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Considered the industry standard resource, this guide's 2017 edition is packed with information on new requirements and relevant changes to the FASB Accounting Standards Codification, including a high-level look at FASB ASU Nos. 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers and 2016-02, Leases. It provides practical tips and industry specific guidance, provides value from simple accounting to joint venture creation, and takes a deep dive into industry specific auditing procedures. With two complete sets of financial statements and disclosures, it provides an industry accepted blueprint from where to start, or a reference for auditing the final product.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017
(Updated as of July 1, 2017)
This guide was prepared by the Construction Contractors Guide Committee.
This AICPA Audit and Accounting Guide has been developed by the AICPA Construction Contractors Guide Committee to assist management in the preparation of their financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and to assist practitioners in performing and reporting on their audit engagements.
AICPA Guides may include certain content presented as “Supplement,” “Appendix,” or “Exhibit.” A supplement is a reproduction, in whole or in part, of authoritative guidance originally issued by a standard setting body (including regulatory bodies) and applicable to entities or engagements within the purview of that standard setter, independent of the authoritative status of the applicable AICPA Guide. Both appendixes and exhibits are included for informational purposes and have no authoritative status.
The Financial Reporting Executive Committee (FinREC) is the designated senior committee of the AICPA authorized to speak for the AICPA in the areas of financial accounting and reporting. Conforming changes made to the financial accounting and reporting guidance contained in this guide are approved by the FinREC Chair (or his or her designee). Updates made to the financial accounting and reporting guidance in this guide exceeding that of conforming changes are approved by the affirmative vote of at least two-thirds of the members of FinREC.
This guide does the following:
Identifies certain requirements set forth in the FASB
Accounting Standards Codification
®
(ASC)
Describes FinREC’s understanding of prevalent or sole industry practice concerning certain issues. In addition, this guide may indicate that FinREC expresses a preference for the prevalent or sole industry practice, or it may indicate that FinREC expresses a preference for another practice that is not the prevalent or sole industry practice; alternatively, FinREC may express no view on the matter
Identifies certain other, but not necessarily all, industry practices concerning certain accounting issues without expressing FinREC’s views on them
Provides guidance that has been supported by FinREC on the accounting, reporting, or disclosure treatment of transactions or events that are not set forth in FASB ASC
Accounting guidance for nongovernmental entities included in an AICPA Guide is a source of nonauthoritative accounting guidance. As discussed later in this preface, FASB ASC is the authoritative source of U.S. accounting and reporting standards for nongovernmental entities, in addition to guidance issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
An AICPA Guide containing auditing guidance related to generally accepted auditing standards (GAAS) is recognized as an interpretive publication as defined in AU-C section 200, Overall Objectives of the Independent Auditor and the Conduct of an Audit in Accordance With Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (AICPA, Professional Standards). Interpretive publications are recommendations on the application of GAAS in specific circumstances, including engagements for entities in specialized industries.
Interpretive publications are issued under the authority of the AICPA Auditing Standards Board (ASB) after all ASB members have been provided an opportunity to consider and comment on whether the proposed interpretive publication is consistent with GAAS. The members of the ASB have found the auditing guidance in this guide to be consistent with existing GAAS.
Although interpretive publications are not auditing standards, AU-C section 200 requires the auditor to consider applicable interpretive publications in planning and performing the audit because interpretive publications are relevant to the proper application of GAAS in specific circumstances. If the auditor does not apply the auditing guidance in an applicable interpretive publication, the auditor should document how the requirements of GAAS were complied with in the circumstances addressed by such auditing guidance.
The ASB is the designated senior committee of the AICPA authorized to speak for the AICPA on all matters related to auditing. Conforming changes made to the auditing guidance contained in this guide are approved by the ASB Chair (or his or her designee) and the Director of the AICPA Audit and Attest Standards Staff. Updates made to the auditing guidance in this guide exceeding that of conforming changes are issued after all ASB members have been provided an opportunity to consider and comment on whether the guide is consistent with the Statements on Auditing Standards (SASs).
Any auditing guidance in a guide appendix or exhibit (whether a chapter or back matter appendix or exhibit), though not authoritative, is considered an “other auditing publication.” In applying such guidance, the auditor should, exercising professional judgment, assess the relevance and appropriateness of such guidance to the circumstances of the audit. Although the auditor determines the relevance of other auditing guidance, auditing guidance in a guide appendix or exhibit has been reviewed by the AICPA Audit and Attest Standards staff and the auditor may presume that it is appropriate.
This guide does not discuss the application of all GAAP or GAAS that are relevant to the preparation and audit of financial statements of construction contractors. This guide is directed primarily to those aspects of the preparation and audit of financial statements that are unique to construction contractors or those aspects that are considered particularly significant to them.
2017 Guide Edition
AICPA Senior Committees
Auditing Standards Board
Catherine Schweigel, ASB MemberMike Santay, Chair
Financial Reporting Executive Committee
Dan Noll, AICPA Director of Accounting StandardsJim Dolinar, Chair
The AICPA gratefully acknowledges those who reviewed and otherwise contributed to the development of this guide: Adam Canosa, Tina Catalina, William A. Clark, Jr., Robert S. Mercado, James Miller, Joseph Naterelli, Suesan Patton, Chris Roemersma, and Robert Schroell.
AICPA Staff
Dave ArmanTechnical ManagerAccounting and Auditing Content Development
This edition of the guide has been modified by the AICPA staff to include certain changes necessary due to the issuance of authoritative guidance since the guide was originally issued, and other revisions as deemed appropriate. Relevant guidance issued through July 1, 2017 has been considered in the development of this edition of the guide. However, this guide does not include all audit, accounting, reporting, regulatory, and other requirements applicable to an entity or a particular engagement. This guide is intended to be used in conjunction with all applicable sources of relevant guidance.
