DH
10 for guidance on accounting for discontinued hedges.
ASC 815-20-25-50 and ASC 815-20-25-51 provide guidance on modifying interest receipts/payments
from one variable rate to another variable rate. Often, this is achieved through a basis swap.
ASC 815-20-25-50
If a hedging instrument is used to modify the contractually specified interest receipts or payments
associated with a recognized financial asset or liability from one variable rate to another variable rate,
the hedging instrument shall meet both of the following criteria:
a. It is a link between both of the following:
1. An existing designated asset (or group of similar assets) with variable cash flows
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
2. An existing designated liability (or group of similar liabilities) with variable cash flows
ASC 815-20-25-51
For purposes of paragraph 815-20-25-50, a link exists if both of the following criteria are met:
a. The basis (that is, the rate index on which the interest rate is based) of one leg of an interest rate
swap is the same as the basis of the contractually specified interest receipts for the designated
asset.
b. The basis of the other leg of the swap is the same as the basis of the contractually specified interest
payments for the designated liability.
In this situation, the criterion in paragraph 815-20-25-15(a) is applied separately to the designated
asset and the designated liability.
The guidance in ASC 815-20-25-51 does not mean that receive or pay amounts have to be identical. For
example, the criterion would be met if the pay leg of a swap was indexed to three-month LIBOR and
the variable rate on the interest receipts was indexed to three-month LIBOR plus 100 basis points.
However, the criterion would not be met if the interest receipts were based on a different index, such
as a different tenor of LIBOR (e.g., one-month LIBOR). ASC 815 does not permit a reporting entity to
apply hedge accounting to this type of instrument since the variability in the net cash flows of the
interest rate basis swap would not offset the variability in the cash flows associated with the financial
instrument.
A basis swap can be an effective mechanism for locking in a spread or margin between variable
interest-bearing assets and liabilities. If it is highly effective and meets the other cash flow hedge
criteria, it will generally qualify for hedge accounting treatment.
The reporting entity should treat each leg of the basis swap, along with the respective designated asset
and liability, as a separate hedging relationship and assess effectiveness separately for each
relationship.
Basis swaps do not qualify as hedges of non-interest-bearing assets and liabilities because the
guidance specifically refers to “a financial asset or liability” and states that the hedge must be used “to
modify the interest receipts or payments associated with a “recognized” financial asset or liability from
one variable rate to another variable rate.” Therefore, a forecasted transaction (e.g., the repricing or
anticipated reissuance of short-term liabilities, such as certificates of deposit or commercial paper)
cannot be a hedged item in a hedging relationship that involves a basis swap.
A variable-rate asset or liability that has been designated as the hedged item in a cash flow hedge
remains subject to the applicable requirements in GAAP for assessing impairment for that type of
asset or for recognizing an increased obligation for that type of liability.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815-30-35-42
Existing requirements in generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for assessing asset
impairment or recognizing an increased obligation apply to an asset or liability that gives rise to
variable cash flows (such as a variable-rate financial instrument) for which the variable cash flows (the
forecasted transactions) have been designated as being hedged and accounted for pursuant to
paragraphs 815-30-35-3 and 815-30-35-38 through 35-41. Those impairment requirements shall be
applied each period after hedge accounting has been applied for the period, pursuant to those
paragraphs. The fair value or expected cash flows of a hedging instrument shall not be considered in
applying those requirements. The gain or loss on the hedging instrument in accumulated other
comprehensive income shall, however, be accounted for as discussed in paragraphs 815-30-35-38
through 35-41.
ASC 815-30-35-43
If, under existing requirements in GAAP, an impairment loss is recognized on an asset or an additional
obligation is recognized on a liability to which a hedged forecasted transaction relates, any offsetting
net gain related to that transaction in accumulated other comprehensive income shall be reclassified
immediately into earnings. Similarly, if a recovery is recognized on the asset or liability to which the
forecasted transaction relates, any offsetting net loss that has been accumulated in other
comprehensive income shall be reclassified immediately into earnings.
If a reporting entity expects that at any time the continued deferral of a loss in AOCI will lead to the
recognition of a net loss when combined with the hedged item in a future period, ASC 815-30-35-40
specifies that a loss should be immediately recognized in earnings for the amount that the entity does
not expect to recover.
If the asset is impaired, the reporting entity should also consider whether the probability of the
forecasted transactions occurring has changed, as discussed in DH 10.4.8.1.
Question DH 6-8 discusses if an impairment loss in current earnings can be offset by reclassifying a
gain in AOCI, or if the reclassification of derivative gains and losses from AOCI to earnings should wait
until the forecasted sales of the loans is recognized in subsequent periods.
Question DH 6-8
DH Mortgage Banking Company (DH) enters into derivatives and designates them as hedging
instruments in cash flow hedging relationships in which the hedged item is the variability in total cash
flows from the forecasted sales of mortgage loans held for sale. As required by ASC 948-310-35-1,
Loans Held for Sale, DH is accounting for the mortgage loans held for sale on the lower-of-cost-or-fair
value (LOCOFV) basis.
As of the end of the current quarter, DH has recognized in current earnings an impairment loss of $20
million on the mortgage loans held for sale as indicated by the LOCOFV computations as required by
ASC 948-310-35-1. At the same time, DH has initially recorded through OCI a gain of $15 million
related to the derivatives that are hedging the forecasted sales of these loans.
Should DH offset the $20 million impairment loss in current earnings by reclassifying the $15 million
gain from AOCI to earnings in the same quarter, or should the reclassification of the derivative gains
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
and losses from AOCI to earnings wait until the forecasted sales of the loans are recognized in earnings
in subsequent accounting periods?
PwC response
DH should offset the $20 million impairment loss in current earnings by reclassifying the $15 million
gain from AOCI to earnings.
If an impairment loss is recognized on an asset to which a hedged forecasted transaction relates, any
offsetting net gain related to that transaction in AOCI should be reclassified immediately into
earnings. Accordingly, DH should reclassify the gain from AOCI to earnings to offset the LOCOFV
impairment loss on the mortgage loans held for sale in the same accounting period.
If the gains accumulated in AOCI exceed the impairment loss (e.g., if the gain were $25 million instead
of $15 million), the excess over the impairment loss ($5 million in this case) should remain in AOCI
until the forecasted sales of the loans are recognized in earnings in subsequent accounting periods.
New guidance
Gains and losses on a qualifying fair value hedge should be accounted for in accordance with
ASC 815-25-35-1.
c. The gain or loss on the hedging instrument shall be recognized currently in earnings, except for
amounts excluded from the assessment of effectiveness that are recognized in earnings through an
amortization approach in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-83A. …
d. The gain or loss (that is, the change in fair value) on the hedged item attributable to the hedged
risk shall adjust the carrying amount of the hedged item and be recognized currently in earnings.
Unlike hedge accounting for cash flow hedges, which results in special accounting for the derivative
designated in the cash flow hedging relationship, hedge accounting for fair value hedges results in
special accounting for the designated hedged item.
The application of fair value hedge accounting requires (1) the changes in value of the designated
hedging instrument and (2) the changes in value (attributable to the risk being hedged) of the
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
designated hedged item to be recognized currently in earnings. As a result, any mismatch between the
hedged item and hedging instrument is recognized currently in earnings.
In a fair value hedge of an asset, a liability, or a firm commitment, the hedging instrument should be
reflected on the balance sheet at its fair value, but the hedged item may often be reflected on the
balance sheet at a value that is different from both its historical cost and fair value, unless the total
amount and all the risks were hedged when the item was acquired. This is because the hedged item is
adjusted each period only for changes in fair value that are attributable to the risk that has been
hedged since the inception of the hedge.
For example, if a reporting entity were to hedge the risk of changes in the benchmark interest rate on a
nonprepayable fixed-rate loan, the carrying amount of the loan would be adjusted only for the change
in fair value that is attributable to the hedged risk (interest rate risk) and would not be adjusted for
changes in fair value that are attributable to the unhedged risks (e.g., credit risk).
When initially designating the hedging relationship and preparing the contemporaneous hedge
documentation, a reporting entity must specify how hedge accounting adjustments will be
subsequently recognized in income. The recognition of hedge accounting adjustments—also referred to
as basis adjustments—will differ depending on how other adjustments of the hedged item’s carrying
amount will be reported in earnings. See DH 6.4.7.
If a firm commitment is designated as a hedged item, the changes in the fair value of the hedged
commitment are recorded in a manner similar to how a reporting entity would account for any hedged
asset or liability that it records. That is, changes in fair value that are attributable to the risk being
hedged are recognized in earnings and recognized on the balance sheet as an adjustment to the hedged
item’s carrying amount. Because firm commitments normally are not recorded, accounting for the
change in the fair value of the firm commitment results in the reporting entity recognizing the firm
commitment on the balance sheet. Subsequent changes in fair value will be recognized as basis
adjustments to the carrying amount of the firm commitment.
As discussed in DH 6.3.1.2, as part of its risk management strategy, a reporting entity may exclude
certain components of a hedging instrument’s change in fair value from the assessment of hedge
effectiveness. The same components of a hedging instrument may be excluded for fair value hedges as
for cash flow hedges, and the same recognition models are available.
ASC 815-20-25-12(f) permits a reporting entity to hedge the following risks individually or in
combination in a fair value hedge of a financial asset or liability.
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2. The risk of changes in its fair value attributable to changes in the designated benchmark interest
rate (referred to as interest rate risk) [DH 6.4.5]
3. The risk of changes in its fair value attributable to changes in the related foreign currency
exchange rates (referred to as foreign exchange risk) [DH 8]
4. The risk of changes in its fair value attributable to both of the following (referred to as credit risk)
[FV 8]
ii. Changes in the spread over the benchmark interest rate with respect to the hedged item’s credit
sector at inception of the hedge.
As specified in ASC 815-20-25-12(f), reporting entities can hedge both the interest rate risk and the
foreign currency risk on the same hedged item. For example, in an investment in a foreign currency-
denominated, fixed-rate, available-for-sale debt security, it could:
□ Enter into a single derivative instrument that hedges the security's interest rate and foreign
currency exchange rate risks (e.g., a cross-currency interest rate swap), or
□ Enter into a receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swap denominated in the same foreign
currency as that of the available-for-sale debt security to hedge the interest rate risk and
simultaneously enter into a separate foreign exchange contract to hedge the foreign currency risk,
or
□ Enter into a receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swap denominated in the same foreign
currency as that of the available-for-sale debt security and simultaneously enter into a separate
foreign exchange contract and jointly designate the instruments as a hedge of the security’s
interest rate and foreign currency exchange risks.
Hedging the interest rate and foreign exchange risk in a financial instrument or group of financial
instruments is discussed in DH 8.
ASC 815 requires that the designated hedged item in a fair value hedge be a recognized asset or
liability or an unrecognized firm commitment. An unrecognized asset or liability that does not embody
a firm commitment is not eligible for fair value hedge accounting.
Hedge accounting may be applied to fair value hedging relationships when they fulfill the general
qualifying criteria discussed in DH 6.2 and the criteria specific to fair value hedges in
ASC 815-20-25-12.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
a. The hedged item is specifically identified as either all or a specific portion of a recognized asset or
liability or of an unrecognized firm commitment.
b. The hedged item is a single asset or liability (or a specific portion thereof) or is a portfolio of
similar assets or a portfolio of similar liabilities (or a specific portion thereof), in which
circumstance:
1. If similar assets or similar liabilities are aggregated and hedged as a portfolio, the individual assets
or individual liabilities shall share the risk exposure for which they are designated as being hedged.
The change in fair value attributable to the hedged risk for each individual item in a hedged
portfolio shall be expected to respond in a generally proportionate manner to the overall change in
fair value of the aggregate portfolio attributable to the hedged risk. See the discussion beginning in
paragraph 815-20-55-14 for related implementation guidance. An entity may use different
stratification criteria for the purposes of Topic 860 impairment testing and for the purposes of
grouping similar assets to be designated as a hedged portfolio in a fair value hedge.
2. If the hedged item is a specific portion of an asset or liability (or of a portfolio of similar assets or a
portfolio of similar liabilities), the hedged item is one of the following:
i. A percentage of the entire asset or liability (or of the entire portfolio). An entity shall not express
the hedged item as multiple percentages of a recognized asset or liability and then retroactively
determine the hedged item based on an independent matrix of those multiple percentages and the
actual scenario that occurred during the period for which hedge effectiveness is being assessed.
ii. One or more selected contractual cash flows, including one or more individual interest payments
during a selected portion of the term of a debt instrument (such as the portion of the asset or
liability representing the present value of the interest payments in any consecutive two years of a
four-year debt instrument). Paragraph 815-25-35-13B discusses the measurement of the hedged
item in hedges of interest rate risk.
Reporting entities often seek to hedge the prepayment risk of financial instruments that have specific
call/put dates or are prepayable at any time after issuance. In this regard, ASC 815-20-25-6 indicates
that prepayment risk per se cannot be designated as a hedged risk. However, ASC 815-20-25-6 permits
a hedge of the option component of a prepayable instrument as the hedged item, thus achieving the
same economic result. ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(2)(iii) specifically lists an embedded put or call option
that is not separated as an eligible hedged item even though, on a standalone basis, derivatives do not
qualify as hedged items.
ASC 815-20-25-12(d) indicates that a hedged item in a fair value hedge can be a prepayment option
embedded in a held-to-maturity debt security. In that case, the hedged risk is the risk of changes in the
entire fair value of the option.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
It may be difficult, however, to obtain a hedging instrument that is highly effective in offsetting the
impact of prepayment risk.
Reporting entities cannot hedge prepayment risk in items derived from prepayable instruments, such
as mortgage servicing rights or interest-only strips, since the items do not themselves contain
prepayment options. However, some entities may choose not to designate mortgage servicing rights or
interest-only strips in hedging relationships given the availability of fair value options under ASC 860-
50 or ASC 825-10, respectively.
ASC 815-20-25-12(c) identifies earnings exposure as a criterion that must be met for an asset or
liability to be the hedged item. The change in fair value of a hedged item attributable to the risk being
hedged must have the potential to change the amount that could be recognized in earnings. This
criterion is based on the premise that the objective of hedge accounting is to allow the gain or loss on a
hedging instrument and the loss or gain on a designated hedged item to be recognized in earnings at
the same time.
Hedge accounting is appropriate only when there is a hedgeable risk arising from a transaction with an
external party (although certain intercompany hedges for foreign currency exposures are permitted).
ASC 815-20-25-12(d) provides guidance on the eligibility of held-to-maturity debt securities for
designation as a hedged item in a fair value hedge.
ASC 815-20-25-12(d)
If the hedged item is all or a portion of a debt security (or a portfolio of similar debt securities) that is
classified as held to maturity in accordance with Topic 320, the designated risk being hedged is the
risk of changes in its fair value attributable to credit risk, foreign exchange risk, or both. If the hedged
item is an option component of a held-to-maturity security that permits its prepayment, the
designated risk being hedged is the risk of changes in the entire fair value of that option component. If
the hedged item is other than an option component of a held-to-maturity security that permits its
prepayment, the designated hedged risk also shall not be the risk of changes in its overall fair value.
The notion of hedging the interest rate risk in a security classified as held to maturity is inconsistent
with the held-to-maturity classification under ASC 320, which requires the reporting entity to hold the
security until maturity regardless of changes in market interest rates. For this reason, ASC 815-20-25-
43(c)(2) indicates that interest rate risk may not be the hedged risk in a fair value hedge of held-to-
maturity debt securities. However, hedging credit risk is permitted. It is not viewed as inconsistent
with the held-to-maturity assertion since ASC 320 permits sales or transfers of a held-to-maturity
security in response to significant deterioration in credit quality of the security. In addition, hedging
foreign exchange risk or the fair value of embedded prepayment options in held-to-maturity securities
is permitted, as discussed in DH 6.4.3.1.
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6.4.3.5 Eligible hedged items in a fair value hedge – residual value in a lease
ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(2)(iv) indicates that a hedged item may be the residual value in a lessor’s net
investment in a direct financing or sales-type lease.
Although the residual value in a lessor’s net investment in a direct financing or sales-type lease may be
designated as the hedged item, many contracts that are used as the hedging instrument in such a
hedge may qualify for the scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-13 and ASC 815-10-15-59(d). A reporting
entity should examine its hedging instruments to determine whether they meet the definition of a
derivative or are scoped out. If a hedging instrument does not fall within the scope of ASC 815, the
corresponding transaction does not qualify for hedge accounting because only derivatives may be
designated as hedging instruments with certain limited exceptions, as discussed in DH 8.2.2.
See DH 4.6.3 for a discussion of certain features of leases that may meet the definition of a derivative
and thus need to be separated from the lease agreement and accounted for individually.
A firm commitment is a binding agreement with a third party for which all significant terms are
specified (e.g., quantity, price, timing of the transaction). The definition of a firm commitment
requires that the fixed price be specified in terms of a currency (or an interest rate).
ASC 815 specifies that a firm commitment must include a disincentive for nonperformance that is
sufficiently large to make performance probable. The determination of whether a sufficiently large
disincentive for nonperformance exists under each firm commitment will be judgmental based upon
the specifics and facts and circumstances. Example 13 in ASC 815-25-55-84 indicates that the
disincentive for nonperformance need not be explicit in the contract. Rather, the disincentive may be
present in the form of statutory rights (that exist in the legal jurisdiction governing the agreement)
that allow a reporting entity to pursue compensation in the event of nonperformance (e.g., if the
counterparty defaults) that is equivalent to the damages that the entity suffers as a result of the
nonperformance.
Question DH 6-9 discusses whether an intercompany commitment can be considered “firm” and,
therefore, be eligible for designation as a fair value hedged item.
Question DH 6-9
Can an intercompany commitment ever be considered “firm” and, therefore, be eligible for designation
as a fair value hedged item?
PwC response
No. As defined in ASC 815-25-20, a firm commitment must be entered into with an unrelated third
party. However, even though a foreign currency-denominated intercompany commitment may not be
eligible for designation as a fair value hedged item, the functional currency variability in the foreign
currency cash flows under that commitment may be eligible for designation as a hedged forecasted
transaction in a cash flow hedge. The functional currency equivalent of the foreign currency cash that
is to be paid or received on the commitment will fluctuate based on changes in the exchange rate;
therefore, the transaction has a hedgeable cash flow exposure.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
In addition to the guidance discussed in DH 6.4.3 through DH 6.4.3.6, ASC 815-20-25-43(c) provides
additional restrictions on items that cannot be hedged items in fair value hedges.
2. For a held-to-maturity debt security, the risk of changes in its fair value attributable to interest
rate risk [DH 6.4.3.4]
3. An asset or liability that is remeasured with the changes in fair value attributable to the hedged
risk reported currently in earnings [see below]
6. An equity instrument issued by the entity and classified in stockholders’ equity in the statement of
financial position
If the entire asset or liability is an instrument with variable cash flows, ASC 815-20-25-43(c)(1) states
the hedged item cannot be deemed to be an implicit fixed-to-variable swap (or similar instrument)
perceived to be embedded in a host contract with fixed cash flows. In other words, a reporting entity
may not consider a variable-rate instrument to be implicitly embedded in a fixed-rate instrument to
achieve a fair value hedge.
ASC 815-20-25-43(c)(3) does not permit hedge accounting for hedged items that are remeasured for
changes in fair value because both the gains or losses on the hedging instrument and the offsetting
losses or gains on the hedged item would be recorded in the income statement and would tend to
naturally offset each other.
ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(1) describes the “similar assets/liabilities test” that is required for fair value
hedges of groups (portfolios) of assets or liabilities. Reporting entities seeking to fair value hedge a
portfolio of assets or liabilities must generally perform a rigorous quantitative assessment at inception
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
of the hedging relationship to document that the portfolio of assets or liabilities is eligible for
designation as the hedged item in a fair value hedging relationship.
1. If similar assets or similar liabilities are aggregated and hedged as a portfolio, the individual assets
or individual liabilities must share the risk exposure for which they are designated as being
hedged. The change in fair value attributable to the hedged risk for each individual item in a
hedged portfolio must be expected to respond in a generally proportionate manner to the overall
change in fair value of the aggregate portfolio attributable to the hedged risk. […]
Consistent with the ASC 815 prohibition on macro hedging, the designation of a group of assets or
liabilities in a single hedging relationship is limited to only those similar assets or liabilities that share
the same risk exposure for which they are designated as being hedged. ASC 815-20-55-14 indicates
that the concept of similar assets or liabilities is interpreted very narrowly. The fair value of each
individual item in the portfolio must be expected to change proportionate to the change in the entire
portfolio. For example, when the changes in the fair value of the hedged portfolio attributable to the
hedged risk alter that portfolio’s fair value by 10% during a reporting period, the change in the fair
value that is attributable to the hedged risk of each item in the portfolio should also be expected to be
within a fairly narrow range of 10%.
ASC 815-20-55-15
In aggregating loans in a portfolio to be hedged, an entity may choose to consider some of the
following characteristics, as appropriate:
a. loan type
b. loan size
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
e. coupon interest rate or the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows (if
fixed)
f. scheduled maturity or the assumed maturity if the hedged item is measured in accordance with
paragraph 815-25-35-13B
In certain limited circumstances when the terms of the individual hedged items in the portfolio are
aligned, a qualitative similar assets/liabilities test may be appropriate. For example, if a reporting
entity intends to hedge a group of fixed-rate nonprepayable financial assets together in a single
hedging relationship, when those financial assets all have the same benchmark component of the
coupon, payment dates, and assumed maturity date (under the partial term hedging guidance), it may
be able to qualitatively support that the individual items in the portfolio share the same risk exposure
for which they are designated as being hedged. The determination of whether a quantitative or
qualitative analysis is sufficient is judgmental and will depend on the nature of the items being
hedged.
When facts and circumstances regarding the portfolio change, we expect a reporting entity to
reconsider its similar assets/liabilities test. When changes are significant such that the original
conclusion is no longer valid without additional support, we would expect a new comprehensive
analysis be performed at that time.
Question DH 6-10 discusses whether a financial institution that economically hedges interest rate
spread through a macro hedge strategy can quality for hedge accounting.
Question DH 6-10
A financial institution economically hedges its interest rate spread through a macro hedge strategy,
whereby hedging instruments are not linked to identifiable assets, liabilities, firm commitments, or
forecasted transactions. Can such a strategy qualify for hedge accounting?
PwC response
No. Absent linkage to an identifiable asset, liability, firm commitment, or forecasted transaction (or a
group of similar items), there is no objective method of either assessing the effectiveness of the
hedging instruments or ultimately recognizing the results of the hedging instruments in income.
When the hedged risk is the total variability in fair value, as permitted by ASC 815-20-25-12(f)(1), the
total change in fair value on the hedged item is offset in the income statement by the change in fair
value of the hedging instrument. However, more effective hedges (with less impact to the income
statement) may result if a reporting entity hedges just interest rate risk, as discussed in DH 6.4.5.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
6.4.5 Hedging the change in fair value due to change in the benchmark interest rate
The Master Glossary defines interest rate risk differently for variable-rate and fixed-rate instruments.
For recognized fixed-rate instruments, interest rate risk is defined as the change in fair value due to
the change in the benchmark rate.
In theory, the benchmark interest rate should be a risk-free rate (that is, has no risk of default). In
some markets, government borrowing rates may serve as a benchmark. In other markets, the
benchmark interest rate may be an interbank offered rate.
Additionally, ASC 815-20-25-6A defines the list of eligible benchmark interest rates in the US as the
following.
□ Fed Funds Effective Swap Rate (also referred to as the Overnight Index Swap Rate or OIS)
□ Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) Municipal Swap Rate
The benchmark interest rate(s) a reporting entity selects will, at a minimum, be used to discount the
hedged item’s projected cash flows.
Reporting entities may elect any of the benchmark interest rates on a hedge-by-hedge basis.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
As of the content cutoff date of this guide (January 2018), the FASB has an active project that may
result in the addition of the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) as a benchmark interest rate.
Preparers and other users of this guide should monitor the project, and if finalized, evaluate its impact
on their application of hedge accounting.
The list of benchmark rates in ASC 815 is for the US market. The guidance does not specifically
address markets outside the US, except that ASC 815-20-55-128 references Euribor as an eligible
benchmark interest rate for euro-denominated financial assets or liabilities. It provides an example of
a reporting entity designating an interest rate swap to hedge its exposure to changes in fair value of its
euro-denominated debt obligation that is attributable to changes in Euribor interest rates.
The benchmark interest rate should be a risk-free rate, but may be an interbank offered rate that is not
entirely free of risk. Euribor, for example, is sponsored by the European Banking Federation, is widely
recognized, and is quoted in an active financial market by banks with high credit ratings. It is the rate
at which euro interbank term deposits are offered by one prime bank to another prime bank.
Reporting entities will need to consider the definition in ASC 815 when determining the eligibility of
rates outside the US.
ASC 815-25-35-1 requires the carrying amount of the hedged item to be adjusted for the fair value
changes attributable to the hedged risk (commonly referred to as basis adjustments). When the
hedged risk is the overall fair value of the entire hedged item, the measurement of the hedged item
should be consistent with ASC 820. However, when the hedged item is a financial asset or liability and
the hedged risk is interest rate risk, ASC 815 provides two ways to project cash flows on the hedged
item when measuring the changes in fair value of hedged item: total contractual coupon cash flows or
the benchmark component of the contractual coupon cash flows.
Reporting entities can elect to use either the total coupon cash flows or the benchmark component of
the coupon cash flows to measure the hedged item on a hedge-by-hedge basis. The ability to elect a
method to measure the hedged item on a hedge-by-hedge basis is analogous to the ability to choose
one of multiple benchmark interest rates, as discussed in DH 6.4.5.1. For reporting entities with a
borrowing rate that is close to the benchmark rate, there may limited differences in hedge results and
earnings impact under either method.
The methodology to measure the gain or loss should be consistent with the original documented risk
management strategy. When the risk designated is changes in fair value due to changes in the
benchmark interest rate, documentation should include details related to:
□ Whether the contractual coupon or benchmark component of the contractual coupon will be used
to project cash flows on the hedged item
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
□ The prepayment features embedded in the instrument, and whether those features will be
considered in the measurement of the hedged item due to fluctuations in only the benchmark
interest rate or all factors that would impact prepayment
6.4.6.1 Measuring the hedged item based on total contractual coupon cash flows
When using the total contractual coupon cash flows to measure the hedged item, reporting entities are
not permitted to exclude some of the hedged item’s contractual cash flows (e.g., the portion of the
interest coupon that is in excess of the benchmark rate) at any point in the hedging relationship. No
specific guidance is provided regarding the yield curve with which the hedged item’s estimated cash
flows should be discounted.
When using the total contractual coupon cash flows to determine the change in fair value of the
hedged item attributable to the hedged risk, there will always be some amount of earnings mismatch
when a fixed-rate interest-bearing asset or liability is being hedged for changes in the benchmark
interest rate under the long-haul method. This is due to the difference between the interest coupon
and the benchmark rate at inception of the hedging relationship, which is not economically reflected in
the terms of the interest rate swap. The only way to avoid this result in a fair value hedge of the
benchmark interest rate when the hedged item is measured based on total contractual coupon cash
flows is to qualify for the shortcut method, which assumes that the change in the fair value of the
hedged item attributable to the benchmark rate is equal to the change in the fair value of the interest
rate swap. However, as discussed in DH 9.4, the shortcut method is limited to only those hedging
relationships that meet strict criteria.
Question DH 6-11 discusses the factors that should be considered in the estimation of changes in a
debt’s fair value attributable to a hedged risk.
Question DH 6-11
DH Corp enters into an interest rate swap to hedge the risk of changes in a benchmark interest rate on
fixed-rate debt. When recording the change in the fair value of the hedged item attributable to the
hedged risk using the total contractual cash flows, should the following factors be considered in the
estimation of changes in the debt’s fair value attributable to the hedged risk (interest rate risk)?
PwC response
No. The provisions of ASC 815 indicate that, in accounting for the hedged item, DH Corp should adjust
the carrying amount of the debt each reporting period solely to reflect changes in the debt’s value that
are attributable to the risk being hedged.
In this example, the risk being hedged comprises changes in the debt’s fair value caused by changes in
a benchmark interest rate. Accordingly, in estimating the changes in the debt’s fair value for purposes
of applying the guidance, DH Corp should not consider changes that are attributable to entity-level or
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
sector-level credit risk or liquidity. However, those factors should be considered when disclosing the
fair value of DH Corp’s financial instruments pursuant to ASC 825 and ASC 820.
The risks should be considered in determining the fair value of the derivative hedging instrument,
which is measured at its full fair value.
6.4.6.2 Measuring the hedged item based on the benchmark component of the contractual
coupon cash flows
Measuring the hedged item in a fair value hedge based on the benchmark component of the coupon is
permitted for fair value hedges of fixed-rate assets or liabilities, regardless of whether the coupon or
yield is more or less than the benchmark rate. While “benchmark component” is not defined, it is
meant to represent the current on-market benchmark rate as of the designation of the hedging
relationship. In other words, the benchmark component may be viewed as the rate on the fixed leg of a
swap that:
□ The benchmark component of five-year non-callable fixed-rate debt is the fixed rate of an at-
market LIBOR-flat (i.e., LIBOR with no spread) five-year swap.
□ The benchmark component of five-year fixed-rate debt callable in year three is the fixed rate of an
at-market LIBOR-flat five-year swap that is cancellable in year three.
If the swap used as the hedging instrument is executed contemporaneously with the start of the
hedging relationship, is at-market, and has the same terms as the hedged item, use of the benchmark
component of the contractual coupon will result in the following.
□ The fixed rate on a LIBOR-flat swap and the fixed rate on the hedged item would match. As such,
only potential mismatches in discount rates for the hedged item and hedging instrument would
generate earnings volatility for the hedging relationship.
□ The initial value of the bond for hedge accounting purposes will be par. This eliminates the need
for the “pull-to-par” calculations (highlighted in Example DH 6-3).
This will be true regardless of when the hedged item was issued in relation to the hedge
designation date. If the debt was issued the same day or three years prior to execution of the
hedged relationship, use of the benchmark component will still result in the debt’s initial value for
hedge accounting purposes being par. This is because the benchmark component of the coupon is
determined at the date of hedge designation. As a result, its use helps to alleviate the tension
associated with using the shortcut method of assessing effectiveness for a “late-term” hedge, that
is, one designated in a period after the hedged item was issued, as discussed in DH 9.4.2.8.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
When measuring the hedged item based on the total contractual coupon cash flows, a reporting
entity will sometimes add a fixed spread to the hedged item’s discount rate. That is typically done
to force the initial value of the hedged item for hedge accounting purposes to be equal to par. Since
use of the benchmark component of the contractual coupon cash flows results in the hedged item’s
initial value being par (when those cash flows are discounted using the benchmark interest rate),
we do not expect entities to add a spread to the discount rate when electing to use the benchmark
component of the cash flows to measure the hedged item.
ASC 815 does not prescribe a specific method for a reporting entity to calculate changes in fair value
attributable to the benchmark interest rate. In practice, reporting entities may use two methodologies
to estimate the change in value attributable to the risk being hedged (i.e., the basis adjustment),
referred to as the Example 9/120C and Example 11/FAS 138 methods.
The first method is described in ASC 815-25-55-55 (Example 9) and is often referred to as the “120C
method” (as originally described in paragraph 120C of FAS 133).
ASC 815-25-55-55
Under this method, the change in a hedged item’s fair value attributable to changes in the benchmark
interest rate for a specific period is determined as the difference between two present value
calculations that use the remaining cash flows as of the end of the period and reflect in the discount
rate the effect of the changes in the benchmark interest rate during the period.
b. Using the LIBOR benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows (Case B).
Under the 120C method, the change in the fair value of the hedged item over a specific period of time
is calculated as the difference between:
□ the present value of the cash flows as of the end of the period using the benchmark rate at the
beginning of the period, and
□ the present value of the cash flows as of the end of the period using the benchmark rate at the end
of the period.
In other words, this method compares end-of-period cash flows associated with the hedged item
discounted using the benchmark rate at the beginning and end of the specified period. Accordingly,
the change in fair value attributable to changes in the benchmark rate (designated hedged risk) from
the beginning of the period to the end of the period is isolated. This results in the change in fair value
due to the passage of time being excluded from the measurement of the hedged item.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Absent any amortization policies, reporting entities using the Example 9 method may be left with
“hanging” basis adjustments in the carrying value of the hedged item resulting in earnings volatility
upon maturity of the hedged item (unless the hedging relationship is terminated earlier). Accordingly,
reporting entities may choose to amortize basis adjustments each reporting period, as discussed in
DH 6.4.7.
While the guidance does not specify the method of amortization, we believe the basis adjustment
should be accounted for in the same manner as other components of the carrying amount of that asset
or liability (e.g., the interest method).
Reporting entities should ensure basis adjustments are fully amortized upon the maturity of the
hedged item.
The more common method of measuring changes in fair value of a hedged item attributable to changes
in a benchmark interest rate is illustrated in ASC 815-25-55-72 through ASC 815-25-55-77 (Example
11) and is often referred to as the “FAS 138 method” (since it was originally illustrated in the FASB
staff’s examples issued in conjunction with FAS 138). Under this method, the changes in the fair value
of the hedged item over a specific period of time are calculated as the difference between:
□ the present value of the cash flows as of the beginning of the period using the benchmark rate at
the beginning of the period, and
□ the present value of the cash flows as of the end of the period using the benchmark rate at the end
of the period.
Accordingly, the change in fair value attributable to changes in the benchmark interest rate
(designated as the hedged risk) from the beginning of the period to the end of the period includes not
only changes in the benchmark interest rate but also the change due to the passage of time.
Adjustments may need to be made for the receipt/payment of cash.
When a reporting entity projects cash flows on the debt using the total contractual coupon (as
discussed in DH 6.4.6.1), a debt instrument’s present value is different from its book or par value at
hedge inception since the total interest coupons are typically different from the benchmark rate. At
maturity, the debt’s present value will equal its par or redemption amount. In this scenario, the
cumulative changes in present value of the debt instrument over the hedge period are not zero when
using the present value technique under the Example 11 method. This is often referred to as the “pull-
to-par” effect.
To illustrate this pull-to-par concept (pulling the present value of the debt at hedge inception to par
upon maturity), consider a reporting entity with outstanding debt with a $100 principal balance and
$105 present value at hedge inception. However, because the initial present value did not equal the par
value, application of the Example 11 method without an additional adjustment would result in a $5
gain at maturity of the hedged item. This would occur because under the Example 11 method, even if
the benchmark interest rate did not change after hedge inception, the initial present value amount of
the contractual cash flows would migrate toward par value over time. Consequently, the cumulative
change in fair value not attributable to changes in a benchmark rate amounts to ($5) over the hedge
period (a decline from a $105 present value at hedge inception to a $100 fair value at hedge maturity).
The ($5) is the portion of the change in the present value calculations not attributable to a change in a
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
benchmark interest rate, but to the natural migration of the initial present value to par over time.
Therefore, the reporting entity would adjust the periodic basis adjustments on the hedged item to
further isolate the change in value attributable to the hedged risk.
Specifically, a reporting entity should calculate the change in present value that would occur in each of
the remaining reporting periods over the remaining term of the five-year debt assuming that the
benchmark rate does not change. That calculated amount for each reporting period should be
subtracted from the basis adjustments calculated under the Example 11 method for each
corresponding reporting period to determine the net basis adjustment to be recognized.
In the first reporting period following hedge inception, the present value of $105 may have become
$110 by the end of the period. The calculation that assumed no change in the benchmark rate would
indicate that, if rates had not changed, the present value would have decreased from $105 to $103 as it
migrates back to par. This difference of $2 would need to be subtracted from the basis adjustment
calculation of $5 ($110 – $105) resulting in $7 ($5 – (-$2)) as the net basis adjustment to be
recognized against the hedged item. Consistently adjusting the basis adjustment each reporting period
correctly accounts for any differences that existed at inception between the present value of future
cash streams and par.
The Example 11 method is more common in practice than the Example 9 method, partly because the
calculation of the change in fair value from the beginning of the period to the end of the period
(including the passage of time) is supported by many Treasury valuation systems. Some Treasury
valuation systems may not have the ability to isolate the change in value of the hedged item without
the passage of time, as prescribed under the Example 9 method.
We believe the Example 11 method will continue to be more prevalent in practice after adoption of
ASU 2017-12 now that the pull-to-par concerns have been mitigated through the ability to measure the
hedged item using the benchmark component of the contractual coupon cash flows (as discussed in
DH 6.4.6.2). Measuring the hedged item based upon the benchmark component of the contractual
coupon cash flows will, in most cases, equate the hedged item’s present value to par at hedge
inception, as illustrated in Example DH 6-2.
EXAMPLE DH 6-2
Measuring the hedged item based on the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon under
the Example 11 method
On January 1, 20X1, DH Corp issued a $100,000, sever-year fixed-rate noncallable debt instrument
with an annual 10% interest coupon at par. Two years after issuance, on December 31, 20X2, when the
LIBOR swap rate for five years is 7% and the debt remains on the books at a carrying value equal to
par, DH Corp enters into an on-market five-year receive-fixed (7%) pay-LIBOR interest rate swap and
designates it as the hedging instrument in a fair value hedge of the $100,000 liability due to changes
in the benchmark interest rate (this is often referred to as a “late hedge”). DH Corp chooses to measure
the hedged item based on the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows.
The variable leg of the interest rate swap resets each year on December 31 for the payments due the
following year. At the time of hedge designation, the debt is recorded on DH Corp’s books at
$100,000. The present value of the debt including its full $10,000 annual contractual coupons
discounted at the benchmark interest rate is approximately $112,300. However, when only the
benchmark rate component of the coupon is used (i.e., 7%, resulting in $7,000 per annum assumed
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
cash flows), the present value of the debt discounted at the hedge inception benchmark rate is equal to
the par value of the debt. The incremental $3,000 per year of cash flows on the debt is not considered
in the measurement of the hedged item due to the hedged risk since DH Corp chooses to measure the
hedged item based upon the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows.
20X2 7%
20X3 6.5%
20X4 6.0%
20X5 5.5%
20X6 5.0%
20X7 4.5%
How should DH Corp account for the fair value hedge using the benchmark rate component of the
contractual coupon under the Example 11 method to measure the hedged item?
Analysis
When discounting the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows at the
designated benchmark interest rate, the present value of the bond’s cash flows at the inception of the
hedging relationship will equal par. When using the full contractual coupon, the present value of the
cash flows would be greater than par. As a result, a pull-to-par adjustment resulting from this
premium (i.e., the $12,300 explained above and as used in Example DH 6-3) would otherwise be
required to ensure the carrying value of the hedged item is equal to par at the maturity of the hedging
relationship. Under the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon, this premium may not
exist. Under the Example 11 method, when a hedged item begins at par and is subsequently adjusted
away from par due to changes in the benchmark rate, the calculations will return the hedged item back
to par as it approaches the designated maturity. This is observable in years 20X6 and 20x7. In this
example, interest rates decline each period by 50 basis points. A fixed-rate instrument should increase
in present value when rates decline. However, as the instrument gets closer to the designated maturity,
the changes in value calculated under the Example 11 method will revert the debt to par because the
effects of discounting diminish as maturity approaches.
The calculations in this example are simplified by assuming that the interest rate applicable to a
payment due at any future date is the same as the rate for a payment at any other future date (that is,
the yield curve is flat for the term of the swap), and that all rates change only once per year on
December 31 of each year.
DH Corp records the following journal entries (for the purposes of this example, any credit valuation
adjustment (CVA) or debit valuation adjustment (DVA) impacts on the valuation of the swap have
been ignored).
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Note: No cash settlement on the swap to be recorded as the fixed and floating legs were both
7% for 20x3
To record the settlement on the swap (receive fixed $7,000, pay float $6,500)
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
To record the settlement on the swap (receive fixed $7,000, pay float $6,000)
To record the settlement on the swap (receive fixed $7,000, pay float $5,500)
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Example DH 6-3 illustrates how to exclude the “pull-to-par” effect from the measurement of the
hedged item under the Example 11 method when the hedged item is measured using the full
contractual coupon cash flows under ASC 815-25-35-13. We observe that when confronted with the
differences in complexity between Example DH 6-2 and Example DH 6-3, most reporting entities will
choose to use the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon with the Example 11 method.
EXAMPLE DH 6-3
Measuring the hedged item based upon the total contractual coupon using the Example 11 method
On January 1, 20X1, DH Corp issued a $100,000, seven-year fixed-rate noncallable debt instrument
with an annual 10% interest coupon at par. Two years after issuance, on December 31, 20X2, when the
LIBOR swap rate for five-year debt is 7% and the debt remains on the books at a carrying value equal
to par, DH Corp enters into an on-market five-year receive-fixed (7%) pay-LIBOR interest rate swap
and designates it as the hedging instrument in a fair value hedge of the $100,000 liability due to the
change in the benchmark interest rate. DH Corp chooses to measure the hedged item based on the
total contractual coupon cash flows.
The variable leg of the interest rate swap resets each year on December 31 for the payments due the
following year. At the time of hedge designation, the debt is recorded on DH Corp’s books at
$100,000; however, the present value of the contractual cash flows of the debt discounted at the
benchmark interest rate is approximately $112,300, a difference from par of $12,300.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
20X2 7%
20X3 6.5%
20X4 6.0%
20X5 5.5%
20X6 5.0%
20X7 4.5%
How should DH Corp account for the fair value hedge using the total contractual coupon cash flows
under the Example 11 method to measure the hedged item?
Analysis
If the book value of the debt is simply adjusted for the total change in value due to both interest rate
changes and the changes in time, the pull-to-par effects of a debt’s change in value from a premium
(i.e., the $12,300 in this example) down to par would, over time, bring the debt’s ultimate carrying
value down to $87,700 by crediting the income statement in 20X3, 20X4, 20X5, 20X6, and 20X7. This
amount is not reflective of a change in fair value due to changes in the benchmark interest rate. It
would result in a $12,300 loss at maturity; the debt will be settled for $100,000 when the book value is
$87,700. (Reference the lower line in the below graph.)
To avoid this outcome, pull-to-par effects must be removed from the changes in fair value of the
hedged item due to changes in the hedged risk calculation. To isolate the pull-to-par effects, the hedge
accounting needs to be adjusted for the effects of $12,300 of premium on the same debt instrument
with rates remaining at the 7% initial hedge rate throughout the time of the hedge until maturity. The
pull-to-par effect can be determined by calculating the change in fair value in each period after the
hedge designation date, assuming no changes in discount rates (see the impact of passage of time in
the following table).
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Consistent with the example in ASC 815-25-55-54, the calculations in this example are simplified by
assuming that the interest rate applicable to a payment due at any future date is the same as the rate
for a payment at any other future date (that is, the yield curve is flat for the term of the swap), and that
all rates may change only once per year on December 31 of each year.
Compute changes in fair value due to changes in the benchmark interest rate
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
To record the change in fair value of debt for change in benchmark interest rates (a)
Note: No cash settlement on the swap to be recorded, as the fixed and floating legs were both 7% for
20x3
December 31, 20X4
To record the change in fair value of debt for change in benchmark interest rates (c)
To record the settlement on the swap (receive fixed $7,000, pay float $6,500)
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
To record the change in fair value of debt for change in benchmark interest rates (e)
To record the settlement on the swap (receive fixed $7,000, pay float $6,000)
To record the change in fair value of debt for change in benchmark interest rates (g)
To record the settlement on the swap (receive fixed $7,000, pay float $5,500)
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
To record the change in fair value of debt for change in benchmark interest rates (i)
A partial-term hedge is a hedge for a portion of the time to maturity of a fixed-rate asset or liability, for
example, the first two years of a four-year bond. ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(2)(ii) provides for partial-term
hedging.
ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(2)
If the hedged item is a specific portion of an asset or liability (or of a portfolio of similar assets or a
portfolio of similar liabilities), the hedged item is one of the following:
i. A percentage of the entire asset or liability (or of the entire portfolio). An entity shall not express
the hedged item as multiple percentages of a recognized asset or liability and then retroactively
determine the hedged item based on an independent matrix of those multiple percentages and the
actual scenario that occurred during the period for which hedge effectiveness is being assessed.
ii. One or more selected contractual cash flows, including one or more individual interest payments
during a selected portion of the term of the instrument (such as the portion of the asset or liability
representing the present value of the interest payments in any consecutive two years of a four-year
debt instrument). Paragraph 815-25-35-13B discusses the measurement of the hedged item in
hedges of interest rate risk.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815-25-35-13B provides measurement guidance for partial-term fair value hedging of interest rate
risk.
ASC 815-25-35-13B
For a fair value hedge of interest rate risk in which the hedged item is designated as selected
contractual cash flows in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-12(b)(2)(ii), an entity may measure
the change in the fair value of the hedged item attributable to interest rate risk using an assumed term
that begins when the first hedged cash flow begins to accrue and ends when the last hedged cash flow
is due and payable. The assumed maturity of the hedged item occurs on the date in which the last
hedged cash flow is due and payable.
Under a partial-term hedging strategy, an interest rate swap with a term of two years may be
designated as hedging the corresponding interest payments of a fixed-rate debt instrument with a
longer term of, say, four years. Thus, the four-year debt instrument is economically (i.e., synthetically)
converted into an instrument whose interest rate floats with the market for two years (i.e., the hedged
period) and is fixed for the other two years.
Mechanically, partial-term hedging under the new guidance is achieved by assuming that the term of
the hedged item is the same as the term of the hedging instrument. The reporting entity should
assume that any payments made at the contractual maturity of the hedged item are made at the
conclusion of the hedge term (i.e., at the end of the partial-term period). Without this assumption, the
hedge would likely not be highly effective.
In a fair value hedge of the benchmark interest rate risk in fixed-rate prepayable debt (that is not
designated in a last-of-layer hedge), prepayment risk needs to be measured in one of two ways,
considering:
□ only how fluctuations in the designated benchmark interest rate would affect the decision to settle
the hedged item prior to its contractual maturity, or
□ all factors that would affect the decision to settle the hedged item prior to its contractual maturity.
When considering the effect of a prepayment option only as it relates to changes in the benchmark
interest rate to assess hedge effectiveness and calculate the change in fair value of the hedged item, the
reporting entity will only consider how the change in the benchmark interest rate, not other factors
such as credit risk, will impact the decision to call or put the instrument. Limiting consideration of the
prepayment option to only benchmark interest rate risk will likely make hedges of prepayable assets
and liabilities more effective.
The decision to consider only how the benchmark interest rate impacts the decision to prepay is
independent of the decision to measure the hedged item using the benchmark component of
contractual cash flows. Reporting entities can use either the benchmark component or contractual
coupon cash flows and still elect to evaluate the prepayment feature in this way.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
If the prepayment feature within the hedged item is outside the term of the hedging relationship, the
measurement of the hedged item does not need to consider the prepayment risk. Figure DH 6-4
illustrates this point.
Figure DH 6-4
Considering optionality in measurement of hedged item
Hedging Hedging
relationship 1 relationship 2
Stated
maturity 9/30/2025 9/30/2025
Designated
hedged term
end date 9/30/2024 9/30/2025
Hedged item
measurement
include
optionality? No Yes
In Hedging relationship 2, the optionality is considered in measuring the hedged item because the
hedge period extends past the option exercise date.
ASC 815-25-35-8 and ASC 815-25-35-9 provide guidance on amortizing basis adjustments in fair value
hedges.
ASC 815-25-35-8
The adjustment of the carrying amount of a hedged asset or liability required by ASC 815-25-35-1(b)
shall be accounted for in the same manner as other components of the carrying amount of that asset or
liability. For example, an adjustment of the carrying amount of a hedged asset held for sale (such as
inventory) would remain part of the carrying amount of that asset until the asset is sold, at which point
the entire carrying amount of the hedged asset would be recognized as the cost of the item sold in
determining earnings.
ASC 815-25-35-9
An adjustment of the carrying amount of a hedged interest-bearing financial instrument shall be
amortized to earnings. Amortization shall begin no later than when the hedged item ceases to be
adjusted for changes in its fair value attributable to the risk being hedged.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
For an interest-bearing asset or liability, a reporting entity has two options in dealing with basis
adjustments (1) defer the amortization of the hedged item’s basis adjustment or (2) immediately start
amortizing any basis adjustment.
□ If amortization of the hedged item’s basis adjustment is deferred, a significant income statement
impact may result in later periods, due to the approach of the hedged item’s maturity date, which
would require the entity to “catch up” the basis of the hedged item to its par value over a shorter
period.
□ In the case of a fair value hedge of interest rate risk that uses a swap contract, an entity would
most likely want to start immediately amortizing any basis adjustments to offset the interest-
accrual component of the changes in the swap’s fair value.
Reporting entities may defer amortization of a basis adjustment until the hedged interest-bearing
asset or liability ceases to be adjusted for changes in fair value that are attributable to the risk that is
being hedged. The policy election may simplify the accounting and record-keeping that an entity might
otherwise have to undertake to track and properly account for basis adjustments.
Theoretically, amortization should start immediately. However, it might be complex and burdensome
to amortize prior basis adjustments in the hedged item at the same time that the item’s basis continues
to be adjusted for changes in value that are attributable to the hedged risk.
Depending on the methodology used to calculate the basis adjustment of the hedged item (discussed in
DH 6.4.6.2), the choice that the reporting entity has made to begin amortization immediately may not
be readily apparent without looking at the actual calculation of the basis adjustment. For example, if a
reporting entity used the Example 11 method, the amortization that occurs is inherent in the basis
adjustment calculation because it incorporates a “natural amortization.” The implicit “natural
amortization” occurs because the difference between the beginning-of-the-period present value of the
hedge item’s future cash flows and the end-of-the-period present value of the hedged item’s future
cash flows, after adjustments for cash payments, is added to or subtracted from the carrying amount of
the fixed rate debt. The “natural amortization” will result in the match of accounting and economics
that the reporting entity wanted to obtain when it elected hedge accounting. The Example 11 method
will result in a close offset between the changes in the fair value of the interest rate swap and the
change in the carrying value of the hedged item because the calculation incorporates a benchmark
interest rate-based factor for the “passage of time.”
In contrast, the reporting entity could choose to apply the Example 9 method. In that methodology,
the difference between the two end-of-period present value cash flow streams will be added to or
subtracted from the carrying amount of the fixed-rate debt. There is no passage of time captured or
implicitly factored into the calculation, because both of the amounts are as of the end of the period.
Therefore, no “natural amortization” will occur. If the reporting entity applies the Example 9 method,
there will be a build-up in the debt’s basis adjustments that could result in gains or losses at maturity,
and it would not get the full offset between changes in fair value of the swap and debt without
separately amortizing the basis adjustments. To achieve the accounting offset between the hedging
instrument and the hedged item, the reporting entity should begin amortization of the basis
adjustment immediately through an appropriate amortization method. Using a market-based
amortization method, the results of the “natural amortization” in the Example 11 method could be
duplicated. Under the Example 9 method, the amortization of the basis adjustment would be more
evident than under the Example 11 method, as the reporting entity would have to keep separate
records and schedules to determine the amount of amortization each period.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
When initially designating the hedging relationship and preparing the contemporaneous hedge
documentation, a reporting entity must specify how hedge accounting adjustments will be
subsequently recognized in income, and should elect a similar approach for similar hedges. This will
prevent the entity from choosing to (1) defer amortization of basis adjustments that would result in a
charge to current earnings and (2) currently amortize basis adjustments that result in an increase in
earnings. We do not believe determining whether the effect of amortization is a debit or credit is an
appropriate basis for distinguishing similar types of hedged items.
