October

United States "Blue Ribbon" Panel prefers 'GAAP with exceptions' for private companies

13 Oct 2010

The United States Financial Accounting Foundation (FAF) has issued a press release outlining the majority preferred view of the AICPA/FAF/NASBA "Blue Ribbon" Panel on reporting by private companies in the United States.

A majority of the panel believes there is a need for a new standard-setting model that follows Generally Accepted Accounting Practices (GAAP) with exceptions for private companies. In addition, the majority envisions a separate private company standards board under the oversight of the FAF. This outcome is consistent with our earlier stories and appears to confirm the IFRS for SMEs will not be adopted in the United States in the short term.

The Panel's recommendations are expected to be finalised at a meeting in December before a formal report is issued in January 2011, after which the FAF will consider the recommendations and likely call for further constituent comment.

Click for FAF press release (link to FAF website).

Our previous stories on the 'Blue Ribbon' Panel include:

  • 5 October 2010 'AICPA calls for new standards board for private companies'
  • 21 September 2010 'Call for United States not to overlook IFRS for SMEs'
  • 14 September 2010 'Update on United States private company reporting'
  • 6 August 2010 'Blue Ribbon Panel calls for submissions on US private company reporting'

 

Updated EFRAG 'endorsement status report'

13 Oct 2010

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.

Click to download the Endorsement Status Report as of 13 October 2010 (PDF 156k). Currently, the following three IASB pronouncements await endorsement action:
  • IFRS 9 Financial Instruments
  • Amendments to IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures
  • Improvements to IFRSs
You can always find the endorsement status report Here.

 

FASB proposes ASU to improve financial reporting about TDRs

13 Oct 2010

The FASB has released Proposed Accounting Standards Update, Receivables (Topic 310): Clarifications to Accounting for Troubled Debt Restructurings by Creditors.

The proposed ASU provides additional guidance to assist creditors in determining whether a restructuring of a receivable meets the criteria to be considered a troubled debt restructuring (TDR). If finalized, this guidance will help to improve the consistency of applying U.S. GAAP for restructurings. Similar issues do not exist under IFRS, since there is no guidance for TDRs in IFRSs. Deloitte LLP (USA) has published a Heads Up Newsletter FASB Addresses Troubles With Restructurings (PDF 106k) explaining the proposed ASU.

Comments on the proposed ASU are due by 13 December 2010.

Hans Hoogervorst appointed new IASB chairman – first reactions

13 Oct 2010

Following yesterday's announcement that Hans Hoogervorst will succeed Sir David Tweedie on his retirement as chairman of the IASB at the end of June 2011 and that Ian Mackintosh will become vice-chairman, first reactions have been voiced.

Michel Barnier, European Commissioner for Internal Market and Services, welcomes the appointment of Hans Hoogervorst as future Chairman of the IASB: "Hans's background and experience as a minister and supervisor make him well suited to the job, giving him a good understanding for the broader international context in which the IASB operates." (click for full statement)

George Möller, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), calls Hoogervorst's switch "a great pity for the AFM, but a great fortune for him, for the Netherlands and for the IASB." (our translation, click for full statement in Dutch)

Hans Hoogervorst, newly appointed IASB chairman, looks forward to his tasks with the IASB: "The standards are a motor of financial modernization, especially in the emerging markets." Nevertheless, he leaves the AFM "with a pain in the heart". (our translations, click for full statement in Dutch)

Michael Izza, chief executive of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, does not envy the tasks waiting for Hoogervorst: "He, and his future deputy Ian Mackintosh, needs to build on the tremendous progress made by David Tweedie towards achieving a single set of global accounting standards, working towards a positive US decision on adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). At the same time they need to inaugurate the transition to a new and very different phase of international accounting where the quality of existing and new standards is the overriding priority for the Board. They have an unenviable to-do list." (click for full statement)

Baroness Hogg, chairman of the Financial Reporting Council (FRC), welcomes the appointment of Ian Mackintosh as vice-chairman: "This is a critical time in the development of a single set of high quality global accounting standards and I know that Ian's wealth of international experience will be of enormous value to the IASB." (click for full statement)

Insight into Hans Hoogervorst's thinking and an interview with Ian Mackintosh is also available in our new Robert Bruce column.

Trustees appoint Hans Hoogervorst to succeed Sir David Tweedie

12 Oct 2010

The Trustees of the IFRS Foundation, the oversight body of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), today announced the appointment of Hans Hoogervorst as chairman and Ian Mackintosh as vice-chairman of the IASB.

Hans Hoogervorst will succeed Sir David Tweedie on his retirement as chairman of the IASB at the end of June 2011. He is currently chairman of the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), the Dutch securities and market regulator, chairman of the Technical Committee of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) and co-chair of the Financial Crisis Advisory Group (FCAG), an independent body of senior leaders formed to advise accounting standard-setters on their response to the global financial crisis. He will step down from all his present positions in order to join the IASB.

