Bob Jensen's Web Site

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FAS 133 and IAS 39 Glossary and Transcriptions of Experts
Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities
Bob Jensen at Trinity University

 

Warning 1:  Many of the links were broken when the FASB changed all of its links.  If a link to a FASB site does not work , go to the new FASB link and search for the document.  The FASB home page is at http://www.fasb.org/ 

Warning 2: The DIG documents are not yet available in the Codification Database, but they can now be accessed at  http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/ 
Over 300 pages of  DIG pronouncements can be downloaded from  http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/allissuesp2.pdf 

Warning 3:  The international standard IAS 39 has been amended many times and continued to be amended. The IASB tends to change paragraph numbers with many of its amendments and directly amends the preceding version of a standard. Hence some of the IAS 39 paragraphs quoted in this glossary may be relocated and/or altered in the latest and greatest version of IAS 39.

Warning 4:  In February 2008 the FASB for the first time allowed users free access to its "FASB Accounting Standards Codification" database. Access will be free for at least one year, although registration is required for free access. Much, but not all, information in separate booklets and PDF files may now be accessed much more efficiently as hypertext in one database. The Glossary below has not been updated for the Codification Database. Although the database is off to a great start, there is much information in this Glossary and in the FASB standards that cannot be found in the Codification Database. You can read the following at http://asc.fasb.org/asccontent&trid=2273304&nav_type=left_nav

Welcome to the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification™ (Codification).

The Codification is the result of a major four-year project involving over 200 people from multiple entities. The Codification structure is significantly different from the structure of existing accounting standards. The Notice to Constituents provides information you should read to obtain a good understanding of the Codification history, content, structure, and future consequences.

The FASB's Accounting Standard Codification Online Database (FASCOD) --- http://asc.fasb.org/home

I have been using FASCOD regularly, especially Section 815 on accounting for derivative financial instruments and hedging. I find this quite easy to use and appreciate the cross referencing to other standards. It would help in some instances to also reference to the printed standards.

Although there are narrowed-down glossaries for some of the sections like Section 815 (10)(S20), there is also a wonderful "Master Glossary" at http://asc.fasb.org/glossary&nav_type=left_nav#null

When you are into a section's outline, especially note the "Collapse" and "Expand" hot words that let you expand or collapse the outline for a desired level of detail and links to illustrations. Some of the illustrations are new in Section 815. Also there are links to SEC standards and interpretations that have been added to the database.

I did encounter a problem trying to print FASCOD quotations. For some reason, FASCOD pastes as hidden text. I could read it in a MS Word document but not in Print Preview or in printed hard copy. In MS Word I went to Tools, Options, View and clicked on Hidden Text. That did not solve my problem --- not being able to print FASCOD quotations. Then I went to Tools, Options, Print and clicked on Hidden Text. That made my FASCOD quotations appear in both Print Preview and hard copy.

FASB member Tom Linsmeier has been in charge of the FASCOD development. Tom indicates that his team was unaware of the above hidden text problem that some users are having. He says that his team is now looking into why the hidden text printing problem arose in the first place. It may well be that the above problem for some of us will disappear in the future.

Now if we only had such an IASCOD database for international standards. In fairness, the IASB standards, interpretations, exposure drafts, and a glossary can be downloaded into your computer and updated for an annual fee. This database has useful cross referencing and database search features. In many ways it is quite well done. However, it does not slice and dice content into better codification schema.

The IASB has some political correctness issues when it appears to be copying United States GAAP and/or technology. Hopefully the IASB will look at the economics involved in developing FASCOD over four years with over 200 professionals and millions of dollars and decide that the codification schema used by the FASB is suitable, with some tweaking, for the international standards. Of course the actual IASCOD content will be international GAAP rather than U.S. GAAP. It will still be a huge expense to slice and dice international GAAP for purposes of IASCOD. It will also entail a change in delivery. IASCOD will be served up online, whereas the current IASB database of standards, interpretations, exposure drafts, etc. must be downloaded into each user's computer for a fee initially and for annual updates.

The current IASB database can be downloaded from http://www.iasb.org/Home.htm
I find that it is best to leave its red-circle icon as a Startup icon on my computer screen (it could be just a bit smaller). Then it 's very easy to click the database on and off. In some ways the downloaded IASB database is programmed quite cleverly, especially the way it does database search. I give five stars for its search engine.

I hope that the IASB will invest in more illustrations if and when it develops IASCOD. One of the severe weaknesses of the IASB standards is that they cannot compare with the FASB standards in terms of abundant and useful illustrations. This is especially helpful for those of us in education and training. For example, when teaching IAS 39 having very few illustrations, I often run to FAS 133 and its amendments and DIGs for some illustrations. Now I can turn to Section 815 of FASCOD for added illustrations.

A drawback of the current Section 815 FASCOD content is that it does not yet have sliced and diced content of all the Derivative Implementation Group (DIG) pronouncements. Hopefully the DIG's will be added soon to FASCOD.

Bob Jensen

"Framing the Future: A first look at FASB’s GAAP codification, by Bruce Pounder, Journal of Accountancy, May 2008 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2008/fasb_gaap.htm 

In less than a year, FASB’s Accounting Standards Codification will affect the day-to-day work of nearly every CPA who practices, teaches or researches accounting in accordance with U.S. GAAP.

By April 2009, FASB is expected to make the codification the single source of authoritative GAAP, overriding all existing literature. In other words, the codification content—not the original pronouncements from which the content was derived—will be GAAP. And the online codification research system—not books, loose-leaf services or CDs—will be the primary way that accountants access GAAP.

For many historical reasons, GAAP has become a minimally organized collection of many kinds of accounting pronouncements issued by various standard setters over many decades, as well as “widely recognized and prevalent” industry practices that are not the product of any formal standard-setting process. The present components of GAAP vary greatly in format, structure, completeness, authority and accessibility. As a result, practicing CPAs and financial statement preparers who attempt to apply GAAP often find themselves confused and frustrated. Likewise, accounting students frequently struggle to learn GAAP.

If a standard setter were to develop a body of accounting standards from scratch today, those standards presumably would not resemble the challenging jumble that GAAP has become. Rather than start from scratch, FASB has done the next best thing in an attempt to make GAAP more understandable and user-friendly—FASB has sought to simplify the structure of GAAP by codifying it.

In January, FASB released the Accounting Standards Codification for public review and verification. The codification is not merely a new entrant into the market for products and services designed to help CPAs understand and apply GAAP. Rather, the codification completely changes the way that GAAP will be documented, updated, referenced and accessed. It organizes in an entirely new way thousands of existing authoritative financial accounting and reporting standards and delivers the content via an Internet based research system that helps users search and access the material.

One often–overlooked aspect of the codification is that it will eliminate or flatten the GAAP hierarchy. In other words, there will be no more House of GAAP—no tiered structure with varying levels of authority on each floor. Under the codification, there’s no distinction—all standards are uniformly authoritative.

FASB expects that the codification will help mitigate the risk of noncompliance with accounting standards, provide real time updates as standards change and reduce the amount of time and effort required to research accounting issues.

A MAJOR RESTRUCTURING The primary goal of the codification project is not to change GAAP’s content, but rather to organize it in a more useful way. The codification will contain all current, authoritative accounting standards for nongovernmental entities that have been issued by U.S. standard setters, including FASB, FASB’s Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF), and the AICPA Accounting Standards Executive Committee (AcSEC). Certain SEC guidance also is included.

The codification has, for the most part, left standards unchanged. Appendix A of the Notice to Constituents, an overview document on the codification Web site, highlights areas in which FASB is recommending changes to standards to resolve conflicts in GAAP.

As used above, the word “authoritative” refers to GAAP from levels A through D in the current GAAP hierarchy. Undocumented industry practices and documented but-nonauthoritative guidance have been excluded from the codification. Because there are some exceptions regarding what is included in the codification, users are advised to consult FASB’s Notice to Constituents.

The project effectively disassembled each existing authoritative pronouncement and reassembled the pieces, organizing them into approximately 90 topics. Contents in each topic are further organized first by subtopic, then section and finally paragraph. The paragraph level is the only level that contains substantive content; all higher levels in the topical structure exist merely to organize the paragraph-level content.

Continued in article

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory and standard setting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm

 

The DIG documents are not yet available in the Codification Database, but they can now be accessed at  http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/ 
Over 300 pages of  DIG pronouncements can be downloaded from  http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/allissuesp2.pdf 

Bob Jensen's Web Site

Top of Document

Start of Glossary

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

FAS 133 and IAS 39 Glossary and Transcriptions of Experts
Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities
Bob Jensen at Trinity University

The FASB's Derivatives and Hedging Glossary (in the Accounting Standards Codification Database) ---
http://asc.fasb.org/subtopic&trid=2229141&nav_type=left_nav

FASB Accounting  Standards Codification online databaase  --- http://asc.fasb.org/home
Section 815 pertains to FAS 133 --- http://asc.fasb.org/section&trid=2229142&query=Derivative

A Glossary is provided in this Codification database in Section 815 (A20).

Also see the Codification Master Glossary at http://asc.fasb.org/glossary&nav_type=left_nav#null

Timeline of scandals and legislation leading up to FAS 133 and IAS 39 http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds

Bob Jensen's CD --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/

I'm sharing some old (well relatively old) accounting theory quiz and exam material that I added to a folder at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/


Question
What are hedge funds, especially after Bernie Madoff made them so famous?

When people ask me this question, my initial response is that a hedge fund no longer necessarily has anything to do with financial risk hedging. Rather a hedge fund is merely a "private" investment "club" that does not offer shares to the general public largely because it would then subject itself to more SEC, stock exchange, and other regulators. Having said this, it's pretty darn easy for anybody with sufficient funds to get into such a "private" club. Minimum investments range from $10,000 to $1,000,000 or higher.

Since Bernie Madoff made hedge funds so famous, the public tends to think that a hedge fund is dangerous, fraudulent, and a back street operation that does not play be the rules. Certainly hedge funds emerged in part to avoid being regulated. Sometimes they are risky due to high leverage, but some funds skillfully hedge to manage risk and are much safer than mutual funds. For example, some hedge funds have shrewd hedging strategies to control risk in interest rate and/or foreign currency trading.

Most hedge funds are not fraudulent. In general, however, it's "buyer beware" for hedge fund investors.

I would never invest in a hedge fund that is not audited by a very reliable CPA auditing firm. Not all CPA auditing firms are reliable (Bernie Madoff proved you can engage a fraudulent auditor operating out of a one-room office). Hence, the first step in evaluating a hedge fund is to investigate its auditor. The first step in evaluating an auditor is to determine if the auditing firm is wealthy enough to be a serious third party in law suits if the hedge fund goes belly up.

But the recent multimillion losses of Carnegie Mellon, the University of Pittsburgh, and other university endowment funds that invested in a verry fraudulent hedge fund purportedly audited by Deloitte suggests that the size and reputation of the auditing firm is not, by itself, sufficient protection against a criminal hedge fund (that was supposedly given a clean opinion by Deloitte in financial reports circulated to the victims of the fraud).

When learning about hedge funds, you may want to begin at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedge_Fund

"What is a hedge fund and how is it different from a mutual fund?" by Andy Samuels, Business and Finance 101 Examiner, June 10, 2009 --- Click Here
Jim Mahar pointed out this link.

Having migrated away from their namesake, hedge funds no longer  focus primarily on “hedging” (attempting to reduce risk) because hedge funds are now focused almost blindly on one thing: returns.

Having been referred to as “mutual funds for the super rich” by investopedia.com, hedge funds are very similar to mutual funds in that they pool money together from many investors. Hedge funds, like mutual funds, are also managed by a financial professionals, but differ because they are geared toward wealthier individuals.

Hedge funds, unlike mutual funds, employ a wider array of ivesting techniques, which are considered more aggresive. For example, hedge funds often use leverage to amplify their returns (or losses if things go wrong).

The other key difference between hedge funds and mutual funds is the amount of regulation involved. Hedge funds are relatively unregulated because investors in hedge funds are assumed to be more sophisticated investors, who can both afford and understand the potential losses. In fact, U.S. laws require that the majority of investors in the fund are accredited.

Most hedge funds draw in investors because of the trustworthy reputations of the executives of the fund. Word-of-mouth praise and affiliations are often the key to success. Bernie Madoff succeed in luring customers based on two leading factors:  (1) His esteemed reputation on Wall Street and (2) His highly regarded connections in the Jewish community where he drew in most of his victims.

Bob Jensen's threads on frauds are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
In particular see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm
And see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm

 

 


"What’s a Couple of Hundred Trillion When You’re Talking Derivatives?" by Floyd Norris, The New York Times, September 23, 2006 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/23/business/23charts.html

Everett McKinley Dirksen, the Senate Republican leader in the 1950’s, is supposed to have said, “A billion here and a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking real money.” What would he have thought of derivatives today?

The International Swaps and Derivatives Association, a trade group, reported this week that the outstanding nominal value of swaps and derivatives at the end of June was $283.2 trillion.

Compare that with the combined gross domestic product of the United States, the European Union, Canada, Japan and China, which is about $34 trillion. The total value of all homes in the United States is about the same amount.

To be sure, notional value is an exaggerated term as it greatly overstates the amount at risk in many contracts. But the growth rate is real, and in the fastest-growing area of swaps — credit default swaps — notional value is closer to the amount at risk, because such swaps promise to make up the losses if a borrower defaults on the notional amount.

The value of outstanding credit default swaps doubles every year — a trend that must eventually stop — and now equals $26 trillion. That is about the same as the total amount of bond debt in the United States, and corporate debt, on which most credit swaps are traded, comes to just $5.2 trillion.

The credit derivatives cover the risks of default by individual companies, and offer insurance against default for bond indexes and specified bond portfolios.

The growth of the market has forced the swaps and derivatives association to change the way its credit swaps work. It used to be that if a company defaulted, the writer of a credit swap would have to pay par value for the bond he had guaranteed, and could then sell the bond to reduce his losses.

