Renee Rampulla

Revenue Recognition


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and apply the guidance in FASB ASC 606 to each separate contract.

      1 Indicators of a combined contract include:The contracts are entered into at or near the same time and have a single commercial objective.The contracts have different commercial objectives.The amounts of consideration in the two contracts are independent of each other.The customer receives a discount as a result of an existing relationship.

      

Connected concepts: Practical point for management

      The following are few considerations for management when identifying a contract with a customer:

       Is there a formal or informal policy in place to approve and modify contracts with customers? Does that policy differ based on contract types?

       Are there controls around both the approval and modification of contracts with customers?

       Is there a need to engage expert legal advice to determine whether a contract with a customer is legally enforceable and/or has commercial substance?

       At the inception of the contract, how has management determined that they will collect substantially all of the consideration they are entitled to?

       How does management identify contracts that should be combined?

       Has management elected the use of the portfolio approach? If so, how did management determine which contracts with customers have similar characteristics?

       Can the judgments and assumptions used when identifying a contract with a customer be supported and are they documented? Is that documentation and support sufficient enough for the company’s auditors?

      

Connected concepts: Practical point for small and medium-sized private companies

      1 1 Exercise fact pattern originated from paragraphs 95–98 of FASB ASC 606-10-55.

      2 2 Exercise fact pattern originated from FASB ASC 606-10-55-98.

      3 3 Exercise fact pattern originated from paragraphs 99–101 of FASB ASC 606-10-55.

      4 4 Example fact pattern originated from paragraphs 106–109 of FASB ASC 606-10-55.

      Learning objectives

       Identify the definition of a performance obligation.

       Identify promises of goods or services in a contract with a customer.

       Identify when a good or service is distinct within the context of a contract with a customer.

      The core principle of the revenue recognition standard is that an entity should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services.

      In order to achieve the core principle of the revenue standard, an entity should be able to perform the following five steps:

       Step 1: Identify the contract with a customer

       Step 2: Identify the performance obligations in the contract

       Step 3: Determine the transaction price

       Step 4: Allocate the transaction price

       Step 5: Recognize revenue when or as the entity satisfies a performance obligation

      After an entity has determined that it has a contract with a customer, thereby meaning that the criterion in step 1 has been achieved, they will turn their attention to step 2. This is performed by assessing, at the inception of the contract, the types of goods or services, or both, promised in the contract with the customer. The entity will need to determine whether each of these goods or services, or both, meet the definition of a separate performance obligation. Therefore, it is important to understand the definition of a performance obligation, which is given in the FASB Accounting Standards Codification® (ASC) master glossary as:

       Performance Obligation: A promise in a contract with a customer to transfer to the customer either:

      1 A good or service (or a bundle of goods or services) that is distinct

      2 A series of distinct goods or services that are substantially the same and that have the same pattern of transfer to the customer.

      Promised goods and services identified in a contract

      Generally, a contract with a customer will explicitly state the promised goods or services; however, promised goods and services need not be explicitly stated. A contract with a customer may also include promises that are implied. These implied promises might have originated by an entity’s customary business practice, published policies, or specific statements if made at the time the customer entered into the contract. Implied promises may create a reasonable expectation that the entity will transfer to the customer a good or a service.

      

Key point

      Assessing whether a good or service is a performance obligation does not apply when the promised good or service

       is immaterial in the context of the contract with the customer.

       does not include the activities that an entity must undertake to fulfill a contract unless those activities transfer a good or service to a customer. For example, administrative tasks to set up a contract. are not promised goods or services in the contract with the customer, and therefore, would not be considered a performance obligation.

      Keep in mind that the term “immaterial” is not defined in FASB ASC 606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers; consider referring to FASB ASC 105, Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. FASB ASC 105-10-05-6 explains that the provisions in the FASB ASC need not be applied to immaterial amounts.