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Revenue Recognition - Multiple-Element Arrangements

Revenue Recognition - Multiple-Element Arrangements. ASC 605-25 Highlights. Overview. This topic addresses accounting by a vendor for arrangements under which there are multiple revenue-generating activities, including

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Revenue Recognition - Multiple-Element Arrangements

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  1. Revenue Recognition - Multiple-Element Arrangements ASC 605-25 Highlights

  2. Overview • This topic addresses accounting by a vendor for arrangements under which there are multiple revenue-generating activities, including • how to determine whether an arrangement involving multiple deliverables contains more than one unit of accounting and • how arrangement consideration should be measured and allocated to the separate units of accounting. • Examples: • May be multiple products, services, or rights • May involve performance at different times or different periods of time. • May include initial installation, initiation, or activation services in the form of a fixed fee or a fixed fee coupled with a continuing payment stream. • Fees for continuing performance may be fixed, variable based on future performance, or a combination.

  3. Scope • Applies to all entities • Applies to • all deliverables • products, services, or rights to use assets • within contractually binding arrangements • written, oral or implied • in all industries • under which a vendor will perform multiple revenue-generating activities.

  4. Does NOT apply to: • Arrangements that include vendor offers to a customer for • Free or discounted products or services delivered at a future date OR rebate or refund • if the customer completes a specified cumulative level of revenue transactions or remains a customer for a specified length of time. • Arrangements involving award credits by loyalty program operators • Payments relating to R&D deliverables that are accounted for under the milestone method of revenue recognition (605-28)

  5. Interaction with other topics • If another topic addresses both separate units of accounting and allocation of consideration, • apply that topic. • If another topic addresses separate units of accounting but not allocation of consideration, • allocate consideration per the relative selling price of the deliverables. • If another topic addresses neither separate unit of accounting or allocation of consideration, • follow this subtopic.

  6. This subtopic does not address when the criteria for revenue recognition are met • or provide the appropriate revenue recognition convention for a unit of accounting.

  7. Recognition • Again, this subtopic provides guidance for determining: • units of accounting within a multiple deliverable arrangement and • measurement and allocation of consideration among the separate units of accounting. • Revenue arrangement with multiple deliverables shall be divided into separate units of accounting if certain criteria are met, • and arrangement consideration shall be allocated among the separate units of accounting based on relative selling prices. • Applicable revenue recognition criteria is considered separately for separate units of accounting.

  8. Units of accounting: • Separate contracts with the same entity or related parties that are entered into at or near the same time are presumed to have been negotiated as a package and are considered a single arrangement in determining the units of accounting • Evaluation of units of accounting is done at the inception of the arrangement

  9. Delivered item(s) are considered a separate unit of accounting if both of the following criteria are met: • Delivered item has value to the customer on a standalone basis: • if they are sold separately by any vendor • or if the customer could resell the delivered items on a standalone basis • Does not require the existence of an observable market • If the arrangement includes a right of return for the delivered item, delivery or performance of the undelivered item is considered probable and substantially in the control of the vendor.

  10. Initial Measurement • Consideration is allocated at the inception of the arrangement to all deliverables on the basis of their relative selling price, • unless required under another topic to be recorded at fair value and marked to market each reporting period thereafter.

  11. Selling price is determined using: • vendor-specific objective evidence of selling price if possible (preferred) • limited to either the price charged for a deliverable when it is sold separately or if not sold separately, the prics established by management having relevant authority • or third party evidence of selling price • Price for interchangeable products or services in standalone sales to similarly situated customers • or worst case – use the best estimate of selling price. • Consider market conditions as well as entity-specific factors

  12. The amount allocable to a delivered item is limited to the amount that is not contingent upon delivery of additional items or meeting other performance conditions. • The revenue per period is limited to the measurement assuming cancellation will not occur. • An asset for the excess of revenue recognized over the amount of cash received shall not exceed all amounts to which the vendor is legally entitled, including cancellation fees. • Consider whether the vendor intends to enforce cancellation fees in determining the amount of any asset.

  13. Contractually stated prices for individual products or services in a multiple deliverable arrangement shall not be presumed to be representative of vendor-specific objective evidence, third-party evidence or a vendor’s best estimate of selling price.

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