March

March 2023 IASB meeting agenda posted

10 Mar, 2023

The IASB has posted the agenda for its next meeting, which will be held in its office in London on 20–23 March 2023. There are seven topics on the agenda.

The Board will discuss the following:

  • Climate-related risks in the financial statements
  • Board work plan update
  • Disclosure Initiative — Subsidiaries without public accountability: Disclosures
  • Primary financial statements
  • Equity method
  • PIR of IFRS 15
  • Business combinations — Disclosures, Goodwill and Impairment

The full agenda for the meeting can be found here. We will post any updates to the agenda, our com­pre­hen­sive pre-meet­ing summaries, as well as observer notes from the meeting on this page as they become available.

March 2023 IASB meeting notes posted

28 Mar, 2023

The IASB met in London from 20-23 March 2023. We have posted our comprehensive Deloitte observer notes for all projects discussed during the meeting.

The following topics were discussed

Climate-related risks in the financial statements: The IASB commenced its project on climate-related risks in the financial statements. Particularly, the staff presented the origins of the project, the purpose of the project and the planned initial steps for the project. The IASB was not asked to make any decisions on the project.

Work plan update: In this session, the staff provided an update on the IASB’s work plan since the last update in December 2022. The purpose of the session was to provide a holistic view of the IASB’s technical projects to support decisions about whether to add or remove projects, as may be discussed in individual project papers and assessment of overall progress on the work plan, including project prioritisation and timing. No decisions were made.

Disclosure Initiative—Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures: In this session, the IASB continued its redeliberations of the relationship of the new IFRS Accounting Standard with the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard. The IASB decided to assess separately the costs and benefits for subsidiaries applying the reduced disclosure Standard and the costs and benefits for SMEs applying the IFRS for SMEs.

Equity Method: In this session, the IASB discussed three application questions on its project to revise IAS 28. The IASB decided to propose that, when applying IAS 28, an investor purchasing an additional interest in an associate while retaining significant influence would recognise any difference between the cost of the additional interest and its additional share in the net fair value of the associate’s identifiable assets and liabilities either as goodwill, or as a gain from a bargain purchase. The IASB also decided to propose that an investor, in applying IAS 28, would recognise the full gain or loss on all transactions with its associate, and to propose improvements for the disclosure requirements when an investor recognises the full gain or loss on transactions with its associate.

Primary Financial Statements: The IASB decided on detailed revisions to the Exposure Draft in the areas of disclosure of operating expenses by nature in the notes; management performance measures (MPMs)—rebuttable presumption; MPMs—relationship with the requirements of other IFRS Accounting Standards; MPMs—tax disclosure; issues related to categories in the statement of profit or loss; and issues related to the proposals for entities with specified main business activities.

Post-implementation Review of IFRS 15: The IASB discussed which questions to include in the forthcoming Request for Information. In particular, the IASB decided to include questions on the standard as a whole and the convergence with US GAAP; the five steps of revenue recognition; principal versus agent considerations; licensing; disclosures; transition; and the interaction with IFRS 9, IFRS 10 and IFRS 16.

Business Combinations—Disclosures, Goodwill and Impairment: In this session, the IASB made decisions about some of the IASB’s preliminary views regarding reducing the cost and complexity of the impairment test, and some aspects of the proposed package of disclosure requirements in IFRS 3.

Please click to access the detailed notes taken by Deloitte observers for the entire meeting.

March 2023 IFRS Interpretations Committee meeting agenda posted

03 Mar, 2023

The IFRS Interpretations Committee has posted the agenda for its next meeting, which will be held on 14–15 March 2023.

The Committee will discuss the following:

  • IFRS 16 Leases: Definition of a lease — Substitution rights
  • IFRS 9 Financial Instruments: Guarantee over a derivative contract
  • IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts and IFRS 9 Financial Instruments: Premiums receivable from an intermediary
  • Homes and home loans provided to employees
  • Administrative matters
  • Potential annual improvements to IFRS Accounting Standards
  • Business Combinations — Disclosures, Goodwill and Impairment

The full agenda for the meeting can be found here. We will post any updates to the agenda, our com­pre­hen­sive pre-meet­ing summaries as well as observer notes from the meeting on this page as they become available.

March 2023 ISSB meeting agenda posted

06 Mar, 2023

The ISSB has posted the agenda for its meeting, which will be held via video conference call on 16 March 2023. The Board will discuss topics related to the ISSB consultation on agenda priorities and international applicability of the SASB Standards.

The full agenda for the meeting can be found here. We will post any updates to the agenda, our com­pre­hen­sive pre-meet­ing summaries, as well as observer notes from the meeting on this page as they become available.

March 2023 ISSB meeting notes posted

27 Mar, 2023

The ISSB met via video conference on 16 March 2023. We have posted our comprehensive Deloitte observer notes for all projects discussed during the meeting.