But in some cases defaults led to bond rallies, as those who had purchased credit swaps scrambled to get bonds to deliver. Now traders can choose cash settlements, with the amounts to be paid determined through auctions.

Until 1997, the association provided separate numbers on currency and interest rate contracts, but innovations blurred the distinction between those categories, and now it publishes a combined total. At the end of June, the figure was $250.8 trillion, up 25 percent over the previous 12 months.

Growth in that market slowed markedly early in this decade, as worldwide markets cooled, and there was even one annual decline, from mid-2000 to mid-2001. But growth picked up in 2002 as economies began to recover.

The volume outstanding of equity derivatives is rising by about 30 percent a year, and now totals $5.6 trillion. It could go farther, with world stock market capitalization now about $41 trillion, according to Standard & Poor’s.

Robert Pickel, the chief executive of the association, said that the growth in derivatives enables “more and more firms to benefit from these risk management tools.” On the other hand, the situation allows more and more traders to load up on risk if they choose, and hedge funds have become major derivatives traders.

The combination of large unregulated hedge funds trading ever larger amounts of unregulated derivatives in nontransparent markets makes some people nervous. But so far, anyway, little is being done to change the situation, and nothing devastating has happened to markets.

Continued in article

Jensen Comment
One of the main differences between a "financial instrument" versus a "derivative financial instrument" is that the notional is generally not at risk in a "derivative financial instrument." For example if Company C borrows $600 million from Bank B in a financial instrument, the notional amount ($600 million) is at risk immediately after the notional is transferred to Company C. On the other hand, if Company C and Company D contract for an interest rate swap on a notional of $600 million using Bank B as an intermediary, the $600 million notional never changes hands. Only the swap payments for the differences in interest rates are at risk and these are only a small fraction of the $600 million notional. Sometimes the swap payments are even guaranteed by the intermediary, thereby eliminating credit risk.

So where's the risk of a derivative financial instrument that caused all the fuss beginning in the 1980s and led to the most complex accounting standards ever written (FAS 133 in the U.S. and IAS 39 internationally)?

Often there is little or no risk if the derivative contracts are held to maturity. The problem is that derivatives are often settled before maturity at huge gains to one party and huge losses to the counterparty. For example, if Company C swaps fixed-rate interest payments on $600 million (having current value risk with no cash flow variation risk) for variable-rate interest payments on $600 million (having cash flow variation risk but no market value variation risk), Company C has taken on enormous cash flow risk that may become very large if interest rates change greatly in a direction not expected by Company C. If Company C wants to settle its swap contract before maturity it may have to pay an enormous amount of money to do so either to counterparty Company D or to some other company who will take the swap off the hands of Company C. The risk is not the $600 million notional; Rather the risk is in the shifting value of the swap contract itself which can be huge even if it is less than the $600 million notional amount.

Perhaps derivative financial instrument risk is even better illustrated by futures contracts. Futures contracts are traded on organized exchanges such as the Chicago Board of Trade. If Company A speculates in oil futures on January 1, there is no exchange of cash on a 100,000 barrel notional that gives Company A the right to sell oil at a future date (say in one year) at a forward price (say $100 per barrel) one year from now. As a speculation, Company A has gambled by hoping to buy 100,000 barrels of oil one year from now for less than $100 per barrel and sell it for the contracted $100 price.

But futures contracts are unique in that they are net settled in cash each day over the entire one year contract period. If the spot price of oil is $55 on January 12 and $60 on January 13, Company A must provide $500,000 = ($60-$55)(100,000 barrels) to the counterparty on January 13 even though the futures contract itself does not mature until December 31. If Company A has not hedged its position, its risk can become astounding if oil prices dramatically rise. Company A's futures contract had zero value on January 1 (futures contracts rarely have value initially except in the case of options contracts), but the value of the futures contract may become an enormous asset or an enormous liability each each day thereafter depending upon oil spot price movements relative to the forward price ($100) that was contracted.

Hence, derivative contracts may have enormous risks even though the notionals themselves are not at risk. Prior to FAS 133 these risks were generally not booked or even disclosed. In the 1980s newer types of derivative contracts emerged (such as interest rate swaps) in part because it was possible to have enormous amounts of off-balance-sheet debt that did not even have to be disclosed, let alone booked, in financial statements. Astounding frauds transpired that led to huge pressures on the SEC and the FASB to better account for derivative financial instruments.

Most corporations adopted policies of not speculating in derivatives by allowing derivatives to be used only to hedge risk. However, such policies are very misleading since there are two main types of risk --- cash flow risk versus value risk. It is impossible to simultaneously hedge both types of risk, and hedging one type increases the risk of the other type. For example, a company that swaps fixed for floating rate interest payments increases cash flow risk by eliminating value risk (which it may want if it plans to settle debt prior to maturity). The counterparty that swaps floating rate interest payments for fixed rate payments eliminates cash flow risk by taking on value risk. It is impossible to hedge both cash flow and value risk simultaneously.

Hence, to say that a corporation has a policy allowing hedging but not speculating in derivative financial instruments is nonsense. A policy to only hedge cash flow risk may create enormous value risk. A policy to only hedge value risk may create enormous cash flow risk.

As the NYT article above points out that derivative financial instruments are increasingly popular in world commerce. As a result risk exposures have greatly increased even if all contracts were used for hedging purposes only. The problem is that a hedge only reduces or eliminates one type of risk at the "cost" of increasing the other type of risk. Derivative contracts increase one type or the other type of risk the instant they are signed.  Hedging shifts risk but does not eliminate risk per se.

You can read more about scandals in derivative financial instruments contracting (such as one company's "trillion dollar bet" that nearly toppled Wall Street and Enron's derivative scandals) at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds

You can download the CD containing my slide shows and videos on how to account for derivative financial instruments at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/

My FAS 133 and IAS 39 Glossary is Below.


Table of Contents and Links

Bob Jensen's FAS 133 Glossary on Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities

          Also see a comprehensive risk and trading glossary at
http://risk.ifci.ch/SiteMap.htm

Glossary for the energy industry --- Also see http://snipurl.com/EnergyGlossary  

Related glossaries are listed at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbus.htm 

Click here for tutorial links 

Risk Glossary --- http://www.riskglossary.com/

If you are having trouble finding something try a Google search.  Especially note that you can add terms and phrases at http://www.google.com/advanced_search?hl=en
For example, you can add a phrase in the second cell and individual words in the top cell.  You can fill in both cells simultaneously to narrow your search.

Also note that you can seek definitions in Google.  In the top cell type in --- define “phrase” where your phrase can be one word like “contango” or “backwardation” or a phrase like “asian option”.
It is important to first type in the word “define” without quotation marks.

Second try a search within the standard itself.  
You can find digital versions of FAS 133 by scrolling down at http://www.fasb.org/st/#fas153 
DIG text is can be searched at http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/ 
Free digital versions of IAS 39 are available but they are difficult to find in EU law.  Fee-based versions are available at http://www.iasb.org/ 

 


Bob Jensen's FAS 133 and IAS 39 helpers --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Why there are new rules of accounting for derivative financial instruments and hedge accounting --- See Why!

Bob Jensen's FAS 133,and FAS 138 Cases --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Examples Illustrating Application of FASB Statement No. 138, Accounting for Certain Derivative Instruments and Certain Hedging Activities-an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133 --- http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/examplespg.shtml
or try clicking here.

Flow Chart for FAS 133 and IAS 39 Accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm 

 

FAS 133 Excel Workbooks Solutions to Examples and Cases --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
For example, my Excel wookbook for the Solution to Example 1 in Appendix B of FAS 133 is the file 133ex01a.xls
Note that in many instances, I have expanded upon the FASB examples to make more well-rounded presentation.

Bob Jensen's video tutorials on accounting for derivative financial instruments and hedging activity under FAS 133 and IAS 39 standards --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5341/fas133/WindowsMedia/ 

Comparisons of International IAS Versus FASB Standards --- http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/cda/doc/content/pocketiasus.pdf

Flow Chart for FAS 133 Accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm
Flow Chart for IAS 39 Accounting    --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/39flow.htm

Differences between FAS 133 and IAS 39 --- http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm

Intrinsic Value Versus Full Value Hedge Accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/IntrinsicValue.htm 

Canadian Workshop Topics --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000indexLinks.htm

Accounting for Executory Contracts Such as Purchase/Sale Commitments and Loan Commitments ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryOnFirmCommitments.htm

Illustrations --- See Illustrations 

Two Questions
How did Bob Jensen spend his summer vacation?
What can physicists do when they can't find jobs in physics?

Answers

I've spent a great deal of my summer and my Fall 2004 Semester leave plowing through a book entitled Quantitative Finance and Risk Management:  A Physicists Approach by Jan W. Dash, (World Scientific Publishing, 2004, ISBN 981-238-712-9)
This is a great book by a good writer.

For a more introductory warm up I recommend Derivatives:  An Introduction by Robert A Strong, Edition 2 (Thomson South-Western, 2005, ISBN 0-324-27302-9)

And what about opportunities for physicists?
See "A Geek's Walk on Wall Street," by Peter Coy, Business Week, November 15, Page 26.  This is a review of a book entitled My Life as a Quant, by Emanuel Derman (Wiley, 2005) --- http://www.businessweek.com/@@x3mnUmYQYMjg7RMA/premium/content/04_46/b3908024_mz005.htm 

As one of Wall Street's leading quants, Derman did throw off some intense gamma radiation. He worked at Goldman from 1985 until 2003 except for one year at Salomon Brothers. At Goldman, he moved from fixed income to equity derivatives to risk management, becoming a managing director in 1997. He co-invented a tool for pricing options on Treasury bonds, working with Goldman colleagues Bill Toy and the late Fischer Black, who co-invented the Black-Scholes formula for valuing options on stocks. Derman received the industry's "Financial Engineer of the Year" award in 2000. Now he directs the financial-engineering program at Columbia University.

Derman failed at what he really wanted, which was to become an important physicist. He was merely very smart in a field dominated by geniuses, so he kicked around from one low-paying research job to another. "At age 16 or 17, I had wanted to be another Einstein," he writes. "By 1976...I had reached the point where I merely envied the postdoc in the office next door because he had been invited to give a seminar in France." His move to Wall Street -- an acknowledgment of failure -- brought him financial rewards beyond the dreams of academic physicists and a fair measure of satisfaction as well.

In the tradition of the idiosyncratic memoir, My Life As a Quant is a grab bag of the author's interests. It quotes Schopenhauer and Goethe while supplying not one but three diagrams of a muon neutrino colliding with a proton. There is a long section on the brilliant and punctilious Fischer Black; a glimpse of physicist Richard Feynman; and an embarrassing encounter with finance giant Robert Merton, who sat next to the author on a long flight (Derman treated him rudely before realizing who he was).

Derman's mood seems to vary from bemused on good days to sour on bad ones. The chapter on his postdoc travels is titled "A Sort of Life"; his brief career at Bell Labs, "In the Penal Colony"; his tenure at Salomon Brothers, "A Severed Head." Pre-IPO Goldman Sachs comes off as relatively gentle yet stimulating. He writes: "It was the only place I never secretly hoped would crash and burn."

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads (including video tutorials) on derivative financial instruments and the Freddie and Fannie scandals are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on the trillions of dollars of worldwide frauds using derivative financial instruments are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds 

September 25, 2003 message from editor jda [editor.jda@gmx.de]

Dear Professor Bob Jensen,

The Journal of Deivatives Accounting (JDA) is preparing to publish its first issue and I would be grateful if you could post the following announcement on your web site.

Regards

Mamouda

Dear Colleagues,

There is a new addition to accounting research Journals. The Journal of Derivatives Accounting (JDA) is an international quarterly publication which provides authoritative accounting and finance literature on issues of financial innovations such as derivatives and their implications to accounting, finance, tax, standards setting, and corporate practices. This refereed journal disseminates research results and serves as a means of communication among academics, standard setters, practitioners, and market participants.

The first and special issue of the JDA, to appear in the Winter of 2003, will be dedicated to:

"Stock Options: Developments in Share-Based Compensation (Accounting, Standards, Tax and Corporate Practice)"

This special issue will consider papers dealing with:

* Analysis of applicable national and international accounting standards * Convergence between IASB and FASB * Accounting treatment (Expensing) * Valuation * Corporate and market practice * Design of stock options * Analysis of the structure of stock options contracts * Executives pay incentives and performance * Taxation * Management and Corporate Governance

For more details on how to submit your work to the journal, please visit http://www.worldscinet.com/jda.html 

Sincerely,
The Editorial Board Journal of Derivatives Accounting (JDA)


JOURNAL OF DERIVATIVES ACCOUNTING 

Hedge Effectiveness Analysis Toolkit
Vol. 1, No. 2 (September 2004) out now!! In this issue issue of JDA, Guy Coughlan, Simon Emery and Johannes Kolb discuss the Hedge Effectiveness Analysis Toolkit, which is JPMorgan’s latest addition to a long list of innovative and cutting-edge risk management solutions. View the Table of Contents @ http://www.worldscinet.com/jda/01/0102/S02198681040102.html


FASB staff posts derivatives compilation of all subsequent changes made to the guidance in the February 10, 2004, edition of the bound codification, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (also referred to as the Green Book) --- http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/07-10-06_green_book_changes.pdf

Bob Jensen's tutorials on accounting for derivative financial instruments are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm


In May of 2003, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Statement No. 149, Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities. The Statement amends and clarifies accounting for derivative instruments, including certain derivative instruments embedded in other contracts, and for hedging activities under Statement 133 --- http://www.fasb.org/news/nr043003.shtml 

Norwalk, CT, April 30, 2003—Today the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Statement No. 149, Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities. The Statement amends and clarifies accounting for derivative instruments, including certain derivative instruments embedded in other contracts, and for hedging activities under Statement 133.

The new guidance amends Statement 133 for decisions made:

The amendments set forth in Statement 149 improve financial reporting by requiring that contracts with comparable characteristics be accounted for similarly. In particular, this Statement clarifies under what circumstances a contract with an initial net investment meets the characteristic of a derivative as discussed in Statement 133. In addition, it clarifies when a derivative contains a financing component that warrants special reporting in the statement of cash flows. Statement 149 amends certain other existing pronouncements. Those changes will result in more consistent reporting of contracts that are derivatives in their entirety or that contain embedded derivatives that warrant separate accounting.