The recognition of basis adjustments will differ depending on how other adjustments of the hedged
item’s carrying amount will be reported in earnings. For example, gains and losses on an interest-
bearing debt instrument that are attributable to interest rate risk are amortized as a yield adjustment.
Further, if the hedged item is a portfolio of similar assets or liabilities, except a closed portfolio in a
last-of-layer hedge, a reporting entity must allocate the hedge accounting adjustments to individual
items in the portfolio. Information about such allocations is required, for example, when (1) the assets
are sold or liabilities are settled, (2) the hedging relationship is discontinued, or (3) the hedged item is
assessed for impairment. Last-of-layer hedges are addressed in DH 6.5.
If a reporting entity elects to amortize a basis adjustment in a partial-term hedge while the hedging
relationship is in place, it would amortize the basis adjustment over the life of the hedge (that is, over
the partial-term period). However, if the hedge is discontinued early, the remaining basis adjustment
would be amortized in accordance with the guidance in ASC 310-20, Nonrefundable Fees and Other
Costs. Thus, the amortization period may change upon termination.
For fair value hedges of available-for-sale debt securities, ASC 815-25-35-6 requires that the basis
adjustment be recognized in earnings, rather than through OCI, to offset the gain or loss on the
hedging instrument. For example, if a reporting entity hedges only the risk of changes in fair value due
to changes in the benchmark interest rate of a fixed-rate available-for-sale debt security, the guidance
requires that (1) changes in the fair value that are due to benchmark interest rate risk be recorded in
earnings while (2) changes in the fair value that are due to credit risk and other unhedged risks be
recorded through OCI.
ASC 310-20, Receivables — Nonrefundable Fees and Other Costs, indicates that premiums on callable
debt securities purchased at a premium (i.e., a price in excess of par) should be amortized to the
earliest call date (as opposed to through the maturity date). The Basis for Conclusions in ASU 2017-08,
Premium Amortization on Purchased Callable Debt Securities, indicates that the guidance does not
impact the amortization of basis adjustments from fair value hedges of interest rate risk. However,
when the hedging relationship is discontinued and a hedge accounting basis adjustment remains, a
reporting entity would follow the guidance in ASC 310-20.
ASC 815-25-35-14 addresses how the rollout of a hedge’s effects should be treated for capitalization
purposes. Amounts recorded in a reporting entity’s income statement as interest costs as a result of a
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
fair value hedge of interest rate risk should be reflected in the capitalization rate under ASC 835-20,
Capitalization of Interest, if a reporting entity elects to begin amortization of those adjustments
during the period in which interest is eligible for capitalization.
ASC 815-25-35-10 states that assets and liabilities that have been designated as hedged items in a fair
value hedging relationship remain subject to the normal requirements for impairment assessment (or
the assessment of the need to recognize an increase in an obligation) that are prescribed by other
GAAP, for example:
□ Lower of cost or fair value under ASC 948-310-35-1, Accounting for Certain Mortgage Banking
Activities
□ Impairment of loans under ASC 310-10-35-20, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan
□ Impairment of securities under ASC 320-10-15-4, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt
and Equity Securities
□ Impairment of long-lived assets under ASC 360-10-35-20, Accounting for the Impairment or
Disposal of Long-Lived Assets; and valuation of inventory under ASC 330-10-35-13, Inventory
Pricing)
A reporting entity must apply the relevant impairment requirements after hedge accounting is applied
for the period and the hedged item’s carrying amount has been adjusted to reflect changes in fair value
that are attributable to the risk that is being hedged. Because the hedging instrument is recognized
separately as an asset or a liability, its fair value or expected cash flows will not be considered in the
application of the impairment assessments to the hedged asset or liability.
New guidance
ASU 2016-13, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on
Financial Instruments, is effective on January 1, 2020 for public business entities that are SEC filers
with calendar year ends. It provides new impairment models for loans and AFS debt securities that
will affect the guidance in this and the following sections. Preparers and other users of this guide
should evaluate its impact on their application of hedge accounting.
ASC 815-25-35-11 indicates that the measurement of impairment under ASC 310-10-35 is implicitly
affected by hedge accounting by requiring the present value of expected future cash flows to be
discounted by the new effective rate based on the adjusted recorded investment in a hedged loan, not
the original effective rate.
ASC 310-10-35-31 requires that when the recorded investment of a loan has been adjusted under fair
value hedge accounting, the effective rate is the discount rate that equates the present value of the
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
loan’s future cash flows with that adjusted recorded investment. The adjustment under fair value
hedge accounting of the loan’s carrying amount for changes in fair value attributable to the hedged risk
should be considered to be an adjustment of the loan’s recorded investment. As discussed in ASC 310-
10-35-31, the loan’s original effective interest rate becomes irrelevant once the recorded amount of the
loan is adjusted for any changes in its fair value. Because ASC 815-25-35-10 requires that the loan’s
carrying amount be adjusted for hedge accounting before the impairment requirements of ASC 310-10
are applied, the guidance implicitly supports using the new effective rate and the adjusted recorded
investment.
The guidance in ASC 815-25-35-11 is applicable to all entities applying ASC 310-10 to financial assets
that are hedged items in a fair value hedge regardless of whether those entities have delayed
amortizing basis adjustments until the hedging relationship is dedesignated.
Question DH 6-12 discusses the impairment loss that should be recorded if the credit quality of a loan
has deteriorated.
Question DH 6-12
On January 1, 20X1, DH Financial Institution hedges a 10-year, $50-million fixed-rate, nonprepayable
loan receivable with an interest rate swap, perfectly matching the terms of the loan and qualifying for
the shortcut method of accounting. On December 31, 20X3, the fair value of the swap is a loss of
$800,000, and the carrying amount of the loan is $50.8 million (inclusive of the basis adjustment
from the loss of $800,000 on the interest rate swap).
The borrower’s credit quality has deteriorated and the loan is considered impaired. In accordance with
the requirements of ASC 310-10, DH Financial Institution computes the present value of expected
future cash flows discounted at the loan’s new effective interest rate, considering the new carrying
amount of the loan after being adjusted through hedge accounting (rather than at the loan’s original
effective interest rate), as being $48 million.
What is the amount of the impairment loss that DH Financial Institution should record?
PwC response
DH Financial Institution should record an impairment loss of $2.8 million ($50.8 million carrying
amount less the $48 million present value) on the loan through earnings as per ASC 310-10.
The fair value of the interest rate swap is not considered in the assessment of impairment for the loan.
A reporting entity that is holding investments may wish to reduce its exposure to changes in the fair
value of its investments through a hedging transaction. Because of the special accounting rules under
ASC 320 applicable to debt securities classified as available-for-sale and held to maturity, the
application of hedge accounting is different from that for other investments.
Once hedge accounting has been applied, a reporting entity must perform an impairment assessment
on the hedged item, including an assessment for other-than-temporary impairment. Therefore, if an
other-than-temporary impairment exists on a hedged item, there may be cumulative amounts in other
comprehensive income to be reclassified into the income statement that represented the portion of the
change in the hedged item’s fair value attributable to risks not hedged.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
When the hedging instrument is discounted by an Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate (as discussed in
FV 6.4.5.1), but the benchmark interest rate upon which the hedged item will be discounted is
designated as LIBOR, US Treasury, or SIFMA, the difference in the discount rates will be a source of
earnings volatility.
This hedging strategy leverages the guidance related to partial-term fair value hedges and the ability to
measure the hedged item based on the benchmark component of the total contractual coupon. The
combination of these decisions impacts the application of the similar assets test (required for all
hedges of groups of assets to prove that the individual assets share the same risk exposure for the risk
designated as being hedged).
□ If the hedged item is designated using the partial-term guidance (i.e., the hedge period is not
through the maturity date of the assets in the portfolio), the remaining term of all assets in the
portfolio can be assumed to be the same for hedge accounting purposes.
□ If the remaining term is the same, the benchmark rate component of the contractual cash flows on
each asset in the portfolio will be the same because the benchmark rate component is determined
as of hedge designation.
□ The guidance indicates that prepayments do not need to be considered in measuring the hedged
item in a last-of-layer hedge because what is being hedged is a portion of the portfolio that will
remain throughout the assumed maturity (i.e., through the end of the designated partial term
period).
The result is a portfolio of bonds that should pass the similar assets test qualitatively.
ASC 815-20-55-14A
If both of the following conditions exist, the quantitative test described in paragraph 815-20-55-14
may be performed qualitatively and only at hedge inception:
a. The hedged item is a closed portfolio of prepayable financial assets or one or more beneficial
interests designated in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-12A.
b. An entity measures the change in fair value of the hedged item based on the benchmark rate
component of the contractual coupon cash flows in accordance with paragraph 815-25-35-13.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Using the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows when all assets have the
same assumed maturity date and prepayment risk does not affect the measurement of the hedged item
results in all hedged items having the same benchmark rate component coupon cash flows.
Last-of-layer hedges are designated as the “last x dollar amount” of prepayable financial assets in a
closed portfolio for a defined partial-term period. The reporting entity needs to support its expectation
that the hedged amount (the last of layer) will remain outstanding through the defined partial-term
hedge period. This is not a forecasted transaction, as in a cash flow hedge, but rather an estimate of the
hedged item in a fair value hedge. As such, the reporting entity does not need to assert that the hedged
amount is probable of being outstanding throughout the hedge period. The last of layer is the balance
that is “anticipated to be outstanding” considering “prepayments, defaults, and other events,” such as
sales, throughout the defined partial-term period. When assets are removed from the closed portfolio
through those events, they are deemed to be the ones that are not hedged, provided the removal of
those assets does not cause the remaining balance of the portfolio to fall below the designated last of
layer amount.
The reporting entity needs to support and document its expectation that the hedged balance will
remain outstanding through the end of the designated partial-term period and update that expectation
each period. On a quarterly basis, the analysis performed under ASC 815-20-25-12A(a) must be
reperformed using then-current expectations of prepayments, defaults, and other events affecting the
timing and amount of cash flows associated with the closed portfolio to ensure the hedged balance is
still expected to be outstanding at the end of the defined partial-term period. If expectations change, it
can revisit the hedged balance. There is no concept of tainting, as there is with hedges of forecasted
transactions in the cash flow hedging model. As a result, the reporting entity can re-evaluate its
assumptions and adjust the hedged balance through partial dedesignation of the hedging relationship
when necessary, if it identifies the need to do so before the remaining assets in the pool fall below the
layer designated.
Under the last-of-layer method, a reporting entity is not required to incorporate prepayment risk into
the measurement of the hedged item.
ASC 815-20-25-12A
For a closed portfolio of prepayable financial assets or one or more beneficial interests secured by a
portfolio of prepayable financial instruments, an entity may designate as the hedged item a stated
amount of the asset or assets that are not expected to be affected by prepayments, defaults, and other
factors affecting the timing and amount of cash flows if the designation is made in conjunction with
the partial-term hedging election in paragraph 815-20-25-12(b)(2)(ii) (this designation is referred to
throughout Topic 815 as the “last-of-layer method”).
a. As part of the initial hedge documentation, an analysis shall be completed and documented to
support the entity’s expectation that the hedged item (that is, the designated last of layer) is
anticipated to be outstanding as of the hedged item’s assumed maturity date in accordance with
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
the entity’s partial-term hedge election. That analysis shall incorporate the entity’s current
expectations of prepayments, defaults, and other events affecting the timing and amount of cash
flows associated with the closed portfolio of prepayable financial assets or beneficial interest(s)
secured by a portfolio of prepayable financial instruments.
b. For purposes of its analysis, the entity may assume that as prepayments, defaults, and other events
affecting the timing and amount of cash flows occur, they first will be applied to the portion of the
closed portfolio of prepayable financial assets or one or more beneficial interests that is not part of
the hedged item (that is, the designated last of layer).
Basis adjustments on the closed portfolio in a last-of-layer hedge may need to be allocated to the
individual assets in the portfolio for various reasons, including calculating impairments or interest
income, determining the carrying amount for assets removed from the portfolio, or for disclosure.
Regardless of whether the forecasted debt issuance being hedged is expected to have a fixed or variable
interest rate, the hedging relationship will fall under the forecasted transaction cash flow hedging
model.
For the forecasted issuance of a fixed-rate financial instrument, the hedge accounting model is much
different from that applied for an existing fixed-rate financial instrument. Hedging the interest rate
risk in an existing fixed-rate financial instrument is considered a fair value hedge, while hedging the
interest rate risk in the forecasted issuance of a fixed-rate financial instrument is considered a cash
flow hedge.
Hedge accounting is generally terminated at the debt issuance date because the reporting entity will no
longer be exposed to cash flow variability subsequent to issuance. Accumulated amounts recorded in
AOCI at that date are then released to earnings in future periods to reflect the difference in (1) the
fixed rates economically locked in at the inception of the hedge and (2) the actual fixed rates
established in the debt instrument at issuance. Because of the effects of the time value of money, the
actual interest expense reported in earnings will not equal the effective yield locked in at hedge
inception multiplied by the par value. Similarly, this hedging strategy does not actually fix the interest
payments associated with the forecasted debt issuance.
Fixing the interest payments associated with debt may be achieved by committing to issue debt in the
future at a specific fixed interest rate and then hedging the net proceeds from the issuance of the debt.
In such a hedge, the proceeds or payments resulting from the termination of the hedging instrument
will offset the cash discount or premium received from the lender at debt issuance, such that the
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
issuing entity will receive par value if the hedge is perfectly effective. In future periods, the
amortization of the premium or discount on the debt will be offset by the release of a corresponding
amount from AOCI.
The hedged risk can be designated as the risk of changes in either (1) the coupon payments (or the
interest element of the final cash flow if interest is paid only at maturity) related to the forecasted
issuance of fixed-rate debt or (2) the total proceeds attributable to changes in the benchmark interest
rate related to the forecasted issuance of fixed-rate debt.
Question DH 6-13 discusses whether a reporting entity can designate a Treasury lock to hedge the risk
of changes on the cash flows due to the changes in the benchmark interest rate of debt.
Question DH 6-13
DH Corp expects to issue at par ten-year fixed-rate debt in 6 months on June 15, 20X1, and
management has determined that the future issuance of debt is probable and that it is probable that
there will be ten years of interest payments.
DH Corp wants to hedge the changes in the benchmark interest rate from January 15, 20X1 to June 15,
20X1 that will impact the debt’s fixed interest rate. DH Corp executes a Treasury rate lock on January
15, 20X1.
Can DH Corp designate the Treasury lock to hedge the risk of changes in the cash flows due to the
changes in the benchmark interest rate of the ten years of interest payments resulting from the
forecasted debt issuance?
PwC response
Yes, assuming the hedging relationship meets all of the appropriate requirements of ASC 815, DH
Corp can hedge the benchmark interest rate in a forecasted issuance of fixed-rate debt.
A Treasury rate lock agreement is a financial instrument that allows a reporting entity to “lock in” the
current benchmark interest rate applicable to US Treasury securities and results in a net cash payment
at the settlement of the agreement based on the difference between the current benchmark Treasury
yield and the rate that was locked-in via the Treasury rate lock. Because a Treasury lock locks in the
current benchmark Treasury rate, it acts as a natural economic hedge for the portion of the variability
on the future interest payments of a forecasted fixed-rate debt issuance due to the benchmark interest
rate risk because the debt’s fixed rate will not be determined until the pricing date of the debt issuance
and will be based on then-current market interest rates.
If DH Corp uses a Treasury lock as the hedging instrument, due to the nature of how it is valued and
settled, the Treasury rate lock generally will not be a perfectly effective hedging instrument.
The valuation and settlement of a Treasury lock will be based on the then-current yield on the most
recently issued on-the-run Treasury security for a particular maturity (e.g., at its maturity, the
settlement of a ten-year Treasury rate lock will be based on the yield of the most recently issued ten-
year Treasury security). As a result, once a new Treasury security for the relevant maturity has been
issued, the Treasury lock will be priced based on this new security. Normally, securities underlying the
Treasury lock (i.e., the current or any future Treasury issuance of the appropriate maturity) will not
have cash flows that match those of the forecasted debt issuance exactly. For example, assume a
Treasury lock was executed on January 15 with a maturity date of June 15 to hedge ten years of semi-
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
annual interest payments to occur each December 15 and June 15. Further assume that the relevant
on-the-run ten-year Treasury security had semi-annual interest payment dates of November 15 and
May 15. As a result, the yield on the underlying Treasury security (which, again, is the basis for the
settlement of the Treasury rate lock) will be calculated based on a different set of cash flows than the
cash flows on the debt being hedged.
The Treasury lock is not likely to be a perfectly effective hedging instrument because even at hedge
inception, it is highly unlikely that the timing of the interest payments relating to the Treasury security
underlying the Treasury lock will exactly match the timing of the interest payments relating to the
forecasted debt issuance. In addition, subsequent issuances of Treasury securities may result in more
mismatch in the relationship and if a quantitative assessment of effectiveness is used, will result in
more complex calculations.
Example DH 6-4 illustrates use of a swaption to hedge the forecasted issuance of fixed-rate debt.
EXAMPLE DH 6-4
Use of a swaption to hedge a forecasted issuance of debt
On January 1, 20X1, DH Corp anticipates that on January 1, 20X2, it will issue $10 million of two-
year, fixed-rate debt with the coupon set at the market interest rate at that date. Interest will be paid
annually on December 31 each year.
To protect itself from an increase in the benchmark interest rate for the two-year forward period of
January 1, 20X2 to December 31, 20X3, during the one-year period from January 1, 20X1 to January 1,
20X2 DH Corp purchases, for a premium of $20,000, an option that gives it the right, but not the
obligation, to enter into a two-year, receive-variable (one-year LIBOR), pay-fixed (8%) interest-rate
swap (a swaption) as of January 1, 20X2, based on a notional amount of $10 million. Fixed interest
payments on the swap would be made on an annual basis on December 31 if the option to enter the
swap is exercised by DH Corp.
The interest rate curve is flat. The LIBOR swap rate is 8% on January 1, 20X1 and 10% on December
31, 20X1. The interest rate change from 8% to 10% occurred on the last day of the year (December 31,
20X1).
DH Corp designates the swaption as a cash flow hedge of changes in the forecasted interest payments
due to benchmark interest rate risk related to the forecasted issuance of fixed-rate debt. DH Corp
assesses hedge effectiveness based on changes in the option’s intrinsic value and elects to recognize the
excluded component (i.e., time value) using an amortization approach. Per the guidance in ASC 815-
20-25-83A, DH Corp recognizes the amortization of the initial value of the excluded component in
earnings over the life of the hedging instrument. DH Corp elected to amortize the excluded component
on a straight-line basis, but other methods could be acceptable.
The swaption’s fair value increased in value to $50,000, to $230,000, and to $300,000 at each of the
first three respective quarter-ends during 20X1. On January 1, 20X2, the swaption is settled with the
original counterparty at a fair value of $347,107. The swaption is terminated at the debt issuance date,
January 1, 20X2, since DH Corp will no longer be exposed to interest rate variability after the pricing
date of the fixed-rate debt issuance.
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Analysis
Upon documenting the hedge and performing effectiveness testing, DH Corp is able to assert that the
hedge is expected to be highly effective in offsetting changes in the designated hedged risk. The
swaption contract would be recorded on the balance sheet at fair value as an asset or liability. As an
effective cash flow hedge, the swaption’s gain or loss would be deferred through OCI until the hedged
transactions, the forecasted interest payments, impact earnings. When the forecasted interest
payments impact earnings, the swaption’s gain or loss would be reclassified from AOCI to the same
income statement line item as the hedged item.
The journal entries to record the hedging relationship are as follows. The figures are calculated based
on the effective yield method of releasing AOCI using the debt’s effective rate of 8.10352% (similar to
amortization of a premium of $347,107). Other methods of releasing AOCI to earnings may also be
acceptable.
January 1, 20X1
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
January 1, 20X2
For simplicity and to more easily illustrate the concepts of the release of amounts accumulated in
other comprehensive income, annual journal entries are shown subsequent to the debt offering
(quarterly entries would be required).
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
For the forecasted issuance of a floating-rate debt instrument, the hedged item is typically designated
as forecasted interest payments, and the hedged risk is the contractually specified interest rate
expected to be in the variable-rate debt. This is the same manner in which the hedged item and hedged
risk are designated when hedging an existing variable-rate financial instrument. Thus, the cash flow
hedging model for hedging variable interest payments/receipts is similar for both existing financial
instruments and forecasted issuances of financial instruments.
When hedging the future variable-rate interest payments associated with a forecasted issuance of debt,
the hedging instrument (e.g., a forward starting interest rate swap) could technically remain
outstanding until the maturity of the debt instrument.
However, it is not uncommon to terminate the existing swap and enter into a new swap that exactly
matches the debt issued to facilitate cash flow hedging under a qualitative assessment method. The
amounts in AOCI for the terminated hedge associated with the forecasted issuance of the variable-rate
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Hedges of financial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
financial instrument will be reclassified into earnings in a manner that reflects the economically fixed
yield established at inception of the hedge.
If the reporting entity does not know whether it will issue fixed- or variable-rate debt, it would
designate the hedged risk as the variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a rate that would
qualify as both a benchmark rate and a contractually specified rate.
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Chapter 7:
Hedges of nonfinancial assets,
liabilities, and forecasted
transactions
Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
□ Accounting for fair value and cash flow hedges of nonfinancial assets, forecasted purchases/sales
of nonfinancial assets, and nonfinancial assets in inventory
The concepts within this chapter should be applied in conjunction with information in other chapters
in this guide, including the overview of hedge accounting and documentation requirements for all
hedges (DH 5), foreign currency and intercompany hedges (DH 8), effectiveness assessments (DH 9),
and discontinuance of hedge accounting (DH 10).
Contracts that meet the definition of a derivative and do not qualify for or are not otherwise
designated under a scope exception are accounted for at fair value. If a reporting entity executes
derivatives to manage risk associated with managing inventory or purchases or sales of commodities,
it may seek to apply hedge accounting to such derivatives to minimize volatility associated with
recording changes in fair value in the income statement. Risks are managed using hedging
instruments to transform potentially variable cash flows to fixed cash flows (cash flow hedges), and
conversely, fixed cash flows to potentially variable cash flows (fair value hedges). For effective cash
flow hedges, changes in the fair value of the derivative are initially recorded through other
comprehensive income (OCI) and remain deferred in accumulated other comprehensive income
(AOCI) until the underlying forecasted transaction impacts earnings or the forecasted transaction is
deemed probable of not occurring.
This section discusses general considerations related to all hedges of nonfinancial items, including
matters related to the eligibility of the risk to be hedged, hedged items and transactions, and hedging
instruments. It is followed by discussion of specific considerations for fair value and cash flow hedges.
A reporting entity may apply hedge accounting only to the eligible risks defined by ASC 815. Eligible
risks represent a change in fair values or cash flows that could affect reported earnings and are:
□ Price risk
□ Interest rate risk
□ Foreign exchange risk
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
□ Credit risk
ASC 815 focuses on these four risks because a change in the price associated with one of these risks
will ordinarily have a direct effect on the fair value of an asset or liability in a determinable or
predictable manner. The hedged risk must result in exposure to a change in fair values or cash flows
that could affect reported earnings, which is a requirement for all hedge accounting relationships.
From a nonfinancial perspective, a reporting entity may seek to manage price risk associated with raw
materials or finished products. That risk could be the total price risk or the risk of a component of the
price. Reporting entities may also separately hedge foreign exchange risk in a cash flow hedge of a
forecasted purchase or sale of a nonfinancial asset. Risks such as liquidity, theft, weather, catastrophe,
competition, and seasonality do not qualify for hedge accounting under ASC 815.
Figure DH 7-1 provides examples of the types of risks associated with nonfinancial items that are
eligible for hedge accounting, together with the related hedged items, and the type of hedge accounting
that may be applied. Whether hedge accounting is permitted for each hedging relationship depends on
the specific terms of the hedged item and the hedging instrument.
Figure DH 7-1
Types of risks associated with nonfinancial items
Changes in fair value while Recognized asset or liability Fair value hedge (DH 7.4)
holding inventory for
Firm commitment
consumption or sale
Changes in cash flows associated Recognized asset or liability Cash flow hedge (DH 7.3)
with holding inventory for sale
Firm commitment “All-in-one” cash flow hedge
(DH 7.3.4)
Risk associated with purchasing Forecasted transaction (in its Cash flow hedge (DH 7.3)
commodities with variable cash entirety)
flows
Contractually specified
component of a forecasted
transaction
Foreign exchange risk - Risk Forecasted transaction Foreign currency hedge (see
associated with settling denominated in a foreign DH 8)
commodity purchases or sales in currency
a currency other than the entity’s
functional currency
A reporting entity may apply different strategies to hedge the risks associated with nonfinancial
transactions. In some circumstances, it may be more effective to hedge only a portion or component of
the risk exposure.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815 permits reporting entities to hedge a “contractually specified component” (i.e., a component
of total price risk) of the cash flows related to a forecasted nonfinancial transaction. For example,
purchase and sale contracts for nonfinancial assets may be priced based on a traded commodity index
plus or minus a basis differential. If the traded commodity index is eligible to be designated as a
contractually specified component, a reporting entity would not be required to designate the total
price risk (i.e., overall variability in cash flows) associated with the hedged item as its hedged risk. As
illustrated in Figure DH 7-2, a hedge of only a component of the price may result in a more effective
hedge because delivery location and other basis differences would not be considered in the
effectiveness assessment.
Figure DH 7-2
Total price risk versus component risk in a hedge of a nonfinancial item
Hedged Hedging
item instrument
Quality
Delivery location Basis differential
Other
Often, a reporting entity will not be able to obtain a hedging instrument that perfectly offsets the risk
associated with a nonfinancial item that an entity is looking to mitigate (i.e., the total price risk related
to hedged item). Hedging instruments that are used to mitigate risk exposures related to nonfinancial
items are often standardized contracts that are traded on exchanges (e.g., futures contracts) and the
quantities, quality or grade, and delivery location may not match the hedged item. As a result, use of
this type of contract may not fully mitigate the underlying risk. Similarly, for bilateral contracts (e.g.,
over-the-counter forwards, swaps), counterparties may not wish to absorb some risk exposures related
to certain basis differentials.
If a reporting entity designates the hedged risk as only a component of total price risk, changes in the
value of the hedged item related to any basis differential are excluded from the hedging relationship,
and thus, also excluded from the assessment of effectiveness. As a result, risk management strategies
may qualify for hedge accounting – and may even be perfectly effective – even when a hedging
instrument does not address the entire change in cash flows. See DH 7.3.3.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815 requires each designated risk to be accounted for separately. As such, simultaneous fair value
and cash flow hedge accounting is not permitted for hedges of the same risk because there is only one
earnings exposure. Once the change in the value of a hedged item that is attributable to a particular
risk has been offset by the change in the value of a hedging derivative, another derivative cannot be an
effective hedge of the same risk. However, if a reporting entity has only hedged a portion of a
designated risk (e.g., it expects to procure 30,000 MMBtus of natural gas in October 20X1 at a
specified location and has only hedged purchases of 20,000 MMBtus), it could use a second derivative
to hedge the remaining exposure, if the forecasted transaction is probable and all other hedging
requirements are met.
Excluded components
As part of its risk management strategy, a reporting entity may exclude certain components of a
hedging instrument’s change in fair value from the assessment of hedge effectiveness. ASC 815-20-25-
82 discusses the items that may be excluded, including components of the change in time value (theta,
vega, and rho), as well as spot and forward or futures price differences.
A reporting entity must elect a policy for recognizing excluded components that is consistently applied
for similar hedges. There are two choices for recognition: an amortization approach (ASC 815-20-25-
83A) or a mark-to-market approach (ASC 815-20-25-83B). The amortization approach is the default
method, and the mark-to-market approach is the alternative.
ASC 815-20-25-83B
For fair value and cash flow hedges, an entity alternatively may elect to record changes in the fair value
of the excluded component currently in earnings. This election should be applied consistently to
similar hedges in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-81 and shall be disclosed in accordance with
paragraph 815-10-50-4EEEE.
The initial value attributable to an excluded component (that may be amortized over the life of the
hedging instrument) depends on the type of derivative. When the time value of an option contract is
the excluded component, the time value generally is the option premium paid (provided the option is
at or out of the money at inception). The value attributable to forward points in a forward contract is
the difference between the market forward rate and the spot rate, undiscounted. The fair values of
these excluded components change over time as markets change but must converge to zero by the
maturity of the hedging instrument. Because of that, the FASB permits a systematic and rational
amortization method.
When a reporting entity excludes all or a portion of the time value in an option-based derivative, such
as a cap or floor, from the assessment of effectiveness, and elects to recognize it using an amortization
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
approach, it must determine a systematic and rational method for recognizing the time value in
earnings. We believe a systematic and rational method for recognizing time value must result in a
portion of the excluded component being recognized in earnings during each reporting period between
the hedge designation date and the occurrence of the hedged transaction. We believe that recognizing
the total premium paid for a cap/floor on a straight-line basis may be a systematic and rational
method to recognize time value when it is excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness.
To reduce exposure to changes in the fair value and cash flows associated with recognized balances
and future transactions, reporting entities can hedge:
Nonfinancial items and transactions eligible to be hedged are further discussed in DH 7.3 and DH 7.4
for cash flow and fair value hedges, respectively. In addition, general eligibility criteria applicable to all
hedges are further discussed in the following sections.
The item or transaction to be hedged must present an earnings exposure and cannot be something that
is already measured at fair value through earnings (or a forecasted acquisition of an asset or
incurrence of a liability that subsequently will be similarly remeasured at fair value). Thus, items
meeting the definition of a derivative are not permitted to be the hedged item in a hedging
relationship. However, an instrument that meets the definition of a derivative under ASC 815 but
qualifies for, and is designated under, the normal purchases and normal sales exception may be
designated as a hedged item if the qualifying criteria are met. See Question DH 7-9 for further
discussion.
In accordance with ASC 815, hedge accounting is appropriate only when there is a hedgeable risk
arising from a transaction with an external party and that risk must represent an exposure that could
affect earnings. This concept is consistent for all designated hedges under ASC 815, including fair
value, cash flow, and foreign currency hedges, except that the hedged transaction does not need to be
with an external party for certain forecasted foreign currency intercompany transactions.
ASC 815-20-25-15 and ASC 815-20-25-43 discuss certain items that are prohibited from being the
hedged item in a fair value or cash flow hedge, including:
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
□ An asset or liability measured at fair value with changes in fair value reported currently in
earnings or a forecasted transaction to purchase such an asset or liability
□ A firm commitment or forecasted transaction involving either: (1) a parent entity’s interests in
consolidated subsidiaries or (2) an entity’s own equity interests
Question DH 7-1, Question DH 7-2, Question DH 7-3, Question DH 7-4 and Question DH 7-5 address
items not eligible for hedging relationships.
Question DH 7-1
Can inventory carried at fair value be the hedged item in a fair value hedge?
PwC response
No. ASC 815-20-25-43(c)(3) states that assets or liabilities remeasured through earnings cannot be
designated as a hedged item or transaction.
ASC 815 does not require special accounting for these hedged items because both the gains or losses
on the hedging instrument and the offsetting losses or gains on the hedged item would be recorded in
the income statement and would tend to naturally offset each other.
Question DH 7-2
Can a reporting entity designate a forecasted transaction of an equity method investee as the hedged
item in a cash flow hedge?
For example, can DH Corp hedge the forecasted cash flows (e.g., the forecasted sales of gold) of its
equity method investee by entering into a forward contract that would otherwise qualify for hedge
accounting?
PwC response
No. A forecasted transaction is not eligible for designation as a hedged transaction in a cash flow hedge
when the transaction is between the reporting entity’s equity method investee and a third party.
Also, ASC 815-20-25-46A addresses the use of intra-entity derivatives as hedging instruments and
states that the term “subsidiary” means consolidated subsidiary; therefore, the guidance cannot be
applied to an equity method investee. As a result, a reporting entity is not allowed to apply hedge
accounting to a forecasted transaction of an equity method investee since the reporting entity is not
directly exposed to the risk. Similarly, a reporting entity would not be permitted to apply hedge
accounting to a (1) recognized asset or liability or (2) firm commitment of an equity method investee.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 7-3
Can a reporting entity designate a forecasted transaction with an equity method investee as the hedged
item in a cash flow hedge?
PwC response
Yes. A forecasted purchase or sale with an equity method investee can qualify as a hedgeable risk
exposure under the cash flow hedging model if all of the other criteria for cash flow hedging are met.
Although ASC 815 states that forecasted transactions between members of a consolidated entity
(except for intercompany transactions that are denominated in a foreign currency) are not hedgeable
transactions, except in the standalone financial statements of a subsidiary, equity method investees
are not members of the consolidated group so the prohibition is not applicable.
However, the hedge will need to be considered in the normal elimination entries in ASC 323-10-35 for
preparing consolidated financial statements.
Question DH 7-4
Would the expected phase-out of a tax credit qualify as a hedged item in a cash flow hedge?
PwC response
No. The expected phase-out of a tax credit would not fall within one of the cash flows included as a
qualifying hedged item. A tax credit is not a specifically identified cash flow as it is only received
through a reduction in the reporting entity’s overall tax liability and cannot be transferred or sold to a
third party. Further, it does not meet any of the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-15(i) or 25-15(j) for the
component items of a forecasted transaction that are eligible for designation in a hedging relationship.
Question DH 7-5
Would net assets of a discontinued operation that are presented as a single line item on the balance
sheet qualify as a hedged item in a fair value hedge?
PwC response
No. Although the net assets of a discontinued operation are presented as one line item on the balance
sheet, it represents a group of dissimilar assets and liabilities. Under ASC 815-20-25-12, only specific
individual assets or liabilities, or groups of similar assets or liabilities, qualify as hedged items in fair
value hedges. Exceptions to this rule are net investment hedges (DH 8.6) and last-of-layer hedges
(DH 6.5).
The guidance permits use of a dynamic hedging strategy, either (1) increasing or decreasing the
quantity of hedging instruments necessary to achieve the objective of hedging a specific risk at a
specific level or (2) changing the percentage of the hedged item that is designated. For example, a
reporting entity may hedge the price risk on 80% of next year’s forecasted sales and later adjust the
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
hedge strategy so that only 50% of next year’s forecasted sales are hedged. However, the reporting
entity could never designate more than 100% of the forecasted transaction. The use of dynamic
hedging strategies may require dedesignation and redesignation of hedging relationships that may
create additional complexities.
Generally, only a derivative as defined in ASC 815 can qualify as a hedging instrument; however, as
discussed in DH 8, there are limited circumstances related to foreign currency hedging when a
nonderivative instrument may be used. Forward or futures contracts are commonly used in hedges of
nonfinancial assets and commodity purchases and sales. However, options, price caps, floors, and
collars are also common products for hedging the risk of (1) price increases when forecasting
purchases or (2) price decreases when holding inventory or forecasting sales.
ASC 815-20-25-71 specifically prohibits the use of certain items as the hedging instrument, including
(1) a hybrid financial instrument that is measured at fair value and (2) the individual components of a
compound derivative that are separated from the host contract.
ASC 815 allows an entire derivative or a proportion of a derivative, as well as multiple derivatives
together (or proportions of them), to be designated as a hedging instrument. However, a derivative
cannot be separated into different time periods or different components because those would have
different risk profiles. Separating a derivative in this manner would not necessarily result in the
appropriate offset of cash flows relating to the risk being hedged.
Multiple derivatives, whether entered into at the same time or at different times, may be designated as
a hedge of the same item. ASC 815-20-25-45 clarifies that two or more derivatives may be viewed in
combination and be jointly designated as the hedging instrument. For example, a reporting entity can
designate two purchased options as a hedge of the same hedged item even if the options are acquired
at different times.
ASC 815-20-25-45 requires that the proportion of the derivative being designated be expressed as a
percentage of the derivative’s notional amount over the entire term (e.g., 40% of 20,000 MMBtus over
the entire term of a one-year natural gas swap). In some instances, that percentage may not be
explicitly documented. If (1) the designated proportion of the notional amount and (2) the total
notional amount of the derivative hedging instrument are documented in such a way that the
percentage can be calculated, then the hedge designation would meet the requirement. We believe that
the term “expressed as a percentage” was meant to emphasize that the proportion of the derivative
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
designated as the hedging instrument has the same profile of risk exposures as that of the entire
derivative.
A reporting entity may also use proportions of a derivative in separate hedging relationships. For
example, if 40% of the notional of a natural gas swap is used in one hedging relationship, all or a
proportion of the remaining notional could be used in a separate hedging relationship. Each individual
hedging relationship would have to be assessed separately to determine whether it meets the
requirements for hedge accounting.
Separating a derivative into components representing different risks so that the components can be
designated as a hedging instrument is not permitted. For example, if a reporting entity were to enter
into a compound derivative for the purchase of natural gas and power, it would not be permitted to
separate the natural gas component to solely hedge the natural gas price risk. This would not be a
proportion of a total derivative.
Question DH 7-6 discusses whether a reporting entity can select only certain months to hedge
forecasted transactions.
Question DH 7-6
Can a reporting entity select only certain months of a one-year derivative to hedge forecasted
transactions of those specific months?
PwC response
No. ASC 815 precludes designating a portion of a derivative that represents different risks as a hedging
instrument. ASC 815-20-25-45 requires a proportion of a derivative designated as a hedging
instrument to match the risk profile of the entire derivative. For example, 25% of the notional amount
for each month of a one-year gas swap would match the risk profile of the entire swap. However, the
risk profile of a calendar-year natural gas swap changes over the course of the year due to price
fluctuations arising from seasonal changes in natural gas supply and demand. Therefore, three months
of a one-year gas swap would not have the same risk profile as 25% of the entire derivative and thus
does not meet the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-45.
As an alternative, the reporting entity could enter into separate contracts for different time periods
during the year and designate the separate contracts as hedges.
A written option requires the seller (writer) of the option to fulfill the obligation of the contract should
the purchaser (holder) choose to exercise it. In return for providing that option to the holder, the
writer receives a premium from the holder. For example, a written call option provides the purchaser
of that option the right to call, or buy, a commodity, financial or equity instrument at a price during or
at a time specified in the contract. The writer would be required to honor that call. As a result, written
options provide the writer with the possibility of unlimited loss, but limit any gain to the amount of the
premium received. In other words, written options can have the opposite effect of what a hedge is
intended to accomplish. Thus, they are generally not permitted to be used as hedging instruments.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
However, there are circumstances when a written option may be a more cost-effective strategy than
using other instruments—for example, when used to hedge the call option feature in fixed-rate debt
rather than issuing fixed-rate debt that is not callable. If a reporting entity wishes to use a written
option as a hedging instrument, the instrument must pass the “written option test.” The test includes a
requirement to ensure that, when considering the written option in combination with the hedged item,
the “upside” potential (for gains or favorable cash flows) is equal to or greater than the “downside”
potential (for losses or unfavorable cash flows), as described in ASC 815-20-25-94.
The written option test applies specifically to recognized assets, liabilities, or unrecognized firm
commitments. As a result, we do not believe that a written option (or a net written option) can qualify
as a hedging instrument in a hedge of a forecasted transaction.
ASC 815-20-25-94
If a written option is designated as hedging a recognized asset or liability or an unrecognized firm
commitment (if a fair value hedge) or the variability in cash flows for a recognized asset or liability or
an unrecognized firm commitment (if a cash flow hedge), the combination of the hedged item and the
written option provides either of the following:
a. At least as much potential for gains as a result of a favorable change in the fair value of the
combined instruments (that is, the written option and the hedged item, such as an embedded
purchased option)as exposure to losses from an unfavorable change in their combined fair value
(if a fair value hedge).
b. At least as much potential for favorable cash flows as exposure to unfavorable cash flows (if a cash
flow hedge).
The combined position’s relative potential for gains and losses is only evaluated at hedge inception. It
is based on the effect of a change in price, and the possibility for upside should be as great as the
possibility for downside for all possible price changes.
ASC 815-20-25-96 allows a reporting entity to exclude the time value of a written option from the
written option test, provided that the entity also specifies that it will base its assessment of
effectiveness only on the changes in the option’s intrinsic value.
Covered calls
ASC 815-20-55-45 precludes hedge accounting for “covered call” strategies. In writing a covered call
option, a reporting entity provides a counterparty with the option of purchasing an asset (that the
entity owns) at a certain strike price. In some cases, the reporting entity may then purchase an option
to buy the same underlying at a higher strike price. A reporting entity may enter into this type of
structure to generate income by selling some, but not all, of the upside potential of the securities that it
owns. Often, the net written option in this situation is not designated as a hedging instrument. Under
such a strategy, the net written option does not qualify for hedge accounting because the potential gain
is less than the potential loss.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Combination of options
Hedging strategies can include various combinations of instruments, for example, forward contracts
with written options, swaps with written caps, or combinations of one or more written and purchased
options. A derivative that results from combining a written option and a non-option derivative is
considered a written option. Reporting entities considering using a combination of instruments that
include a written option as a hedging derivative should evaluate whether they have, in effect, a net
written option and therefore are required to meet and document the results of the written option test.
ASC 815-20-25-89 outlines certain requirements for a combination of options to qualify as a net
purchased option or zero-cost collar, in which case the written option test is not required.
ASC 815-20-25-89
For a combination of options in which the strike price and the notional amount in both the written
component and the purchased option component remain constant over the life of the respective
component, that combination of options would be considered a net purchased option or a zero cost
collar (that is, the combination shall not be considered a net written option subject to the
requirements of 815-20-25-94) provided all of the following conditions are met:
b. The components of the combination of options are based on the same underlying.
c. The components of the combination of options have the same maturity date.
d. The notional amount of the written option component is not greater than the notional amount of
the purchased option component.
ASC 815-20-25-89 applies only when the strike price and the notional amount in both the written and
purchased option components of a combination of options remain constant over the life of the
respective components. If either or both the strike price or notional amounts change, the assessment
to determine whether the combination of options is a written option is evaluated with respect to each
date that either the strike price or the notional amount changes.
If a combination of options fails to meet all of the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-89, it cannot be
considered a net purchased option and is subject to the written option test. For example, if a collar
includes a written floor based on the three-month Treasury rate and a purchased cap based on three-
month LIBOR, the underlyings of the components are not the same, and therefore, the collar would be
considered a net written option subject to the written option test.
Under certain circumstances, a reporting entity that has combined two options might attempt to
satisfy the requirement that the hedge provide as much potential for gains as it does for losses.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
However, the entity would not be permitted to apply hedge accounting to the combined position
unless it were to satisfy this requirement for all possible price changes.
Question DH 7-7 discusses if a noncancelable swap with no other embedded options would be
considered a written option.
Question DH 7-7
If a noncancellable swap with no other embedded options has an initial value of $100,000, would it be
considered a written option?
PwC response
No. The $100,000 received at the initiation of the contract is not a premium received for a written
option. The swap contract does not contain an option element. Rather, the initial value of $100,000 is
an indication that the contract is off-market. The counterparty to the contract is paying for this initial
value and expects to be repaid through future periodic settlements.
In essence, the swap contract contains a financing element. If it is more than insignificant, a reporting
entity needs to consider ASC 815-10-45-11 through ASC 815-10-45-15. If the $100,000 financing
element is significant enough to disqualify the entire swap contract from meeting the definition of a
derivative, then the contract should be accounted as a debt host and evaluated for whether it contains
an embedded derivative that should be bifurcated (see DH 4 for a discussion of embedded derivatives).
Example DH 7-1 illustrates application of the written option test in a cash flow hedge using a collar.
EXAMPLE DH 7-1
Using a three-way zero-cost collar as a hedging instrument
In January 20X1, DH Gas Company (DH Gas) hedges its November 20X3 forecasted natural gas sales
at Henry Hub, expected to be 10,000 MMBtus per day, by entering into a zero-cost collar comprised of
two contracts with the same counterparty:
□ A collar with a written call option for $8.00/MMBtu and a purchased put option for
$4.00/MMBtu for 10,000 MMBtus
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Both contracts were for 10,000 MMBtus per day at Henry Hub in the month of November 20X3, and
the combination of these contracts does not result in any premium paid or received by DH Gas.
Is the written option test in ASC 815-20-25-94 required to be performed to determine if the collar is
eligible to be designated at the hedging instrument in a hedge of DH Gas’ forecasted November 20X3
gas sales?
Analysis
Yes. In this example, the combination of options does not meet all four requirements in ASC 815-20-
25-89 for a combination of options to qualify as a net purchased option or zero-cost collar. It provides
for a total notional on the written options of 20,000 MMBtus per day, compared with 10,000 MMBtus
per day on the purchased option component. As such, the hedging instrument does not meet the
criteria in ASC 815-20-25-89(d) that the notional amount of the written option component is not
greater than the notional amount of the purchased option, and is subject to the written option test.
As a net written option, the collar would not qualify as a hedging instrument because it does not
provide at least as much potential for favorable cash flows as exposure to unfavorable cash flows, per
ASC 815-20-25-94(b).
ASC 815-20-55-46 and ASC 815-20-55-47 indicate that a commodity contract that has index pricing
with a fixed spread cannot be designated as a hedging instrument in the cash flow hedge of a
forecasted transaction (e.g., a contract for the purchase of natural gas at NYMEX Henry Hub plus
$1.00). The guidance indicates that the underlying in these types of contracts is related only to
changes in the basis differential (i.e., the fixed spread). As a result, using such an instrument to hedge
a forecasted transaction when the variability in cash flows is based both on the basis spread and the
index price would result in only a portion of the variability in cash flows being offset.
Reporting entities wishing to hedge a forecasted transaction using a derivative that is priced at index
plus a fixed spread should evaluate whether the hedge will be effective at inception and on an ongoing
basis.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Basis swaps
Basis swaps are similar to contracts with variable pricing plus a fixed spread in that a basis swap
represents the difference between two locations or underlyings, and therefore, is used to limit such
differences (similar to a fixed spread, which is generally intended to compensate for location
differences). Because a basis swap does not fix the price, it cannot be used as a hedging instrument on
a standalone basis. ASC 815-20-25-50 permits a reporting entity to use a basis swap as a hedge of
interest-bearing assets and liabilities if specified criteria are met; however, this paragraph specifically
mentions “a financial asset or liability” and states that the hedge is used to “modify the interest
receipts or payments associated with a recognized financial asset or liability from one variable rate to
another variable rate.” Therefore, ASC 815-20-25-50 restricts hedge accounting to interest-bearing
assets and liabilities when a basis swap is involved.
However, a basis swap can be used in combination with a forward or futures contract as a combined
hedging instrument to hedge a forecasted transaction. For example, a reporting entity may use this
strategy if the forecasted transaction will occur at a location for which there is no standalone index
(e.g., hedging a forecasted transaction at Houston Ship Channel with a NYMEX future priced based on
Henry Hub). The futures contract would be used to fix the price of natural gas and the basis swap
would be used to bridge the two indices (i.e., from the NYMEX future to the actual location of the
forecasted transaction, in this case Houston Ship Channel).
Example DH 7-2 and Example DH 7-3 illustrate the use of basis swaps in combination with other
hedging instruments.
EXAMPLE DH 7-2
Use of a natural gas futures contract and basis swap in combination to hedge a forecasted transaction
DH Gas Company (DH Gas) has forecasted sales of 10,000 MMBtus of natural gas per day in the
month of April 20X1 at Houston Ship Channel. It decides to hedge the forecasted transactions.
On January 1, 20X1, DH Gas enters into a NYMEX futures contract priced based on Henry Hub for
10,000 MMBtus of natural gas per day for April 20X1. Subsequently, on February 15, 20X1, it enters
into a receive Houston Ship Channel, pay Henry Hub basis swap for 10,000 MMBtus of natural gas
per day in April 20X1. The total notional amount is 300,000 MMBtus.
Can DH Gas designate the futures contract as a cash flow hedge on January 1, 20X1?
Analysis
Yes. Assuming that all of the hedge criteria have been met, including the assessment that using the
NYMEX futures contract will result in a highly effective hedge, DH Gas can designate the futures
contract as a cash flow hedge of the total cash flows in the sale of natural gas expected to occur in April
20X1. This hedging relationship would not be perfectly effective due to the Henry Hub-Houston Ship
Channel basis difference. As long as the hedge is highly effective, any mismatch would not be recorded
in current earnings.
When DH Gas enters into the basis swap on February 15, 20X1, the original hedge would need to be
dedesignated and redesignated if DH Gas wants the basis swap to be designated as a hedge for
accounting purposes. The basis swap cannot be designated by itself as the hedging instrument
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
(because it does not fix the cash flows) and also cannot be added to the existing hedging relationship
(without dedesignation and redesignation). Further, because the NYMEX futures contract will have a
fair value on February 15, 20X1 other than zero, DH Gas would need to consider the impact of the fair
value at the inception of the hedging relationship on hedge effectiveness.
In implementing this strategy, DH Gas may alternatively elect to retain the original hedging
relationship and allow the basis swap to be recorded directly to earnings (rather than designating it in
a hedge).
EXAMPLE DH 7-3
Use of combination hedging instruments to hedge forecasted purchases of natural gas by a
manufacturer
DH Steel Corp, a steel manufacturer, would like to hedge its natural gas cost expected to be incurred in
October 20X1. DH Steel purchases natural gas at the first-of-month SoCal Border index price.
Historical records show that DH Steel uses at least 50,000 MMBtus during October to support its
operations.
On January 1, 20X1, DH Steel enters into a commodity forward contract for 50,000 MMBtus of
natural gas to hedge the forecasted purchase of natural gas. It concludes that the forecasted
transaction is probable based on its historical and forecasted purchases. Under the terms of the
forward, it will pay $7.50/MMBtu and receive the Henry Hub spot price. There will be no physical
deliveries under this forward contract, but rather a net cash settlement of the fixed and variable prices.
Because the actual purchase of natural gas will be at SoCal Border, and not Henry Hub, DH Steel also
enters into a basis forward contract between Henry Hub and SoCal Border to fix the forward price at
SoCal Border during October 20X1. The basis spread at the time of execution was $0.50/MMBtu (i.e.,
DH Steel pays Henry Hub + $0.50 and receives SoCal on the basis forward contract).
On January 1, 20X1, DH Steel designates the commodity forward and the basis forward in
combination as a cash flow hedge of the variability of total cash flows associated with its first 50,000
MMBTUs of natural gas purchased in October 20X1 at the SoCal Border first of month index price.
DH Corp assumes the hedge is perfectly effective using the critical terms match method in ASC 815-
20-25-84 as follows:
□ The combination commodity forward and basis forward is for the same notional (50,000
MMBtus), same commodity (natural gas), same time (October 1, 20X1) and location (the basis
swap effectively converts the pricing from Henry Hub location to SoCal Border, which is the
location where the actual purchases will occur).
□ The fair value of the commodity and basis forward contracts are zero at inception.
□ The change in the expected cash flows of the forecasted transaction is based on the first-of-month
forward price for the natural gas at the SoCal Border.
The spot and forward market prices for natural gas are as follows:
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
The fair values of the commodity swap and basis forward contracts are as follows:
Analysis
As a highly effective cash flow hedge, the gain or loss on the derivative hedging instruments is
recorded through OCI and reclassified from AOCI to earnings when the actual 50,000 MMBtus of
natural gas purchased is expensed through cost of goods sold.
DH Steel Corp would make the following journal entries during the hedging relationship. No entry
would be made to record the fair values of the commodity or basis forward contracts because they
were at-market at inception.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
October 1, 20X1
Dr. Cash $40,000
Cr. Forward on SoCal basis $9,998
Cr. Commodity forward $29,995
Cr. Other comprehensive income $7
To record the change in fair value and settlement of the commodity and basis
forwards (settlement period ignored for simplicity)
7-18
Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Through the hedge, DH locks in the purchase price at $8.00, which is the SoCal forward price on
January 1, 20X1 and the Henry Hub forward price plus the initial basis spread.
