News

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New IFRS for SMEs training module

21 Dec, 2012

The IFRS Foundation Education Initiative has developed a training module for Section 9 of the IFRS for SMEs 'Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements'. This section defines the circumstances in which an entity presents consolidated financial statements and the procedures for preparing those statements. It also includes guidance on separate financial statements and combined financial statements.

Ultimately, the IFRS for SMEs training material will include 35 stand-alone modules – one for each section of the IFRS for SMEs. Currently, 32 modules are available. Most are also available in Arabic, Russian, Spanish, and Turkish.

Please click for more information on the Section 9 training module or access all training modules on the IASB website.

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EFRAG endorsement status report

21 Dec, 2012

The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) has updated its report showing the status of endorsement, under the EU Accounting Regulation, of each IFRS, including standards, interpretations, and amendments. The latest report follows the issue of EFRAG's draft endorsement advice on the IASB's investment entities amendments, in which EFRAG’s initial assessment is that the amendments satisfy the technical criteria for EU endorsement and EFRAG should therefore recommend their endorsement.

In its draft endorsement advice on the investment entities amendments, EFRAG notes the following on the question of the exemption from consolidation:

EFRAG generally believes that a reporting entity should not differentiate between types of entities when applying the control model of consolidation in IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements. However, EFRAG notes that the Amendments respond to the concerns of users of financial statements, who expressed support for a consolidation exception for subsidiaries of investment entities, and argued that their interests are best served by having a single line measurement basis based on fair value, instead of consolidation of subsidiaries of investment entities.... Although EFRAG acknowledges... concerns, we believe that limiting the use of the exception to investment entities as defined under the Amendments, does not affect the relevance of information produced by those entities, and therefore should not preclude the information provided under the Amendments from meeting the relevance criterion.

In accordance with its usual technical analysis, the draft endorsement advice also considers the investment entity amendments in terms of reliability, compatibility, and understandability before noting "EFRAG’s overall initial assessment is that the information resulting from the application of the Amendments would not be contrary to the true and fair view principle".

Comments on the Invitation to Comment on EFRAG's draft endorsement advice are requested by 28 January 2013.

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IASB launches disclosure survey

20 Dec, 2012

In preparation for the upcoming discussion forum on disclosure, the staff of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) have launched a survey aimed at assisting the IASB to gain a clearer picture on the perceived "disclosure problem". The survey is open until 15 January 2013.

The IASB has announced that responses to the survey will be confidential and no information published will be attributable to any individual or organisation. The survey is expected to take around 10 minutes to complete, although the survey does provide for many 'free form' sections where respondents can provide detailed information if they desire.

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IFRS Foundation issues educational material on fair value measurement

20 Dec, 2012

As part of the IASB’s Education Initiative, the IFRS Foundation staff — with the assistance of the valuation expert group — has issued the first chapter of educational material to accompany IFRS 13, titled 'Measuring the fair value of unquoted equity instruments within the scope of IFRS 9 Financial Instruments'.

This 71-page chapter addresses the fair value measurement of unquoted equity instruments. It presents a range of commonly used valuation techniques for measuring the fair value of unquoted equity instruments within the market and income approaches, as well as the adjusted net asset method. This chapter does not prescribe the use of a specific valuation technique, but instead encourages the use of professional judgement and the consideration of all facts and circumstances surrounding the measurement.

It is the first of a series of chapters of educational material provided to support IFRS 13. These chapters are being developed to describe, at a high level, the thought process for measuring assets, liabilities and an entity’s own equity instruments at fair value, ensuring consistency with the objective of a fair value measurement set out in IFRS 13. Additional chapters will be published as they are finalised.

Click to view (links to IASB website):

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Final notes from the December 2012 IASB meeting

20 Dec, 2012

The IASB's December meeting was held in London on 13-17 December 2012, some of it a joint meeting with the FASB. We have posted the remaining Deloitte observer notes from Monday's session on agriculture.

The IASB discussed three fundamental issues related to the limited scope project on bearer biological assets (BBAs): (1) what definition of BBAs should be used, (2) how BBAs should be measured, and (3) how produce growing on the BBAs should be accounted for.

Click through for direct access to the notes on agriculture (IASB-only session). You can also access the preliminary and unofficial notes taken by Deloitte observers for the entire meeting.