Relevant guidance that is issued and effective on or before July 2017 is incorporated directly in the text of this guide. Relevant guidance issued but not yet effective as of July 1, 2017 but becoming effective on or before December 31, 2017 is also presented directly in the text of the guide, but shaded gray and accompanied by a footnote indicating the effective date of the new guidance. The distinct presentation of this content is intended to aid the reader in differentiating content that may not be effective for the reader’s purposes (as part of the guide’s “dual guidance” treatment of applicable new guidance).
Relevant guidance issued but not yet effective as of the date of the guide and not becoming effective until after December 31, 2017 is referenced in a “guidance update” box; that is, a box that contains summary information on the guidance issued but not yet effective.
In updating this guide, all guidance issued up to and including the following was considered, but not necessarily incorporated, as determined based on applicability:
FASB Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2017-10,
Service Concession Arrangements (Topic 853): Determining the Customer of the Operation Services (a consensus of the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force)
SAS No. 132,
The Auditor's Consideration of an Entity’s Ability to Continue as a Going Concern
(AICPA,
Professional Standards
, AU-C sec. 570)
Users of this guide should consider guidance issued subsequent to those items listed previously to determine their effect, if any, on entities and engagements covered by this guide. In determining the applicability of recently issued guidance, its effective date should also be considered.
The changes made to this edition of the guide are identified in the “Schedule of Changes” appendix. The changes do not include all those that might be considered necessary if the guide were subjected to a comprehensive review and revision.
FASB standards quoted are from the FASB Accounting Standards Codification © 2015, Financial Accounting Foundation. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Amendments to FASB ASC (issued in the form of ASUs) are initially incorporated into FASB ASC in "pending content" boxes following the paragraphs being amended with links to the transition information. The pending content boxes are meant to provide users with information about how the guidance in a paragraph will change as a result of the new guidance.
Pending content applies to different entities at different times due to varying fiscal year-ends, and because certain guidance may be effective on different dates for public and nonpublic entities. As such, FASB maintains amended guidance in pending content boxes within FASB ASC until the roll-off date. Generally, the roll-off date is six months following the latest fiscal year end for which the original guidance being amended could still be applied.
Amended FASB ASC guidance that is included in pending content boxes in FASB ASC on July 1, 2017, is referenced as "Pending Content" in this guide. Readers should be aware that "Pending Content" referenced in this guide will eventually be subjected to FASB’s roll-off process and no longer be labeled as "Pending Content" in FASB ASC (as discussed in the previous paragraph).
Any requirements described in this guide are normally referenced to the applicable standards or regulations from which they are derived. Generally, the terms used in this guide describing the professional requirements of the referenced standard setter (for example, the ASB) are the same as those used in the applicable standards or regulations (for example, “must” or “should”). However, where the accounting requirements are derived from FASB ASC, this guide uses “should,” whereas FASB uses “shall.” In its resource document “About the Codification” that accompanies FASB ASC, FASB states that it considers the terms “should” and “shall” to be comparable terms and to represent the same concept—the requirement to apply a standard.
Readers should refer to the applicable standards and regulations for more information on the requirements imposed by the use of the various terms used to define professional requirements in the context of the standards and regulations in which they appear.
Certain exceptions apply to these general rules, particularly in those circumstances where the guide describes prevailing and/or preferred industry practices for the application of a standard or regulation. In these circumstances, the applicable senior committee responsible for reviewing the guide’s content believes the guidance contained herein is appropriate for the circumstances.
Appendix A, “Council Resolution Designating Bodies to Promulgate Technical Standards,” of the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct recognizes both the ASB and the PCAOB as standard setting bodies designated to promulgate auditing, attestation, and quality control standards. Paragraph .01 of the “Compliance With Standards Rule” (AICPA, Professional Standards, ET sec. 1.310.001 and 2.310.001) requires an AICPA member who performs an audit to comply with the applicable standards.
Audits of the financial statements of those entities subject to the oversight authority of the PCAOB (that is, those audit reports within the PCAOB’s jurisdiction as defined by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended) are to be conducted in accordance with standards established by the PCAOB, a private sector, nonprofit corporation created by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The SEC has oversight authority over the PCAOB, including the approval of its rules, standards, and budget. In citing the auditing standards of the PCAOB, references generally use section numbers within the reorganized PCAOB auditing standards and not the original standard number, as appropriate.
Audits of the financial statements of those entities subject to the oversight authority of the PCAOB (that is, those audit reports not within the PCAOB’s jurisdiction as defined by the Act, as amended)—hereinafter referred to as nonissuers1—are to be conducted in accordance with GAAS as issued by the ASB. The ASB develops and issues standards in the form of SASs through a due process that includes deliberation in meetings open to the public, public exposure of proposed SASs, and a formal vote. The SASs and their related interpretations are codified in the AICPA’s Professional Standards. In citing GAAS and their related interpretations, references generally use section numbers within the codification of currently effective SASs and not the original statement number, as appropriate.
The auditing content in this guide primarily discusses GAAS issued by the ASB and is applicable to audits of nonissuers. Users of this guide may find the tool developed by the PCAOB’s Office of the Chief Auditor helpful in identifying comparable PCAOB Standards. The tool is available at https://pcaobus.org/Standards/Auditing/Pages/FindAnalogousStandards.aspx.
QC section 10, A Firm’s System of Quality Control (AICPA, Professional Standards), addresses a CPA firm’s responsibilities for its system of quality control for its accounting and auditing practice. A system of quality control consists of policies that a firm establishes and maintains to provide it with reasonable assurance that the firm and its personnel comply with professional standards, as well as applicable legal and regulatory requirements. The policies also provide the firm with reasonable assurance that reports issued by the firm are appropriate in the circumstances.
QC section 10 applies to all CPA firms with respect to engagements in their accounting and auditing practice. In paragraph .13 of QC section 10, an accounting and auditing practice is defined as “a practice that performs engagements covered by this section, which are audit, attestation, compilation, review, and any other services for which standards have been promulgated by the ASB or the AICPA Accounting and Review Services Committee (ARSC) under the “General Standards Rule” (ET sec.1.300.001) or the “Compliance With Standards Rule” (ET sec. 1.310.001) of the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct. Although standards for other engagements may be promulgated by other AICPA technical committees, engagements performed in accordance with those standards are not encompassed in the definition of an accounting and auditing practice.”