As an alternative, DH Steel may not need the basis swap if the purchase of natural gas and the
derivative were based on the same or a highly correlated index.
The primary purpose of a cash flow hedge is to link together the income statement recognition of the
hedging instrument and a hedged transaction whose changes in cash flows are expected to offset each
other. For a reporting entity to achieve this offsetting or “matching” of cash flows, the change in the
fair value of the derivative instrument included in the assessment of effectiveness is (1) initially
reported as a component of other comprehensive income and (2) later reclassified into earnings in the
same period or periods during which the hedged transaction affects earnings (e.g., when a forecasted
sale occurs).
A common example of a cash flow hedge of a nonfinancial item is the hedge of a forecasted sale or
purchase of a commodity, such as natural gas, with forward, future or option contracts.
A cash flow hedge of a recognized asset or liability or a forecasted transaction must meet the general
hedge criteria, as discussed in DH 7.2. In addition, in a cash flow hedge of the forecasted purchase or
sale of a nonfinancial asset, ASC 815-20-25-15(i) limits the risks that may be hedged.
1. The risk of changes in the functional-currency-equivalent cash flows attributable to changes in the
related foreign currency exchange rates
2. The risk of changes in the cash flows relating to all changes in the purchase price or sales price of
the asset reflecting its actual location if a physical asset (regardless of whether that price and the
related cash flows are stated in the entity’s functional currency or a foreign currency), not the risk
of changes in cash flows relating to the purchase or sale of a similar asset in a different location
3. The risk of variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a contractually specified component.
See further discussion of additional criteria related to hedges of contractually specified components in
DH 7.3.3. See also a discussion of foreign currency hedges in DH 8.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Hedge accounting may be applied to cash flow hedging relationships when the relevant general
qualifying criteria discussed in DH 7.2 and the criteria specific to cash flows hedges in ASC 815-20-25-
13 and ASC 815-20-25-15 are met.
An entity may designate a derivative instrument as hedging the exposure to variability in expected
future cash flows that is attributable to a particular risk. That exposure may be associated with either
of the following:
a. An existing recognized asset or liability (such as all or certain future interest payments on
variable-rate debt)
Cash flow hedges are frequently used to hedge the forecasted purchase or sale of a commodity, such as
natural gas, coal, power, or fuel oil. A cash flow hedge can also be used to hedge (1) the future purchase
of physical inventory (to protect against the risk of changes in the price of the inventory prior to the
forecasted purchase) or (2) the future sale of physical inventory (to protect against the risk of changes
in the sales price prior to the forecasted sale).
In addition to needing to meet the basic criteria for hedge accounting, ASC 815-20-25-15 outlines the
additional criteria for a forecasted transaction to qualify as the hedged transaction in a cash flow
hedge. The key requirements include the following:
□ The transaction represents an exposure to variable cash flows that impacts earnings and is with a
third party.
□ The transaction is not the acquisition of an asset or incurrence of a liability that will subsequently
be measured at fair value, such as a derivative (i.e., a reporting entity cannot hedge a derivative
with a derivative).
7-20
Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
□ If the hedged item is a nonfinancial transaction (e.g., a purchase or sale with physical delivery), the
risk being hedged should be for all of the cash flows relating to the forecasted purchase or sale
(i.e., the variability in all cash flows, including transportation to the item’s location should be
hedged), or for a contractually specified component.
See DH 7.3.3 for further discussion of cash flow hedges involving a contractually specified component
of a forecasted transaction. Each of the other requirements is further discussed in this section.
When hedging a forecasted transaction, reporting entities have flexibility to hedge individual
transactions or groups of individual transactions that share similar risks.
ASC 815-20-25-15(a)
2. A group of individual transactions that share the same risk exposure for which they are designated
as being hedged. A forecasted purchase and a forecasted sale shall not both be included in the
same group of individual transactions that constitute the hedged transaction.
In either case, the cash flow hedge documentation should identify the forecasted transaction with
sufficient specificity. The documentation requirement is further detailed in ASC 815-20-25-3(d)(1)(vi).
ASC 815-20-25-3(d)(1)(vi)
The hedged forecasted transaction shall be described with sufficient specificity so that when a
transaction occurs, it is clear whether that transaction is or is not the hedged transaction. Thus, a
forecasted transaction could be identified as the sale of either the first 15,000 units of a specific
product sold during a specified 3-month period or the first 5,000 units sold in each of 3 specific
months, but it could not be identified as the sale of the last 15,000 units of that product sold during a
3-month period (because the last 15,000 units cannot be identified when they occur, but only when the
period has ended).
When preparing hedge documentation, a reporting entity should ensure that there is sufficient
specificity so that it is clear what forecasted transaction is being hedged. The designation and
documentation of the hedged transaction depends on the nature of the forecasted transaction and,
absent an all-in-one hedge of a firm commitment (see DH 7.3.4), linkage back to a specific vendor,
customer, or contract is not required. For example, if a reporting entity is selling a commodity into the
open market, it should document details about the quantity, location, and timing of the forecasted
sales, but it would not typically need to designate a specific contract or counterparty.
Reporting entities should consider how they describe the forecasted transaction in their
documentation because it may impact the accounting upon discontinuance of the hedge. For example,
if the documentation of a hedged transaction identifies forecasted sales to a specific counterparty, a
subsequent conclusion that sales to that counterparty are probable of not occurring would lead to
discontinuance of the hedging relationship and immediate release of amounts in AOCI. In contrast, if
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
the designation is more general, changes in the customer mix alone would not affect the hedging
designation, but it may impact the assessment of effectiveness.
Provided that the forecasted transactions are identified with sufficient specificity, a reporting entity
may hedge a group of forecasted transactions.
A single derivative instrument of appropriate size could be designated as hedging a given amount of
aggregated forecasted transactions, such as any of the following:
a. Forecasted sales of a particular product to numerous customers within a specified time period,
such as a month, a quarter, or a year
b. Forecasted purchases of a particular product from the same or different vendors at different dates
within a specified time period
Moreover, a group of commodity sales at the same delivery location could be considered to have a
similar risk if all other features of the contract are aligned. However, if the commodity sales are at
different locations or for different grades or types of the commodity, the variability of cash flows
relating to those different locations or grades would need to be sufficiently correlated to support that
the sales share the same risk exposure. In general, we would not expect a group including more than
one commodity or different pricing structures (e.g., monthly, daily) to qualify for designation as the
hedged item because the forecasted transactions would not qualify under the similar asset test. For
example, it may be difficult to group physical transactions at the SoCal Border (a market hub for
natural gas located in California) and Houston Ship Channel (a market hub for natural gas located in
Houston, Texas).
For fair value hedges, ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(1) also requires that the individual hedged items in a
hedged group share the same risk exposure for which they are as being hedged. In addition, ASC 815-
20-55-14 provides guidance for the quantitative evaluation of whether a portfolio of assets or liabilities
share the same risk exposure in a fair value hedge. This quantitative test, known as the “similar
assets/liabilities test,” is specific to fair value hedges. ASC 815-20-25-15 does not specifically require
reporting entities to perform this test for cash flow hedges of groups of individual transactions.
However, we believe that in most circumstances, a quantitative test is needed for cash flow hedges
when the hedged item is a portfolio of forecasted transactions that are similar but not identical.
In certain limited circumstances when the terms of the individual hedged items in the portfolio are
aligned, a qualitative similar assets test may be appropriate. The determination of whether a
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
quantitative or qualitative analysis is sufficient is judgmental and will depend on the nature of the
commodity being hedged.
When facts and circumstances regarding the portfolio change, we expect reporting entities to
reconsider their similar assets test. When changes are significant such that the original conclusion is
no longer valid without additional support, we would expect a new comprehensive analysis to be
performed at that time.
Example DH 7-4 illustrates the evaluation when a group of individual transactions is designated as a
single hedged item.
EXAMPLE DH 7-4
Similar assets test — group of forecasted sales of natural gas
DH Gas Company sells natural gas at five locations in Texas. To mitigate cash flow volatility associated
with fluctuating natural gas prices, DH Gas decides to hedge its forecasted sales. However, because it
manages all of its sales in Texas as one portfolio, instead of designating a hedging relationship for each
separate location, DH Gas designates all of its forecasted sales within one hedging relationship. The
group of forecasted sales is hedged with NYMEX pay floating, receive fixed swaps based on the
monthly Henry Hub index price. For purposes of this example, assume all physical sales are also based
on a monthly index price.
Analysis
To hedge the forecasted sales at all locations as a group (rather than individual transactions or
locations), DH Gas performs a quantitative similar assets test at inception to demonstrate that the
sales at all five of the locations have similar risks. In general, it may be difficult to pass the similar
assets test when locations are geographically disbursed or when prices at some locations are impacted
by congestion or other factors that would not impact all locations equally.
When facts and circumstances regarding the portfolio change, DH Gas would need to reconsider its
similar assets test to confirm that the five locations continue to share similar risks. If at any point in
the hedging relationship, one or more of the five locations fails the similar assets test, the entire
hedging relationship should be dedesignated. However, DH Gas may be able to enter into a new
hedging relationship with the remaining locations that continue to qualify under the similar assets
test.
Another challenge in grouping transactions for hedge accounting is in establishing the perfect
hypothetical derivative for purposes of assessing effectiveness. The reporting entity will need to make
an initial assessment of the mix of transactions (e.g., 50% Houston Ship Channel, 50% Henry Hub)
and would use that hypothetical derivative in its testing. The perfect hypothetical derivative would
need to be updated if the forecast changes, which may reduce the effectiveness of the hedge in a
particular period. In addition, if a reporting entity is unable to accurately forecast the mix of sales, it
may not be able to apply a group method.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
A key requirement to qualify to hedge a forecasted transaction is that the transaction is probable of
occurring.
An assessment of the likelihood that a forecasted transaction will take place (see paragraph 815-20-25-
15(b)) should not be based solely on management’s intent because intent is not verifiable. The
transaction’s probability should be supported by observable facts and the attendant circumstances.
Consideration should be given to all of the following circumstances in assessing the likelihood that a
transaction will occur.
b. The financial and operational ability of the entity to carry out the transaction
d. The extent of loss or disruption of operations that could result if the transaction does not occur
e. The likelihood that transactions with substantially different characteristics might be used to
achieve the same business purposes (for example, an entity that intends to raise cash may have
several ways of doing so, ranging from a short-term bank loan to a common stock offering.
Further, as discussed in ASC 815-20-55-25, both (1) the length of time that is expected to pass before a
forecasted transaction is projected to occur and (2) the quantity of products or services that are
involved in the forecasted transaction are considerations in determining probability.
ASC 815-20-55-25
Both the length of time until a forecasted transaction is projected to occur and the quantity of the
forecasted transaction are considerations in determining probability. Other factors being equal, the
more distant a forecasted transaction is or the greater the physical quantity or future value of a
forecasted transaction, the less likely it is that the transaction would be considered probable and the
stronger the evidence that would be required to support an assertion that it is probable.
Therefore, a reporting entity should consider whether the volume of planned sales or purchases for the
particular commodity, location, and timing for the forecasted transaction support a probable
assertion. In making the probable assessment, the reporting entity should consider the volume of
forecasted transactions (sales) and/or needs (purchases) compared to the designated hedge volume.
Absent a contractual volume commitment, it may be challenging for a reporting entity to assert that a
forecasted sale constituting a high percentage of its sales is probable due to potential volatility in
market demand. Similarly, if a reporting entity is purchasing a specific commodity for use in
production and wants to hedge its supply, it may be difficult to support designating a high percentage
of its forecasted purchases if its sales are highly dependent on market conditions.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Assessing the probability that a forecasted transaction will occur requires judgment. “Probable” in the
context of hedge accounting is used in the same manner as in ASC 450. Specifically, the term probable
means that “the future event or events are likely to occur” and thus the likelihood of occurrence is
significantly greater than what is indicated by the phrase “more likely than not.” Although ASC 815
and ASC 450 do not establish bright lines, we believe that a transaction may be considered probable of
occurring when there is at least an 80% chance that it will occur on the specified date or within the
specified time period. In addition, there should be compelling evidence to support management’s
assertion that a forecasted transaction is probable.
In addition to the impact on initially qualifying for hedge accounting, a change in the probability of the
forecasted transaction may impact whether discontinuance of the hedge is required and whether
reclassification of amounts deferred in AOCI is required. See DH 10.4.8.1 for further information.
Documentation
In its formal hedge documentation, management should specify the circumstances that were
considered in concluding that a transaction is probable. If a reporting entity has a pattern of
determining that forecasted transactions are no longer probable of occurring, the appropriateness of
management’s previous assertions and its ability to make future assertions regarding forecasted
transactions may be called into question.
Counterparty creditworthiness
In addition to requiring entities to continually assess the likelihood of the counterparty’s compliance
with the terms of the hedging derivative, they are required to perform an assessment of their own
creditworthiness and that of the counterparty (if any) to the hedged forecasted transaction to
determine whether the forecasted transaction is probable. See ASC 815-20-25-16(a).
This assessment should be performed at least quarterly at the time of hedge effectiveness testing. If the
probability of the forecasted transaction changes as a result of a change in counterparty
creditworthiness, the reporting entity would need to evaluate whether it continues to qualify for hedge
accounting.
When designating a forecasted transaction in a cash flow hedge, there may be a specific date on which
the transaction is expected to occur (e.g., there is a contractual commitment for delivery on December
15, 20X1). However, in many cases, delivery will be expected during a defined period rather than on a
specific date. For example, deliveries of a commodity may be expected to occur during the third
quarter, but there may be uncertainty regarding the delivery month. ASC 815-20-25-16 provides
guidance on the timing and probability of a forecasted transaction and uncertainty within a range.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
probable that a forecasted transaction will occur by the end of the originally specified time period, cash
flow hedge accounting for that hedging relationship would continue.
Therefore, although uncertainty within a time period does not preclude hedge accounting (as long as
the forecasted transaction is identified with sufficient specificity), the reporting entity should continue
to monitor whether there are changes in the timing of the forecasted transaction. If there is a change in
the timing of the forecasted transaction such that the forecasted transaction is no longer probable of
occurring as originally documented, in general, the hedge should be discontinued. However, ASC 815-
30-40-4 provides guidance when it is still reasonably possible that the transaction will occur within
two months of the original timing.
If it is determined that the forecasted transaction has become probable of not occurring within the
documented time period plus a subsequent two-month period, then the hedging relationship should
be discontinued and amounts previously deferred in accumulated other comprehensive income should
be immediately reclassified to earnings. See DH 10.4 for further information on discontinuance of cash
flow hedges.
Question DH 7-8 discusses whether a range of time can be used in designating a forecaster
transaction.
Question DH 7-8
If a reporting entity is uncertain about the timing of a forecasted transaction, can it use a range of time
in designating its forecasted transaction?
PwC response
Yes, if the range is defined appropriately. As described in ASC 815-20-25-3, the hedged forecasted
transaction needs to be documented with sufficient specificity so that it is clear what is being hedged.
If only a general timeframe for occurrence of the forecasted transaction is documented, it may not be
clear when the hedged transaction occurs. For example, if a reporting entity expects to sell at least
300,000 units of a particular product in its next fiscal quarter, it might designate the sales of the first
300,000 units during that quarter as the hedged transaction. Alternatively, it might designate the first
100,000 sales in each month of that quarter as the hedged transaction. By designating the hedged
transaction as the first number of units sold during the specified period, a reporting entity is not
“locked in” to a specific date, and if the transaction does not occur on that specific date, the reporting
entity’s hedge will not be affected (as long as it occurs within the documented range).
It would be insufficient to identify the hedged item in this scenario as any sales of 300,000 units
during the quarter or the last 300,000 sales of the quarter. By designating the hedge in either of these
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ways, a reporting entity would be able to select which transactions are the hedged transactions after
the fact, which is inconsistent with the requirements in ASC 815-20-25-3(d)(1)(vi).
Question DH 7-9 discusses whether a contract designated under the normal purchases and normal
sales scope exception would qualify as the hedged item (forecasted transaction) in a cash flow hedge.
Question DH 7-9
Can a contract designated under the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception qualify as the
hedged item (forecasted transaction) in a cash flow hedge?
PwC response
It depends. A derivative cannot be a hedged item, but once the normal purchases and normal sales
scope exception (discussed in DH 3.2.4) is elected, the contract is no longer within the scope of ASC
815. ASC 815-20-25-7 through ASC 815-20-25-9 provides guidance on the designation of a normal
purchase or normal sale contract as a hedged item. The contract can be designated as the hedged item
in a fair value hedge if it meets the definition of a firm commitment, otherwise it could be the hedged
transaction in a cash flow hedge.
Whether the contract is a firm commitment will depend on whether the contract contains a fixed price
and a disincentive for nonperformance that is sufficiently large such that performance under the
contract is probable (which is the definition of firm commitment from ASC 815-20-20). However, if
the contract pricing is based on an index or other variable pricing, the reporting entity continues to
have an earnings exposure and would be able to designate the contract as a forecasted transaction in a
cash flow hedge, provided all the other criteria for cash flow hedging are met.
In addition to hedging the total cash flows associated with a forecasted transaction, ASC 815 also
permits a reporting entity to hedge a contractually specified component of a forecasted transaction. As
a result, a reporting entity may be able to designate certain hedging relationships that would not be
effective if a reporting entity were required to hedge the entire change in cash flows of the hedged
item. This may result in a more effective hedge, depending on the component identified and the terms
of the related hedging instrument. In these situations, when determining how effective a hedging
relationship is, a reporting entity would be able to compare the changes in the value (or cash flows) of
the derivative to just the changes in the component that the reporting entity is managing, rather than
needing to compare the derivative to the entire risk exposure.
For example, a manufacturer may enter into a contract to purchase natural gas at a future date. The
contract is based on the price of natural gas at a specific location (e.g., Henry Hub) plus the
transportation cost to a specified delivery point. Rather than manage the total risk associated with the
natural gas purchase, the manufacturer may seek to mitigate just the risk associated with the prices at
Henry Hub. Accordingly, it may enter into a derivative indexed to the price of natural gas at Henry
Hub for the anticipated date of purchase. This risk would qualify as the hedged risk because the price
of natural gas at Henry Hub is contractually specified.
To qualify as a cash flow hedge of a contractually specified component, a forecasted transaction must
meet all of the criteria discussed in DH 7.2 and the additional criteria discussed in this section. After
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
identifying a contractually specified component, a reporting entity should assess whether it is eligible
to be designated as the hedged risk. This evaluation will depend on whether the reporting entity has an
existing contract (DH 7.3.3.2) or forecasted transaction (DH 7.3.3.3).
Question DH 7-10 discusses whether a reporting entity can designate a contractually specified
component of a firm commitment as the hedged risk in a cash flow hedge.
Question DH 7-10
Can a reporting entity designate a contractually specified component of a firm commitment as the
hedged risk in a cash flow hedge?
PwC response
No. The designation of a contractually specified component only applies to eligible forecasted
purchases and sales of nonfinancial assets and does not apply to firm commitments.
A firm commitment does not expose a reporting entity to variable price risk and thus, generally cannot
be the hedged item in a cash flow hedge. In some cases, a reporting entity may designate a firm
commitment that is accounted for as a derivative as the hedging instrument in a cash flow hedge of a
forecasted transaction that will be consummated upon gross settlement of the firm commitment itself
(an “all-in-one” hedge, discussed in DH 7.3.4). However, an all-in-one hedge inherently involves
variability of cash flows relating to all changes in the purchase or sale price of a specific asset at a
specified location and thus evaluation of contractually specified components would not be applicable.
To qualify as the hedged risk, the item being hedged must qualify as a contractually specified
component as defined in the ASC Master Glossary.
In accordance with this definition, the contractually specified component generally should be
explicitly referenced in the agreement used to determine the purchase or sale price. In assessing
whether the component is explicitly referenced, a reporting entity may also consider related
agreements, as discussed in ASC 815-20-55-26A.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
based on a pre-defined formula that includes a specific index and a basis, those agreements may be
utilized to identify a contractually specified component.
The guidance that the contractually specified component may be “referenced in agreements that
support the price” does not mean that the pricing can be based on market convention. The FASB
considered expanding the allowable risks to include market convention, but ultimately rejected this
approach, as discussed in the Background Information and Basis for Conclusions to ASU 2017-12:
In some cases, a derivative that hedges the risk of a component of a price that is not contractually
specified would still qualify as a highly effective hedge of all changes in the price of an asset reflecting
its actual location, quantity, and grade (as applicable). For example, a natural gas swap priced to
Henry Hub may be a highly effective hedge of a natural gas purchase at Houston Ship Channel, even if
the Houston Ship Channel price does not specifically reference Henry Hub. If the hedge is highly
effective, the impact of basis differences would not impact the reporting entity’s ability to defer the
entire change in fair value of the derivative through OCI.
ASC 815 limits the contractually specified components that can be hedged in existing contracts.
ASC 815-20-25-22A
For existing contracts, determining whether the variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a
contractually specified component may be designated as the hedged risk in a cash flow hedge is based
on the following:
a. If the contract to purchase or sell a nonfinancial asset is a derivative in its entirety and an entity
applies the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception in accordance with Subtopic 815-
10, any contractually specified component in the contract is eligible to be designated as the hedged
risk. If the entity does not apply the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception, no
pricing component is eligible to be designated as the hedged risk.
b. If the contract to purchase or sell a nonfinancial asset is not a derivative in its entirety, any
contractually specified component remaining in the host contract (that is, the contract to purchase
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
or sell a nonfinancial asset after any embedded derivatives have been bifurcated in accordance
with Subtopic 815-15) is eligible to be designated as the hedged risk.
In accordance with this guidance, to be eligible for hedge accounting, the contractually specified
component cannot be extraneous or unrelated to the purchase or sale of the nonfinancial asset. Such
pricing features would preclude application of the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception
or would be separated from a host contract that is not a derivative in its entirety. However, the
remaining host contract could then be evaluated to determine if it includes a contractually specified
component that is eligible to be the hedged risk in a cash flow hedge.
Existing contracts that meet the definition of a derivative, but are not firm commitments, include
contracts to purchase or sell commodities at the future spot market price, often including a
transportation basis adjustment. These contracts may qualify for the normal purchases and normal
sales scope exception; however, in practice, the contracts may not be designated as normal purchases
and normal sales because the fair value is de minimis. A reporting entity that is interested in
designating the contractually specified component of such contracts in a cash flow hedge would first
need to evaluate the contract for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception. If qualified,
they would need to affirmatively elect the normal purchases and normal sales election.
If a contract does not meet the definition of a derivative in its entirety (e.g., because the contract does
not have a notional amount, as would be the case in an index-based requirements contract), a
reporting entity is required to evaluate whether the contract includes any embedded derivatives
requiring bifurcation and then evaluate whether the contract contains a contractually specified
component that would qualify for hedge accounting. In evaluating a contract without a notional
amount, the reporting entity would need to assess whether the future purchases and sales are
probable, similar to the evaluation that is performed for a forecasted transaction designated in a
hedging relationship.
The ability to designate a contractually specified component is not limited to existing contracts. ASC
815-20-25-22B provides criteria for designating contractually specified components in forecasted
purchases or sales of nonfinancial assets.
ASC 815-20-25-22B
An entity may designate the variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a contractually
specified component in accordance with paragraph 815- 20-25-15(i)(3) to purchase or sell a
nonfinancial asset for a period longer than the contractual term or for a not-yet-existing contract to
purchase or sell a nonfinancial asset if the entity expects that the requirements in paragraph 815-20-
25-22A will be met when the contract is executed. Once the contract is executed, the entity shall apply
the guidance in paragraph 815-20-25-22A to determine whether the variability in cash flows
attributable to changes in the contractually specified component can continue to be designated as the
hedged risk. See paragraphs 815-20-55-26A through 55-26E for related implementation guidance.
Consistent with this guidance, a reporting entity may designate a contractually specified component of
forecasted purchases or sales for which it has not entered into a contract if the expected future
payment terms meet the criteria for existing contracts discussed in DH 7.3.3.2 (i.e., the pricing cannot
include any extraneous pricing elements). Further, once the reporting entity executes a contract, the
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
contract would need to be evaluated under ASC 815-20-25-22A to ensure that it still qualifies as a
contractually specified component.
Question DH 7-11 discusses whether the spread added to contractually specified component of a hedge
can be negative or variable.
Question DH 7-11
When hedging a contractually specified component, can the spread added to the component be
negative or variable?
PwC response
Yes. ASC 815 includes examples that address variable and negative spreads, as follows:
□ Example 22: Assessing Effectiveness of a Cash Flow Hedge of a Forecasted Purchase of Inventory
with a Forward Contract (Contractually Specified Component), includes a variable spread for
transportation in a hedge of a contractually specified component; and
□ Example 23: Designation of a Cash Flow Hedge of a Forecasted Purchase of Inventory for Which
Commodity Exposure Is Managed Centrally, includes a negative spread in a hedge of a
contractually specified component.
A reporting entity may wish to manage the risk of changing cash flows due to price variability prior to
the purchase or sale by entering into a firm purchase commitment. Generally, non-foreign-currency-
denominated firm commitments are not eligible for designation as a hedged item in a cash flow
hedging transaction because there is no variability in cash flows due to the fixed price in the firm
commitment. However, the FASB provided an exception in ASC 815-20-25-22 to permit a non-foreign
currency-denominated firm commitment to be designated as the hedging instrument in a cash flow
hedge of a forecasted transaction that will be consummated upon gross settlement of the firm
commitment itself. For a contract to qualify for designation in an all-in-one hedge, it must meet the
definitions of both (1) a firm commitment and (2) a derivative.
Reporting entities often apply an all-in-one hedging strategy to firm commitments for commodities
that do not qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception, which is discussed in
DH 3.2.4.
An all-in-one hedge must be a hedge of total variability in cash flows, not a hedge of a contractually
specified component.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 7-12
DH Gas Company enters into a contract for the purchase of 10,000 MMBtus of natural gas per day in
the month of July 20x1 for $3.00/MMBtu. The contract meets the definition of a derivative, but DH
Gas does not elect the normal purchases and normal sales scope exception. Management has
determined that the contract is probable of being physically settled.
PwC response
Yes. DH Gas could designate the contract as an all-in-one hedge of the future purchase of natural gas
because it has a firm commitment for the daily purchase of 10,000 MMBtus at a fixed price.
7.3.5 Accounting for cash flow hedges of nonfinancial assets and liabilities
In a qualifying cash flow hedge, a derivative’s entire gain or loss included in the assessment of
effectiveness is recorded through OCI. ASC 815-30-35-3(b) indicates that the amounts in AOCI related
to the fair value changes in the hedging instrument are released into earnings when the hedged item
affects earnings. This is to align the earnings impact of the hedged item and the hedging instrument.
In determining how to reclassify amounts in AOCI into earnings, reporting entities should consider
both the amount and timing of reclassification. ASC 815-30-35-3(b) notes that the amount of AOCI
should equal the cumulative gain or loss on the hedging instrument since hedge inception, less (1)
previously reclassified gains and losses, and (2) amounts related to excluded components already
recognized in earnings.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Figure DH 7-3
Components related to hedging in AOCI
When an economic hedging relationship continues even though hedge accounting was not permitted
in a specific period (e.g., because the retrospective effectiveness assessment for that period indicated
that the relationship had not been highly effective), the cumulative gains or losses under ASC 815-30-
35-3(b) exclude the gains or losses occurring during that period. This situation may arise if the
reporting entity had previously determined that the hedging relationship would be highly effective on
a prospective basis.
The amounts deferred in AOCI related to the fair value changes in the hedging instrument are
generally released into the reporting entity’s earnings when the hedged item/transaction affects
earnings.
ASC 815-30-35-39
If the hedged transaction results in the acquisition of an asset or the incurrence of a liability, the gains
and losses in accumulated other comprehensive income that are included in the assessment of
effectiveness shall be reclassified into earnings in the same period or periods during which the asset
acquired or liability incurred affects earnings (such as in the periods that depreciation expense,
interest expense, or cost of sales is recognized).
A change in the fair value of a derivative that is used to hedge price changes of anticipated inventory
purchases is not deferred as a basis adjustment of the inventory, but is deferred in AOCI until earnings
are impacted by the purchased item. In this situation, the gain or loss on the derivative would be
deferred in AOCI until the inventory is sold or consumed in production.
For example, if a reporting entity is hedging a purchase of raw materials that will be held in inventory
for resale or use in production of finished goods, it is important to understand the subsequent
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
accounting for the materials purchased and when the related expense will be recorded in cost of goods
sold. If the materials are held for resale, the recognition of the amounts deferred in AOCI should be
recorded consistent with the inventory costing method (e.g., first-in, first-out; last-in, first-out;
weighted average). If the materials are used in the production of finished goods, the amounts deferred
in AOCI would not be reclassified until the finished goods are sold. Certain costing models, such as
LIFO and average cost, often result in long-term deferrals in AOCI because the hedged inventory does
not turn over for long periods of time.
Similarly, when a transaction involves the purchase of equipment, the gain or loss on the derivative
that is deferred in AOCI should be reclassified to earnings as the equipment is depreciated. The
amount of the derivative’s gain or loss that is taken out of AOCI and reclassified to earnings should be
proportionate to the percentage of depreciation expense recorded each period.
Example DH 7-5 illustrates a cash flow hedge of a forecasted purchase of inventory with an option.
EXAMPLE DH 7-5
Cash flow hedge of a forecasted purchase of inventory, time value recognized through an amortization
approach
DH Jewelry Manufacturing Corp purchases gold from its suppliers based on the market COMEX spot
price. DH Jewelry decides to purchase New York COMEX call options on gold futures to hedge the
price risk of its probable forecasted purchase of 200 ounces of gold on April 30, 20X1. The options give
DH Jewelry the right, but not the obligation, to buy gold at a specific price.
□ If gold prices increase, the profit on the purchased call options will approximately offset the higher
price that DH Jewelry must pay for the gold to be used in its manufacturing process.
□ If gold prices decline, DH Jewelry will lose the premium it paid for the call options, but can then
buy gold at the lower price in the spot market.
On January 1, 20X1, DH Jewelry purchases two at-the-money spot call options for April 30, 20X1
delivery at $291 per ounce for a premium of $7.50 per ounce. Each call option is for a notional amount
of 100 ounces of gold. The call options are derivatives under ASC 815 because of their contractual
provisions, which permit net cash settlement. They protect DH Jewelry from the risk of gold prices
increasing above $291 per ounce.
On April 30, 20X1, the spot price of gold is $316 per ounce. DH Jewelry settles its two April calls on
April 30, 20X1 and buys 200 ounces of gold from its suppliers at the COMEX spot price.
Change in
COMEX Strike price Estimated estimated
spot price — April call Option option fair option fair
Date of gold option premium value value
January 1, 20X1 $291 $7.50 1,500 -
January 31, 20X1 3,100 1,600
February 28, 20X1 4,000 900
March 31, 20X1 4,500 500
April 30, 20X1 $316 5,000 500
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
The estimated option fair value at January 1, 20X1 includes only the time value (premium) of $1,500.
In subsequent periods, the fair value includes both the remaining time value and the intrinsic value.
On January 20X1, DH Jewelry designates the hedging relationship as a cash flow hedge of the first
200 ounces of forecasted gold purchases during the month of April 20X1 at the then-spot gold price
delivered to DH Jewelry’s facility. DH Jewelry assesses effectiveness based on the option’s intrinsic
value and recognizes the time value using an amortization approach. Straight-line amortization is
determined to be a systematic and rational approach.
Analysis
As a highly effective cash flow hedge of a forecasted purchase of a nonfinancial asset (gold), the call
options’ change in fair value would be deferred through OCI and reclassified to earnings when the
related inventory is sold. The time value would be amortized on a straight-line basis. The change in
fair value, which includes the change in time value, would be recorded through OCI.
DH Jewelry would record the following journal entries for the hedging relationship.
January 1, 20X1
Dr. Call options $1,500
Cr. Cash $1,500
To record the premium paid on the purchase of the call options (2 options × 100
ounces per option × $7.50/ounce premium)
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
$500
Dr. Call options
$500
Dr, Call options
Cr. Other comprehensive income $500
To record the change in fair value of the call options
$5,000
Dr. Cash
Cr. Call options $5,000
To record the cash settlement of the call options
$63,200
Dr. Gold inventory
Cr. Cash $63,200
To record the purchase of 200 ounces of gold ($316 per ounce × 200 ounces)
The gain in AOCI will be reclassified to earnings when the related inventory is sold (i.e., when earnings
are impacted) according to how DH Jewelry accounts for its inventory (e.g., LIFO, FIFO).
Alternatively, DH Jewelry could elect to assess effectiveness based on the terminal value of the option.
In that case, the entire change in fair value of the option would be deferred through OCI if the hedge is
highly effective. However, many manufacturers believe that an intrinsic value approach better reflects
the true cost of inventory. The premium paid is akin to insurance that locks in the cost of the
inventory.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
ASC 815 prohibits reporting gains or losses on cash flow hedging instruments as basis adjustments of
the qualifying assets. Instead, ASC 815 requires reclassification of amounts deferred in AOCI into
earnings in the same period(s) during which the hedged forecasted transaction affects earnings. ASC
815-30-35-45 provides specific guidance for cash flow hedges of borrowings related to plant under
construction.
ASC 815-30-35-45
If the variable-rate interest on a specific borrowing is associated with an asset under construction and
capitalized as a cost of that asset, the amounts in accumulated other comprehensive income related to
the cash flow hedge of the variability of that interest shall be reclassified into earnings over the
depreciable life of the constructed asset, because that depreciable life coincides with the amortization
period for the capitalized interest cost of the debt.
When a swap is terminated early or the debt term extends beyond the construction period, reporting
entities need to ensure proper attribution and accounting for the derivative gains and losses deferred
in AOCI related to interest payments that were capitalized.
Excluded components
As discussed in DH 7.2.1.3, a reporting entity’s risk management strategy may exclude certain
components from the assessment of hedge effectiveness. Such amounts will be recognized in earnings
either currently or following an amortization approach.
Because ASC 815 prescribes different accounting provisions for hedges of forecasted transactions (as
cash flow hedges) and firm commitments (as fair value hedges, discussed in DH 7.4.3.2), the question
arises of how to account for a change in circumstances that results in the conversion of a forecasted
transaction to a firm commitment (e.g., when a reporting entity enters into a purchase order specifying
penalties that will apply if the counterparty does not fulfill its performance obligations with respect to
a previously-anticipated purchase of inventory).
A hedging instrument that was initially intended as a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction must
be effective in offsetting the variability in future cash flows (i.e., the purpose of the derivative would be
to lock in a fixed price for the forecasted transaction). However, once the reporting entity enters into a
firm commitment, the price will be fixed, and the original objective of the hedge will no longer exist. A
hedge of a firm commitment is a fair value hedge and a derivative must be effective in offsetting
changes in the fair value of the firm commitment. Accordingly, the original derivative that was
effective as a cash flow hedge will not be effective as a fair value hedge, and cash flow hedge accounting
should be discontinued.
A reporting entity could subsequently designate the now-firm commitment as the hedged item in a fair
value hedge and use a derivative instrument that is different from the one that the entity had used for
the cash flow hedge. In addition, the reporting entity may designate the firm commitment itself as an
“all-in-one” cash flow hedge (see DH 7.3.4).
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Regardless of the subsequent accounting for the firm commitment, the amount deferred in AOCI as a
result of the initial cash flow hedge should be reclassified to earnings only when the original forecasted
transaction (which has now become a firm commitment) impacts earnings.
Assuming that the hedge relationship is highly effective, the entire change in fair value of the hedging
instrument (less excluded components, if any, as discussed in DH 7.2.1.3) would be recorded through
OCI.
If a reporting entity disposes of a component of its operations (that met the requirements for
classification as a discontinued operation) that included a hedged item in a cash flow hedge,
management should assess whether gains and losses previously realized on the hedge (i.e., the
amounts reclassified from AOCI) should be presented in income from discontinued operations. This
assessment should be performed even if the derivatives are not included in the disposal group.
Specifically, management should consider the original hedge documentation of the cash flows being
hedged to determine whether the prior year effects of the derivatives should be reclassified into
discontinued operations and whether amounts remaining in AOCI should be released. Based on the
documentation, management should assess whether the hedged cash flows specifically relate to the
group of assets and liabilities being disposed, which may require judgment.
ASC 815 requires immediate recognition of amounts deferred in AOCI if the combined impact of the
hedging instrument and hedged item will lead to a loss in future periods.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 7-13
DH Corp periodically purchases inventory and designates its next forecasted purchase of that
inventory as the hedged item in a cash flow hedge. At the date that the inventory is purchased, a loss
on the hedging instrument of $25 is in AOCI. In a subsequent period, the purchased inventory has a
carrying amount of $100 and a fair value of $110. DH Corp expects to sell the inventory at a price
equivalent to its fair value.
DH Corp determines that the combined value of the loss in AOCI and the carrying amount of the
inventory (i.e., $125) exceeds the inventory’s fair value (i.e., $110), such that a net loss on the
forecasted sale of the inventory will be recognized in a future period.
PwC response
DH Corp would reclassify a $15 loss ($100 + $25 – $110) from AOCI into earnings because it does not
expect to recover more than the inventory’s fair value.
Further, in accordance with ASC 815-30-35-42, for assets and liabilities with variable cash flows and
for which the variable cash flows have been designated as the hedged item in a cash flow hedge, a
reporting entity must assess impairment under other GAAP applicable to those assets or liabilities. For
example, a reporting entity needs to consider whether the net realizable value of inventory has
declined to an amount below its cost in a cash flow hedge of a forecasted sale of inventory. A reporting
entity should apply those requirements after hedge accounting is applied for the period and without
regard to the expected cash flows of the hedging instrument (i.e., gains and losses that are deferred in
AOCI may not be used to assess either impairment or the need for an increase in an obligation of a
hedged item).
If an impairment loss is recognized on a hedged item under other applicable GAAP, ASC 815-30-35-43
provides further guidance on accounting for any amounts deferred in AOCI.
ASC 815-30-35-43
If, under existing requirements in GAAP, an impairment loss is recognized on an asset, or an
additional obligation is recognized on a liability to which a hedged forecasted transaction relates, any
offsetting net gain related to that transaction in accumulated other comprehensive income shall be
reclassified immediately into earnings. Similarly, if a recovery is recognized on the asset or liability to
which the hedged forecasted transaction relates, any offsetting net loss that has been accumulated in
other comprehensive income shall be reclassified immediately into earnings.
In accordance with this guidance, if an impairment loss is recognized for an asset (to which a
forecasted transaction relates), DH Corp should offset gains related to the forecasted transaction that
were deferred in AOCI and reclassify them immediately to earnings. However, the amount of any gains
reclassified to earnings should not be in excess of the impairment loss recognized.
See Question DH 7-14 for discussion of timing of recognition of an impairment gain in AOCI.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 7-14
DH Corp periodically purchases inventory and designates its next forecasted purchase of that
inventory as the hedged item in a cash flow hedge. DH Corp purchases inventory for $100. At the date
that the inventory is purchased, there is a $25 gain on the hedging instrument deferred in AOCI. In a
subsequent period, the fair value of the purchased inventory (carrying amount of $100) declines to
$80 and should be written down to the lower of cost or net realizable value.
Should DH Corp recognize any of the gain in AOCI at the time of the impairment?
PwC response
DH Corp should recognize an impairment loss of $20 ($100 – $80) on its inventory. In addition, in
the period in which the impairment is recorded, DH Corp should recognize a portion of the deferred
gain from the hedge of the purchase of the inventory by reclassifying a gain of $20 (i.e., part of the
total $25 deferred gain) from AOCI into earnings. As a result, there is no net impact to current
earnings.
The remaining $5 gain in AOCI would continue to be deferred until the hedged forecasted transaction
impacts earnings when the inventory is sold (or if a subsequent impairment is recognized).
7.4.1 Types of risks eligible for fair value hedge accounting of nonfinancial assets and
liabilities
In a fair value hedge of a nonfinancial item, ASC 815-20-25-12(e) limits the risks that may be hedged.
ASC 815-20-25-12(e)
If the hedged item is a nonfinancial asset or liability (other than a recognized loan servicing right or a
nonfinancial firm commitment with financial components), the designated risk being hedged is the
risk of changes in the fair value of the entire hedged asset or liability (reflecting its actual location if a
physical asset). That is, the price risk of a similar asset in a different location or of a major ingredient
may not be the hedged risk. Thus, in hedging the exposure to changes in the fair value of gasoline, an
entity may not designate the risk of changes in the price of crude oil as the risk being hedged for
purposes of determining effectiveness of the fair value hedge of gasoline.
Reporting entities are not permitted to designate the price risk of a similar asset in a different location
or an ingredient or a component of a nonfinancial asset or liability as the hedged item. Hedges of
nonfinancial assets and liabilities are limited to hedges of the risk of changes in the price of the entire
hedged item (reflecting its actual location if a physical asset), except for nonfinancial firm
commitments with financial components. A nonfinancial firm commitment with a financial
component (e.g., the obligation to purchase inventory in a foreign currency) may be able to be
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
designated as the hedged item in a fair value hedge if it meets one of the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-
12(f), discussed in DH 7.2.1.
Further, the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-12(e) permits “cross” or “tandem” hedges. Therefore, the
entity may be able to use the rubber derivative as a fair value hedge of the tire inventory if the price of
rubber is highly correlated to the market price of tires. For it to do so, however, (1) the entire change in
the fair value of the derivative must be expected to be highly effective at offsetting the entire change in
the fair value or expected cash flows of the hedged item and (2) all of the remaining hedge criteria
must be met. The reporting entity would need to consider all changes in the value of the tire inventory
in its hedge effectiveness assessment.
ASC 815 requires that the designated hedged item in a fair value hedge be a recognized asset or
liability or an unrecognized firm commitment. An unrecognized asset or liability that does not embody
a firm commitment is not eligible for fair value hedge accounting.
The hedged item in a fair value hedge must fulfill the general qualifying criteria discussed in DH 6.2
and the criteria specific to fair value hedges outlined in ASC 815-20-25-12. The types of hedged items
that may qualify in fair value hedging relationships related to nonfinancial items are:
Specific considerations related to these requirements are further discussed in the following sections.
A recognized asset or liability, such as inventory, can be the hedged transaction in a fair value hedge if
the specified criteria are met.
Production companies and users of commodities may need to manage exposure to the price of
purchasing inputs and to changes in the value of their inventories during a holding period. A fair value
hedge can be used to protect against the risk of a change in the value of physical inventory during the
hedging period.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
The risk identified as being hedged in a hedging transaction involving recognized nonfinancial assets,
such as inventory, or a firm commitment may only be for overall changes in fair value (i.e., price risk)
at the location of the inventory or the location at which the reporting entity intends to purchase or sell
the inventory.
In contrast, the hedged risk identified in a cash flow hedge of a forecasted purchase or sale of
inventory may also be the changes in a contractually specified component of the price or functional
currency cash flows.
In practice, reporting entities often hedge the price risk associated with forecasted inventory purchases
when changes in those prices cannot be passed onto their customers (i.e., through the subsequent sale
of their product) because either the reporting entity has a fixed-price sales commitment or the
marketplace is too competitive to allow for the pass-through of material cost increases. Reporting
entities often hedge the price risk associated with forecasted inventory sales if their raw material or
production costs are fixed and/or the pricing for their product in the marketplace is volatile. Because
there is an opportunity to hedge the variability in either forecasted purchases or sales of inventory,
many reporting entities do not find a need to enter into fair value hedges of their existing inventories.
However, when a reporting entity has commodity inventories on hand, but cannot adequately forecast
the timing of sales, it may be appropriate to consider entering into a fair value hedge.
EXAMPLE DH 7-6
Collar used to hedge inventory price risk
DH Corp uses a purchased collar (i.e., a combination of a purchased and written option) that does not
constitute a written option to hedge the price risk in the inventory it holds. It structures a collar
consisting of (1) a purchased put with a strike price of $80 and (2) a written call with a strike price of
$120.
DH Corp documents that its hedge strategy is to protect the inventory from fair value changes outside
the specified range; it does not hedge changes in the fair value from $80 to $120.
Analysis
DH Corp would adjust the inventory to reflect only the changes in value caused by a drop in the price
below $80 or an increase in the price above $120 (i.e., the collar would be effective in offsetting only
losses that occur when the price is below $80 or gains that occur when the price is above $120). The
inventory would not be adjusted for price fluctuations that fall within the range of $80 to $120.
Accordingly, changes in the fair value of the collar that reflect price fluctuations within the range of
$80 to $120 would be recorded in earnings, with no offsetting adjustments made to the carrying
amount of the inventory.
In this hedging relationship, DH Corp may elect to recognize the time value of the option using an
amortization approach, as discussed in DH 7.2.1.3.
Example DH 7-7 illustrates a fair value hedge of commodity inventory using futures contracts.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
EXAMPLE DH 7-7
Fair value hedge of commodity inventory using futures contracts
On October 1, 20X1, DH Mining Corp (DH Mining), located in Colorado, has 10 million pounds of
copper inventory in its warehouse located near Dinosaur, Colorado, at an average cost of $3.065 per
pound. DH Mining would like to protect the value of the inventory from a possible decline in copper
prices until its planned sale in February 20X2. To hedge the value of the inventory, DH Mining sells
400 copper contracts (each for 25,000 pounds) through the Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s COMEX
Division at $3.19 per pound for delivery in February 20X2 to coincide with its expected physical sale of
its copper inventory. The spot price on October 1, 20X1 is $3.13.
Analysis
DH Mining would designate the hedging relationship as a fair value hedge of inventory. If prices fall
during the period prior to settlement, the gain from the short position in COMEX futures contracts
would be expected to substantially offset the decline in the fair value of the copper inventory. The
hedge relationship may not be perfectly effective due to locational differences between the inventory
and the specific warehouses designated for goods delivery by the COMEX exchange contract, none of
which is near the inventory’s location. This difference creates basis risk. As a result, DH Mining would
likely elect to assess effectiveness based on changes in spot prices and exclude the difference between
the spot rate ($3.13) and forward rate ($3.19) from the hedging relationship. Using a mark-to-market
approach, DH Mining would recognize the spot-forward difference of $600,000 ($0.06 on 10 million
pounds) in current earnings.
As a highly effective fair value hedge of the copper inventory, the futures contracts would be
recognized on the balance sheet as assets or liabilities, and gains or losses on the futures contracts
would be recognized currently in earnings, offset by the basis adjustment on the copper inventory.
ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(1) describes the similar assets/liabilities test that is required for fair value
hedges of groups (portfolios) of assets or liabilities. Reporting entities seeking to fair value hedge a
portfolio of assets or liabilities generally must perform a rigorous quantitative assessment at inception
of the hedging relationship to document that the portfolio of assets or liabilities is eligible for
designation as the hedged item in a fair value hedging relationship.
1. If similar assets or similar liabilities are aggregated and hedged as a portfolio, the individual assets
or individual liabilities must share the risk exposure for which they are designated as being
hedged. The change in fair value attributable to the hedged risk for each individual item in a
hedged portfolio must be expected to respond in a generally proportionate manner to the overall
change in fair value of the aggregate portfolio attributable to the hedged risk.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Consistent with the ASC 815 prohibition on macro hedging, the designation of a group of assets or
liabilities in a single hedging relationship is limited to only those similar assets or liabilities that share
the same risk exposure for which they are designated as being hedged. The concept of “similar” is
interpreted very narrowly. The fair value of each individual item in the portfolio must be expected to
change proportionate to the change in the entire portfolio. For example, when the changes in the fair
value of the hedged portfolio attributable to the hedged risk alter that portfolio’s fair value by 10%
during a reporting period, the change in the fair value that is attributable to the hedged risk of each
item in the portfolio should also be expected to be within a fairly narrow range of 10%.
In certain limited circumstances when the terms of the individual hedged items in the portfolio are
aligned, a qualitative similar assets test may be appropriate. The determination of whether a
quantitative or qualitative analysis is sufficient is judgmental and will depend on the nature of the
commodity being hedged.
When facts and circumstances regarding the portfolio change, we expect reporting entities to
reconsider their similar assets test. When changes are significant such that the original conclusion is
no longer valid without additional support, we would expect a new comprehensive analysis to be
performed at that time.
ASC 815-20-25-12(b)(2)(i)
If the hedged item is a specific portion of an asset or liability (or of a portfolio of similar assets or a
portfolio of similar liabilities), the hedged item is one of the following:
i. A percentage of the entire asset or liability (or of the entire portfolio). An entity shall not express
the hedged item as multiple percentages of a recognized asset or liability and then retroactively
determine the hedged item based on an independent matrix of those multiple percentages and the
actual scenario that occurred during the period for which hedge effectiveness is being assessed.
In applying this guidance, the hedge documentation should specify how the percentage of the asset or
liability will be determined. For example, if a reporting entity is hedging a portion of its inventory, it
should specify the location, nature of the inventory, and the quantity of inventory being hedged.
This guidance refers to a percentage of an asset or liability; however, a partial-term hedge (in which
only certain cash flows within an instrument are hedged) is not permitted for nonfinancial items.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Firm commitment
A firm commitment is a binding agreement with a third party for which all significant terms are
specified (e.g., quantity, price, timing). The definition of a firm commitment requires that the fixed
price be specified in terms of a currency (or an interest rate).
ASC 815 specifies that a firm commitment must include a disincentive for nonperformance that is
sufficiently large to make performance probable. The determination of whether a sufficiently large
disincentive for nonperformance exists under each firm commitment is judgmental based upon the
specifics and facts and circumstances. Example 13 in ASC 815-25-55-84 indicates that the disincentive
for nonperformance need not be an explicit part of a contract. Rather, the disincentive may be present
in the form of statutory rights (that exist in the legal jurisdiction governing the agreement) that allow a
reporting entity to pursue compensation in the event of nonperformance (e.g., if the counterparty
defaults) that is equivalent to the damages that the entity suffers as a result of the nonperformance.
As an example, a reporting entity may enter into contracts to deliver nonfinancial assets to customers
under firm commitments as part of normal business activities, but does not want to be exposed to the
risk of price variability. The reporting entity could enter into a derivative to offset the changes in fair
value of the firm commitment to deliver nonfinancial assets to its customers. If the firm commitment
is designated as the hedged item in an effective hedge, changes in its fair value will be recognized on
the balance sheet with the offset recorded to earnings.
Additionally, as noted in ASC 815-20-25-21, a derivative that satisfies the definition of a firm
commitment and that will involve a gross settlement may be designated as the hedging instrument in a
cash flow hedge of the variability of the consideration to be paid or received in the forecasted
transaction that will occur upon gross settlement of the derivative itself (sometimes known as an “all-
in-one hedge,” discussed in DH 7.3.4).
Figure DH 7-4 illustrates the alternative ways to account for a firm commitment.
Figure DH 7-4
Accounting for a firm commitment
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Question DH 7-15 discusses whether a reporting entity can designate a contractually specified
component of a firm commitment as the hedged risk in a fair value hedge.
Question DH 7-15
Can a reporting entity designate a contractually specified component of a firm commitment as the
hedged risk in a fair value hedge?
PwC response
No. The designation of a contractually specified component only applies to cash flow hedges of eligible
forecasted purchases and sales of nonfinancial assets and does not apply to firm commitments.
Firm commitments should be evaluated to determine if they are eligible for designation as the hedged
item in a fair value hedge. However, ASC 815-20-25-12(e) requires that the designated risk being
hedged in a fair value hedge of a nonfinancial asset or liability must involve the risk of changes in the
fair value of the entire hedged asset or liability, reflecting the actual asset or liability and its physical
location, or the related foreign currency risk.
