2010

Deloitte's new IASB Project Insights highlights key IASB activities for each project

04 Nov, 2010

Deloitte's IFRS Global Office now publishes IASB Project Insights, which provides (in easily printed PDF format) a summary, by project, of:

  • Current status - brief background and current steps being undertaken
  • Key decisions and proposals - high-level summaries of decisions to date and any consultation documents published
  • 'Thinking ahead' - key considerations for entities given the status of the project
  • Next steps - forthcoming deadlines or due process steps to be undertaken and guidelines as to when the project may be finalised.

We've posted 17 separate documents, covering the key topics including revenue recognition, leases, insurance contracts, consolidation, financial instruments and more.

The documents will be updated on a regular basis as developments occur and represent a great way to stay in touch with particular IASB projects. Click here to access IASB Project Insights.

IASB webcast on hedge accounting

03 Nov, 2010

On Monday 8 November, the IASB staff of the IASB will present two webcasts about the exposure draft on Hedge Accounting that will be published shortly.

There is no charge to attend the web presentation, but registration is required. Details of the webcast are as follows:

Topic: Hedge Accounting
Date and time: Monday, 8 November 2010, 11:00am and repeated again 3:00pm (London time)
More information on the webcast and registration: click here (link to IASB website)
More information on IAS Plus: For our agenda project page click here

IASB webcast on financial liability accounting

02 Nov, 2010

On Wednesday 3 November, the IASB staff will be hosting a live webcast on accounting for financial liabilities in accordance with the recently reissued IFRS 9 which incorporates new requirements for financial liabilities.

There is no charge to attend the web presentation, but registration is required. Details of the webcast are as follows:

Topic: Financial Liability Accounting
Date and time: Wednesday, 3 November 2010, 10:30am and repeated again 4:00pm (London time)
More information on the webcast and registration: click here (link to IASB website)
More information on IAS Plus: For our agenda project page click here

FRC appoints Roger Marshall as Interim ASB Chairman

02 Nov, 2010

The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has announced the appointment of Roger Marshall as interim chairman of the Accounting Standards Board (ASB).

Mr Marshall replaces Ian Mackintosh who was recently appointed vice-chairman designate of the IASB (see our earlier story on the IASB appointments). He will take up his role as interim ASB chairman with immediate effect. Mr Marshall takes the helm just as the ASB has brought out one of its most controversial documents, the exposure draft of the new Financial Reporting Standard for Mid-Size Entities (FRSME). Click for the FRC press release(link to FRC website).

 

Deadline reminder – ED on Deferred Tax

02 Nov, 2010

We remind you that comments on the Exposure Draft ED/2010/11 Deferred Tax: Recovery of Underlying Assets are due on 9 November 2010.

Under IAS 12, the measurement of deferred tax liabilities and deferred tax assets depends on whether an entity expects to recover an asset by using the asset or by selling the asset. In some cases, it is difficult and subjective to assess whether recovery will be through use or through sale. To provide a practical approach in such cases, the proposed amendment would introduce a presumption that an asset is recovered entirely through sale unless the entity has clear evidence that recovery will occur in another manner.

Click for our earlier story on ED/2010/11 Deferred Tax: Recovery of Underlying Assets.

The Bruce Column — No news could be good news in the debate over IFRS in the US

01 Nov, 2010

It is often the case that no news should be seen as good news.

And that is certainly how it looked when the US regulatory body, the Securities and Exchange Commission, issued the first progress report on its workplan which may, or may not, lead to IFRS becoming the financial reporting norm for the largest US companies, and the US, as a result, joining the rest of the world in the use of one financial reporting language. The SEC had promised to publish the report by the end of October and, keeping the tension high to the end, released it on the last working day of the month.

Indeed on the day before, at the SEC's New York office, the Monitoring Board which oversees the work of the IASB had met. And SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro had joked afterwards that the SEC could hold the report out for longer and put it up on the website on Halloween night. Instead it appeared on the website at the same time that IASB Chairman, Sir David Tweedie, and FASB interim Chair, Leslie Seidman, were speaking at the annual Deloitte IFRS Summit, also held in New York. So for two days activity and discussion was intense. The progress report shows, as such reports should, that progress has been made. But there is nothing in the report to suggest which way the final argument may go. It is a sober consideration of the efforts which have been made to evaluate the IFRS process and all of its possible consequences.

That may disappoint those who wanted a more significant boost to the movement towards global harmony. But they should hearken to the wise words of the SEC's Chief Accountant, Jim Kroeker. I chatted to him after the Monitoring Board meeting and he was dampening down speculation about the nature of the progress report's conclusions. But he made a significant remark. "If we had seen anything fatal we would have said so", he said. "But we didn't". So no one should be downcast at the downbeat nature of the report.

But there are still significant problems ahead. One is the funding of the IASB. Again, in conversation, Mary Schapiro made it plain that one of the most important issues in maintaining and safeguarding the independence of the IASB was to ensure that it was properly funded. The SEC progress report points out that the IASB is currently running a sizeable deficit and that its funding is haphazard. The report makes the point that: "Not all jurisdictions that have incorporated IFRS in some form as part of their financial reporting system contribute to the IFRS Foundation. In fact, based on the Staff's initial research, it appears that less than 25% of these countries contribute; in other words, three out of four countries reported by the IFRS Foundation as permitting or requiring some form of IFRS provide no monetary funding". And the progress report goes on to comment that: "Conversely, the two national jurisdictions with the largest contributions in 2009 were the United States (£1.85 million) and Japan (£1.74 million), neither of which have formally incorporated IFRS into the financial reporting system for their domestic reporting issuers". Then, says the report: "In fact, voluntary contributions from the United States, principally from large US companies, have been the largest country-specific source of funds to the IFRS Foundation. During 2009, 2008, and 2007, payments from US-based contributors accounted for 17%, 22%, and 26 %".

