November

No political interference in accounting standards

12 Nov 2008

The International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN) has issued a public statement on the global financial crisis. The statement, released ahead of the 15 November 2008 international summit on the crisis, calls on the leaders involved to include strengthened corporate governance as part of a package of measures aimed at restoring confidence to markets.

ICGN members are largely institutional investors who collectively represent funds under management in excess of US$15 trillion. The ICGN statement expressly rejects any political interference in setting accounting standards:

Accounting standards: There must be no political interference in setting accounting standards. The fair value approach has been blamed for encouraging pro-cyclicality. Investors generally support fair value that delivers a picture of what is actually happening. There are some challenges to address, but abandoning this approach would damage confidence in financial reporting. It is important to recognise that there is a difference between fair value used for reporting and fair value used to measure the need for regulatory capital. Accounting standards also need to be clearer about when off-balance sheet business should be reported.

Click to view the Public Statement on the Global Financial Crisis (PDF 62k).

Heads Up on presentation discussion paper

12 Nov 2008

Deloitte (United States) has published a special issue of the Heads Up newsletter discussing the joint IASB-FASB Discussion Paper (DP) on financial statement presentation.

The goal of the project is to create a standard that requires entities to organise financial statements in a manner that clearly communicates an integrated financial picture of the entity. Click to download the Heads Up newsletter (PDF 143k).

 

iGAAP 2008: IFRS for Canada

12 Nov 2008

Deloitte & Touche LLP (Canada) has developed iGAAP 2008: IFRS for Canada, which has been published by CCH.

It is a comprehensive reference book on the convergence of Canadian GAAP with IFRS. It is essential reading for accounting professionals, as well as others who need to understand the implications of Canada's IFRS conversion on their organisation. Written for Canadians by Canadian practitioners, the book provides a roadmap to help companies understand how to effectively transition from Canadian GAAP to IFRS. It can be purchased through www.cch.ca/product.aspx?WebID=2424.

ARC recommends delayed use of IFRIC 12 in EU

11 Nov 2008

The European Commission's Accounting Regulatory Committee (ARC) met on 6 November 2008.

While the official summary record of the meeting has not yet been posted on the EC website, observers at the meeting have indicated that the ARC reached the following decision with respect to IFRIC 12 Service Concession Arrangements: The European Commission should endorse IFRIC 12 for mandatory use in Europe starting in 2010. The IASB's effective date for IFRIC 12 was annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2008. More specifically, the ARC recommended that IFRIC 12 should be mandatory for an EU company's first financial year that begins after formal endorsement by the Commission. If endorsement happens, as expected, in January 2009, that would mean that IFRIC 12 would be effective in Europe in 2010. The ARC recommended that early application be permitted.

EU heads of state urge reform of IASB

11 Nov 2008

The heads of state or government of the EU member countries met in Brussels on 7 November 2008 to discuss a coordinated EU response to the credit crisis.

The meeting was also, in part, preparation for the upcoming Meeting of the G20 heads of state in Washington on 15 November. In their Report of the EU Leaders' Meeting (PDF 101k), the leaders reaffirmed their resolve to 'devise long-term ways of reforming the international financial system'. The leaders also agreed that Europe should introduce a set of 'principles on which to build a new international financial system' for discussion at the upcoming G20 meeting. The principles are:
  1. No financial institution, no market segment and no jurisdiction must escape proportionate and adequate regulation or at least oversight
  2. The new international financial system must be based on principles of accountability and transparency.
  3. The new international financial system must allow risks to be assessed so as to prevent crises.
  4. Give the IMF a central role in a more efficient financial architecture.

Relating to principle 2 above, the EU leaders said:

2. The new international financial system must be based on principles of accountability and transparency.

  • Transparency of financial transactions must be ensured by means of a more comprehensive information system, which no longer omits vast swathes of financial activity from auditable, certifiable accounts.
  • Arrangements conducive to excessive risk-taking must be overhauled, particularly debt securitisation procedures and pay policy.
  • Both prudential and accounting standards applicable to financial institutions will have to be revised to ensure that they do not contribute to creating speculative bubbles in periods of growth and make the crisis worse at times of economic downturn.
  • Standards bodies, in particular in the area of accountancy, will have to be reformed to allow a genuine dialogue with all the parties concerned, in particular prudential authorities.