ASC 815-20-25-12(b) also permits embedded puts and calls in a recognized asset or liability and the
residual value in a lessor’s net investment in a direct financing or sales-type lease to be the hedged
item in a fair value hedging relationship.
Although the residual value in a lessor’s net investment in a direct financing or sales-type lease may be
designated as the hedged item, many contracts that are used as the hedging instrument in such a
hedge may qualify for one of the scope exceptions in ASC 815-10-15-13, such as ASC 815-10-15-59(d),
discussed in DH 3. A reporting entity should examine its hedging instruments to determine whether
they meet the definition of a derivative or are scoped out. If a hedging instrument does not fall within
the scope of ASC 815, the corresponding transaction does not qualify for hedge accounting because
only derivatives may be designated as hedging instruments, with certain exceptions discussed in DH 8.
See DH 4.6.3 for a discussion of certain features of leases that may meet the definition of a derivative
and thus need to be separated from the lease agreement and accounted for individually.
7.4.3 Accounting for fair value hedges of nonfinancial assets and liabilities
In accordance with ASC 815-10-30-1, all derivatives should be measured initially at fair value following
the guidance of ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement. At each subsequent reporting period, all
derivatives should be remeasured at fair value. Gains and losses on a qualifying fair value hedge
should be accounted for in accordance with ASC 815-25-35-1.
ASC 815-25-35-1
Gains and losses on a qualifying fair value hedge shall be accounted for as follows:
a. The gain or loss on the hedging instrument shall be recognized currently in earnings, except for
amounts excluded from the assessment of effectiveness that are recognized in earnings through an
amortization approach in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-83A. All amounts recognized in
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
earnings shall be presented in the same income statement line item as the earnings effect of the
hedged item.
b. The gain or loss (that is, the change in fair value) on the hedged item attributable to the hedged
risk shall adjust the carrying amount of the hedged item and be recognized currently in earnings.
Unlike hedge accounting for cash flow hedges, which results in special accounting for the derivative
designated in the cash flow hedging relationship, hedge accounting for fair value hedges results in
special accounting for the designated hedged item.
The application of fair value hedge accounting requires both (1) the changes in value of the designated
hedging instrument and (2) the changes in value (attributable to the risk being hedged) of the
designated hedged item to be recognized currently in earnings. Accordingly, any mismatch between
the hedged item and hedging instrument is recognized currently in earnings.
In a fair value hedge of an asset, a liability, or a firm commitment, the hedging instrument should be
reflected on the balance sheet at its fair value, but the hedged item may often be reflected on the
balance sheet at a value that is different from both its historical cost and fair value, unless the total
amount and all the risks were hedged when the item was acquired. This is because the hedged item is
adjusted each period only for changes in the fair value that are attributable to the risk that has been
hedged since the inception of the hedge.
The accounting for changes in the fair value of the hedged item is discussed in ASC 815-25-35-8.
ASC 815-25-35-8
The adjustment of the carrying amount of a hedged asset or liability required by ASC 815-25-35-1(b)
shall be accounted for in the same manner as other components of the carrying amount of that asset or
liability. For example, an adjustment of the carrying amount of a hedged asset held for sale (such as
inventory) would remain part of the carrying amount of that asset until the asset is sold, at which point
the entire carrying amount of the hedged asset would be recognized as the cost of the item sold in
determining earnings.
When initially designating the hedging relationship and preparing the contemporaneous hedge
documentation, a reporting entity must specify how hedge accounting adjustments will be
subsequently recognized in income. The recognition of hedge accounting adjustments—also referred to
as basis adjustments—will differ depending on how other adjustments of the hedged item’s carrying
amount will be reported in earnings. For example:
□ Hedge accounting adjustments for an operating lease with substantial cancellation penalties do
not have an obvious pattern of accounting and would need to follow the substance of the
agreement
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
Further, if the hedged item is a portfolio of similar assets or liabilities, a reporting entity must allocate
the hedge accounting adjustments to individual items in the portfolio. Information about such
allocations is required, for example, when (1) the assets are sold or liabilities are settled, (2) the
hedging relationship is discontinued, or (3) the hedged item is assessed for impairment.
If a firm commitment is designated as a hedged item, the change in fair value of the hedged
commitment is recorded in a manner similar to how a reporting entity would account for any hedged
asset or liability that it records. That is, changes in fair value that are attributable to the risk that is
being hedged would be recognized in earnings and, on the balance sheet, recognized as an adjustment
of the hedged item’s carrying amount. Because firm commitments normally are not recorded,
accounting for the change in the fair value of the firm commitment would result in the reporting entity
recognizing the firm commitment on the balance sheet. The recognition of subsequent changes in fair
value would adjust the carrying amount of the firm commitment.
If a reporting entity disposes of a component of its operations (that met the requirements for
classification as a discontinued operation) that included a hedged item in a fair value hedge,
management should assess whether gains and losses previously realized on the hedge should be
presented as income from discontinued operations. This assessment should be performed even if the
derivatives are not included in the disposal group.
Specifically, management should consider the original hedge documentation of the recognized asset or
liability or firm commitment being hedged to determine whether the prior year effects of the
derivatives should be presented in income from discontinued operations. Based on the documentation,
management should assess whether the hedged item specifically relates to the group of assets and
liabilities being disposed, which may require judgment.
ASC 815-25-35-10 provides guidance on the accounting for impairment of a hedged item.
In accordance with this guidance, nonfinancial assets that have been designated as hedged items in
fair value hedging relationships remain subject to the normal requirements for impairment
assessment. For example, reporting entities should continue to apply the valuation requirements of
ASC 330, Inventory, and the impairment requirements of ASC 360, Accounting for the Impairment or
Disposal of Long-Lived Assets.
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Hedges of nonfinancial assets, liabilities, and forecasted transactions
A reporting entity must apply those impairment requirements after hedge accounting is applied for
the period and the hedged item’s carrying amount has been adjusted to reflect changes in fair value
that are attributable to the risk that is being hedged.
The interest cost recognized in earnings related to fair value hedges should be reflected in the amount
of interest subject to capitalization, as addressed in ASC 815-25-35-14.
ASC 815-25-35-14
Amounts recorded in an entity’s income statement as interest costs shall be reflected in the
capitalization rate under Subtopic 835-20. Those amounts could include amortization of the
adjustments of the carrying amount of the hedged liability, under paragraphs 815-25-35-9 through 35-
9A, if an entity elects to begin amortization of those adjustments during the period in which interest is
eligible for capitalization.
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Chapter 8:
Foreign currency hedges
Foreign currency hedges
This chapter focuses on the unique aspects and requirements of foreign currency hedge accounting,
such as:
□ The ability to apply either the cash flow or fair value hedge accounting model to hedges of foreign
currency-denominated assets or liabilities and unrecognized firm commitments
□ The ability to hedge intercompany foreign currency receivables and payables and forecasted
intercompany transactions
□ The ability to use intercompany derivatives as hedging instruments in the consolidated financial
statements in certain circumstances
See DH 5 for an overview of hedge accounting, DH 6 for information on financial hedges, and DH 7 for
information on nonfinancial hedges.
Figure DH 8-1
Types of foreign currency hedges
Hedging Section
Hedged item instrument Type of hedge reference
8-2
Foreign currency hedges
Hedging Section
Hedged item instrument Type of hedge reference
The hedged item in a hedge of foreign currency risk can be a single unrecognized firm commitment, a
recognized asset or liability, a forecasted transaction, or a portion of any of these items. In addition, a
reporting entity can hedge its net investment in a foreign operation.
Although most intercompany transactions do not affect consolidated earnings (and are, therefore, not
eligible for hedge accounting), ASC 815 allows a reporting entity to hedge the foreign currency risk of
certain intercompany transactions because transactions denominated in a foreign currency (including
intercompany transactions) result in foreign currency transaction gains and losses that are reported in
consolidated earnings. See DH 8.7 for additional information on hedges of intercompany transactions.
Question DH 8-1 discusses whether a reporting entity can hedge the foreign currency risk associated
with the forecasted purchases of a business or a firm commitment to acquire a business.
Question DH 8-1
Can a reporting entity hedge the foreign currency risk associated with the forecasted purchase of a
business or firm commitment to acquire a business?
PwC response
No. ASC 815-20-25-43 precludes the forecasted purchase of a business or a firm commitment to
acquire a business from being the hedged item in an ASC 815 hedging relationship. It similarly
prohibits the forecasted purchase of an equity method investment or a firm commitment to purchase
an equity method investment from being the hedged item.
A firm commitment is a binding agreement that specifies all of the significant terms of the transaction
and provides a sufficient disincentive for nonperformance to make performance probable. See DH
6.4.3.6 and DH 7.4.2.4 for information on firm commitments relating to financial instruments and
nonfinancial instruments, respectively.
When a firm commitment relates to the purchase or sale of a foreign currency-denominated financial
instrument, the contract containing the firm commitment should be analyzed to determine whether it
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Foreign currency hedges
meets the definition of a derivative (i.e., a forward contract) under ASC 815. If so, it is not eligible for
hedge accounting, but may be economically hedged by another derivative. It may also be designated as
a hedging instrument in a qualifying hedging relationship. If the firm commitment is not a derivative
(e.g., because the underlying financial instrument is not readily convertible to cash), it can be the
hedged item in a fair value or cash flow hedging relationship.
Question DH 8-2 discusses whether a firm commitment can be designated as the hedged item in a
cash flow hedging relationship when the amount to be received for paid is fixed in terms of a foreign
currency.
Question DH 8-2
Can a firm commitment be designated as the hedged item in a cash flow hedging relationship when the
amount to be received or paid under the firm commitment is fixed in terms of a foreign currency?
PwC response
Yes. As discussed in ASC 815-20-25-28, the foreign currency risk in a firm commitment can be hedged
using either the cash flow or fair value hedging model. The cash flow hedging model can be applied to
firm commitments when the amount that is to be received or paid under the firm commitment is fixed
in terms of a foreign currency because the reporting entity is still subject to variability in functional
currency cash flows. See Example 14 in ASC 815-20-55-136 through ASC 815-20-55-138 for an
illustration of a cash flow hedge of the foreign currency risk in a firm commitment.
Foreign currency-denominated financial assets and liabilities are required to be remeasured based on
spot exchange rates in accordance with ASC 830, Foreign Currency Matters; the resulting transaction
gain or loss is ordinarily included in net income. As a result, foreign currency-denominated assets and
liabilities present an earnings exposure that reporting entities may choose to hedge using either the
cash flow or fair value hedging models.
Only a derivative can be designated as the hedging instrument in a hedge of a foreign currency-
denominated asset or liability.
Available-for-sale securities
ASC 320, Investments-Debt Securities, requires changes in the fair value of available-for-sale debt
securities to be reported in other comprehensive income (OCI) until realized. The change in fair value
of a foreign currency-denominated available-for-sale debt security, expressed in a reporting entity’s
functional currency, is the total of (1) the change in market price of the security, expressed in the local
currency and (2) the change in the exchange rate between the local currency and the reporting entity’s
functional currency.
A foreign currency-denominated available-for-sale debt security (or a portion of one) can be hedged in
either a cash flow or fair value hedging relationship; in practice, they are most often hedged using the
fair value hedging model. When a derivative is designated as a hedge of changes in the fair value of a
foreign currency-denominated available-for-sale debt security attributable to changes in foreign
currency exchange rates, the change in fair value of the hedged security is initially recorded in OCI.
The portion of the gain or loss attributable to changes in foreign currency rates is immediately
8-4
Foreign currency hedges
reclassified from OCI into earnings. This reclassification is partially offset by the change in the fair
value of the hedging derivative, which is also reported in earnings. Changes in the fair value of the
available-for-sale debt security due to unhedged risks remain in OCI, as required by ASC 320.
See DH 8.4 for information on foreign currency cash flow hedges and DH 8.5 for information on
foreign currency fair value hedges. Example DH 8-7 illustrates a fair value hedge of an available-for-
sale security.
Cash flow hedge accounting can only be applied to hedges of recognized foreign currency-
denominated assets and liabilities if the hedge eliminates all of the variability in the functional
currency-equivalent cash flows. A currency swap that economically changes floating-rate foreign
currency debt into floating-rate functional currency debt does not qualify as a cash flow hedge because
the variability in functional currency-equivalent cash flows is not eliminated (i.e., the functional
currency-equivalent interest payments are still floating); however, this type of swap could qualify as a
hedging instrument in a fair value hedge. A currency swap that economically changes floating-rate
foreign currency debt to fixed-rate functional currency debt qualifies as a cash flow hedge if the
relationship is highly effective. An interest rate swap that economically changes floating-rate foreign
currency debt into fixed-rate foreign currency debt also qualifies for cash flow hedge accounting, but it
is a hedge of interest rate risk, not a hedge of foreign currency risk as the functional currency cash
flows are not fixed.
The following sections illustrate these principles assuming a US dollar-functional currency entity
borrows funds in euro and converts the borrowing into a US dollar obligation by entering into a cross-
currency swap that matches the terms of the debt issued.
See DH 8.4 for information on foreign currency cash flow hedges and DH 8.5 for information on
foreign currency fair value hedges. See DH 6 for information on interest rate risk hedges.
Because the functional currency-equivalent cash flows are not fixed, the hedging relationship does not
qualify for cash flow hedge accounting; fair value hedge accounting is the only type of hedge
accounting that can be applied.
Applying fair value hedge accounting will produce the same overall accounting results as not applying
hedge accounting at all; the derivative will be measured at fair value with changes recorded in earnings
and the foreign currency-denominated debt will be remeasured at the current spot exchange rate, as
required by ASC 830. However, the income statement presentation of a fair value hedging relationship
may better reflect the reporting entity’s objective (i.e., to hedge the currency risk of the debt) than not
applying hedge accounting because the results of the derivative and the hedged item must be
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Foreign currency hedges
presented in the same income statement line item. For economic hedges, presentation would depend
on the reporting entity’s election, as discussed in FSP 19.4.4. In addition, a reporting entity may elect
to designate the swap as a fair value hedge if designation is consistent with its risk management
strategy and/or the reporting entity would prefer to demonstrate to investors that the derivative met
the requirements for hedge accounting in ASC 815.
Hedge of foreign currency risk and interest rate risk on a fixed-rate borrowing
Because the functional currency-equivalent cash flows are not fixed, the hedging relationship does not
qualify for cash flow hedge accounting; fair value hedge accounting is the only type of hedge
accounting that can be applied.
In applying fair value hedge accounting of both interest rate and foreign currency risk, a reporting
entity would adjust the value of the foreign currency-denominated debt to reflect changes in foreign
interest rates and then remeasure the debt at the current spot exchange rate, as required by ASC 830.
The functional currency-equivalent cash flows are fixed; therefore, this hedging relationship is eligible
for either cash flow or fair value hedging. Cash flow hedge accounting is generally applied.
Example DH 8-5 in DH 8.4.4 illustrates a cash flow hedge of fixed-rate foreign currency-denominated
debt.
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Foreign currency hedges
Since the functional currency cash flows are fixed, this hedging relationship is a cash flow hedge of
both interest rate and foreign currency risk.
A forecasted foreign currency transaction, such as a forecasted sale denominated in a foreign currency,
presents earnings exposure due to movements in foreign exchange rates and can be the hedged item in
a cash flow hedging relationship. A derivative may be designated as hedging the foreign currency
exposure due to variability in the functional currency-equivalent cash flows of a forecasted transaction
if certain criteria are met. See DH 8.4 for additional information on applying cash flow hedge
accounting.
As discussed in ASC 830-30-45-3, the net assets of a foreign subsidiary are translated into the
reporting currency using the current exchange rate at each balance sheet date; the change in net assets
due to changes in exchange rates is recorded in the cumulative translation adjustment (CTA) account
(a component of OCI). Applying net investment hedge accounting allows a reporting entity to record
the gain or loss on the hedging instrument in CTA, thereby offsetting the impact of the translation
process.
Question DH 8-3 discusses whether two swap contracts can be designated as a cash flow hedge of the
foreign currency risk in a debt instrument.
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Foreign currency hedges
Question DH 8-3
A US dollar functional currency reporting entity issues fixed-rate debt denominated in Japanese yen.
At the same time, it enters into two swap contracts to hedge the debt. Under the first swap, the
reporting entity receives fixed Japanese yen (equal to the interest and principal obligations on the
hedged debt) and pays US dollars based on LIBOR; under the second swap, the reporting entity
receives variable US dollars based on LIBOR and pays fixed US dollars.
Can the two swaps be designated as a cash flow hedge of the foreign currency risk in the debt?
PwC response
Yes. ASC 815-20-25-45 permits a reporting entity to designate two or more derivatives as hedging
instruments in a single hedging relationship. Since the two swaps, designated together, eliminate the
variability in the hedged item’s functional currency-equivalent cash flows, they can be designated as
the hedging instrument.
Tandem currencies are two currencies other than a reporting entity’s functional currency that are
expected to move in tandem with each other in relation to the reporting entity’s functional currency.
For example, when the exchange rates for (1) the US dollar and foreign currency A and (2) the US
dollar and foreign currency B are expected to be highly correlated (i.e., expected to move in tandem),
currency A and currency B are tandem currencies for a reporting entity with the US dollar as its
functional currency.
The item or transaction being hedged must present an earnings exposure and cannot be something
that is already measured at fair value through earnings. Eligibility of a hedged item or hedged risk is
also dependent on the type of hedge (cash flow, fair value, or net investment), as discussed in DH 8.4,
DH 8.5, and DH 8.6, respectively.
The contemporaneous hedge documentation requirements for fair value or cash flow hedges of foreign
currency risk are the same as for hedges of other risks. See DH 5.7 for information on hedge
documentation.
ASC 815-20-25-30 specifies additional qualifying criteria for foreign currency hedges. The application
of ASC 815-20-25-30(a)(2) is illustrated in ASC 815-20-55-130.
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Foreign currency hedges
ASC 815-20-25-30
Both of the following conditions shall be met for foreign currency cash flow hedges, foreign currency
fair value hedges, and hedges of the net investment in a foreign operation:
1. The operating unit that has the foreign currency exposure is a party to the hedging instrument.
2. Another member of the consolidated group that has the same functional currency as that
operating unit is a party to the hedging instrument and there is no intervening subsidiary with a
different functional currency. See guidance beginning in paragraph 815-20-25-52 for conditions
under which an intra-entity foreign currency derivative can be the hedging instrument in a cash
flow hedge of foreign exchange risk.
b. The hedged transaction is denominated in a currency other than the hedging unit’s functional
currency.
Under the functional currency concept in ASC 830, each foreign entity (as defined in ASC 830) of a
multinational corporation is treated as a separate entity.
The criterion in ASC 815-20-25-30(a) is included so that the hedging model is consistent with the
functional currency concept in ASC 830 (i.e., only the entity with the foreign currency risk can be the
hedging entity). In addition, when a parent company’s functional currency differs from that of its
subsidiary, the parent is not directly exposed to the foreign currency risk in the subsidiary’s foreign
currency transactions. Accordingly, a parent company that has a different functional currency may not
directly hedge a subsidiary’s foreign currency-denominated assets and liabilities, unrecognized firm
commitments, or forecasted transactions.
Sometimes, one operating unit (such as a centralized treasury center) enters into a third-party hedging
instrument on behalf of another operating unit within the consolidated entity. When the functional
currencies of the units are not the same, ASC 815 requires an intercompany derivative contract to be
created to apply hedge accounting. The unit with the foreign currency exposure would then designate
the intercompany derivative as a hedge of its foreign currency exposure. See DH 8.8 for information
on treasury center hedging.
8-9
Foreign currency hedges
The effectiveness assessment of foreign currency cash flow and fair value hedges is similar to that of all
other cash flow and fair value hedges (discussed in DH 9); however, the currency basis spread in cross-
currency swaps can be excluded from the effectiveness assessment of a foreign currency hedge.
As discussed in DH 9, a reporting entity may elect to exclude certain components of the change in fair
value of the hedging instrument from the assessment of hedge effectiveness. The components a
reporting entity may choose to exclude are:
□ Difference between the spot rate and the forward rate in a forward contract (i.e., forward points in
a foreign currency forward contract)
If a reporting entity elects to exclude a component, ASC 815 provides two alternatives for recognition:
an amortization approach or a mark-to-market approach.
□ If the amortization approach is elected, the reporting entity should quantify and recognize the
initial value attributable to the excluded component. It should be recognized in earnings using a
systematic and rational amortization method over the life of the hedging instrument. Any
difference between the change in fair value of the hedging instrument attributable to the excluded
component and amounts recognized in earnings is recognized in other comprehensive income.
□ If the mark-to-market approach is elected, all changes in fair value attributable to an excluded
component are recognized currently in earnings.
The initial value attributable to an excluded component depends on the type of derivative. When the
time value of an option contract is the excluded component, the time value generally is the option
premium paid (provided the option is at or out of the money at inception). The value attributable to
forward points in a forward contract is the undiscounted difference between the market forward rate
and the spot rate. The fair values of the excluded components will change over time as markets change
but must converge to zero by the maturity of the hedging instrument. Because of that, the FASB
permits a systematic and rational amortization method.
Theoretically, the difference between the spot and forward exchange rates for currency forward
contracts should be equal to the difference between the risk-free nominal interest rates in each
currency. Any differences (other than a minor dealer profit) should be eliminated through arbitrage.
However, theory ignores certain market realities, such as transaction and hedging costs, dealer profit,
and credit risk, and assumes ready access to funding and liquidity in currency money markets. For
these reasons, the difference between the spot and forward exchange rates might not equal the
difference in interest rates. The currency basis spread is essentially this excess spread over what is
predicted by arbitrage pricing theory.
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Foreign currency hedges
There are no observable spot-to-forward differences in cross-currency interest rate swaps. Therefore,
the ability to specifically consider a currency basis spread as an excluded component and recognize it
through an amortization approach is helpful in reducing earnings volatility.
For currency swaps involving the US dollar, the currency basis spread can be thought of as the
difference between (1) the direct US dollar interest rate and (2) the synthetic US dollar interest rate
earned by swapping a foreign currency investment into a US dollar investment. Theoretically, there
should be no difference in the rates earned from this synthetic approach as compared to simply
holding US dollars and earning US dollar interest rates. A difference in the actual US dollar yield and
the yield earned from this synthetic approach means that a currency basis spread exists.
For example, a European bank can borrow in euro, paying three-month Euribor on the debt, and then
execute a swap under which it initially receives US dollars and pays euro for the principal amount.
Under the swap, it receives periodic payments of three-month Euribor and pays three-month US
dollar LIBOR. At the end of the swap, the bank receives the same amount of euro it paid at the
beginning of the swap and pays back the same US dollar principal amount it received at the beginning
of the swap.
Typically, the principal exchanged at the beginning and end of the swap is exchanged at the same
exchange rate: the spot rate at inception. This allows currency swaps to be quoted to participants as
US dollar LIBOR rate versus the Euribor rate plus or minus a spread (e.g., three-month Euribor minus
20). If LIBOR and Euribor were equal, the expected swap spread would be zero, and thus the “minus
20” would represent the currency basis spread. If these base rates are not equal, the rate differential
explains some of the swap pricing, but if the rate differential does not account for all of the difference,
a currency basis spread is implied.
Thus, Euribor “minus” that is not explained by a difference in rates could occur when US dollar
funding has been difficult for European banks to obtain (as has sometimes been the case since the
financial crisis), leading them to borrow in euro and swap into US dollar. The European bank would be
receiving less than Euribor on the swap contract, but still paying full US dollar LIBOR. Over the term
of the swap, this excess currency swap spread effectively represents a cost to the European bank, and
can be regarded as an excluded component. Although the whole swap spread has been locked in on the
swap contract, the change in fair value of the swap attributable to the currency basis spread will
fluctuate as market conditions change, and might be particularly volatile if there is a credit or liquidity
scare.
Common examples of foreign currency cash flow hedges include the hedge of the foreign currency risk:
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Foreign currency hedges
□ Related to a recognized asset or liability that is remeasured in income (e.g., receipt or payment of
interest on a foreign-currency-denominated debt instrument)
The hedging of these risks is permitted only if all of the variability in functional currency-
equivalent cash flows is eliminated, as required by ASC 815-20-25-39(d) and ASC 815-20-25-40.
ASC 815-20-25-39 and ASC 815-20-25-40 specify qualifying criteria for foreign currency cash flow
hedges in addition to the criteria applicable to all foreign currency hedges in ASC 815-20-25-30,
discussed in
DH 8.3.
ASC 815-20-25-39
A hedging relationship of the type described in the preceding paragraph qualifies for hedge accounting
if all the following criteria are met:
b. All of the cash flow hedge criteria in this Section otherwise are met, except for the criterion in
paragraph 815-20-25-15(c) that requires that the forecasted transaction be with a party external to
the reporting entity.
ASC 815-20-25-40
For purposes of item (d) in the preceding paragraph, an entity shall not specifically exclude a risk from
the hedge that will affect the variability in cash flows. For example, a cash flow hedge cannot be used
with a variable-rate foreign-currency-denominated asset or liability and a derivative instrument based
solely on changes in exchange rates because the derivative instrument does not eliminate all the
variability in the functional currency cash flows. As long as no element of risk that affects the
variability in foreign-currency-equivalent cash flows has been specifically excluded from a foreign
currency cash flow hedge and the hedging instrument is highly effective at providing the necessary
offset in the variability of all cash flows, a less-than-perfect hedge would meet the requirement in (d)
in the preceding paragraph. That criterion does not require that the derivative instrument used to
hedge the foreign currency exposure of the forecasted foreign-currency-equivalent cash flows
associated with a recognized asset or liability be perfectly effective, rather it is intended to ensure that
the hedging relationship is highly effective at offsetting all risks that impact the variability of cash
flows.
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Foreign currency hedges
As stated in ASC 815-20-25-39(b), a foreign currency cash flow hedge must also meet the criteria
applicable to all cash flow hedges, except that the forecasted transaction does not need to be with a
third party (i.e., intercompany transactions can be the hedged transaction in a foreign currency cash
flow hedge). These requirements are discussed in DH 6 for hedges of financial items and DH 7 for
hedges of nonfinancial items.
Question DH 8.4 discusses whether the requirement that a cash flow hedge of foreign currency risk in
an asset or liability must eliminate all of the variability in the functional currency-equivalent cash
flows mean that the hedging relationship must be perfectly effective.
Question DH 8-4
Does the requirement in ASC 815-20-25-39(d) that a cash flow hedge of the foreign currency risk in a
recognized foreign currency-denominated asset or liability must eliminate all of the variability in the
functional currency-equivalent cash flows mean that the hedging relationship must be perfectly
effective?
PwC response
No. A relationship qualifies for cash flow hedge accounting as long as it is designed to offset all
relevant risks (e.g., interest rate, foreign currency) and is highly effective. This requirement is designed
to prevent reporting entities from specifically excluding a risk that will affect the variability in cash
flows from the hedging relationship. However, the hedging relationship does not have to be perfectly
effective.
Question DH 8-5
Is the variability in functional currency-equivalent proceeds expected to be received from the
forecasted issuance of foreign currency-denominated debt eligible for designation as the hedged
transaction in a cash flow hedge of foreign currency risk?
PwC response
No. An anticipated foreign currency borrowing is not a transaction that qualifies for hedge accounting
of foreign currency risk. The variation in functional currency-equivalent proceeds that a reporting
entity will receive upon borrowing the funds at a future date does not present an earnings exposure
because changes in exchange rates from hedge inception to the borrowing date will only impact the
initial measurement of the liability. The repayment of this amount will not impact earnings.
Question DH 8-6 asks if a reporting entity can hedge the foreign currency risk in the forecasted
transactions of a foreign subsidiary.
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Foreign currency hedges
Question DH 8-6
Can a reporting entity hedge the foreign currency risk in the forecasted earnings of a foreign
subsidiary?
PwC response
No. The forecasted earnings (or net income) of a foreign subsidiary is not permitted to be the hedged
item; ASC 815 prohibits hedge accounting for hedges of future earnings. A reporting entity may
designate (1) a net investment in a foreign operation or (2) royalty payments that are to be received
from a subsidiary as the hedged item. See DH 8.6 for information on net investment hedges.
Question DH 8-7 asks if a reporting entity can hedge the foreign currency risk associated with a
forecasted intercompany dividend.
Question DH 8-7
Can a reporting entity hedge the foreign currency risk associated with a forecasted intercompany
dividend?
PwC response
No. The intercompany dividend does not present an earnings exposure so it is not eligible to be a
hedged item.
Question DH 8-8 discusses if a foreign subsidiary can hedge its forecasted foreign currency-
denominated operating costs.
Question DH 8-8
A parent company and foreign subsidiary both have a US dollar functional currency. The foreign
subsidiary’s sales and cost of sales are denominated in US dollars, while all other operating costs are
denominated in the local foreign currency. Can the foreign subsidiary hedge its forecasted foreign
currency-denominated operating costs?
PwC response
Yes. The local-currency operating costs are considered denominated in a foreign currency since the
functional currency of the foreign subsidiary is the US dollar. The forecasted operating costs may need
to be segregated into specific forecasted transactions (e.g., payments of rent, salaries, and similar
specific costs) to meet the qualifying criteria for cash flow hedge accounting (e.g., specific
identification, probability, high effectiveness), but these forecasted foreign currency-denominated
transactions are eligible to be hedged.
Question DH 8-9 asks if a specified amount of foreign currency-denominated sales can be hedged.
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Foreign currency hedges
Question DH 8-9
Can a reporting entity hedge a specified amount of foreign currency-denominated sales (e.g., 10
million euro in sales)?
PwC response
Yes. A reporting entity can designate a specified amount of foreign currency-denominated sales as the
hedged item in a cash flow hedge of the foreign currency risk in foreign currency-denominated sales.
This differs from cash flow hedges of nonfinancial risks, which require that the hedged item be a
specified number of units sold rather than a specified currency amount.
When a forecasted foreign currency purchase or sale will be made on credit (i.e., a payable or
receivable will be created by the sale), a reporting entity can choose to hedge the foreign currency risk
to the date the sale will occur or to the date the foreign currency payable or receivable will be settled.
Hedging to the settlement date of the payable or receivable allows a reporting entity to designate one
overall cash flow hedging relationship rather than designating separate cash flow hedging
relationships of (1) the forecasted purchase/sale and (2) payment of the payable/receivable (which
would require dedesignating and redesignating the hedging instrument).
When a reporting entity chooses to hedge to the date the sale will occur, changes in the fair value of the
hedging derivative should be recorded in OCI until the sales date; that amount should be reclassified
into earnings as the hedged transaction impacts earnings (in the same income statement line item).
A reporting entity can decide to assess hedge effectiveness either (1) based on the forward price or (2)
based on the spot price. If a reporting entity chooses the spot method, it would generally elect to
amortize the spot-forward difference over the life of the hedge. See DH 8.3.1.1 for information on
excluded components.
Example DH 8-1 in DH 8.4.4 illustrates the accounting for this type of a hedging relationship.
A reporting entity may use a single forward contract to hedge the foreign currency risk associated with
a forecasted foreign currency purchase or sale through to the settlement date of the payable or
receivable. ASC 815-20-25-34 through ASC 815-20-25-36 permits a reporting entity to designate such
a forward in a single cash flow hedging relationship of the variability attributable to foreign currency
risk related to the settlement of a foreign currency-denominated receivable or payable resulting from a
forecasted transaction on credit.
This type of hedging relationship may have been more beneficial before the issuance of the new
hedging guidance because the longer hedge period together with a forward to forward hedge
designation minimized earnings volatility when compared to recording the change in the spot-to-
forward difference in earnings. It may not be applied as often now that a reporting entity can elect to
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Foreign currency hedges
amortize the spot-to-forward difference when the forward points are excluded from the assessment of
hedge effectiveness.
ASC 815-30-35-9 provides guidance with respect to this type of hedging relationship.
a. The gain or loss on the derivative instrument that is included in the assessment of hedge
effectiveness is reported in other comprehensive income during the period before the forecasted
purchase or sale.
b. The functional currency interest rate implicit in the hedging relationship as a result of entering
into the forward contract is used to determine the amount of cost or income to be ascribed to each
period of the hedging relationship….
c. For forecasted sales on credit, the amount of cost or income ascribed to each forecasted period is
reclassified from other comprehensive income to earnings on the date of the sale. For forecasted
purchases on credit, the amount of cost or income ascribed to each forecasted period is reclassified
from other comprehensive income to earnings in the same period or periods during which the
asset acquired affects earnings. The reclassification from other comprehensive income to earnings
of the amount of cost or income ascribed to each forecasted period is based on the guidance in
paragraphs 815-30-35-38 through 35-41.
d. The income or cost ascribed to each period encompassed within the periods of the recognized
foreign-currency-denominated receivable or payable is reclassified from other comprehensive
income to earnings at the end of each reporting period.
See examples in DH 8.4.4. Example DH 8-2 illustrates this strategy when hedge effectiveness is
assessed based on forward rates and Example DH 8-3 illustrates this strategy when hedge
effectiveness is assessed based on spot rates.
Foreign currency cash flow hedges are accounted for in the same way as other cash flow hedges under
ASC 815. The hedging derivative is recorded at fair value; changes in the fair value of the hedging
derivative are recorded in OCI and reclassified into earnings as the hedged transaction impacts
earnings (in the same income statement line item). If a reporting entity elects to exclude a component
of the change in fair value of the hedging instrument (e.g., time value of an option) from the
assessment of effectiveness, the fair value attributable to the excluded component may be recognized
currently in earnings or included in OCI and amortized over the life of the hedging instrument. See DH
8.3.1.1 for information on excluding components.
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Foreign currency hedges
8.4.3.1 Accounting for a cash flow hedge of foreign currency-denominated assets or liabilities
When the hedged item in a highly effective cash flow hedge is a recognized foreign-currency-
denominated asset or liability, ASC 815 requires the following accounting at each reporting period:
□ The hedged item is measured based on the current spot rate, as required by ASC 830, and the
resulting transaction gain or loss is recorded in earnings
□ The hedging instrument is measured at fair value and the entire gain or loss is initially recorded in
OCI
□ An amount equal to the transaction gain or loss on the hedged item is transferred from OCI to
earnings to offset the transaction gain or loss recorded in earnings
When a forward contract is designated as the hedging instrument in a cash flow hedge of a foreign
currency-denominated asset or liability, the different bases for measuring the forward contract (based
on forward rates) and the asset or liability (based on spot rates) give rise to a mismatch.
When noninterest-bearing assets or liabilities, such as trade receivables and payables, are hedged with
a forward contract, the spot-forward difference should be amortized; how it is amortized depends on
whether it is excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness. If the spot-forward difference is
excluded, the difference should be recognized in earnings using a systematic and rational amortization
method over the life of the hedging instrument. When the spot-forward difference is not treated as an
excluded component, the difference should be recognized using the interest method. See DH 8.3.1.1 for
information on excluding components from the effectiveness assessment of a foreign currency hedge.
Some reporting entities decide to forgo hedge accounting and elect to simply “economically hedge”
noninterest-bearing assets or liabilities, particularly short-term trade payables and receivables (i.e.,
not designate the derivative as a hedge). In those cases, the derivative is measured at fair value each
reporting period, with all changes in fair value recorded in earnings. The receivable or payable is
measured at the spot exchange rate (as required by ASC 830) and the resulting transaction gain or loss
is recorded in earnings.
Example DH 8-1, Example DH 8-2, Example DH 8-3, Example DH 8-4 and Example DH 8-5 illustrate
the accounting for foreign currency cash flow hedges.
EXAMPLE DH 8-1
Cash flow hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from forecasted foreign currency sales
USA Corp forecasts that it will sell 12 million euro (EUR) of its primary product to European
customers in six months. Payment will be made at the date of sale. The sales are not firmly committed,
but historical experience and current sales forecasts indicate that the sales are probable.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp enters into a six-month foreign currency forward contract to
deliver EUR and receive USD to hedge a portion of its exposure to euro sales. The foreign exchange
forward contract has the following terms:
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Foreign currency hedges
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp documents its designation of the forward contract as a cash flow
hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from the forecasted euro sales.
USA Corp assesses the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 and concludes that the hedging relationship is
expected to be perfectly effective under the critical terms match method of assessing effectiveness as
follows:
□ The forward is for the sale of the same quantity, the same currency, and at the same time as the
hedged forecasted sale; the critical terms of the forward and the hedged item are identical
□ Hedge effectiveness will be assessed based on changes in the forward price of the currency
The following table summarizes the exchange rates during the hedging relationship.
Date Spot exchange rate Forward exchange rate to March 31, 20X2
September 30, 20X1 USD 0.84 = EUR 1 USD 0.83 = EUR 1
December 31, 20X1 USD 0.81 = EUR 1 USD 0.805 = EUR 1
March 31, 20X2 USD 0.79 = EUR 1 —
The following table shows the fair values of the forward contract, which are based on the changes in
forward rates (discounting to net present value has been ignored for simplicity).
Analysis
There is no entry required to record the forward contract at inception of the hedge because it is an at-
market forward with a fair value of zero.
Since the hedging relationship meets the requirements for the critical terms match method of
assessing effectiveness, and assuming USA Corp has monitored the hedging relationship each quarter
and noted no changes, USA Corp can assume that the hedging relationship is perfectly effective.
USA Corp would record the following entry on December 31, 20X1 to record the change in fair value of
the forward contract in OCI.
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Foreign currency hedges
USA Corp would record the following entries when the forecasted sales occur and forward contract
matures on March 31, 20X2.
Even though there was an unfavorable change in exchange rates that reduced the functional currency-
equivalent sales proceeds received, USA Corp’s sales in US dollars were fixed at USD 8,300,000 (USD
7,900,000 sales + USD 400,000 gain on forward contract) equal to the EUR 10,000,000 converted to
USD at the forward rate at inception through the hedge.
EXAMPLE DH 8-2
Cash flow hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from forecasted foreign currency sales on credit
(hedge through payment of receivable, based on change in entire fair value)
USA Corp forecasts that it will sell 12 million euro (EUR) of its primary product to European
customers in six months. Instead of receiving cash for the sales on March 31, 20X2 (the sales date),
USA Corp will record an account receivable for the sale, which it expects the customers to pay on April
30, 20X2. The sales are not firmly committed, but historical experience and current sales forecasts
indicate that the sales are probable.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp enters into a seven-month foreign currency forward contract to
deliver EUR and receive USD to hedge its foreign currency exposure resulting from the forecasted sale
and the cash flows from the euro-denominated account receivable. The foreign exchange forward
contract has the following terms:
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Foreign currency hedges
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp documents its designation of the forward contract as a cash flow
hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from the forecasted euro sales that includes the variability of
the functional currency-equivalent cash flow from collection of the euro-denominated account
receivable. USA Corp decides to assess the effectiveness of the hedge based on changes in the entire
fair value of the forward contract.
USA Corp elects to attribute the forward points to the forecasted sale portion and resulting receivable
using the pro rata method described in ASC 815-30-35-9 and Example 18 in ASC 815-30-55-106
through ASC 815-30-55-112. To do this, USA Corp:
□ Calculates the forward points as USD 120,000, which is the difference between the functional
currency-equivalent amount at (1) the spot rate at inception and (2) the derivative’s forward rate
□ Determines the number of days (1) between the inception of the derivative and the invoice date
(182 days) and (2) between the invoice date and the payment date (30 days), a total of 212 days
□ Allocates the forward points to each period: (1) between the inception of the derivative and the
invoice date (182 days/212 days × USD 120,000 = USD 103,019) and (2) between the invoice date
and the payment date (30 days/212 days × USD 120,000 = USD 16,981)
USA Corp assesses the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 and concludes that the hedging relationship is
expected to be perfectly effective under the critical terms match method of assessing effectiveness as
follows:
□ The forward is for the purchase of the same quantity, the same currency, and at the same time as
the hedged forecasted sale; the critical terms of the forward and the hedged item are identical
□ Hedge effectiveness will be assessed based on changes in the forward price of the currency
The following table summarizes the exchange rates during the hedging relationship.
Date Spot exchange rate Forward exchange rate to April 30, 20X2
September 30, 20X1 USD 0.84 = EUR 1 USD 0.828 = 1 EUR
December 31, 20X1 USD 0.81 = EUR 1 USD 0.803 = 1 EUR
March 31, 20X2 USD 0.79 = EUR 1 USD 0.788 = 1 EUR
April 30, 20X2 USD 0.78 = EUR 1 —
The following table shows the fair values of the forward contract, which are based on the changes in
forward rates (discounting to net present value has been ignored for simplicity).
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Foreign currency hedges
Analysis
There is no entry required to record the forward contract at inception of the hedge because it is an at-
market forward with a fair value of zero.
Since the hedging relationship meets the requirements for the critical terms match method of
assessing effectiveness, assuming USA Corp has monitored the hedging relationship each quarter and
noted no changes, USA Corp can assume that the hedging relationship is perfectly effective.
USA Corp would record the following entry on December 31, 20X1 to record the change in fair value of
the forward contract.
USA Corp would record the following entries when the forecasted sale occurs on March 31, 20X2.
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Foreign currency hedges
USD 8,400,000 sales (USD 7,900,000 sales + USD 500,000 gain on forward contract attributable to
changes in the spot rate) equals the EUR 10,000,000 converted to USD at the spot rate at inception of
the hedge. Further adjusting sales for USD 103,019 cost of the hedge results in sales of USD 8,296,981.
USA Corp would record the following entries on April 30, 20X2.
To record the transaction loss for the period based on the change in the spot rate
(EUR 10,000,000 × USD 0.78 = EUR 1) – (EUR 10,000,000 × USD 0.79 = EUR 1)
To reclassify the allocable cost of the forward contract from the sale date to the April cash
receipt date from accumulated other comprehensive income into earnings
EXAMPLE DH 8-3
Cash flow hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from forecasted foreign-currency sales (hedge
through payment of receivable, forward points excluded from assessment of effectiveness)
USA Corp forecasts that it will sell 12 million euro (EUR) of its primary product to European
customers in six months. Instead of receiving cash for the sales on March 31, 20X2 (the sales date),
USA Corp will record an account receivable for the sale, which it expects the customers to pay on April
30, 20X2. The sales are not firmly committed, but historical experience and current sales forecasts
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Foreign currency hedges
indicate that the sales are probable. USA Corp excludes the forward points from the assessment of
hedge effectiveness.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp documents its designation of the forward contract as a cash flow
hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from the forecasted euro sales through the collection date of
the account receivable. However, for this hedging relationship, USA Corp decides to assess the
effectiveness of the hedge based on changes in the spot exchange rate. Therefore, the change in fair
value of the forward contract attributable to changes in the spot exchange rate is recorded in OCI
through the date of sale. USA Corp quantifies the amount of forward points attributable to the forward
contract between September 30, 20X1 and April 30, 20X2 and amortizes that amount to earnings
using a systematic and rational method over the hedge period.
USA Corp assess the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 and concludes that the hedging relationship is
expected to be perfectly effective under the critical terms match method of assessing effectiveness as
follows:
□ The forward is for the purchase of the same quantity, the same currency, and at the same time as
the hedged forecasted payment; the critical terms of the forward and the hedged item are identical
The following table summarizes the exchange rates during the hedging relationship.
The following table shows the fair values of the forward contract, which are based on changes in
forward rates (discounting to net present value has been ignored for simplicity).
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Foreign currency hedges
Analysis
There is no entry required to record the forward contract at inception of the hedge because the forward
contract is an at-market forward with a fair value of zero.
Since the hedging relationship meets the requirements for the critical terms match method of
assessing effectiveness, and assuming USA Corp has monitored the hedging relationship each quarter
and noted no changes, USA Corp can assume that the hedging relationship is perfectly effective.
USA Corp would record the following entries on December 31, 20X1 to record the change in fair value
of the forward contract and amortization of the forward points.
USA Corp would record the following entries when the forecasted sale occurs on March 31, 20X2.
To record the amortization of the forward points (USD 120,000 × 90 days / 212 days)
USD 8,400,000 sales (USD 7,900,000 sales + USD 500,000 gain on forward contract attributable to
changes in the spot rate) equals the EUR 10,000,000 converted to USD at the spot rate at inception of
the hedge.
USA Corp would record the following entries on April 30, 20X2.
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Foreign currency hedges
To record the transaction loss for the period based on the change in the spot rate
(EUR 10 million × USD 0.79 = EUR 1) – (EUR 10,000,000 × USD 0.78 = EUR 1)
EXAMPLE DH 8-4
Use of foreign currency option to hedge forecasted foreign sales
USA Corp forecasts that it will sell 12 million euro (EUR) of its primary product to European
customers in six months, on March 31, 20X1. Payment will be made at the date of sale. The sale is not
firmly committed, but historical experience and sales forecasts indicate that the sales are probable.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp enters into a six-month foreign currency put option on EUR to
hedge a portion of its exposure to euro sales.
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Foreign currency hedges
The option has a strike price that is at the money and the option premium reflects only the option’s
time value.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp documents its designation of the put option as a cash flow hedge of
foreign currency risk in the forecasted euro sales below the strike price. It decides to exclude the time
value of the option from the assessment of effectiveness; effectiveness will be assessed based on the
option’s intrinsic value. USA Corp assesses hedge effectiveness at inception of the hedging relationship
and on an ongoing basis and determines that the hedging relationship is highly effective.
The USD 20,000 of option time value will be systematically amortized and included in earnings.
The following table summarizes the exchange rates, intrinsic values, and fair values of the put option
during the hedging relationship.
Since the spot exchange rate on the date the option expires (March 31, 20X2) is below the option’s
strike price, USA Corp will exercise the put option.
Analysis
USA Corp would record the following entry on September 30, 20X1.
USA Corp would record the following entries on December 31, 20X1.
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Foreign currency hedges
USA Corp would record the following entries when the forecasted sales occur and the put option
expires on March 31, 20X2.
USD 8,400,000 sales (USD 7,900,000 sales + USD 500,000 gain on put option attributable to
changes in the spot rate) equals the EUR 10,000,000 converted to USD at the spot rate at inception of
the hedge. Further adjusting sales for USD 20,000 cost of the hedge results in sales of USD 8,380,000
across all the reporting periods.
EXAMPLE DH 8-5
Cash flow hedge of foreign-currency-denominated debt with a fixed-for-fixed cross-currency swap
On January 1, 20X1, USA Corp issues 1,000,000 in euro (EUR) denominated debt. The debt matures
on December 31, 20X1 and bears interest at a fixed rate of 8% per year. Concurrent with the debt
issuance, USA Corp enters into a cross-currency swap to hedge the foreign currency risk associated
with the debt. The swap has the following terms:
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Foreign currency hedges
All terms of the swap match those of the foreign currency debt, including the notional amount and
interest payment dates. By entering into the fixed-for-fixed cross-currency interest rate swap, USA
Corp fixed the USD interest expense throughout the life of the debt and the amount due in USD at
maturity.
On January 1, 20X1, USA Corp documents its designation of the fixed-for-fixed cross-currency swap as
a cash flow hedge of the changes in the cash flows of the foreign currency-denominated debt (both
interest and principal) resulting from foreign exchange risk.
USA Corp assesses the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 and concludes that the hedging relationship is
expected to be perfectly effective under the critical terms match method of assessing effectiveness as
follows:
□ The critical terms of the debt and the cross-currency swap are identical (i.e., notional, interest
rate, cash flow date)
□ Hedge effectiveness will be assessed based on changes in the total fair value of the swap
The following table summarizes the spot exchange rate and the fair value of the fixed-for-fixed cross-
currency swap (excluding the accrued swap interest).
For purposes of this example, assume USA Corp only issues annual financial statements. In addition,
for simplicity, interest expense (on the debt and swap) is recorded at the period-end spot rate rather
than the average rate over the reporting period.
Analysis
USA Corp would record the following entry upon the issuance of the debt on January 1,20X1. There is
no entry required to record the swap at inception of the hedge because it has a fair value of zero.
Since the hedging relationship meets the requirements for the critical terms match method of
assessing effectiveness, and assuming USA Corp has monitored the hedging relationship each quarter
and noted no changes, USA Corp can assume that the hedging relationship is perfectly effective.
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Foreign currency hedges
USA Corp would record the following entries on December 31, 20X1.
The USD 50,000 loss on the swap offsets the USD 50,000 transaction gain on the foreign currency-
denominated debt. In addition, the swap accrual reduced the total interest expense on the foreign
currency-denominated debt to USD 60,200 (USD 64,800 interest expense – USD 4,600 swap
accrual), which is synthetically equal to paying 7% on USD 860,000 of debt.
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Foreign currency hedges
If the hedged item is an unrecognized firm commitment, the hedging instrument can be either a
derivative or nonderivative instrument. For all other fair value hedges, the hedging instrument must
be a derivative.
To qualify for fair value foreign currency hedge accounting, the qualifying criteria for all other fair
value hedges must be met, in addition to those applicable to all foreign currency hedges (discussed in
DH 8.3). The criteria applicable to all fair value hedges are discussed in DH 6.2 for financial items and
DH 7.2 for nonfinancial items.
Common examples of foreign currency fair value hedges include the hedge of a foreign-currency-
denominated asset or liability or unrecognized firm commitment with an unrelated party, including a
firm commitment to purchase a nonfinancial asset. Question DH 8-10 illustrates this.
Question DH 8-10
Can a reporting entity designate the change in fair value of a nonfinancial asset (e.g., inventory or fixed
asset) due to changes in foreign currency rates as the hedged risk in a fair value hedge?
PwC response
No. ASC 815-20-25-12(e) requires the designated risk in a fair value hedge of a nonfinancial asset or
liability to be the change in the fair value of the entire hedged asset or liability; the change in fair value
due to foreign currency rates cannot be hedged separately.
Foreign currency fair value hedges are accounted for in the same way as other fair value hedges under
ASC 815. The hedging derivative is recorded at fair value with changes in the fair value of the
derivative recorded in earnings. The change in the fair value of the hedged item due to changes in the
hedged risk (or risks) is also recorded in earnings, assuming the hedging relationship is considered
highly effective. If a reporting entity elects to exclude a component of the change in fair value of the
hedging instrument (e.g., time value of an option) from the assessment of effectiveness, the fair value
attributable to the excluded component may be recognized currently in earnings or included in OCI
and amortized over the life of the hedging instrument. See DH 8.3.1.1 for information on excluding
components.
When the hedged item is a foreign currency-denominated asset or liability, the reporting entity is
required to remeasure it based on spot exchange rates in accordance with ASC 830. When a reporting
entity hedges multiple risks, it should first adjust the carrying amount of the hedged item for changes
attributable to hedged risks other than foreign currency, and then record any subsequent transaction
gain or loss in accordance with ASC 830.
When a forward contract is used as the hedging instrument in a fair value hedge of a foreign currency-
denominated asset or liability, there are different measurement criteria for the hedged item (based on
spot rates) and the hedging derivative (based on forward rates). The gains or losses on the hedging
instrument will not completely offset the losses or gains on the hedged item due to the spot-to-forward
differences. This mismatch can be reduced if a reporting entity elects to exclude the spot-to-forward
difference from its assessment of effectiveness and elects to recognize changes in fair value
attributable to the excluded component in OCI.
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Foreign currency hedges
When a nonderivative is used as the hedging instrument in a fair value hedge of an unrecognized firm
commitment, the gain or loss recognized in earnings is the foreign currency transaction gain or loss
recognized in accordance with ASC 830. This amount is calculated as the difference between (1) the
spot rate at designation of the hedge (or the previous balance sheet date) and (2) the spot rate at the
current reporting date. The hedging instrument itself may not be measured at fair value; other
accounting literature would continue to be used to determine its carrying value.