In addition to the provisions of QC section 10, readers should be aware of other sections within AICPA Professional Standards that address quality control considerations, including the following provisions that address engagement level quality control matters for various types of engagements that an accounting and auditing practice might perform:
AU-C section 220,
Quality Control for an Engagement Conducted in Accordance With Generally Accepted Auditing Standards
(AICPA,
Professional Standards
)
AT-C section 105,
Concepts Common to All Attestation Engagements
(AICPA,
Professional Standards
)
AR-C section 60,
General Principles for Engagements Performed in Accordance With Statements on Standards for Accounting and Review Services
(AICPA,
Professional Standards
)
Because of the importance of engagement quality, this guide includes an appendix, “Overview of Statements on Quality Control Standards.” This appendix summarizes key aspects of the quality control standard. This summarization should be read in conjunction with QC section 10, AU-C section 220, AT-C section 105, AR-C section 60, and the quality control standards issued by the PCAOB, as applicable.
The Private Company Council (PCC), established by the Financial Accounting Foundation’s Board of Trustees in 2012, and FASB, working jointly, will mutually agree on a set of criteria to decide whether and when alternatives within U.S. GAAP are warranted for private companies. Based on those criteria, the PCC reviews and proposes alternatives within U.S. GAAP to address the needs of users of private company financial statements. These U.S. GAAP alternatives may be applied to those entities that are not public business entities, not-for-profits, or employee benefit plans.
The FASB ASC Master Glossary defines a public business entity as:
A public business entity is a business entity meeting any one of the criteria below. Neither a not-for-profit entity nor an employee benefit plan is a business entity.
a. It is required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to file or furnish financial statements, or does file or furnish financial statements (including voluntary filers), with the SEC (including other entities whose financial statements or financial information are required to be or are included in a filing).
b. It is required by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Act), as amended, or rules or regulations promulgated under the Act, to file or furnish financial statements with a regulatory agency other than the SEC.
c. It is required to file or furnish financial statements with a foreign or domestic regulatory agency in preparation for the sale of or for purposes of issuing securities that are not subject to contractual restrictions on transfer.
d. It has issued, or is a conduit bond obligor for, securities that are traded, listed, or quoted on an exchange or an over-the-counter market.
e. It has one or more securities that are not subject to contractual restrictions on transfer, and it is required by law, contract, or regulation to prepare U.S. GAAP financial statements (including footnotes) and make them publicly available on a periodic basis (for example, interim or annual periods). An entity must meet both of these conditions to meet this criterion.
An entity may meet the definition of a public business entity solely because its financial statements or financial information is included in another entity’s filing with the SEC. In that case, the entity is only a public business entity for purposes of financial statements that are filed or furnished with the SEC.
Considerations related to alternatives for private companies may be discussed within this guide’s chapter text. When such discussion is provided, the related paragraphs are designated with the following title: “Considerations for Private Companies That Elect to Use Standards as Issued by the Private Company Council.”
The AICPA encourages you to visit the website at www.aicpa.org, and the Financial Reporting Center (FRC) at www.aicpa.org/FRC. The FRC supports members in the execution of high-quality financial reporting. Whether you are a financial statement preparer or a member in public practice, this center provides exclusive member-only resources for the entire financial reporting process and provides timely and relevant news, guidance, and examples supporting the financial reporting process, including accounting, preparing financial statements and performing compilation, review, audit, attest or assurance, and advisory engagements. Certain content on the AICPA’s websites referenced in this guide may be restricted to AICPA members only.
To address concerns over the clarity, length, and complexity of its standards, the ASB established clarity drafting conventions and undertook a project to redraft all the standards it issues in clarity format. The redrafting of Statements on Standards for Attestation Engagements (SSAEs or attestation standards) in SSAE No. 18, Attestation Standards: Clarification and Recodification, represents the culmination of that process.
The attestation standards are developed and issued in the form of SSAEs and are codified into sections. SSAE No. 18 recodifies the “AT” section numbers designated by SSAE Nos. 10–17 using the identifier “AT-C” to differentiate the sections of the clarified attestation standards (“AT-C sections”) from the attestation standards that are superseded by SSAE No. 18 (“AT sections”).
The AT sections in AICPA Professional Standards remain effective through April 2017, by which time substantially all engagements for which the AT sections were still effective are expected to be completed. The clarified attestations found in AT-C sections are effective for practitioners' reports dated on or after May 1, 2017.
1
See the definition of the term
nonissuer
in the AU-C Glossary (AICPA,
Professional Standards
).
