Why Corporate Leasing Practices Deserve More Respect
Written by: Tom
Petruno, April 4, 2018 – UCLA Anderson
Review
In February 2016, the Financial Accounting Standards Board
(FASB) announced a major overhaul to the accounting rules for leases. The new rules require that all long-term
leases be counted on corporate balance sheets as liabilities beginning in
2019. Current rules distinguish between
debt-like “capital leases,” which appear as liabilities, and “operating leases,”
which are treated as straight rentals and do not appear as liabilities. By recording liabilities for operating
leases, the new rules will add more than $1 trillion in liabilities to
estimated total U.S. corporate liabilities to $26 trillion, according to the
FASB.
Historically, operating leases have been “off-balance-sheet”
items, usually cited in footnotes of financial statements. Critics say that invites “window dressing,”
or using leases to understate company liabilities and, therefore, financial
risk. But the rule change governing
companies’ reporting assets like real estate and machinery – may be targeting
an accounting abuse that is more imagined than real, new research suggests.
An extensive study (Documents/sites/faculty/review
publications/Caskey Ozel TAR-2016-0176R1, pdf) by UCLA Anderson’s Judson Caskey
and N. Bugra Ozel of the University of Texas finds companies’ decisions to use
operating leases, rather than debt or capital leases, are primarily driven by business
strategy. More important, operating
leases receive not only different accounting treatment, but also different
legal treatment.
For example, the bankruptcy code treats capital leases as “secured
financing arrangements” subject to similar rules as debt, whereas it treats
operating leases as rentals. In the
event of a bankruptcy, an operating lease needn’t get tied up in court
proceedings, whereas financiers of debt and capital leases must rely on the
bankruptcy settlement.
Because operating leases afford more protection to
financiers than capital leases, they help companies gain access to additional financing. They can also allow a company to get
equipment without committing to owning it, a help in uncertain times. There are also favorable tax treatments that
support leasing.
If decisions to use operating leases were largely motivated
by a desire to disguise a company’s finances, the study says, you’d expect to
see heavy lease activity in situations “where managers have strong incentives
to window-dress their financial statements.”
The authors identify such situations, including periods before private
companies take themselves public (and want to look as financially fit as possible),
and periods before companies borrow heavily (and likewise want to appear
healthy to get the best loan terms).
The working paper looked at leasing data from 1990 to 2012
from two separate groups of companies:
142 private and public airlines, because the airline industry has a long
history of leasing jets; and the broad universe of 7,712 public U.S.
companies. Overall, the authors found “no
evidence that [accounting strategy] plays a major role in leasing decisions.”
In the case of airlines, Caskey and Ozel found that
privately held carriers – which don’t have to worry about reporting quarterly
financial data to Wall Street – actually rely on operating leases more than
publicly-owned airlines. And in the
broad sample of companies, the authors likewise found “no evidence” to
associate leasing with efforts to alter reported financial data.
In the interview, Caskey said he was “somewhat neutral” on
the value of the new rule. “On the one
hand, it provides a bit of new information, beyond what companies currently
report in footnote disclosures about leases,” he said. “On the other hand, that information can be
costly for companies to provide, especially smaller companies with limited
accounting staff – and probably lots of leases.”