Example DH 8-6 and Example DH 8-7 illustrate the accounting for foreign currency fair value hedges.
EXAMPLE DH 8-6
Fair value hedge of a firm commitment to pay foreign currency using a nonderivative instrument as
the hedging instrument
In connection with the renovation of one of its plants, USA Corp enters into a firm commitment with a
foreign supplier to purchase equipment for 10 million euro (EUR). The equipment is deliverable on
March 31, 20X2; payment is due on June 30, 20X2.
USA Corp has a EUR 10 million receivable from a customer due June 30, 20X2.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp documents its designation of the receivable as the hedging
instrument in a fair value hedge of foreign currency risk resulting from the firm commitment to
purchase equipment in euro.
USA Corp assesses the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 and concludes that the hedging relationship is
expected to be perfectly effective under the critical terms match method of assessing effectiveness
because the critical terms of the hedging instrument (receivable) and the hedged transaction are
identical (i.e., same notional, same date, same currency).
The following table summarizes the exchange rates during the hedging relationship.
The following table shows the change in the USD value of the receivable and the firm commitment.
Change in value
Date Change in value of the receivable of the firm commitment
September 30, 20X1 — —
December 31, 20X1 USD 300,000 USD 300,000
March 31, 20X2 USD 200,000 USD 200,000
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Foreign currency hedges
Analysis
There is no entry required to record the change in fair value of the firm commitment during the period
ended September 30, 20X1 because there was no change in spot rates from the time of designation.
Since the hedging relationship meets the requirements for the critical terms match method of
assessing effectiveness, and assuming USA Corp has monitored the hedging relationship each quarter
and noted no changes, USA Corp can assume that the hedging relationship is perfectly effective.
USA Corp would record the following entries on December 31, 20X1.
USA Corp would record the following entries when the equipment is delivered on March 31, 20X2.
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Foreign currency hedges
USA Corp would record the following entries when the account payable is settled on June 30, 20X2.
EXAMPLE DH 8-7
Fair value hedge of the foreign currency risk in an available-for-sale debt security
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp purchases a British pound sterling (GBP)-denominated debt
security for GBP 100,000 and classifies it as available for sale. On that same date, USA Corp enters
into a forward contract to sell GBP 100,000 on December 31, 20X1, at the current exchange rate of
USD 1.49 = GBP 1 to hedge the impact of currency fluctuations on the available-for-sale security over
the next three months.
On September 30, 20X1, USA Corp designates the forward contract as a fair value hedge of the GBP-
denominated debt security and decides to assess the effectiveness of the hedge based on changes in the
spot exchange rate. Therefore, changes in the fair value of the available-for-sale debt security due to
changes in the spot exchange rate will be recorded in earnings, along with the entire change in the fair
value of the forward contract.
USA Corp assesses the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 and concludes that the hedging relationship is
expected to be perfectly effective under the critical terms match method of assessing effectiveness as
follows:
□ The critical terms of the forward and the hedged transaction are identical (i.e., notional, date,
currency)
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Foreign currency hedges
USA Corp elects to exclude the changes in the difference between the forward rate and the spot rate
from the effectiveness assessment and decides to record this change in earnings.
The following table summarizes the exchange rates and fair values of the forward contract at inception
and conclusion of the hedging relationship.
The following table shows the change in the fair value of the available-for-sale debt security.
USA Corp has a policy of segregating the impact of foreign currency risk by multiplying the opening
fair value of the foreign currency-denominated security by the change in exchange rates. The purpose
of this calculation is to determine what portion of any increase (or decrease) in the fair value of the
security is related to change in the security price and what portion is related to changes in exchange
rates. USA Corp performs this calculation as follows:
To calculate the change in the fair value of the available-for-sale security attributable to risks that are
not hedged, USA Corp performs the following calculation:
The total change in the fair value of the GBP-denominated security is USD (7,000), which comprises a
USD 20,000 foreign currency loss and a USD 13,000 gain from other sources (e.g., interest rates and
credit).
Analysis
There is no entry to record the forward contract because it is an at-market forward with a fair value of
zero.
Since the hedging relationship meets the requirements for the critical terms match method of
assessing effectiveness, and assuming USA Corp has monitored the hedging relationship each quarter
and noted no changes, USA Corp can assume that the hedging relationship is perfectly effective.
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Foreign currency hedges
To record the purchase of the available-for-sale debt security on September 30, 20X1, USA Corp would
record the following entry.
USA Corp would record the following entries on December 31, 20X1.
If USA Corp had hedged the available-for-sale security for a longer period and used the critical terms
match method of assessing hedge effectiveness, it would have to rebalance the hedge ratio given its
policy of measuring the foreign currency gain/loss component based on the foreign currency fair value
as of the beginning of each reporting period.
Some reporting entities choose to determine the gain or loss attributable to foreign currency risk based
on the foreign currency cost basis. Under this approach, the foreign currency gain or loss attributable
to the unrealized holding gain or loss would not be considered to be a part of the hedging relationship,
which would allow the hedging relationship to be designated on a static basis.
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Foreign currency hedges
dissimilar assets and liabilities, since the investment is viewed as a single unit of account with no
maturity.
To qualify for net investment hedge accounting, the qualifying criteria for all other foreign currency
hedges, discussed in DH 8.3, must be met. These criteria require that the party to the hedge be either
(1) the operating unit that has the foreign currency exposure or (2) another member of the
consolidated group that has the same functional currency as the operating unit (provided there are no
intervening entities with a different functional currency).
Either a derivative or nonderivative can be the hedging instrument in a net investment hedge.
Question DH 8-11, Question DH 8-12, and Question DH 8-13 illustrate this.
Question DH 8-11
USA Corp has two subsidiaries: Nikkei Corp (based in Japan) and Aussie Corp (based in Australia).
The functional currency of each subsidiary is the local currency in its respective country. Aussie Corp
has Japanese yen-denominated debt. Can USA Corp designate Aussie Corp’s Japanese yen-
denominated debt as a hedge of USA Corp’s net investment in Nikkei Corp?
PwC response
No. Since (1) USA Corp (the operating unit with the foreign currency exposure) is not a party to the
hedging instrument (i.e., the Japanese yen-denominated debt) and (2) USA Corp and Aussie Corp do
not have the same functional currency, the requirements in ASC 815-20-25-30 have not been met.
Question DH 8-12
Can a reporting entity designate a net investment hedge of its investment in a foreign equity method
investee?
PwC response
Yes. Although an equity method investment is not eligible to be a hedged item with respect to fair
value hedges and cash flow hedges, a reporting entity may hedge the foreign currency risk of its equity
method investments.
Question DH 8-13
Reporting entities that do not assert indefinite reinvestment of a net investment must recognize a
deferred tax liability for any applicable foreign withholding taxes on historical earnings and profits.
Since the withholding tax obligation is typically denominated in the currency of the foreign entity,
does this deferred tax liability meet the definition of a financial instrument that is eligible to be
designated as a hedge of a net investment in a foreign operation?
PwC response
No. Only a nonderivative financial instrument can be designated as a hedging instrument in a net
investment hedge (provided the qualifying criteria are met). A financial instrument is defined as cash,
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Foreign currency hedges
Because the withholding tax does not meet the definition of a financial instrument it would not qualify
to be designated as a hedging instrument in a net investment hedge.
As discussed in DH 9.9, there are two methods a reporting entity can use to assess the effectiveness of
a net investment hedge: (1) based on spot rates and (2) based on forward rates. A reporting entity must
document the method it chooses and consistently apply it. The forward method may not be used when
the hedging instrument is a nonderivative.
Unlike fair value and cash flow hedges, ASC 815 does not prescribe specific documentation criteria for
hedges of net investments in foreign operations. However, the hedge designation documentation of a
net investment hedge should be prepared with the same detail as other types of hedges, which is
discussed in DH 5.7. Additionally, a reporting entity should document the elections specific to net
investment hedges, such as:
□ Whether effectiveness will be assessed based on the beginning, ending or some other balance of
the net investment
□ How frequently any redesignation will be made pursuant to ASC 815-35-35-27 and Example 1 in
ASC 815-35-55-1
□ Whether hedge effectiveness will be assessed using the spot or forward method
ASC 815-20-25-71(d) clarifies that a reporting entity is not permitted to designate a cross-currency
interest rate swap that has one fixed-rate leg and one floating-rate leg as the hedging instrument in a
net investment hedge because such a swap includes interest rate risk and ASC 815 generally prohibits
a compound derivative that involves an underlying other than foreign currency risk to be designated as
the hedging instrument in a net investment hedge. However, fixed-for-fixed and floating-for-floating
cross-currency interest rate swaps are permitted. A cross-currency interest rate swap that has either
two floating legs or two fixed legs has a fair value that is driven primarily by changes in foreign
exchange rates rather than by changes in interest rates. Therefore, foreign currency risk, rather than
interest rate risk, is the dominant risk exposure in such a swap.
ASC 815 requires changes in the fair value of a hedging derivative or the foreign currency transaction
gain or loss on a nonderivative hedging instrument to be reported in the same manner as the related
translation adjustments (i.e., recorded in CTA), except for any permitted excluded components.
As it pertains to excluded components (i.e., spot-to-forward difference) a reporting entity can elect to
record the related cost in one of two ways:
□ The initial value attributable to the excluded component is amortized to income over the life of the
hedging instrument; any difference between the change in fair value of the hedging instrument
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Foreign currency hedges
attributable to the excluded component and the amounts recognized in earnings is recorded in
CTA.
□ The change in fair value attributable to the excluded component is included in earnings over the
life of the hedging instrument.
If the hedge is discontinued, the unamortized amount remains in CTA until the net investment is
disposed of or substantially liquidated. See FX 8.4 for information on the disposition of a foreign
entity.
ASC 830-30-45-13 through ASC 830-30-45-15 provide guidance on when a reporting entity should
include the CTA account balance attributable to a foreign entity in an impairment assessment. It
requires a reporting entity to include the CTA balance related to any gain or loss from an effective
hedge of the net investment as part of the carrying amount of the net investment when evaluating that
investment for impairment. See FX 8.5 for additional information on impairment calculations that
should consider CTA.
Foreign currency transactions under ASC 830 result in transaction gains and losses that are recorded
in earnings to reflect current exchange rates. A reporting entity may designate intercompany balances
or the forecasted cash flows as the hedged item in foreign currency fair value or cash flow hedges,
respectively, so long as the criteria in ASC 815 are fulfilled. Forecasted intercompany transactions
(e.g., forecasted foreign currency-denominated sales to a foreign subsidiary) are also eligible for hedge
accounting under ASC 815.
As with other highly effective foreign currency cash flow hedging relationships, when the hedged item
is an intercompany foreign currency-denominated asset or liability, ASC 815 requires the following
accounting at each reporting period:
□ The hedged item is measured based on the current spot rate, as required by ASC 830, and the
resulting transaction gain or loss is recorded in earnings
□ The hedging instrument is measured at fair value and the entire gain or loss is initially recorded in
OCI
□ An amount equal to the transaction gain or loss on the hedged item is transferred from OCI to
earnings to offset the transaction gain or loss recorded in earnings
Example 14 in ASC 815-30-55-86 through ASC 815-30-55-90 addresses when the amounts in
accumulated other comprehensive income related to intercompany transactions should be reclassified
in earnings. It concludes that for consolidated statements, the amounts in OCI should be reclassified
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Foreign currency hedges
as earnings when the sale to an unrelated third party occurs; consolidated earnings are not affected
until that time. For a hedge of the foreign currency cash flows of an intercompany purchase of
inventory, the amounts accumulated in other comprehensive income would be released and included
in cost of sales only when the related inventory is sold to third parties.
Question DH 8-14 and Question DH 8-15 discusses whether an intercompany hedging relationship
would qualify for hedge accounting in the separate, standalone financial statements of a subsidiary
and the consolidated statements of the parent.
Question DH 8-14
USA Corp has a subsidiary, Deutsche AG, which is a euro-functional currency entity. Deutsche AG
enters into a firm commitment with a third party, which results in cash inflows of British pound
sterling. Deutsche AG also has an intercompany note payable to USA Corp denominated in British
pound sterling. Deutsche AG designates the British pound sterling intercompany note payable as a fair
value hedge of its firm commitment.
Would the hedging relationship qualify for hedge accounting in the separate, standalone financial
statements of Deutsche AG?
PwC response
Yes. A nonderivative financial instrument that may give rise to a foreign currency transaction gain or
loss can be designated as the hedging instrument in a fair value hedge of an unrecognized firm
commitment attributable to foreign currency exchange rates. Additionally, intercompany transactions
are considered external third-party transactions for the purposes of applying hedge accounting in the
subsidiary’s separate, standalone financial statements because those transactions are with a party
external to the reporting entity in those standalone financial statements.
Question DH 8-15
USA Corp has a subsidiary, Deutsche AG, which is a euro-functional currency entity. Deutsche AG
enters into a firm commitment with a third party, which results in cash inflows of British pound
sterling. Deutsche AG also has an intercompany note payable to USA Corp, denominated in British
pound sterling. Deutsche AG designates the British pound sterling intercompany note payable as a fair
value hedge of its firm commitment.
Would the hedging relationship qualify for hedge accounting in the consolidated financial statements
of USA Corp?
No. In consolidation, the foreign currency risk has not been hedged, since the foreign currency risk
relating to the transaction (i.e., the firm commitment denominated in British pound sterling) still
remains within the consolidated group. Thus, hedge accounting would not be appropriate in the
consolidated financial statements of USA Corp.
However, as discussed in ASC 815-20-25-60 and ASC 815-20-55-167 through ASC 815-20-55-170, the
hedging relationship may qualify for hedge accounting in the consolidated financial statements if USA
Corp enters into a third-party British pound sterling loan that offsets the foreign exchange exposure of
the intercompany loan.
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Foreign currency hedges
ASC 815-20-25-61
An internal derivative can be a hedging instrument in a foreign currency cash flow hedge of a
forecasted borrowing, purchase, or sale or an unrecognized firm commitment in the consolidated
financial statements only if both of the following conditions are satisfied:
a. From the perspective of the member of the consolidated group using the derivative instrument as
a hedging instrument (the hedging affiliate), the criteria for foreign currency cash flow hedge
accounting otherwise specified in this Section are satisfied.
b. The member of the consolidated group not using the derivative instrument as a hedging
instrument (the issuing affiliate) either:
1. Enters into a derivative instrument with an unrelated third party to offset the exposure that results
from that internal derivative
2. If the conditions in paragraphs 815-20-25-62 through 25-63 are met, enters into derivative
instruments with unrelated third parties that would offset, on a net basis for each foreign
currency, the foreign exchange risk arising from multiple internal derivative instruments. In
complying with this guidance the issuing affiliate could enter into a third-party position with
neither leg of the third-party position being the issuing affiliate’s functional currency to offset its
exposure if the amount of the respective currencies of each leg are equivalent with respect to each
other based on forward exchange rates.
Although the requirement that there be an intercompany derivative contract may seem a formality, it
has important implications. For example, the gain or loss on the third-party hedging contract executed
by the treasury center must be “pushed down” to the hedging unit (i.e., recorded in the foreign entity’s
financial statements). The intercompany derivative does not eliminate in consolidation. At the
treasury center, a gain from the external derivative gets offset by the loss from the intercompany
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Foreign currency hedges
derivative; at the hedging unit, the gain from the intercompany derivative is recorded and not
eliminated in consolidation.
Example DH 8-8 addresses treasury center hedging of foreign currency sales of members of a
consolidated group.
EXAMPLE DH 8-8
Treasury center hedge of foreign-currency sales
USA Corp is a US dollar (USD) functional currency reporting entity. USA Corp has a first-tier
subsidiary (Euro Holding Co) in the United Kingdom that is a British pound sterling (GBP) functional
currency entity. Euro Holding Co has a second-tier subsidiary (Deutsche AG) in Germany that is a
euro (EUR) functional entity. USA Corp has another first-tier subsidiary (Central Treasury Co), which
is a euro functional entity. The following diagram shows the organizational structure of USA Corp.
USA Corp
(USD functional currency)
Deutsche AG
(EUR functional currency)
Central Treasury Co functions as a centralized treasury center for the consolidated group.
Deutsche AG forecasts USD sales and would like to enter into a foreign currency forward contract to
deliver USD and receive EUR to hedge its exposure to USD.
Can Central Treasury Co execute a forward contract with an external party to deliver USD and receive
EUR and designate it as a hedge of the foreign currency risk in Deutsche AG’s USD sales?
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Foreign currency hedges
Analysis
Not without entering into an additional intercompany forward contract. Although Deutsche AG and
Central Treasury Co are both euro-functional currency entities, Central Treasury Co cannot enter into
a foreign currency hedging derivative on behalf of Deutsche AG because there is an intervening
subsidiary that has a different functional currency (Euro Holding Co).
To qualify for hedge accounting, Central Treasury Co and Deutsche AG would have to enter into an
intercompany forward contract under which Deutsche AG delivers USD and receives EUR and Central
Treasury Co receives USD and delivers EUR. For Central Treasury Co, this intercompany forward will
be offset by the forward contract that it enters into with the external party.
Deutsche AG would designate the intercompany derivative as the hedging instrument in a hedge of its
USD sales. Central Treasury Co would carry both the intercompany derivative and the external
forward contract at fair value through earnings (they should approximately offset each other). In the
consolidated financial statements of USA Corp, the remaining hedging relationship would be Deutsche
AG’s hedge of its foreign currency-denominated sales.
A treasury center can aggregate intercompany derivatives executed in the same foreign currency and
then enter into third-party contracts to offset the net exposure (rather than offset each intercompany
derivative contract individually) by currency, provided the conditions in ASC 815-20-25-62 and ASC
815-20-25-63 are met. ASC 815 does not permit the netting of intercompany derivatives that are used
in fair value hedges, net investment hedges, or cash flow hedges of recognized assets and liabilities.
ASC 815-20-25-62
If an issuing affiliate chooses to offset exposure arising from multiple internal derivatives on an
aggregate or net basis, the derivative instruments issued to hedging affiliates shall qualify as cash flow
hedges in the consolidated financial statements only if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
a. The issuing affiliate enters into a derivative instrument with an unrelated third party to offset, on a
net basis for each foreign currency, the foreign exchange risk arising from multiple internal
derivatives.
b. The derivative instrument with the unrelated third party generates equal or closely approximating
gains and losses when compared with the aggregate or net losses and gains generated by the
derivative instruments issued to affiliates.
c. Internal derivatives that are not designated as hedging instruments are excluded from the
determination of the foreign currency exposure on a net basis that is offset by the third-party
derivative instrument. Nonderivative contracts shall not be used as hedging instruments to offset
exposures arising from internal derivatives.
d. Foreign currency exposure that is offset by a single net third-party contract arises from internal
derivatives that mature within the same 31-day period and that involve the same currency
exposure as the net third-party derivative instrument. The offsetting net third-party derivative
instrument related to that group of contracts shall meet all of the following criteria:
8-42
Foreign currency hedges
3. It is entered into within three business days after the designation of the internal derivatives as
hedging instruments.
2. It maintains documentation supporting linkage of each internal derivative and the offsetting
aggregate or net derivative instrument with an unrelated third party.
f. The issuing affiliate does not alter or terminate the offsetting derivative instrument with an
unrelated third party unless the hedging affiliate initiates that action.
ASC 815-20-25-63
If the issuing affiliate alters or terminates any offsetting third-party derivative (which should be rare),
the hedging affiliate shall prospectively cease hedge accounting for the internal derivatives that are
offset by that third-party derivative instrument.
For foreign currency cash flow hedges of recognized assets and liabilities, the treasury center cannot
net its exposures. This prohibition raises the question of whether it is permissible to net exposures
when a forecasted transaction results in the recognition of a resulting foreign currency-denominated
receivable or payable (or the issuance of foreign currency debt) once the forecasted transaction has
occurred. This is discussed in ASC 815-20-25-64.
ASC 815-20-25-64
A member of a consolidated group cannot meet the offsetting criteria by offsetting exposures arising
from multiple internal derivative contracts on a net basis for foreign currency cash flow exposures
related to recognized foreign-currency-denominated assets or liabilities. That prohibition includes
situations in which a recognized foreign-currency-denominated asset or liability in a fair value hedge
or cash flow hedge results from the occurrence of a specifically identified forecasted transaction
initially designated as a cash flow hedge.
Because of this prohibition, a reporting entity that is offsetting net exposures must stop applying
hedge accounting for each intercompany derivative if and when the hedged forecasted transaction
results in the acquisition of a foreign currency-denominated asset or the incurrence of a foreign
currency-denominated liability. If, at that point, the hedging unit wishes to continue the cash flow
hedge or initiate a fair value hedge by using an intercompany derivative, the treasury center must
enter into an offsetting contract with a third party on a “one-for-one” or gross basis (i.e., without
netting any other exposures).
8-43
Foreign currency hedges
In net investment hedges, it is common for a US parent to hedge a foreign net investment on an after-
tax basis when the parent has made a tax assertion that profits will be indefinitely reinvested and not
remitted to the parent. In such a case, this tax assertion allowed the US parent to defer tax on the
related CTA, and accordingly, the US parent would not provide for deferred taxes on the CTA.
For example, assume the notional amount of a hedged net investment in a foreign operation is $1,000.
Due to an assertion that the earnings of the foreign operation will be indefinitely reinvested in the
foreign operation, there is no deferred tax provided on CTA. If the tax rate is 40% and the reporting
entity wants to hedge on an after-tax basis, then the notional amount of the hedging instrument
should be $1,666.67 [$1,000/(1-40%)]. On an after-tax basis, the hedging instrument with $1,666.67
in notional has a notional of $1,000, matching the hedged item. In documenting the hedge, the
documentation should indicate that the hedging instrument serves as a hedge on an after-tax basis.
When a net investment hedge is accounted for on an after-tax basis, gains and losses on the hedging
instrument are recorded in CTA net of tax effects. This is accomplished by having the portion of the
gain or loss on the hedging instrument that exceeds the loss or gain on the hedged item recorded as an
offset of the related tax effects in the period that those tax effects are recognized.
8-44
Chapter 9:
Effectiveness
Effectiveness
For public business entities and financial institutions, effectiveness assessments are required at hedge
inception and periodically thereafter, with an assessment required whenever financial statements or
earnings are reported, and at least every three months. This periodic assessment needs to be
performed on both a prospective basis (to reconfirm forward-looking expectations) and a retrospective
basis (to determine whether the hedging relationship was highly effective).
Hedging relationships do not have to be perfectly effective to qualify for hedge accounting. However,
the extent of effectiveness in achieving the risk management objectives documented at inception of the
hedging relationship must be assessed, both at inception and in each subsequent period. If the initial
assessment of effectiveness demonstrates that the hedge relationship is expected to be highly effective
and the other requirements to apply hedge accounting are met, a reporting entity is eligible to apply
hedge accounting at inception.
In certain limited circumstances specified in ASC 815, some hedging relationships may be considered
perfectly effective, and thus, reporting entities may avoid the need to assess effectiveness
quantitatively, even at hedge inception. In these cases, the guidance specifically identifies criteria that
will allow the derivative to be considered a perfect hedge of the hedged risk, in which case, a
quantitative analysis is not required. See DH 9.3.1.
If the hedging relationship does not qualify for an assumption of perfect effectiveness, the initial
assessment of effectiveness is required to be quantitative. See DH 9.11. However, if certain criteria are
met, subsequent effectiveness assessments may be performed on a qualitative basis. See DH 9.12 for
discussion of (ongoing) qualitative assessments of effectiveness.
ASC 815-20-25-75 requires an expectation that the relationship between a hedging instrument and the
hedged item will be “highly effective” in achieving offsetting changes in fair value or cash flows
attributable to the hedged risk during the period that the hedge is designated.
The more closely the terms of the hedged item and hedging instrument align, the more likely the
hedging relationship will be considered highly effective.
Although having an expectation that the hedging relationship will be highly effective is fundamental to
qualifying for hedge accounting, the term is not explicitly defined. When a quantitative effectiveness
9-1
Effectiveness
assessment is required, the term highly effective has been interpreted in practice to mean that the
change in fair value of the designated portion of the hedging instrument is within 80 to 125% of the
change in the fair value of the designated portion of the hedged item attributable to the risk being
hedged.
Even though qualifying hedging relationships might be highly effective, in many cases, the
effectiveness will not be perfect (i.e., the gains and losses on the hedging instrument will not be
perfectly offset by the losses and gains on the hedged item). High effectiveness does not guarantee that
there will be no earnings volatility.
For a highly effective fair value hedge, any difference between the change in value of the derivative
and the hedged item directly affects earnings since both (1) the entire change in fair value of the
derivative hedging instrument and (2) the change in the fair value of the hedged item (attributable
to the hedged risk) are reflected in earnings for each reporting period, and the two changes may
not perfectly offset each other. For example, in a fair value hedge, if the derivative’s fair value
decreases by $100, but the hedged item’s fair value attributable to the hedged risk increases by
$90, a net loss of $10 will result when gains and losses on both the derivative and the hedged item
are recorded in the income statement.
For a highly effective cash flow hedge, any difference between (1) the change in fair value of the
derivative and (2) the change in fair value of the hedged cash flows attributable to the risk being
hedged will not be recognized in current earnings. The entire change in fair value of the derivative
is deferred in OCI and will be released to earnings when the hedged item/transaction impacts
earnings. This amount may not exactly offset the earnings impact of the hedged item/transaction.
To qualify for hedge accounting, a cash flow or fair value hedging relationship must be highly effective
both (1) at the inception of the hedging relationship and (2) on an ongoing basis throughout the life of
the hedge. ASC 815-20-25-79 clarifies that effectiveness must be considered in two specific ways: (1)
prospectively and (2) retrospectively.
The prospective assessment is forward-looking and should consider the reporting entity’s expectation
of whether the relationship will be highly effective over future periods in achieving offsetting changes
in fair value or cash flows attributable to the hedged risk.
The retrospective assessment should consider whether the hedge was highly effective for the period
ended.
Reporting entities may select a different method for performing the prospective and retrospective
effectiveness assessments, as described in ASC 815-20-55-68. However, this flexibility is not often
utilized in practice due to the unusual outcomes that can occur. For example, it is possible for the
method used for the prospective assessment to indicate that the hedge is expected to be highly
effective for future periods while the method used for the retrospective assessment demonstrates that
the hedge has not been highly effective. In such a case, hedge accounting would not be allowed for the
current period, but could be applied in future periods. The reverse scenario is also possible. In that
9-2
Effectiveness
case, hedge accounting would be allowed for the current period, but could not be applied in future
periods. To avoid such disparate results and to reduce the administrative burden of preparing two
analyses, many reporting entities use the same method for both assessments.
Certain hedging relationships qualify for an assumption of perfect effectiveness under ASC 815-20-25-
3(b)(2)(iv)(01). Under that guidance, a reporting entity’s requirement to assess effectiveness at
inception of the hedging relationship may be performed qualitatively; no initial quantitative
assessment is required.
If the hedging relationship cannot be assumed to be perfectly effective, a reporting entity will need to
perform an initial prospective effectiveness assessment quantitatively. ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(02)
indicates that the quantitative assessment needs to be performed by the earliest of the following:
□ The date that financial statements that include the hedged transaction are available to be issued
□ The date that the hedge no longer qualifies for hedge accounting
□ For a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction, the date that the forecasted transaction occurs
Private companies that are not financial institutions have more time to complete the initial
quantitative assessment. See DH 11.3.
For public business entities and financial institutions, ongoing assessments of effectiveness are
required whenever financial statements or earnings are reported, and at least as frequently as every
three months. Requirements for private companies that are not financial institutions are addressed in
DH 11.3.
Although an assessment of effectiveness is required at least every three months, a reporting entity may
wish to, and in some cases is required to, perform this assessment more frequently (e.g., when using a
dynamic hedging strategy). The designated hedge period should coincide with the rebalancing of the
hedge. That requirement may be achieved through the performance of daily effectiveness assessments
but, at a minimum, must support the daily or weekly frequency of rebalancing the portfolio. When
initially designated, a reporting entity may not document a hedge period of monthly or quarterly if the
hedge is being rebalanced on a daily or weekly basis.
9-3
Effectiveness
assessment period because it fails the retrospective assessment, the overall change in fair value of the
derivative for that period is recognized in earnings with no offset in the form of a basis adjustment to
the hedged item. The same is true for the next period if the fair value hedging relationship fails the
prospective assessment.
If a cash flow/net investment hedging relationship fails to qualify for hedge accounting in a certain
assessment period, the change in fair value of the derivative would not be deferred through OCI/CTA
for that period; instead, it would be recognized through current earnings. The same is true for the next
period if the cash flow/net investment hedging relationship fails the prospective assessment.
ASC 815-20-25-80 and ASC 815-20-25-81 require that assessments of effectiveness be reasonable and
consistent with the originally documented risk management strategy. Management should also ensure
that the method selected is adequately described in its hedge documentation. Failure to do so could
result in the loss of hedge accounting from inception. The same effectiveness method documented at
hedge inception should be used in subsequent periods, except as described in DH 9.3.5.
There may be advantages and disadvantages to different methods. Certain, more complex effectiveness
methodologies may allow a hedging relationship to remain highly effective during the term of the
hedge even when there are isolated periods of aberrant behavior in the underlying. As further
discussed in section DH 9.11.4.1, one of the inherent disadvantages of the dollar-offset effectiveness
method is that these isolated periods could result in the hedging relationship not being considered to
be highly effective under this relatively straightforward approach. A more complex regression analysis,
however, may not result in a similar outcome of losing hedge accounting. For example, the fact that
there are multiple periods or data points included in a regression analysis would result in less weight
being applied to any one particular data point, which may include the isolated period of aberrant
behavior. That is, an isolated period may not have as significant an impact when it is only one of
multiple data points used in a regression analysis.
If none of the methods in ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01) are applicable, then a quantitative method
(also referred to as a “long-haul” method) must be used to assess hedge effectiveness at inception of
the hedging relationship and at least quarterly.
If a reporting entity performs an initial quantitative assessment, the subsequent prospective and
retrospective assessments of effectiveness may be performed qualitatively if certain conditions are
met. See DH 9.12.
9-4
Effectiveness
Figure DH 9-1 summarizes the methods of assessing effectiveness both at inception and on an ongoing
basis.
Figure DH 9-1
Methods of assessing effectiveness – at inception and ongoing
When the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the hedged item are exactly the same as it
relates to the hedged risk, ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01) provides a list of circumstances in which a
reporting entity can avoid performing an initial quantitative assessment of effectiveness. In other
words, the reporting entity may qualitatively assume the hedge is perfectly effective. Figure DH 9-2
describes the key information on each of these circumstances and where it is discussed in this chapter.
9-5
Effectiveness
Figure DH 9-2
Instances when no initial quantitative effectiveness assessment is required if the critical terms of the
hedging instrument and the hedged item are exactly the same
Shortcut Interest rate Interest rate swap Fair value or 815-20-25-102 DH 9.4
method risk in cash flow through ASC
recognized 815-20-25-117D
financial
815-20-55-71
assets or
through ASC
liabilities
815-20-55-79
815-20-55-199
through ASC
815-20-55-203
Change in Interest rate Interest rate swap Cash flow 815-30-35-16 DH 9.7
variable cash risk through ASC
flows method 815-30-35-24
815-30-55-91
through ASC
815-30-55-93A
Hypothetical All eligible Any eligible type Cash flow 815-30-35-25 DH 9.8
derivative risks through ASC 815-
DH 9.11.3.1
method 30-35-29
815-20-55-106
through ASC 815-
20-55-110
9-6
Effectiveness
In all cases in Figure DH 9-2, including the shortcut method, a reporting entity must assess the
possibility of default by the reporting entity itself and the counterparty to the hedging instrument both
at inception and on an ongoing basis, in accordance with ASC 815-20-35-10 and ASC 815-20-35-14
through ASC 815-20-35-18.
The reporting entity should document its assessment of the critical terms and credit risk as part of its
ongoing documentation of effectiveness whenever financial statements or earnings are reported, and
at least as frequently as every three months, as discussed in ASC 815-20-25-85 and ASC 815-20-35-9.
9-7
Effectiveness
In addition, for a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction, the reporting entity should monitor
whether the hedged cash flows remain probable of occurring and whether the timing of those expected
cash flows varies from the original expected date(s).
If none of the methods of assuming perfect effectiveness in Figure DH 9-2 are applicable, a long-haul
quantitative method must be used to assess hedge effectiveness of the hedging relationship at
inception. However, even if an initial quantitative assessment is performed, the subsequent
prospective and retrospective assessments of effectiveness may be performed qualitatively when
certain conditions are met, as discussed in DH 9.12.
A reporting entity may elect to exclude certain components of the change in value of the derivative
from the assessment of effectiveness. This election may impact (1) the ability of a hedging relationship
to qualify for an assumption of perfect effectiveness both at inception and on an ongoing basis and (2)
whether a hedge will be considered highly effective.
ASC 815-20-25-82 provides guidance as to what may be excluded in a fair value or cash flow hedge.
□ For forwards and futures contracts (and swaps) when the spot method is used:
o The change in the fair value of the contract related to the changes in the difference
between the spot price and the forward or futures price (the “forward points”)
Only the entire difference between the change in the total fair value of the derivative and
the change in fair value due to changes in the spot rate may be excluded from the
assessment of effectiveness.
o The portion of the change in fair value of a currency swap attributable to a cross-currency
basis spread
o Time value (the difference between the change in fair value and the change in
undiscounted intrinsic value)
9-8
Effectiveness
o Volatility value (the difference between the change in fair value and the change in
discounted intrinsic or minimum value)
▪ Volatility (vega)
ASC 815-20-25-83 prohibits the exclusion of any other components. For example, a reporting entity is
not permitted to exclude only part of the spot-forward difference when using the spot method.
Whether a component of the gain or loss on a derivative is excluded and the mechanics of isolating the
change in time value of an option when assessing effectiveness should be applied consistently for
similar hedges. See DH 9.3.4.
If a reporting entity elects to exclude the spot-forward difference in a net investment hedge with a
derivative as the hedging instrument in accordance with ASC 815-35-35-4, it must do so for all net
investment hedges with a derivative as the hedging instrument.
ASC 815-20-25-80 and ASC 815-20-25-81 require that the method(s) used to assess hedge
effectiveness (including whether a component of the gain or loss on a derivative is excluded and the
mechanics of isolating the change in time value of an option) be defined and documented at inception
of the hedging relationship and that the method(s) be used consistently throughout the life of the
hedge. The guidance also requires that a reporting entity assess hedge effectiveness for all similar
hedges in a similar manner, unless a different method can be justified.
A reporting entity may change the method of assessing effectiveness, but (1) it must be an improved
method, and (2) it must change the method for all similar hedges.
Should a reporting entity identify and wish to apply an improved method for assessing hedge
effectiveness, ASC 815-20-35-19 states that it must dedesignate the existing hedging relationship and
prospectively redesignate a new hedging relationship. However, as discussed in ASC 815-20-35-20 and
ASC 815-20-55-55 through ASC 815-20-55-56, such a change is not considered a change in accounting
principle and the wording “improved method” was not meant to imply that a change to a new method
must be considered “preferable” under ASC 250-10-45-2.
The new method of assessing hedge effectiveness should be applied prospectively, and the same
method should be applied to all similar hedges. A change in whether a component is excluded or the
mechanics of isolating the change in time value of an option in assessing effectiveness each constitute
9-9
Effectiveness
a change in method, as indicated in ASC 815-20-25-81. Consequently, ASC 815-35-35-4 indicates that
a change from the spot method to the forward method for a net investment hedge or vice versa (i.e.,
whether the spot-forward difference is excluded from the assessment of effectiveness) must follow the
same guidance as any other change in method.
If a reporting entity chooses to change whether to exclude components from the assessment of
effectiveness (e.g., changing from the spot method to the forward method), the new method must be
an improved method.
Unlike the other methods described in Figure DH 9-2 that permit an assumption of perfect
effectiveness, if the hedging relationship qualifies to use the shortcut method, no periodic evaluation
of the critical terms is required over the life of the hedging relationship. However, if the critical terms
of the hedging instrument or the hedged item change such that the hedging relationship no longer
qualifies for use of the shortcut method, its application would no longer be permitted. See DH 9.4.5
regarding potential application of a quantitative effectiveness assessment method in this case.
Given the potential for recognizing a perfectly effective hedge without performing quantitative
assessments of effectiveness, the application of the shortcut method is narrow in scope by design, and
the qualification for use of the shortcut method should be assessed with particular rigor. Reporting
entities should never analogize to the shortcut method for transactions that do not precisely meet its
requirements. Even transactions that are economically perfect hedges may nevertheless fail to meet all
of the requirements for use of the shortcut method.
There are three fundamental criteria in ASC 815-20-25-102 to qualify for the shortcut method.
Other criteria in ASC 815-20-25-103 through ASC 815-20-25-117 are addressed in DH 9.4.2 through
DH 9.4.4.4.
9-10
Effectiveness
Interest rate risk (i.e., changes in fair value or cash flows attributable to changes in either the
benchmark interest rate or the contractually specified rate) must be the only risk identified as the
hedged risk. If the hedging relationship is a hedge of (1) foreign exchange and interest rate risk or (2)
credit risk and interest rate risk, use of the shortcut method is not permitted.
For a fair value hedge of a fixed-rate instrument, ASC 815-20-55-71(b) requires that the designated
interest rate be a benchmark interest rate, and ASC 815-20-25-105(f) requires that the index on the
variable leg of the swap match the benchmark interest rate designated as the risk being hedged. For a
cash flow hedge of a variable-rate instrument, ASC 815-20-55-71(bb) requires that the designated
interest rate (1) be the contractually specified rate of the variable-rate financial asset or liability and
(2) match the interest rate index of the variable leg of the interest rate swap.
Question DH 9.1 asks if the shortcut method can be applied to a hedge of changes in fair value due to
benchmark interest rate risk of an available-for-sale debt security with an interest rate swap.
Question DH 9-1
Can the shortcut method be applied to a hedge of changes in fair value due to benchmark interest rate
risk of an available-for-sale debt security with an interest rate swap?
PwC response
Yes. Assuming that all of the relevant conditions in ASC 815-20-25-104 and ASC 815-20-25-105 are
met, a reporting entity may apply the shortcut method to a fair value hedge of an available-for-sale
debt security that uses an interest rate swap. This is true even though the actual change in the fair
value of an available-for-sale debt security may differ from the gain or loss on the interest rate swap
because the change in the fair value of the hedged item may be partly attributable to unhedged risks.
For example, an available-for-sale debt security may change in value due to changes in credit risk or
foreign-exchange risk, which are not the risks that are being hedged with an interest rate swap.
After applying the shortcut method in a hedge of an available-for-sale debt security, it is necessary to
apply the measurement provisions of ASC 320, which require that the available-for-sale debt security
be carried at its full fair value. The full fair value of the debt security is then compared to the carrying
amount that resulted from applying the shortcut method (i.e., the carrying value of the available-for-
sale debt security, as adjusted by the change in the fair value of the interest rate swap), and the
difference between the change in the adjusted carrying value and the change in fair value is recorded
through OCI. As a result, changes in fair value of the available-for-sale debt security that are
attributable to risks other than interest rate risk should remain in AOCI, pursuant to ASC 320.
The shortcut method is available for hedging relationships only when the hedging instrument is an
interest rate swap with a variable-rate leg indexed to either:
□ a benchmark interest rate (for a fair value hedge of a fixed rate financial asset or liability), or
□ the contractually specified interest rate that matches the contractually specified rate in a variable
rate financial asset or liability (for a cash flow hedge).
9-11
Effectiveness
In addition, a compound hedging instrument composed of such an interest rate swap and a mirror-
image call or put option and/or, in the case of cash flow hedges, a floor or cap on the swap’s variable
interest rate that is comparable to the floor or cap on the variable-rate asset or liability, is also
permitted. However, the shortcut method cannot be used when the hedging instrument is a compound
hedging instrument composed of an interest rate swap and any mirror-image features other than puts,
calls, floors, or caps.
Forwards, futures, other types of swaps, options (including options to enter into a swap), forward
starting swaps, and other instruments are not eligible for the shortcut method. For example, a partial-
term hedge using a forward starting interest rate swap in which the term is either the middle or latter
part of the contractual term of the hedged item is not eligible for the shortcut method. See further
discussion on the use of the shortcut method in partial-term hedges in DH 9.4.3.1.
The shortcut method is available only for fair value or cash flow hedges involving a recognized
interest-bearing asset or liability (or portfolio of recognized interest-bearing assets or liabilities). The
most common example of a recognized interest-bearing asset or liability is a debt security (i.e., a
liability to the issuer and asset to the holder). The shortcut method is not available for forecasted or
anticipated debt issuances, other forecasted transactions, such as forecasted purchases or sales of
inventory or commodities, and operating leases because they are not recognized interest-bearing
assets or liabilities.
Notwithstanding that the shortcut method is applicable only for recognized assets and liabilities, it
may still be applied in certain cases when the hedged item may not be considered “recognized,” i.e.,
when the hedging instrument is entered into on the pricing date (trade date) of the hedged item but
the hedged item is not recognized until settlement date. Criteria for meeting the shortcut method
requirement that the hedged item is a recognized asset or liability when it is entered into on the trade
date but settles on the settlement date are as follows.
□ There must be a firm commitment arising on the trade (pricing) date to purchase or issue an
interest-bearing asset or liability between the reporting entity and the underwriter (i.e., the entity
is obligated to borrow and the underwriters are obligated to fund the settlement of the borrowing)
that contains terms with a fixed element that create a fair value exposure to interest rate risk.
□ The period between the trade date and the settlement date of the debt is within the time generally
established by regulations or conventions (i.e., it settles within the customary period for
transactions in the marketplace or exchange in which the transaction is being executed -
analogous to the “regular way” scope exception in ASC 815-10-15-15, see DH 3.2.3).
□ If this issue is significant to the reporting entity because it frequently enters into fixed-rate debt
instruments that are hedged using the shortcut method, appropriate disclosure is made of the
policy of applying hedge accounting on the trade date, the accounting rationale, and the length of
the market settlement convention.
9-12
Effectiveness
In addition to the fundamental considerations in DH 9.4.1, all of the required conditions specified in
ASC 815-20-25-104 through ASC 815-20-25-106 must be strictly met to qualify for use of the shortcut
method.
In general, the terms of the hedged item and hedging instrument must match, including notional
amounts, dates, calendar adjustments for business days for payments and fixing the variable rate,
interest calculation periods, interest rate fixing and payment conventions (in arrears versus in
advance), and day count convention. As it relates to the shortcut method, “match” means “match
exactly.” There is no concept of “close enough” when it comes to applying the shortcut method.
In addition, as discussed in ASC 815-20-25-111 and ASC 815-20-25-122, comparable credit risk at
inception is not a condition for assuming perfect effectiveness; however, implicit in the criteria for the
shortcut method is the requirement that a basis exists for concluding that the hedging relationship is
expected to be highly effective in achieving offsetting changes in fair values or cash flows throughout
the life of the hedging relationship. Accordingly, reporting entities need to consider the likelihood of
the counterparty’s compliance with the contractual terms of the interest rate swap. If the likelihood
that the counterparty will not default ceases to be probable, a reporting entity would be unable to
conclude that the hedging relationship in a cash flow hedge is expected to be highly effective in
achieving offsetting cash flows. When using the shortcut method, a reporting entity is required to
monitor hedges for adverse developments in credit risk.
ASC 815-20-25-104(a) requires that the notional amount of the hedging instrument match the
principal of the hedged item. However, the condition in ASC 815-20-25-104(a) need not be applied so
literally that only a hedge of the entire debt instrument with a single interest rate swap would qualify.
This criterion could be satisfied by:
□ A hedging relationship that includes two or more derivatives with two or more counterparties
against a single hedged item
ASC 815-20-25-45 states that multiple derivatives may be viewed in combination and jointly
designated as a hedging instrument. We believe that a hedging relationship can satisfy the
notional condition through the use of more than one swap, provided that (1) the total of the
notional amount of all the swaps used as hedging instruments matches the principal amount of the
hedged item and (2) each swap would (on an individual basis) meet all of the applicable conditions
in ASC 815-20-25-102 through ASC 815-20-25-106.
Reporting entities seeking to diversify counterparty risk may wish to employ this strategy. We do
not believe that the use of more than one swap with different counterparties for a single hedging
relationship precludes use of the shortcut method. Although swaps with different counterparties
may be priced differently due to different credit ratings, comparable creditworthiness (of the bond
issuer and swap counterparty) is not a condition for applying the shortcut method, as indicated in
ASC 815-20-25-111.
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Effectiveness
ASC 815-20-25-106(f) permits the hedged item to be a group of forecasted interest payments on a
group of existing interest-bearing assets or liabilities if both (1) the notional amount of the swap
matches the notional amount of the aggregated group and (2) the remaining criteria to qualify for
the shortcut method with respect to the interest rate swap and the individual transactions in the
group are met (e.g., all the reset dates need to be identical to the interest rate swap).
In designating the hedging relationship, the notional amount derived from the designated
proportion of the principal amount of the interest-bearing asset or liability must match the
notional amount derived from the designated proportion of the notional amount of the interest
rate swap.
In a fair value hedge, both the designated proportion of the swap and the designated proportion of
the principal amount of the hedged item must be considered as a percentage of the total notional
or principal amount, respectively, and not as a set dollar amount. For example, an interest rate
swap with a notional of $50 million could qualify for the shortcut method as a hedge of 50% of a
$100 million debt security.
Alternatively, two shortcut method hedging relationships could be created if one interest rate swap
is used to hedge two items. For example, 40% of an interest rate swap with a notional amount of
$50 million could be designated against Loan A with $20 million principal, and 60% of the
interest rate swap could be designated against Loan B with $30 million principal. In this instance,
two separate hedging relationships must be documented and evaluated under the shortcut method
requirements.
Question DH 9-2 discusses whether a reporting entity can apply the shortcut method to a hedging
relationship.
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Question DH 9-2
DH Corp issued fixed-rate debt with an amortizing notional amount. It executed a swap that has the
same critical terms as the debt that pays LIBOR and has the same fixed interest rate and the same
payment dates and maturity as the debt. Neither the swap nor the debt is prepayable. The notional
amount of the swap exactly matches that of the debt, and the swap and the debt amortize on the exact
same dates.
If all other requirements for the shortcut method are met, can DH Corp apply the shortcut method to
this hedging relationship?
PwC response
Yes, the shortcut method may be applied when the notional amount of the interest-bearing debt and
the interest rate swap changes throughout the life of the hedge, provided that at all times the notional
amount of the swap matches the principal amount of the debt (i.e., the swap has a specific
amortization schedule that exactly matches that of the hedged debt).
We do not believe that ASC 815-20-25-104(a) requires that the notional amount not change. The
requirement is simply that the notional amount of the swap match the principal amount of the debt at
all times throughout the term of the hedging relationship.
We believe the amortization of the notional amount is a typical feature in both debt and swap
agreements and does not invalidate the assumption of perfect effectiveness required by ASC 815-20-
25-104(g) since the swap and the debt have the same notional amount at all times.
Question DH 9-3 asks if the shortcut method can be applied to a hedge of a zero-coupon bond.
Question DH 9-3
May the shortcut method be applied to a hedge of a zero-coupon bond or significantly discounted
notes?
PwC response
No. We do not believe that the shortcut method may be used for hedges of zero-coupon bonds or
significantly discounted notes when the notional amount of the interest rate swap equals the proceeds
received from the issuance of the zero-coupon bonds (or the deep discount notes). This is because the
proceeds would be discounted relative to the principal amount. For example, an interest rate swap
with a notional amount of $80 million could not be used to match the $80 million proceeds received
from the discounted issuance of $100 million principal zero-coupon bonds.
In addition to the notional amount of the fixed leg of the swap not matching the notional amount of
the variable leg of the swap throughout the life of the hedging relationship, we believe that a hedge of a
zero-coupon financial instrument would not qualify for the shortcut method because the interest rate
swap contains a financing element (payments on the fixed leg of the swap are being financed).
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□ Each asset or liability in the portfolio needs to individually meet the shortcut criteria, as discussed
in ASC 815-20-25-116 and ASH 815-20-25-117.
□ The assets or liabilities in the portfolio should all be identical, except for the notional amounts,
counterparties, the spread over the contractually specified interest rate for cash flow hedges, and
the spread over the benchmark interest rate for fair value hedges of the benchmark rate
component of the contractual coupon.
□ The aggregate designated principal amounts of the hedged interest-bearing assets or liabilities
must equal the designated notional amount of the swap.
For example, a loan with a principal amount of $100 million and a loan with a principal amount of
$50 million could be included in the portfolio and they could be hedged by an interest rate swap
with a notional amount of $150 million.
Except as provided in ASC 815-20-25-104(b), the fair value of the interest rate swap designated in a
hedging relationship under the shortcut method must always be zero at hedge inception.
ASC 815-20-25-104(b)
If the hedging instrument is solely an interest rate swap, the fair value of that interest rate swap at the
inception of the hedging relationship must be zero, with one exception. The fair value of the swap may
be other than zero at the inception of the hedging relationship only if the swap was entered into at the
relationship’s inception, the transaction price of the swap was zero in the entity’s principal market (or
most advantageous market), and the difference between transaction price and fair value is attributable
solely to differing prices within the bid-ask spread between the entry transaction and a hypothetical
exit transaction. The guidance in the preceding sentence is applicable only to transactions considered
at market (that is, transaction price is zero exclusive of commissions and other transaction costs, as
discussed in 820-10-35-7). If the hedging instrument is solely an interest rate swap that at the
inception of the hedging relationship has a positive or negative fair value, but does not meet the one
exception specified in this paragraph, the shortcut method shall not be used even if all other
conditions are met.
Because of this requirement, it is highly unlikely that a hedging relationship could qualify for the
shortcut method unless the designation is made at the inception (trade) date for the interest rate swap.
Any designation after that point, even one day later, would likely result in the swap having a fair value
other than zero because of market movements in interest rates and the passage of time.
ASC 820-10-35-9B indicates that an interest rate swap with a non-zero fair value at inception of the
hedging relationship may still qualify for the shortcut method if the swap was entered into at the
hedge’s inception for a transaction price of zero and the non-zero fair value is due solely to the
existence of a bid-ask spread in the reporting entity’s primary market (or most advantageous market,
as applicable).
A question arises as to how to apply this requirement when the swap counterparty agrees to pay
brokerage or debt issuance costs on behalf of the issuer (or make any up-front payments) and includes
such costs as a part of the swap agreement. This results in either (1) the fair value of the contract not
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being zero or (2) one or both legs of the swap being at a non-market rate. Reporting entities need to
consider all such unstated rights and privileges that may have been considered in the pricing of the
swap.
Reporting entities should also examine the terms of the individual instruments if they are entered into
through a basket transaction. The simultaneous issuance or exchange of instruments when no cash
changes hands is not a guarantee that an interest rate swap included in the transaction has a fair value
of zero. The swap could be off-market in an equal and opposite amount to another instrument.
ASC 815-20-25-104(d) requires that the terms of the interest rate swap designated in a shortcut
hedging relationship have a constant fixed interest rate component and use a consistent floating
interest rate index throughout its term.
ASC 815-20-25-104(d)
The formula for computing net settlements under the interest rate swap is the same for each net
settlement. That is, both of the following conditions are met:
2. The variable rate is based on the same index and includes the same constant adjustment or no
adjustment. The existence of a stub period and stub rate is not a violation of the criterion in (d)
that would preclude application of the shortcut method if the stub rate is the variable rate that
corresponds to the length of the stub period.