Effective Dates and Order Information

This Statement is effective for contracts entered into or modified after June 30, 2003, except as stated below and for hedging relationships designated after June 30, 2003. The guidance should be applied prospectively.

The provisions of this Statement that relate to Statement 133 Implementation Issues that have been effective for fiscal quarters that began prior to June 15, 2003, should continue to be applied in accordance with their respective effective dates. In addition, certain provisions relating to forward purchases or sales of when-issued securities or other securities that do not yet exist, should be applied to existing contracts as well as new contracts entered into after June 30, 2003.

Copies of Statement 149 may be obtained through the FASB Order Department at 800-748-0659 or by placing an order on-line at the FASB website.


SAS 92 auditing standard entitled "Auditing Derivative Instruments, Hedging Activities, and Investments in Securities."  Click Here.


An earlier FAS 133 Amendment on the Heels of the Previous (FAS 138) Amendment --- A Mere 104 Pages

Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (Exposure Draft)

The News Release reads as follows at http://www.fasb.org/news/nr050102.shtml 

Today the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued an Exposure Draft, Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities. The Exposure Draft amends Statement No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, to clarify the definition of a derivative. A copy of the Exposure Draft is available on the FASB’s website at www.fasb.org. The comment period concludes on July 1, 2002.

In connection with Statement 133 Implementation Issue No. D1, "Application of Statement 133 to Beneficial Interests in Securitized Financial Assets," the Board addressed issues related to the accounting for beneficial interests in securitized financial assets, such as beneficial interests in securitized credit card receivables. In resolving those issues, the FASB decided that an amendment was needed to clarify the definition of a derivative, as set forth in Statement 133.

The purpose of the Exposure Draft is to improve financial reporting by requiring that financial contracts with comparable characteristics be accounted for in the same way. The Statement would clarify under what circumstances a financial contract—either an option-based or non-option-based contract—with an initial net investment would meet the characteristic of a derivative discussed in paragraph 6(b) of Statement 133. The FASB believes the proposed change will produce more consistent reporting of financial contracts as either derivatives or hybrid financial instruments.

The proposed effective date for the accounting change is the first day of the first fiscal quarter beginning after November 15, 2002, which, for calendar year end companies, will be January 1, 2003.

Bob Jensen's threads on FAS 122 and IAS 39 are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/casea


The FASB staff has prepared a new updated edition of Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities. This essential aid to implementation presents Statement 133 as amended by Statements 137 and 138. Also, it includes the results of the Derivatives Implementation Group (DIG), as cleared by the FASB through December 10, 2001, with cross-references between the issues and the paragraphs of the Statement.

“The staff at the FASB has prepared this publication to bring together in one document the current guidance on accounting for derivatives,” said Kevin Stoklosa, FASB project manager. “To put it simply, it’s a ‘one-stop-shop’ approach that we hope our readers will find easier to use.”

Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities—DC133-2

Prices: $30.00 each copy for Members of the Financial Accounting Foundation, the Accounting Research Association (ARA) of the AICPA, and academics; $37.50 each copy for others.

International Orders: A 50% surcharge will be applied to orders that are shipped overseas, except for shipments made to U.S. possessions, Canada, and Mexico. Please remit in local currency at the current exchange rate.

To order:


FASB staff posts derivatives compilation of all subsequent changes made to the guidance in the February 10, 2004, edition of the bound codification, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (also referred to as the Green Book) --- http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/07-10-06_green_book_changes.pdf

Bob Jensen's tutorials on accounting for derivative financial instruments are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm


Derivative Financial Instruments Frauds --- 
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm

A Condensed Multimedia Overview With Video and Audio from Experts --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000overview/mp3/133summ.htm 

A Longer and More Boring Introduction to FAS 133, FAS 138, and IAS 39 --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Flow Chart for FAS 133 and IAS 39 Accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm

Differences between FAS 133 and IAS 39 --- http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm

Intrinsic Value Versus Full Value Hedge Accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/IntrinsicValue.htm

The Devil's Derivatives Dictionary at http://www.margrabe.com/Devil/DevilF_J.html 

To understand more about derivative financial instruments, I suggest that you begin by going to the file at 
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm
  
Especially note the discussion of the shortcut method at the end of the above document.

A helpful site on FAS 133 is at http://fas133.com 

Differences between FAS 133 and IAS 39 --- http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm 


Auditing Requirements for Derivative Financial Securities
Auditing Derivative Instruments, Hedging Activities, and Investments in Securities

http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/auditstd/riasai/sas92.htm 

A Nice Summary of SAS 92 is Available Online (Auditing, Derivative Financial Instruments, Hedging)

SAS 92-New Guidance on Auditing Derivatives and Securities
by Joe Sanders, Ph.D., CPA and Stan Clark, Ph.D., CPA 
http://www.ohioscpa.com/member/publications/Journal/1st2001/page10.asp
  

Auditors face many challenges in auditing derivatives and securities. These instruments have become more complex, their use more common and the accounting requirements to provide fair value information are expanding. There is also an increasing tendency for entities to use service organizations to help manage activities involving financial instruments. To assist auditors with these challenges, the Auditing Standards Board (ASB) issued SAS 92, Auditing Derivative Instruments, Hedging Activities and Investments in Securities. The ASB is also currently developing a companion Audit Guide. SAS 92 supersedes SAS 81, Auditing Investments.

SAS 92 provides a framework for auditors to use in planning and performing auditing procedures for assertions about all financial instruments and hedging activities. The Audit Guide will show how to use the framework provided by the SAS for a variety of practice issues. The purpose of this article is to summarize and explain some of the more significant aspects of SAS 92.

Scope SAS 92 applies to:

Derivative instruments, as defined in SFAS 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activity. Hedging activities which also fall under SFAS 133. Debt and equity securities, as defined in SFAS 115, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities. The auditor should also refer to APB 18, The Equity Method of Accounting for Investments in Common Stock. Special Skill or Knowledge

SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt, in his speech on renewing the covenant with investors stated, "I recognize that new financial instruments, new technologies and even new markets demand more specialized know-how to effectively audit many of today's companies".1 One of the first items noted in SAS 92 is that the auditor may need to seek assistance in planning and performing audit procedures for financial instruments. This advice is based primarily on the complexity of SFAS 133. Understanding an entities' information system for derivatives, including work provided by a service organization, may require the auditor to seek assistance from within the firm or from an outside expert. SAS 73 provides guidance on using the work of a specialist.

Inherent Risk Assessment

The inherent risk related to financial instruments is the susceptibility to a material misstatement, assuming there are no related controls. Assessing inherent risk for financial instruments, particularly complex derivatives, can be difficult. To assess inherent risk for financial instruments, auditors should understand both the economics and business purpose of the entity's financial activities. Auditors will need to make inquiries of management to understand how the entity uses financial instruments and the risks associated with them. SAS 92 provides several examples of considerations that might affect the auditor's assessment of the inherent risk for assertions about financial instruments:2

The complexity of the features of the derivative or security. Whether the transaction that gave rise to the derivative or security involved the exchange of cash. The entity's experience with derivatives or securities. Whether the derivative is freestanding or an embedded feature of an agreement. The evolving nature of derivatives and the applicable generally accepted accounting principles. Significant reliance on outside parties. Control Risk Assessment

SAS 92 includes a section on control risk assessment. Control risk is the risk that a material misstatement could occur and would not be prevented or detected in a timely manner by an entity's internal control. Management is responsible for providing direction to financial activities through clearly stated policies. These policies should be documented and might include:

Policies regarding the types of instruments and transactions that may be entered into and for what purposes. Limits for the maximum allowable exposure to each type of risk, including a list of approved securities broker-dealers and counterparties to derivative transactions. Methods for monitoring the financial risks of financial instruments, particularly derivatives, and the related control procedures. Internal reporting of exposures, risks and the results of actions taken by management. Auditors should understand the contents of financial reports received by management and how they are used. For example, "stop loss" limits are used to protect against sudden drops in the market value of financial instruments. These limits require all speculative positions to be closed out immediately if the unrealized loss on those positions reaches a certain level. Management reports may include comparisons of stop loss positions and actual trading positions to the policies set by the board of directors.

The entity's use of a service organization will require the auditor to gain an understanding of the nature of the service organization's services, the materiality of the transactions it processes, and the degree of interaction between its activities and those of the entity. It may also require the auditor to gain an understanding of the service organization's controls over the transactions the service organization processes for it.

Designing Substantive Procedures Based on Risk Assessments

The auditor should use the assessed levels of inherent and control risk to determine the acceptable level of detection risk for assertions about financial instruments and to determine the nature, timing, and extent of the substantive tests to be performed to detect material misstatements of the assertions. Substantive procedures should address the following five categories of assertions included in SAS 31, Evidential Matter:

1. Existence or occurrence. Existence assertions address whether the derivatives and securities reported in the financial statements through recognition or disclosure exist at the balance sheet date. Occurrence assertions address whether changes in derivatives or securities reported as part of earnings, other comprehensive income, cash flows or through disclosure occurred. Examples of substantive procedures for existence or occurrence assertions include:3

Confirmation with the holder of the security, including securities in electronic form or with the counterparty to the derivative. Confirmation of settled or unsettled transactions with the broker-dealer counterparty. Physical inspection of the security or derivative contract. Inspecting supporting documentation for subsequent realization or settlement after the end of the reporting period. Performing analytical procedures. 2. Completeness. Completeness assertions address whether all of the entity's derivatives and securities are reported in the financial statements through recognition or disclosure. Since derivatives may involve only a commitment to perform under a contract and not an initial exchange of tangible consideration, auditors should not focus exclusively on evidence relating to cash receipts and disbursements.

3. Rights and obligations. These assertions address whether the entity has rights and obligations associated with derivatives and securities reported in the financial statements. For example, are assets pledged or do side agreements exist that allow the purchaser of a security to return the security after a specified period of time? Confirming significant terms with the counterparty to a derivative or the holder of a security would be a substantive procedure testing assertions about rights and obligations.

4. Valuation. Under SFAS 115 and SFAS 133 many financial instruments must now be measured at fair value, and fair value information must be disclosed for most derivatives and securities that are measured at some other amount.

The auditor should obtain evidence corroborating the fair value of financial instruments measured or disclosed at fair value. The method for determining fair value may be specified by generally accepted accounting principles and may vary depending on the industry in which the entity operates or the nature of the entity. Such differences may relate to the consideration of price quotations from inactive markets and significant liquidity discounts, control premiums, commissions and other costs that would be incurred to dispose of the financial instrument.

If the derivative or security is valued by the entity using a valuation model (for example, the Black-Scholes option pricing model), the auditor should assess the reasonableness and appropriateness of the model. The auditor should also determine whether the market variables and assumptions used are reasonable and appropriately supported. Estimates of expected future cash flows, for example, to determine the fair value of long-term obligations should be based on reasonable and supportable assumptions.

The method for determining fair value also may vary depending on the type of asset or liability. For example, the fair value of an obligation may be determined by discounting expected future cash flows, while the fair value of an equity security may be its quoted market price. SAS 92 provides guidance on audit evidence that may be used to corroborate these assertions about fair value.

5. Presentation and disclosure. These assertions address whether the classification, description and disclosure of derivatives and securities are in conformity with GAAP. For some derivatives and securities, GAAP may prescribe presentation and disclosure requirements, for example:

Certain securities are required to be classified into categories based on management's intent and ability such as trading, available-for-sale or held-to-maturity. Changes in the fair value of derivatives used to hedge depend on whether the derivative is a fair-value hedge or an expected cash flow hedge, and on the degree of effectiveness of the hedge. Hedging Transactions

Hedging will require large amounts of documentation by the client. For starters, the auditor will need to examine the companies' established policy for risk management. For each derivative, management should document what risk it is hedging, how it is expected to hedge that risk and how the effectiveness will be tested. Without documentation, the client will not be allowed hedge accounting. Auditors will need to gather evidence to support the initial designation of an instrument as a hedge, the continued application of hedge accounting and the effectiveness of the hedge.

To satisfy these accounting requirements, management's policy for financial instrument transactions might also include the following elements whenever the entity engages in hedging activities:

An assessment of the risks that need to be hedged The objectives of hedging and the strategy for achieving those objectives. The methods management will use to measure the effectiveness of the strategy. Reporting requirements for the monitoring and review of the hedge program. Impairment Losses

Management's responsibility to determine whether a decline in fair value is other than temporary is explicitly recognized in SAS 92. The auditor will need to evaluate whether management has considered relevant information in determining whether other-than-temporary impairment exists. SAS 92 provides examples of circumstances that indicate an other-than-temporary impairment condition may exist:4

Management Representations

The auditor must obtain written representations from management confirming their intent and ability assertions related to derivatives and securities. For example, the intent and ability to hold a debt security until it matures or to enter into a forecasted transaction for which hedge accounting is applied. Appendix B of SAS 85 (AU Sec. 333.17) includes illustrative representations about derivative and security transactions.

Summary

SAS 92 provides guidance for auditing derivatives and securities. Accounting requirements related to these instruments, SFAS 115 and SFAS 133, are very complex and because of their extensive use of fair value measures require significant use of judgment by the accountant. SAS 92 establishes a framework for auditors to assess whether the entity has complied with the provisions of SFAS 115 and SFAS 133. However, because of the subjective nature of many of the requirements of these two standards, considerable auditor judgment will be required to comply with SAS 92.

Effective Date

This SAS is effective for audits of financial statements for fiscal years ending on or after June 30, 2001. Early adoption is permitted.

