[Proship] New Lease Accounting Standard Seminar | How to Reduce Operational Burden from Intercompany Lease Discrepancies? — Registration Open
Proship Inc. is hosting the 6th session of its free online seminar series to prepare for the new lease accounting standard effective April 2027. The session focuses on 'Intercompany Leases,' explaining how to reduce operational burdens in consolidated accounting and resolve discrepancies between individual and consolidated processing. The live stream is scheduled for June 25.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: May 28, 2026 at 13:10
- 🔍 Collected: June 1, 2026 at 01:42 (84h 32m after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 1, 2026 at 23:00 (21h 17m after Collected)
Proship Inc. (Headquarters: Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo; President: Fumihiro Suzuki) is holding a series of 14 free online seminars aimed at reducing operational burdens in preparation for the application of the new lease accounting standard starting in April 2027. The 6th session will focus on 'Intercompany Leases,' a key issue in complying with the new standard, and practical responses. Responding to the new lease accounting standard requires design that considers not only individual processing but also consolidated financial statements. Intercompany leases are a point where burdens tend to increase in both institutional compliance and practical operation. Even for transactions within a consolidated group, there are cases where compliance with the new lease accounting standard is required. On the other hand, even if lease assets and liabilities are recorded individually, they are eliminated in consolidation procedures and treated as transactions that do not affect consolidated financial statements. Due to this structure, discrepancies easily occur between individual and consolidated processing, leading to increased confirmation and reconciliation work, which inflates operational burdens.
FAQ
What is the impact of the new lease accounting standard in Japan?
It requires the recognition of lease assets and liabilities in consolidated financial statements, necessitating significant changes to operational processes.