2017

Agenda for the upcoming IFASS meeting

14 Feb 2017

The International Forum of Accounting Standard Setters (IFASS) will meet in Taipei on 2 and 3 March 2017. Major topics on the agenda are implementing "big" standards, IFASS support for consistent application, and research the standard-setters should address.

The meeting offers core sessions and, in addition, evening/late morning optional sessions dedicated to the presentation of activities that have already been presented at other forums.

The agenda is summarised below:

Thursday, 2 March 2017 (09:00-18:15)

  • Opening remarks and objective of the meeting
  • Implementing "big" standards
    • Introduction
    • Presentation: Implementing IFRS 15 and IFRS 16 in the US
    • Group discussions
    • Discussion of group conclusions
  • Treatment of income tax on distribution of dividends
  • IFASS strategy: support for consistent application
    • Introduction
    • Group discussions
    • Discussion of group conclusions
  • High Inflation
  • Optional session: FRC’s triennial review of UK GAAP
  • Optional session: EFRAG reserach on macro hedging


Friday, 3 March 2017 (08:15-16:30)

  • Optional session: IFRS Taxonomy
  • Optional session: IFRS adoption in Korea - 5 years experience and lessons
  • Research: what should standard-setters address?
    • Introduction
    • An economic-based theory of financial reporting: Designing the balance sheet and the income statement to serve investors' need
    • Evidence-based accounting research and standard setting
    • Digital currencies
    • The role and the future of OCI
    • Conclusion
  • Implementation: Case studies on IFRS 15 and IAS 37
    • Introduction
    • Group discussions
    • Discussion of group conclusions
  • Closing remarks

Monitoring Board approves three IFRS Foundation Trustees

13 Feb 2017

The IFRS Foundation Monitoring Board has announced that Else Bos, Su-Keun Kwak, and Guangyao Zhu have been appointed as IFRS Foundation trustees.

Ms Bos fills the European vacancy, and Mr Kwak and Mr Zhu fill the Asia-Oceania vacancies. The terms of all three members became effective on 1 February 2017 and will last for three years.

For more in­for­ma­tion, see the press release on the IASB’s website.

Updated AOSSG survey on the financial reporting practices of Islamic financial institutions

13 Feb 2017

In March 2015, the Asian-Oceanian Standard-Setters Group (AOSSG) released the results of a 2014 survey into the financial reporting standards that Islamic financial institutions (IFIs) are legally required to comply with in their jurisdiction and the extent of compliance. This research has now been updated with 2016 data.

In comparison with the 2014 results, the 2016 data shows a 2% increase in the number of IFIs asserted compliance with IFRS, however, 52% of IFIs still don't use IFRS but apply local GAAP (33%), the accounting standards issued by the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) (17%), or do not specify the accounting standards or law complied with in their financial statements (2%). The study concludes:

The IFIs in the study continued to apply a variety of financial reporting frameworks. As a result, the differing recognition and measurement bases impede users’ ability to meaningfully compare the financial statements. Further efforts must be made to engage with relevant standard-setters and regulators to persuade them of the merits of IFRS compliance. This is all the more important when there may be indications that affected entities in those jurisdictions would prefer IFRS over other frameworks.

Please click for access to the study on the AOSSG website. It offers a general survey of the standards applied and the treatment of the three areas of focus (lessor accounting for ijarah with an arrangement to transfer ownership, classification of customer investment accounts, and recognition and measurement of finance income) for the whole sample as well as findings listed by jurisdiction.

February 2017 IASB meeting agenda posted

10 Feb 2017

The IASB has posted the agenda for its next meeting, which will be held at its offices in London on 22–23 February 2017.

The Board will discuss the following:

  • Insurance contracts.
  • Financial instruments with characteristics of equity.
  • Symmetric prepayment options related to IFRS 9.
  • Due process step followed in the post-implementation review of IFRS 13.
  • Definition of a business.
  • Update on the research programme.
  • Rate-regulated activities.
  • Cash-flow-based measurement techniques, concepts supporting asset and liability definition, and due process related to the Conceptual Framework.
  • IFRS implementation issues related to IFRS 9.

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.

Sue Lloyd appointed new IFRS Interpretations Committee Chair

10 Feb 2017

The Trustees of the IFRS Foundation have announced that Sue Lloyd, IASB Vice-Chair, has been appointed Chair of the IFRS Interpretations Committee with immediate effect.

The position had become vacant with the death of Wayne Upton in September 2016.

Please click for the press release announcing Ms Lloyd's appointment on the IASB website.