 


Keeping Up With Financial Instruments Derivatives

Bob Jensen's CD --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/

I'm sharing some old (well relatively old) accounting theory quiz and exam material that I added to a folder at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/

You can find some great tutorials go to CBOE at http://www.cboe.com/education/ .   But these do not help with learning how to account for the derivatives under FAS 133 and IAS 39.  The same holds for the CBOT at http://www.cbot.com/cbot/pub/page/0,3181,909,00.html  and the CME at http://www.cme.com/edu/ 

New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) for energy and metals under the Education tab at http://www.nymex.com/jsp/index.jsp 

Optionetics has some good tutorials with respect to options but these do not explain options accounting --- http://www.optionetics.com/education/trading.asp 

Daniel Oglevee's Course Site --- http://www.cob.ohio-state.edu/fin/autumn2004/723.htm 

In 2000, ISDA filed a letter to the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) urging changes to FAS 133, its derivatives and hedge accounting standard. ISDA’s letter urged alterations to six areas of the standard: hedging the risk-free rate; hedging using purchased options; providing hedge accounting for foreign currency assets and liabilities; extending the exception for normal purchase and sales; and central treasury netting. The FASB subsequently rejected changes to purchased option provisions, conceded some on normal purchases and sales, extending the exception to contracts that implicitly or explicitly permit net settlement, declined to amend FAS 133 to facilitate partial term hedging and agreed to consider changing the restrictions on hedge accounting for foreign currency. 
ISDA ®INTERNATIONAL SWAPS AND DERIVATIVES ASSOCIATION, INC.http://www.isda.org/wwa/Retrospective_2000_Master.pdf
  

A good tutorial on energy futures and options hedging is given by the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) under the Education tab at http://www.nymex.com/jsp/index.jsp 

Two Questions
How did Bob Jensen spend his summer vacation?
What can physicists do when they can't find jobs in physics?

Answers

I've spent a great deal of my summer and my Fall 2004 Semester leave plowing through a book entitled Quantitative Finance and Risk Managment:  A Physicists Approach by Jan W. Dash, by Jan W. Dash (World Scientific Publishing, 2004, ISBN 981-238-712-9)
This is a great book by a good writer.

For a more introductory warm up I recommend Derivatives:  An Introduction by Robert A Strong, Edition 2 (Thomson South-Western, 2005, ISBN 0-324-27302-9)

And what about opportunities for physicists?
See "A Geek's Walk on Wall Street," by Peter Coy, Business Week, November 15, Page 26.  This is a review of a book entitled My Life as a Quant, by Emanuel Derman (Wiley, 2005) --- http://www.businessweek.com/@@x3mnUmYQYMjg7RMA/premium/content/04_46/b3908024_mz005.htm 

As one of Wall Street's leading quants, Derman did throw off some intense gamma radiation. He worked at Goldman from 1985 until 2003 except for one year at Salomon Brothers. At Goldman, he moved from fixed income to equity derivatives to risk management, becoming a managing director in 1997. He co-invented a tool for pricing options on Treasury bonds, working with Goldman colleagues Bill Toy and the late Fischer Black, who co-invented the Black-Scholes formula for valuing options on stocks. Derman received the industry's "Financial Engineer of the Year" award in 2000. Now he directs the financial-engineering program at Columbia University.

Derman failed at what he really wanted, which was to become an important physicist. He was merely very smart in a field dominated by geniuses, so he kicked around from one low-paying research job to another. "At age 16 or 17, I had wanted to be another Einstein," he writes. "By 1976...I had reached the point where I merely envied the postdoc in the office next door because he had been invited to give a seminar in France." His move to Wall Street -- an acknowledgment of failure -- brought him financial rewards beyond the dreams of academic physicists and a fair measure of satisfaction as well.

In the tradition of the idiosyncratic memoir, My Life As a Quant is a grab bag of the author's interests. It quotes Schopenhauer and Goethe while supplying not one but three diagrams of a muon neutrino colliding with a proton. There is a long section on the brilliant and punctilious Fischer Black; a glimpse of physicist Richard Feynman; and an embarrassing encounter with finance giant Robert Merton, who sat next to the author on a long flight (Derman treated him rudely before realizing who he was).

Derman's mood seems to vary from bemused on good days to sour on bad ones. The chapter on his postdoc travels is titled "A Sort of Life"; his brief career at Bell Labs, "In the Penal Colony"; his tenure at Salomon Brothers, "A Severed Head." Pre-IPO Goldman Sachs comes off as relatively gentle yet stimulating. He writes: "It was the only place I never secretly hoped would crash and burn."

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads (including video tutorials) on derivative financial instruments and the Freddie and Fannie scandals are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on the trillions of dollars of worldwide frauds using derivative financial instruments are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds 

 

You can read a great deal about energy derivatives in The Derivatives 'Zine at http://www.margrabe.com/Energy.html 
Other topics include the following:

The Derivatives 'Zine by Dr. Risk
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QUANTITATIVE FINANCE AND RISK MANAGEMENT A Physicist's Approach
by Jan W Dash

This book is designed for scientists and engineers desiring to learn quantitative finance, and for quantitative analysts and finance graduate students. Parts will be of interest to research academics --- http://www.worldscientific.com/books/economics/5436.html 
804pp Pub. date: Jul 2004
ISBN 981-238-712-9 US$98 / Ł73


Contents:


The above sources are not much good about accounting for derivatives under FAS 133, FAS 138, and IAS 39.  For that, go to the following source:

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


FAS 133 Tutorial, SmartPros --- http://www.smartpros.com/x33017.xml 

FAS 133, the standard for financial reporting of derivatives and hedging transactions, was adopted in 1998 by the Financial Accounting Standards Board to resolve inconsistent previous reporting standards and practices. It went into effect at most U.S. companies at the beginning of 2001.

Courtesy of Kawaller & Company, SmartPros presents this FAS 133 tutorial to help you understand the provisions of the standard. For news pertaining to FAS 133, click on the links to the right in Related Stories.

PwC Tutorial on IAS 39 --- http://www.pwcglobal.com/images/gx/eng/fs/bcm/032403iashedge.pdf 


PowerPoint Show Highlighting Some Complaints About IAS 39 and IAS 32 --- http://www.atel.lu/atel/fr/publications/Publications/030524_EACT%20mtg_Milan.ppt 


"IAS 32 and IAS 39 Revised:  An Overview," Ernst & Young, February 2004  --- http://www.ey.com/global/download.nsf/International/IAS32-39_Overview_Febr04/$file/IAS32-39_Overview_Febr04.pdf 
I shortened the above URL to http://snipurl.com/RevisedIAS32and39 


Sharing Professor  --- John Hull (who writes about financial instrument derivatives) --- http://www.rotman.utoronto.ca/~hull/

His great books (not free) are great, but he also shares (for free) some software and data --- http://www.rotman.utoronto.ca/~hull/

Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 5th Edition 

Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 4th Edition


Forwarded by Carl Hubbard on September 12, 2003

I would like to bring to your attention Analysis of Derivatives for the CFA(r) Program by Don M. Chance, CFA, recently published this year by the Association for Investment Management and Research(r). While designed for the CFA program, this publication is a terrific text for academic derivatives and risk management courses.

The treatment in this volume is intended to communicate a practical risk management approach to derivatives for the investment generalist. The topics in the text were determined by a comprehensive job analysis of investment practitioners worldwide. The illustrative in-chapter problems and the extensive end-of-chapter questions and problems serve to reinforce learning and understanding of the material.

We believe that this text responds to the need for a globally relevant guide to applying derivatives analysis to the investment process. We hope you will consider adopting Analysis of Derivatives for the CFA(r) Program for a future course.

Thank you for your attention.

Sincerely,

Helen K. Weaver
Associate
AIMR

656 PAGES
0-935015-93-0 
HB 2003


Message from Ira Kawaller on August 4, 2002

Hi Bob,

I posted a new article on the Kawaller & Company website: “What’s ‘Normal’ in Derivatives Accounting,” originally published in Financial Executive, July / August 2002. It is most relevant for financial managers of non-financial companies, who seek to avoid FAS 133 treatment for their purchase and sales contracts. The point of the article is that this treatment may mask some pertinent risks and opportunities. To view the article, click on http://www.kawaller.com/pdf/FE.pdf  .

I'd be happy to hear from you if you have any questions or comments.

Thanks for your consideration.

Ira Kawaller Kawaller & Company, LLC http://www.kawaller.com 

kawaller@kawaller.com 717-694-6270

Bob Jensen's documents on derivative financial instruments are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


March 8, 2002 Message from the Risk Waters Group [RiskWaters@lb.bcentral.com

ONLINE TRADING TRAINING NOW AVAILABLE (Investments, Finance, Derivatives) … 
‘Introduction to Trading Room Technology’ from Waters Training. A low-cost, Web-based training solution for financial professionals. Go at your own pace, travel nowhere, and learn about the core trading processes and key technology issues from your own desktop. For more information, go to http://www.waters-training.com  to find out more. Lastly, if you have any colleagues, training managers or business associates who would be interested in this new product, please forward them this message. 
Thank you
.

If you are interested in email messages regarding financial risk news, you may be interested in contacting:

Christopher Jeffery  mailto:cjeffery@riskwaters.com 
Editor, RiskNews
http://www.risknews.net 


Governmental Disclosure Rules for Derivative Financial Instruments ---  see Disclosure.


The DIG
In the meantime, the FASB formed the FAS 133 Derivatives Implementation Group (DIG) to help resolve particular implementation questions, especially in areas where the standard is not clear or allegedly onerous.  The FASB's DIG website (that contains its mission and pronouncements) is at http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/  DIG issues are also summarized (in red borders) at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#0000Begin.


IAS 138 Implementation Guidance
"Implementation of SFAS 138, Amendments to SFAS 133," The CPA Journal, November 2001. (With Angela L.J. Huang and John S. Putoubas), pp. 54-56 --- http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2001/1100/dept/d115401.htm


April 25, 2002 message from Charlie Stutesman [southwestern.email@swcollege.com

Dear Professor Jensen,

In direct contrast to most trade training derivatives texts which emphasize issues related to the pricing and hedging of derivatives, this groundbreaking text is designed for those who want to teach students how to manage derivatives to maximize firm value through risk management. DERIVATIVES AND RISK MANAGEMENT presents the crucial tools necessary for executives and future derivatives players to effectively hedge with derivatives in order to protect firms from losses.

* WRITTEN TO EMPHASIZE THE ROLE OF MANAGERS: Managers will use derivatives to maximize firm value as opposed to traders who may use derivatives to speculate.

* MANAGERIAL APPLICATION BOXES: Preparing users to meet the challenges of today's business decisions, real-world applications bring chapter concepts to life.

* TECHNICAL BOXES: Concepts presented within the chapters are taken to a higher level of conceptual or mathematical rigor.

We encourage you to request a complimentary exam copy of DERIVATIVES AND RISK MANAGEMENT (ISBN: 0-538-86101-0) by Stulz. Simply reply to this message, contact your South-Western, Thomson Learning representative, call the Thomson Learning Academic Resource Center at 1-800-423-0563, or go to:

http://esampling.thomsonlearning.com/s1.asp?Rid=1+JWA+1719&SC=2SCF2262 

South-Western has helped provide generations of learners with a solid foundation and true understanding of finance. Now more than ever, follow the proven leader into a new century with relevant, comprehensive, and up-to-date finance products and information.

Sincerely,

Charlie Stutesman 
Senior Marketing Manager
 
charlie.stutesman@swlearning.com
 


IAS 39 Implementation Guidance

Supplement to the Publication
Accounting for Financial Instruments - Standards, Interpretations, and Implementation Guidance
http://www.iasc.org.uk/docs/ias39igc/batch6/39batch6f.pdf

The IASB’s Exposure Draft of the macro hedging compromise is entitled “Amendments to IAS 39:  Recognition and Measurement Fair Value Hedge Accounting for a Portfolio Hedge of Interest Rate” and for a short time can be downloaded free from http://www.iasc.org.uk/docs/ed-ias39mh/ed-ias39mh.pdf
See Macro Hedging 

Also see Bob Jensen's Interest Rate Swap Valuation, Forward Rate Derivation,  and Yield Curves
for FAS 133 and IAS 39 on Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm 

Hi Patrick,

The term "better" is a loaded term. One of the main criticisms leveled at IASC standards is that they were too broad, too permissive, and too toothless to provide comparability between different corporate annual reports. The IASC (now called IASB) standards only began ot get respect at IOSCO after they started becoming more like FASB standards in the sense of having more teeth and specificity.

I think FAS 133 is better than IAS 39 in the sense that FAS 133 gives more guidance on specific types of contracts. IAS 39 is so vague in places that most users of IAS 39 have to turn to FAS 133 to both understand a type of contract and to find a method of dealing with that contract. IAS 39 was very limited in terms of examples, but this has been recitified somewhat (i.e., by a small amount) in a recent publication by the IASB: Supplement to the Publication Accounting for Financial Instruments - Standards, Interpretations, and Implementation Guidance http://www.iasc.org.uk/docs/ias39igc/batch6/39batch6f.pdf 

In theory, there are very few differences between IAS 39 and FAS 133. But this is like saying that there is very little difference between the Bible and the U.S. Commercial Code. Many deals may be against what you find in the Bible, but lawyers will find it of less help in court than the U.S. Commercial Code. I admit saying this with tongue in cheek, because the IAS 39 is much closer to FAS 133 than the Bible is to the USCC.

Paul Pacter wrote a nice paper about differences between IAS 39 and FAS 133. However, such a short paper cannot cover all differences that arise in practice. The paper is somewhat dated now, but you can find more recent updates on differences at Differences between FAS 133 and IAS 39 --- http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm

Although there are differences between FAS 133 and IAS 39, I would not make too big a deal out of such differences. IAS 39 was written with one eye upon FAS 133, and the differences are relatively minor. Paul Pacter's summary of these differences can be downloaded from http://www.iasc.org.uk/cmt/0001.asp?s=490603&sc={65834A68-1562-4CF2-9C09-D1D6BF887A00}&sd=860888892&n=3288 

Also note "Comparisons of International IAS Versus FASB Standards" --- http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm

Hope this helps,

Bob (Robert E.) Jensen Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212 Voice: (210) 999-7347 Fax: (210) 999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen 

-----Original Message----- 
From: Patrick Charles [mailto:charlesp@CWDOM.DM]  
Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2002 11:54 AM 
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU 
Subject: US GAAP Vs IASB

Greetings Everyone

Mr Bolkestein said the rigid approach of US GAAP could make it easier to hide companies' true financial situation. "You tick the boxes and out come the answer," he said. "Having rules is a good thing, but having rigid rules is not the best thing.

http://news.ft.com/ft/gx.cgi/ftc?pagename=View&c=Article&cid=FT3AHWRLXXC&live=true&tagid=FTDCZE6JFEC&subheading=accountancy

Finally had a chance to read the US GAAP issue. Robert you mentioned IAS 39, do you have other examples where US GAAP is a better alternative to IASB, or is this an European ploy to get the US to adopt IASB?