__________________________
Chapter
1
Industry Background
Nature and Significance of the Industry
Features of the Business Environment
Characteristics Common to Contractors
Types of Contracts
Contract Modifications and Changes
Bonding and the Surety Underwriting Process
Project Ownership and Rights of Lien
Financing Considerations
Joint Ventures
Reporting for Financial and Income Tax Purposes
Typical Industry Operations
Preparing Cost Estimates and Bids
Entering Into the Contract
Planning and Initiating the Project
Variations in Size and Methods of Operation
Project Management
2
Accounting for Performance of Construction-Type Contracts
Basic Accounting Policy for Contracts
Percentage-of-Completion Method
Completed-Contract Method
Determining the Profit Center
Measuring the Extent of Progress Toward Completion
Income Determination—Revenue
Impact of Change Orders on Revenue
Impact of Claims on Revenue
Income Determination—Cost Elements
Accounting for Contract Costs
Cost Attributable to Claims
Precontract Costs
Cost Adjustments for Back Charges
Estimated Cost to Complete
Computation of Earned Income
Revised Estimates
Provisions for Anticipated Losses on Contracts
Selecting a Measure of Extent of Progress
Costs of Equipment and Small Tools
3
Accounting for and Reporting Investments in Construction Joint Ventures
Joint Venture Accounting
Accounting Methods
Capital Contributions to Joint Ventures and Initial Measurement of Investments in Joint Ventures
Sales to a Venture
Subsequent Measurement and Presentation of Investments in Joint Ventures
Determining Venturers’ Percentage Ownership
Conforming the Accounting Principles of the Venture
Losses in Excess of a Venturer’s Investment, Loans, and Advances
Disclosures in a Venturer’s Financial Statements
4
Financial Reporting by Affiliated Entities
Combined Financial Statements
Presentation of Separate Financial Statements of Members of an Affiliated Group
Presentation of Separate Financial Statements of Members of an Affiliated Group That Constitute an Economic Unit
5
Other Accounting Considerations
Definition of a
Public Business Entity
Fair Value Measurements
Definition of
Fair Value
Valuation Techniques
Present Value Techniques
The Fair Value Hierarchy
Application of Fair Value Measurements
Additional Guidance For Fair Value Measurement in Special Circumstances
Disclosures
Fair Value Option
Accounting for Certain Receive-Variable, Pay-Fixed Interest Rate Swaps
Disclosure
Service Concession Arrangements
Discontinued Operations
Disposal Group Classified as Held for Sale
Disclosure
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets
Property, Plant, and Equipment
Intangibles—Goodwill
Accounting Alternative
Intangibles—Other
Accounting for Identifiable Intangible Assets in a Business Combination
Accounting Alternative
Business Combinations—Pushdown Accounting
Asset Retirement Obligations
Mandatorily Redeemable Stock
Presentation of an Unrecognized Tax Benefit When a Tax Carryforward Exists
Differences Between Financial Accounting and Income Tax Accounting
Accounting Methods Acceptable for Income Tax Purposes
Cash Method
Accrual Method
6
Financial Statement Presentation
Balance Sheet Classification
Guidelines for Classified Balance Sheets
General Guidance
Retentions Receivable and Payable
Investments in Construction Joint Ventures
Equipment
Liabilities
Deferred Income Taxes
Offsetting or Netting Amounts
Disclosures in Financial Statements
Significant Accounting Policies
Revised Estimates
Backlog on Existing Contracts
Receivables
Going Concern
Disclosures of Certain Significant Risks and Uncertainties
Accounting for Weather Derivatives
Disclosures of Multiemployer Pension Plans
Multiemployer Plans That Provide Pension Benefits
Multiemployer Plans That Provide Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions
Sample Disclosure for Plans That Provide Pension Benefits
7
Auditing Within the Construction Industry
Audit Focus
Scope of Auditing Guidance Included in This Guide
8
Controls in the Construction Industry
Estimating and Bidding
Project Administration and Contract Evaluation
Job Site Accounting and Controls
Billing Procedures
Contract Costs
Contract Revenues
Construction Equipment
Claims, Extras, and Back Charges
Joint Ventures
Internal Audit Function
9
Planning the Audit, Assessing and Responding to Audit Risk, and Additional Auditing Considerations
Scope of This Chapter
Planning and Other Auditing Considerations
Planning the Audit
Auditor’s Communication With Those Charged With Governance
Audit Risk
Materiality
Use of Assertions in Obtaining Audit Evidence
Understanding the Entity, Its Environment, and Its Internal Control
Risk Assessment Procedures
Discussion Among the Audit Team
Understanding the Entity and Its Environment
Understanding of Internal Control
Assessment of Risks of Material Misstatement and the Design of Further Audit Procedures
Assessing the Risks of Material Misstatement
Designing and Performing Further Audit Procedures
Evaluating Misstatements
Audit Documentation
Identifying and Evaluating Control Deficiencies
10
Major Auditing Procedures for Contractors
Job Site Visits and Interim Audit Procedures
Accounts Receivable
Unbilled Receivables
Retentions
Unapproved Change Orders, Extras, Claims, and Back Charges
Contract Scope Changes
Contract Guarantees and Cancellation or Postponement Provisions
Collectibility
Liabilities Related to Contracts
Contract Costs
Costs Incurred to Date
Estimated Cost to Complete
Income Recognition
Evaluating the Acceptability of Income Recognition Methods
The Percentage-of-Completion Method
The Completed-Contract Method
Combining and Segmenting
Review of Earned Revenue
Analysis of Gross Profit Margins
Review of Backlog Information on Signed Contracts and Letters of Intent
Management Representations
11
Other Audit Considerations
Affiliated Entities
Participation in Joint Ventures
Auditing Affiliated Entities and Related Party Transactions
Participation in a Group Audit
Capitalization and Cash Flow
Types of Auditor’s Reports on Financial Statements
Going Concern Considerations
Supplementary Information in Relation to the Financial Statements as a Whole
Additional Considerations
Auditor’s Communications Related to Internal Control Matters
Legal and Regulatory Considerations
State Statutes Affecting Construction Contractors
The Auditor’s Consideration of Compliance With Laws and Regulations
Reporting of Identified or Suspected Noncompliance
Governmental Prequalification Reporting
12
Consideration of Fraud in a Financial Statement
The Importance of Exercising Professional Skepticism
Discussion Among Engagement Personnel Regarding the Risks of Material Misstatement Due to Fraud
Obtaining the Information Needed to Identify the Risks of Material Misstatement Due to Fraud
Considering Fraud Risk Factors
Identifying Risks That May Result in a Material Misstatement Due to Fraud
A Presumption That Improper Revenue Recognition Is a Fraud Risk
Key Estimates
Assessing the Identified Risks After Taking Into Account an Evaluation of the Entity’s Programs and Controls That Address the Risks
Responding to the Results of the Assessment
Evaluating Audit Evidence
Responding to Misstatements That May Be the Result of Fraud
Communicating About Possible Fraud to Management, Those Charged With Governance, and Others
Documenting the Auditor’s Consideration of Fraud
Appendix
A
The New Revenue Recognition Standard: FASB ASC 606
B
The New Leases Standard: FASB ASU No. 2016-02
C
Overview of Statements on Quality Control Standards
D
Illustrations of Segmenting Criteria
E
Computing Income Earned Under the Percentage-of-Completion Method
F
Examples of Computation of Income Earned
G
Example of Change in Accounting Estimate
H
Sample Financial Statements Percentage Contractors, Inc.