No wonder that Schapiro was making the point that the IASB needed a stable source of funding and at present, she said: "we don't have that". "There needs to be sufficient funding that is stable over the long run", she said, "to ensure the IASB's independence".

Curiously enough it is the EU which has reduced its contribution. Perhaps it should listen to the relevant EU Commissioner for Internal Market and Services. Like Mary Schapiro, Michel Barnier is a member of the Monitoring Board, and at the meeting the day before the progress report's publication he made the point that ensuring the stable funding of the Board was a major objective and that the Board's independence should never be undermined. And then he went on to stress his thanks to Sir David Tweedie for all his work. Maybe the cheque is in the post.

Elsewhere all was sweetness and light. Both Tweedie and Seidman made it plain that there was the resolve to sort out a slimmed down agenda of essential work which should be completed by the middle of 2011. And at the Monitoring Board meeting Tweedie stressed that: "There had been vast improvements because of the convergence programme", and found his words echoed by Mary Schapiro who said that: "The convergence process is also a process which has got both the IASB and FASB to produce higher quality standards".

There is a long way to go before the SEC allows the US to join with much of the rest of the world and use IFRS. But the progress report is a hopeful sign. The SEC promises to report back with a decision sometime next year. Schapiro suggested it would be later rather than sooner in the year. And with the Halloween precedent no one is betting, as she again joked, against a New Year's Eve announcement at the end of next year.

Robert Bruce
November 2010

Related links

 

 

Proposed international standard on compilation engagements

29 Oct, 2010

The International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB) has proposed a new proposed pronouncement – International Standard on Related Services (ISRS) 4410 Compilation Engagements.

The proposed standard is the first step in the IAASB'S work to create robust standards for services that can be used by entities that are either not required or do not elect to be audited to meet their business reporting needs.

Click here for IAASB Press Release (IFAC website), which includes a link to download the proposal. Comments are due by 31 March 2011.

Proposals for a three-tier reporting framework in the UK

29 Oct, 2010

The UK Accounting Standards Board (ASB) has published its proposals for the future of financial reporting in the UK and Republic of Ireland.

The Exposure Drafts set out proposals for a three-tier reporting framework, which aims to balance the needs of preparers and users of accounts.

The proposed three-tier approach, which has been developed and consulted on over the past six years, builds on the existing system:

  • Tier 1 – Quoted groups will continue to report under international financial reporting standards (IFRS), as adopted by the EU. They would be joined in Tier 1 by other companies that are publicly accountable. This would apply if their debt is traded on public markets, or if they hold deposits or manage other people's money. (Some very small financial institutions would be exempt.)
  • Tier 2 – All other UK entities, except those that apply the Financial Reporting Standard for Smaller Entities (FRSSE), would report under a new standard based on the IFRS for SMEs, which is considerably shorter and less complicated than current UK standards. The FRSME, as it would be called, would be modified to comply with UK and EU law and to ease tax reporting.
  • Tier 3 – The smallest companies will continue to use the simplified version of UK standards, the FRSSE.

The consultation period will run until 30 April 2011. It is proposed that the new framework would be effective from 1 July 2013.

The document published today includes an explanation of the proposals, a draft Impact Assessment and the two new proposed standards. Click for:

New editorial corrections to IFRSs

29 Oct, 2010

The IASB has posted to its website a new batch of Editorial Corrections to IFRSs.

This batch includes editorial corrections and changes to IFRS for SMEs (issued July 2009), IFRS 9 Financial Instruments (issued November 2009), Bound Volume (Red Book) 2010, Bound Volume (Blue Book) 2010, Improvements to IFRSs (issued May 2010) and IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures – Transfers of Financial Assets (issued October 2010).
Click for Editorial Corrections to IFRSs.

 

IASB issues additions to IFRS 9 for financial liability accounting

28 Oct, 2010

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has today issued requirements on the accounting for financial liabilities.

These requirements will be added to IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and complete the classification and measurement phase of the IASB's project to replace IAS 39. They follow the IASB's November 2009 issue of IFRS 9, which prescribed the classification and measurement of financial assets.

The new requirements address the problem of volatility in profit or loss arising from an issuer choosing to measure its own debt at fair value. This is often referred to as the 'own credit' problem. The IASB decided to maintain the existing amortised cost measurement for most liabilities, limiting change to that required to address the own credit problem. With the new requirements, an entity choosing to measure a liability at fair value will present the portion of the change in its fair value due to changes in the entity's own credit risk in the other comprehensive income (OCI) section of the income statement, rather than within profit or loss.

IFRS 9 applies to financial statements for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2013. Entities are permitted to apply the new requirements in earlier periods, however, if they do, they must also apply the requirements in IFRS 9 that relate to financial assets.

Click for:

 

Correction list for hyphenation

These words serve as exceptions. Once entered, they are only hyphenated at the specified hyphenation points. Each word should be on a separate line.