Cheers

Mr. Patrick Charles charlesp@cwdom.dm  ICQ#6354999

"Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught."



Bob Jensen's Glossary of FAS 133 and IAS 39

Bob Jensen's Overview of FAS 133 (With Audio) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Interest Rate Swap Valuation, Forward Rate Derivation,  and Yield Curves
for FAS 133 and IAS 39 on Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments 

See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm

FAS 133 flow chart  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm

Bob Jensen's Document on the Missing Parts of FAS 133

Summary of Key Paragraphs in FAS 133 on Portfolio/Macro Hedging.

Bob Jensen's Weekly Assignments and Hints Regarding FAS 133

Bob Jensen's Technology Glossary (Includes an Extensive Listing of Accounting and Finance Glossaries)

ACCT 5341 International Accounting Theories Course Helpers

Yahoo Finance is Bob Jensen's Favorite Place to learn more about the mechanics and widespread use of derivative financial instruments.  That web site, however, will not help much with respect to accounting for such instruments under FAS 133.

Bob Jensen's Mexcobre Case

For a FAS 133 flow chart, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm 

Internet Links of Possible Interest

Bob Jensen's Transcripts of Presentations by Experts

PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) Summary Tables (With Some Notes Added by Bob Jensen) 


Derivatives Implementation Group (DIG) 

Hi George,

That depends upon what you mean by "support." If you mean failing to adhere to any FASB standard in the U.S. on a set of audited financial statements, then auditors are sending an open invitation to all creditors and shareholders to contact their tort lawyers --- lawyers always salivate when you mention the magic words "class action lawsuit".

If you mean sending mean-spirited letters to the FASB, then that's all right, because the FASB is open to all communications in what it defines as "due process."

I am a strong advocate of FAS 133 --- corporations got away with hiding enormous risks prior to FAS 133. Could FAS 133/138 and IAS 39 be simplified? Well that's a matter of opinion. The standards will be greatly simplified if your Canadian friends and my U.S. friends support the proposal to book all financial instruments at fair value (as advocated by the JWG and IASB Board Member Mary Barth). But whether this is a simplification is a matter of conjecture since estimation of fair value is a very complex and tedious process for instruments not traded in active and deep markets. In the realm of financial instruments there are many complex financial instruments and derivatives created as custom and unique contracts that are nightmares to value and re-value on a continuing basis. One needs only study how inaccurate the estimated bond yield curves are deriving forward rates. In some cases, we might as well consult astrologers who charge less than Bloomberg and with almost the same degree of error.

My bottom line conclusion: We could simplify the wording of the financial instruments and derivative financial instruments standards by about 95% if we go all the way in adopting fair value accounting for all financial instruments and derivative financial instruments.

But simplifying the wording of the standard does not necessarily simplify the accounting itself and will add a great deal of noise to the measurement of risk. In the U.S., the banking industry is so opposed to fair value accounting that the Amazon river will probably freeze over before the FASB passes what the JWG proposes. See http://www.aba.com/aba/pdf/GR_tax_va6.PDF 

Readers interested in downloading the Joint Working Group IASC Exposure Draft entitled Financial Instruments: Issues Relating to Banks should follow the downloading instructions at http://www.aba.com/aba/pdf/GR_TAX_FairValueAccounting.pdf  
(Trinity University students may find this on J:\courses\acct5341\iasc\jwgfinal.pdf  ).

On December 14, 1999 the FASB issued Exposure Draft 204-B entitled Reporting Financial Instruments and Certain Related Assets and Liabilities at Fair Value. I'm not sure where you can find this buried document at the moment. 
(Trinity University students can find the document at J:\courses\acct5341\fasb\fvhtm.htm  ).

 

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message----- 
From: glan@UWINDSOR.CA [mailto:glan@UWINDSOR.CA]  
Sent: Monday, February 25, 2002 5:33 PM 
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU 
Subject: Re: Intrinsic Versus Time Value

I have seen the credit to be Paid-in Capital- Stock Options or to Stock Options Outstanding rather than to a liability. It would be interesting to learn more about what the accounting firms stand to gain by not supporting FAS133. 

George Lan

For a FAS 133 flow chart, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm 

Differences between FAS 133 and IAS 39 --- http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm

Side by Side: IAS 39 Compared with FASB Standards (FAS 133), by Paul Pacter, as published in Accountancy International Magazine, June 1999 --- http://www.iasc.org.uk/news/cen8_142.htm 
Also note "Comparisons of International IAS Versus FASB Standards" --- http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/cda/doc/content/pocketiasus.pdf

IAS 39 history --- http://www.iasc.org.uk/cmt/0001.asp?s=6941204&sc={CB32B469-886C-4486-86B7-36E49358DDE5}&sd=617116004&n=3306 

Limited Revisions to IAS 39, Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement (E66) --- http://www.iasc.org.uk/cmt/0001.asp?s=6941204&sc={CB32B469-886C-4486-86B7-36E49358DDE5}&sd=268256258&n=3222

Recognition and Measurement (E66)

E66, Proposed Limited Revisions to IAS 39 and Other Related Standards, proposed the following limited revisions to IAS 39, Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement, and other related Standards:
  • changes to require consistent accounting for purchases and sales of financial assets using either trade date accounting or settlement date accounting. IAS 39 currently requires settlement date accounting for sales of financial assets, but permits both trade date and settlement date accounting for purchases;
  • elimination of the requirement in IAS 39 for a lender to recognise certain collateral received from a borrower in its balance sheet;
  • improvement of the wording on impairment recognition;
  • changes to require consistent accounting for temporary investments in equity securities between IAS 39 and other International Accounting Standards; and
  • elimination of redundant disclosure requirements for hedges in IAS 32, Financial Instruments: Disclosure and Presentation.
None of the proposed revisions represents a change to a fundamental principle in IAS 39. Instead, the purpose of the proposed changes is primarily to address technical application issues that have been identified following the approval of IAS 39 in December 1998. The IASC Board’s assessment is that the proposed changes will assist enterprises preparing to implement IAS 39 for the first time in 2001 and help ensure a consistent application of the Standard. No further changes to IAS 39 are contemplated.

 

At its meeting in March 2000, the Board appointed a Committee to develop implementation guidance on IAS 39, Financial Instruments: Recognition. The guidance is expected to be published later this year, after public comment, as a staff guidance document. The IAS 39 Implementation Guidance Committee may refer some issues either to the SIC or to the Board.  http://www.iasc.org.uk/frame/cen2_139.htm

Recommended Reading

Recommended Links

Bob Jensen's Glossary of FAS 133 and IAS 39

 


A message from Ira Kawaller on January 13, 2002

Hi Bob,

I wanted to alert you to the fact that I posted another article on the Kawaller and Company website, "The New World Under FAS 133." It came out in the latest issue of the GARP Review. It deals with the economics and accounting considerations relating to the use of cross-currency interest rate swaps. The link below brings you to the paper:

http://www.kawaller.com/pdf/garpswaps.pdf

I also posted a new calendar of events, at

http://www.kawaller.com/schedule/calendar.pdf

To navigate to the links in this email message, click on them. If that does not work, copy the link and paste it into the address field of your browser.

Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions. Thanks for your consideration.

Ira Kawaller kawaller@kawaller.com 
http://www.kawaller.com

Bob Jensen's documents on FAS 133, FAS 138, and IAS 39 are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) Summary Tables

Source:  A Guide to Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (New York, Pricewaterhouse Coopers, 1999, pp. 4-5 and pp. 19-22)  

Note that the FASB's FAS 133 becomes required for calendar-year companies on January 1, 2001.  Early adopters can apply the standard prior to the required date, but they cannot apply it retroactively.   The January 1, 2001 effective date follows  postponements from the original starting date of June 15, 1999 stated in Paragraph 48 on Page 29 of FAS 133.   For fiscal-year companies, the effective date is June 15, 2000.  The international counterpart known as the IASC's IAS 39 becomes effective for financial statements for financial years beginning on the same January 1, 2001.  Earlier application permitted for financial years ending after 15 March 1999.  

Note that Bob Jensen has added notes (in red),

OVERVIEW & EXPECTED IMPACT of FAS 133 and IAS 39

FAS 133 and IAS 39

Pre-FAS 133

U.S. FAS 133:  All derivatives must be carried on the balance sheet at fair value.  ¶5

Notes from Jensen:  
International:  IAS 39 differs in that it requires fair value adjustments of "all" debt securities, equity securities, and other financial assets except for those whose value cannot be reliably estimated. ¶s 1,5,6, 95, and 96.  There are exceptions where value estimates are unreliable such as in the case of unlisted equity securities (see IAS ¶s 69, 93, and 95).   FAS 133 requires an active market for value estimation of non-trading items.  Under FAS 133, unquoted equity securities are measured at cost subject to an impairment test whether or not value can be estimated reliably by other means. 

FASB requires fair value measurement for all derivatives, including those linked to unquoted equity instruments if they are to be settled in cash but not those to be settled by delivery, which are outside the scope of FAS 133.

There are some exceptions for hybrid instruments as discussed in  IAS 39  ¶ 23c and FAS 133  ¶ 12b.  

Derivatives are reported on the balance sheet on a variety of bases (including fair value, forward value, spot rates, intrinsic value, historical cost) or not recorded at all.

Synthetic (accrual) accounting model for interest-rate swaps is prohibited.

Synthetic (accrual) accounting model is widely used for interest-rate swaps that hedge debt.

Gains and losses on derivative hedging instruments must be recorded in either other comprehensive income or current earnings.  They are not deferred as liabilities or assets.

Note from Jensen
One area of difference between IAS 39 and FAS 133 is that FAS 133 requires that certain gains and losses of hedging instruments be carried in equity (as OCI) whereas IAS 39 provides an option of equity versus current earnings.

Derivative gains and losses for hedges of forecasted transactions and firm commitments are deferred as liabilities or assets on the balance sheet under FAS 52 and FAS 80.

Derivative gains and losses for hedges of forecasted transactions are required to be reported in other comprehensive income (equity), thus causing volatility in equity.

Note from Jensen:
One of the major sources of difference between FAS 133 and IAS 39 concerns embedded derivatives.  In general, net profit or loss will be the same under IAS and FASB Standards, but the balance sheet presentation will be net under IAS and gross under FASB.  See cash flow hedge.

Derivative gains and losses for hedges of forecasted transactions are permitted to be deferred on the balance sheet as assets or liabilities and, as such, do not affect equity.

Hedge accounting is permitted for forward contracts that hedge foreign-currency-denominated forecasted transactions (including intercompany foreign-currency-denominated forecasted transactions).

FAS 52 does not permit hedge accounting for forward contracts that hedge foreign-currency-denominated forecasted transactions.

Some hybrid instruments (i.e., contracts with embedded derivatives), must be bifurcated into their component parts, with the derivative component accounted for separately.

Note from Jensen
IAS 39's definition of a derivative differs in that IAS 39 does not require "net settlement" provisions that are required under FAS 133.

There are some exceptions for hybrid instruments as discussed in  IAS 39  ¶s 23b & 23c;  FAS 133  ¶s 12b & 12c.

Bifurcation of many hybrid instruments is not required under current practice and, therefore, such instruments generally are not bifurcated.

Limited use of written options to hedge is permitted (e.g., when changes in the fair value of the written option offset those of an embedded purchased option).

Current practice generally prohibits hedge accounting for written options.

Hedge accounting is prohibited for a hedge of a portfolio of dissimilar items, and strict requirements exist for hedging a portfolio of "similar" items.

Less stringent guidelines are applied in practice for portfolio hedging.

Demonstration of enterprise or transaction risk reduction is not required -- only the demonstration of a high effectiveness of offset in changes in the fair value of cash flows of the hedging instrument and the hedged. item.

Demonstration of enterprise risk reduction is required for hedge transactions with futures contracts and, by analogy, option contracts.  Demonstration of transaction risk reduction is required for foreign-currency hedges.

The definition of a derivative is broader than in current practice (e.g., it includes commodity-based contracts).

Note from Jensen
IAS 39's definition of a derivative differs in that IAS 39 does not require "net settlement" provisions that are required under FAS 133.

The definition of a derivative excludes certain commodity and other contracts involving nonfinancial assets.

 

Table of Derivatives-Contract Types

Contract

Derivative within the scope
of FAS 133?

Underlying

Notional Amount of
Payment Provision

1.

Equity security

No. An initial net investment is required to purchase a security

-

-

2.

Debt security or loan

No. It requires an initial net investment of the principal amount or (if purchased at a discount or premium) an amount calculated to yield a market rate of interest.

-

-

3.

Regular-way security trade (e.g., trade of a debt or equity security)

No. Such trades are specifically excluded from the scope of FAS 133 (paragraph 10(a)).

-

-

4.

Lease

No. It requires a payment equal to the value of the right to use the property.

-

-

5.

Mortgage-backed security

No. It requires an initial net investment based on market interest rates adjusted for credit quality and prepayment.

-

-

6.

Option to purchase or sell real estate

No, unless it can be net-settled and is exchange-traded.

Price of the real estate

A specified parcel of the real estate

7.

Option to purchase or sell an exchange-traded security

Yes

Price of the security

A specified number of securities

8.

Option to purchase or sell a security not traded on an exchange

No, unless it can be net-settled.

Price of the security

A specified number of securities

9.