The following topics were discussed:

ISSB Consultation on Agenda Priorities

The ISSB decided to refine the specifics surrounding the upcoming Request for Information (RFI). In particular, the ISSB decided that, within the RFI the scope of the connectivity project be expanded to be more broadly focused on ‘integration in reporting’; consider integrated disclosures beyond the requirements related to connected information in IFRS S1 and IFRS S2; the requirements of S1 and S2 related to connected information be included to provide necessary context when considering the project on ‘integration in reporting’; present the project as an ISSB project that could be pursued jointly with the IASB, rather than presenting it as a formal ‘joint project’; and frame the questions asked in a manner that elicits input about how this project should be pursued.

International Applicability of the SASB Standards

The ISSB is developing an exposure draft (ED) that explains the process and the methodology for updating specific jurisdictional laws and regulations in the SASB Standards in order to enhance the international applicability of the SASB Standards. In this session, ISSB members received a status update of the project and details on the concepts and processes that guide that effort. The ISSB expects to publish the ED in May 2023.

Please click to access the detailed notes taken by Deloitte observers for the entire meeting.

Pre-meeting summaries for the March 2023 IFRS Interpretations Committee meeting

07 Mar, 2023

The IFRS Interpretations Committee (Committee) meets on 14–15 March 2023. The IFRS IC will discuss comment letters on one tentative agenda decision, three new items, two potential Annual Improvements to IFRS Accounting Standards and an item for input on an IASB project.

Comment letters on tentative agenda decision: IFRS 16 Leases—Definition of a Lease: Substitution Rights: In November 2022, the IFRS IC published a tentative agenda decision in response to a submission about how to assess whether a contract contains a lease applying IFRS 16 when the supplier has particular substitution rights.  Almost all these respondents agreed with the IFRS IC’s analysis of level at which to evaluate whether a contract contains a lease. Most respondents agreed (or did not necessarily disagree) with the conclusion that, there is an identified asset in the fact pattern described, but some of them raised comments on the analysis in the tentative agenda decision.

New item: IFRS 9 Financial Instruments—Guarantee over a Derivative Contract: The IFRS IC received a submission about how to assess whether an issuer accounts for a guarantee written over a derivative contract as a financial guarantee contract or a derivative. In the fact pattern described, Entity C provides a guarantee over a derivative contract between Entity A and Entity B, which promises to reimburse Entity A, in full or in part, the actual loss suffered in the event of a default by Entity B. The submitter asked whether such guarantee written meets the definition of a financial guarantee contract of a derivative. The staff concluded that the matter described in the request is, in isolation, too narrow for the IASB or the IFRS IC to address in a cost-effective manner.

New item: IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts and IFRS 9 Financial Instruments—Premium Receivable from an Intermediary: The IFRS IC received a submission about how an issuer accounts for premiums receivable from an intermediary. In the fact pattern described, a policyholder has paid the premiums to an intermediary when the amounts became due under an insurance contract. At this point, the insurer is legally obliged to provide insurance contract services to the policyholder, even if the intermediary does not pay the premiums to the insurer (under the agreement between the insurer and the intermediary, the intermediary is allowed to pay later). The submissions asked, when the policyholder pays the premiums to the intermediary, whether the insurer is required to recognise the premiums receivable from an intermediary as a separate financial asset under IFRS 9 and remove these premiums from the measurement of the group of insurance contracts under IFRS 17. The staff concluded that the premiums receivables from the intermediary remain in the measurement of a group of insurance contracts until recovered or settled in cash. However, the view that the premiums receivable from an intermediary should be recognised as a separate financial asset under IFRS 9 and are removed from the measurement of the group of insurance contracts under IFRS 17 cannot be precluded.

New item: Home and Home Loans Provided to Employees: The IFRS IC received a submission about how an entity accounts for homes and loans to buy homes provided to its employees in two fact patters. In view of the fact that outreach indicates that neither of the fact patterns described in the submission is widespread, nor are the amounts involved material, that staff recommend not adding a standard-setting project to the work plan and to publish a tentative agenda decision that explains the reasons.

Potential Annual Improvements to IFRS Accounting Standards: The staff will ask whether the IFRS IC members agree with their preliminary views on the following two proposed amendments to IFRS Accounting Standards and to include them in the next annual improvements cycle:

  • IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and IFRS 16 Leases—Lessee accounting for lease payments forgiven
  • Guidance on implementing IFRS 17: Disclosure of deferred difference between fair value and transaction price

Input on IASB project: Business Combinations—Disclosures, Goodwill and Impairment: Possible changes to the impairment test of cash-generating units (CGU) containing goodwill: The IASB has a project which aims at improving information entities provide about their business combinations at a reasonable cost. The staff identified suggestions for changes to the impairment test of CGUs containing goodwill that the staff considered warrant further consideration. The staff paper provided details of each suggestion and initial staff comments. The purpose of the discussion is to obtain feedback on some suggestions respondents to the Discussion Paper had for changes to the impairment test of CGUs containing goodwill.  

Work in progress: The following new matter has not yet been presented to the IFRS IC: Merger between a parent and its subsidiary in separate financial statements.

The full agenda for the meeting and our comprehensive pre-meeting summaries can be found here.

