25-06-2024, 12:57 PM
(25-06-2024, 10:21 AM)weijian Wrote: This is where I figured out ROU understanding (including the portion of lease/interest which was confusing to me for a long time): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4tR1s0ojD0
It basically works like a mortgage amortisation schedule. In the old lease accounting, rental is a straight line amortisation. Under IFRS16, it is front-loaded which means that for F&B business where rental terms is 3 years, the swing will be more meaningful. There was an old Breadtalk presentation slide which illustrated this comparison very well.
IFRS16 was introduced because there were a lot of off balance sheet lease arrangements adopted, mainly by the western companies. You can think of it as sales and leaseback on steroids in order to juice their ROE. Hence IFRS16 attempts to quantify the full on balance sheet impact. The trade off is that net cash companies with high lease exposure, especially F&B businesses, end up with a large amount of lease liabilities. People unaware of the intention will then think these companies are highly leveraged and incurring "interest" payments.
I don't include lease liabilities in my enterprise value calculation because these are not actual interest-bearing debt obligation. It is contractual binding but same nature as employee contracts. Terminating it comes with penalties (e.g. severance payments) but we don't PV all employees contracts and add it into EV.
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