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IASB-EFRAG joint meeting

20 Dec, 2012

Following the regular IASB meeting in December 2012, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and a European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) delegation met on 18 December 2012 to discuss a number of topics.

The topics discussed were:

Please click for:

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EFRAG Update with a summary of the November and December 2012 EFRAG conference calls and meetings

20 Dec, 2012

The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) has released the December 2012 issue of its EFRAG Update newsletter.

The newsletter contains a summary from the EFRAG TEG conference call held in November 2012 and the EFRAG CFSS and EFRAG TEG meeting held in December 2012. Highlights were the approval of a draft endorsement advice on the IASB's investment entities amendments, of EFRAG’s final response to the IASB’s post-implementation review of IFRS 8 Operating Segments and of two draft comment letters (on annual improvements and on depreciation and amortisation).

Click for the EFRAG Update (link to EFRAG website).

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IASB work plan revised

20 Dec, 2012

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has released a revised work plan, reflecting the outcomes from the IASB's Agenda Consultation 2011 and other IASB decisions. A number of new projects have been added to the agenda, and new target dates introduced or clarified for many other projects.

Details of the changes from the previous work plan dated 4 December 2012 are as follows:

New projects

  • Rate-regulated activities - inclusion of this project in the active agenda, to be completed in two phases: an interim IFRS (exposure draft expected in first or second quarter 2013) and a comprehensive project (discussion paper expected in the second half of 2013).
    This dual approach is the result of much debate on this contentious topic. Over the past few years, several jurisdictions adopting IFRS for the first time or considering the adoption of IFRS, including Canada, have come out very vocal in support of an interim standard (and possibly final standard) that would allow grandfathering of existing accounting practice upon adoption of IFRS. These views have often been in conflict with the views of other jurisdictions that already adopted IFRSs and having already changed their accounting for regulatory asset and liabilities, they are generally not supportive of exceptions or changes being made for new adopters. The IASB is balancing the desire to have Canada (where companies with rate regulated activities still have not adopted IFRSs) and other jurisdictions fully adopt IFRSs without amendment with the views of those jurisdictions already using IFRSs. Thus the IASB decided (after much debate) to proceed with the issuance of an exposure draft for an interim standard that will allow some sort of grandfathering in addition to their prior decision arising from the Agenda Consultation process to proceed with a comprehensive project on rate regulated activities.  There is no certainty at this early stage about what the ultimate outcome will be for either project.
  • IAS 12 — Deferred tax assets for unrealised losses - a new project split out separately from the annual improvements process, as was decided at the December IASB meeting, with an exposure draft expected in the fourth quarter of 2013
  • IAS 36 — Recoverable amount disclosures for non-financial assets - a narrow scope amendment designed to clarify relevant disclosure requirements, which the IASB agreed at its December meeting would be fast tracked as an amendment outside the annual improvements process in an attempt to finalise the amendment as timely as possible. An exposure draft is expected in the first quarter of 2013.

Clarification of target dates on other projects

Click for IASB work plan dated 19 December 2012 (link to IASB website). We have updated our project pages to reflect the updated work plan and other known developments.

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Further notes from the December 2012 IASB meeting

19 Dec, 2012

The IASB's December meeting was held in London on 13-17 December 2012, some of it a joint meeting with the FASB. We have posted Deloitte observer notes from Friday's session on insurance contracts and Monday's sessions on IAS 36 and rate-regulated activities.

Click through for direct access to the notes:

Friday, 14 December 2012
Monday, 17 December 2012

You can also access the preliminary and unofficial notes taken by Deloitte observers for the entire meeting.

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The Bruce Column — Focusing on year-end priorities

19 Dec, 2012

ESMA, the European investor protection authority, has made clear the areas which it expects companies and auditors to look upon as priorities in the current round of year-end financial reporting. Our regular columnist Robert Bruce takes a look at how it is laying down the enforcement law.

Stephen Maijoor’s warning was blunt. On the day the European Securities and Markets Authority, (ESMA)—the European investor protection authority which he chairs—issued the details of the enforcement priorities which it would be pursuing in 2013 it also issued a blunt reminder. Maijoor made it clear that ESMA had ‘deliberately issued the European common enforcement priorities before the year-end so that companies and their auditors could – and should – take due consideration of them when preparing and auditing the IFRS financial statements for the year ending December 2012’. And these priorities are just as relevant all around the world.

