SEC Announces Delay in Options Expensing

From the SEC, in an announcement yesterday: The Securities and Exchange Commission announced today the adoption of a new rule that amends the compliance dates for Financial Accounting Standards Board's Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123 (revised 2004), Share-Based…

From the SEC, in an announcement yesterday:

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced today the adoption of a new rule that amends the compliance dates for Financial Accounting Standards Board’s Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123 (revised 2004), Share-Based Payment (Statement No. 123R).

Under Statement No. 123R, registrants would have been required to implement the standard as of the beginning of the first interim or annual period that begins after June 15, 2005, or after Dec. 15, 2005 for small business issuers. Calendar year-end companies that are not small business issuers, therefore, would have been permitted to follow the pre-existing accounting literature for the first and second quarters of 2005, but required to follow Statement No. 123R for their third quarter reports.

The Commission’s new rule allows companies to implement Statement No. 123R at the beginning of their next fiscal year, instead of the next reporting period, that begins after June 15, 2005, or Dec. 15, 2005 for small business issuers. This means, for example, that the financial statements for a calendar year-end company do not need to comply with Statement No. 123R until the interim financial statements for the first quarter of 2006 are filed with the Commission. The financial statements for a company, other than a small business issuer, with a June 30 year-end, however, must comply with Statement No. 123R when the interim financial statements for the quarter beginning July 1, 2005 are filed with the Commission.

From PlanSponsor.com: “SEC Makes it Official: FASB 123 Implementation Date Moved Back Again.”

Also, from the Wall Street Journal: “SEC OKs Delay In Options Expensing.” Excerpt:

Don Nicolaisen, the SEC’s chief accountant, cited concerns that companies were already struggling to cope with a new congressionally mandated internal controls reporting requirement. Officials also hoped to bring consistency to financial statements that might otherwise have relied on varying options-expensing standards within a single fiscal year.

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