v3.26.1
Basis Of Presentation And Summary Of Significant Accounting Policies
9 Months Ended
Mar. 31, 2026
Basis Of Presentation And Summary Of Significant Accounting Policies [Abstract]  
Basis Of Presentation And Summary Of Significant Accounting Policies
1.
Basis of Presentation and Summary of Significant Accounting
Policies
Unaudited Interim Financial Information
The accompanying
unaudited condensed
consolidated financial
statements include
all majority-owned
subsidiaries over
which
the Company exercises
control and have been
prepared in accordance with
U.S. generally accepted accounting
principles (“GAAP”)
and
the rules
and
regulations
of
the United
States Securities
and
Exchange
Commission
for
Quarterly Reports
on Form
10-Q
and
include all of the information and
disclosures required for interim financial reporting.
The results of operations for the
three and nine
months ended March 31, 2026 and
2025, are not necessarily indicative of
the results for the full year.
The Company believes that the
disclosures are adequate to make the information presented not misleading.
These
unaudited
condensed
consolidated
financial
statements
should
be
read
in
conjunction
with
the
financial
statements,
accounting policies and financial notes thereto included in the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June
30,
2025.
In
the
opinion
of
management,
the
accompanying
unaudited
condensed
consolidated
financial
statements
reflect
all
adjustments (consisting only of normal recurring adjustments), which are necessary for a fair
representation of financial results for the
interim periods presented.
References to “Lesaka” are references
solely to Lesaka Technologies,
Inc. References to the “Company” refer
to Lesaka and its
consolidated subsidiaries, collectively,
unless the context otherwise requires.
Revision of Previously Issued Financial Statements
Understatement of cost and accumulated depreciation
for computer equipment
In October 2025, the Company
identified that it had understated
its June 30, 2025, amounts
of cost and accumulated depreciation
for
computer
equipment
as
well
as
the
totals
for
cost
and
accumulated
depreciation
by
$
6.5
million
in
the
notes
to
the
audited
consolidated
financial
statements
for
the
years
ended
June
30,
2025,
2024
and
2023.
The
carrying
value
of
property,
plant
and
equipment reported as
of June
30, 2025, was
not impacted by
the error. The Company has
recast its
accumulated depreciation presented
on the condensed consolidated balance sheet as of June 30, 2025, to increase
the amount from $
48,636
to $
55,086
.
The Company assessed the materiality of this error and change in presentation on prior period consolidated
financial statements
in accordance with SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin (“SAB”) No. 99 “Materiality” and SAB No. 108, “Considering the Effects of Prior
Year
Misstatements
when
Quantifying
Misstatements
in
the
Current
Year
Financial
Statements.”
Based
on
this
assessment,
the
Company has concluded
that previously issued
financial statements were
not materially misstated
based upon overall
considerations
of both quantitative and qualitative factors.
Understatement of cost of goods sold, IT processing,
servicing and support due to incorrect claim of indirect
taxes
Subsequent to the issuance
of the Company’s
Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the three
months ended September
30, 2025,
it
determined
that
its
certain
indirect
taxes
had
not
been
accounted
for
correctly
in
its
consolidated
balance
sheet,
consolidated
statements of
operations,
consolidated
statement of
comprehensive
loss, consolidated
statement of
changes in
equity,
consolidated
statement of cash flows and
related notes to the
consolidated financial statements included in
previously filed Annual Reports on
Form
10-K and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q since June 30, 2022, and these filings were incorrect. In these previous filings, the amount
of
certain
indirect
taxes
were
incorrectly
claimed
in
monthly
indirect
tax
submission
to
the
taxing
authority
and
were
incorrectly
excluded
from
the Company’s
reported
cost of
goods
sold, IT
processing,
servicing
and support
in the
consolidated
statements of
operations
and
other
payables
and
retained
earnings
in
the
consolidated
balance
sheet.
The
corrected
presentation
in
the
revised
consolidated
financial
statements
includes
certain
indirect
taxes
in
cost
of
goods
sold,
IT processing,
servicing
and
support
in
the
consolidated statements of operations and other payables and retained
earnings in the consolidated balance sheet.
The Company has
also determined that
it may also
be liable for
penalties and interest
related to the
indirect taxes not
paid in a
timely manner and has recorded the penalties in the selling,
general and administration expense and the interest in interest expense
in
the revised consolidated statements of operations.
The cumulative sum of the penalties and interest are included in other payables and
retained earnings in the revised consolidated balance sheet.