The EU leaders also urged that the G20 adopt 'adopt the principle of convergence of accounting standards and review the application in the financial sector of the fair value rule in order to improve its consistency with prudential rules'.

IFRIC agenda pages are updated

10 Nov 2008

We have updated the following IFRIC agenda issues pages to reflect the discussions and decisions at the meeting of the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee on 6 November 2008.

 

Simplifying the IFRS for Private Entities

10 Nov 2008

We have posted an article by Paul Pacter, the IASB's Director of Standards for Private Entities (who is also webmaster of IAS Plus) about Simplifying the IFRS for Private Entities.

Paul's article (PDF 226k), which was published in Financial Executive magazine November 2008 issue, reviews the decisions made by the IASB in the past six months to further simplify the IFRS for Private Entities. Those decisions are based on the Board's consideration of:

  • the 162 letters of comment on the exposure draft
  • the results of field tests of the ED by 116 small companies
  • recommendations of the IASB's Working Group on the project
  • further staff research since publication of the ED

The article also identifies the remaining steps for completion of the standard and comments on the possibility of using the standard in the United States. The article is copyright by Financial Executives International, and we have posted it on IAS Plus with their kind permission.

Our views on the Annual Improvements ED

09 Nov 2008

Deloitte has submitted to the IASB a comment letter on the IASB's Exposure Draft of Proposed Improvements to IFRSs 2008.

We welcome and support the IASB's continuing improvements process as a way of dealing with certain amendments to IFRSs in an efficient and effective manner. And we are supportive of most of the proposals in the ED. Our letter takes issue with three of the proposals, as noted in the box below.

The three improvements with which we have some concerns are the following:

  • We do not agree with the proposal in IAS 7 Statement of Cash Flows for basing the classification of expenditures as cash flows from investing activities on recognition of an asset in the statement of financial position and believe this has significant impact for certain entities and industries. We believe that the question of classification of cash flows in the statement of cash flows would be better addressed in the IASB's project on financial statement presentation.
  • In addition, we believe the proposed guidance in IAS 18 Revenue on determining whether an entity is acting as a principal or as an agent does not establish a principle underlying the list of indicators provided and hence, will not resolve many of the issues that arise in practice.
  • Finally, we believe the proposed change of guidance in IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement for determining whether a non-financial contract contains a separable embedded foreign currency derivative could be improved. We acknowledge that determining whether such embedded derivatives require separation has proved problematic in practice and therefore the requirement does need improvement. However, we do not believe the current proposed wording will establish the necessary clarity. We have provided an alternative wording that uses the indicators provided in the proposed Basis for Conclusions which we believe would make the amendment clear and operational.

Click to view Deloitte's Comment Letter on the IASB's Exposure Draft of Proposed Improvements to IFRSs 2008 (PDF 175k).

EC working party on derivatives begins its work

09 Nov 2008

The European Commission's Working Party on Derivatives held its first meeting on 5 November 2008. The goal of the group is to develop, by the end of this year, a plan for the centralised clearing of credit default swaps (CDS) across the EU.

While the group will focus primarily on market operation and regulation, it intends also to focus on 'how to ensure adequate information and supervision by regulators'. The group is composed of representatives from the industry and many European regulators. Click for the Meeting Report (PDF 67k).

Notes from the November 2008 IFRIC meeting

08 Nov 2008

The International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee (IFRIC) met at the IASB's offices in London on Thursday 6 November 2008. Presented below are the preliminary and unofficial notes taken by Deloitte observers at the meeting.

Among IFRIC's key decisions were the following:
  • The IFRIC approved an Interpretation based on D24 Customer Contributions;
  • A potential topic on REACH costs was referred to the staff for more work, principally to identify an underlying principle;
  • Tentative agenda items issued in September were finalised;
  • A proposal for an Interpretation on the effects of rate regulation was tentatively rejected; the topic will not be referred to the IASB.

Notes from the IFRIC Meeting6 November 2008

gpeg.gif Introduction

The minutes of the September 2008 IFRIC meeting were approved.

gpeg.gif D24 Customer Contributions (Transfers of Assets from Customers)

The IFRIC approved an Interpretation based on that exposed in D24 Customer Contributions.

Title

The IFRIC agreed that the title of the Interpretation should be changed to refer to 'transfers' of assets from customers. This is because, in many jurisdictions, 'contributions' are non-reciprocal transactions. The transaction being addressed by this Interpretation is a reciprocal transaction.