‘Auditors’, he said, ‘ have an important role to play in assuring investors about a company’s financial position and performance, which is more important than ever for all companies, and especially financial institutions’.

He made it clear he was connecting two important strands. Strong credible financial reporting provides investor protection. But to provide proper comparability around the world you have to have strong and effective enforcement.

‘We strongly believe that financial reporting with strong measurement principles along with entity-specific and relevant disclosures reflecting economic substance are important in underpinning market discipline’ he said. This contributed toward proper investor protection and stability. ‘Market discipline can only be achieved through the development and application of high quality accounting standards’, he said.

Worldwide adoption of IFRS was necessary but was not enough, on its own, to provide global comparability. In order to achieve true global comparability the standards had to be enforced. Research showed that adoption of IFRS resulted in reduced capital costs in the immediate mandatory adoption period and that, in turn, reflected increased disclosure and enhanced information comparability. But, said Maijoor: ‘This is only really the case in countries with strong legal enforcement frameworks’, hence the importance of consistent application across the EU, and ESMA’s efforts to enforce this.

He highlighted several areas of concern. ‘Since the beginning of the financial crisis transparency related to financial instruments is a top priority’, he said. ‘Issuers should provide disaggregated and expanded disclosures on material exposures  to all financial instruments – not only sovereign debt exposures – that are exposed to risk’.

And he emphasised other areas where greater disclosure would be expected.

‘A significant or prolonged decline in fair value triggers the recognition of an impairment loss for equity instruments held in the available-for-sale portfolio’, he pointed out. ‘EU enforcers have observed diverging practices in the application of the relevant criteria and think investors would benefit from more transparency’.  His advice? ‘Please tell them and us what is considered to be a significant or prolonged decline in value’.

He turned to the impairment of non-financial assets. ‘The current economic situation increases the likelihood that the carrying amounts of assets might be higher than their recoverable amounts’, he said. ‘The market value of many listed companies has fallen below their book value, a situation potentially indicating impairment and thus the need for an impairment test. ESMA considers that particular attention has to be paid to the valuation of goodwill and intangible assets with indefinite life spans, whenever significant amounts are recognised in the financial statements’.

He warned on defined benefit obligations. ‘In some countries there is no, or no longer, a deep market in high quality corporate bonds whilst discounted post-employment benefit obligations should be determined with reference to such market’, he said. ‘The crisis and economic downturn resulted in significant swings in market yields for some sovereign and corporate debt. The question could arise whether entities should change their approach when determining discount rates for their post-employment benefit obligations. ESMA would expect issuers to disclose the yields used and provide a description of how they determined them’. ESMA are not just looking at the disclosure. They are looking at how an appropriate discount rate is determined. ESMA’s statement on enforcement priorities makes clear that they do not expect to see companies changing their approach to this determination.

And finally Maijoor looked at provisions within the scope of IAS 37. ‘The measurement of provisions involves significant management judgement and could in the current market circumstances be subject to more uncertainty’, he warned. ‘The strong link between provisions and the risks an issuer is subject to, makes a case for high-quality disclosures’. But he voiced his disappointment at the effectiveness of current disclosure practices. ‘European enforcers often find that only aggregated and boilerplate information is provided. Issuers should disclose for each class of provision the nature of the obligation, the expected timing of the outflows of economic benefits, uncertainties related to the amount and timing of those outflows as well as, if relevant, major assumptions regarding future events’. And that too is relevant all around the world, as observations by the US regulator, the SEC, show.

All of these are well-trodden enforcement priorities. But they have a double importance. They are important as areas which need to be focussed on. But at the same time it provides an example of how global enforcement could develop.

As Maijoor made clear a few days later: ‘A principles-based environment can only survive if clear and entity-specific disclosures, re-assessed at the end of each reporting period, bring useful decision-making information to investors’, he said. ‘If not, detailed prescriptive requirements would need to be developed and we all know that what is important today will not necessarily be so in the next financial year. The only way to avoid this is for issuers to stop providing boilerplate information directly mimicking the standards’.

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