September

IASB publishes errata on IBOR amendments

17 Sep 2020

The IASB has published errata on 'Interest Rate Benchmark Reform — Phase 2'.

The errata affect the numbering of paragraphs in IFRS 9 Financial instruments.

Editorial corrections and errata do not change the meaning or application of pronouncements, but instead correct inadvertent errors. The list of errata can be viewed on the editorial corrections page of the IASB's website.

EFRAG questionnaire on goodwill

14 Sep 2020

The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) has published a questionnaire and an invitation for interviews for preparers with active mergers and acquisitions agendas or material goodwill amounts in their financial statements.

The purpose is to collect input on the proposals in the IASB's discussion paper DP/2020/1 Business Combinations — Disclosures, Goodwill and Impairment and on EFRAG’s suggestions included in its draft comment letter.

Responses on the survey are requested by 26 October 2020. Please click for more information and access to the survey on the EFRAG website.

Please note that the deadline for responses has been extended to 13 November 2020.

September 2020 IASB meeting agenda posted

11 Sep 2020

The IASB has posted the agenda for its next meeting, which will be held via video conference on 22–23 September 2020. There are six topics on the agenda.

The Board will discuss the following:

  • Board work plan update
  • Maintenance and consistent application
  • Rate-regulated activities
  • Management commentary
  • Business combinations under common control
  • Extractive activities

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.

IFAC calls for IASB sister board for setting global sustainability standards

11 Sep 2020

The International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) has released 'Enhancing Corporate Reporting: The Way Forward' calling for the creation of a new sustainability standards board that would exist alongside the IASB under the IFRS Foundation.

IFAC calls for the IFRS Foundation to create an International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB). This new Board could leverage the independence and success of IFRS governance to develop global standards and rationalise the current fragmented ecosystem. As with the IASB, clear support from global institutions like IOSCO and appropriate funding would be critical to success. Under the structure the IFAC envisions, the IASB would remain focused on financial reporting standards and coordinate with the ISSB to avoid overlaps and gaps.

The ISSB itself would adopt a “building blocks” approach, working with and leveraging the expertise and disclosure requirements of leading initiatives, including CDP, CDSB, GRI, IIRC, and SASB. These building blocks would consist of:

  • Requirements for material non-financial information focused on company performance, risk profile, economic decisions and enterprise value creation.
  • Collaboration with respect to reporting requirements designed to address broader, material sustainable development and company impacts on economy, environment, and people. These requirements may ultimately be incorporated or endorsed into ISSB standards.
  • Supplemental jurisdictional requirements to support local public accountability.

Financial and non-financial information would be connected through a common conceptual framework.

The IFAC notes that the time for a global solution is now — to answer the demand from investors, policymakers and other stakeholders for a reporting system that delivers consistent, comparable, reliable, and assurable information relevant to enterprise value creation, sustainable development and evolving expectations. A fragmented approach would perpetuate inefficiency, increased cost, and a lack of trust. Therefore, the IFAC argues, that important work that is currently underway should be continued, but with the aim of ultimately contributing to the emerging global system.

Please click to access Enhancing Corporate Reporting: The Way Forward on the IFAC website.

Towards comprehensive corporate reporting

11 Sep 2020

Five internationally significant framework- and standard-setting institutions (CDP, CDSB, GRI, IIRC, and SASB) have published a statement of intent to work together towards a comprehensive corporate reporting system.

While GRI, SASB, CDP and CDSB set the frameworks and standards for sustainability disclosure, including climate-related reporting, along with the TCFD recommendations, the IIRC provides the integrated reporting framework that connects sustainability disclosure to reporting on financial and other capitals.

These organisations have now declared their intent to provide:

  • joint market guidance on how the frameworks and standards can be applied in a complementary and additive way;
  • a joint vision of how these elements could complement financial generally accepted accounting principles (financial GAAP) and serve as a natural starting point for progress towards a more coherent, comprehensive corporate reporting system; and
  • joint commitment to drive toward this goal, through an ongoing programme of deeper collaboration between them, and a stated willingness to engage closely with other interested stakeholders.

The “big picture” view of the relationship between the standards and frameworks, including their relationship to the IASB and FASB standards, foresees an approach to standard-setting that results in a globally agreed set of sustainability topics and related disclosure requirements under a rigorous and ongoing standard-setting due processes that will result in high-quality global standards.

The comprehensive corporate reporting system the paper envisions would then see three nested sets of reporting:

  • Reporting on matters that reflect the organisation’s significant impacts on the economy, environment and people;
  • reporting on the sub-set of sustainability topics that are material for enterprise value creation; and
  • reporting that is already reflected in the financial accounts.

