KPM

Communicating Accounting Information Inventory Management WIP Non-GAAP Metrics Reduce Billing Bottlenecks Auditor Independence Accounting Methods Year-End Financials Auditing Revenue Recognition Inventory Management System Access To Capital M&A Due Diligence What Is Materiality Job-Costing Systems Technology Bank Reconciliation Cybersecurity New Segment Expense Disclosure Rules QuickBooks To Prepare 2024 Budgets Safeguard Organization Assets Offsetting Rules Inventory Count negotiation M&A Accounting Monthly Financial Close Shareholder advance Payroll challenges Prepare for audit QuickBooks income tax Crypto Accounting Percentage-Of-Completion Financial Statement PCAOB Overhead Mileage in QuickBooks UTPs Cross-Train Employee Benefit Plan Audits Accounts Receivable

The Offsetting Rules: Here’s What You Need To Know

In the current uncertain economic landscape, companies delving into hedging strategies may find it necessary for management to familiarize themselves with the accounting regulations governing offsets. Here are the basics that you need to know, include the requisite disclosures in footnotes related to these contractual agreements.

Right Of Setoff

In general, it’s not proper to offset assets and liabilities in the balance sheet — except when there’s a right of setoff. This exists when the following four criteria are satisfied:

  1. The debt amounts are determinable.
  2. The reporting entity has the ‘right’ to setoff.
  3. The right is enforceable by law.
  4. The reporting entity has the ‘intention’ to setoff.

 

Gross Vs. Net Presentation

If these requirements are met, the company may offset the gross figure for the liability against the gross figure for the asset and, instead, report a single net amount for the asset and liability on the balance sheet. Under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), the offsetting rules apply to the following:

  • Derivatives accounted for under provisions of Accounting Standard Codification (ASC) Topic 815, Derivatives and Hedging
  • Repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements
  • Securities borrowing and lending transactions

 
For example, a company might have a derivative asset with a fair value of $10 million and a derivative liability with a fair value of $7.5 million, both with the same party. If the four criteria are met, the company can offset the derivative liability against the derivative asset on the balance sheet, resulting in the presentation of only a net derivative asset of $2.5 million.

Offsetting is allowed for derivatives that are subject to legally enforceable netting arrangements with the same party, even if the right to offset is available only in the event of bankruptcy or default. However, offsetting doesn’t apply to unsettled regular-way trades (trades that are settled within the normal settlement cycle for that type of trade) or ordinary trade payables or receivables.

Disclosure Requirements

Under GAAP, companies must disclose financial instruments and derivative instruments that are either offset on the balance sheet in accordance with ASC Section 210-20-45 or ASC Section 815-10-45 or subject to an enforceable master netting arrangement or similar agreement. So-called “master netting arrangements” consolidate individual contracts into a single agreement between two counterparties. If one party defaults on a contract within the arrangement, the other can terminate the entire arrangement and demand the net settlement of all contracts.

Specifically, companies must disclose:

  • The gross amounts subject to offset rights
  • Amounts that have been offset
  • The related net credit exposure

 
Detailed disclosures also are required for the collateral pledged in netting arrangements and a description of the rights associated with covered assets and liabilities subject to netting arrangements. These disclosures — which are usually presented in a tabular format — help investors, lenders, and other financial statement users to understand the potential effect of netting arrangements on the company’s performance.

For More Information

The rules for offsetting differ under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). So, comparisons between entities that apply different standards may require adjustments based on the footnote disclosures. Contact us to determine whether your hedging arrangements fall under the scope of the offsetting rules. We can help you comply with the rules and benchmark your performance with global competitors.

Related Articles

Talk with the pros

Our CPAs and advisors are a great resource if you’re ready to learn even more.