Consensus

Control of an asset

Much of the discussion centred on whether an asset can be recognised by the recipient. The IFRIC was presented with wording revised since the Observer Notes were released. The revised wording concentrates on the definition of an asset in the IASB Framework. The IFRIC concluded that references to IAS 17 and IFRIC 4 were confusing and detracted from the issue being articulated in D24: who controls the asset transferred?

The IFRIC noted that paragraph 49(a) of the IASB Framework states that an asset is a resource 'controlled by the entity as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity.'

The IFRIC thought that a key indicator of control of an item of property, plant and equipment would be that the entity is responsible for the repair, maintenance, upgrade and replacement of the item transferred.

The IFRIC agreed that if an item of property, plant and equipment received by a service provider meets the definition of an asset, it should be recognised as an asset by the recipient at its transfer date fair value.

Accounting for the credit

The IFRIC agreed that, should the item of property, plant and equipment meet the definition of an asset of the recipient, the credit side of the recognition entry would be a component of revenue.

IFRIC members suggested that the Interpretation should clarify use of the term 'the customer.' Currently, the drafting has been simplified so that 'customer' includes both the entity transferring the item of property, plant and equipment and the entity receiving on-going services through the item transferred. IFRIC members noted that, in many cases, the entity transferring the item of property, plant and equipment will have no further association with the item and that using one term to describe two or more parties might cause more confusion than it was intended to avoid.

Much of the discussion centred on whether that revenue was earned as the result of a single or multiple element transaction. If there was a multiple element transaction, some portion of the revenue would be deferred and amortised over the related service period. However, if there was a single element transaction immediate recognition of revenue would be required.

The IFRIC requested that the Interpretation clarify that what the customer receives (e.g. when an office building is connected to the power grid) is the ongoing access to the distribution network, not the goods or services provided by that network. The goods and services (e.g. electrical power) are usually the subject of a separate transaction between the distributor and the customer. Only when connection to the distribution network is bundled with a preferential rate for the future supply of services would the transaction be treated as a multiple element transaction and unbundled in to its constituent elements.

IFRIC members were concerned that some of the terminology confused this intention, especially in situations in which the distributor had a statutory obligation to supply to all customers connected to its distribution network. The IFRIC agreed that the Interpretation should be clarified to avoid the inference that an obligation would be created by a connexion to a distribution network.

Effective date and transition

The IFRIC agreed that the Interpretation should be effective three months after it is issued. The transition provisions caused more discussion, with some IFRIC members favouring some degree of retrospective application. However, there were others who expressed reservations about this approach on practicability grounds and because of the use of hindsight in determining fair value.

The IFRIC agreed that the Interpretation should apply to transfers of assets within the scope of the Interpretation occurring on or after the effective date (i.e., prospective application only).

Re-exposure

The IFRIC discussed whether re-exposure was necessary. Although there have been some significant changes to the consensus, the IFRIC agreed with the staff analysis of the IFRIC's criteria for re-exposure that re-exposure was not necessary. However, the IFRIC staff agreed that they would publicise the post-approval steps to a greater extent than usual, which would delay the issuance of the Interpretation until January 2009 (see next steps, below).

Approval

Subject to drafting, the IFRIC approved the Interpretation, with one member dissenting.

Next steps

In response to requests from IFRIC members, the IFRIC staff agreed to:

  • Highlight the release of the 'near-final draft' of the Interpretation on the IASB's Website (in mid-December 2008) for longer than normal. Although this document would not represent an Invitation to Comment, any comments received would be considered by the IFRIC in January 2009.
  • Refer the Interpretation to the IASB for approval in January 2009 (rather than December 2008).

 

gpeg.gif Compliance Costs for REACH (European Commission Regulation Concerning the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals)

The staff introduced a paper on accounting for costs incurred to comply with the requirements of the European Regulation concerning the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH). The IFRIC in July 2008 tentatively agreed to add the issue to its agenda and asked the staff to provide additional analysis on the basis of broader principles. The purpose of this session was to make a decision whether the item meets the IFRIC's criteria for adding it to the agenda in the light of the analysis provided by the staff.

The staff continued to introduce the background and regulation mechanisms of REACH noting that entities that have to comply with the regulation would regularly incur significant costs, particularly in connection with the technical dossier and safety tests required by the regulation. This was confirmed by some of the IFRIC members.