Employee stock option

No; for purposes of the issuer's accounting. It is specifically excluded as a derivative by paragraph 11.

-

-

10.

Futures contract

Yes. A clearinghouse (a market mechanism) exists to facilitate net settlement.

Price of a commodity or a financial instrument

A specified quantity or fact amount

11.

Forward contract to purchase or sell securities

No, unless it can be net-settled, or if the securities are readily convertible to cash and the forward contract does not qualify as a "regular way" trade.

Price of a security

A Specified number of securities or a specified principal or face amount

12.

A nonexchange traded forward contract to purchase or sell manufactured goods

No, unless it can be net-settled and neither party owns the goods.

Price of the goods

A specified quantity

13.

A nonexchange traded forward contract to purchase or sell a commodity

No, unless it can be net-settled or the commodity is readily convertible to cash and the purchase is not a "normal purchase."

Price of the commodity

A specified quantity

14.

Interest-rate swap

Yes

An interest rate

A specified amount

15.

Currency swap

Yes. Paragraph 257.

An exchange rate

A specified currency amount

16.

Swaption

Yes. It requires the delivery of a derivative or can be net-settled.

Value of the swap

The notional amount of the swap

17.

Stock-purchase warrant

Yes, for the holder, if the stock is readily convertible to cash. No, for the issuer, if the warrant is classified in stockholders' equity.

Price of the stock

A specified number of shares

18.

Property and casualty insurance contract

No. Specifically excluded.

-

-

19.

Life insurance contract

No. Specifically excluded.

-

-

20.

Financial-quarantee contract -- payment occurs if a specific debtor fails to pay the guaranteed party.

No. Specifically excluded.

-

-

21.

Credit-indexed contract -- payment occurs if a credit index (or the creditworthiness of a specified debtor or debtors) varies in a specified way.

Yes

Credit index or credit rating

A specified payment amount (which may vary, depending on the degree of change, or, which may be fixed)

22.

Royalty agreement

No. It is based on sales of one of the parties, which is an excluded underlying.

-

-

23.

Interest-rate cap

Yes

An interest rate

A specified amount

24.

Interest-rate floor

Yes

An interest rate

A specified amount

25.

Interest-rate collar

Yes

An interest rate

A specified amount

26.

Adjustable-rate loan

No. An initial net investment equal to the principal amount of the loan is required.

-

-

27.

Variable annuity contracts

No. Such contracts require an initial net investment.

-

-

28.

Guaranteed investment contracts

No. Such contracts require an initial net investment.

-

-


Other References --- See References 



Beginning of Bob Jensen's FAS 133 and IAS 39 Glossary
Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities

 

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M |
| N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

Note that the FASB's FAS 133 becomes required for calendar-year companies on January 1, 2001.  Early adopters can apply the standard prior to the required date, but they cannot apply it retroactively.   The January 1, 2001 effective date follows  postponements from the original starting date of June 15, 1999 stated in Paragraph 48 on Page 29 of FAS 133.   For fiscal-year companies, the effective date is June 15, 2000The international counterpart known as the IASC's IAS 39 becomes effective for financial statements for financial years beginning on the same January 1, 2001.  Earlier application permitted for financial years ending after 15 March 1999

For a FAS 133 flow chart, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm  

Bob Jensen's Web Site

Top of Document

Start of Glossary

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

A-Terms

Accounting Exposure =

a term used in alternate ways. In one context, accounting exposure depicts foreign exchange exposure that cannot be captured by the accounting model. In some textbooks accounting exposure is synonymous with translation exposure. See translation exposure.  Also see risks.

Amortization of Basis Adjustments = see basis adjustment.

Anticipated Transaction = see forecasted transaction.

AOCI = accumulated other comprehensive income.  See comprehensive income.

Arbitrage

By definition, arbitraging entails investing at zero market (price) risk coupled with the risk of losing relatively minor transactions costs of getting into and closing out contracts.  There might be other risks.  Especially when dealing in forward contracts, there may be credit risks.  Forward contracts are often private agreements between contracting individuals.  Other arbitraging alternatives such as futures and options contracts are generally obtained in trading markets such as the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) and the Chicago Board of Options Exchange (CBOE).  In markets like the CBOT or the CBOE, the trading exchanges themselves guarantee payments such that there is no credit risk in hedging or speculating strategies.  Arbitrage entails a hedging strategy that eliminates all market (price) risk while, at the same time, has no chance of losing any money and a positive chance of making a profit.  Sometimes the profit is locked in to a fixed amount in advance.  At other times, the profit is unknown, but can never be less than zero (ignoring transactions costs).

Generally arbitrage opportunities arise when the same item is traded in different markets where information asymmetries between markets allows arbitragers with superior information to exploit investors having inferior information.  In perfectly efficient markets, all information is impounded in prices such that investors who "know more" cannot take advantage of investors who are not up on the latest scoop.  Only in inefficient markets can there be some differences between prices due to unequal impounding of information.

FAS 133 says nothing about arbitrage accounting.  Thus it is necessary to drill arbitrage trans actions down to their basic component contracts such as forwards, futures, and options.  See derivative financial instruments and hedge.

You can learn more about arbitrage from my tutorial on arbitraging at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/muppets.htm 

You will find the following definition of arbitrage at http://risk.ifci.ch/00010394.htm 

1) Technically, arbitrage consists of purchasing a commodity or security in one market for immediate sale in another market (deterministic arbitrage). (2) Popular usage has expanded the meaning of the term to include any activity which attempts to buy a relatively underpriced item and sell a similar, relatively overpriced item, expecting to profit when the prices resume a more appropriate theoretical or historical relationship (statistical arbitrage). (3) In trading options, convertible securities, and futures, arbitrage techniques can be applied whenever a strategy involves buying and selling packages of related instruments. (4) Risk arbitrage applies the principles of risk offset to mergers and other major corporate developments. The risk offsetting position(s) do not insulate the investor from certain event risks (such as termination of a merger agreement or the risk of delay in the completion of a transaction) so the arbitrage is incomplete. (5) Tax arbitrage transactions are undertaken to share the benefit of differential tax rates or circumstances of two or more parties to a transaction. (6) Regulatory arbitrage transactions are designed to provide indirect access to a market where one party is denied direct access by law or regulation. (7) Swap- driven arbitrage transactions are motivated by the comparative advantages which swap counterparties enjoy in different debt and currency markets. One counterparty may borrow relatively cheaper in the intermediate- or long-term United States dollar market while the other may have a comparative advantage in floating rate sterling. A cross-currency swap can improve both of their positions. 

At-the-Money = see option and intrinsic value.

Auditing See SAS 92

Available-for-Sale (AFS) Security =

is one of three classifications of securities investments under SFAS 115.  Securities designated as "held-to-maturity" need not be revalued for changes in market value and are maintained at historical cost-based book value.  Securities not deemed as being held-to-maturity securities are adjusted for changes in fair value.  Whether or not the unrealized holding gains or losses affect net income depends upon whether the securities are classified as trading securities versus available-for-sale securities.  Unrealized holding gains and losses on available-for-sale securities are deferred in comprehensive income instead of being posted to current earnings.  This is not the case for securities classified as trading securities rather than trading securities.  See FAS 133 Paragraph 13.  The three classifications are of vital importance to cash flow hedge accounting under FAS 133.  See cash flow hedge and held-to-maturity.   Also see equity method and impairment.

Flow Chart for AFS Hedge Accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133flow.htm 

Classification of an available-for-sale security gives rise to alternative gain or loss recognition alternatives under international rules.  Changes in the value of an available-for-sale instrument either be included in earnings for the period in which it arises; or recognized directly in equity, through the statement of changes in equity ( IAS 1 Paragraphs 86-88) until the financial asset is sold, collected or otherwise disposed of, or until the financial asset is determined to be impaired (see IAS Paragraphs 117-119), at which time the cumulative gain or loss previously recognized in equity should be included in earnings for the period.  See IAS 39 Paragraph 103b.

A trading security (not subject to APB 15 equity method accounting and as defined in SFAS 115) cannot be a FAS 133 hedged item.  That is because SFAS 115 requires that trading securities be revalued (like gold) with unrealized holding gains and losses being booked to current earnings.  Conversely, Paragraphs 4c on Page 2, 38 on Page 24, and 479 on Page 209 of FAS 133 state that a forecasted purchase of an available-for-sale can be a hedged item, because available-for-sale securities are revalued under SFAS 115 have holding gains and losses accounted for in comprehensive income rather than current earnings.  Unlike trading securities, available-for-sale securities can be FAS 133-allowed hedge items.   Mention of available-for sale is made in Paragraphs 4, 18, 23, 36, 38, 49, 52-55, 123, 479-480, and 534 of FAS 133.  Held-to-maturity securities can also be FAS 133-allowed hedge items.

Note that if unrealized gains and losses are deferred in other comprehensive income, the deferral lasts until the transactions in the hedged item affect current earnings.  This means that OCI may carry forward on the date hedged securities are purchased and remain on the books until the securities are sold.  This is illustrated in Example 19 on Page 228 of the Derivatives and Hedging Handbook issued by KPMG Peat Marwick LLP in July 1998).  The Example 5.5 illustration on Page 165 notes that hedge effectiveness need only be assessed for price movements in one direction for put and call options since these only provide one-way price protection.

Suppose a company expects dividend income to continue at a fixed rate over the two years in a foreign currency.  Suppose the investment is adjusted to fair market value on each reporting date.  Forecasted dividends may not be firm commitments since there are not sufficient disincentives for failure to declare a dividend.  A cash flow hedge of the foreign currency risk exposure can be entered into under Paragraph 4b on Page 2 of FAS 133.  Whether or not gains and losses are posted to other comprehensive income, however, depends upon whether the securities are classified under SFAS 115 as available-for-sale or as trading securities.   There is no held-to-maturity alternative for equity securities.

The difference between a forward exchange rate and a spot rate is not excluded from a fair value hedging relationship for firm commitments measured in forward rates.  However Footnote 22 on Page 68 of FAS 133 reads as follows:

If the hedged item were a foreign-currency-denominated available-for-sale security instead of a firm commitment, Statement 52 would have required its carrying value to be measured using the spot exchange rate. Therefore, the spot-forward difference would have been recognized immediately in earnings either because it represented ineffectiveness or because it was excluded from the assessment of effectiveness.

Available-for-Sale  investments are elaborated upon in March 2003 by the FASB in an exposure draft entitled "Financial Instruments --- Recognition and Measurement," March 2003 --- http://www.cica.ca/multimedia/Download_Library/Standards/Accounting/English/e_FIRec_Mea.pdf 

 

Bob Jensen's Web Site

Top of Document

Start of Glossary

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

B-Terms

Backwardation = see basis and contango swap.

Banker Opinions = 

Joint Working Group of Banking Associations Financial Instrument Issues Relating to Banks

- banksjwg.pdf - Discussion Paper 
- jwgfinal.pdf - Final Position on Fair Value Accounting

Hi Dr. Jensen!

It is the official site about the Financial Instruments - Comprehensive Project of the IASC http://www.iasc.org.uk/frame/cen3_112.htm  The site of the IAS Recognition and Measurement Project is: http://www.iasc.org.uk/frame/cen2_139.htm 

Your Trinity-Homepages on Derivatives SFAS No. 133 is my favorite on this subject, espicially the illustrative examples (and the account simulations).

Currently I am focusing on splitting up hybrid financial instruments, especially those with embedded optional building blocks. The book of Smith/Smithson/Willford (1998) Managing Financial Risk and that from Das S. (1998) and Walsey J. (1997) provides a good guidance on how these products are structured.

Best Regard Christian

Basis =

difference between the the current spot price and the forward (strike) price of a derivative such as a futures contract or the forward component  in an options contract.     The basis is negative in normal backwardation.  The basis is is postive in the normal contango.  Various theories exist to explain the two differing convergence patterns. 

There are other definitions of basis found in practice.  Some people define basis as the difference between the spot and futures price.  Alternately basis can be viewed as the benefits minus the costs of  holding the hedged spot underlying until the forward or futures settlement date. 

Still another definition of this term is based on the U.S. tax code where basis is the carrying value of an asset.  It is the last definition that gives rise to the term basis adjustment.  See intrinsic value.  Also see the terms that use "basis" that are listed below.

Still another term is the difference between commodity prices as the difference between physical locations or product quality grades.

Basis Adjustment =

the adjustment of the booked value of an asset or liability as required by SFAS 80 but is no longer allowed for cash flow and foreign currency hedges under FAS 133 according to Paragraph 31 and Paragraphs 375-378 of FAS 133.    Basis adjustment is required for fair value hedges under Paragraphs 22-24 on Pages 15-16 of FAS 133.   An illustration of amortization of fair value hedge basis adjustments appears in Example 2 beginning in Paragraph 111 on Page 60 of FAS 133.   Also see short-cut method.

The carrying value of a hedging offset account (OCI, Firm Commitment, or Balance Sheet Item) may be written off prematurely whenever the hedge becomes severely ineffective.

Under IAS 39, the carrying value of an effective hedge is written off when the hedge expires or is dedesignated. See Paragraphs 162 and 163 of IAS 39.

Under FAS 133, the carrying value of an effective hedge is carried forward until the ultimate disposition of the hedged item (e.g. inventory sale or depreciation of equipment). See Paragraph 31 of FAS 133.

The FASB decision to ban basis adjustment on the date the hedging contract is settled is controversial, although the controversy is a tempest in a teapot from the standpoint of reported net earnings each period.  Suppose you are enter into a firm commitment on 1/1/99 to purchase a building for the amount of yen that you can purchase for $5 million on 1/1/99.  The financial risk is that this commitment requires a payout in Japanese yen on 7/1/99 such that the building's cost may be higher or lower in terms of how many yen must be purchased on 7/1/99.   To hedge the dollar/yen exchange rate, you enter into a forward contract that will give you whatever it takes make up the difference between the yen owed and the yen that $5 million will purchase on 7/1/99.  On 1/1/99 the forward contract has zero value.  Six months later, assume that the forward contract has been value adjusted to $1 million because of the decline in the yen exchange rate. The offsetting credit is $1 million in OCI if since this was not designated as a fair value hedge. 