I
Reporting on Supplementary Information in Relation to the Financial Statements as a Whole
J
Sample Financial Statements Completed Contractor, Inc.
K
The Auditor’s Report
L
Information Sources
M
Schedule of Changes Made to the Text From the Previous Edition
Glossary
EULA
Cover
Table of Contents
Preface
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1.01 This chapter is intended as background for the presentation of recommendations and guidance on financial reporting and auditing in the industry. It does not contain recommendations or guidance on the technical application of generally accepted accounting or auditing standards. Recommendations and guidance on technical accounting and auditing issues are presented in the chapters that follow and include the guidance from FASB Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) 605-35.
1.02 The construction industry consists of individuals and entities that are engaged in diverse types of activities defined as construction in the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The 2017 U.S. NAICS Manual North American Industry Classification System—United States classifies construction establishments into a wide variety of subcategories. These subcategories include: Construction of Buildings (residential and nonresidential), Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction (including Utility System Construction, Land Subdivision, and Highway, Street and Bridge Contractors), and several different classes of Specialty Trade Contractors (such as Foundation, Structure, and Building Exterior Contractors, Building Equipment Contactors, Building Finishing Contractors, and Other Specialty Trade Contractors). Data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis indicates that the construction industry is a significant factor in the U.S. economy, contributing nearly 4 percent of the gross domestic product in 2015. It represents hundreds of billions of dollars of economic activity, consists of several hundred thousand business entities widely dispersed throughout the country, and employs a large labor force.
1.03 Construction contractors may be distinguished by their size, the type of construction activity they undertake, and the nature and scope of their responsibility for a construction project. Although the construction industry also encompasses large, multinational contractors that undertake construction of billion-dollar projects, most business entities in the industry are small, local businesses whose activities are limited to a small geographical area. The large number of small entities in the industry may be attributed to the ease of entry into many phases of the construction industry and to the limited amount of capital required. The diverse types of business activities conducted by construction contractors include construction of buildings, highways, dams, and bridges; installation of machinery and equipment; dredging; and demolition. Many entities are able to meet the demands of large construction projects by combining their efforts in joint ventures.
1.04 A contractor may engage in those activities as a general contractor, a subcontractor, or a construction manager. A general contractor is a prime contractor who enters into a contract with the owner of a project for the construction of the project and who takes full responsibility for its completion, although he or she may enter into subcontracts with others for the performance of specific parts or phases of the project. A subcontractor is a second-level contractor who enters into a contract with a prime contractor or an upper-tier contractor to perform a specific part or phase of a construction project. A subcontractor’s performance responsibility is to the general contractor, with whom the subcontractor’s relationship is essentially the same as that of the prime contractor to the owner of the project. A construction manager is a contractor who enters into an agency contract with an owner of a construction project to supervise and coordinate the construction activity on the project, including negotiating contracts with others for all the construction work.
1.05 The organizational structure, resources, and capabilities of contractors tend to vary with the type of activity. Each type of contractor can pose unique accounting and auditing problems.
1.06 Contractors operate in a business environment that differs in some respects from that of other types of businesses. The features of the business environment are discussed in this section in terms of characteristics common to contractors, types of contracts, bonding and surety underwriting, project ownership and rights of lien, contract changes, financing considerations, the use of joint ventures to accomplish objectives, and reporting for financial and income tax purposes.
1.07 Although the construction industry is difficult to define because of its diversity, as explained in FASB ASC 910-10-15-3, certain characteristics are common to companies in the industry. The most basic characteristic is that work is performed under contractual arrangements with customers. A contractor, regardless of the type of construction activity or the type of contractor, typically enters into an agreement with a customer to build or to make improvements on a tangible property to the customer’s specification. The contract with the customer specifies the work to be performed, specifies the basis of determining the amount and terms of payment of the contract price, and generally requires total performance before the contractor’s obligation is discharged. Unlike the work of many manufacturers, the construction activities of a contractor are usually performed at job sites owned by customers, rather than at a central place of business, and each contract usually involves the production of a unique property rather than repetitive production of identical products.
1.08 As noted in FASB ASC 910-10-15-4, other characteristics common to contractors and significant to accountants and users of financial statements include the following:
A contractor normally obtains the contracts that generate revenue or sales by bidding or negotiating for specific projects.
A contractor bids for or negotiates the initial contract price based on an estimate of the cost to complete the project and the desired profit margin, although the initial price may be changed or renegotiated.
A contractor may be exposed to significant risks in the performance of a contract, particularly a fixed-price contract.
Customers (usually referred to as
owners
) may require a contractor to post a performance and payment bond as protection against the contractor’s failure to meet performance and payment requirements. This requirement commonly depends on the type of work being performed. If a bond is required, most governmental owners, by law, are required to have the contractor post these bonds; other owners have the option of either having the contractor post the bonds or not. Recently, a trend has developed whereby owners, or general contractors, prequalify with contractors by providing financial statements and other information, such as safety records and evidence of experience on similar projects.
The costs and revenues of a contractor are typically accumulated and accounted for by individual contracts or contract commitments extending beyond one accounting period, which complicates the management, accounting, and auditing processes.
Update 1-1 Accounting and Reporting: Revenue Recognition
FASB ASC 606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers, is effective for annual reporting periods of a public business entity, a not-for-profit entity that has issued, or is a conduit bond obligor for, securities that are traded, listed, or quoted on an exchange or an over-the-counter market, and an employee benefit plan that files or furnishes financial statements with or to the SEC should apply the “Pending Content” that links to FASB ASC 606-10-65-1 for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2017, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period. Earlier application is permitted only as of annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2016, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period.