Ian Mackintosh, a former chief accountant of the Australian Securities and Investment Commission, has more than 30 years experience of national and international accounting standard-setting. He is currently chairman of the UK Accounting Standards Board and chairman of the group of national accounting standard-setters, a body in which more than 20 national and regional accounting standard-setting organisations participate.

The new chairman brings a strong understanding of, and an ability to navigate through, the challenges facing the IASB on the path to global IFRS adoption. Mr. Mackintosh's significant experience in the standard-setting field will assist the IASB as it seeks to establish IFRSs as the global standard.

Biographies of Mr. Hoogervorst and Mr. Mackintosh as well as their statements concerning their firm commitment to protecting the independence of the standard-setting process and acting in the interest of investors and other stakeholders are available in the IASB's press release (PDF 34k).

Insight into Hans Hoogervorst's thinking and an interview with Ian Mackintosh is also available in our new Robert Bruce column.

Outcomes from the Second Asian-Oceanian Standard Setters Group Meeting

12 Oct 2010

The Communiqué from the second meeting of the Asian-Oceanian Standard Setters Group (AOSSG), held in Tokyo, Japan on 29-30 September 2010, has been released.

Topics discussed included:

  • Importance of the AOSSG. It was noted that it was important to have greater coordination between Asian-Oceanian standard setters in the development of IFRS. Sir David Tweedie (IASB Chairman) noted input from the region should be given more weight given the strong economic growth and developments throughout the region
  • Administration. Mr. Ikuo Nishikawa (Accounting Standards Board of Japan) and Mr. Kevin Stevenson (Australian Accounting Standards Board) were elected chairman and vice-chairman respectively. A 'Chairman's Advisory Committee' is also to be established
  • Emission trading. The group is to recommended the IASB accelerates finalisation of this project and expands it to include other schemes
  • Islamic finance. The group has identified a number of issues in accounting for Islamic financial transactions and the possible impacts on a country's full adoption of IFRS
  • IASB projects. The group discussed the IASB's projects on consolidation, financial instruments, financial statement presentation, insurance, fair value measurement, leases and revenue recognition
  • Working groups. The group decided to establish a working group on IAS 41 Agriculture.

Click for Communiqué from the meeting (PDF 40k). The next meeting is expected to be held in Australia in 2011, hosted by the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB). Our AOSSG page is Here.

Canadian publication on improving the quality of IFRS financial statements

12 Oct 2010

Deloitte (Canada) has published Enhancing the quality of IFRS financial statements.

This publication presents 10 easy ways to improve the quality of IFRS financial statements, including how information is presented, the level of detail provided and the linkages between disclosures. Overriding considerations such as the use of 'plain English' and clear explanations are also discussed.

Click for:

 

Duck-Koo Chung to serve as Trustee of the IFRS Foundation

12 Oct 2010

The IFRS Foundation, the oversight body of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), today confirmed the appointment of Duck-Koo Chung to serve as a Trustee of the IFRS Foundation for an initial three-year term, with effect from 1 January 2011.

Duck-Koo Chung is a former Minister of Commerce, Industry and Energy for the Republic of Korea. He is a visiting professor of international finance at Korea University and Renmin University in Beijing, Republic of China, and a founding member of the North East Asian Research (NEAR) Foundation, a research group comprising, Chinese, Japanese and Korean international finance experts.

Jeffrey Lucy (Australia) and Pedro Malan (Brazil) have been reappointed to serve as Trustees of the IFRS Foundation. More information is available in the IASB's press release (PDF 35k).

The Bruce Column – Hans Hoogervorst and Ian Mackintosh: Some insights into their thinking

11 Oct 2010

The much anticipated announcement that when Sir David Tweedie steps down from his ten year tenure as Chairman of the IASB at the end of June next year it will indeed be Hans Hoogervorst who takes over as Chairman with Ian Mackintosh as his Deputy means that the Tweedie tradition of independence and pragmatism will be upheld.

Hoogervorst is a man of great political experience as both a former Dutch finance minister and securities regulator. "I have investor protection in my DNA", he said on his appointment. "I strongly believe that a global set of accounting standards, set for investors by an independent standard-setter, is an essential component for the world's financial markets. These will remain my priorities".

And he has made his views clear in the past. "Accounting standard setters can be expected to maintain a pragmatic approach in problems concerning fair value accounting and provisioning", he has said. "But it is equally clear that accounting rules cannot make stable what is inherently unstable".

And Ian Mackintosh is of a similar view. I interviewed him just before he headed off to the Trustees' meeting in Korea which confirmed the appointments.

Mackintosh is a thoughtful character of great experience. Talking to him last week he advanced the title of a book written by a former Sri Lankan Minister of Justice as summing up his philosophy for the future. It is called: 'A Warm Heart, A Cool Head, And a Deep Breath'. Mackintosh adapts it to his task ahead. "Have the right intentions," he says. "Think it through and don't jump in".