There is a view that the words in ASC 815-20-25-104(d) could be interpreted as requiring that both the
fixed and variable legs of the swap settle on the same dates. Under this view, any interest rate swap
that had its fixed and variable legs settling on different dates, e.g., the floating leg settling quarterly
and the fixed leg settling semi-annually, albeit using a constant fixed interest rate and a consistent
index, would fail this condition and be ineligible for the shortcut method. We think such an approach
is overly rigid. Even though cash settlements on the fixed and variable legs of the interest rate swap
may not occur simultaneously, we believe that as long as the formulas for calculating both of the
settlements on the fixed and variable legs do not change over the life of the swap, the criterion is met.
A forward-starting swap will not meet the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-104(d) because the formula for
computing net settlements during the forward period (when there are no settlements) will differ from
the settlements that occur after the effective date of the swap (when settlements occur).
Stub periods
The existence of a shortened or stub period and stub rate (for a partial period) is not a violation of the
criterion in ASC 815-20-25-104(d) if the stub rate is the variable rate that corresponds to the length of
the stub period.
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While the formula for computing net settlements needs to be consistent, the coupon does not have to
be identical between the fixed leg of a swap and the fixed-rate hedged item (for a fair value hedge), nor
does the spread on the floating leg of the swap need to be the same as the spread on the floating-rate
hedged item (for a cash flow hedge).
ASC 815-20-25-109
The fixed interest rate on a hedged item need not exactly match the fixed interest rate on an interest
rate swap designated as a fair value hedge. Nor does the variable interest rate on an interest-bearing
asset or liability need to be the same as the variable interest rate on an interest rate swap designated as
a cash flow hedge. An interest rate swap’s fair value comes from its net settlements. The fixed and
variable interest rates on an interest rate swap can be changed without affecting the net settlement if
both are changed by the same amount. That is, an interest rate swap with a payment based on LIBOR
and a receipt based on a fixed rate of 5 percent has the same net settlements and fair value as an
interest rate swap with a payment based on LIBOR plus 1 percent and a receipt based on a fixed rate of
6 percent.
Swap in arrears
ASC 815-20-25-107 permits the shortcut method to be applied to a hedging relationship that involves
the use of an interest rate swap in arrears, provided all of the applicable conditions are met.
In a cash flow hedge, a reporting entity would only be able to apply the shortcut method to a swap
when the floating leg of the swap is reset in arrears if the interest rate on the hedged item is also
calculated in arrears.
1. This criterion does not apply to an interest-bearing asset or liability that is prepayable solely due
to an embedded call option (put option) if the hedging instrument is a compound derivative
composed of an interest rate swap and a mirror-image call option (put option).
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Prepayment options that do not violate the criterion that the asset/liability is not
prepayable
Debt instruments may contain terms that permit either the debtor or creditor to cause the prepayment
of the debt prior to maturity that would not violate the shortcut criterion that the asset/liability is not
prepayable. ASC 815-20-25-113 through ASC 815-20-25-115 and ASC 815-20-55-74 through ASC 815-
20-55-78 provide guidance on which provisions are considered prepayable for the purposes of
applying the shortcut method. If a prepayment option will at all times be uneconomic for the party
with the option to exercise, it is not considered to be prepayable when applying the shortcut method.
Therefore, mirror-image prepayment options would not be required to be incorporated in the interest
rate swap in this scenario to qualify for the shortcut method.
Make-whole provisions
A typical call option enables the issuer to benefit from the option’s exercise by prepaying debt when a
decline in market interest rates causes the fair value of the debt to rise above the option’s settlement
price. In contrast, a make-whole provision typically does not yield such a benefit, and, as a result, the
hedge would not need a mirror-image prepayment option in the interest rate swap.
The settlement price in a make-whole provision is a variable amount that is generally determined by
discounting the debt’s remaining contractual cash flows at the current Treasury rate plus a small
spread specified in the agreement. The specified spread is usually significantly lower than the issuer’s
credit spread over the Treasury rate, making the settlement amount greater than the debt’s fair value.
In this way, the make-whole provision results in a premium settlement amount that penalizes the
issuer.
Reporting entities should consider whether the specified spread in the make-whole provision is small
enough to constitute a penalty relative to the issuer’s credit spread. The greater the spread added to
the discount rate to determine the settlement amount, the less cash will have to be paid, and therefore,
the lower the penalty to the issuer. The lower the penalty, the more likely the option is to violate the
criterion against the asset/liability being prepayable.
A contingent acceleration clause may permit the lender to accelerate the maturity of an outstanding
liability only if a specified event relating to the debtor’s credit risk occurs (e.g., a deterioration of credit
or other change such as failure to make a timely payment, meet specific covenant ratios or a
restructuring by the debtor). ASC 815-20-55-75(b) specifically states that a debt instrument that
includes a contingent acceleration clause that permits acceleration of the maturity only upon the
occurrence of a specified event related to the debtor’s credit deterioration does not result in the debt
being considered prepayable under ASC 815-20-25-104(e).
ASC 815-20-25-114 notes that a provision that allows either counterparty to settle an interest-bearing
asset or liability at its fair value would not violate the assumption of perfect effectiveness. Therefore,
even if the provisions of ASC 815-20-25-104(e) were extended to the hedging instrument, a swap
prepayable at fair value would not be considered prepayable.
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As a result, the existence of a fair value cancellation right in a long-term swap agreement should not,
in and of itself, preclude the application of the shortcut method.
When there is a prepayment (e.g., put or call) feature in a financial asset or liability that cannot be
exercised until a certain point in the future, a reporting entity may choose to designate only the
portion of the term of the financial asset or liability up until that prepayment date as being hedged (a
partial-term hedge). In these cases, since the prepayment option only becomes exercisable at or after
the end of the designated partial-term period, the reporting entity need not consider the hedged item
to be prepayable during the life of the hedge.
ASC 815-20-25-6B permits a reporting entity to only consider how changes in the benchmark interest
rate affect the decision to settle the hedged item before its scheduled maturity. A reporting entity need
not consider other factors (e.g., credit risk) that could affect an obligor’s decision to call a debt
instrument when it has the right to do so. However, this guidance does not apply when determining
whether a hedged item is considered to be prepayable when applying the shortcut method. Thus, it is
possible that certain prepayment features might preclude the application of the shortcut method but
not have a significant impact on the assessment of effectiveness under a long-haul method.
Mirror-image options
For those interest-bearing assets and liabilities that contain an embedded put or call option or cap or
floor that must be mirrored in the interest rate swap, all terms must match exactly, as stated in ASC
815-20-25-104(e)(2), except as discussed in DH 9.4.4.2 related to ASC 815-20-25-106(c)(2).
□ Maturities
□ Notification/election dates (the option notification date partially defines the term of the option,
which is a key factor in determining its fair value)
□ Strike prices (ASC 815-20-55-79 provides guidance on determining whether the strike price of the
prepayment feature in the hedged item matches the strike price of the prepayment option in the
swap)
□ Notional amounts
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ASC 815-20-25-108 clarifies that the carrying amount of the debt has no direct impact on whether the
swap contains a mirror-image option because it is economically unrelated to the amount that would be
required to be paid to exercise the embedded option. Per ASC 815-20-25-108, any discount or
premium, including any related deferred issuance costs, is irrelevant in determining whether the
criterion in ASC 815-20-25-104(e) is met. Therefore, a swap is not permitted to contain a termination
payment equal to the deferred debt issuance costs that remain unamortized on the date the option is
exercised if the shortcut method is to be applied.
Question DH 9-4 discusses whether a hedge would qualify for the shortcut method.
Question DH 9-4
DH Corp issues variable-rate debt with an interest rate that resets quarterly based on three-month
LIBOR plus a fixed spread. DH Corp can call the instrument at par on the quarterly interest rate reset
dates.
If DH Corp hedges its exposure to changes in the benchmark interest rate with an interest rate swap
that perfectly matches the debt in terms of notional amount, interest rate index, reset dates, payment
dates, etc. and that may be terminated by the counterparty at fair value on the interest rate reset dates,
does it qualify for the shortcut method?
PwC response
No. The debt is considered prepayable under the provisions of ASC 815-20-25-104(e) because the call
provision permits the issuer to cause settlement of the debt at an amount that is potentially below the
contract’s fair value. Because the credit spread on the debt is not reset, the interest rate reset
provisions on the debt instrument are insufficient to ensure that the par amount would equal the fair
value at the call dates.
Although the interest rate swap includes a termination option, this feature is not the mirror image of
the debt’s prepayment option as would be necessary to qualify for the shortcut method. Because the
debt has an interest rate that resets to the index, plus a fixed spread, DH Corp will likely exercise the
prepayment option only if it can refinance the borrowing at a lower credit spread. The termination
option in the interest rate swap, however, is at fair value, and therefore, the swap counterparty should
be indifferent as to exercising it based on movements in the issuer’s credit spread. Thus, the
termination option in the interest rate swap would not necessarily be exercised in a fashion that
mirrors the issuer’s exercise of the debt’s prepayment option. Additionally, if it were exercised, DH
Corp would incur the loss or receive the benefit associated with the forecasted movement in LIBOR
relative to the fixed leg of the swap over its remaining term, because the swap was terminated at its fair
value. However, DH Corp would not have any further exposure to interest payments for that period
because the debt was extinguished at par.
Since many variable-rate financial instruments contain prepayment options, application of the
shortcut method to cash flow hedging relationships is less common than fair value hedges of fixed-rate
financial instruments.
While this hedging relationship may not qualify for the shortcut method, it might qualify for hedge
accounting using a long-haul method, assuming that the hedged forecasted interest payments are
probable of occurring. Because of the presence of the debt prepayment option, DH Corp would have to
(1) assert that if it were to prepay the debt, it would immediately replace it with a similar variable-rate
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debt instrument, and (2) define the hedged item as the forecasted interest payments on its existing
variable-rate debt or its subsequent variable-rate refinancing. Alternatively, DH Corp might decide to
hedge only those interest payments from the existing debt deemed probable of occurring (i.e., hedge
through the expected prepayment date).
In most cases when reporting entities issue debt with embedded prepayment options (calls or puts),
the premium for the options is paid as an adjustment to the interest rate on the debt. For example, if a
reporting entity issues callable debt (e.g., prepayable by the issuer), the interest rate on that debt
would be higher than if the reporting entity had issued non-callable debt. This is because the reporting
entity purchased a call option from the investor, and is paying the premium for that option as an
adjustment to the interest rate over time. In such instances, the hedging instrument in a qualifying
shortcut hedging relationship may only be a compound derivative comprised of an interest rate swap
and a mirror image put or call that is also paid over time (e.g., zero fair value at inception).
ASC 815-20-25-104(c)
If the hedging instrument is a compound derivative composed of an interest rate swap and mirror-
image call or put option as discussed in [ASC 815-20-25-104](e), the premium for the mirror-image
call or put option shall be paid or received in the same manner as the premium on the call or put
option embedded in the hedged item based on the following:
1. If the implicit premium for the call or put option embedded in the hedged item is being paid
principally over the life of the hedged item (through an adjustment of the interest rate), the fair
value of the hedging instrument at the inception of the hedging relationship shall be zero (except
as discussed previously in (b) regarding differing prices due to the existence of a bid-ask spread).
2. If the implicit premium for the call or put option embedded in the hedged item was principally
paid at inception-acquisition (through an original issue discount or premium), the fair value of the
hedging instrument at the inception of the hedging relationship shall be equal to the fair value of
the mirror-image call or put option.
The only explicit exception to the ASC 815-20-25-104(b) requirement for zero fair value at inception is
when the hedged interest-bearing asset or liability has an embedded put or call option. In such
instances, the hedging instrument in a qualifying shortcut hedging relationship must be a compound
derivative composed of an interest rate swap and a mirror-image put or call, and the premium for that
option must be paid or received in the same manner as the premium for the call or put option
embedded in the hedged item. Therefore, if the prepayable interest-bearing asset or liability in a
shortcut method hedge is issued at a premium or discount equal to the fair value of the embedded call
or put option, the interest rate swap must be issued at a rate that would result in its having an
inception fair value equal to the value of its mirror-image put or call option. Consequently, in these
cases, the fair value of the swap, including the mirror-image put or call, will not have a fair value of
zero. While this amount may approximate the discount or premium on the hedged item, it would not
be expected to be the same because of credit spread differences between the instruments. Because
prepayable interest-bearing assets and liabilities are generally issued at or near their par values, the
circumstances when the interest rate swap would be allowed to have a fair value other than zero are
expected to be rare.
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Question DH 9-5 asks whether the shortcut method can be applied to a hedge of a callable fixed-rate
debt.
Question DH 9-5
DH Corp issues fixed-rate debt that is callable at par at its option on specified dates.
On the date the debt is issued, DH Corp simultaneously enters into a receive-fixed, pay-variable
interest rate swap that can be cancelled on the same dates that the debt is callable, at its discretion.
Can the reporting entity apply the shortcut method in this scenario?
PwC response
No. ASC 815 indicates that the call option included in the interest rate swap is considered a mirror-
image of the call option embedded in the hedged item if (1) the terms of the two call options match and
(2) the reporting entity is the writer of one call option and the holder (or purchaser) of the other call
option. Since DH Corp is the purchaser of both options, the transaction does not qualify for the
shortcut method.
The shortcut method criteria include a general requirement that no terms invalidate the assumption of
perfect effectiveness.
ASC 815-20-25-104(g)
Any other terms in the interest-bearing financial instruments or interest rate swaps meet both of the
following conditions:
Under ASC 815-20-25-104(g), the only difference explicitly permitted in the shortcut method is a
difference in counterparty credit spreads, as discussed in ASC 815-20-25-111. Any other differences in
a hedging relationship should serve as an alarm that the application of the shortcut method is likely
not appropriate.
The wording about terms “typical of those instruments [interest rate swaps]” suggests that any highly
structured interest rate swap would violate this criterion. The challenge with this view is how to
determine when a feature is non-standard, given the constant evolution in the marketplace. Such a
determination requires judgment.
Trust-preferred securities
Trust-preferred securities often include features that allow the issuers (usually banks) to defer the
payment of interest or dividends for one or more payment periods. A hedge of the interest rate risk in
a trust-preferred or similar security does not qualify for the shortcut method regardless of whether (1)
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Effectiveness
the swap contains a mirror-image interest or dividend deferral feature and (2) that feature affects one
or both legs of the swap.
In executing a hedge, some reporting entities enter into swaps that permit the swap counterparty to
defer interest payments on the fixed-rate receive leg of the swap if the issuer exercises its right to defer
interest/dividend payments on its trust-preferred securities. In doing this, reporting entities believe
that they have exactly matched the terms of the interest rate swap with the terms of the trust-preferred
securities. However, most interest deferral features are options that would violate the provision in ASC
815-20-25-104(d) requiring the formula for computing net settlements to be the same each period
(i.e., no payments in one period, a large payment the next, and so on).
Alternatively, a reporting entity may also enter into a plain-vanilla swap that does not include the
mirror-image interest deferral feature. However, in a hedging relationship of trust-preferred securities
with a plain-vanilla swap, the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-104(g), which requires that any other terms
in the trust-preferred securities or interest rate swaps are typical of those instruments and do not
invalidate the assumption of perfect effectiveness, is not met. If the issuer elects to defer interest, the
trust-preferred securities will be valued like a zero-coupon bond, rather than as a current-pay, fixed-
rate obligation. As a result, the duration of the bonds will differ from that of the plain-vanilla swap,
thus invalidating the assumption of perfect effectiveness.
Late-term hedging refers to the practice of establishing a hedging relationship after issuance of the
hedged item.
When a hedging relationship satisfies all of the shortcut method criteria but the interest rate swap was
executed after the acquisition or issuance of the designated recognized asset or liability, the hedging
relationship can qualify for use of the shortcut method. To use the shortcut method (or hedge
accounting in general) there is no explicit requirement that the swap be executed at the inception or
acquisition date of the interest-bearing asset or liability that is being hedged.
Measuring the hedged item using the full contractual coupon cash flows
There is some question about whether a late hedge designated subsequent to issuance of the hedged
item contains terms that invalidate the assumption of perfect effectiveness in ASC 815-20-25-104(g).
Specifically, the primary concern is when measuring the hedged item using the full contractual coupon
cash flows, the duration (interest rate sensitivity) of the hedged item and interest rate swap in a late
hedge will differ from the duration of the hedged item and the interest rate swap that would have been
executed at issuance of the hedged item. This duration difference could lead to decreased effectiveness
in the late hedging relationship in comparison to the hedging relationship that would have qualified
for the shortcut method at the issuance date. However, in other cases, a late hedge may not be
significantly less effective (and could be more effective) than a hedging relationship that would have
qualified for the shortcut method at the issuance date.
Consider, for example, a reporting entity that enters into an interest rate swap and designates it as a
fair value hedge of a fixed-rate debt instrument that was issued a number of years ago. When the debt
was issued (and the debt coupon was established), benchmark interest rates were 10%. In the current
interest rate environment, benchmark rates are 1%. As a result, assuming the swap is transacted such
that it has a fair value of zero at inception, the fair value of the swap will be more sensitive to interest
rate movements than the debt.
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We believe that if a reporting entity is going to utilize the shortcut method, it should ensure, at a
minimum, that the hedging relationship is highly effective and would not invalidate the assumption of
perfect effectiveness. One way this could be achieved is by performing a prospective effectiveness
analysis on both the late hedging relationship and a hypothetical hedging relationship that would have
met the requirements for the shortcut method at the issuance date of the instrument (i.e., one that is
not a "late" hedge).
In this analysis, the terms of the interest rate swap in the hypothetical "at issuance" hedging
relationship would mirror the terms of the interest rate swap executed in the late hedge, except that
the coupon on the fixed rate leg of the interest rate swap would be adjusted so that it would have been
at market at the issuance date of the instrument. The reporting entity would then compare the
effectiveness of the late hedging relationship with the effectiveness of the hypothetical "at issuance"
hedging relationship. If the analysis demonstrates that the late hedging relationship is as effective as
the hypothetical hedging relationship (or less effective by 0nly a de minimis amount), this would
indicate that the late hedge does not invalidate the assumption of perfect effectiveness in ASC 815-20-
25-104(g).
Another approach to demonstrating that the late hedge does not invalidate the assumption of perfect
effectiveness is by reference to the fair value of the hedged item. If the fair value of the hedged item is
at or near par, the entity may be able to conclude that the hedging relationship is as effective as it
would have been at the issuance date. The reporting entity should ensure that there is robust
contemporaneous documentation that includes how the shortcut criteria were met, including the
quantitative evidence of “perfect effectiveness.”
If the reporting entity’s analysis demonstrates that the late hedge invalidates the assumption of perfect
effectiveness, it should not use the shortcut method but instead should use the long-haul method.
Measuring the hedged item using the benchmark component of the contractual coupon
cash flows
As an alternative to using the full contractual coupon cash flows, a reporting entity may choose to
measure the hedged item based on the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash
flows, as discussed in DH 6.4.6.2. When hedging the benchmark rate component of the hedged item’s
contractual coupon in a late hedge, it will likely be easier for reporting entities to demonstrate that the
hedging relationship meets the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-104(g).
Paragraph BC96 in the Basis for Conclusions of ASU 2017-12 states the Board’s view on this.
The following are additional requirements beyond those in DH 9.4.2 for use of the shortcut method
applicable to fair value hedges only.
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The maturity of the hedged item and hedging instrument must match. ASC 815-20-25-105(a) permits
application of the shortcut method to partial-term hedges if the maturity of the hedging instrument
matches the assumed maturity of the hedged item in a partial-term hedge.
ASC 815-20-25-105(a)
The expiration date of the interest rate swap matches the maturity date of the interest-bearing asset or
liability or the assumed maturity date if the hedged item is measured in accordance with paragraph
815-25-35-13B [i.e., it is a partial-term hedge].
In evaluating this criterion, reporting entities should review the impact of weekend and holiday rules
on this assessment. Generally, if a maturity/expiration date was scheduled to fall on a Saturday or
Sunday, the terms in both instruments should provide for the same-business-day rule, such as on the
subsequent business day (often referred to on trade confirmations as the “following” business day
convention). Or the terms may provide for a subsequent business day unless that subsequent business
day is in the next month, in which case it is the preceding business day (often referred to on the trade
confirmations as the “modified following” business day convention). In some cases, seemingly
different business-day rules may result in matched terms (different conventions may nonetheless
result in the same date).
ASC 815-20-25-105(b) requires that there be no floor or cap on the variable interest rate of the interest
rate swap.
As noted in DH 9.4.2.6, ASC 815-20-25-104(c) allows the embedded puts and calls in the hedged
interest-bearing asset or liability to be mirrored in the interest rate swap under the shortcut method.
However, ASC 815-20-25-105(b) precludes floors, caps, and other embedded features from being
included in an interest rate swap in a fair value hedge qualifying for the shortcut method because the
introduction of such options would result in not all of the interest rate risk in the fixed-rate hedged
item being eliminated through the hedge relationship.
Theoretically, an interest rate swap that resets continuously would be necessary to ensure that its
variable leg always reflects a market rate. However, for practical reasons, ASC 815-20-25-105(c) allows
the frequency of the reset to extend up to an interval of six months.
ASC 815-20-25-105(c)
The interval between repricings of the variable interest rate in the interest rate swap is frequent
enough to justify an assumption that the variable payment or receipt is at a market rate (generally
three to six months or less).
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The swap’s floating leg must be based on a benchmark interest rate. Benchmark interest rates are
discussed in DH 6.4.5.1.
Since many variable-rate financial instruments contain prepayment options, we have observed that
application of the shortcut method to cash flow hedging relationships is less common than fair value
hedges of fixed-rate financial instruments.
The following are additional requirements beyond those in DH 9.4.2 for use of the shortcut method
applicable to cash flow hedges only. When the hedged forecasted transaction is a group of individual
transactions, the criteria for applying the shortcut method must be met for each individual transaction
that makes up the group, in accordance with ASC 815-20-25-106(f)(2).
9.4.4.1 The swap hedges all payments within the hedge term
All interest receipts/payments during the term of the hedging relationship need to be designated as
the hedged item, and no cash flows beyond the hedge term may be designated.
ASC 815-20-25-106(a)
All interest receipts or payments on the variable-rate asset or liability during the term of the interest
rate swap are designated as hedged.
ASC 815-20-25-106(b)
No interest payments beyond the term of the interest rate swap are designated as hedged.
The inclusion of interest receipts or payments on the variable-rate asset or liability in the hedge
designation that are beyond the term of the interest rate swap would result in a portion of the interest
rate exposure not being hedged and thus violate the shortcut method’s assumption of perfect
effectiveness. An example of a cash flow hedging relationship that would violate this condition is a 24-
month floating-rate debt instrument (in which all cash flows are designated as being hedged) that is
hedged with a 12-month swap. Because the cash flows in the hedged item that are designated as being
hedged extend beyond the cash flows on the interest rate swap, the condition in ASC 815-20-25-106(a)
is not met. However, if only the first 12 months of interest payments were designated as being hedged,
then the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-106(a) would be met because all interest payments on the hedged
item during the term of the swap would be designated as hedged.
If the hedged item has a floor or cap, the interest rate swap must have a comparable floor or cap and
vice versa.
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ASC 815-20-25-106(c)
Either of the following conditions is met:
1. There is no floor or cap on the variable interest rate of the interest rate swap.
2. The variable-rate asset or liability has a floor or cap and the interest rate swap has a floor or cap on
the variable interest rate that is comparable to the floor or cap on the variable-rate asset or
liability. For the purpose of this paragraph, comparable does not necessarily mean equal. For
example, if an interest rate swap’s variable rate is based on LIBOR and an asset’s variable rate is
LIBOR plus 2 percent, a 10 percent cap on the interest rate swap would be comparable to a 12
percent cap on the asset.
It is important to understand how the interest rate terms are defined in the governing documents for
the hedged item and the master agreement for the swap to determine what could happen if the
underlying referenced interest rate were to become negative, even if not explicitly stated in term sheets
and trade confirmations. If the hedged item or interest rate swap’s terms prevent the rate from become
negative, such a feature would be considered a floor.
To satisfy ASC 815-20-25-106(c), the floor or cap in the hedged interest-bearing asset or liability is not
required to equal the floor or cap in the hedging instrument; rather, they must be comparable. If a
swap’s variable rate is LIBOR and an asset’s variable rate is LIBOR plus 2%, a 10% cap on the swap
would not be comparable to a 10% cap on the asset because the entity would be exposed to interest
rate variability in the combination of the interest rate swap’s variable-leg payments and the hedge
item’s cash flows when interest rates ranged from 10 to 12%. Reporting entities should also ensure that
any differences between the floors or caps do not violate the assumption of perfect effectiveness in ASC
815-20-25-104(g).
The reset and fixing dates on the hedged item and hedging instrument must match.
ASC 815-20-25-106(d)
The repricing dates of the variable-rate asset or liability and the hedging instrument occur on the same
dates and be calculated the same way (that is, both shall be either prospective or retrospective). If the
repricing dates of the hedged item occur on the same dates as the repricing dates of the hedging
instrument but the repricing calculation for the hedged item is prospective whereas the repricing
calculation for hedging instrument is retrospective, those repricing dates do not match.
ASC 815-20-25-106(f)(2)
The remaining criteria for the shortcut method are met with respect to the interest rate swap and the
individual transactions that make up the group. For example, the interest rate repricing dates for the
variable-rate assets or liabilities whose interest payments are included in the group of forecasted
transactions shall match (that is, be exactly the same as) the reset dates for the interest rate swap.
The interest rate and payment conventions (whether in advance or in arrears) for the floating leg of the
interest rate swap and the hedged item must be the same. The day count convention, such as
actual/360, must also match.
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Calendar adjustments for business days for making payments, determining the interest calculation
periods, and fixing the variable rate should match. Reporting entities should review the impact of
weekend and holiday rules on this assessment. Generally, if a repricing date was scheduled to fall on a
Saturday or Sunday, the terms in both instruments should provide for the same-business-day rule,
such as on the subsequent business day (known typically as the “following” business day convention).
Or the terms may provide for a subsequent business day unless that subsequent business day is in the
next month, in which case it is the preceding business day (often referred to on trade confirmations as
the “modified following” business day convention). In some cases, seemingly different business-day
rules may result in matched terms (different conventions may nonetheless result in the same date).
A hedging relationship involving a financial asset or liability with a floating interest rate is eligible to
be hedged with a swap with a variable leg based on the same contractually specified interest rate as the
hedged item.
ASC 815-20-25-106(g)
The index on which the variable leg of the interest rate swap is based matches the contractually
specified interest rate designated as the interest rate risk being hedged for that hedging relationship.
The contractually specified index must be an interest rate. It would not be appropriate to use an
underlying that does not represent an interest rate.
ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(04) states that a reporting entity applying the shortcut method may elect to
document at hedge inception a quantitative method to assess hedge effectiveness if the entity later
determines that the use of the shortcut method was not or no longer is appropriate. 1
If a reporting entity documents a quantitative method at inception, it can apply that quantitative
method at the time the entity determines that the use of the shortcut method was not or no longer is
appropriate to determine (a) whether the hedging relationship was/is highly effective in the periods in
which the requirements for the shortcut method were not met, and (b) the basis adjustment to the
hedged item in a fair value hedge.
ASC 815-20-25-117A through ASC 815-20-25-117D describe how the quantitative method is to be used.
In the period when a reporting entity determines that use of the shortcut method was not or no longer
is appropriate, it can use a quantitative method without dedesignating the hedging relationship if it
meets two criteria.
□ It must have documented the quantitative method it would use at hedge inception.
□ The hedging relationship must be highly effective under the quantitative method in all periods
when the hedge did not qualify for the shortcut method. If the reporting entity is not able to
1 This approach is only available for hedging relationships using the shortcut method. It is not available for other methods.
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identify when the hedge ceased to qualify for the shortcut method, it should perform the
quantitative assessment for every period since initial designation.
In assessing effectiveness, the terms of the hedged item and hedging instrument as of the date the
hedge no longer qualified for shortcut should be used. However, if the hypothetical derivative method
is used in a cash flow hedge, the fair value of the hypothetical derivative should be set to zero as of the
inception of the hedge.
The reporting entity should consider the error correction guidance in ASC 250, Accounting Changes
and Error Corrections.
If the hedge would have been highly effective using the quantitative method in the periods in which the
shortcut method could not be applied, the amount of the error would be the difference between the
amounts recorded using the quantitative assessment and the shortcut method.
If the reporting entity documented the quantitative method, but the hedging relationship was not
highly effective using that method, the hedging relationship would be considered invalid in the periods
when the effectiveness assessment failed. The error would be the difference between the amount
actually recorded and what would have been recorded if hedge accounting had not been applied.
If a reporting entity does not document a quantitative method at hedge inception and subsequently
realizes that application of the shortcut method was not appropriate, it is prohibited from retroactively
identifying a quantitative method of hedge effectiveness assessment at a subsequent date. It must view
the past application of hedge accounting as an error. This holds true even if the hedging relationship
would have been deemed highly effective under another method of assessing effectiveness and even if
it represented a perfect economic hedge. Accordingly, an incorrect application of the shortcut method
results in an accounting error that must be evaluated for materiality and potential correction if the
reporting entity did not document a quantitative method at inception.
Under the shortcut method, the change in fair value or cash flow of the hedged interest-bearing asset
or liability attributable to the hedged risk is assumed to equal the change in fair value of the interest
rate swap.
ASC 815-25-55-43 and ASC 815-30-55-25 describe the specific steps that a reporting entity should take
in applying the shortcut method for a fair value hedge of a fixed-rate interest-bearing liability and a
cash flow hedge of a variable-rate interest-bearing asset. Reporting entities should follow comparable
steps for a fair value hedge of a fixed-rate interest-bearing asset and a cash flow hedge of a variable-
rate interest-bearing liability.
a. Determine the difference between the fixed Determine the difference between the variable
rate to be received on the interest rate swap rate to be paid on the interest rate swap and the
and the fixed rate to be paid on the bonds. variable rate to be received on the bonds.
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b. Combine that difference with the variable Combine that difference with the fixed rate to be
rate to be paid on the interest rate swap. received on the interest rate swap.
c. Compute and recognize interest expense Compute and recognize interest income using
using that combined rate and the fixed-rate that combined rate and the variable-rate asset’s
liability’s principal amount. (Amortization of principal amount. (Amortization of any
any purchase premium or discount on the purchase premium or discount on the asset must
liability also must be considered.) also be considered.)
d. Determine the fair value of the interest rate Determine the fair value of the interest rate
swap. swap.
e. Adjust the carrying amount of the interest Adjust the carrying amount of the interest rate
rate swap to its fair value and adjust the swap to its fair value and adjust other
carrying amount of the liability by an comprehensive income by an offsetting amount.
offsetting amount.
9.4.7 Novations
A reporting entity applying the shortcut method also needs to monitor whether the critical terms of the
hedged item or interest rate swap have been amended. Per ASC 815-20-55-56, such a change in the
terms of the hedged item or the interest rate swap would require a dedesignation, and thus, loss of the
shortcut method.
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Effectiveness
ASC 815-20-25-84
If the critical terms of the hedging instrument and of the hedged item or hedged forecasted transaction
are the same, the entity could conclude that changes in fair value or cash flows attributable to the risk
being hedged are expected to completely offset at inception and on an ongoing basis. For example, an
entity may assume that a hedge of a forecasted purchase of a commodity with a forward contract will
be perfectly effective if all of the following criteria are met:
a. The forward contract is for the purchase of the same quantity of the same commodity at the same
time and location as the hedged forecasted purchase. Location differences do not need to be
considered if an entity designates the variability in cash flows attributable to changes in a
contractually specified component as the hedge risk and the requirements in paragraphs 815-20-
25-22A through 25-22B are met.
1. The change in the discount or premium on the forward contract is excluded from the
assessment of effectiveness pursuant to paragraphs 815-20-25-81 through 25-83.
2. The change in expected cash flows on the forecasted transaction is based on the forward price
for the commodity.
ASC 815-20-25-84 points out that a hedge may be assumed to be perfectly effective when the
conditions are satisfied. ASC 815-20-25-84 does not mean that a reporting entity (1) does not need to
perform any assessments of effectiveness, or (2) may disregard known factors that would cause a
hedge to not be perfectly effective.
However, if at inception, the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the hedged forecasted
transaction are the same, a reporting entity can conclude that changes in cash flows attributable to the
risk being hedged are expected to be completely offset by the hedging derivative. Therefore, the
reporting entity may forego performing a quantitative effectiveness assessment in each period and
instead document at the inception of the hedging relationship and on an ongoing basis throughout the
hedging period that (1) the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the hedged item match (or
have not changed since inception) and (2) it is probable that the counterparties to the hedging
instrument and the hedged item will not default. If these two requirements are met, the entity may
conclude that the hedge is perfectly effective. In that case, the change in the fair value of the
components of the derivative included in the assessment of effectiveness can be viewed as a proxy for
the present value of the change in cash flows attributable to the risk being hedged.
A reporting entity should document the quantitative method it will use to assess hedge effectiveness if
circumstances change over the course of the hedging relationship, as discussed in ASC 815-20-35-12.
Should the critical terms subsequently change and thus invalidate the assumption of perfect
effectiveness, a full quantitative effectiveness assessment would be required (i.e., the long-haul
method should be applied). The assessment of effectiveness to be used should the critical terms of the
hedged item and hedging instrument no longer match has to be consistent with the method selected in
the reporting entity’s original contemporaneous hedge documentation and completely documented at
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hedge inception to avoid the need to dedesignate when migrating to the quantitative effectiveness
assessment.
Hedge accounting would need to be discontinued if there is any change in the critical terms and the
entity does not document the quantitative method to assess effectiveness in these cases. Further,
should it no longer be probable that the reporting entity or the counterparty to the hedging instrument
or the hedged item will not default, hedge accounting should be discontinued.
While the critical terms match method requires the critical terms to match between the derivative and
the hedged item or hedged forecasted transaction, ASC 815-20-25-84A permits limited differences
between the maturity of the derivative and the timing of occurrence of a group of hedged forecasted
transactions.
ASC 815-20-25-84A
In a cash flow hedge of a group of forecasted transactions in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-
15(a)(2), an entity may assume that the timing in which the hedged transactions are expected to occur
and the maturity date of the hedging instrument match in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-84(a)
if those forecasted transactions occur and the derivative matures within the same 31-day period or
fiscal month.
Based on paragraphs BC196 and BC197 in the Basis for Conclusions of ASU 2017-12, we believe the
Board intended for this accommodation to only apply when the window of time specified for the
hedged transactions is either 31 days or the fiscal month. For example, a reporting entity cannot apply
the critical terms match method to a hedge that specifies a period extending from 31 days before the
maturity of the derivative to 31 days after the maturity of the derivative as the window of time in which
the group of forecasted transactions could occur (i.e., it cannot use a 62-day window).
If at inception of the hedging relationship or in any subsequent period the maturity of the derivative
and the timing of occurrence of the hedged group of forecasted transactions is not or is no longer
within the same 31-day period or fiscal month, the critical terms match method cannot be applied and
a long-haul method must be used.
Example DH 9-1 discusses the use of critical terms match method to a hedge of a group of forecasted
transactions.
EXAMPLE DH 9-1
Use of critical terms match method to a hedge of a group of forecasted transactions
In November of 20X1, DH Corp, a USD functional entity, decides to hedge the first 1 million euro
(EUR) of its probable euro-denominated sales transactions expected to occur during the month of
March 20X2 with a forward contract to receive 1.3 million USD and pay 1 million EUR maturing on
March 15, 20X2. The derivative has a fair value of zero at inception. DH Corp uses the calendar month
as its fiscal month and documents March 20X2 as the 31-day period to use for purposes of comparing
the maturity of the derivative and the group of hedged forecasted transactions.
Can DH Corp use the critical terms match method for the hedge?
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Analysis
Yes. For purposes of assessing whether the qualifying criteria for the critical terms match method are
met for a group of forecasted transactions, DH Corp may assume that the hedging derivative matures
at the same time as the occurrence of the forecasted transactions since both the derivative maturity
and the forecasted transactions occur within the specified 31-day period. That is, if all of the other
criteria to apply hedge accounting and the critical terms match method are met, DH Corp may ignore
the timing difference between the dates of expected occurrence of the hedged forecasted transactions
(throughout the month of March 20X2) and the maturity date of the derivative (March 15, 20X2) since
they occur within the documented 31-day period.
If in a subsequent period, DH Corp determines that the hedged forecasted transactions will not occur
within the documented 31-day period (e.g., they will occur on April 1, 20X2), DH Corp could no longer
apply the critical terms match method. This is because DH Corp specified the month of March 20X2 as
the 31-day period (March 1 through March 31) to use to compare the maturity of the derivative to the
group of hedged forecasted transactions. DH Corp should also consider whether the hedged forecasted
transaction remains probable of occurring within the time period originally specified, as discussed in
DH 10.4.8.1.
The critical terms match method may be used to assess effectiveness in all-in-one hedges. As discussed
in DH 7.3.4, in an all-in-one hedge, a derivative that will be gross settled is the hedging instrument in a
cash flow hedge of the variability of the consideration to be paid or received in the forecasted
transaction that will occur upon gross settlement of the derivative itself. In effect, the hedged item and
hedging instrument are the same.
Question DH 9-6 asks whether the critical terms match method can be used to assess the effectiveness
of an all-in-one hedge.
Question DH 9-6
DH Gas Company executes an all-in-one hedge of the future purchase of natural gas because it has a
firm commitment for the daily purchase of 10,000 MMBtus at a fixed price per day of $3/MMBtus in
the month of July 20x4. Can DH Gas use the critical terms match method to assess effectiveness of the
all-in-one hedge?
Yes. The hedged item (the forecasted purchase of 10,000 MMBtus per day in July 20x4) and the
hedging instrument (the firm commitment) are the same transaction; therefore, the critical terms
match and the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-84 are met.
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For these hedging relationships to be considered perfectly effective, all of the conditions in ASC 815-
20-25-126 and ASC 815-20-25-129 must be met. If the reporting entity concludes that the hedging
relationship may be considered to be perfectly effective because all of the conditions are met, it (1)
does not have to assess effectiveness quantitatively and (2) should record all changes in the hedging
option’s fair value (including changes in the option’s time value) through OCI (until the hedged item
impacts earnings).
b. The exposure being hedged is the variability in expected future cash flows attributed to a
particular rate or price beyond (or within) a specified level (or levels)
c. The assessment of effectiveness is documented as being based on total changes in the option’s cash
flows (that is, the assessment will include the hedging instrument’s entire change in fair value),
not just changes in intrinsic value
b. The strike price (or prices) of the hedging option (or combination of options) matches the
specified level (or levels) beyond (or within) which the entity’s exposure is being hedged
c. The hedging instrument’s inflows (outflows) at its maturity date completely offset the present
value of the change in the hedged transaction’s cash flows for the risk being hedged (that is, the
option cannot have intrinsic value at inception), and
d. The hedging instrument can be exercised only on a single date—its contractual maturity date (that
is, European style options are permitted whereas an American style option is not).
If all of the conditions in ASC 815-20-25-126 are met, but any of the conditions in ASC 815-20-25-129
are not met in that not all of the critical terms match, the reporting entity would look to ASC 815-20-
25-129 to determine the terms of the “perfect hypothetical derivative.” In other words, it would assess
effectiveness by comparing the change in fair value of the actual hedging instrument and the change in
fair value of a hypothetical hedging instrument that meets all of the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-129.
As an alternative to using the option’s entire terminal value to assess effectiveness, ASC 815-20-25-
83A permits a reporting entity to exclude the initial value of an excluded component from the
assessment of effectiveness and to recognize the amount in earnings using a systematic and rational
method over the life of the hedging instrument. For example, if a hedge does not meet the criteria to be
considered perfectly effective, the reporting entity may be able to recognize the initial value of an
excluded component, like the time value, using a systematic and rational method over the life of the
hedging instrument. See DH 9.3.3 for discussion of excluded components.
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Effectiveness
While the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-129(a) is that the critical terms match between the derivative
and the hedged item or hedged forecasted transaction, ASC 815-20-25-129A permits limited
differences between the maturity date of the hedging instrument and the timing in which a group of
hedged forecasted transactions are expected to occur.
ASC 815-20-25-129A
In a hedge of a group of forecasted transactions in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-15(a)(2), an
entity may assume that the timing in which the hedged transactions are expected to occur and the
maturity date of the hedging instrument match in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-129(a) if
those forecasted transactions occur and the derivative matures within the same 31-day period or fiscal
month.
Based on paragraphs BC196 and BC197 in the Basis for Conclusions of ASU 2017-12, we believe the
Board intended for this accommodation to only apply when the window of time specified for the
hedged transactions is either 31 days or the fiscal month. For example, a reporting entity cannot apply
the critical terms match method to a hedge that specifies a period that extends from 31 days before the
maturity of the derivative to 31 days after the maturity of the derivative as the window of time in which
the group of forecasted transactions could occur (i.e., it cannot use a 62-day window).
If at inception of the hedging relationship, or in any subsequent period, the maturity of the derivative
and the timing of occurrence of the hedged group of forecasted transactions is not or is no longer
within the same 31-day period or fiscal month, a reporting entity would not be able to assume perfect
effectiveness under the terminal value method for options, and a long-haul method must be used.
ASC 815-30-35-14 states that the change-in-variable-cash-flows method cannot be used if the swap
has a fair value that is not zero (or “somewhat near zero”) at the inception of the hedging relationship,
not at the inception of the swap. Thus, if a swap with a fair value of zero at the inception of the swap
was designated in a hedging relationship at any point after the inception of the swap, use of the
change-in-variable-cash-flows method to that hedging relationship would be precluded because the
swap’s fair value would likely have changed enough to no longer be considered somewhat near zero.
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Effectiveness
ASC 815-30-35-18
The change-in-variable-cash-flows method is consistent with the cash flow hedge objective of
effectively offsetting the changes in the hedged cash flows attributable to the hedged risk. The method
is based on the premise that only the floating-rate component of the interest rate swap provides the
cash flow hedge, and any change in the interest rate swap’s fair value attributable to the fixed-rate leg
is not relevant to the variability of the hedged interest payments (receipts) on the floating-rate liability
(asset).
ASC 815-30-35-19
An entity shall assess hedge effectiveness under this method by comparing the following amounts:
a. The present value of the cumulative change in the expected future cash flows on the variable leg of
the interest rate swap
b. The present value of the cumulative change in the expected future interest cash flows on the
variable-rate asset or liability.
ASC 815-30-35-20
Because the focus of a cash flow hedge is on whether the hedging relationship achieves offsetting
changes in cash flows, if the variability of the hedged cash flows of the variable-rate asset or liability is
based solely on changes in a variable-rate index, the present value of the cumulative changes in
expected future cash flows on both the variable-rate leg of the interest rate swap and the variable-rate
asset or liability shall be calculated using the discount rates applicable to determining the fair value of
the interest rate swap.
If the four conditions in ASC 815-30-35-22 are met, a reporting entity can qualitatively assess that the
hedge results in perfect effectiveness and is therefore not required to quantitatively assess hedge
effectiveness.
ASC 815-30-35-22
The change-in-variable-cash-flows method will result in a perfectly effective hedge if all of the
following conditions are met:
a. The variable-rate leg of the interest rate swap and the hedged variable cash flows of the asset or
liability are based on the same interest rate index (for example, three-month London Interbank
Offered Rate (LIBOR) swap rate).
b. The interest rate reset dates applicable to the variable-rate leg of the interest rate swap and to the
hedged variable cash flows of the asset or liability are the same.
c. The hedging relationship does not contain any other basis differences (for example, if the variable
leg of the interest rate swap contains a cap and the variable-rate asset or liability does not).
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Effectiveness
If any of the four criteria are not met, a quantitative assessment is needed to determine if the hedge is
highly effective. See DH 9.11.
Use of the change-in-variable-cash-flows method is limited to certain circumstances, such as when the
fair value of the swap is zero (or “somewhat near zero”) at inception of the hedging relationship and
only to hedges of interest rate risk.
The hypothetical derivative method may be used for a hedging relationship of interest rate risk that
does not meet the requirements for use of the shortcut method and that involves (1) a receive-floating,
pay-fixed interest rate swap designated as a hedge of the variable interest payments on an existing
floating-rate liability, (2) a receive-fixed, pay-floating interest rate swap designated as a hedge of the
variable interest receipts on an existing floating-rate asset, or (3) cash flow hedges of the variability of
future interest payments on interest bearing assets to be acquired or interest-bearing liabilities to be
incurred. The interest rate swap is permitted to have embedded options (caps and floors).
If a reporting entity uses the hypothetical derivative method to assess hedge effectiveness involving an
interest rate swap and determines that the terms of the hypothetical derivative exactly match the
terms of the actual hedging instrument, ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01)(F) states that it does not need
to perform an initial prospective quantitative effectiveness test. Instead, it may qualitatively assume
the hedging relationship is perfectly effective. The perfect hypothetical derivative is a derivative that
has terms that identically match the critical terms of the hedged item and has a fair value of zero at
inception of the hedging relationship. However, if the terms do not exactly match, an initial
quantitative assessment is needed to determine if the hedge is highly effective. See DH 9.11.
While the hypothetical derivative method was written in the context of a cash flow hedge of forecasted
interest payments with an interest rate swap, it is commonly used as a proxy for the change in the
hedged cash flows attributable to the hedged risk when assessing effectiveness of other hedging
strategies, such as commodity hedges or certain foreign currency hedging strategies. In these cases,
the hedging relationship will not explicitly fall within the guidance that permits an assumption of
perfect effectiveness under the hypothetical derivative method (see Figure DH 9-2). However, it is
possible that in some cases the actual derivative will exactly match the hypothetical derivative, in
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Effectiveness
which case we believe an initial quantitative assessment is not required, as indicated by ASC 815-20-
25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01)(F).
Under the hypothetical derivative method, the assessment of hedge effectiveness is based on a
comparison of (1) the change in fair value of the actual swap designated as the hedging instrument and
(2) the change in fair value of a hypothetical swap. The hypothetical swap must have a fair value of
zero at the inception of the hedging relationship and terms that exactly match the critical terms of the
floating-rate asset or liability, including the same:
□ notional amount,
□ repricing dates,
ASC 815-30-35-26 states that the hypothetical derivative would need to satisfy all of the applicable
conditions in ASC 815-20-25-104 and ASC 815-20-25-106 necessary to qualify for use of the shortcut
method, as described in DH 9.4, except the criterion in ASC 815-20-25-104(e), which requires that the
asset or liability not be prepayable. Thus, the hypothetical interest rate swap would be expected to
perfectly offset the hedged cash flows.
ASC 815-20-55-106 through ASC 815-20-55-110 provides guidance on how to determine the
appropriate hypothetical derivative for variable-rate debt that is prepayable at par at each reset date.
The prepayment provisions of a debt instrument should not be considered in determining the
appropriate hypothetical derivative as long as (1) the debt is probable of not being prepaid or (2) it is
probable that the replacement debt that would be issued has interest payments with the same relevant
critical terms as the existing debt.
If the actual derivative and perfectly-effective hypothetical derivative have identical terms, a reporting
entity is not required to perform a quantitative assessment of effectiveness. However, if a reporting
entity is hedging forecasted transactions (e.g., forecasted interest payments on the forecasted
issuance/purchase of debt, or forecasted interest payments on prepayable variable-rate debt
[including a future replacement if the original debt is prepaid]), we recommend that the reporting
entity specify and document at the inception of the hedging relationship a long-haul approach using
the hypothetical derivative method. If done properly, this will help ensure that if the terms of the
hedged forecasted transactions differ from the hedging instrument subsequent to hedge inception, the
reporting entity will not automatically have to dedesignate the hedging relationship because the terms
of the actual and hypothetical derivatives differ.
The determination of the fair value of both the perfect hypothetical swap and the actual swap should
use discount rates based on the relevant interest-rate swap curves and consider credit risk.
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□ Spot method (applies to forwards, options, cross currency swaps, and foreign-denominated
nonderivatives): The change in fair value attributable to changes in the undiscounted spot rate is
recorded in CTA. All other changes in fair value are treated as excluded components. See DH
8.3.1.1 for recognition guidance and DH 9.3.3 for additional information on excluded components.
The entire spot forward difference must be excluded from the assessment of effectiveness. See ASC
815-35-35-5 through ASC 815-35-35-11.
□ Forward/full fair value method (applies to forwards, options, and cross-currency swaps): All
changes in fair value of the derivative are recorded in CTA. No components are permitted to be
excluded from the assessment of effectiveness. See ASC 815-35-35-17 through ASC 35-35-35-26.
Some reporting entities may wish to use the spot method because they believe it provides a better
offset to the foreign currency translation impact in CTA from the hedged net investment (which under
ASC 830 is performed using spot FX rates). However, under the spot method, the excluded component
will be recognized in earnings over the life of the hedging instrument. Others may choose to use the
forward method to avoid recognizing any part of the change in fair value of the derivative through
earnings until the hedged net investment is sold or substantially liquidated.
As discussed in DH 9.3.3, DH 9.3.4 and ASC 815-35-35-4, a reporting entity must use the same
method for all its net investment hedges in which the hedging instrument is a derivative. Use of the
spot method for some derivatives designated as net investment hedges and the forward method for
others is not permitted.
As discussed in DH 9.3.5 and ASC 815-35-35-4, a reporting entity that wishes to change from the spot
method to the forward method of assessing effectiveness (or vice versa), must apply the same
considerations regarding a method change for net investment hedges as for method changes for fair
value and cash flow hedges: the new method needs to be an improved method but it need not be
considered “preferable” under ASC 250.
For a nonderivative that is designated as the hedging instrument in a net investment hedge, the spot
method must be used to assess effectiveness.
The spot method refers to excluding from the assessment of effectiveness (a) the difference between
the spot price and the forward price (sometimes referred to as forward points) from a forward contract
(or an eligible cross currency swap), or (b) the time value of an option that is designated as a hedging
instrument in a net investment hedge, in accordance with ASC 815-20-25-82.
When the hedging derivative instrument is a cross-currency interest rate swap, it must be eligible for
designation in a net investment hedge in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-67. That is, the cross-
currency interest rate swap must either be (1) a fixed-for-fixed cross-currency swap, or (2) a float-for-
float cross-currency swap with the interest rates based on the same currencies in the swap and both
legs resetting at the same intervals and dates.
ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01)(G) states that if a reporting entity uses the spot method to assess
effectiveness, it does not have to perform an initial quantitative effectiveness assessment if certain
criteria are met.
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For derivative hedging instruments designated as net investment hedges under the spot method, the
hedge will be perfectly effective and no initial quantitative effectiveness assessment is required if the
following criteria (from ASC 815-35-35-5 and ASC 815-35-35-9) are met:
□ The notional amount of the derivative instrument designated as a hedge of a net investment in a
foreign operation equals the portion of the net investment designated as being hedged.
□ The derivative instrument’s underlying exchange rate is the exchange rate between the functional
currency of the hedged net investment and the investor’s functional currency.
□ For a float-for-float cross-currency swap, both legs must be based on comparable interest rate
curves (e.g., a swap that pays foreign currency based on three-month LIBOR, and receives
functional currency based on three-month commercial paper rates would not be considered
perfectly effective).
For nonderivative hedging instruments (e.g., foreign-denominated debt), the net investment hedge
will be perfectly effective and no initial quantitative effectiveness assessment is required if the
following criteria in ASC 815-35-35-12 are met:
□ The notional amount of the nonderivative instrument matches the portion of the net investment
designated as being hedged.
□ The nonderivative instrument is denominated in the functional currency of the hedged net
investment.
For cross-currency swaps, the net gain or loss on the periodic payments are part of the excluded
component.