Pre-meeting summaries for the March 2023 ISSB meeting

14 Mar, 2023

The ISSB is meeting in Frankfurt on 16 March 2023. We have posted our pre-meeting summaries for the meeting that allow you to follow the ISSB’s decision making more closely. We summarised the agenda papers made available by the ISSB and pointed out the main issues and recommendations.

The following topics are on the agenda:

ISSB Consultation on Agenda Priorities: The staff recommend refining the specifics surrounding the upcoming Request for Information (RFI). In particular, The staff recommend that, within the RFI the scope of the connectivity project be expanded to be more broadly focused on ‘integration in reporting’; the requirements of S1 and S2 related to connected information be included to provide necessary context when considering the project on ‘integration in reporting’; the project be rearticulated as an ISSB project that could be pursued jointly with the IASB, rather than presenting it only as a formal ‘joint project’; and the questions asked are framed in a manner that elicits input about how this project should be pursued.

International Applicability of the SASB Standards: The ISSB is developing an exposure draft (ED) that explains the process and the methodology for updating specific jurisdictional laws and regulations in the SASB Standards in order to enhance the international applicability of the SASB Standards. In this session, ISSB members will receive a status update of the project and details on the concepts and processes that guide that effort. The ISSB expects to publish the ED in May 2023.

Our pre-meeting summaries is available on our March meeting notes page and will be supplemented with our popular meeting notes after the meeting.

Pre-meeting summaries for the March 2023 IASB meeting

16 Mar, 2023

The IASB meets in London on 20–23 March 2023. We have posted our pre-meeting summaries for the meeting that allow you to follow the IASB’s decision making more closely. We summarised the agenda papers made available by the IASB staff and point out the main issues to be discussed by the IASB and the staff recommendations.

The following topics are on the agenda.

Climate-related risks in the financial statements: The IASB will start discussions on its project on climate-related risks in the financial statements. Particularly, the staff will present the origins of the project, the purpose of the project and the planned initial steps for the project. The IASB will not be asked to make any decisions on the project.

Work plan update: In this session, the staff will provide an update on the IASB’s work plan since the last update in December 2022. The purpose of the session is to provide a holistic view of the IASB’s technical projects to support decisions about whether to add or remove projects, as may be discussed in individual project papers and assessment of overall progress on the work plan, including project prioritisation and timing.

Disclosure Initiative—Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures: In this session, the IASB will continue its redeliberations of the relationship of the new IFRS Accounting Standard with the IFRS for SMEs Accounting Standard. The staff recommend that the IASB assess separately the costs and benefits for subsidiaries applying the reduced disclosure Standard and the costs and benefits for SMEs applying the IFRS for SMEs.

Equity Method: In this session, the IASB will discuss three application questions on its project to revise IAS 28. The staff recommend responses and actions with regard to these application questions.

Primary Financial Statements: The staff recommend detailed revisions to the Exposure Draft in the areas of disclosure of operating expenses by nature in the notes; management performance measures (MPMs)—rebuttable presumption; MPMs—relationship with the requirements of other IFRS Accounting Standards; MPMs—tax disclosure; issues related to categories in the statement of profit or loss; and issues related to the proposals for entities with specified main business activities.

Post-implementation Review of IFRS 15: The IASB will discuss which questions to include in the forthcoming Request for Information. In particular, the staff recommend questions on the standard as a whole and the convergence with US GAAP; the five steps of revenue recognition; principal versus agent considerations; licensing; disclosures; transition; and interaction with IFRS 9, IFRS 10 and IFRS 16.

Business Combinations—Disclosures, Goodwill and Impairment: In this session, the IASB will make decisions about some of the IASB’s preliminary views regarding reducing the cost and complexity of the impairment test, and some aspects of the proposed package of disclosure requirements in IFRS 3.

Our pre-meeting summaries are available on the March meeting notes page and will be supplemented with our popular meeting notes after the meeting.

Report on the January 2023 interim IFASS meeting

02 Mar, 2023

A report has been issued summarising the discussions at the interim meeting of the International Forum of Accounting Standard Setters (IFASS) held by remote participation on 12 January 2023.

The topics discussed at the meeting were:

  • IASB and ISSB update (IASB and ISSB)
  • Connection between financial and sustainability reporting (UKEB and EFRAG)
  • IAS 12 temporary exception amendment (IASB)
  • IFRS 16 research (ANC) Transition relief and ongoing practical expedients in IFRS 16 Leases (AASB and MASB)

The next meeting will be the regular spring meeting which is to be held on 19-21 April 2023 in Norwalk.

Please click for the full report from the meeting.

Summary of the February 2023 ASAF meeting now available

03 Mar, 2023

The IASB staff have published a summary of the Accounting Standards Advisory Forum (ASAF) meeting held on 10 February 2023.

The topics covered during the meeting were the following (numbers in brackets are ref­er­ences to the cor­re­spond­ing para­graphs of the summary):

  • International Tax Reform — Pillar Two Model Rules (1–6): The ASAF members were provided with an overview of the Exposure Draft International Tax Reform — Pillar Two Model Rules and discussed where jurisdictions are expected to implement the Pillar Two model rules and the current status of implementation.

full summary of the meeting is available on the IFRS Foundation's website.

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