For other entities, FASB ASC 606 is effective for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2018, and interim periods within annual periods beginning after December 15, 2019. Other entities may elect to adopt the standard earlier, however, only as of either
an annual reporting period beginning after December 15, 2016, including interim periods within that reporting period, or
an annual reporting period beginning after December 15, 2016, and interim periods within annual periods beginning one year after the annual reporting period in which an entity first applies the “Pending Content” that links to FASB ASC 606-10-65-1.
FASB ASC 606 provides a framework for revenue recognition and supersedes or amends several of the revenue recognition requirements in FASB ASC 605, Revenue Recognition, as well as guidance within the 900 series of industry-specific topics, including FASB ASC 910, Contractors—Construction. The standard applies to any entity that either enters into contracts with customers to transfer goods or services or enters into contracts for the transfer of nonfinancial assets unless those contracts are within the scope of other standards (for example, insurance or lease contracts).
Readers are encouraged to consult the full text of FASB ASC 606 on FASB’s website at www.fasb.org.
The AICPA has formed 16 industry task forces to assist in developing a new Audit and Accounting Guide on revenue recognition that provides helpful hints and illustrative examples for how to apply the new standard (guide available at www.aicpastore.com). Revenue recognition implementation issues identified by the Engineering & Construction Contractors Revenue Recognition Task Force are available for informal comment, after review by the AICPA Financial Reporting Executive Committee, at www.aicpa.org/interestareas/frc/accountingfinancialreporting/revenuerecognition/pages/rrtf-construction.aspx. Readers are encouraged to submit comments to [email protected].
As of the date of this publication, eight accounting implementation issues specific to the engineering and construction contractors industry have been identified. Of the eight identified issues, three issues have been finalized and incorporated in the 2017 AICPA Audit and Accounting Guide Revenue Recognition. These finalized issues include the following:
Identifying the Unit of Account
Variable Consideration and Constraining Estimates of Variable Consideration
Acceptable Measures of Progress
For more information on FASB ASC 606, see appendix A, “The New Revenue Recognition Standard: FASB ASC 606,” of this guide.
1.09 The nature of a contractor’s risk exposure varies with the type of contract. As identified in FASB ASC 605-35-15-4, the four basic types of contracts used in the construction industry based on their pricing arrangements are fixed-price or lump-sum contracts, cost-type (including cost-plus) contracts, time-and-materials contracts, and unit-price contracts, which are defined in the FASB ASC Master Glossary and further described as follows:
A
fixed-price contract
, also known as a
lump-sum contract
, provides for the contractor’s performance of all work to be performed under the contract for a stated price. The stated price may be subsequently adjusted, as deemed necessary by the parties to the contract, via a
change order
, which is a written agreement between the contractor and owner to adjust the terms of the contract. This type of contract is usually the safest option for the owner, but the riskiest for the contractor.
A
cost-type
(including a
cost-plus
)
contract
provides for reimbursement of allowable or otherwise defined costs incurred plus a fee for the contractor’s services that represents profit. Usually, the contract only requires that the contractor’s best efforts be used to accomplish the scope of the work within some specified time and stated dollar limitation. Cost-type contracts take a variety of forms, including
guaranteed max
contracts, which are “cost plus a fee” up to a certain maximum price contract, and are gaining popularity in practice. The contracts often contain terms specifying reimbursable costs, overhead recovery percentages, and fees. The fee may be fixed or based on a percentage of reimbursable costs. These types of projects can pose a higher risk for contractors, based on whether a cost is reimbursable or not.
A
time-and-materials contract
is similar to a cost-plus contract and generally provides for payments to the contractor on the basis of direct labor hours at fixed hourly rates (the rates cover the costs of indirect labor and indirect expenses and profit) and cost of materials or other specified costs. This type of contract is usually the safest option for the contractor, but the riskiest for the owner. Some time-and-material contracts have provisions in the contract that convert the contracts from a time-and-material to a guaranteed maximum contract, in essence the contract becomes a fixed-price contract.
A
unit-price contract
provides for the contractor’s performance of a specific project at a specified price per each unit of output. Unit-price contracts are seldom used for an entire major construction project, but are frequently used for agreements with sub-contractors. This type of contract is commonly associated with road building and it is not unusual to combine a unit-price contract for parts of the project with other types of contracts.
1.10 Although not specifically defined in the FASB ASC Master Glossary, the number of design-build contracts, over the last two decades, has dramatically increased. Design-build contracts differ from traditional contracts because one entity works under a single contract to provide both the design of the work and the performance of the construction services. This combination of the design work and actual construction work may be accomplished via a joint venture, a corporation or limited-liability company comprising two separate specialty entities, although the number of single contractors developing the expertise to handle both types of work is growing. Alternatively, the work may be done via a design subsidiary of a construction parent or a construction and design subsidiary established under a holding company.
1.11 All types of contracts may be modified by target penalties and incentives relating to factors such as completion dates, plant capacity on completion of the project, and underruns and overruns of estimated costs.
1.12 Management control of change orders, claims, extras, and back charges is of critical significance in construction activity. Modifications of the original contract frequently result from change orders that may be initiated by either the customer or the contractor. The nature of the construction industry, particularly the complexity of some types of projects, is conducive to disputes between the parties that may give rise to claims or back charges. Claims may also arise from unapproved change orders. In addition, customer representatives at a job site sometimes authorize the contractor to do work beyond contract specifications, and this gives rise to claims for extras. The ultimate profitability of a contract often depends on control, documentation, and collection of amounts arising from such items.
1.13 Contractors bidding on or negotiating a contract may be required to make a deposit for the use of the plans and specifications for the project. Before they are allowed to submit bids, those seeking prime contracts may be required to post a bid bond or make a deposit, usually in the form of a bank-guaranteed check, equal to a percentage of the total cost estimated in the feasibility study. On virtually all public work and on some private work, bid security is usually required to provide some assurance that only qualified, responsible contractors submit bids. In the construction industry, bid bonds, as well as performance bonds and payment bonds, are provided by surety companies. A surety company makes itself jointly and severally responsible for the performance of the contractor via the execution of the bond.