To close out the derivative on 7/1/99, you debit cash and credit the forward contract for $1 million.    To basis adjust the cost of the building, you would debit OCI for $1 million and credit the building fixed asset account.   The building would end up being booked on 7/1/99 for $4 million instead of its 1/1/99 contracted $5 million.  If you did not basis adjust, the credit would stay in OCI and leave the building booked at a 7/1/99 value of $5 million.   Paragraph 376 on Page 173 of FAS 133 requires that you no longer adjust the basis to $4 million as a result of the foreign currency hedge.   Hence depreciation of the building will be more each year than it would be with basis adjustment. 

The controversy stems over how and when to get that $1 million out of  OCI and into retained earnings.  Under SFAS 80, suppose that with basis adjustment the impact would have been a reduction of annual depreciation by $50,000 over the 20-year life of the building.  In other words,  depreciation would have been $50,000  less each year smaller $4 million adjusted basis rather than the $5 million unadjusted basis.   One argument against basis adjustment in this manner is that the company's risk management outcomes become buried in depreciation expense and are not segregated on the income statement.

Without basis adjustment under FAS 133, you get $50,000 more annual depreciation but identical net earnings because you must amortize the $1 million in OCI over the life of the building.  Here we will assume the amortization is $50,000 per year.  Each year a $50,000 debit is made to OCI and a credit is made to the P&L closing account. When OCI is amortized, investors are reminded on the income statement that, in this example, a $50,000 per year savings accrued because the company successfully hedged $1 million in foreign currency risk exposure.

In Paragraph 31 on Page 22 of FAS 133, the amortization approach is required for this cash flow hedge outcome. You cannot basis adjust in order to take $50,000 per year lowered depreciation over the life of the building.  But you report the same net earnings as if you had basis adjusted.   In any case, FAS 133 does not allow you to take the entire $1 million into 7/1/99 earnings.  Paragraph 376 on Page 173 of FAS 133  elaborates on this controversy. 

What is wrong with the FAS 133 approach, in my viewpoint, is that it may give the appearance that a company  speculated when in fact it merely locked in a price with a cash flow or foreign currency hedge.  The hedge locks in a price.  But the amortization approach (in the case of a long-term asset) or the write-off at the time of the sale (in the case of inventory) isolates the hedge cash flow as an expense or revenue as if the company speculated.   In the above example, the company reports $50,000 revenue per year from the forward contract.  This could have been a $50,000 loss if the dollar had declined against the yen between 1/1/99 and 7/1/99.  If the $50,000 was buried in depreciation charges, it would seem less likely that investors are mislead into thinking that the $50,000 per year arose from speculation in forward contracts.  Companies also point out that the amortization approach greatly adds to record keeping and accounting complexities when there are many such hedging contracts.  Basis adjustment gives virtually the same result with a whole lot less record keeping.

It should also be noted that to the extent that the hedge is ineffective, the ineffective portion gets written off to earnings on the date the asset or liability is acquired.  In the above example, any ineffective portion would have to be declared on 1/199 and never get posted to OCI.   Hence it would never be spread over the life of the building.  According to Paragraph 30 of FAS 133, ineffectiveness is to be defined at the time the hedge is undertaken.  Hedging strategy and ineffectiveness definition with respect to a given hedge defines the extent to which interim adjustments affect interim earnings.

Click here to view the IASC's Paul Pacter commentary on basis adjustment.

 

Two illustrations of basis adjustment taken from http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/CaseAmendment.htm
Especially note my reasoning under Illustration 2 shown below

Illustration 1

Prices of oil per unit

 

10/31

11/30

12/31

1/31

3/31

Oil Price (Spot)

$35

$40

$38

$44

$46

Forward Price

$36

$41

$39

$44

 

 

Fair Value Hedge of a Firm Commitment

Assume that Warfield makes a deal with an oil supplier to buy 100,000 units of oil for $35 per barrel which is $1 less than the $36 derivatives market forward price on October 31. There can be many reasons such as customer relations and delivery costs that motivate buyers and suppliers to contract for something other than forward prices in a derivatives instruments market exchange and over the counter. Warfield thinks that prices are going to plunge so it hedges the fair value of this firm commitment with a fair value hedge using a forward contract that will settle for the difference between the January 31 spot price and the $35 forward price.

 

Cash Flow Hedge of a Forecasted Transaction
Assume that Warfield has a forecasted transaction to purchase 100,000 units of oil at the January 31 spot rate. In order to hedge cash flow risk, Warfield enters into a forward contract to that will settle for the difference between the January 31 spot price and a $35 forward price.

 

 

Using Jensen Prices

 

 

Date

No Inventory on Hand

Fair Value Hedge of a Firm Commit.

Jensen Solution --- Cash Flow Hedge of Forecasted Trans.

 

Date

Ledger Account

Debit

Credit

Balance

Ledger Account

Debit

Credit

Balance

10/31

No entry for hedge
No inventory on hand

 

 

 

No entry for hedge
No inventory on hand

 

 

 

 

$35 ppb firm commit.
$36 ppb forward price
$35 ppb spot price
100,000 notional
$0 forward contract value

 

 

 

No firm commitment
$36 ppb forward price
$35 ppb spot price
100,000 notional
$0 forward contract value

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11/30

Firm commitment

500,000

 

$500,000

OCI or AOCI

0

500,000

($500,000)

 

G/L (I/S)

0

 

$0

G/L (I/S)

 

0

$0

 

Forward contract

 

500,000

($500,000)

Forward contract

500,000

 

$500,000

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($41-$36)/
             abs($40-$35)

          = 1.0 or 100%
Hence this is a perfect hedge at this point.

 

 

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($41-$36)/
             abs($40-$35)

          = 1.0 or 100%
Hence this is a perfect hedge at this point.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12/31

Firm commitment

 

200,000

$300,000

OCI or AOCI

200,000

 

($300,000)

 

G/L (I/S)

 

0

$0

G/L (I/S)

0

 

0

 

Forward contract

200,000

 

($300,000)

Forward contract

 

200,000

$300,000

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($39-$36)/
             abs($38-$35)

          = 1.0 or 100%
Hence hedge accounting is now fully allowed with a perfect cumulative Delta

 

 

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($39-$36)/
             abs($38-$35)

          = 1.0 or 100%
Hence hedge accounting is now fully allowed with a perfect cumulative Delta

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/31

Firm commitment

500,000

 

$800,000

OCI or AOCI

0

500,000

($800,000)

 

G/L (I/S)

 

 

$0

G/L (I/S)

 

 

 

 

Forward contract

 

500,000

($800,000)

Forward contract

500,000

 

$800,000

 

-To adjust the forward contract fair value for a perfectly effective fair value hedge..

 

 

 

- To adjust the forward contract fair value for a perfectly effective cash flow hedge.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/31

Forward contract

800,000

 

$0

Forward contract

 

800,000

$0

 

Cash

 

800,000

($800,000)

Cash

800,000

 

$800,000

 

-To record unfavorable settlement of fair value  hedging contract

 

 

 

-To record favorable settlement of cash flow  hedging contract

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/31

Oil inventory

4,400,000

 

$4,400,000

Oil inventory

4,400,000

 

$4,400,000

 

G/L (I/S)

 

900,000

($900,000)

G/L (I/S)

 

0

$0

 

Cash

 

3,500,000

($4,300,000)

Cash

 

4,400,000

($4,000,000)

 

-To record purchase of the oil inventory at the $35 firm commitment price

 

 

 

-To report purchase of the oil inventory at spot price

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3/31

Cash

4,600,000

 

$300,000

Cash

4,600,000

 

$600,000

 

Oil inventory

 

4,400,000

$0

Oil inventory

 

4,400,000

$0

 

G/L (I/S)

 

200,000

($1,100,000)

G/L (I/S)

 

200,000

($200,000)

 

-To record the sale of the oil inventory at the spot price

 

 

 

-To record the sale of the oil inventory at the spot price

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3/31

G/L (I/S)

800,000

 

$300,000

G/L (I/S)

 

$800,000

($1,000,000)

 

Firm commitment

 

800,000

$0

OCI or AOCI

$800,000

 

$0

 

-This is the basis adjustment that accompanies the sale of all the oil inventory.

 

 

 

-This is the basis adjustment that accompanies the sale of all the oil inventory.

 

 

 

 

Fair Value Hedge Summary (using Jensen’s prices)
+$1,100,000 = March 31 profit without a hedge = $4,600,000 sale on March 31 - $3,500,000 purchase on January 31 at firm commitment price
   +$300,000  = March 31 profit with a hedge = $1,100,000 profit without a hedge - $800,000 loss on fair value hedging contract

A company that wants to hedge fair value of its purchase commitments must be prepared to accept the cash flow risk and loss of opportunity value its firm commitment price is way below the current spot price when the oil is purchased.

Hedging ineffectiveness with the revised prices was greatly eliminated in the second example that did not use the Smith and Kohlbeck prices.

A fair value hedge creates cash flow risk.
A cash flow hedge creates fair value risk.

Basis adjustment for the $800,000 loss on the firm commitment fair value hedge is controversial due to ambiguity in FAS 133 regarding basis adjustment of the Firm Commitment equity account. My way of doing this above is explained under Exhibit 5 shown below.

Cash Flow Hedge Summary (using Jensen’s prices)
+$200,000 = March 31 profit without a hedge = $4,600,000 sale on March 31 - $4,400,000 purchase on January 31
+$1,000,000  = March 31 profit with a hedge = $200,000 profit without a hedge + $800,000 gain on cash flow hedging contract


A company that wants to hedge cash flows of its forecasted transactions must be prepared to accept the fair value risk and loss of opportunity value its decision to pay spot prices.

Hedging ineffectiveness with Jensen’s revised prices was greatly eliminated in the second example that did not use the Smith and Kohlbeck prices. Hedging against cash flow risk of price increases is a good deal when spot prices soar and a bad deal when spot prices plunge.

A fair value hedge creates cash flow risk.
A cash flow hedge creates fair value risk.


The above solution for the cash flow hedge shows the correct way to basis adjust the gain of $800,000 on the hedging contract on the date of sale rather than the date of purchase of the inventory. Smith and Kohlbeck incorrectly basis adjust all cash flow hedges on the date of the hedge settlement. Basis adjustment should be on the date inventory is sold under FAS 133, but under IAS 39 basis should be adjusted when the hedge is settled or dedesignated.

Paragraph 377 of FAS 133 reads as follows:

377. The Board decided to require that the gain or loss on a derivative be reported initially in other comprehensive income and reclassified into earnings when the forecasted transaction affects earnings. That requirement avoids the problems caused by adjusting the basis of an acquired asset or incurred liability and provides the same earnings impact. The approach in this Statement, for example, provides for (a) recognizing the gain or loss on a derivative that hedged a forecasted purchase of a machine in the same periods as the depreciation expense on the machine and (b) recognizing the gain or loss on a derivative that hedged a forecasted purchase of inventory when the cost of that inventory is reflected in cost of sales

 

 

Illustration 2

Instead of buying oil inventory on January 31 at a $35 firm commitment price, suppose the firm purchased the inventory for $35 on October 31 and enters a forward contract to protect the value of the inventory. The hedge accounting is somewhat different for these two types of fair value hedges. The main difference is that for inventory value, the “Firm Commitment” account invented by the FASB is not used for fair value hedge accounting. Instead the accounting for the inventory itself is changed from historical cost to fair value accounting during the hedging period.

 

They are compared below.

 

I will now illustrate hedge accounting using case prices that have more effective hedging outcomes.


Jensen Prices

 

10/31

11/30

12/31

1/31

3/31

Oil Price (Spot)

$35

$40

$38

$44

$46

Forward Price

$37

$41

$40

$44

 

 

Fair Value Hedge of Existing Inventory

Assume buys 100,000 units of oil for $35 per barrel on October 31. Warfield thinks the prices might go down and decides to enter into a forward contract to hedge the fair value of this inventory. The forward contract will settle for the difference between the spot rate on January 31 and $37.

 

Fair Value Hedge of a Firm Commitment

Assume that Warfield makes a deal with an oil supplier to buy 100,000 units of oil for $37 per barrel which is at the $37 derivatives market forward price on October 31. There can be many reasons such as customer relations and delivery costs that motivate buyers and suppliers to contract for something other than forward prices in a derivatives instruments market exchange and over the counter. Warfield thinks that prices are going to plunge so it hedges the fair value of this firm commitment with a fair value hedge using a forward contract that will settle for the difference between the January 31 spot price and the $37 forward price.

 

 

Using Jensen Prices

With Inventory on Hand

With No Inventory on Hand

Date

 

Fair Value Hedge of a Inventory

Fair Value Hedge of a Firm Commitment

 

Date

Ledger Account

Debit

Credit

Balance

Ledger Account

Debit

Credit

Balance

10/31

No entry for forward
Contract

 

 

 

No entry
No inventory on hand

 

 

 

 

$37 ppb forward price
$35 ppb spot price
100,000 notional
$0 forward contract value

 

 

 

$37 ppb firm commit.
$36 ppb forward price
$35 ppb spot price
100,000 notional
$0 forward contract value

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10/31

Oil inventory

3,500.000

 

$3,500,000

 

 

 

 

 

Cash

 

3,500,000

($3,500,000)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11/30

Oil inventory

500,000

 

$4,000,000

Firm commitment

500,000

 

$500,000

 

G/L (I/S)

0

100,000   

($100,000)

G/L (I/S)

 

100,000  

($100,000)

 

Forward contract

 

400,000

($400,000)

Forward contract

 

400,000

($400,000)

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($41-$37)/
              abs($40-$35)

          = 0.8 or 80%
Hence this is a 80% effective fair value hedge..