If the reporting entity employs an after-tax hedging methodology, the reporting entity should consider
the tax effects in the assessment of effectiveness, as discussed in ASC 815-35-35-26. Hedge
effectiveness will need to be reconsidered in after-tax hedging strategies when tax rates change.
If the actual hedging instrument does not meet the criteria for assuming perfect effectiveness, the
hedging relationship is required to be assessed using a long-haul method and the hedge item should be
modelled with a hypothetical instrument that meets the criteria for the assumption of perfect
effectiveness.
ASC 815-35-35-4 permits reporting entities to assess effectiveness of derivatives designated in a net
investment hedge using a method based on changes in forward exchange rates (the entire change in
fair value). This applies to forwards, options, and cross-currency swaps. Use of the forward method is
not permitted for nonderivative hedging instruments (such as foreign-denominated debt).
When the hedging derivative instrument is a cross-currency interest rate swap, it must be eligible for
designation in a net investment hedge in accordance with ASC 815-20-25-67. That is, the cross-
currency interest rate swap must either be (1) a fixed-for-fixed cross-currency swap, or (2) a float-for-
float cross-currency swap with the interest rates based on the same currencies in the swap and the
both legs resetting at the same intervals and dates.
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ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01)(H) states that that if a reporting entity uses the forward exchange rate
method to assess effectiveness, it does not have to perform an initial quantitative effectiveness
assessment if certain requirements are met.
For derivative hedging instruments designated as net investment hedges under the forward method,
the hedge will be perfectly effective and no initial quantitative effectiveness assessment is required if
the following criteria are met:
□ The notional amount of the derivative instrument designated as a hedge of a net investment in a
foreign operation equals the portion of the net investment designated as being hedged
□ The derivative’s underlying relates only to the foreign exchange rate between the functional
currency of the hedged net investment and the investor’s functional currency
□ For a float-to-float cross currency swap, both legs must be based on comparable interest rate
curves (e.g., a swap that pays foreign currency based on the three-month LIBOR, and receives
functional currency based on three-month commercial paper rates would not be considered
perfectly effective)
For cross currency swaps, the net gain or loss on the periodic payments is also included in CTA.
If the reporting entity employs an after-tax hedging methodology, the reporting entity should
appropriately consider the tax affects in the assessment of effectiveness, as discussed in ASC 815-35-
35-26. Hedge effectiveness will need to be reconsidered in after tax hedging strategies when tax rates
change.
If the actual hedging instrument does not meet the criteria for the assumption of perfect effectiveness,
the hedging relationship is required to be assessed using a long-haul method and the hedged item
should be modelled with a hypothetical instrument that meets the criteria for perfect effectiveness.
Reporting entities should monitor their net investment hedging relationships to ensure the hedged net
investment balance is greater than the notional of the hedging instruments (adjusted for taxes if
hedging after tax), the functional currency of the entity with the hedging instrument and the entity
being hedged has not changed (and any intervening subsidiaries as appropriate), and that tax rates
have not changed (if hedging after tax).
ASC 815-35-35-27
If an entity documents that the effectiveness of its hedge of the net investment in a foreign operation
will be assessed based on the beginning balance of its net investment and the entity’s net investment
changes during the year, the entity shall consider the need to redesignate the hedging relationship (to
indicate what the hedging instrument is and what numerical portion of the current net investment is
the hedged portion) whenever financial statements or earnings are reported, and at least every three
months. An entity is not required to redesignate the hedging relationship more frequently even when a
significant transaction (for example, a dividend) occurs during the interim period. Example 1 (see
paragraph 815-35-55-1) illustrates the application of this guidance.
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A reporting entity is not required to dedesignate and redesignate the hedging relationship if (1) the
only thing that has changed is the amount of equity in the hedged subsidiary, (2) that amount is still
greater than the notional of the hedging instruments (adjusted for taxes if hedging after tax), and (3)
the entity has specified this approach in its hedging relationship.
There are many reasons why a hedge might not be perfectly effective, and therefore, an initial
quantitative test might be required and an entity would recognize some volatility in net income during
the life of the hedge (for a fair value hedge) or when the hedged item and derivative impact earnings
(for a cash flow or net investment hedge).
Circumstances that may preclude a reporting entity from assuming perfect effectiveness at inception of
the hedging relationship include:
□ A difference between the basis of the hedging instrument and the hedged item or transaction, such
as:
□ Differences in the critical terms of the hedging instrument and hedged item or transaction, such as
differences in the principal and notional amounts, rate reset dates, the term or maturity, or cash
2ASC 815-25-55-3 indicates that the use of a hedging instrument with a different underlying basis than the item or transaction
being hedged is referred to as a cross hedge. The principles for assessing the effectiveness of cross-hedges illustrated in the
guidance also apply to hedges involving other risks. For example, the effectiveness of a hedge of interest rate risk in which one
interest rate is used as a surrogate for another would be evaluated in the same way as it is for the cross-hedge.
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Effectiveness
receipt or payment dates (beyond the 31 days or same fiscal month permitted for certain hedges
per ASC 815-20-25-84A)
□ Location differences between the commodity on which the derivative’s underlying is based and the
location of the commodity actually being purchased or sold (when hedging the total cash flows or
total change in fair value)
□ Hedging relationships using purchased options when the provisions of ASC 815-20-25-128 have
not been utilized and time value is not excluded from the assessment of effectiveness
□ Forward premiums or discounts that represent the cost of the derivative that are not excluded
from the assessment of effectiveness (e.g., a foreign currency spot transaction hedged with a
forward foreign exchange contract)
□ When the payment dates of the hedged assets differ in a last-of-layer method hedge
Although the guidance in ASC 815-20-55-14A permits a qualitative similar assets test in a last-of-
layer hedge, the assessment of effectiveness may not be able to be performed qualitatively. See
DH 6.5.
□ Use of different discount rates in a fair value hedge of benchmark interest rate risk when the
shortcut method is not applied
For example, when designating a fair value hedge of a fixed-rate financial instrument for changes
in fair value due to changes in the benchmark interest rate using an interest rate swap, the change
in value of the hedged item (or benchmark component of the hedged item) attributable to changes
in the benchmark interest rate must be discounted using the benchmark interest rate. However,
the fair value of the swap could be impacted by other valuation adjustments (e.g., own and
counterparty credit risk, using overnight index swap (OIS) or OIS-based discount rates for
collateralized positions).
As a general rule, these or other mismatches in a hedging relationship should be identified in the
hedge documentation and assessed as to their potential impact on effectiveness at inception and in
subsequent assessments of effectiveness.
As specified in ASC 815-20-35-2A, a reporting entity may qualitatively assess hedge effectiveness after
hedge inception only if it:
□ performs an initial quantitative test of hedge effectiveness on a prospective basis that
demonstrates that the hedging relationship is highly effective, and
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Effectiveness
Figure DH 9-3
Effectiveness requirements when hedge is not assumed to be perfectly effective
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Effectiveness
Long-haul methods are also generally available for purposes of assessing hedge effectiveness when one
of the methods detailed in Figure DH 9-2 in which perfect effectiveness can be assumed (such as the
shortcut method or critical terms match approach) is allowed. Because of some of the nuances in
eligibility of these approaches and the consequences of incorrect application, reporting entities might
want to consider application of one of the long-haul methods if they are uncertain as to whether they
qualify and will continue to qualify for an assumption of perfect effectiveness.
ASC 815-25-55 and ASC 815-30-55 describe several (but not all) acceptable and unacceptable methods
of assessing effectiveness for specific fair value and cash flow hedges.
In determining how effectiveness should be assessed, reporting entities should consider how they have
defined the hedged risk and any excluded components (discussed in DH 9.3.3). Both the hedged risk
and excluded components may have a significant impact on how the hedged item or transaction is
modeled in quantitative assessments of effectiveness and the ability to qualify for qualitative
subsequent testing.
Given how the last-of-layer method (discussed in DH 6.5) works, many aspects of the effectiveness
assessment will be simplified when the last-of-layer method is used.
□ If the hedged item is designated using the partial-term guidance (i.e., the hedge period is for some
portion of the term of the asset), the remaining term of all assets in the portfolio can be assumed
to be the same (as each other) for hedge accounting purposes.
□ Prepayments do not need to be considered in measuring the hedged item in a last-of-layer hedge
because what is being hedged is a portion of the portfolio that will remain throughout the assumed
maturity of the portfolio.
Although prepayments do not need to be considered in measuring the hedged item, differences in
payment dates among the assets in the closed portfolio and the derivative hedging instrument need to
be considered in the assessment of effectiveness and may invalidate the assumption of perfect
ineffectiveness because the benchmark component of the coupon cash flows on the closed portfolio
(the hedged item) and hedging instrument will differ. The guidance in ASC 815-20-55-14A permits a
qualitative similar assets test but that does not mean that the assessment of effectiveness can be
performed qualitatively.
In certain situations, it may be difficult for a reporting entity to calculate the change in fair value (or
present value of cash flows) of the hedged portion of the hedged item. ASC 815 permits several
methods to model the hedged cash flows.
When applying a quantitative method to assess effectiveness in a cash flow hedging relationship, many
reporting entities determine the change in fair value of the hedged cash flows by using a perfectly
effective hypothetical derivative, i.e., a derivative with terms that match those of the hedged item and
would therefore represent the “perfect” derivative for the hedged risk. The reporting entity compares
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Effectiveness
the change in fair value of the hypothetical derivative to the change in fair value of the hedging
instrument in assessing whether the hedge is highly effective.
The term “hypothetical derivative” is used within ASC 815-30-35-25 through ASC 815-30-35-29, which
provides guidance on assessing effectiveness for hedges using interest rate swaps. However, the
concept of a hypothetical derivative is used more broadly in practice because it provides a basis for
comparison when determining whether a hedging instrument is highly effective. A hypothetical
derivative may be used for options, forwards, swaps, or other derivatives and for other exposures in
addition to interest rate risk (e.g., foreign currency or commodity price risk).
The perfect hypothetical derivative is a derivative that has terms that are identical to the critical terms
of the hedged item and has a fair value of zero at inception of the hedging relationship. As indicated in
ASC 815-20-55-108 through ASC 815-20-55-109, if an entity uses the hypothetical derivative method
and determines that the terms of the hypothetical derivative exactly match the terms of the actual
hedging instrument, the actual swap would be expected to perfectly offset the hedged cash flows. In
these cases, we do not believe an initial quantitative assessment test is required, based on the guidance
in ASC 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(01)(F).
We recommend that the reporting entity still specify and document at inception of the hedging
relationship a long-haul approach using the hypothetical derivative method to ensure that if the terms
of the forecasted transaction change, the reporting entity will not automatically have to dedesignate
the hedging relationship because the terms of the actual and hypothetical derivatives differ. Under this
approach, the reporting entity could document that an initial quantitative test was not required since
the actual derivative was equal to the hypothetical derivative. However, if the terms do not exactly
match, a quantitative assessment is needed to determine if the hedge is effective.
The determination of the fair value of both the perfect hypothetical derivative and the actual derivative
should use discount rates based on the relevant swap curves.
In some cases, use of the hypothetical derivative method to assess effectiveness is required, including:
□ Cash flow hedges with options when effectiveness is based on terminal value (see ASC 815-30-35-
33 and ASC 815-30-35-34)
□ Net investment hedges using the spot method (see ASC 815-35-35-10 and ASC 815-35-35-11)
□ Net investment hedges using the forward method (see ASC 815-35-35-19 through ASC 815-35-35-
21)
For net investment hedges, ASC 815-35-35-11, ASC 815-35-35-14, ASC 815-35-35-19, and ASC 815-35-
35-20 specify that the hypothetical instrument used to assess hedge effectiveness should have a
maturity and repricing and payment frequencies for any interim payments that match those in the
actual designated hedging instrument in the net investment hedge.
A reporting entity may also use the change-in-variable-cash-flows method to assess effectiveness of a
cash flow hedge in certain circumstances. See DH 9.7 for more information.
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Effectiveness
When applying a quantitative method to assess effectiveness in a cash flow hedging relationship,
reporting entities may also determine the change in fair value of the hedged cash flows by using the
change-in-fair-value method, discussed in ASC 815-30-35-31.
An entity must also assess the risk of counterparty default as required by ASC 815-20-25-122. If the
likelihood of the obligor defaulting is assessed as being probable, the hedging relationship would not
qualify for hedge accounting.
The most common quantitative methods for assessing hedge effectiveness are dollar-offset and
regression analysis, but other methods may also be appropriate.
The dollar-offset method compares the change in fair value or present value of cash flows of the
hedging instrument to the changes in the fair value or present value of cash flows of the hedged item.
The dollar-offset method can be used in performing the prospective and/or the retrospective
assessments of effectiveness. This is supported by ASC 815-20-35-12.
As discussed in ASC 815-20-35-5, there are two permissible methods for retrospective assessments of
effectiveness under a dollar-offset approach: (1) the discrete (or period-by-period) approach and (2)
the cumulative approach. As their names imply, the discrete method computes an effectiveness ratio
based on the changes occurring in the period being assessed, while the cumulative method computes
an effectiveness ratio based on the cumulative change since inception of the hedge.
Figure DH 9-4
Dollar offset: discrete and cumulative approaches
Dollar-offset analysis
Hedged
End of Derivative Change1 item Change2 Discrete Cumulative
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Effectiveness
Inception $0 $0 $0 $0
As Figure DH 9-4 demonstrates, using the discrete period method of assessing effectiveness results in
disqualification of the hedge in quarters 3 and 4 (when the hedge effectiveness ratio is outside of the
80%-125% threshold), and thus, the inability to apply hedge accounting in those quarters.
If the cumulative method had been used, all periods would have been considered highly effective
(within the 80%-125% threshold) and the hedging relationship would have qualified for hedge
accounting.
When using the dollar-offset method, a reporting entity is free to select either the cumulative or the
discrete method when assessing hedge effectiveness; but once selected, it must abide by the results
regardless of the outcome, as discussed in ASC 815-20-35-6. A different method of assessing hedge
effectiveness may never be selected in hindsight.
Advantages/disadvantages to dollar-offset
While the dollar-offset method is simple to understand and easy to implement, its use might result in
difficulties demonstrating high effectiveness for the hedging relationship, particularly when there are
isolated periods of aberration in the behavior of the underlying. Generally, hedging relationships that
contain basis differences have an elevated risk of not qualifying for hedge accounting under a
retrospective test because such an aberration could weigh heavily in the assessment results.
An example of aberrant behavior is when there is a period of low price volatility in the principal
underlying reflected in the hedging instrument such that the changes in the fair value or present value
of cash flows of the hedging instrument and the hedged item are small. While many hedging
relationships will pass a dollar-offset test for high effectiveness when there are reasonably sized
movements in the price of the principal underlying, it is not uncommon for them to fail when there is a
small movement. This is because the difference will potentially represent a far greater portion of the
overall change in the hedged item. For example, assume a fair value hedge in which the notional
amount of the hedged item and the derivative are each $100 million. If the fair value of the hedged
item changes by $500,000 over the assessment period and the change in the fair value of the hedging
instrument is within plus or minus 10% of the change in the fair value of the hedged item, the dollar-
offset ratio would be 1.1 (i.e., $550,000 divided by $500,000). However, if in a period of low volatility
for the underlying, the change in fair value of the hedging instrument was $65,000, and the change in
fair value of the hedged item is $50,000, the dollar-offset ratio would be 1.3 and the hedging
relationship would fail the effectiveness assessment.
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Effectiveness
Because of the risk of losing hedge effectiveness in periods of low volatility, many reporting entities
use regression analysis instead of the dollar-offset approach. Regression analysis evaluates the
relationship between the hedging instrument and the hedged item over a number of periods, and thus,
isolated periods of low volatility in the underlying will generally not cause the hedge to fail the
effectiveness test.
Regression analysis is a statistical technique used to analyze the relationship between one variable (the
dependent variable) and one or more other variables (independent variables) using a set of data
points. A regression model is a formal means of expressing a tendency of the dependent variable to
vary with the independent variable in a systematic fashion.
In the context of a hedge effectiveness assessment, the primary objective of regression analysis is to
determine if changes to the hedged item and derivative are highly correlated and, thus, supportive of
the assertion that there will be a high degree of offset in fair values or cash flows achieved by the
hedge. For example, if a $10 change in the dependent variable (i.e., the derivative) was accompanied
by an offsetting $10.01 change in the independent variable (i.e., the hedged item) and if further
changes in the dependent variable were accompanied by similar magnitude changes in the
independent variable, there would be a strong correlation because approximately 100% of the change
in the dependent variable can be “explained” by the change in the independent variable.
The use of regression analysis is more likely than the dollar-offset method to enable a reporting entity
to continue with hedge accounting despite unusual aberrations that may occur in a particular period.
The application of regression analysis allows isolated aberrations to be minimized by more normal
changes in fair value that occur over the remainder of the periods included in the regression. However,
the use of regression analysis is complex; it requires considerable effort to develop the models, and
interpreting the results requires judgment.
Model inputs
The following are key considerations regarding inputs in the regression analysis.
In the regression model, the change in fair value of the derivative will likely be the dependent variable
(Y) and the change in fair value of the hedged item will likely be the independent variable (X).
Data points
The objective of the regression analysis is to estimate a linear equation that best captures the
relationship between the hedged item and the derivative. The inputs are a series of matched-pair
observations for the hedged item and derivative. For example, the inputs could be the change in fair
value of the hedged item and derivative observed weekly between January 1, 20X1 and October 31,
20X1. Thus, the first observation would be as of January 8, 20X1 and would include only the changes
in the fair value of the derivative and the hedged item from January 1, 20X1 to January 8, 20X1.
Subsequent observations would include only the changes in the fair value of the derivative and hedged
item that occur during the weekly periods under observation (i.e., not on a cumulative basis). Use of
cumulative changes has a propensity to create autocorrelation in the regression analysis, which may
invalidate it. See the Other considerations section later in this section.
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Effectiveness
In calculating the data points to be used in the regression model, reporting entities should also decide
whether to use a declining maturity approach (i.e., the remaining term of the hedged item and hedging
instrument will vary at each data point because the maturity date is held constant) or a constant
maturity approach (i.e., the remaining term of the hedged item and hedging instrument will stay
constant at each data point).
□ In a declining maturity approach, the reporting entity uses some previously-calculated data points
by removing the oldest and adding more recent data points (keeping the number of data points the
same each period).
□ In a constant maturity approach, all of the data points are recalculated in each successive analysis
as the remaining tenor or life of the derivative changes over time.
Time horizon
For prospective considerations throughout the life of a hedging relationship, the analysis should use
observations selected on a consistent basis over a consistent period of time. The time horizon (period
over which data points are gathered) should be relevant for the hedging period and statistically
significant.
It is important to use a sufficient number of data points to ensure a statistically valid regression
analysis. Generally speaking, as sample size increases, interpretation of the model and conclusions
that can be drawn improve. We expect most regression analyses conducted to assess hedge
effectiveness will be based on 30 or more observations, but fewer may be acceptable in certain
circumstances.
ASC 815-20-35-3 permits a reporting entity to use the same regression analysis for both prospective
and retrospective tests. The regression calculations should use the same number of data points, and
the reporting entity must periodically update the data points used in its regression analysis.
Results
□ The F-statistic or t-statistic associated with the slope coefficient should be significant at a 95% or
greater confidence level.
In addition:
□ Unexpectedly large residuals, especially recent ones, may indicate an unusual period in the
relationship.
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R2
The degree of explanatory power or correlation between the dependent and independent variables is
measured by the coefficient of determination, or R2. R2 is one of the key statistical considerations
when a regression analysis is used to support hedge accounting. The R2 indicates the portion of
variability in the dependent variable that can be explained by variation in the independent variable.
Therefore, the higher the R2 for a hedging strategy, the more effective the relationship is likely to be.
Although ASC 815 does not provide a specific threshold for R2, practice generally requires an R2 of
0.80 or higher for a hedging relationship to be considered highly effective.
While the R2 is a key metric, it is not the only consideration when using regression analysis to evaluate
the effectiveness of a hedging relationship. Reporting entities should also evaluate the slope coefficient
and the F-statistic or t-statistic, the statistical significance of the relationship between the variables.
Slope coefficient
The slope is an important component of a highly effective hedging relationship. The slope coefficient is
the slope of the straight line that the regression analysis determines "best fits" the data.
Many regression analyses uses the "least squares" method to fit a line through the set of observations
(ordinary least squares regression). This method determines the intercept and slope that minimize the
size of the squared differences between the actual Y observations and the predicted Y values (i.e., the
vertical differences between plotted observations and the regression line).
The slope coefficient should be interpreted as the change in the derivative associated with a change in
the hedged item. If the model is developed using the change in fair value of the derivative as the
dependent variable (Y) and the change in fair value of the hedged item the independent variable (X),
the slope equals the change in Y divided by the change in X, or "rise" over "run." In effective 1 for 1
hedging relationships, the slope coefficient will approximate a value of -1. In practice, many reporting
entities apply a range of -0.80 to -1.25, as described in DH 9.2.1.
The slope coefficient should be negative (except when the hedged item is represented by a hypothetical
derivative in a cash flow hedge) because the derivative is expected to offset changes in the hedged
item. In other words, to be an effective hedging relationship, the derivative and the hedged item must
move in an inverse manner. If the analysis yields a positive slope coefficient, it means that when the
hedged item goes up in value, the derivative goes up in value, which is not a hedge. If the hypothetical
derivative method is used in a regression as a proxy for the hedged item, the slope of a regression line
would be positive, since the actual derivative is compared to a hypothetical derivative, rather than to
the hedged item itself.
F-statistic or t-statistic
An F-statistic or t-statistic associated with the slope coefficient is useful in determining whether there
is a statistically significant relationship between the dependent and independent variables. In ordinary
least squares regression analyses, the F-statistic is equal to the squared t-statistic for the slope
coefficient. Generally, the result should be significant at a 95% confidence level.
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Effectiveness
Other considerations
Unexpectedly large residuals (relative to the predicted value or to other residuals) may indicate an
unusual period in the relationship between the dependent and independent variables. In many cases
when the regression analysis yields acceptable results, the residuals will not be important. However,
residuals may signal declining effectiveness if the largest residuals come primarily from the most
recent observations. Judgment should be used when interpreting declining effectiveness over time.
The decline could be temporary, or it could call into question the effectiveness of the hedging
relationship in future periods if the trend persists.
One of the assumptions underlying ordinary least squares regression is that the errors are
uncorrelated. Correlated errors are referred to as “autocorrelation.” Autocorrelation may indicate that
the regression model is not statistically valid because it can cause the R2, F-statistic (or t-statistic), and
slope coefficient to be misstated. In time series data, autocorrelation can be caused by the prolonged
influence of shocks in the economy (e.g., the effects of war or strikes can affect several periods).
Autocorrelation can also be artificially induced through the use of overlapping observations. For
example, overlapping inputs would result if the first observation in a regression analysis is the change
in value from January 1, 20X1 to March 31, 20X1 and the second observation is the change in value
from February 1, 20X1 to April 30, 20X1. The use of overlapping inputs creates a dependency in the
input variables because some months of each observation are the same, and should be avoided.
Reporting entities should consider use of statistical procedures that are available to detect, and
attempt to correct for, autocorrelation, such as the Durbin-Watson Test.
To determine whether the reporting entity can reasonably support performing assessments of
effectiveness after hedge inception on a qualitative basis, ASC 815-20-55-79G through ASC 815-20-55-
79N states that the entity should consider the following:
□ The results of the quantitative assessment of effectiveness performed at inception of the hedging
relationship
Generally, the closer the initial quantitative assessment is to achieving perfect offset, the more
support there is for using a qualitative assessment subsequently. When a hedge is close to failing
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Effectiveness
the effectiveness test, it is less likely that a reporting entity will be able to support performing its
subsequent effectiveness assessments qualitatively.
□ Alignment of the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the hedged item
o Which market conditions may cause the changes in fair values or cash flows attributable
to the hedged risk to diverge as a result of the misalignment
o The extent and consistency of the correlation between the hedged item and hedging
instrument
For example, if the only critical term that does not match is the underlying and past
observations of changes in the underlyings of the hedged item and hedging instrument
consistently exhibited high correlation, then performing subsequent assessments
qualitatively is more likely to be supportable than if changes have not been consistently
highly correlated.
o Whether changes in market conditions could cause a divergence and whether there is a
reasonable expectation that the hedging relationship is expected to remain stable or
whether that divergence is expected to continue or recur
The implementation guidance in ASC 815-20-55-79N makes it clear that a reporting entity should
consider the interaction of these factors in determining whether it can reasonably support performing
subsequent assessments of effectiveness qualitatively. For example, if a hedging relationship was not
close to failing the quantitative assessment of effectiveness nor was it close to being perfectly effective,
a lack of consistent high correlation exhibited over time between the past changes in the underlyings of
the hedged item and the hedging instrument would prevent the entity from reasonably supporting the
subsequent use of qualitative assessments. However, if the example were changed such that the past
changes had been highly correlated, then the entity might conclude it could reasonably support
performing subsequent assessments of effectiveness on a qualitative basis.
Reporting entities are required to perform an assessment at least quarterly. Using a qualitative
assessment does not impact the required frequency.
ASC 815-20-35-2C
When an entity performs qualitative assessments of hedge effectiveness, it shall verify and document
whenever financial statements or earnings are reported and at least every three months that the facts
and circumstances related to the hedging relationship have not changed such that it can assert
qualitatively that the hedging relationship was and continues to be highly effective. While not all-
inclusive, the following is a list of indicators that may, individually or in the aggregate, allow an entity
to continue to assert qualitatively that the hedging relationship is highly effective:
a. An assessment of the factors that enabled the entity to reasonably support an expectation of high
effectiveness on a qualitative basis has not changed such that the entity can continue to assert
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Effectiveness
qualitatively that the hedging relationship was and continues to be highly effective. This shall
include an assessment of the guidance in paragraph 815-20-25-100 when applicable.
b. There have been no adverse developments regarding the risk of counterparty default.
In the ongoing qualitative assessment, reporting entities should consider all sources of ineffectiveness,
both in terms of probability and magnitude. The factors to consider may vary depending on the type of
hedging relationship, but the analysis should consider all reasonably possible scenarios and should not
be limited only to likely or expected ones, as specified in ASC 815-20-25-79(a). Reporting entities
should also consider the existence of caps and floors that limit exposure in the hedged item when the
hedging instrument does not have an offsetting cap or floor.
A reporting entity should implement a process to monitor whether facts and circumstances in the
factors considered at hedge inception have changed during the period and since inception (both
periodic and cumulative) that would cause it to no longer be able to use a qualitative assessment of
hedge effectiveness.
For example, significant weather events could have an impact on certain agricultural commodities
such that two indices that were highly correlated previously would diverge (see ASC 815-20-55-79R).
Alternatively, a significant increase in the credit risk of the counterparty to the hedging instrument in
a fair value hedge of interest rate risk in a financial instrument may indicate that the hedging
relationship will no longer be highly effective at achieving offsetting changes in fair value.
The results of the reporting entity’s qualitative assessment should be documented. The extent of the
documentation may vary, but generally we expect more robust documentation as the need for
judgment increases.
When there has been a change in facts and circumstances such that the entity can no longer assert
qualitatively that the hedging relationship was and continues to be highly effective, a quantitative test
will need to be performed for that hedging relationship, and potentially, other similar hedging
relationships.
ASC 815-20-35-2D
If an entity elects to assess hedge effectiveness on a qualitative basis and then facts and circumstances
change such that the entity no longer can assert qualitatively that the hedging relationship was and
continues to be highly effective in achieving offsetting changes in fair values or cash flows, the entity
shall assess effectiveness of that hedging relationship on a quantitative basis in subsequent periods. In
addition, an entity may perform a quantitative assessment of hedge effectiveness in any reporting
period to validate whether qualitative assessments of hedge effectiveness remain appropriate. In both
cases, the entity shall apply the quantitative method that it identified in its initial hedge
documentation in accordance with paragraph 815-20-25-3(b)(2)(iv)(03).
Often, the change in facts and circumstances will affect other similar hedges. However, there may be
instances when a change only affects particular hedging relationships, for example, an adverse change
in counterparty credit risk would only affect hedges with that counterparty.
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Effectiveness
It may be prudent to perform a quantitative test if there has been a change in facts and circumstances
that could cause a decrease in effectiveness, even if the magnitude of the change does not appear to be
significant. In other words, reporting entities should consider performing a quantitative test even
when they still suspect there is some “headroom” in the effectiveness ratio.
While not necessary in all cases, some reporting entities may choose to periodically perform a
quantitative assessment, rather than only performing the test qualitatively, as a control to monitor the
continued ability to use the qualitative assessment.
ASC 815-20-35-2E
When an entity determines that facts and circumstances have changed and it no longer can assert
qualitatively that the hedging relationship was and continues to be highly effective, the entity shall
begin performing subsequent quantitative assessments of hedge effectiveness as of the period that the
facts and circumstances changed. If there is no identifiable event that led to the change in the facts and
circumstances of the hedging relationship, the entity may begin performing quantitative assessments
of effectiveness in the current period.
The FASB observes in paragraph BC213 of the Basis for Conclusions to ASU 2017-12 that it did not
intend for reporting entities to override judgments and conclusions made in prior periods when
applying the qualitative method in those prior periods was deemed appropriate. We believe this
concept applies as long as the qualitative assessment process in those prior periods was valid. In other
words, we do not believe the Board’s observation in the Basis for Conclusions can be used to
grandfather a nonexistent or invalid qualitative process that did not previously detect an effectiveness
issue due to a flaw in design or execution.
After performing a quantitative assessment of hedge effectiveness for one or more periods, a reporting
entity may revert to qualitative assessments of hedge effectiveness if it can reasonably support an
expectation of high effectiveness on a qualitative basis for subsequent periods.
ASC 815-20-55-79G(b)(1)(ii)
A specific event or circumstance may cause a temporary disruption to the market that results in an
entity concluding that the facts and circumstances of the hedging relationship have changed such that
it no longer can assert qualitatively that the hedging relationship was and continues to be highly
effective. In those instances, if the results of the quantitative assessment of effectiveness do not
significantly diverge from the results of the initial assessment of effectiveness, that market disruption
should not prevent the entity from returning to qualitative testing in subsequent periods. If the results
of the quantitative assessment of effectiveness do significantly diverge from the results of the initial
assessment of effectiveness, the entity should continually monitor whether the temporary market
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Effectiveness
disruption has been resolved when determining whether to return to qualitative testing in subsequent
periods.
The event or circumstance that prevented use of a qualitative assessment might be temporary or
isolated and its effects may have passed such that the hedged item and hedging instrument now
behave more consistently relative to one another as they had at the time of the initial effectiveness
assessment.
ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement, applies to assets and liabilities designated as the hedged item in a
fair value hedge of the overall change in fair value. We believe the change in fair value of the hedged
item in a fair value hedge of the overall change in fair value should be measured at exit value based on
the fair value measurement framework that includes the effects of credit risk (nonperformance risk).
The change in fair value of the hedged item attributable to the risk being hedged should be measured
over the hedge period and reported as an adjustment of the hedged item’s carrying value. The risk
being hedged may be the overall change in fair value or only the change in value attributable to a
specific risk. In the latter situation, the change in fair value is measured under ASC 820 based on the
hedged risk and not on the asset or liability designated as the hedged item in a fair value hedge. The
hedged item may be an item that is reported at fair value with changes in fair value reported in OCI
(e.g., an available-for-sale debt security) or it may be reported based on some other measurement
basis (e.g., a debt instrument reported at amortized cost). However, it is the change in the fair value of
the hedged item due to changes in the hedged risk that is measured.
Reporting entities need to consider nonperformance risk for derivatives used as hedging instruments
in both fair value and cash flow hedges. Also, nonperformance risk will impact the measurement of the
hedged item in a fair value hedge when the hedged risk is the total change in fair value.
Often, a reporting entity will have a master netting agreement in place with a counterparty.
Consequently, it needs to (1) allocate the impact of nonperformance risk for the counterparty to the
individual derivatives with that counterparty that are used in hedging relationships and (2) use the fair
value, inclusive of nonperformance risk, in assessing effectiveness. When there is no master netting
agreement, step (1) is not necessary; the calculation of counterparty credit risk is done at the
individual instrument level.
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Effectiveness
The impact of considering nonperformance risk may vary depending on the type of hedge (fair value
versus cash flow), the hedged risk (i.e., whether it is a hedge of total changes in fair value for a fair
value hedge), and the method used to assess hedge effectiveness.
Different approaches, including qualitative ones, may be acceptable. However, even if a qualitative
approach is appropriate for the assessment of effectiveness, reporting entities need to use a
quantitative approach to allocating the nonperformance risk to the appropriate income statement line
items or to other comprehensive income.
The assessment should take into account the effect on both the derivative’s carrying amount and on
hedge effectiveness. For example, if a hedging relationship is near 100% effective before considering
the effect of credit risk, it may be easier to demonstrate that any adjustment would not materially
affect the financial statements than if a hedge is, say, close to 80% effective before considering the
effect of credit risk. In the latter circumstance, even a minor change could result in the hedge not
meeting the 80%—125% threshold to qualify for hedge accounting.
Reporting entities should consider nonperformance risk for derivatives used as hedging instruments
in fair value hedges. In the case of a fair value hedge, a change in the creditworthiness of the
derivative’s counterparty would have an immediate impact because it would affect the change in the
derivative’s fair value, which would immediately affect both:
□ The difference between the change in fair value of the hedged item attributable to the hedged risk
and the change in fair value of the derivative recognized in earnings under fair value hedge
accounting
Nonperformance risk is calculated based on multiple derivatives and collateral when master netting
agreements are used. A reporting entity may make a qualitative assessment as to whether
nonperformance risk, if allocated, would impact the determination of effectiveness of an individual
hedging relationship. If, as a result of the qualitative analysis, the reporting entity concludes that the
allocation of nonperformance risk is unlikely to affect its assessment of hedge effectiveness, it would
not be required to allocate the impact of nonperformance risk to the individual derivatives for
purposes of assessing effectiveness. However, this analysis does not affect the requirement to calculate
the risk of nonperformance in the measurement of fair value and record the actual amount in the
appropriate income statement line item.
If, on the other hand, the reporting entity concludes through its qualitative analysis that the risk of
nonperformance could impact its assessment of hedge effectiveness, the reporting entity should
allocate the effect of nonperformance risk to the individual derivative hedging instruments and
consider that risk in evaluating hedge effectiveness.
For a reporting entity to conclude on an ongoing basis that a cash flow hedge is expected to be highly
effective, it cannot ignore whether it will collect the payments it would be owed under the contractual
provisions of the derivative instrument. The entity should assess the possibility that the counterparty
to the derivative will default by failing to make any contractually-required payments to the entity. In
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Effectiveness
making that assessment, the entity should also consider the effect of any related collateralization or
financial guarantees. The entity should be aware of the counterparty’s creditworthiness (and changes
in it) in determining the fair value of the derivative. Although a change in the counterparty’s
creditworthiness would not necessarily indicate that the counterparty would default on its obligations,
such a change would warrant further evaluation.
The effect of counterparty credit risk on cash flow hedging relationships is slightly different than in a
fair value hedge. If the likelihood that the counterparty will not default ceases to be probable, a
reporting entity would be unable to conclude that the hedging relationship in a cash flow hedge is
expected to be highly effective in achieving offsetting cash flows.
If the likelihood that the counterparty will not default is still probable, the impact of credit risk when
assessing effectiveness of a cash flow hedge could vary depending on the method applied:
□ Change in variable cash flows method: When applying this method, the present value of the
cumulative changes in expected future cash flows on both the variable-rate leg of the interest rate
swap and the variable-rate asset or liability is calculated using the discount rates applicable to
determining the fair value of the interest rate swap (see ASC 815-30-55-92). Credit risk has an
impact only when there are other differences between the floating leg of the swap and the variable-
rate asset or liability or if default is probable.
□ Hypothetical derivative method: The determination of the fair value of both the perfect
hypothetical interest rate swap and the actual interest rate swap uses discount rates based on the
relevant interest rate swap curves (see ASC 815-30-35-29). Credit risk has an impact only when
there are other differences between the actual and hypothetical derivative or if default is probable.
□ Change in fair value method: A change in the creditworthiness of the derivative instrument’s
counterparty in a cash flow hedge has an immediate impact under this method because credit and
nonperformance risk are considered in determining the fair value of the swap in each period.
In summary, under the first two scenarios, hedge effectiveness is generally not impacted by credit risk
if it is probable that the counterparties will comply with the contractual provisions of the instrument
and there are no other differences present. Credit risk more directly impacts hedge effectiveness under
the third method, which is less commonly used in practice.
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Chapter 10:
Discontinuance
9-1
Discontinuance
□ the hedging relationship no longer qualifies for hedge accounting or ceases to be highly effective;
The dedesignation of a hedging relationship and the designation of a new hedging relationship is not a
change in accounting principle under ASC 250, Accounting Changes and Error Corrections.
After discontinuance of a prior hedge, a reporting entity may establish a new hedging relationship
prospectively that involves either the same or a new derivative, or the same or a new hedged item, as
long as the new hedging relationship satisfies the qualifying criteria for hedge accounting.
Question DH 10-1 discusses terminating a hedging relationship and redesignating a new hedging
relationship with the same hedged item on a recurring basis.
Question DH 10-1
Does hedge accounting prohibit terminating or dedesignating a hedging relationship and
redesignating a new hedging relationship with the same hedged item on a recurring basis?
10-2
Discontinuance
PwC response
No. ASC 815 has no specific prohibition against terminating one hedge and initiating another, nor does
it set limitations on the frequency of such terminations and redesignations. Delta-neutral and dynamic
hedging are examples of strategies that involve dedesignations and redesignations. In delta-neutral
hedging, the quantity of the hedging instrument is constantly adjusted to maintain a desired hedge
ratio. Dynamic hedging may involve a single derivative, or more commonly, it involves a number of
derivatives to make the hedge highly effective for a hedge period of one or several days to a week.
Dynamic and delta-neutral hedging strategies are eligible for hedge accounting provided that
reporting entities can (1) properly track all of the changes (i.e., terminations and redesignations) and
(2) demonstrate that all other qualifying criteria, such as high effectiveness, have been met. Dynamic
hedging is addressed in DH 6.2.2.2 and DH 9.2.4.
Generally, if a critical term of a hedging relationship is modified, the existing hedging relationship
must be discontinued. If a reporting entity wishes to continue hedge accounting, it must create a new
hedging relationship. ASC 815-20-55-56 and ASC 815-30-35-37A provide an exception for a change in
the hedged risk in a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction.
ASC 815-30-35-37A
If the designated hedged risk changes during the life of a hedging relationship, an entity may continue
to apply hedge accounting if the hedging instrument is highly effective at achieving offsetting cash
flows attributable to the revised hedged risk. The guidance in paragraph 815-20-55-56 does not apply
to changes in the hedged risk for a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction.
Some modifications to the hedged item that would require dedesi gnation of a hedging relationship
include:
□ Certain changes to the documented key terms of a forecasted transaction (e.g., changing from
hedging the purchase of a commodity in November to the purchase of a commodity in February)
□ Substitution of a new debt issuance for an existing debt issuance in a fair value hedge of interest
rate risk of a specified debt issuance
□ Addition or removal of a floor or cap to or from the agreement (or adjustment of the terms)
10-3
Discontinuance
Some modifications to the hedging instrument that would require dedesignation of a hedging
relationship include:
□ Modifications to a payment term of the derivative (changing the coupon on an interest rate swap
or changing the strike price of a forward or option)
□ Significant increase in credit risk such that the likelihood that the counterparty will not default
ceases to be probable
□ “Blend and extend” transactions in which a current derivative is settled by entering into a new
derivative with similar terms and the gain or loss on the original contract is settled by the new
contract having off-market terms
Novations of a derivative contract may occur for a number of reasons, including regulatory
requirements (such as to effect central clearing of certain transactions), financial institution mergers,
intercompany transactions, or financial institutions voluntarily exiting a particular derivative business
or a customer relationship.
As discussed in ASC 815-25-40-1A for fair value hedges and ASC 815-30-40-1A for cash flow hedges, a
change in the counterparty to a derivative hedging instrument in an existing hedging relationship
would not, in and of itself, be considered a termination of the derivative. However, a reporting entity
needs to evaluate whether it is probable that the counterparty will perform under the contract as part
of its ongoing effectiveness assessment. Therefore, a novation of a derivative to a counterparty with a
sufficiently high credit risk could still result in dedesignation of the hedging relationship.
A Credit Support Annex (CSA) is an appendix to the ISDA master document establishing rules for the
receiving and posting of collateral by each party to the ISDA contract. Adding a CSA is a modification
that changes the credit risk of the derivative instrument. Given the existence of netting provisions
within agreements, entering into a new individual derivative transaction can also impact the credit risk
of other derivatives. Since any new derivatives do not typically call into question the existing
designations of other derivatives with the same counterparty under the same ISDA master agreement,
we do not believe that subsequent executions of the most common CSA agreements would call into
question the existing hedge designations of the derivatives.
In some arrangements, the legal nature of variation margin payments is collateral, and in others, it is a
settlement payment. See DH 1.3.2.1 for discussion of collateralized-to-market and settled-to-market
transactions.
10-4
Discontinuance
Because variation margin is paid or received on a daily basis, a question arises as to whether a
derivative would need to be dedesignated and redesignated on a daily basis to maintain a hedging
relationship when it is deemed a settlement payment. In an industry preclearance submission, the SEC
staff did not object to a view that these settlement payments would not require daily dedesignation and
redesignation if the terms of the derivative, such as the notional amount and fixed and floating rates,
are not reset to market rates on a daily basis. As a result, these settlement payments would not result
in the extinguishment of one instrument and the execution of a new instrument on a daily basis.
□ Hedging instrument is dedesignated in its entirety (DH 10.3.3) or in part (DH 10.3.3.1), although
it may be redesignated in a new hedging relationship (DH 10.3.4)
□ Hedged item no longer meets the definition of a firm commitment in ASC 815-10-20 (DH 10.3.5)
□ Hedged item is sold or extinguished, in its entirety (DH 10.3.6) or in part (DH 10.3.6.1)
When a fair value hedging relationship is no longer intact or effective, a reporting entity should stop
adjusting the carrying amount of the hedged item for changes in fair value due to the hedged risk.
Unlike the accounting for the hedged item, if there were no components excluded from the assessment
of effectiveness in the hedging relationship, the measurement of the derivative may not change when a
fair value hedge is discontinued. If there were excluded components in the hedging relationship
recognized in earnings under an amortization approach, when the derivative is no longer in the
hedging relationship, that treatment would not be appropriate. As such, prospectively, the entire
derivative should be measured at fair value through earnings, but without any offset, unless it is
redesignated in a new hedging relationship.
Upon discontinuance of a fair value hedge, excluded components deferred in AOCI because they were
recognized through an amortization approach are released to earnings consistent with how other
components of the carrying amount of the hedged item are recognized in earnings. However, if the
hedged item is derecognized, ASC 815-25-40-7 requires any amounts remaining in AOCI related to the
excluded components to be recorded in earnings. Excluded components are discussed in DH 6.3.1.2
for financial items and DH 7.2.1.3 for nonfinancial items.
If a fair value hedging relationship does not pass the prospective effectiveness test, hedge accounting
should be discontinued going forward.
If a hedging relationship does not pass the retrospective effectiveness test, hedge accounting should be
discontinued as of the last date when the hedged item was assessed and demonstrated high
10-5
Discontinuance
effectiveness. The reporting entity would stop adjusting the carrying amount of the hedged item for
the hedged risk as of that date, unless it can determine a specific point that it failed to be effective.
Adjustments to the carrying amount of the hedged item (basis adjustments) should be recognized in
earnings consistent with how other components of the carrying amount of the hedged item are
recognized in earnings. For example, adjustments to the basis of an interest-bearing loan are
recognized in accordance with ASC 310-20, Receivables - Nonrefundable Fees and Other Costs.
Assume a reporting entity determines that a hedging relationship did not pass the retrospective and
prospective effectiveness assessments during its monthly effectiveness assessment on July 31, 20X1.
Hedge accounting should be discontinued as of June 30, 20X1, the last date on which the hedged item
was assessed and demonstrated high effectiveness. The reporting entity would stop adjusting the
carrying amount of the hedged item for the hedged risk as of that date, unless it can determine a
specific point in July of 20X1 on which it failed to be effective.
For a discontinued fair value hedge in which the hedged item is not derecognized, ASC 815-25-40-7
indicates that amounts related to the excluded components remaining in AOCI should be recorded in
earnings in the same manner as other components of the carrying amount of the hedged item are
recognized in earnings.
At maturity of a derivative, any final amounts due are settled, there are no further rights or obligations
of either party, and the fair value of the expired contract (after final settlement) is zero. There is no
further accounting for the derivative because it no longer exists.
Similarly, a derivative settled in its entirety with the counterparty prior to its maturity date, or sold or
novated/assigned to a third party no longer exists from the perspective of the reporting entity.
For a discontinued fair value hedge in which the hedged item is not derecognized, basis adjustments
are recognized in earnings consistent with how other components of the carrying amount of the
hedged item are recognized in earnings. For example, adjustments to the basis of an interest-bearing
loan are recognized in accordance with ASC 310-20. In addition, ASC 815-25-40-7 indicates that
amounts related to the excluded components remaining in AOCI are recorded in earnings in the same
manner as basis adjustments.
When a fair value hedging instrument is dedesignated, continues to exist, and is not redesignated in a
new hedging relationship, the hedging instrument should be measured at fair value with changes
recorded in current earnings prospectively. However, there is no basis adjustment on the hedged item
to fully or partially offset the gain or loss on the derivative.
For a discontinued fair value hedge in which the hedged item is not derecognized, adjustments to the
carrying amount of the hedged item are recognized in earnings consistent with how other components
of the carrying amount of the hedged item are recognized in earnings. For example, adjustments to the
basis of an interest-bearing loan are recognized in accordance with ASC 310-20. In addition, ASC 815-
25-40-7 indicates that amounts related to the excluded components remaining in AOCI should be
recorded in earnings in the same manner as basis adjustments.
10-6
Discontinuance
Within Example 19, Hedging a Portfolio of Fixed Rate Financial Assets, ASC 815-20-55-178 indicates
that a partial dedesignation of a fair value hedge is permitted. In that example, a reporting entity
dedesignated the portion of the notional amount of a swap that was in excess of the portfolio of fixed-
rate loans that it had available to hedge. Changes in the fair value of the portion of the derivative that
was dedesignated would be recorded in earnings with no offsetting basis adjustment to the hedged
item from the point of partial dedesignation onward. However, changes in the fair value of the portion
of the derivative that remains in the hedging relationship would be offset in earnings by changes in the
fair value of the hedged item for the hedged risk.
The dedesignated portion of the derivative may be redesignated in a new hedging relationship.
When a fair value hedging instrument is dedesignated and subsequently redesignated in a new fair
value hedging relationship, the accounting for the derivative may change depending on the reporting
entity’s elections for excluded components on the original and the new hedging relationships. As
discussed in DH 10.3.3, for a discontinued fair value hedge in which the hedged item is not
derecognized, basis adjustments and excluded components recognized in AOCI are recognized in
earnings consistent with how other components of the carrying amount of the hedged item are
recognized in earnings. Any excluded components in the new hedging relationship would be
recognized in accordance with the reporting entity’s election, as discussed in DH 6.3.1.2 for hedges of
financial items and DH 7.2.1.3 for hedges of nonfinancial items.
Although rare, when a hedged firm commitment no longer meets the definition of a firm commitment,
815-25-40-5 states that any asset or liability that was recognized under a fair value hedge through
cumulative fair value adjustments of the firm commitment must be derecognized, and a corresponding
gain or loss recorded in earnings.
A pattern of discontinuing hedge accounting and derecognizing firm commitments would call into
question the application of hedge accounting to firm commitments in the future.
The fair value hedge model provides for recording a basis adjustment on the hedged item. As a result,
when the hedged item is sold or extinguished, the basis adjustment is derecognized with the hedged
item and impacts any gain or loss recorded on sale or extinguishment of the hedged item.
Because the derivative is no longer in a hedging relationship, it is measured at fair value through
current earnings without any offset, unless it is redesignated in another hedging relationship.
10-7
Discontinuance
If part of the hedged item is sold, prepaid, or otherwise extinguished, consistent with the treatment of
a full extinguishment discussed in DH 10.3.6, a portion of the basis adjustment is derecognized.
In the case of partial sale or extinguishment, we believe the portion of the amount in AOCI related to
excluded components recognized through an amortization approach on the partially sold or prepaid
derivative should be reclassified to earnings currently.
The hedging relationship may no longer be effective if a portion of the hedged item no longer exists. If
so, the reporting entity will have to dedesignate the entire relationship (because it will no longer
qualify for hedge accounting). Alternatively, it may partially dedesignate the hedging instrument if
done concurrent with the change to the hedged item.
Example DH 10-1 illustrates a partial dedesignation of a hedging instrument when the hedged item is
partially extinguished.
EXAMPLE DH 10-1
Partial dedesignation of hedging instrument upon partial extinguishment of hedged item
DH Corp issues $100 million of fixed-rate non-callable debt and enters into a receive-fixed/pay-
floating interest rate swap with a notional amount of $70 million. DH Corp designates the interest rate
swap as a fair value hedge of benchmark interest rate risk of 70% of the debt.
One year after issuing the debt, DH Corp repurchases $20 million of the debt in the market so that the
new debt balance is $80 million.
Analysis
After the debt extinguishment, the amount of debt hedged would be $56 million (70% of the $80
million new debt balance). To maintain a highly effective hedge, DH Corp could partially dedesignate
(concurrent with the extinguishment) the portion of the hedging instrument no longer needed once
the debt balance decreases to $80 million. Once the unnecessary portion of the swap is dedesignated,
$56 million of the notional amount would be designated as a hedge of the debt and $14 million would
not.
DH Corp may redesignate the $14 million of swap notional in a new hedging relationship, including as
a hedge of the originally unhedged portion of the debt.
When a reporting entity discontinues a fair value hedging relationship of an interest-bearing asset or
liability by either dedesignating or terminating the derivative, the basis adjustment should generally
be amortized over the remaining life of the hedged item, with the amortization included in interest
income or interest expense. Amortization must commence when the hedged item ceases to be adjusted
for changes in fair value attributable to the hedged risk.
10-8
Discontinuance
If the hedged item is not an interest-bearing financial instrument and the hedge is discontinued, the
basis adjustment is generally recognized in the income statement when the hedged item impacts
earnings in the same line item. For example, if a hedge of a commodity held in inventory is
discontinued, the basis adjustment to the inventory balance would be recognized in earnings when the
inventory is sold (as part of cost of goods sold).
If a new hedging instrument is designated as a hedge of 100% of the existing hedged item for the same
hedged risk, the carrying amount of the hedged item would resume being adjusted.
If only a portion of an item is redesignated as the hedged item in a new hedging relationship, only that
portion of the carrying amount of the hedged item attributable to the risk being hedged will be
adjusted for changes in fair value due to the hedged risk. The remaining portion of the hedged item
would not be measured at fair value for the risk being hedged because it is not part of the hedging
relationship.
Whether full or partial redesignation, basis adjustments from previous hedging relationships that were
hedging interest rate risk of interest bearing hedged items generally should be amortized over the
hedged item’s remaining contractual life.
For interest-bearing assets and liabilities, if a partial-term hedge is discontinued early, the remaining
basis adjustment would be amortized in accordance with the applicable guidance for the hedged item.