1.14 A bid bond issued by a surety does not guarantee that the contractor will sign a contract or guarantee that the surety will issue a performance bond. The contractor and surety promise the owner that if the contractor who is awarded the contract does not sign the contract or cannot provide a performance bond, the surety will pay, subject to the maximum bid bond penalty, the difference between the contractor’s bid and the bid of the next lowest responsible bidder. The bid bond or deposit protects the owner from bidders without the resources necessary to complete the work and gives the owner a certain amount of indemnity against the cost of rebidding or finding another contractor who can complete the work. Owners many times will use the bid bond requirement on a job to reduce the amount of bidders on a job and use the surety as a prequalification of the contractor. A surety required to pay on a defaulted bid usually has the right of recovery against the contractor’s assets.
1.15 After being awarded a contract, a contractor may be required to post payment and performance bonds, also issued by a surety. The payment and performance bond provides protection against the contractor’s failure to perform the contract in accordance with its terms. The surety’s obligation under the bond terminates on satisfactory completion of the work required by the contract. However, if the contractor should fail to perform in accordance with the contract, the surety is obligated to the owner for losses or to assure performance but usually has recourse against the contractor’s assets.
1.16 A payment, or labor-and-materials, bond is commonly provided by sureties as a companion (or as a combined item) to the performance bond. The protection provided by a payment bond is governed by state laws, which vary widely but generally cover the contractor’s labor, subcontractors, and suppliers. The Miller Act of 1935 requires general contractors on federal government projects to post payment bonds to protect suppliers of labor, materials, and supplies to those projects. This type of bond generally applies to work already performed.
1.17 In providing the various types of bonds required in the construction industry, the primary function of sureties is to prequalify the contractor. The surety examines the contracting entity to determine if it has the management, experience, equipment, and financing capability to get the job done. This due diligence, amongst other procedures, involves the surety reviewing the contractor’s financial statements. As such, sureties are one of the primary users of contractors’ financial statements.
1.18 If, in the judgment of the surety, the contractor can perform the contract, the surety will provide the required bonds. Similarly, the contractor may wish to evaluate the quality and capability of the surety, including the financial stability of the surety.
1.19 Surety underwriting is similar to, yet different from, insurance. Insurance involves a two-party agreement in which a premium is paid to protect an insured party from the risk of certain types of losses. In contrast, a surety bond involves a three-party agreement in which the surety and the contractor join together to provide protection against losses to a third party. Surety underwriting is also similar to extending credit. For a fee, the surety provides a guarantee to third parties that the contractor will fulfill obligations of performance and payment. Just as a banker will not knowingly make a loan without satisfying himself regarding a borrower’s ability to repay the loan in accordance with its terms, a surety will not knowingly issue a surety bond without similar knowledge of the contractor’s ability to meet obligations in accordance with the terms of a contract. The financial strength of the contractor is critical to the surety underwriting process.
1.20 A contractor may be required to make a significant commitment of resources to a project under construction. His ability to recover his investment may be impaired by certain peculiar considerations. The project is ordinarily one of a kind and is built on the owner’s site. The owner has title to the real estate as well as all improvements as the contractor provides them. The contractor acquires materials for specific projects and has no direct ownership claims to the work in progress. Subassemblies fabricated on the contractor’s premises usually have little value to him or her because of the uniqueness of the project.
1.21 As a special remedy for these conditions, the laws of most states protect providers of labor and materials, such as contractors, from the failure of the owner to pay by granting a right of lien. Under a right of lien, contractors have a claim against the real property, although that right is not necessarily senior to other claims, such as the rights of mortgage holders. Because lien rights are lost if they are not perfected within a limited time period, contractors ordinarily have an established procedure for filing claims before the expiration of those rights. Federal government property ordinarily is not subject to lien under state law, but suppliers, other than general contractors, of labor and material for such property are normally protected by payment bonds that the general contractor is required to post under the Miller Act of 1935.
1.22 The methods of financing operations in the construction industry have developed in response to the nature of the industry and the business environment in which it functions. The cost and availability of financing are affected by the risks to which contractors are susceptible. The greatest risk factor in the industry stems from the method of pricing. A contractor, unlike a businessperson in most other industries, normally must set his or her prices in the bidding or negotiating process before product costs are absolutely determined; and the prices, particularly for fixed-price contracts, are not necessarily subject to modifications solely because of changes in costs.
1.23 A contractor’s greatest financing need is working capital. Term loans to support working capital needs are rare because expansion can usually be supported by working capital loans on a contract-by-contract basis. Banks and other credit grantors typically require more tangible types of security for term loans than most contractors can furnish. However, contractors use chattel loans, which may be tailored to match payments with cash receipts (such as by a waiver of payments during off-season periods), to finance equipment purchases.
1.24 In addition to a traditional line of credit, a working capital line of credit on specific contracts is another short term financing option often available to contractors. Working capital loans are usually advanced on a contract as needed to pay for materials, labor, and subcontract costs. Such loans are a necessary means of financing for most contracts because of the lag between expenditures and the receipt of cash. The credit grantor may take an assignment of the contract and the related receivables; however, a bonding company, if one is involved, has rights to the receivables that take precedence over those of other creditors, including a secured lender. Credit grantors often require that the proceeds of contracts be assigned to them and may also require that the proceeds of the loan be paid directly to suppliers as invoices are submitted.
1.25 Contractors may qualify for government-sponsored programs that support or guarantee financing for small or minority-owned businesses. The programs generally guarantee lines of credit on a contract-by-contract basis. Those programs, under which the contract proceeds are usually assigned to the creditor, are ordinarily available only to contractors that would not qualify for working capital loans from banks without some form of government guarantee.
1.26 Some contractors finance bid deposits with temporary bank loans that are usually repaid by the return of the bid check. Because a bank-guaranteed check used as a bid deposit can be forfeited if a contractor who is awarded a contract cannot obtain the required bonding or withdraws from the contract, a contractor usually obtains a commitment for the required bonding before bidding on a project.
