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Overview

This presentation on new lease accounting rules pursuant to Accounting Standards Codification Topic 842 issued in February 2016. ASC 842 makes substantial changes to the accounting for leases primarily for the Lessee. A lease conveys the right to the Lessee to control the use of identified property, plant or equipment for a period of time in exchange for consideration to the Lessor. For the Lessee, leases are either Finance leases or Operating leases. 

The Lessee will record a right of use asset and lease liability for all leases with a term greater than one year. A Finance lease must meet one of five requirements, four of which are similar to prior capital lease accounting. If a lease is not a Finance lease, it’s an Operating lease. Most leases of equipment will be Finance leases and space leases will be Operating leases. For the Lessor, a lease is either an Operating lease, Direct Financing lease or Sales-Type lease. In general, the accounting for the Lessor has not changed substantially from the prior rules. Accounting for leases from both the Lessee and Lessors perspective will be analyzed as well as lease straight lining, advantages and disadvantages of leasing, financial statement disclosure and the financial impact of the new rules.

Why you should Attend

This is a great presentation for the beginner in business, accounting and finance and professionals and business owners to get a basic understanding of the new lease accounting rules pursuant to Accounting Standards Codification Topic 842 issued in February 2016. ASC 842 makes substantial changes to the accounting for leases primarily for the Lessee. A lease conveys the right to the Lessee to control the use of identified property, plant or equipment for a period of time in exchange for consideration to the Lessor. For the Lessee, leases are either Finance leases or Operating leases. 

The Lessee will record a right of use asset and lease liability for all leases with a term greater than one year. A Finance lease must meet one of five requirements, four of which are similar to prior capital lease accounting. If a lease is not a Finance lease, it’s an Operating lease. Most leases of equipment will be Finance leases and space leases will be Operating leases. For the Lessor, a lease is either an Operating lease, Direct Financing lease or Sales-Type lease. In general, the accounting for the Lessor has not changed substantially from the prior rules. Accounting for leases from both the Lessee and Lessors perspective will be analyzed as well as lease straight lining, advantages and disadvantages of leasing, financial statement disclosure and the financial impact of the new rules.

Areas Covered in the Session

Leases, lease accounting, lessors and lessees, sale-leasebacks, advantages and disadvantages of leasing and financial statement disclosure.

Who Will Benefit

  • Students, finance professionals, accountants, management personnel and business owners.

Speaker Profile

Joseph Ori is Executive Managing Director of Paramount Capital Corporation, a real estate and corporate finance and advisory firm (www.paramountcapitalcorp.com) where he is involved in all facets of commercial real estate investment, finance, capital markets, development, capital raising, management, brokerage and advisory services. Mr. Ori has completed more than $6.2 billion in real estate and corporate transactions since 1983.

Prior to forming Paramount, Mr. Ori was Senior Vice President of NRC Realty & Capital Advisors, Chief Investment Officer of The Rhodes Group, LLC, a Las Vegas based land and home developer, President and Managing Partner of Rockdale Property Ventures, the real estate investment group of Rockdale Investment Management, a New York based investment management firm, Practice Director of the Chicago Real Estate Advisory Group of BDO Seidman, LLP, a National Accounting and Tax firm, Founder and President of Paramount Securities Corporation, a real estate investment bank and broker dealer and Senior Vice President of South mark Corporation, a Dallas based Fortune 500 company.

Mr. Ori has a Bachelor of Science degree in Accounting from Southern Illinois University, an MBA in Finance from DePaul University and completed an Executive Program in Financial Management at Harvard Business School. He is a licensed real estate broker in California, a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) and a Certified Public Accountant (CPA). Mr. Ori is also an Adjunct Professor of Finance at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, CA.

Mr. Ori has authored numerous articles on real estate and corporate financing, deal structuring, portfolio diversification and industry trends in leading real estate and finance periodicals and publishes a monthly newsletter, View of the Market, on Insight and Strategy in the Commercial Real Estate Industry and has published two books, “The 50 Commandments of Commercial Real Estate Investment” and “Commercial Real Estate Investment for Pros (and Dummies Too!)”, both available on Amazon.com.