The staff noted that there is no specific guidance in IFRSs that would address schemes like REACH. The key accounting issues identified were:

  • Should a provision for expected REACH costs be recognised?
  • Should REACH costs be expensed or capitalised as an intangible asset?

 

Regarding the first issue it was noted that there was general consensus amongst constituents that expected REACH costs should not be provided for.

On the second issue the IFRIC had a discussion over how to distinguish between REACH costs and other costs of compliance if one would go down a capitalisation route.

Again, it was confirmed that the costs are generally significant (ranging between 50.000 to 1 million per substance), leading entities to gather in consortia to share costs. Another IFRIC member noted that the first couple of years will be particularly significant when companies have to register existing substances.

Many IFRIC members asked whether there was a distinguishing feature of REACH costs compared to general compliance costs and whether such a feature could be used for developing a wider principle for a wider range of situations. One IFRIC member noted that one such feature could be that the registration is specific to the contract. Members acknowledged that a wide range of such regulation schemes existed across the globe.

The Chairman reminded the IFRIC that addressing a jurisdictional matter without an underlying principle would lead to further submissions that could not be turned down because they are jurisdiction-specific.

There was some uncertainty around the table about the mechanism of REACH when a substance was actually registered. Some believed other market participants could then use the substance without further costs. Others opposed to this. The staff was asked to follow up on this.

The IFRIC then turned to the question on how to proceed with this issue. Some wanted to expand the scope of the issue others tried to narrow it down with the intent to find a consensus on a timely basis. It was agreed that any narrow scope should be 'natural' and not artificial.

The staff was asked to bring this issue back and find characteristics based on the REACH scheme that would be a starting point for the scope of a potential project. It was also asked to look at cost-sharing agreements in consortia and also whether an asset exists.

gpeg.gif Customer-related Intangible Assets

At the last IFRIC meeting it was agreed to tentatively add to the agenda a project on accounting for customer-related intangible assets with regard to the contractual/non-contractual notion. This session aimed to identify a scope for a possible interpretation.

The staff began to talk the IFRIC through the agenda paper. The staff highlighted that the issue arises in practice when determining the meaning of 'non-contractual' customer relationship and the link to contractual customer relationship.

The IFRIC discussed at length the question what would be subsumed under both notions and whether the approach taken in IFRS 3 (Revised) – ie, separating from goodwill any non-contractual customer relationship that is separable).

The IFRIC finally agreed to refer this issue to the Board with a recommendation to remove the distinction in IFRS 3 (Revised) and IAS 38 between contractual and non-contractual customer relationships.

gpeg.gif Review of Tentative Agenda Decisions published in September 2008 IFRIC Update

IAS 39: – Restricted securities

The IFRIC confirmed the wording of the tentative agenda decision published in the September IFRIC Update.

IFRIC 14 - Stable workforce assumption

The IFRIC confirmed its decision not to take the issue originally submitted on its agenda.

On a different issue identified by the staff during the deliberations of the submission the staff acknowledged that this issue causes problems in cases where an entity voluntarily prepays contributions under a minimum funding requirement, but proposed to address this issue in the upcoming ED/Standard on employee benefits accounting as a result of the IASB's discussion paper on this area.

One IFRIC member noted that this would not happen before 2011 and highlighted that the numbers produced would be wrong and IFRIC would confirm this, but not fix it. This member was sympathetic to address this issue before any improved Standard on pension accounting. Most IFRIC members shared this view.

Finally, it was decided to propose an amendment to IFRIC 14 with regard to paragraph 22 of the agenda to resolve the issue described above.

gpeg.gif Staff Recommendations for Tentative Agenda Decision

Regulatory assets and liabilities

The staff presented the IFRIC with its recommendation on regulatory assets and liabilities based on the background information research it undertook. The staff's proposal was not to add the item to the IFRIC's agenda, but to refer it to the Board with a recommendation to add it to the agenda.

It was acknowledged that this issue was of particular relevance for jurisdictions moving towards IFRS that, under local GAAP, recognised regulatory assets and liabilities.

The IFRIC had some discussion on whether such assets and liabilities exist at all or only in very rare circumstances. Some IFRIC members had strong views on this issue. It was noted that the ability to charge favourable prices in the future does not create an asset as their realisation depended on future revenues; nor does the requirement to charge a lower price in the future create a liability (unless the contract is made onerous thereby).