 

 

 

- To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($41-$37)/
              abs($40-$35)

          = 0.8 or 80%
Hence this is a 80% effective fair value hedge..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12/31

Oil inventory

 

200,000

$3,800,000

Firm commitment

 

200,000

$300,000

 

G/L (I/S)

100,000

0

$0

G/L (I/S)

100,000

 

$0

 

Forward contract

100,000

 

($300,000)

Forward contract

100,000

 

($300,000)

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($40-$37)/
             abs($38-$35)

          = 1.0 or 100%
Hence hedge accounting is now fully allowed with a perfect cumulative Delta

 

 

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value with Delta = abs($40-$37)/
             abs($38-$35)

          = 1.0 or 100%
Hence hedge accounting is now fully allowed with a perfect cumulative Delta

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/31

Oil inventory

600,000

 

$4,400,000

Firm commitment

100,000

 

$400,000

 

G/L (I/S)

 

500,000

($500,000)

G/L (I/S)

 

 

$0

 

Forward contract

 

100,000

($400,000)

Forward contract

 

100,000

($400,000)

 

-To adjust the forward contract to fair value at a pending $41-$37 unfavorable pending settlement.

 

 

 

- To adjust the forward contract to fair value at a pending $41-$37 unfavorable pending settlement.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/31

Forward contract

400,000

 

$0

Forward contract

400,000

 

$0

 

Cash

 

400,000

($400,000)

Cash

 

400,000

($400,000)

 

-To record unfavorable settlement of fair value  hedging contract

 

 

 

-To record unfavorable settlement of fair value  hedging contract

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/31

Oil inventory

 

 

$4,400,000

Oil inventory

4,400,000

 

$4,400,000

 

G/L (I/S)

 

0

($500,000)

G/L (I/S)

 

700,000

($700,000)

 

Cash

 

0

($3,900,000)

Cash

 

3,700,000

($4,100,000)

 

-No entry

 

 

 

-To record purchase of the oil inventory at the $37 firm commitment price

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3/31

Cash

4,600,000

 

700,000

Cash

4,600,000

 

$500,000

 

Oil inventory

 

4,400,000

$0

Oil inventory

 

4,400,000

$0

 

G/L (I/S)

 

200,000

($700,000)

G/L (I/S)

 

200,000

($900,000)

 

-To record the sale of the oil inventory at the spot price

 

 

 

-To record the sale of the oil inventory at the spot price

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3/31

G/L (I/S)

 

 

($700,000)

G/L (I/S)

400,000

 

($500,000)

 

Firm commitment

 

 

 

Firm commitment

 

400,000

$0

 

-This is the basis adjustment is not necessary for inventory on hand.

 

 

 

-This is the basis adjustment that accompanies the sale of all the oil inventory.

 

 

 

 

Fair Value Hedge Summary of Hedging the Fair Value of Inventory
+$1,100,000 = March 31 profit without a hedge = $4,600,000 sale on March 31 - $3,500,000 purchase on October 31
   +$700,000  = March 31 profit with a hedge = $1,100,000 profit without a hedge - $400,000 loss on fair value hedging contract

First it might be noted that hedge accounting is not allowed for commodities that are carried or will be carried at fair value in the ledger accounts. Only inventories maintained at historical cost can get hedge accounting. Oil inventory is normally carried at historical cost except during the hedging period of a fair value hedge under FAS 133 rules.

The main difference between hedging the fair value of inventory and the fair value of a firm commitment is that the “Firm Commitment” account is not used for existing  inventory fair value hedging. Instead existing inventory (the hedged item) normally carried at historical cost is carried at fair value during the hedging period. After the hedge is settled or dedesignated, the company must revert to historical cost valuation of inventories.

A fair value hedge creates cash flow risk of existing inventory.
The can be no cash flow hedge since there is no cash flow risk of existing inventory.

Fair Value Hedge Summary of Hedging the Fair Value of a Firm Commitment
+$900,000 = March 31 profit without a hedge = $4,600,000 sale on March 31 - $3,700,000 purchase on January 31
+$500,000  = March 31 profit with a hedge = $900,000 profit without a hedge - $400,000 loss on fair value hedging contract

The solutions above ignore the time value of money. FAS 133 recommends and in some cases requires that hedge accounting be further complicated with time value of money adjustments.

When inventory is on hand, the effective part of the hedge is carried forward in the Oil Inventory account whose fair value changes offset the changes in value of the hedging contract. That is consistent with Paragraphs 22-24 in FAS 133.

These are two paragraphs from the Fair Value section of Section 815 of the FASB’s Codification database

35-8   The adjustment  of the carrying amount of a hedged asset or liability required by paragraph 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.

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.

But consider the case of the hedge of the firm commitment when there is no inventory on hand. In this case, the Firm Commitment account absorbs the changes in value of the hedging contract. If the Firm Commitment account is basis adjusted (zeroed out) when the hedge is settled or otherwise terminated, you are not being consistent with the way the hedge settlement is deferred with the inventory is on hand, i.e., until the inventory is sold. The risk being hedged was the change in spot rates and the gain or loss being deferred, in my viewpoint, should be deferred until the purchased inventory is sold so as to be consistent with the hedge accounting when the inventory was on hand when the hedging period commenced.

Hence in the two illustrations above, the ($4,211,111-$3,500,000 = $711,111) change in the value of inventory when the hedge was settled unfavorably on January 31 is deferred from being recognized in current earnings until the inventory is sold on March 31. (The fair value is not hedged between January 31 and March 31 and fair value accounting is not used for the inventory in the unhedged period).

Similarly, when the inventory was not on hand and the fair value of the firm commitment was being hedged, the $711,111 in the Firm Commitment account should not be basis adjusted on January 31. Instead it should be basis adjusted when the inventory is sold since this unfavorable hedge settlement is not buried in the Inventory account like it was when we hedge the fair value of inventory on hand.

Actually, I’ve not been successful in finding examples contrasting these two situations so we have to reason this one through. It seems as though both approaches illustrated above are consistent with each other in deferring the hedge settlement basis adjustment until the inventory is sold. Basis adjusting the Firm Commitment account on January 31 is not consistent with the basis adjustment when we hedged inventory on hand for fair value. This would not be basis adjustment deferral.

It seems to me that my approach is consistent with Paragraph 35-8 above and Paragraphs 22-24 of FAS 133. I’ve been bothered by the sorry way the FASB has explained the accounting for fair value hedging a firm commitment. Of course this is no problem in IAS 39 since basis adjustment always takes place when the hedge is dedesignated or settled.

The Firm Commitment account is always an equity (never an asset or liability) account and is a place to defer the hedge gain or loss to the point of sale for inventory. That’s what basis adjustment deferral is all about. It is just like AOCI in the sense that between the date of the purchase of the inventory and the date of the sale of inventory, the equity account (whether AOCI for cash flow hedges or Firm Commitment for fair value hedges) remains constant until part or all of the inventory is sold. Then basis is adjusted by reclassifying the hedge gain or loss deferral into earnings at the time of the sale.

The purchase price is $35 and the spot price is $44 giving rise to a gain at the time of purchase of $44-$35=$9 per unit or a total gain of $900,000 due to a favorable purchase price. This gain is to be immediately recognized on the date of purchase whether or not we hedge. Commodity inventories are to be booked at fair value on the date of purchase irrespective of the actual purchase price. This has nothing to do with hedging the fair value of the firm commitment.

The question is whether the gain or loss on the hedging derivative should be recognized on the date of the purchase or the date of the sale. In this illustration the hedging derivative lost $800,000 on the date of the purchase of the inventory. The fair value hedge was effective for 89% or $711,111 and ineffective for 11% or $88,889.

Under Smith and Kohlbeck (SK) approach you would basis adjust on January 31 for the full $800,000 hedging derivative loss. Under my approach I would only charge the ineffective $88,889 portion to January 31 earnings and defer the $711,111 effective portion in an equity account (Firm Commitment) until the inventory is sold on March 31.

The issue was never whether to recognize the $900,000 total gain on January 31. Commodity inventories have to be carried at fair value on the date they are purchased even if they are purchased a lower or higher firm commitment price. If the firm commitment price was higher than fair value we certainly would not want to record inventory at above its fair value. The question was never whether to recognize the difference between the firm commitment price and the fair value on the date of purchase and to book this difference in current earnings.

The issue was whether to hit all the hedge derivative loss of $800,000 to earnings on the January 31 date of purchase (SK approach) or to defer the effective portion of the hedging contract’s loss ($711,111) until basis adjustment on the date of the sale (the Jensen approach). I grant you that the FASB does not seem to be clear on this issue for fair value hedges of firm commitments, but it is very clear with respect to deferred basis adjustment for cash flow hedges.

Paragraph 377 of FAS 133 reads as follows:

377. The Board decided to require that the gain or loss on a derivative be reported initially in other comprehensive income and reclassified into earnings when the forecasted transaction affects earnings. That requirement avoids the problems caused by adjusting the basis of an acquired asset or incurred liability and provides the same earnings impact. The approach in this Statement, for example, provides for (a) recognizing the gain or loss on a derivative that hedged a forecasted purchase of a machine in the same periods as the depreciation expense on the machine and (b) recognizing the gain or loss on a derivative that hedged a forecasted purchase of inventory when the cost of that inventory is reflected in cost of sales.

I think my solution is consistent with the above paragraph for fair value hedges vis-ŕ-vis cash flow hedges.

I think my solution is consistent with what happens for a fair value hedge of existing inventory.

I think my solution is consistent with Paragraph 24 (in the Fair Value Hedging Section of FAS 113).

I think my solution is consistent with what companies do in practice when a fair value hedge is dedesignated before maturity. The Firm Commitment equity account is carried forward until the hedged item revenue cycle is completed in whole or in part.

Harris Preferred Capital is carrying forward the hedge settlement until the earnings cycle is completed whether the hedge is desesignated early or settled at maturity.

 You can read the following in the 2005 10-K of the HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION ---
http://yahoo.brand.edgar-online.com/EFX_dll/EDGARpro.dll?FetchFilingHTML1?SessionID=bkB8jTdF57B95gG&ID=4306792

 

When hedge accounting is discontinued because a fair value hedge is no longer highly effective, the derivative instrument continues to be recorded on the balance sheet at fair value but the hedged item is no longer adjusted for changes in fair value that are attributable to the hedged risk. The carrying amount of the hedged item, including the basis adjustments from hedge accounting, is accounted for in accordance with applicable generally accepted accounting principles. For a hedged loan, the basis adjustment is amortized over its remaining life. When hedge accounting is discontinued because the hedged item in a fair value hedge no longer meets the definition of a firm commitment, the derivative instrument continues to be recorded on the balance sheet at fair value and any asset or liability that was recorded to recognize the firm commitment is removed from the balance sheet and recognized as a gain or loss in current period earnings. When hedge accounting is discontinued because a cash flow hedge is no longer highly effective, the gain or loss on the derivative that is in accumulated other comprehensive income ("AOCI") remains there until earnings are impacted by the hedged item and the derivative instrument is marked to market through earnings. When hedge accounting is discontinued because it is no longer probable that the forecasted transaction in a cash flow hedge will occur, the gain or loss on the derivative that was in AOCI is recognized immediately in earnings and the derivative instrument is marked to market through earnings. When hedge accounting is discontinued and the derivative remains outstanding, the derivative may be redesignated as a hedging instrument as long as the applicable hedge criteria are met under the terms of the new contract.

Bob Jensen’s illustrations of hedge effectiveness testing can be found using the following links:

 

 

 

Basis Point =

interest rate amount equal to .0001 or 0.01%.

Basis Risk

risk of financial exposure of a basis difference as defined under "basis" above.  For example in energy hedging there may be location basis risk due to the differences in location such as the difference between capacity at a supply terminal and a demand terminal.  This risk is commonly hedged with swaps.

Interest rate basis risk is the difference arises from a difference between the index of the hedged item vis-a-vis the exposure risk.  

A basis swap is the swapping of one variable rate for another variable rate for purposes of changing the net interest rate.

Also see interest rate swap.

Basis Swap = see interest rate swap.

Benchmark = the designated risk being hedged.  In FAS 133/138, the term applies to interest rate risk.

In FAS 133, the FASB did not take into account how interest rate risk is generally hedged in practice.  FAS 133 based the hedging rules upon hedging of sector spreads for which there are no hedging instruments in practice.  The is one of the main reasons why FAS 138 amendments to FAS 133 were soon issued.  Components of interest rate risk are shown below:

Risk-free rate u(0) = 
LIBOR spread l(0)-u(0) = 
LIBOR(0) rate l(0) = 
Unhedged credit sector spread s(0)-l(0) = 
Total systematic interest rate risk s(0) = 
Unhedged unsystematic risk v(0)-s(0) = 
Full value effective rate v(0) = 
Premium (discount) on the debt issue f(0)-v(0)= 
Nominal (coupon) rate f(0) = 

In FAS 138, the FASB moved away from sector spread hedging and defined benchmarked interest rate hedging based upon only two allowed interest rate spreads (i.e., the U.S. Treasury risk-free rate with no spread or the LIBOR rate with only the LIBOR spread.  Sector spread hedging can no longer receive hedge accounting.

For an extensive numerical example of benchmark hedging, go to http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000overview/138bench.htm 

FAS 138 Introduces Benchmarking

Examples Illustrating Application of FASB Statement No. 138, Accounting for Certain Derivative Instruments and Certain Hedging Activities-an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133 --- http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/examplespg.shtml
or try clicking here.

FAS 138 Amendments expand the eligibility of many derivative instrument hedges to qualify FAS 133/138 hedge. Such qualifications in accounting treatment that reduces earnings volatility when the derivatives are adjusted for fair value. 

It is very popular in practice to have a hedging instrument and the hedged item be based upon two different indices.  In particular, the hedged item may be impacted by credit factors.  For example, interest rates commonly viewed as having three components noted below:

·        Risk-free risk that the level of interest rates in risk-free financial instruments such as U.S. treasury T-bill rates will vary system-side over time.

·        Credit sector spread risk that interest rates for particular economic sectors will vary over and above the risk-free interest rate movements.  For example, when automobiles replaced horses as the primary means of open road transportation, the horse industry’s credit worthiness suffered independently of other sectors of the economy.  In more recent times, the dot.com sector’s sector spread has suffered some setbacks.