Transcript Document

International Financial Reporting Standards

Ian P.N. Hague Principal, Accounting Standards

Presentation to FMI (Halifax Chapter) January 15, 2009

Own views – not those of AcSB or other staff

Agenda

What is changing and when?

The IASB

First-time Adoption

Some similarities and differences

Planning for the change

Resources

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The Plan

• •

IFRS will replace Canada’s current Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) for those enterprises.

February 13, 2008: “The Canadian Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) has confirmed that use of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) will be required in 2011 for publicly accountable profit-oriented enterprises.

The official changeover date is for interim and annual financial statements relating to fiscal years beginning on or after January 1, 2011.

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Who does this apply to?

• • • •

Publicly Accountable Enterprise:

• •

Issued, or is in the process of issuing, debt or equity instruments that are or will be outstanding in a public market (i.e. all public companies are PAE’s ); or Holds assets in a fiduciary capacity for a broad group of outsiders as its primary business, (i.e. others with large or diverse groups of users , such as a bank, insurance entity, securities broker/dealer, credit union, mutual fund or investment banking entity).

Also, Public Sector: GBE/GBTO NOT required for NFPOs Others may choose to adopt IFRSs

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Public Sector

November 2007, PSAB approved amendments to Introduction to PSAB standards:

GBEs and GBTOs follow for-profit GAAP – i.e., IFRSs

December 2008, decided to reconsider whether ALL such entities should follow IFRSs – ITC, early 2009

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When is adoption required?

Opening balance sheet

< 12 months

Jan. 1, 2008 Preparatory period Jan 1/ Apr 1 2010 Jan 1/ Apr 1 2011 Cdn. GAAP & IFRS IFRS Reporting date Dec 31 2011/ Mar 31 2012

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Agenda

What is changing and when?

The IASB

First-time Adoption

Some similarities and differences

Planning for the change

Resources

7

What are IFRSs?

A single set of globally converged, high quality accounting standards

Regulatory backing – IOSCO, EU, etc.

Globally accepted (100+ countries)

SEC – 2011 to decide if IFRS mandatory for 2014

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What are IFRSs?

“Principles-based” standards

Developed by International Accounting Standards Board (based in London, England)

Broad international representation

Independent

Extensive due process

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IASB structure

Standards Advisory Council

(SAC) (advises Board)

National standard setters

Trustees (22) (appoint Board, IFRIC and SAC) IASB (14) (sets accounting standards)

Int’l Finc’l Reporting Interpretations Committee

(IFRIC) (14) 10

The standards

IFRSs:

Set out recognition, measurement, presentation & disclosure requirements for general purpose F/S • • • •

IFRS IAS IFRIC SIC Financial Reporting Standards Financial Reporting Interpretations

Standards EICs Developed in accordance with Conceptual Framework 11

What does it mean to adopt IFRSs?

PAEs adopt IFRSs without modification as Canadian GAAP – all Canadian GAAP falls away (for PAEs)

Interpretations by IFRIC only

Focus of attention becomes on IASB in London

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Benefits to Canada

Access to foreign markets

Lower cost of capital – familiar standards

Continued principles-based standards – less complexity

Efficiencies for international companies

BUT: It will take work to get there

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Challenges

Financial information will differ

Recognition

Measurement

Disclosure

Significant education required

IFRSs are, themselves, changing

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Agenda

What is changing and when?

The IASB

First-time Adoption

Some similarities and differences

Planning for the change

Resources

15

First-time adoption of IFRSs

Basic Principle: Retrospective treatment of IFRSs in effect at the reporting date

Cost benefit to retrospective treatment

Optional exemptions – e.g., fair value on transition

Exceptions to the principle – e.g., estimates and hedging

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IFRS 1: Timeline

(calendar year entity) Date of Transition Opening balance sheet Jan. 1, 2010 First IFRS Financial Statement IFRS Reporting date Jan. 1, 2011

Same accounting policies

Dec. 31, 2011

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First IFRS financial statements

• • •

Reconciliations of the effect of the change from ‘local’ GAAP to IFRS

Equity as at

Date of transition, and

End of latest period presented by the entity in most recent annual financial statements prepared in accordance with its local GAAP

Net income for period last presented in most recent annual financial statements Accounting policy disclosures Other disclosures if significant

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Agenda

What is changing and when?

The IASB

First-time Adoption

Some similarities and differences

Planning for the change

Resources

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What will IFRS F/S look like? Similarities

Cash

• •

Accounts Receivable – except transfers Inventories - except for Agriculture and Construction Contracts

Property, Plant and Equipment – revaluation optional

• • • •

Leases – finance lease = capital lease Goodwill and Intangibles – some revaluation Accounts payable Long term debt – presentation: must refinance by balance sheet date

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IFRS Adoption at changeover

Many similarities between IFRSs & Cdn GAAP

BUT: Also some major differences

Impairment

Fair value / Revaluations

Securitization

Devil is in the details!

