January 2021

IASB proposes new standard on rate-regulated activities

Jan 28, 2021

On January 28, 2021, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) published the exposure draft of a new standard "Regulatory Assets and Regulatory Liabilities" that is intended to replace IFRS 14, "Regulatory Deferral Accounts". The deadline for submitting comments is June 30, 2021.

 

Background

The IASB is developing an accounting model that will require rate-regulated companies to provide information about their incremental rights to add amounts, and incremental obligations to deduct amounts, in determining the future rates to be charged to customers as a result of goods or services already supplied.

Currently, there is no specific guidance in IFRSs addressing the accounting for rate‑regulated activities and companies use different accounting models to report the effects of rate regulation. Consequently, comparing and understanding the effects of rate regulation across different countries and companies is difficult.

The exposure draft published today follows a discussion paper DP/2014/2 Reporting the Financial Effects of Rate Regulation that was published in September 2014 and examined a certain type of rate regulation where customers have little or no choice but to purchase the rate‑regulated goods or services from the entity.

Previous to the publication of DP/2014/2, the IASB published the limited‑scope standard IFRS 14, Regulatory Deferral Accounts in January 2014 to provide a short‑term, interim solution for rate‑regulated entities that have not yet adopted IFRSs but that recognize regulatory deferral balances under their previous GAAP. This was to address the concern that the lack of guidance may be a barrier to the adoption of IFRS Standards of for such entities. Once the exposure draft is finalized, IFRS 14 will be withdrawn.

 

Key proposals

The main proposals in ED/2021/1 Regulatory Assets and Regulatory Liabilities are the following:

  • Objective: The new standard would replace IFRS 14, Regulatory Deferral Accounts by introducing a new comprehensive accounting model for regulatory assets and liabilities.
  • Scope: The standard would apply when the entity is party to a regulatory agreement that determines the regulated rate the entity can charge for the goods or services it supplies to customers.
  • Recognition: Regulatory assets and liabilities arise when the regulated rate is determined in such a way that some or all of the total allowed compensation for goods or services supplied in one period is charged to customers in a different past or future period. Recognizing regulatory assets and liabilities leads to regulatory income and expense.
  • Measurement: Regulatory assets and liabilities would be measured at historical cost, modified for subsequent measurement by using updated estimates of the amount and timing of future cash flows. The estimated future cash flows of a regulatory asset or liability would be discounted to their present value by using the regulatory interest rate. After initial recognition, the carrying amount of the regulatory asset or liability would be updated at the end of each reporting period to reflect conditions existing at that date.
  • Presentation: In the statement(s) of financial performance, an entity would present all regulatory income and expense as a separate line item immediately below revenue. In the statement of financial position, an entity would present line items for regulatory assets and liabilities.
  • Disclosure. The exposure draft includes several proposed disclosure objectives and detailed requirements to achieve these objectives.

The deadline for submitting comments is June 30, 2021.

 

Alternative view

The basis for conclusions on the exposure draft includes an alternative view by Board member Mary Tokar. Ms. Tokar voted against publication of the exposure draft because of the focus on understanding the relationship between an entity’s revenue and expenses and the related proposals to present particular items of regulatory income and regulatory expense in other comprehensive income, and to measure some regulatory assets and regulatory liabilities by reference to the measurement under IFRSs of the related liabilities and related assets. She also disagrees with the proposed scope of the standard.

 

Effective date and transition

The exposure draft does not contain a proposed effective date as the IASB will decide on the effective date only upon completion of its redeliberations. The expectation is currently that the standard will become effective approximately 18-24 months after being published in its finalized form.

The standard would be applied retrospectively with one transitional provision and early adoption would be permitted.

 

Additional information

Review the following additional information on the IASB's website:

 

IFRS Foundation webinars: Academics and the PIRs of IFRS 9, IFRS 15, and IFRS 16

Jan 12, 2021

On January 12, 2021, the IFRS Foundation announced that it is offering three webinars aimed at identifying how academics can contribute to the post-implementation reviews (PIRs) of IFRS 9 'Financial Instruments', IFRS 15 'Revenue from Contracts with Customers', and IFRS 16 'Leases'.

Each webinar will be offered once in the morning and once in the afternoon to accommodate stakeholders in different time zones. The webinars will last approximately 60 minutes and will consist of an overview of the standard’s objectives and related research opportunities, followed by questions and answers.

Please click for registration on the IASB website:

IFRS 9, Thursday 21 January 2021:

IFRS 16, Friday 22 January 2021:

IFRS 15, Monday 8 February 2021:

Re­view the press re­lease on the IASB’s web­site.

IIRC publishes revised Framework

Jan 19, 2021

On January 19, 2021, the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC) published revisions to the International <IR> Framework, originally released in 2013, to enable more decision-useful reporting.

The IIRC launched the revision process in February 2020 and identified three key themes of the revision: a) business model considerations, b) responsibility for an integrated report, and c) charting a path forward. The third theme was not directly related to the revision but focused on future of corporate reporting, including extended assurance and the role of technology, and was intended to inform the IIRC’s longer-term strategy.

The revisions published today focus on a simplification of the required statement of responsibility for the integrated report; improved insight into the quality and integrity of the underlying reporting process; a clearer distinction between outputs and outcomes; and a greater emphasis on the balanced reporting of outcomes and value preservation and erosion scenarios. The press release states:

As business resilience is tested so severely in the wake of the global pandemic, climate change and growing inequality, effective integrated thinking and reporting is more important than ever. We believe these revisions can help businesses deliver more robust, balanced reporting. The revisions are also aligned with our efforts to develop a global, comprehensive corporate reporting system.

Review the following information on the IIRC's website:

 

Updated IASB work plan — Analysis (January 2021 meeting)

Jan 29, 2021

Following the IASB's January 2021 meeting, we have analyzed the IASB work plan to see what changes have resulted from the meeting and other developments since the work plan was last revised in December 2020. Changes are many, but most of them just regard clarifications of dates.

Below is an analysis of all changes made to the work plan since our last analysis on December 18, 2020. 

Stan­dard-set­ting projects

Main­te­nance projects

Research projects

  • Goodwill and im­pair­ment— Dis­cus­sion of the feedback received on the dis­cus­sion paper is now expected to begin in March 2021 (pre­vi­ously Q1 2021).
  • Second com­pre­hen­sive review of the IFRS for SMEs Standard — A decision on the project direction is now expected in March 2021 (pre­vi­ously Q1 2021).

Other projects

  • IFRS Taxonomy Update — Amend­ments to IAS 1, IAS 8 and IFRS Practice Statement 2— The next milestone is now correctly iden­ti­fied as "Proposed IFRS Taxonomy Update" again; the proposed update is now expected in second quarter of 2021 (pre­vi­ously February 2021).
  • IFRS Taxonomy Update — Amend­ments to IFRS 17, IFRS 4 and IAS 16— An IFRS Taxonomy Update is now expected in March 2021 (pre­vi­ously Q1 2021).
  • Sus­tain­abil­ity Reporting— The date for the dis­cus­sion of the feedback received on the Trustees' con­sul­ta­tion paper has been removed, however, the IASB website reveals that the Trustees will begin dis­cussing the feedback on February 1, 2021.
  • Third Agenda Con­sul­ta­tion — This is the new name of the 2020 Agenda Con­sul­ta­tionproject; a request for in­for­ma­tion is now expected in March 2021 (pre­vi­ously Q1 2021).

The above is a faithful com­par­i­son of the IASB work plan at December 18, 2020 and January 29, 2021. For access to the current IASB work plan at any time, please click here.

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