The Bruce Column — Pushing stakeholders towards value creation and the long term

09 Feb 2017

Robert Bruce, our regular, resident, columnist reports on moves towards widespread adoption of integrated reporting and the direction taken at the recent joint conference of the International Corporate Governance Network and the International Integrated Reporting Council.

For integrated reporting this year is intended to be a time of strategic initiatives aimed at making the reporting system a principle of corporate governance for the future and a catalyst for a more cohesive reporting system. There is a series of themes developing. There is the question of global adoption of the integrated reporting framework across all sectors; greater technical support to increase the quality of integrated reporting practice; being a catalyst for corporate governance change in the capital markets; facilitating greater alignment of the corporate reporting system; and bringing the concepts of integrated reporting to bear on the policy and regulatory environment. All of this will play out over the year ahead. And these themes were echoed at a gathering late last year where views were shared and the scale of change assessed. 

It was Mervyn King’s words in the opening sessions of the recent joint conference of the International Corporate Governance Network and the International Integrated Reporting Council which brought the most influential sense of change.

King is the guru in such circles and later in the proceedings he was given the ICGN lifetime achievement award. In his opening remarks he emphasised the rapid rate of progress that had been made in recent years. ‘You will not see the word profit in the conference programme’, he said. ‘We have moved from profit to value creation’. And this theme ran through the whole conference.

His words were backed up by the annual global survey* from consultancy Black Sun released during the conference. ‘There is strong indication from executives that attitudes concerning business and stakeholder value creation need to change and that organisations must deliver a purpose beyond profit’, was how it summed it up. ‘Shareholder returns will, as expected, remain crucial for business, but other factors, such as meeting customer expectations and inspiring and engaging people, will significantly grow in importance. Working for the longer-term is cited as preferable over the short-term, and doing this is thought to bring significant internal and external benefits’.

It is a world moving away from narrow measures. Mervyn King made it clear that the traditional financial measures were not up to scratch. For him the importance was that the corporate world should move from ‘the plague of short-term profits to value-creation in a long-term manner’. And, for most people at the conference, this meant properly run companies using the wider models of integrated reporting.

In his opening keynote address the former managing director and CFO of the World Bank, Bertrand Badré, reinforced this: ‘As we continue to struggle in the aftermath of the global financial crisis it remains crucial to focus on tools and practices that can make a difference and contribute to restore trust in the market economy system. Proper corporate governance and integrated reporting can help to achieve this’.

The research from Black Sun amongst senior executives around the world backed this up. ‘Executives also believe that bringing financial and non-financial information together enhances business performance and corporate reporting, but many executives say that their organisations lack reliable tools and techniques for doing this’, it reported. ‘Improved reporting, particularly Integrated Reporting, is viewed by many as a potential driver for future value creation, improved reporting and enhanced business’.

But during the plenary session on aligning the capital market system for the current century’s needs the amount of disconnect between what was actually happening and what it was felt ought to happen became plain. Two votes during the session summed it up. 70% of those voting supported the idea that corporate governance was ‘essential’ for the reform process. David Pitt-Watson, guru in the field of responsible investment and business practice and co-chair of UNEPFI, the UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative, and who headed up the session, agreed but was sceptical that this was a widely held view in the world outside. ‘I have never heard any western leader say that corporate governance is central to the economic system’, was his comment.

The next vote was on which corporate governance issue was the most important one to concentrate upon. Again there was disconnect. Recent Government pronouncements have focused on pay and incentives and the composition of corporate boards, yet these issues attracted just 9% and 5% of the vote. The overwhelming favourite, coming in at 68%, was for getting boards to focus on long-term value and the significance of stakeholder interests. For Jane Diplock, director of Singapore Exchange, this vote essentially squared the circle. ‘It’s about integrated thinking’, she said. ‘It is all about getting businesses to think about their stakeholders as well as their shareholders’.

And the world of integrated reporting has been testing out the views of its stakeholders too. The recent IIRC survey found that 87% of respondents strongly agreed or agreed that integrated reporting promoted ‘a more joined-up and efficient approach to corporate reporting’. The question for the year ahead is how far such views can stretch within the wider market.  It is a great aspiration but it remains to be see whether it is a universally shared one.

* ‘The Value of Value: Board-Level Insights’ is an annual survey of C-Suite members from across the globe, carried out by consultancy Black Sun, which looks into the value of value creation stories inside boardrooms. This year’s edition - ‘Purpose beyond profit’ – was conducted in partnership with AICPA, CIMA and IIRC, with the aim of gauging executives’ views on how their organisations understand, manage and communicate value creation.