For example, for hedges of interest bearing loans, amortization of the basis adjustment would be
calculated in accordance with ASC 310-20. Thus, the amortization period may change upon
termination because basis adjustments amortized while the partial-term hedge is in place are
amortized over the assumed term of the hedged item while amortization upon discontinuance under
ASC 310-20 may be over the contractual life.
As described in ASC 815-25-35-7A, when a hedged item qualifies and is designated under the last-of-
layer method, the reporting entity is required to perform an analysis at each effectiveness assessment
date to determine whether the amount representing the hedged item is still expected to be fully
outstanding as of the assumed maturity date.
10-9
Discontinuance
ASC 815-25-40-8 indicates that the entire last-of-layer hedging relationship must be discontinued in
full when, on a testing date, the outstanding amount of the closed portfolio is less than the amount
hedged. A last-of-layer hedge can be partially discontinued when the reporting entity cannot, on a
forward-looking basis, support that the hedged item will be outstanding through the assumed maturity
date of the hedged portfolio. In that case, the reporting entity may dedesignate the portion of the
derivative related to the portion of the hedged layer no longer expected to be outstanding. Upon
discontinuance, whether full or partial, the outstanding basis adjustment, or a portion of it, is allocated
to the individual assets in the closed portfolio and amortized over a period consistent with
amortization of other discounts or premiums on the assets.
Reporting entities that are proactive in partially designating may be able to avoid a situation in which
full dedesignation is required.
If a last-of-layer hedging relationship is partially discontinued before the hedged item’s assumed
maturity date, the reporting entity needs to use a systematic and rational method to allocate the
outstanding basis adjustment associated with the amount of the hedged item that is dedesignated as of
the discontinuance date to the individual assets in the portfolio. ASC 815-25-40-9 states that those
amounts will then be amortized consistently with other discounts and premiums on the related assets.
If a last-of-layer hedging relationship is fully discontinued before the hedged item’s assumed maturity
date because the reporting entity breached the layer designated as the hedged item, the basis
adjustment would be divided using a systematic and rational method:
□ The proportion of the basis adjustment associated with the amount by which the hedged item
exceeds the amount outstanding in the closed portfolio is recognized in earnings.
□ The remaining outstanding basis adjustment is allocated to the remaining assets in the portfolio
using a systematic and rational method.
□ Hedging instrument is dedesignated in its entirety (DH 10.4.3) or in part (DH 10.4.3.1), although
it may be subsequently redesignated in a hedging relationship (DH 10.4.4)
□ Forecasted transaction is no longer probable but is reasonably possible of occurring (DH 10.4.5)
□ Forecasted transaction is probable of occurring, but on a date more than two months after the
initially-specified period (DH 10.4.7)
10-10
Discontinuance
When a cash flow hedge is discontinued, the net derivative gain or loss remains in AOCI unless it is
probable that the forecasted transaction will not occur in the originally-specified time period, range, or
within an additional two-month period thereafter. The additional two-month period relates only to
when the gain or loss on the derivative should be reclassified, not when hedge accounting should be
discontinued. In rare circumstances, the additional period of time may exceed two months due to
extenuating circumstances related to the nature of the forecasted transaction that are outside the
control or influence of the reporting entity.
If it is probable that the hedged forecasted transaction will not occur by the end of the originally-
specified time period, range or within the additional two-month period and the transaction does not
qualify for the extenuating circumstances exception, the derivative gain or loss in AOCI should be
reclassified to earnings immediately. Probability of the forecasted transaction is addressed in
DH 6.3.3.4 for hedges of financial items and DH 7.3.2.2 for hedges of nonfinancial items.
A pattern of determining that hedged forecasted transactions will not occur will call into question a
reporting entity’s ability to accurately predict forecasted transactions and the propriety of using hedge
accounting in the future for similar forecasted transactions. Reporting entities should develop a
process to identify if and when specific forecasted transactions become less than probable of
occurring.
ASC 815-30-40-6 precludes reversing gains/losses that were reclassified to earnings back to OCI due
to a re-assessment of probabilities (e.g., if the reporting entity later concluded the forecasted
transaction was again probable of occurring).
Examples included in ASC 815 provide further guidance on how documentation and probability
assessments impact hedge accounting and amounts deferred in AOCI.
10-11
Discontinuance
815-30-40-6A
When applying the guidance in paragraph 815-20-25-83A [in which excluded components are
recognized through an amortization approach], if the hedged forecasted transaction is probable of not
occurring, any amounts remaining in accumulated other comprehensive income related to amounts
excluded from the assessment of effectiveness shall be recorded in earnings in the current period. For
all other discontinued cash flow hedges, any amounts associated with the excluded component
remaining in accumulated other comprehensive income shall be recorded in earnings when the hedged
forecasted transaction affects earnings.
If a cash flow hedging relationship does not pass the prospective effectiveness test, hedge accounting
should be discontinued going forward.
If a cash flow hedging relationship does not pass the retrospective effectiveness test, hedge accounting
should be discontinued as of the last date when the hedged item was assessed and demonstrated high
effectiveness, unless a reporting entity can determine a specific point that it failed to be effective.
Assume a reporting entity determines that a hedging relationship did not pass the prospective and
retrospective effectiveness assessments during its monthly effectiveness assessment on July 31, 20X1.
Hedge accounting should be discontinued as of June 30, 20X1, the last date on which the hedged item
was assessed and demonstrated high effectiveness. The reporting entity would stop hedge accounting
as of that date, unless it can determine a specific point in July of 20X1 on which it failed to be effective.
If the cash flow hedge is no longer effective, but the forecasted transaction is not probable of not
occurring, the amounts previously recorded in AOCI, including amounts remaining related to excluded
components that were recognized through an amortization approach, remain there until the forecasted
transaction impacts earnings.
When a reporting entity dedesignates or voluntarily discontinues a cash flow hedge and the forecasted
transaction giving rise to variability in future cash flows will occur as expected, gains and losses that
are in AOCI, including amounts remaining related to excluded components that were recognized
through an amortization approach, will not be affected. In these cases, gains and losses remain in
AOCI until the forecasted transaction impacts earnings.
Future changes in the derivative’s fair value after discontinuance of hedge accounting, however, will be
recorded in current-period earnings if the derivative is not terminated or redesignated in a qualifying
hedge.
10-12
Discontinuance
We believe partial dedesignation of cash flow hedging instruments is permitted in some instances.
The dedesignated portion of the derivative may be redesignated in a new hedging relationship, as
illustrated in Example DH 10-2.
EXAMPLE DH 10-2
Redesignation of a portion of a derivative
USA Corp forecasts that it will sell 2,000 euro (EUR) of inventory on November 15, 20X1. The sales
have not been firmly committed to, but historical experience and sales forecasts indicate that sales are
probable.
On January 15, 20X1, USA Corp enters into a ten-month foreign currency forward contract to deliver
EUR 1,000 and receive USD to hedge the foreign currency risk associated with the sale of the first EUR
1,000 of forecasted sales of inventory on November 15, 20X1.
In March 20X1, USA Corp re-evaluates its foreign currency exposure and decides to decrease the
hedged amount to the first EUR 800 of forecasted sales of inventory expected on November 15, 20X1;
however, the original EUR 1,000 of sales are still probable of occurring.
Can USA Corp partially dedesignate EUR 200 of the derivative and continue hedge accounting for the
remaining EUR 800 under the existing hedging relationship?
Analysis
Yes. USA Corp may dedesignate EUR 200 of hedged item and EUR 200 of hedging instrument
notional amount and continue to apply hedge accounting for the remaining EUR 800.
10-13
Discontinuance
The hedging instrument would be accounted for in its new hedging relationship from the point of
redesignation onward.
When a reporting entity determines it is reasonably possible but not probable that the forecasted
transaction will not occur, the hedging relationship must be terminated, but gains and losses that are
in AOCI, including amounts remaining related to excluded components that were recognized through
an amortization approach, will remain there until the forecasted transaction impacts earnings or until
it later becomes probable of not occurring.
When a reporting entity determines that it is probable that the forecasted transaction will not occur by
the end of the originally specified time period or within an additional two-month period of time,
amounts deferred in AOCI are recognized immediately.
When a hedged forecasted transaction is probable of not occurring, ASC 815-30-40-6A requires any
amounts remaining in AOCI related to the excluded components to be recorded in earnings.
Generally, a forecasted transaction being probable of occurring on a date more than two months after
the originally-specified period would result in dedesignation of the hedging relationship and a
reclassification of amounts recorded in AOCI. In rare circumstances, the existence of extenuating
circumstances that are related to the nature of the forecasted transaction and are outside the control
or influence of the reporting entity may cause the forecasted transaction to be probable of occurring on
a date that is beyond the additional two-month period of time. In such rare circumstances, ASC 815-
30-40-4 permits the net derivative gain or loss related to the discontinued cash flow hedge to remain
in AOCI until the forecasted transaction impacts earnings.
How a reporting entity specifically defines its forecasted transaction can significantly impact (1) when
it must dedesignate a hedging relationship and (2) when the deferred gains or losses on the hedging
instrument get reclassified from AOCI into earnings. The key is to be specific enough such that it is
clear when the forecasted transaction occurs. However, the more specific the designation, the more
likely that unanticipated changes in the terms of the forecasted transaction could result in the
termination of the hedging relationship and the potential release of AOCI.
Figure DH 10-1 illustrates the impact of probability of forecasted transactions on the continuation of
hedge accounting and the amounts in AOCI.
10-14
Discontinuance
Figure DH 10-1
Assessing probability of forecasted transactions
Cash flow hedge accounting is required to be discontinued when the variability in cash flows of the
hedged forecasted transaction cease, for example, when a forecasted transaction becomes a firm
commitment. The amounts in AOCI related to the gain or loss on the derivative and the components
excluded from the assessment of effectiveness that were not yet amortized related to the time that it is
in a designated hedging relationship would remain deferred there until the forecasted transaction
impacts earnings. After discontinuance, the hedging instrument would be either (1) measured at fair
value through current earnings or (2) in a new hedging relationship (if it is redesignated) from the
point of redesignation onward.
In the example of a forecasted transaction that becomes a firm commitment, the firm commitment
could be designated as the hedged item in a new fair value hedging relationship. See DH 7.3.6.2.
10-15
Discontinuance
Discontinuance of a hedge of the foreign currency exposure of a net investment in a foreign operation
should be accounted for in a manner consistent with the provisions of ASC 830-30, Foreign
Currency—Translation of Financial Statements. ASC 830-30-40 requires reporting entities to
reclassify the amount attributable to a particular foreign entity from the cumulative translation
adjustment (CTA) in equity to earnings upon sale or complete or substantially complete liquidation of
an investment in the foreign entity.
A reporting entity must discontinue hedge accounting prospectively upon sale or complete or
substantially complete liquidation of the foreign entity or through the deconsolidation of a subsidiary
from a change in control, as provided in ASC 810-10, Consolidation-Overall. The reporting entity must
also discontinue hedge accounting if the hedging relationship no longer qualifies or no longer is highly
effective, or if the derivative expired or was sold, terminated, or exercised.
Consistent with fair value and cash flow hedges, a reporting entity may elect to voluntarily discontinue
a net investment hedge.
If a net investment hedging relationship does not pass the prospective effectiveness test, hedge
accounting should be discontinued going forward.
If a net investment hedging relationship does not pass the retrospective effectiveness test, hedge
accounting should be discontinued as of the last date when the hedged item was assessed and
demonstrated high effectiveness, unless it can determine a specific point that it failed to be effective.
Assume a reporting entity determines that a net investment hedging relationship did not pass the
prospective and retrospective effectiveness assessments during its monthly effectiveness assessment
on July 31, 20X1. Hedge accounting should be discontinued as of June 30, 20X1, the last date on
which the hedged item was assessed and demonstrated high effectiveness. The reporting entity would
stop hedge accounting as of that date, unless it can determine a specific day in July on which it ceased
being effective.
If the net investment hedge is no longer effective, any amounts that have not yet been recognized in
earnings remain in CTA until the net investment is sold, completely liquidated, or substantially
liquidated. ASC 815-35-40-1 provides that this would also apply to amounts related to excluded
components not yet recognized using the amortization approach if the entity assessed effectiveness
using the spot method.
10-16
Discontinuance
When a reporting entity dedesignates or voluntarily discontinues a net investment hedge, any amounts
that have not yet been recognized in earnings remain in CTA until the net investment is sold,
completely liquidated, or substantially liquidated. ASC 815-35-40-1 provides that this would also apply
to amounts related to excluded components not yet recognized using the amortization approach if the
entity assessed effectiveness using the spot method.
Future changes in the derivative’s fair value after discontinuance of hedge accounting, however, will be
recorded in current-period earnings if the derivative is not terminated or redesignated in a qualifying
hedge.
The hedging instrument would be accounted for in its new hedging relationship from the point of
redesignation onward.
The new entity will need to elect whether or not to designate derivatives in new hedge relationships
and demonstrate that the new hedging relationships meet all of the criteria to achieve hedge
accounting, including that they are expected to be highly effective. It may be challenging to achieve
hedge accounting for a redesignated hedge following a purchase business combination because:
□ the derivatives likely have a fair value other than zero at the acquisition date,
□ the hedged assets and liabilities, which are measured at fair value in a business combination, likely
have a different basis than they did in the original hedging relationship, and
□ the probability of a forecasted transaction occurring could change upon a business combination.
10-17
Discontinuance
However, Example 24 does not provide guidance for acquired companies that continue to exist within
the combined entity and issue standalone financial statements. Pushdown accounting represents the
termination of the old accounting entity and the creation of a new one. Therefore, if pushdown
accounting is applied to the acquired company, the acquired company as an accounting entity ceases
to exist. Consistent with the guidance with respect to the consolidated financial statements of the
acquirer, we believe that when pushdown accounting is applied in the standalone financial statements
of an acquired entity, hedging relationships at the acquired-company level must be reassessed to
determine whether they again qualify for hedge accounting (i.e., after they are dedesignated and
redesignated). However, if pushdown accounting is not applied, the acquired company may continue
to account for its own hedging relationships based on the preacquisition designations in its standalone
financial statements. This is true even though those hedging relationships must be discontinued and
redesignated at the consolidated level.
10-18
Chapter 11:
Derivatives — private
company guidance
11-1
Derivatives private company guidance
This chapter discusses this simplified hedge accounting approach and other relief provided for private
companies when applying ASC 815, Derivatives and Hedging. See FSP 19.6A and FSP 20.7.3 for
information on derivative and hedging presentation and disclosure considerations for private
companies.
As discussed in DH 5, for an interest rate swap to be accounted for as a cash flow hedge under the
hedge accounting rules, a reporting entity is required to document its election and assess the
effectiveness of the hedging relationship. If a reporting entity does not contemporaneously document
the hedging relationship, the interest rate swap would not qualify for hedge accounting and would be
recorded at fair value, with changes in fair value recorded in earnings.
The simplified hedge accounting approach makes qualifying for hedge accounting simpler and
measurement of the swap less complex. Under the simplified approach, private companies are allowed
to assume perfect effectiveness for qualifying receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swaps designated
in a cash flow hedging relationship provided certain criteria are met. In addition, the simplified hedge
accounting approach relaxes the requirements for contemporaneous documentation.
The simplified hedge accounting approach is elective. If an eligible entity does not elect the simplified
hedge accounting approach, it should apply the general cash flow hedge accounting guidance or
choose to not apply hedge accounting and record the interest rate swap at fair value with changes in
value recorded in earnings. See DH 5 for general information on cash flow hedge accounting, DH 6 for
information on cash flow hedges of debt, and DH 11.3 for information on private company hedge
documentation requirements if the simplified hedge accounting approach is not applied.
Before adopting the simplified hedge accounting approach, an eligible private company should weigh
both the impact of applying the approach on its key financial metrics, and the potential cost of
unwinding the accounting and reapplying the general hedge accounting requirements if its reporting
requirements change because it no longer meets the definition of a private company.
A reporting entity that is private today could later meet the definition of a public business entity (e.g.,
by becoming a public company through an initial public offering or through acquisition or investment
by a public company). Once a reporting entity meets the definition of a public business entity, it may
no longer apply the simplified hedge accounting approach.
11-2
Derivatives private company guidance
Additionally, if upon becoming a public business entity, it is subject to standalone SEC reporting
requirements, it will need to retrospectively adjust its historical financial statements to remove the
effect of applying the simplified hedge accounting approach for all prior periods.
Public business entities (as defined the ASC Master Glossary) may not apply the simplified hedge
accounting approach. The simplified hedge accounting approach may be applied by private companies
that are not:
□ Financial institutions, as defined in ASC 942-320-50-1, which includes banks, savings and loan
associations, savings banks, credit unions, finance companies and insurance companies
□ Not-for-profit-entities
□ Employee benefit plans within the scope of ASC 960 through ASC 965
Question DH 11-1 asks if an entity can use the simplified hedge accounting approach if it is not a public
business entity itself, but is a subsidiary of a public business entity.
Question DH 11-1
If a reporting entity is not a public business entity itself, but a subsidiary of a public business entity,
may it use the simplified hedge accounting approach in its standalone financial statements?
PwC response
Yes. The reporting entity may elect the simplified hedge accounting approach in its standalone
financial statements (provided those financial statements are not publicly filed). A reporting entity
that meets the definition of a public business entity solely because its financial statements are included
in another entity’s SEC filings is only a public business entity for purposes of the financial statements
filed with the SEC.
Question DH 11-2 asks how a private company applying the simplified hedge accounting approach
applies hedge accounting after becoming a public business entity.
Question DH 11-2
How should a private company applying the simplified hedge accounting approach apply hedge
accounting after becoming a public business entity?
PwC response
A public business entity should dedesignate the simplified hedge accounting relationship, and could
prospectively designate a new hedging relationship. It is unlikely that the requirements for applying
the shortcut method would be met on the date the new hedging relationship is designated.
11-3
Derivatives private company guidance
Private companies that elect the simplified hedge accounting approach can assume perfect
effectiveness for qualifying receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swaps designated in a cash flow
hedging relationship provided the criteria in ASC 815-20-25-137 are met. Interest rate swaps entered
into by a private company for any other purpose do not qualify for the simplified approach.
ASC 815-20-25-137
An eligible entity under paragraph 815-20-25-135 must meet all of the following conditions to apply
the simplified hedge accounting approach to a cash flow hedge of a variable-rate borrowing with a
receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swap:
a. Both the variable rate on the swap and the borrowing are based on the same index and reset
period (for example, both the swap and borrowing are based on one-month London Interbank
Offered Rate [LIBOR] or both the swap and borrowing are based on three-month LIBOR).
b. The terms of the swap are typical (in other words, the swap is what is generally considered to be a
“plain-vanilla” swap), and there is no floor or cap on the variable interest rate of the swap unless
the borrowing has a comparable floor or cap.
c. The repricing and settlement dates for the swap and the borrowing match or differ by no more
than a few days.
d. The swap’s fair value at inception (that is, at the time the derivative was executed to hedge the
interest rate risk of the borrowing) is at or near zero.
e. The notional amount of the swap matches the principal amount of the borrowing being hedged. In
complying with this condition, the amount of the borrowing being hedged may be less than the
total principal amount of the borrowing.
f. All interest payments occurring on the borrowing during the term of the swap (or the effective
term of the swap underlying the forward starting swap) are designated as hedged whether in total
or in proportion to the principal amount of the borrowing being hedged.
Question DH 11-3 asks if a private company can apply the simplified hedge accounting approach to a
variable rate borrowing that is based on an index other than LIBOR.
Question DH 11-3
Can a private company apply the simplified hedge accounting approach to a variable-rate borrowing
that is based on an index other the LIBOR?
PwC response
Yes. A variable-rate borrowing and a swap may be indexed to any variable interest rate (including rates
that are not benchmark interest rates) and still be eligible for the simplified hedge accounting
11-4
Derivatives private company guidance
approach provided the variable rate for both the borrowing and the swap are based on the same index,
have the same reset period, and all other requirements are met.
Question DH 11-4 discusses the repricing and settlement date requirements in ASC 815-20-25-137(c).
Question DH 11-4
How many days is considered “no more than a few days” with regard to the repricing and settlement
date requirements in ASC 815-20-25-137(c)?
PwC response
The FASB did not provide a bright line, but we believe a week or less between repricing and settlement
dates on the interest rate swap and the borrowing would generally represent a reasonable time period.
Question DH 11-5 discusses whether the simplified hedge accounting approach must be elected for all
hedging relationships that meet the requirement.
Question DH 11-5
If a private company elects the simplified hedge accounting approach for one eligible hedging
relationship, must it elect the simplified approach for all hedging relationships that meet the
requirements?
PwC response
No. ASC 815 generally requires reporting entities to use the same method to assess hedge effectiveness
for all similar hedges; however, the decision to apply the shortcut method can be elected on a swap-by-
swap basis. By analogy, we believe that private companies can elect to apply the simplified hedge
accounting approach on a swap-by-swap basis.
Certain borrowing arrangements provide the borrower with the option to periodically select the
interest rate index and reset period. For example, when the interest rate on a borrowing resets, assume
the borrower has the ability to designate the interest rate index as three-month LIBOR, 6-month
LIBOR, or the Prime rate. The existence of this option does not preclude a private company from
applying the simplified hedge accounting approach as long as the interest rate index and reset period
on the swap and the borrowing match. For example, if the private company elects three-month LIBOR
as the interest rate for the borrowing at inception of the hedge, the swap must also be based on three-
month LIBOR.
If the private company subsequently elects to change the interest rate or reset period such that the rate
on the swap no longer matches the borrowing, the relationship will no longer qualify for the simplified
hedge accounting approach. The private company would have to dedesignate the hedging relationship
and discontinue hedge accounting under the simplified approach. However, it would be able to
attempt to designate a new hedging relationship. See DH 11.2.6 for information on discontinuance of
the simplified hedge accounting approach.
11-5
Derivatives private company guidance
ASC 815-20-25-137(d) requires the swap’s fair value at inception of the hedging relationship to be at or
near zero. Therefore, if a private company enters into an interest rate swap with terms that do not
reflect the prevailing market rates and pays or receives a significant premium, or designates an
existing interest rate swap with a significant fair value at the inception of the hedging relationship, the
simplified hedge accounting approach should not be applied.
This guidance may also come into play when a private company acquires another private company that
was applying the simplified approach. Because the date the acquisition is consummated is considered
the inception of the hedging relationship for the acquirer, and the interest rate swap is not likely to
have a fair value at or near zero at that date, the simplified approach cannot be continued by the
acquirer in its consolidated financial statements.
As discussed in ASC 815-20-25-138, a private company may apply the simplified hedge accounting
approach to a forward-starting interest rate swap entered into to hedge variable-rate interest
payments on future debt issuances provided the qualifying criteria are met. Example DH 11-1
illustrates the application of the simplified hedge accounting approach to a forward-starting interest
rate swap.
EXAMPLE DH 11-1
Use of the simplified hedge accounting approach for a forward-starting swap
Private Co expects to issue $5 million in a 10-year variable rate borrowing one year from today. To
hedge the interest rate risk associated with the forecasted variable-rate interest payments, Private Co
enters into a forward-starting receive-variable, pay-fixed interest rate swap with a notional amount of
$5 million, 10-year effective term, and commencement date on the same date Private Co plans to
borrow. Private Co designates the swap as a cash flow hedge of the interest payments on the forecasted
10-year variable-rate borrowing.
Can Private Co apply the simplified hedge accounting approach for this cash flow hedging
relationship?
Analysis
Provided the remaining criteria for applying the simplified hedge accounting approach are met,
Private Co could apply the simplified hedge accounting approach to this hedging relationship.
However, if Private Co delays its debt issuance (for example, it issues the debt two months after
originally forecasted), it would no longer qualify for simplified hedge accounting. Private Co would
have to dedesignate the hedging relationship and discontinue hedge accounting. If the forward-
starting swap were to meet the requirements for long-haul hedge accounting, then Private Co could
dedesignate the simplified hedge accounting approach hedging relationship and prospectively
designate a new long-haul hedging relationship.
11-6
Derivatives private company guidance
documentation. Under the simplified approach, hedge accounting documentation must be completed
by the date on which the first annual financial statements are available to be issued after hedge
inception. For example, if a calendar year-end private company enters into an interest rate swap on
January 1, 20X1, and has until March 31, 20X2 to issue the annual financial statements, it would have
until the financial statements are available to be issued (i.e., on or before March 31, 20X2) to complete
the required hedge documentation.
Although a private company has additional time to complete its hedge documentation, all of the formal
hedge documentation requirements in ASC 815-20-25-3 are applicable. These requirements are
extensive and include documentation of the following:
□ The private company’s risk management objective and strategy for undertaking the hedge,
including identification of all of the following:
o The method that will be used to retrospectively and prospectively assess the hedging
instrument’s effectiveness in offsetting the exposure to the hedged transaction’s variability in
cash flows attributable to the hedged risk
□ The date the forecasted hedged interest payments are expected to occur (this must be described
with sufficient specificity that when an interest payment occurs it is clear whether it is the hedged
interest payment)
See DH 6.3.3.4 for information on the identification of the hedged forecasted transaction and the
impact it may have on hedge accounting and DH 5.7 for additional information on hedge
documentation requirements.
Although the simplified hedge accounting approach allows some latitude with regard to when hedging
documentation must be completed, private companies should complete the hedge accounting
documentation as soon as possible. If it is determined that an interest rate swap does not meet all of
the requirements for the simplified approach, the private company would not be able to retroactively
apply the long-haul method.
See DH 11.3 for information on private company hedge documentation requirements if the simplified
hedge accounting approach is not applied.
If all of the criteria for applying the simplified hedge accounting approach are satisfied, a private
company may assume the hedging relationship is perfectly effective and elect to recognize the interest
rate swap at its settlement value instead of fair value. Since the swap is considered perfectly effective,
the change in settlement value of the swap (or fair value, if elected) is recorded in other comprehensive
income and the swap accruals are recorded in interest expense. As a result, the amount of interest
11-7
Derivatives private company guidance
expense recognized in the income statement under this approach would approximate the amount that
would have been recognized if the private company had borrowed at a fixed rate.
The primary difference between settlement value and fair value is that nonperformance risk (the risk
that an entity will not fulfill an obligation) is not considered in the measurement of settlement value.
ASC 815-10-35-1B provides guidance on determining the settlement value of a swap.
We believe the discount rate used in the present value calculation may either be the current market
rate of interest adjusted for credit risk or the appropriate current risk free/benchmark rate.
Banks and other swap counterparties periodically send statements of an interest rate swap’s value. The
value furnished by the counterparty is typically a settlement value consistent with the guidance in
ASC 815-10-35-1B. A private company should gain an understanding of the valuation techniques used
by the swap counterparty to ensure the value provided is representative of settlement value before
recording that value in its financial statements.
Question DH 11-6 discusses whether a private company is required to record a swap using settlement
value if the simplified hedge accounting approach is elected.
Question DH 11-6
Is a private company that elects the simplified hedge accounting approach required to record the swap
using settlement value?
PwC response
No. Use of settlement value is optional under the simplified approach. A private company may elect
the simplified hedge accounting approach for purposes of assessing hedge effectiveness but record the
swap at fair value. Settlement value is provided as a practical expedient and can be elected on a swap-
by-swap basis. As such, settlement value does not have to be used for all similar hedging relationships.
Question DH 11-7 discusses if a swap accounted for at settlement value under the simplified hedge
accounting approach is subject to the disclosure requirements for fair value measurements.
Question DH 11-7
Is a swap accounted for at settlement value under the simplified hedge accounting approach subject to
the disclosures for fair value measurements required by ASC 820, Fair Value Measurement?
PwC response
Yes. The disclosures for fair value measurements required by ASC 820 are still required for amounts
disclosed at settlement value. Disclosures related to swaps measured at settlement value should be
11-8
Derivatives private company guidance
clearly identified separate from the fair value disclosures. In addition, all of the presentation and
disclosure requirements of ASC 815 continue to apply. See FSP 19.9.1 and FSP 20.7.3 for additional
information on disclosures for swaps accounted for using the simplified hedge accounting approach
and fair value measurements.
A private company should periodically assess whether the terms of the hedging relationship have been
modified (i.e., confirm that the “critical terms” have not changed during the period) and that the
forecasted interest payments are probable of occurring. As part of this assessment, a private company
should consider the likelihood of the counterparty’s compliance with the contractual terms of the
swap.
ASC 815 requires a reporting entity to assess counterparty credit risk on at least a quarterly basis. If
there are no adverse developments regarding counterparty default risk and the terms of the swap
continue to mirror the terms of the borrowing in accordance with the simplified hedge accounting
approach criteria, a private company can conclude that the hedge is perfectly effective. However, if
there have been adverse developments regarding counterparty credit risk such that it is no longer
probable that the counterparty will not default, a private company can no longer apply the simplified
hedge accounting approach. A private company should perform this assessment on a quarterly basis,
but can defer the documentation to no later than the date the annual financial statements are available
to be issued.
If a hedging relationship no longer meets the criteria to qualify for the simplified hedge accounting
approach, the hedging relationship must be prospectively discontinued from the date the criteria were
no longer met. A private company can also elect to discontinue a simplified hedge accounting
relationship.
On the date the simplified hedge accounting approach is discontinued, a private company must
calculate the fair value of the swap (not the settlement value) and record the difference between
settlement value and fair value in other comprehensive income. Subsequent changes in the fair value
of the swap will be reported in earnings unless the private company meets the requirements for cash
flow hedge accounting using a method other than the simplified hedge accounting approach; in that
case, the private company may designate a new hedging relationship prospectively.
Treatment of the gains and losses previously deferred in accumulated other comprehensive income
upon discontinuance of a simplified hedge accounting relationship will depend on the cause of
discontinuance and the original hedge documentation.
□ If the forecasted hedged interest payments are still probable of occurring, amounts in accumulated
other comprehensive income should be released when the interest payments are recorded in
earnings.
□ If the forecasted interest payments are considered probable of not occurring, amounts in
accumulated other comprehensive income are reclassified to earnings in the current period.
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Derivatives private company guidance
EXAMPLE DH 11-2
Hedged forecasted interest payments are probable of not occurring
On January 1, 20X1, Private Co enters into a $5 million, 10-year loan with an interest rate of 3-month
LIBOR plus 2.50%.
Private Co concurrently enters into an at-market 10-year receive 3-month LIBOR, pay-fixed interest
rate swap with a notional amount of $5 million to economically convert the loan’s variable rate interest
payments to a fixed rate.
All of the requirements to qualify for the simplified hedge accounting approach are met. Private Co
designates the interest rate swap as a cash flow hedge of the variable-rate interest payments and elects
to apply the simplified hedge accounting approach. In its hedge documentation it defines the hedged
transactions as the forecasted LIBOR interest payments associated with the specific January 20X1
loan.
Five years later, Private Co repays the loan. The hedging relationship no longer qualifies for hedge
accounting because the hedged interest payments will no longer occur.
Should Private Co recognize the gains and losses on the swap accumulated in other comprehensive
income in earnings immediately?
Analysis
Yes. The gains and losses on the swap accumulated in other comprehensive income should be
reclassified to earnings immediately because the hedged forecasted transactions (i.e., the interest
payments on the January 20X1 loan) are probable of not occurring.
EXAMPLE DH 11-3
Hedged forecasted interest payments are probable of occurring
On January 1, 20X1, Private Co enters into a $5 million, 10-year loan with an interest rate of 3-month
LIBOR plus 2.50%.
Private Co concurrently enters into an at-market 10-year receive 3-month LIBOR, pay-fixed interest
rate swap with a notional amount of $5 million to economically convert the loan’s variable rate interest
payments to a fixed rate.
All of the requirements to qualify for the simplified hedge accounting approach are met. Private Co
designates the interest rate swap as a cash flow hedge of the variable-rate interest payments and elects
to apply the simplified hedge accounting approach. In its hedge documentation it defines the hedged
transactions as the first forecasted LIBOR-based interest payments to occur each quarter on $5 million
of borrowings over the next 10 years (i.e., the hedging relationship is not tied to a specific borrowing).
Five years later, Private Co refinances its debt with a new lender. The new loan has interest payments
based on 1-month LIBOR. The hedging relationship no longer qualifies for the simplified hedge
accounting approach because the variable interest rate on the loan (1-month LIBOR) does not match
the variable interest rate on the swap (3-month LIBOR) so Private Co dedesignated the hedging
relationship and discontinues hedge accounting.
11-10
Derivatives private company guidance
Should Private Co recognize the gains and losses on the swap accumulated in other comprehensive
income in earnings immediately?
Analysis
No. The gains and losses on the swap accumulated in other comprehensive income should continue to
be deferred because the forecasted transactions (as defined) are still probable of occurring since
Private Co will continue to incur interest payments indexed to LIBOR on $5 million of borrowings for
the term of the hedge. The gains and losses on the interest rate swap deferred in accumulated other
comprehensive income would not be reclassified until the forecasted interest payments are recorded in
earnings.
Private companies are still required to complete multiple assessments of effectiveness. For example,
four assessments must be completed for every hedge outstanding for the entire year. This is because
the purpose of the assessments is to validate that the application of hedge accounting was appropriate
for the entire annual period. In addition, the effectiveness assessments must be done using relevant
data as of hedge inception and each subsequent quarter-end, regardless of when they are performed.
11-11
Chapter 12:
ASU 2017-12: Effective date
and transition
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
Figure DH 12-1
Effective date of ASU 2017-12
Public business entities Fiscal years, and interim periods within those years,
beginning after December 15, 2018
Entities other than public business entities Fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2019, and
interim periods beginning after December 15, 2020.
The new guidance can be early adopted in any interim or annual period before the mandatory effective
date. If adopted in an interim period, the guidance is required to be reflected as of the beginning of the
fiscal year that includes the interim period.
12.3 Transition
Transition is on a modified retrospective basis, except presentation and disclosure. Key terms in the
transition provisions and their definitions are as follows.
Term Definition
Existing hedges Hedging relationships in which the hedging instrument has not expired,
been sold, terminated, exercised, or dedesignated
Modified For hedges existing both on the date of adoption and on the initial
retrospective application date, record the cumulative effect of application in AOCI with a
approach corresponding adjustment to the opening balance of retained earnings as of
the initial application date.
12-2
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
□ Remove ineffectiveness previously recorded in earnings on existing cash flow and net investment
hedges as part of the cumulative effect adjustment
□ Disclose the nature of and reason for the change in accounting principle and the cumulative effect
of the change on the opening balance of each affected component of equity
Other provisions are optional. However, there may be a benefit to adopting some of the optional
provisions at initial adoption, as opposed to later. Figure DH 12-2 summarizes the transition guidance,
whether each provision is required, optional, or optional with a benefit if elected at transition, and
whether the impact would be included in the cumulative effect adjustment to the opening balance of
retained earnings if the hedging relationship existed at the initial application date. It also includes a
reference to where each provision is described in more detail in this guide.
Figure DH 12-2
ASU 2017-12 transition guidance
Required? Included in
Optional? cumulative
Optional with effect Guide
Change / new requirement transition benefit? adjustment? reference
Present derivative results with the Required Not applicable FSP 19.4
hedged item in the income statement
12-3
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
Required? Included in
Optional? cumulative
Optional with effect Guide
Change / new requirement transition benefit? adjustment? reference
Rebalance the hedging relationship when Optional, but Yes - if elected DH 12.3.1.4
modifying hedge documentation to transition relief if as part of
remeasure the hedged item to use the elected as part of transition
benchmark component of the contractual transition
cash flows
Remeasure the hedged item in a fair Optional, but Yes - if elected DH 12.3.1.5
value hedge of interest rate risk to transition relief if as part of
consider only how changes in the elected as part of transition
benchmark interest rate affects the transition
decision to prepay
Reclassify a debt security from held-to- Optional, only at Not applicable DH 12.3.1.6
maturity to available-for-sale if it is transition
eligible to be hedged in a last-of-layer
hedge
12-4
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
Required? Included in
Optional? cumulative
Optional with effect Guide
Change / new requirement transition benefit? adjustment? reference
* For these changes, reporting entities need not elect the same methodology for existing hedges and new hedges.
The new guidance removes the concept of ineffectiveness from the hedging literature. It eliminates the
requirement and the ability to record ineffectiveness on cash flow and net investment hedges. As such,
reporting entities are required to reverse ineffectiveness previously recorded on cash flow and net
investment hedges that exist at the date of adoption.
The new guidance adds the SIFMA (the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association)
Municipal Swap Rate as an additional benchmark interest rate for tax-exempt issuers and investors.
As a result, some reporting entities may wish to modify existing hedging relationships to designate the
hedged risk as the change in fair value due to changes in the benchmark interest rate with the SIFMA
Municipal Swap Rate as the designated benchmark rate. Reporting entities would need to dedesignate
and redesignate these hedging relationships to make this change. The cumulative basis adjustment of
the hedged item from the dedesignated hedging relationship would be amortized to earnings as a
premium or discount under other GAAP.
The benchmark interest rate concept no longer applies for variable-rate assets and liabilities. Instead,
reporting entities can hedge the interest rate risk associated with a contractually specified interest
rate. Because this is a new hedging strategy that was not previously permitted, the Board provided
transition relief. If elected at adoption:
□ there is no need to dedesignate and redesignate the relationship - existing hedge documentation
can be amended, and
□ the terms of the instrument used to estimate changes in cash flows due to the hedged risk (e.g., the
hypothetical derivative) should use market data at inception of the original hedging relationship
(not at transition).
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ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
Reporting entities need not elect the same methodology for existing hedges and new hedges.
Although the transition guidance permits a reporting entity to change the hedged risk without
dedesignating the hedging relationship, it does not permit changing from a long-haul method to
critical terms match (CTM) (discussed in DH 9.5) without dedesignating the hedging relationship. A
reporting entity would not be able to change the method of assessing effectiveness on existing hedges
from long-haul to CTM through a dedesignation and redesignation because the hedging instrument
would not have a fair value of zero at the date of redesignation, and would therefore not meet the
criteria to apply CTM.
Example DH 12-1 illustrates the transition to hedging variability in cash flows due to a change in a
contractually specified component.
EXAMPLE DH 12-1
Transition to hedging variability in cash flows due to a change in a contractually specified component
DH Corp has cash flow hedges of forecasted purchases of commodities (under long-term purchase
contracts priced based on a published index for the commodity plus a spread). As was required before
ASU 2017-12, the hedged risk was the total variability in cash flows. Because of the spread added to the
index price, DH Corp was unable to use CTM to assess effectiveness and instead used the long-haul
hypothetical derivative method.
At the date of adoption of ASU 2017-12, DH Corp decides to change the hedged risk to the variability
in cash flows due only to changes in a contractually specified component. Because of the change in the
hedged risk, the spread is no longer a factor that prevents the use of CTM. All terms are matched in the
purchase contracts and derivatives, including the index price.
Given the transition guidance, how can DH Corp minimize the ongoing quantitative assessments
needed on existing hedging relationships when amending the hedged risk from the variability in total
cash flows to the variability in cash flows due only to changes in a contractually specified component?
Analysis
For existing hedges (which now hedge the variability in cash flows due to the change in a contractually
specified component), we believe DH Corp may not use CTM because the derivatives would not have a
fair value of zero when they are redesignated, but could take steps to minimize the number of
quantitative effectiveness assessments needed. DH Corp could:
□ Change the terms of the perfectly effective hypothetical derivative used to estimate changes in
value due to the hedged risk in the assessment of effectiveness to use market data as of the
inception of the hedging relationship. Per ASC 815-20-65-3(e)(6)(ii) (discussed in DH 13.3.1.7),
this would not require dedesignation.
□ Amend the documentation for existing hedges to specify a qualitative assessment of effectiveness
on an ongoing basis, including how it can reasonably support an expectation of high effectiveness
12-6
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
on a qualitative basis. Per ASC 815-20-65-3(e)(5)(i) (discussed in DH 13.3.1.9), this would not
require dedesignation.
o If all terms related to the contractually specified component perfectly match between
the derivative and the purchase agreement, including the timing of the occurrence of
the forecasted transaction and the maturity of the derivative, there is no need to
perform a quantitative assessment. However, DH Corp would need to document that
the assessment was done without any quantitative calculations because the actual
derivative and revised hypothetical derivative are the same (because ASC 815-20-65-
3(e)(6)(ii) permits changing the terms of the hypothetical derivative to use market
data at hedge inception).
o If the terms do not perfectly match because of timing differences within a month
between the occurrence of the forecasted transactions and the maturity of the
derivative, DH Corp would need to perform a quantitative assessment to demonstrate
that even with the timing difference, the hedge is highly effective. In doing so, it could
potentially leverage the prior long-haul analyses. The hedging relationship is likely to
still be highly effective because it was highly effective when using the long-haul
method prior to transition (when the hedged risk was the total variability in cash
flows).
Under the new guidance, reporting entities may hedge the benchmark rate component of the
contractual coupon cash flows for fair value hedges of fixed-rate debt. Because this is a new hedging
strategy that was not previously permitted, the Board provided transition relief. If elected at adoption:
□ there is no need to dedesignate and redesignate the hedging relationship (from a hedge of total
coupon to a hedge of the benchmark interest rate component) – existing hedge documentation can
be amended,
□ the cumulative basis adjustment carried forward is adjusted to the amount it would have been had
the modified methodology been used since hedge designation, and
□ the benchmark rate component of the contractual coupon cash flows is measured as of the
inception of the original hedging relationship, not at the transition date.
When applying the transition relief, the benchmark component is calculated as of the inception date of
the hedging relationship in effect at the date of adoption. As a result, if the hedge was dedesignated
and redesignated before adoption, the benchmark component may not match the rate on the actual
hedging derivative and the hedging relationship may not be perfectly effective.
Reporting entities can elect to use either the total coupon cash flows or the benchmark component of
the coupon cash flows to measure the hedged item on a hedge-by-hedge basis.
12-7
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
The Board also provided transition relief if reporting entities rebalance their hedging relationships to
change from total coupon cash flows to the benchmark component of contractual coupon cash flows.
While the guidance provides explicit relief when dedesignating a portion of the hedged item, we
understand through discussion with the FASB staff that the transition provision was designed to
permit a reporting entity to increase/decrease the portion of a derivative or hedged item designated in
a hedging relationship, provided that the rebalanced relationship contains only the hedged item and
hedging instrument that existed as of the date of adoption. If the transition provisions are met,
reporting entities may include the basis adjustment related to the dedesignated portion of the hedged
item in the cumulative effect adjustment.
In a fair value hedge of the benchmark interest rate risk in fixed-rate prepayable debt, the new
guidance permits reporting entities to consider the effect of a prepayment option only as it relates to
changes in the benchmark interest rate to assess hedge effectiveness and calculate the change in fair
value of the hedged item. Because this new way to measure the hedged item was not previously
permitted, the Board provided transition relief. If elected at adoption:
□ there is no need to dedesignate and redesignate the hedging relationship – existing hedge
documentation can be amended, and
□ the cumulative basis adjustment carried forward is adjusted to the amount it would have been had
the modified methodology been used since hedge designation.
The new guidance permits a new “last-of-layer” hedging approach, which permits reporting entities to
designate the portion of a closed pool of prepayable assets that is not expected to be affected by
prepayments, defaults, and other events affecting the timing and amount of cash flows as the hedged
item in a fair value hedge. Upon adoption of the new guidance, reporting entities may elect to
reclassify debt securities that are eligible to be hedged in a last-of-layer hedge from held-to-maturity to
available-for-sale. If elected, any unrealized gain or loss on the date of adoption would be recorded in
accumulated other comprehensive income.
The question has arisen as to whether the debt securities transferred are required to be designated in a
last-of-layer hedge subsequent to the adoption of the standard. We understand that the use of the
word “eligible” was intentional; the transfer is permissible regardless of the reporting entity’s intent to
hedge them after the transfer.
The new guidance permits cash flow hedges of contractually specified components of nonfinancial
items subject to certain criteria. Because this is a new hedging strategy, the Board provided transition
relief. If elected at adoption:
12-8
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
□ there is no need to dedesignate and redesignate the hedging relationship (from a hedge of the total
variability in cash flows to a hedge of variability in the contractually specified component) -
existing hedge documentation can be amended, and
□ the terms of the instrument used to estimate changes in cash flows (e.g., the hypothetical
derivative) should use market data as of the inception of the original hedging relationship.
Reporting entities need not elect the same methodology for existing hedges and new hedges.
The new guidance permits a reporting entity to apply a quantitative approach to assessing
effectiveness without dedesignating the hedging relationship if it later determines that the use of the
shortcut method was or is no longer appropriate. If elected at adoption, reporting entities can modify
their current shortcut hedge documentation to specify the quantitative method that will be applied if
the shortcut method is later deemed to have been inappropriate without dedesignating the existing
hedging relationships.
Reporting entities need not document a quantitative method for existing hedges even if they would
like to document a quantitative method for new hedges that use the shortcut method.
For a hedge that is not perfectly effective, the new guidance requires an initial quantitative assessment,
but provides a qualitative method of assessing effectiveness after hedge inception if the reporting
entity can reasonably support an expectation of high effectiveness throughout the term of the hedge. If
elected at adoption, reporting entities may modify existing documentation to state their intent to
perform ongoing assessments on a qualitative basis without dedesignating and redesignating the
hedging relationship.
The standard amends the guidance on net investment hedges to permit a change in the method of
assessing effectiveness for net investment hedges, subject to the requirements that (1) the new method
is an “improved” method and (2) effectiveness for similar hedges is assessed similarly. We believe
reporting entities can only choose to change methods upon or after adoption of the new guidance.
Further, because there is no specific transition guidance for this provision, we believe making this
change would require the hedges to be dedesignated and redesignated.
The new guidance permits certain elements of a derivative instrument to be excluded from the
assessment of effectiveness. In addition to adding cross-currency basis as an eligible excluded
component, the new guidance also amends the recognition of excluded components. As a result,
12-9
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
transition relief is provided for hedges that had previously excluded a component from the assessment
of effectiveness that will now be recognized through an amortization approach. This transition relief
also applies when excluding the cross-currency basis spread from an existing fair value hedge and
recognizing it through an amortization approach.
If elected at adoption, there is no need to dedesignate and redesignate these hedging relationships.
Reporting entities will record the cumulative effect of application in OCI with a corresponding
adjustment to the opening balance of retained earnings.
Reporting entities need not elect the same approach to amortization for existing hedges and new
hedges.
12.3.2 Disclosures
The new and amended disclosures are required in the period of adoption, but they are prospective.
Disclosures prior to the period of adoption are not required to comply with the new requirements.
Reporting entities should consider disclosing any changes to significant accounting policies as a result
of the new guidance.
At adoption, a reporting entity must provide the disclosures required by ASC 250, Accounting
Changes and Error Corrections, in each interim and annual period in the fiscal year of adoption.
These are:
□ The cumulative effect of the change on the opening balance of each affected component of equity
or net assets as of the date of adoption
SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 74, Disclosure Of The Impact That Recently Issued Accounting
Standards Will Have On The Financial Statements Of The Registrant When Adopted In A Future
Period, requires reporting entities to provide quantitative and qualitative disclosure of the expected
impact of any new accounting standard not yet adopted. If a reporting entity does not know, or cannot
reasonably estimate, the expected financial statement impact, it should disclose that fact. In these
situations, the SEC staff expects a qualitative description of the effect of the new accounting policies,
and a comparison to the reporting entity’s current accounting.
The transition relief provided for certain of the transition elections is only available at adoption.
Private reporting entities that are not financial institutions and private not-for-profit entities need to
make the elections before the next set of interim or annual financial statements is available to be
issued. All others need to make the elections before the first quarterly effectiveness assessment date
after the date of adoption.
If a reporting entity does not elect a transition provision within the timeframe, it would not qualify for
the transition relief and instead would have to dedesignate and redesignate the impacted hedging
12-10
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
relationships to make a change. This would mean that the hedging instrument would have a non-zero
fair value, which would impact the assessment of effectiveness. Also, the impact would not be included
in the cumulative effect adjustment. The same is true for changes in the new guidance that do not have
special transition guidance.
Figure DH 12-3 illustrates how a calendar-year-end public reporting entity that early adopts the new
guidance on January 1, 2018 would consider hedges in effect for different periods. In this fact pattern,
the date of adoption and date of initial application are the same (i.e., January 1, 2018). The same
answers would apply if the hedging relationships began and ended one year later if the entity adopted
the guidance on the mandatory effective date of January 1, 2019 for calendar-year-end public business
entities.
Figure DH 12-3
Application of the transition guidance when the adoption date and initial application date are the same
Apply new
recognition and
measurement Would this hedge
guidance to impact the Apply new
Term of hedging hedging cumulative effect presentation
relationship relationship? adjustment? guidance in 2018?
9/30/17 – 12/30/17 No - the hedging No - the hedging No - the hedging
relationship expired relationship did not relationship expired
before the adoption exist at the initial before the adoption
date application date date
1/2/18 – 3/30/18 Yes - the hedging No - the hedge did not Yes - the hedging
relationship was exist at the initial relationship was
designated after the application date designated after the
adoption date adoption date
11/1/17 – 10/1/18 Yes - the hedging Yes - the hedging Yes - the hedging
relationship existed at relationship existed at relationship existed at
the adoption date the initial application the adoption date
date and the adoption
date
12-11
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
Although a calendar year-end public reporting entity adopting the new guidance in an interim period
of 2018 will reflect the change as of January 1, 2018, the Form 10-Qs for any quarters of 2018 already
issued will not need to be amended. Instead, the reporting entity will revise the comparative
information and disclosures for 2018 in the Form 10-Qs for the corresponding quarters of 2019 to
reflect the adopted standard. Reporting entities also need to consider if there were any significant
changes in internal controls over financial reporting in the period of adoption that may need to be
disclosed in Item 4 of the interim period Form 10-Q.
In the 2018 Form 10-K, the reporting entity should revise the disclosure of quarterly financial data.
The selected financial data table in the Form 10-K is not impacted because the prior year amounts are
not affected by the adoption of the new guidance. If a new registration statement were filed prior to the
issuance of the 2018 Form 10-K, the reporting entity would need to consider including revised
quarterly financial data for the prior quarters of 2018 in the registration statement.
Reporting entities also need to consider if there were any significant changes in internal controls over
financial reporting in the period of adoption that may need to be disclosed in Item 9A of the
Form 10-K.
Figure DH 12-4 illustrates how a calendar year-end public reporting entity that adopts the new
guidance in the second quarter of 2018 on April 1, 2018 would consider hedges in effect for different
periods.
Figure DH 12-4
Application of the transition guidance upon early adoption in an interim period (April 1, 2018)
Apply new
recognition and
measurement Would this hedge
guidance to impact the Apply new
Term of hedging hedging cumulative effect presentation
relationship relationship? adjustment? guidance in 2018?
11/1/17 – 3/30/18 No - the hedging No - while the hedging No - the hedging
relationship expired relationship existed at relationship expired
before the adoption the initial application before the adoption
date date, it expired before date
the adoption date
12-12
ASU 2017-12: Effective date and transition
Apply new
recognition and
measurement Would this hedge
guidance to impact the Apply new
Term of hedging hedging cumulative effect presentation
relationship relationship? adjustment? guidance in 2018?
11/1/17 – 10/1/18 Yes - the hedging Yes - the hedging Yes - the hedging
relationship existed at relationship existed at relationship existed at
the adoption date the initial application the adoption date
date and the adoption
date
1/2/18 – 10/1/18 Yes - the hedging No - while the hedging Yes - the hedging
relationship existed at relationship existed at relationship existed at
the adoption date the adoption date, it the adoption date
was designated after
the initial application
date *
* Because the recognition and measurement provisions of the new guidance must be applied, but the impact is not included in
the cumulative effect, the impact will be reflected in the year-to-date results.
12-13
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