The Company has determined
that at this time
it is more likely
than not that it
will be unable to
claim an income tax
deduction
related to the error, however,
it is performing further analysis of
its tax position with its external tax advisors.
Therefore, there are no
income tax adjustments reflected in these condensed consolidated
financial statements related to the correction of this error.
1.
Basis of Presentation and Summary of Significant Accounting
Policies (continued)
Revision of Previously Issued Financial Statements (continued)
Understatement of cost
of goods sold,
IT processing, servicing and
support due to
incorrect claim of indirect taxes
(continued)
The Company assessed the materiality of this error and change in presentation on prior period consolidated
financial statements
in
accordance
with
SAB
No.
99“Materiality”
and
SAB
No.
108,
“Considering
the
Effects
of
Prior
Year
Misstatements
when
Quantifying
Misstatements in
the Current
Year
Financial Statements.”
Based on
this assessment,
the Company
has concluded
that
previously
issued
financial
statements
were
not
materially
misstated
based
upon
overall
considerations
of
both
quantitative
and
qualitative factors.
The Company
has revised the
previous presentations
on the condensed
consolidated statements
of operations
for the three
and
nine months ended March 31, 2025, and corrected them in this filing. The Company has also included the impact of the correction for
the three months ended September 30, 2025, in the condensed consolidated statements of operations for the nine months ended March
31, 2026, included in this filing. The impact of these revisions has increased cost
of goods sold, IT processing, servicing and support,
selling,
general
and
administration
expense
and
interest
expense,
and
all
subtotals
from
operating
income
to
net
income
(loss)
attributable to Lesaka for the affected periods.
Specifically,
for the nine months
ended March 31, 2026,
Cost of goods sold,
IT processing, servicing
and support increased by
$
0.2
million, Selling,
general and
administration expense
increased by
$
0.06
million, Operating
income decreased
by $
0.2
million,
Interest expense increased
by $
0.1
million, and Net
income (loss) attributable
to Lesaka decreased
by $
0.4
million, as a result
of the
correction to amounts reported
for the three months
ended September 30, 2025.
Basic and Diluted loss per
share for the nine months
ended March 31, 2026, were not impacted by the correction to amounts reported
for the three months ended September 30, 2025.
The Company
has revised
the condensed
consolidated balance
sheet as
of June
30, 2025,
and corrected
it in
this filing
where
these amounts
are presented as
comparative prior
period amounts in
other payables and
retained earnings and
affected subtotals
and
totals.
The tables below present the impact of
the revisions to specific captions to
the Company’s condensed consolidated balance sheet
and condensed consolidated statement of operations for the periods
identified.
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
June 30, 2025
As reported
Correction
As revised
Other payables
$
72,079
$
3,956
$
76,035
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
(185,664)
38
(185,626)
Retained earnings
222,719
(3,994)
218,725
Condensed consolidated statement of operations
Three months ended March 31, 2025
As reported
Correction
As revised
(in thousands, except per share data)
Cost of goods sold, IT processing, servicing and support
$
117,013
$
150
$
117,163
Selling, general and administration
34,217
53
34,270
Interest expense
5,777
92
5,869
Basic earnings (loss) per share attributable to Lesaka shareholders
$
(0.27)
$
(0.01)
$
(0.28)
Diluted earnings (loss) per share attributable to Lesaka shareholders
$
(0.27)
$
(0.01)
$
(0.28)
Condensed consolidated statement of operations
Nine months ended March 31, 2025
As reported
Correction
As revised
(in thousands, except per share data)
Cost of goods sold, IT processing, servicing and support
$
366,618
$
486
$
367,104
Selling, general and administration
97,213
171
97,384
Interest expense
16,983
268
17,251
Basic earnings (loss) per share attributable to Lesaka shareholders
$
(0.81)
$
(0.01)
$
(0.82)
Diluted earnings (loss) per share attributable to Lesaka shareholders
$
(0.81)
$
(0.01)
$
(0.82)
1.
Basis of Presentation and Summary of Significant Accounting
Policies (continued)
Recent accounting pronouncements adopted
In December 2023,
the Financial Accounting
Standards Board (“FASB”)
issued guidance regarding
Income Taxes
(Topic
740)
to improve income tax
disclosure requirements. The guidance
requires entities, on an
annual basis, to (1) disclose
specific categories
in the income tax rate reconciliation and (2) provide additional information for reconciling items that meet a quantitative threshold (if
the effect of those reconciling items is equal to or greater than five percent of
the amount computed by multiplying pre-tax income or
loss by
the applicable
statutory income
tax rate).
