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Basic Question 8 of 8

Select the correct statement(s):

I. It is easier for a lease to be classified as an operating lease under IFRS standards than under GAAP.
II. If a lease with rising rental payments is classified as an operating lease, the lease expense and cash flow will be identical for the lessee.
III. It's possible that the lessee treats a lease as a capital lease but the lessor treats the same lease as an operating lease.

User Contributed Comments 8

User Comment
MFTIOA isn't I true for capital leases more so than operating leases?
surjoy I guess so..
edison20 II implies that lease expense is constant over the life of the asset. Good question.
GouldenOne For II, I didn't think that lessee's report depreciation for an operating lease. Only lease payments as they occur
Shaan23 I doesnt make sense. It's not easier to be classified as an Operating lease under IFRS --- It's easier to be classified as a Capital Lease

It's less strict with regards to capital lease requirements.
Shaan23 Tricky.

From the text

The Explicit standards in the US that determines when a company should report a capital lease versus an OPlease make it easier for a company to structure a lease so that it is reported as an Operating lease.
daverco From the curriculum text: "US accounting standards are more prescriptive in their criteria for classifying finance and operating leases". It seems under US GAAP in both cases it's tougher vs. IFRS.
farhan92 @Shaan US GAAP gives you thresholds, that if breached, will be capital lease so the lessor could for example ensure the term of the lease is just under 75% while where as the lack of thresholds given in IFRS makes that harder to do.
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Craig Baugh

Learning Outcome Statements

explain the financial reporting of leases from the perspectives of lessors and lessees

CFA® 2025 Level I Curriculum, Volume 2, Module 8.