Many IFRIC members disagreed with the staff analysis while agreeing with the staff's recommendation not to add the item to the agenda.

It was noted that this issue can be addressed using existing Standards, but there was no divergence in practice under IFRS as such items are only rarely recognised by entities using IFRS.

Ultimately, the IFRIC agreed by a majority vote tentatively not to add the item to the agenda and not to recommend that the item be referred to the IASB.

IAS 32 – Classification of puttable and perpetual instruments

The staff presented the IFRIC with a submission on the revised version of IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Presentation. The submission asked whether an entity can have more than one class of equity instruments under the revised Standard where one class is a puttable instrument. The scenario described in the submission assumed a perpetual instrument meeting the definition of an equity instrument in IAS 32 and a puttable instrument that would be a deemed equity instrument under the amended provisions.

The staff brought forward two possible views:

  • Perpetual instruments classified as equity do not prohibit an entity from classifying puttable instruments as equity provided the criteria in IAS 32.16A/B are met
  • Perpetual instruments classified as equity prohibit puttable instruments from being classified as equity at the same time since the criterion in IAS 32.16A(c) is not met.

 

There was consensus around the IFRIC that the first view was in line with the Standard. It was agreed that the agenda decision as drafted should clearly that the existence of more than one class of equity is possible under IAS 32.

IAS 28 Associates – Potential effect of IFRS 3 and IAS 27 (as revised in 2008) on equity method accounting

The staff noted that the FASB's Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) added EITF Issue No. 08-6 Equity Method Investment Accounting Considerations to its agenda. This draft EITF addresses several potential issues arising from the issue of the revised business combination standards (these are in large parts converged between US GAAP and IFRS).

Four issues are addressed:

  • How the initial carrying value of an equity method investment should be determined
  • How an impairment assessment of an underlying indefinite-lived intangible asset of an equity method investment should be performed
  • How an equity method investee's issuance of shares should be accounted for
  • How to account for a change in an investment from the equity method to the cost method.

 

The IFRIC had some discussion in principle over the equity method of accounting and issues arising from its application. With regard to the four issues the EITF had identified the IFRIC agreed that the staff should come back with further analysis on the issues of determining the initial carrying amount of an equity method investment and how an equity method investee's issuance of shares should be accounted for. For the remaining two issues the IFRIC will issue a tentative agenda decision not to take them on the agenda.

IAS 39 – Derecognition

The IFRIC decided to remove this item from its agenda in the light of the IASB's project on the topic.

Fair Value Measurement of Financial Instruments in Inactive Markets – Determining the Discount Rate

This was a late entry. The submission specifically asked the IFRIC to address the issue at the November IFRIC meeting as it related to the current market conditions. The IFRIC coordinator informed the IFRIC that the submitter published the submission on its website and hence, normal rules of confidentiality were not relevant. It was noted that the approach presented in the submission was, according to the submission, broadly agreed with by non-accounting standard setting authorities in the jurisdiction the issue had arisen.

The submission was seeking for IFRIC's input on determining the components of a discount rate to be used to determine fair value using a discounted cash flow approach for instruments where markets are considered inactive. In particular, two specific components were identified and a possible approach to that proposed: credit and liquidity spreads that are not observable in a market.

The staff noted that it was clear that any guidance would be more like implementation guidance and that IFRIC generally does not add items to the agenda where the output would be implementation guidance. In addition, it was highlighted that the Board has several activities on its agenda in relation to determining fair value.

One IFRIC member noted that the proposed agenda decision wording was not strong enough in the light of the possibility of being interpreted as implicit consent to the proposed approach. This member proposed to be explicit that the agenda decision should be clear that this approach is not acceptable. It was also noted that the IASB's Expert Advisory Panel has published guidance on this, which was generally considered useful albeit not authoritative and that the agenda decision should refer to the output of the panel published recently.

The IFRIC agreed not to add the item to the agenda, but to change the wording of the tentative agenda decision to:

  • Make explicit reference to the final report of the IASB's Expert Advisory Panel
  • Make clear that the approach presented was not consistent with the measurement objective and the guidance in IAS 39.

 

gpeg.gif Administrative Session – IFRIC work in progress

The IFRIC coordinator debriefed the IFRIC on the current status of the work in progress.

This summary is based on notes taken by observers at the IFRIC meeting and should not be regarded as an official or final summary.

 

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.