This guidance
was effective
for the
Company beginning
July 1,
2025 for
its year
ended June 30, 2026.
Recent accounting pronouncements not yet adopted
as of March 31, 2026
In
November
2024,
the
FASB
issued
guidance
regarding
Income
Statement—Reporting
Comprehensive
Income—Expense
Disaggregation
Disclosures
(Subtopic
220-40)
which
requires
disaggregated
disclosure
of
income
statement
expenses
for
public
business entities. The guidance does not change the expense captions an
entity presents on the face of the income statement; rather,
it
requires
disaggregation
of
certain
expense
captions
into
specified
categories
in
disclosures
within
the
footnotes
to
the
financial
statements. This guidance is effective for the
Company beginning July 1, 2027. Early
adoption is permitted. The Company is
currently
assessing the impact of this guidance on its financial statements and related disclosures.
In
July
2025,
the
FASB
issued
guidance
regarding
Financial
Instruments-Credit
Losses
(Topic
326)
Measurement
of
Credit
Losses for Accounts Receivable and Contract Assets
which amends current guidance to provide a practical
expedient (for all entities)
and an accounting
policy election (for
all entities, other than
public business entities,
that elect the practical
expedient) related to
the
estimation of expected credit
losses for current accounts receivable
and current contract assets that
arise from transactions accounted
for under
Revenue From Contracts With
Customers (Topic
606).
This guidance is effective for
the Company beginning July 1, 2026,
and interim
reporting periods during
that fiscal year.
Early adoption
is permitted. The
Company is currently
assessing the impact
of
this guidance on its financial statements and related disclosures.
On
September
18,
2025,
the
FASB
issued
guidance
regarding
Intangibles—Goodwill
and
Other—
Internal-Use
Software
(Subtopic 350-40)
which amends certain
aspects of the
accounting for and
disclosure of software
costs under ASC
350-40. The new
guidance
makes
targeted
improvements
to
existing
guidance
but
does
not
fully
align
the
framework
for
accounting
for
internally
developed software
costs that
are subject
to ASC
350-40 with
the framework
applied to
software to
be sold
or marketed
externally
that is
subject to
guidance regarding
Costs of
Software to
Be Sold,
Leased, or
Marketed
(Subtopic ASC
985-20)
. The
new guidance
also does not amend the guidance
on costs of software licenses that
are within the scope of ASC 985
-20. The amendments supersede
the guidance
on website
development costs
in guidance
regarding
Website
Development Costs
(Subtopic ASC
350-50)
and relocate
that guidance,
along with the
recognition requirements
for development costs
specific to websites,
to ASC 350
-40. This guidance
is
effective for
the Company beginning
July 1, 2028,
and interim reporting
periods during that fiscal
year. Early
adoption is permitted.
Entities
may
apply
the
guidance
prospectively,
retrospectively,
or
via
a
modified
prospective
transition
method.
The
modified
prospective
transition
approach
would
allow
entities
to
account
for
an
in-process
project
that,
before
the
transition
date,
met
the
capitalization requirements but would no longer meet
the requirements for capitalization under the
new guidance by derecognizing the
capitalized costs for
that in-process project
through a
cumulative-effect adjustment
to the opening
balance of retained
earnings. The
Company is currently assessing the impact of this guidance on its financial
statements and related disclosures.
On December
8, 2025,
the FASB
issued guidance
regarding
Interim Reporting
(Topic
270)
which is
intended to
improve the
navigability
of the
guidance
in ASC
270
and clarify
when it
applies.
Under the
amendments, an
entity is
subject to
ASC 270
if
it
provides “interim financial
statements and notes
in accordance with
GAAP.” The updated guidance also
addresses the
form and content
of such financial statements, adds lists to ASC 270 of the interim disclosures required by all other Codification topics, and establishes
a principle
under which an
entity must “disclose
events since the
end of the
last annual reporting
period that have
a material impact
on the entity.”
As the FASB
stated in the
proposed guidance and
reiterates in the ASU,
the amendments are
not intended to
“change
the fundamental nature
of interim reporting
or expand or
reduce current interim
disclosure requirements.” This
guidance is effective
for the
Company beginning
July 1,
2028, and
interim reporting
periods during
that fiscal
year.
Early adoption
is permitted.
Entities
m
ay apply the guidance prospectively,
retrospectively, or via a modified
prospective transition method.