News

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Income taxes

Apr 24, 2020

On April 24, 2020, the Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) released a publication on how the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting the recoverability of deferred tax assets and has introduced new government relief measures.

Entities should use professional judgment to assess how this will impact the accounting for income taxes in accordance with IFRS® Standards.

Review the publication on the AcSB's website.

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AcSB Exposure Draft – Covid-19-Related rent concessions (Proposed amendment to IFRS 16)

Apr 24, 2020

On April 24, 2020, the Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) issued its Exposure Draft that corresponds to the IASB’s Exposure Draft on this topic. Comments are requested by May 8, 2020.

The AcSB would like input from Canadian respondents on the following additional question regarding the proposed amendments:

The IASB has developed the proposed amendment in accordance with its due process for application around the world. Assuming the Exposure Draft proposal is finalized and approved by the IASB in accordance with its due process, do you think that the proposal is appropriate for application in Canada? If not, please specify which aspects of the proposal, and what circumstances, make the accounting requirements proposed in the Exposure Draft inappropriate.

Review the press release and exposure draft on the AcSB's website.

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Potential impact on lease accounting

Apr 22, 2020

On April 22, 2020, the Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) released a publication on how the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting the ability of organizations to collect and pay rent and other lease obligations.

This means companies should use professional judgement and consider the potential implications that COVID-19 could have relating to the accounting for leases under IFRS 16, "Leases".

Review the publication on the AcSB's website.

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Report: Women in leadership at S&P/ TSX companies

Apr 22, 2020

On April 22, 2020, Catalyst released a report on how Canada’s largest companies are leading the pack to accelerate progress for women.

Women’s economic participation and leadership are essential to driving business performance and achieving gender balance on corporate boards. This report by Catalyst offers a snapshot of progress for the companies included in the S&P/TSX Composite Index over a 5-year time period ending December 31, 2019, as well as a comparative perspective on progress versus all disclosing companies on the TSX. It also provides a full list of Index companies with 30% or more women on boards and 30% or more women on executive teams.

Review the report on Catalyst's website.

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Going Concern and Liquidity Risk

Apr 21, 2020

On April 21, 2020, the Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) released a publication on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the ability to continue as a going concern or liquidity risk.

This guide covers the impact of COVID-19 on the financial statements.

Review the publication on the AcSB's website.

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Impact of the coronavirus on your company

Apr 20, 2020

In April 2020, the Harvard Business Review (HBR) released a series of articles on the coronavirus.

Review these articles:

How to manage Coronavirus layoffs with compassion

As the coronavirus pandemic continues to evolve, the damage to the job market looks likely to be deep and long lasting. Managers are not only dealing with the stress and sadness of having to let go of a large number of their workers, many of them are also feeling underlying anxiety about their own positions. Even if laying off employees is the only way to keep the organization running, how do you handle your feelings of guilt and sadness? How should you deliver the news when you can’t meet face-to-face? What should you say to your employees who remain? And what can you do to manage fear about your own future?

To build an agile team, commit to organizational stability

To promote more effective coping, leaders need to set priorities. The top priority right now, of course, is to help people focus on what matters most: health and safety. This means leaders need to do everything they can to enable, reinforce, and perhaps tighten social-distancing measures to contain the outbreak. After that, their next priority is to determine what tasks and functions will be critical in keeping the business running. Leaders must be disciplined in identifying their top priorities and then communicating them to their teams, almost to the point of over-communicating. Because many employees around the globe are working from home, the potential for new distractions and miscommunication are ripe.

Social distancing doesn’t have to disrupt mentorship

The current pandemic has many more people teleworking and adapting business to the virtual environment. While continuing to lead direct reports and collaborate with customers remain business imperatives in the new “workplace,” don’t forget your mentees. Great mentors show up and engage with mentees in crises and uncertain times, even when that requires creativity and adaptation. There are several reasons not to let your commitments slide.

A detailed plan for getting Americans back to work

This plan may allow people to begin to return to work depending on local conditions. There wouldn’t be a set date for reopening the economy; rather, a minimum set of conditions would be specified before the economy of a given state can be reopened, and a path to reopening it once these conditions are met.

Coronavirus is putting corporate social responsibility to the test

Corporate leaders face pressure from investors and bankers to conserve cash and reduce losses, but neither investors nor bankers will go hungry. Even retirees, who have seen their savings depleted, can expect to see stocks recover as long as they don’t sell in panic. Companies write off the costs of restructuring, product failures, or acquisitions that go wrong all the time. Everyone will understand writing off losses due to the coronavirus pandemic. Here are some things that companies can do to help their employees, small suppliers, health care providers, and communities.

Are you leading through the crisis … or managing the response?

For nearly two decades, we’ve researched and observed public and private-sector executives in high-stakes, high-pressure situations. What we’ve learned is that crises are most often over-managed and under-led. The best leaders navigate rough waters deftly, saving lives, energizing organizations, and inspiring communities. This article discusses how most of the leaders fall into one or more of specific leadership traps.

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Managing your company during on the coronavirus

Apr 20, 2020

In April 2020, Accounting Today released a series of articles on managing your company during the coronavirus.

