Tag: human capital expenses

FASB adopts new ASU requiring disaggregation of expenses

Currently, companies typically include in their income statements expense captions for selling, general and administrative expenses, cost of services and other cost of revenues, and cost of tangible goods sold. But, as reported by Bloomberg, there has been a push for disaggregation of expenses on the income statement since at least 2016.  As this piece in Bloomberg explained, investors complained that “companies lump expenses into catch-all financial statement categories like ‘selling, general, and administrative,’ without explaining the biggest cost drivers inside them.” But in 2019, the FASB voted (5 to 2) “to put its once-high priority financial reporting project on pause.” It was quite a lengthy pause, but, in February 2022—hearing the call again from investors and others in response to the FASB’s 2021 Invitation to Comment—the FASB decided to restart work on the project to “improve the decision usefulness of business entities’ income statements through the disaggregation of certain expense captions.” And, in 2023, FASB published  a proposed Accounting Standards Update intended to provide investors with more decision-useful information about expenses on the income statement. (See this PubCo post and this PubCo post.) As reported, businesses “bristled against the plan,” contending that it was too expensive and time-consuming, with many raising, in particular, issues regarding the difficulty of providing more detailed inventory and manufacturing expense disclosures required in each relevant expense category. Companies also asked for specific industry carve-outs or exemptions for smaller reporting companies.  But the FASB rejected that that request. Last week, the FASB announced that it had adopted a new Accounting Standards Update—ASU 2024-03—that will require “public companies to disclose, in interim and annual reporting periods, additional information about certain expenses in the notes to financial statements.”  According to FASB Chair Richard Jones, the “project was one of the highest priority projects cited by investors in our extensive outreach with them as part of our 2021 agenda consultation initiative….We heard time and again from investors that additional expense detail is fundamental to understanding the performance of an entity and we believe that this standard is a practical way of providing that detail.”