1.27 Billing practices in the industry have evolved from the need to generate cash flows in order to finance the progress of construction projects. In contrast to manufacturing entities, whose billing practices are fairly standard, with the customer billed on shipment of the goods, billing practices in the construction industry vary widely and often are not correlated with the performance of the work. Billing arrangements are usually specified in the contract and vary with the different types of contracts used in the industry. The amount and timing of billings under contract may be based, for example, on such measures as
completion of certain stages of the work.
costs incurred on cost-plus contracts.
architects’ or engineers’ estimates of completion.
specified time schedules.
quantity measures of unit price contracts, such as cubic yards excavated.
1.28 In any event, progress billings or customer advances on contracts provide a significant source of financing for most construction contractors. Most contracts, however, call for retention by the owner of a specified amount of each progress billing, often ranging from 5 percent to 10 percent, until the job reaches an agreed-upon state of completion, with a provision for a reduction thereafter. The purpose of retentions is to ensure performance of the work in accordance with acceptable quality standards or to protect the owner against the cost of obtaining another contractor if a contractor fails to complete the work.
1.29 A contractor ordinarily will try to assign a higher relative bid price to job components that he or she expects to complete early in the job. The practice of unbalanced bidding, referred to as front-end loading, accelerates the contractor’s cash receipts on a contract and represents a significant financing strategy for many contractors.
1.30 Front-end loading and other types of unbalanced bidding are often viewed with concern by those not familiar with the industry, but they are common practices that contractors use to assist in the financing of jobs. Money management is a vital part of construction management, and unbalanced bidding is one of the key tools. Negotiation of advantageous cash payment terms at the bidding stage, and other procedures to accelerate cash collection, are significant financing considerations in the industry. However, the contractor needs to be aware that, as a result of unbalanced bidding, cash inflows at the end of the contract may be less than cash requirements. Therefore, appropriate controls and cash budgeting are an essential part of financial management. An increasing number of credit grantors are requiring contractors to furnish cash projections on contracts before they will extend credit.
1.31 According to the FASB ASC Master Glossary, a joint venture is an entity owned and operated by a small group of businesses (the joint venturers) as a separate and specific business or project for the mutual benefit of the members of the group. A joint venture usually provides an arrangement under which each joint venturer may participate, directly or indirectly, in the overall management of the joint venture. Joint venturers thus have an interest or relationship other than as passive investors. The ownership of a joint venture seldom changes, and its equity interests usually are not traded publicly.
1.32 In the construction industry, ownership of joint ventures may take several forms. The most common are corporate joint ventures, partnerships, limited liability corporations, and other types of pass-through entities. Contractors frequently participate in joint ventures with other parties on construction projects to share risks, combine the financial and other resources and talents of the participants, or obtain financing or bonding. In the construction industry, joint ventures often include arrangements for pooling equipment, bonding, and financing and for sharing skills such as engineering, design, and construction. Many times, these joint ventures are formed between local and nonlocal construction firms in order to share the advantages of each, for example, access to local labor and equipment, or specific expertise.
1.33 The rights and obligations of each joint venturer, the scope of the joint venture’s operations, and the method of sharing profits or losses of the joint venture are typically set forth in the joint venture agreement. A joint venture provides for the sharing of profits and losses in a variety of ways and may not be related to the method of sharing management or other responsibilities. Accomplishing objectives through joint ventures is often a significant business strategy for construction contractors, and management control of such activity can have a significant effect on the contractors’ operations.
1.34 Public-private partnerships, or P3s, are becoming increasingly common forms of collaboration for construction projects. Public-private partnerships take the form of contractual agreements between a public agency (federal, state, local) and a private sector entity. Due to governmental agencies struggling to obtain financing for large public works projects, these partnerships allow the private sector entity to share the risks and rewards of these public sector projects.
1.35 Because of the large number of small enterprises in the construction industry, construction contractors’ financial statements are used most frequently for credit and bonding purposes. Such a use is often accompanied by a request for supplemental information, including a job-by-job analysis of the recognized gross profit of both completed and uncompleted contracts allocated between reporting periods, a breakdown of general and administrative expenses, job costs, and a summary aging of accounts receivable. Recognition of revenues for these financial presentations is governed by accounting conventions described elsewhere in this guide and in FASB ASC 605-35.
1.36 On the other hand, business realities demonstrate that the gross profit is not certain, nor irrevocably earned, until the contract is actually completed and accepted. In addition, final collection, particularly of retentions, usually takes place sometime after the earning process has been completed and revenue has been recognized in the financial statements.
1.37 Some contractors adopt income tax reporting practices that are sensitive to the uncertainties of the estimating process and that more nearly relate to the timing of cash receipts and disbursements. This usually means the adoption of methods that defer income recognition until contracts are completed; the use of the modified accrual basis, which reports retentions only when received; or the use of the cash basis.
1.38 Because the industry consists of diverse types of entities engaged in various types of work that may change over time, users of the guide need to understand not only the industry but also the operation of the individual entity with which they are concerned. For that reason, a description of the process of obtaining and initiating a project is useful to identify unusual conditions that require special consideration in preparing, auditing, or using the financial statements of a particular construction contractor.
1.39 The process leading to the preparation of estimates and bids on a project usually is initiated by the entity that engages a construction contractor for a project. When a customer, usually referred to as an owner, decides to construct a new facility, an architect or engineer may be engaged to prepare preliminary plans and cost estimates for the project. If preliminary procedures indicate the project is feasible, plans and specifications are prepared in sufficient detail for the preparation of cost estimates.
1.40 The owner may negotiate for a price with several general contracting firms or may advertise for bids. Bidders may be limited to those who can meet specified prequalification standards regarding financial capacity, experience, and availability of specialized equipment and who can furnish a bid, payment, or performance bond or all three types of bonds. The owner may decide to use one contractor as a prime contractor responsible for all phases of the work or to grant separate prime contracts for certain specialized portions of the work, such as electrical work, mechanical work, special equipment, and elevators.
1.41