Review these articles:

Coronavirus and Wayfair decision affecting state tax revenues

The Supreme Court decision in the Wayfair case combined with the pandemic are having a wide-ranging impact. It’s one thing to have economic nexus, but states also need to impose the obligation on marketplace facilitators. If you just have economic nexus, then all those retailers that sell on the marketplace have the obligation to collect, but the marketplace doesn’t. The states have figured out that if they make the marketplace collect, they can collect on the really small sellers that they couldn’t otherwise, since many of the smaller retailers don’t meet the threshold for economic nexus.

Global economic confidence plummets due to coronavirus, say ACCA and IMA

In normal circumstances, economic conditions change little in the space of just a few weeks. But these are not normal circumstances. So, although global confidence and orders both fell significantly in the Q1 survey, they do not convey the true scale of the global economic contraction that is now in progress. What is abundantly clear is that the global economy is heading into a recession, initially at least a severe one.

The coronavirus pandemic requires bold firm leadership

One of the pillar qualities of great leadership is adapting to the situation. Every workplace has different variables, from the personalities on a team to the health of a business. In accounting, one of the biggest environmental factors in the workplace comes in the form of seasonality. There are no getting around tax deadlines and the way they warp the accounting calendar. No matter how far you plan ahead, you will have to deal with the added stress and excess work that tax season entails. How you approach this situation as a leader goes a long way toward determining team success and mental well-being.

10 ways to immunize your firm during a crisis like the coronavirus

While the effects of the pandemic will be felt — and continue to evolve — for some time to come, it’s crucial for accounting leaders to think through their firms’ actions and to have a process in place to evaluate and redirect as necessary. Here are 10 suggestions to help firms think through near-term needs and create a plan to help shore up business continuity and mitigate some risks during this sensitive time.

3 steps to manage your company during economic uncertainty

Some companies are mobilizing to meet increased demand or pivoting their business models to better serve the changing needs of their customers. Others are facing much more difficult scenarios as their revenue streams evaporate. These challenges are exacerbated by the speed at which conditions are changing. Businesses must adapt rapidly, and the time for decisive action is now. Companies that operate well through this downturn may be able to leapfrog competitors.

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Updated IASB work plan — Analysis (April 2020 supplementary meeting)

Apr 17, 2020

On April 17, 2020, the International Accounting Standards Board (the Board) updated its work plan following its April 2020 supplementary meeting. Due to the COVID-19 situation, changes are numerous.

Below is an analysis of all changes made to the work plan since our last analysis on March 27, 2020.

Standard-setting projects

Maintenance projects

Research projects

Other projects

  • 2020 Agenda Consultation — A request for information is now expected in the first half of 2021 (previously second half of 2020)

Review the press release and the revised IASB work plan on the Board's website.

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IAASB technical director update on COVID-19 response

Apr 17, 2020

On April 17, 2020, the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB) published its Strategy for 2020‒2023 (the Strategy) and Work Plan for 2020‒2021 (the Work Plan). They have also signaled their sensitivity to the current circumstances created by the COVID-19 outbreak. The purpose of this note is to update stakeholders on the progress of support material under development and the evolution of our thinking on our Work Plan.

Staff Alerts under Development

A core element of their COVID-19 response is to develop Staff Alerts on several targeted topics to support the application of our standards under current circumstances. Their goal is to support the public interest and the role auditors must play in sustaining trust in financial and other external reporting.

In addition to the IAASB Staff AlertHighlighting Areas of Focus in an Evolving Audit Environment Due to the Impact of COVID-19, they are drafting Staff Alerts on the following topics:

  • Auditor Reporting
  • Going Concern
  • Subsequent Events
  • Auditing Accounting Estimates
  • Public Sector Audit Considerations

The Staff Alerts on Auditor Reporting and Going Concern will be issued next and are expected to be available within the next two weeks.

Review the press release on the IAASB's website.

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IASB holds meeting dedicated to COVID-19 issues

Apr 17, 2020

On April 17, 2020, in advance of its regular meeting next week, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) held a supplementary IASB meeting today to consider COVID-19-related matters: the Board's timelines in view of the COVID-19 pandemic and accounting for COVID-19-related rent concessions.

On the Board's timelines in view of the COVID-19 pandemic, the staff recommended that the Board:

All Board members agreed with the staff recommendations and also agreed that the exposure draft on delaying the effective date of the IAS 1 amendments should have a comment period of 30 days. The Board gave the permission to begin the balloting process for the exposure draft and no Board member intends to dissent.

On accounting for COVID-19-related rent concessions, the staff recommended that the Board amend IFRS 16 to provide lessees with an exemption from assessing whether a COVID-19-related rent concession is a lease modification. Entities applying the exemption would account for the changes as if they were not lease modifications. The exemption would have to be applied retrospectively but comparative figures would not be restated. A lessee would recognise any difference arising on initial application of the amendment in opening retained earnings (or other component of equity, as appropriate) in the annual reporting period that includes the date of initial application.

All Board members agreed with the staff recommendations and also agreed that the exemption would be effective immediately, when the final amendment is issued. The Board will ask the Trustees to approve a comment period of 14 days. The Board gave the permission to begin the balloting process for the exposure draft and no Board member intends to dissent. 

Note: The shortened comment periods for both exposure drafts were discussed in a DPOC call yesterday.

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