Reporting already reflected in the annual accounts would continue to be the remit of IASB and FASB and the subset of sustainability topics that are material for enterprise value creation would be covered by CDSB and SASB. Both sets would be connected by an overarching integrated reporting framework. GRI Standards would enable companies to report sustainability information that describes their significant impacts on the economy, environment, or people, and hence their contributions towards sustainable development and could also be used to describe impacts on the company. CDP would fill the crucial role of technology in reporting and enable access for all stakeholders to corporate performance on sustainability topics. The standards rsulting from this comprehensive reporting system would enable companies to collect information about performance on a given sustainability topic once but provide relevant information to different users through appropriate communication channels.

Please click to access the joint press release and statement of intent (external link).

In addition, see Deloitte's Purpose-driven Business Reporting in Focus — Progress towards a comprehensive corporate reporting system.

Pre-meeting summaries for the September 2020 IFRS Interpretations Committee meeting

10 Sep 2020

The IFRS Interpretations Committee will meet via video conference on Tuesday 15 September 2020 to discuss two topics.

IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements and IFRS 16 Leases—Sale and Leaseback in a Corporate Wrapper: The Committee received a submission asking about the applicability of the sale and leaseback requirements in IFRS 16 to a transaction in which an entity sells its equity interest in a subsidiary that holds only a real estate asset and then leases that real estate asset back. The submitter asked as to how the gain or loss on disposal should be recognised. The staff concluded that the principles and requirements in IFRS 10 and IFRS 16 provide an adequate basis to determine that the transaction is a sale and leaseback and that the requirements in IFRS 16 apply. On that basis the staff recommend that the Committee not add the matter to its agenda.

IAS 12 Income Taxes—Deferred Tax arising from a Single Transaction: In July 2019, the Board published Exposure Draft ED/2019/5 Deferred Tax related to Assets and Liabilities arising from a Single Transaction (Amendments to IAS 12).The staff analysed the respondents' feedback to the ED and will present the preliminary proposed recommendations to the Committee for advice.

Work in progress: The staff are analysing requests related to the hedge of variability in cash flows in real terms and configuration or customisation costs in a cloud computing arrangement.

The full agenda for the meeting can be found here. We will update this page for any changes to the agenda and our Deloitte pre-meeting summaries for the meeting as they become available.

EFRAG agrees on draft endorsement advice on IFRS 17

10 Sep 2020

In a public meeting, the Board of the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) agreed today to publish positive a draft endorsement advice (DEA) on IFRS 17 'Insurance Contracts'.

The Board achieved consensus on all issues with the exception of annual cohorts, with nine Board members voting in favour of the cohorts meeting the endorsement criteria and seven members disagreeing. The actual letter containing the DEA is not expected until October as questions to constituents still need to be agreed. Stakeholders will be given four months to comment on the DEA. A final advice will be aimed for by the end of March 2021.

Summary report of a field-test workshop with financial institutions on the IASB's PFS proposals

09 Sep 2020

EFRAG, in close coordination with the European national standard-setters and the IASB, is conducting field-tests of the IASB proposals included in the Exposure Draft ED/2019/7 'General Presentation and Disclosures' published in December 2019. A report is now available from a field-test workshop held held with financial institutions on 7 July 2020.

Participants of the field-test were asked to apply the IASB's proposals to their financial statements and answer a questionnaire from EFRAG and the IASB. The results were then discussed in the workshop.

Please click for additional information and the report from the workshop on the EFRAG website.

Results from a similar workshop with corporates were released in August 2020.

European Lab announces members of its task force on possible EU non-financial reporting standards

07 Sep 2020

The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) has published a list of the members of a new project task force on preparatory work for the elaboration of possible EU non-financial reporting standards.

The task force will be chaired by Patrick de Cambourg, President of the French standard-setter ANC.

Please click for a list of all members in the press release on the EFRAG website.

Agenda for the September/October 2020 IFASS meeting

04 Sep 2020

The International Forum of Accounting Standard Setters (IFASS) will meet on 30 September and 1 October 2020. The meeting will be held virtually.

The full agenda for the meeting is summarised below.

Wednesday, 30 September 2020 (11:00–15:00)

  • Welcome and opening remarks
  • Issues surrounding separate financial statements
    • Presentations by Brazil, Italy, and Korea
  • Primary financial statements
    • Presentations by EFRAG and Korea on the IASB exposure draft
  • Cryptoassets
    • EFRAG discussion paper on the accounting for cryptoassets
  • Intangibles
    • Joint paper by Canada, Germany, Japan, UK and US

Thursday, 1 October 2020 (11:00-14:30)

  • Going Concern
    • Presentations by Australia and New Zealand
  • International financial reporting for non-profit organisations
  • IPSASB update
  • Fintech application and accounting standards
    • Presentation by Taiwan
  • Impact of COVID-19 in Sri Lanka
    • Presentation by Sri Lanka
  • Closing remarks

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.