AASB Research Forum – IASB keynote presentation and call for expressions of interest

09 Feb 2017

The inaugural research forum of the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB) was held at the University of Technology in Sydney on 24 November 2016. The IASB keynote presentation by IASB Vice-Chair Sue Lloyd is now available for download. At the same time, the AASB has issued a call for expressions of interest regarding the second AASB research forum that will be held in November 2017.

The following papers from the 2016 research forum are available (all links to the IAASB website):

The 2017 research forum will focus on effective communication of financial and narrative reporting. The AASB is now calling for expressions of interest from academics who wish to undertake research for the purpose of presenting and discussing their research at the forum. The AASB is seeking papers that will inform a wide range of audiences from the for-profit and/or not-for-profit sectors by presenting research findings relevant to standard setting. Topics to be covered include:

  • IASB Disclosure initiative project
  • fair value measurement
  • revenue recognition
  • service performance reporting (including the post implementation review of IFRS 13/AASB 13)
  • digital reporting, XBRL, big data
  • recognition, measurement and disclosure of intangible assets
  • integration of financial reporting/explanations and narrative reporting
  • other topics of interest

For more information please see the call for expressions of interest on the AASB website.

Recent sustainability and integrated reporting developments

09 Feb 2017

A summary of recent developments at the GRI, Accountancy Europe, and SEBI.

The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and the international think tank SustainAbility have published the latest insights from the GRI Corporate Leadership Group on Reporting 2025 which explored four key trends fundamental to the UN Sustainable Development Goals: climate change, human rights, wealth inequality, and data and technology. The insights, captured in the report Future Trends in Sustainability Reporting, provide practical guidance to reporting organisations working to respond to the risks and opportunities on the path to a sustainable future. Please click for access to the report on the GRI website.

The GRI has also published an updated version of the GRI Standards/UN Sustainable Development Goals linkage document, which can be downloaded here.

Accountancy Europe has responded to the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB)’s discussion paper Supporting Credibility and Trust in Emerging Forms of External Reporting: Ten Key Challenges for Assurance Engagements. Accountancy Europe does not consider it would be the right approach for the IAASB to develop a lot of detailed standards at present. Any guidance should remain at a high level and focus on consistency of principles already present in the IAASB’s assurance framework and ISAE 3000. Please click to access the response on the website of Accountancy Europe.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has published a circular asking the top 500 listed companies in India to adopt integrated reporting. The circular states: "Today an investor seeks both financial as well as non-financial information to take a well-informed investment decision. An integrated report aims to provide a concise communication about how an organisation's strategy, governance, performance and prospects create value over time." Please click to access the circular on the SEBI website.

IFRS Foundation issues “Debrief” on the IFRS for SMEs

07 Feb 2017

The IFRS Foundation has issued a new Debrief series video on the IFRS for Small and Medium-Sized Entities (IFRS for SMEs). The video features IASB Board member Darrel Scott as he provides an overview of the background to the standard.

Topics discussed in the five minute video include:

  • Why do smaller businesses have different needs?
  • How does the IFRS for SMEs differ from full IFRSs?
  • How widespread is the use of the standard?
  • How has the standard changed since its inception?

For more information, see the Debrief video on the IASB’s website.

Agenda for the March 2017 ASAF meeting

06 Feb 2017

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has released an agenda for the meeting of the Accounting Standards Advisory Forum (ASAF), which is to be held at the IASB's offices in London on 6-7 March 2017.

The agenda for the meeting is sum­marised below:

Monday, 6 March 2017 (10:30-17:30)
  • Rate-regulated activities
    • update on the Board’s deliberations and outline future topics for discussion
  • Definition of a business
    • summary of the feedback on the exposure draft
    • request of members’ advice on the project’s next steps
  • Conceptual Framework
    • summary of tentative decisions
    • any topics/questions the members would like to discuss
  • Insurance contracts
    • ASAF members’ views on how they can support implementation of IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts
  • Dynamic risk management
    • EFRAG findings from research activities

Tuesday, 7 March 2017 (9:00-12:45)

  • Financial instruments with characteristics of equity
    • illustrative examples that demonstrate the practical implications of the model to be proposed in the discussion paper
  • Symmetric prepayment options
    • overview and discussion of the Board’s tentative decisions
  • Primary financial statements
    • scope of the project
    • future topics to be discussed
  • Disclosure initiative
    • update on the Principles of Disclosure discussion paper
    • views on how best the Board can obtain feedback on the discussion paper
  • Project updates and agenda planning

Agenda papers for the meeting are currently being made available on the IASB's website.

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