These are calm and thoughtful words from a man who will be taking up one of the most fraught positions in the accountancy world. And he does not underestimate the task ahead. First up is the work programme which was pledged by both the IASB and FASB to the G20 Group of Finance Ministers in the aftermath of the financial crisis. "The IASB and the FASB will probably make it through to their reduced target in June 2011", he said. It is a huge challenge and there are formidable obstacles. "But the big question", he said, "is convergence on financial instruments". In the US, as he points out, FASB has come under considerable pressure. "FASB got 1900 responses to its proposals", he says.

Then there is the question of whether or not the US will join with much of the rest of the world in allowing its major companies to adopt IFRS. It all depends on the main US regulatory body, the SEC. "The next big step is from the SEC as to whether they will adopt or not", he says. His view is an optimistic one. He is, after all, an optimist by nature. "I think that they will", he says, "in some form. It's a hope and a belief".

Other consequences would follow. "The IASB will have to map out how it absorbs the US into its family", he says. "And that is when the real work will start". He sees this as his defining task at the IASB. "It is the beginning of another sort of work", he says. "All the countries which adopt IFRS have their own problems and the US is just so much bigger". His optimism comes to the fore again. "But the problems can be overcome". Have the right intentions, think it through and don't jump in will be his guiding light.

He has the experience, and it is global experience. He has been a keen supporter of idea of the fledgling Asian-Oceanic Standard Setters Group as a means of re-balancing power in the standard-setting world, which has long been dominated by the two blocs of Europe and the US. He is a New Zealander and has been involved in the standard-setting world for years. He has been a Deputy Chairman of the Australian Accounting Standards Board and was a member of its Urgent Issues Task Force. A decade ago he became Chief Accountant of the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and was then Manager, Financial Management, South Asia, at the World Bank. He has also taken a keen interest in accounting standards for the public sector. He has chaired both the Australian Public Sector Accounting Standards Board and the IFAC Public Sector Committee. And since August 2004 he has been Chairman of the UK Accounting Standards Board where he has diplomatically steered a careful course towards a coherent set of domestic standards and the use of the IFRS for SMEs.

All this comes at a time when politicians are looking into the role of accounting in the financial crisis. Hoogervorst showed himself to be a forceful and diplomatic character through his co-chairing of the Financial Crisis Advisory Group, which was set up by the IASB and FASB to consider financial reporting issues arising from the crisis. And, as his words to the International Centre for Financial Regulation earlier this year show, he is a determined character with a strong view of the value of good financial reporting.

This is what he said about the aims of financial reporting on that occasion: "The object of financial reporting is to provide as accurate a picture as possible of the financial position of a company or organisation", he said. "I deliberately say 'as accurate as possible', because financial reporting is not an exact science. Asset valuation is in many respects more of an art than a science. Accountants and their standards should therefore always be pragmatic, with a tilt towards conservatism. If one knows that valuation necessarily involves judgement, it is better to be safe than to be sorry".

And he followed that up with some warning words, particularly for politicians: "Despite these relativist comments, it is of great importance that strict and objective accounting rules exist", he said. "Firstly to prevent manipulation of figures, and secondly to increase the comparability of the financial performance of entities.

"It would be logical to assume that if accounting rules are intended to lead to as accurate a picture as possible, that these should be essentially equal for all parties, whether they are companies, governments or foundations. They should also have an equal value for all interested parties, irrespective of whether they are investors, depositors or prudential regulators. But this is exactly where opinions begin to differ.

"First of all, accounting rules are not the same for everybody. The problems surrounding the Greek government budget show that the financial reporting of governments is still at a stage of primitive anarchy. Although the deception with respect to the Greek budget was extreme, the tricks applied were certainly not unique. In the run-up to EMU, many Euro countries applied tricks that, in the world of business, would irrevocably have led to legal sanctions.

"Only a few governments recognise future social security expenses in the state balance sheet, even if they are legally binding. If they did, it would be clear that government finances in the Western world are in an even more alarming condition than they already appear to be. This explains why few fervent supporters of accounting orthodoxy can be found among politicians".

Robert Bruce
October 2010

Related links

 

Newsletter on IASB proposal on severe hyperinflation

11 Oct 2010

Deloitte's IFRS Global Office has published an IFRS in Focus Newsletter – IASB issues Exposure Draft on First-time Adoption of IFRSs after a period of Severe Hyperinflation.

This newsletter describes the recent IASB proposal on severe hyperinflation. The exposure draft proposes that when an entity's date of transition to IFRSs is on, or after, the functional currency normalisation date, the entity may elect to measure assets and liabilities at fair value on the date of transition to IFRSs and use that fair value as the deemed cost of those assets and liabilities in the opening IFRS statement of financial position.

Comments are due by 30 November 2010.

Click for:

 

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