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Impairment

Identify cash generating unit Identify impairment indicators (B/S date) Identify asset group Monitor for impairment indicators If impairment indicators exist, determine recoverable amount (discounted cash flows) If impairment indicators exist, determine recoverable amount (undiscounted cash flows) Write-down to recoverable amount Write-down to fair value

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Looking for impairment

• •

Impairment Indicators

Proactive review at each reporting date to assess whether there is any indication that an asset might be impaired External information Internal information

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Reversal of impairment loss

All impaired assets other than goodwill

Look for indicators of reversal (B/S date)

Mirror of external and internal indicators of impairment

Calculate new recoverable amount and perform impairment test

Recognize reversal if appropriate

Only if change in estimates since last impairment loss

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Fair value in existing IFRSs compared to Canadian

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

IAS 16: Property, Plant and Equipment – optional FV IAS 17: Leases - similar IAS 18: Revenue - similar IAS 19: Employee Benefits - similar IAS 20: Government Grants - similar IAS 21: Foreign Exchange - similar IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation - similar IAS 33: Earnings per Share - similar IAS 38: Intangible Assets – optional FV IAS 39: Financial Instruments: Recgn. & Meas. - similar IAS 40: Investment Property – optional FV IAS 41: Agriculture - additional IFRS 2: Share-based Payments - similar IFRS 3: Business Combinations - same IFRS 4: Insurance Contracts – additional IFRS 7 – Financial Instruments: Disclosure - same

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Fair value guidance in IFRSs

Limited guidance today in IAS 32, 39 & 41

Recent guidance issued on fair value in inactive markets

Active project to develop consistent fair value guidance

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Property, plant & equipment

Property plant and equipment (IAS 16)

Options for measurement

Cost

Revaluation Model

Both less accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment losses

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Property, plant & equipment

When to revalue?

As frequently as necessary to ensure that the carrying value of the revalued assets and the current values are not materially different

Therefore, frequency depends on volatility of asset value

Revalue all assets of same class at same time

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Property, plant & equipment

Changes in value

Increase = credit to revaluation surplus (in equity)

Decrease = charge to income statement

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Property, plant & equipment

Revaluation after initial recognition Upwards Asset Revalued Downwards

Yes No

Increase to Equity as ‘revaluation surplus” Increase to income = previous downward. Excess to equity in re valuation surplus.

Decrease to Income

No

Decrease to Statement.

Yes

revaluation surplus. Excess to income

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Property, plant & equipment

Depreciation

Charge for depreciation against income even in revaluation model

Portion of revaluation reserve also transferred to retained earnings

When asset disposed of, any remaining balance in revaluation reserve moved to retained earnings

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Investment property

Options for measurement

Cost (but must disclose FV)

Fair value method ( not revaluation method )

Gains and losses directly to income statement

No depreciation

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Property, plant & equipment / Investment property

28% of EU companies with investment property used FV method [ICAEW, 2007]

4% of EU companies used revaluation for buildings – none for P&E [ICAEW, 2007]

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Agenda

What is changing and when?

The IASB

First-time Adoption

Some similarities and differences

Planning for the change

Resources

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Majority of IFRSs remain unchanged through 2011

• • • • • • •

Inventories Accounting Policies & Accounting Changes Events after the Balance Sheet Date Property Plant & Equipment Government Grants Foreign Currency Borrowing Costs

• • • • • • • • • •

Associates Hyperinflation Interim Reporting Impairment ??

Intangible Assets Investment Property Agriculture Business Combinations Extractive Activities Segments

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How do we get there?

• • • •

Convergence before changeover

Business combinations [IFRS 3/IAS 27] – 2011 Earnings per share [IAS 33] – 2010?

Joint ventures [IAS 31] – 2011 Credit Environment? – 2010/11?

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IASB changes expected

IASB changes before 2011

• • • • •

Financial instruments disclosures – 2009 Fair value measurement (how not when) – 2010 Liabilities – 2010 Income taxes – 2010 Emissions trading – 2010 2009 probably effective 2011 2010 probably effective 2012

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IASB isolated changes

Isolated changes

Related Party Disclosures

Discontinued Operations

Group Cash-settled Shared-based Payment

First-time Adoption

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Changes expected in 2011

• • • • • •

Financial statement presentation Insurance contracts Liabilities & equity Leases Employee benefits Revenue recognition Likely to be effective in 2013. Might not be available for early adoption?

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IASB Projects in longer term

Reducing complexity in financial instruments

Extractive activities

Common control transactions

Government grants

Intangible assets

Conceptual framework

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Planning

Evaluate the effects for your organization

• • • •

More than a technical exercise – creates opportunities and challenges Need to thoroughly assess accounting policies Start thinking in terms of IFRSs More than just accounting

• • •

User relations Performance measures Covenants, etc.

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Agenda

What is changing and when?

The IASB

First-time Adoption

Some similarities and differences

Planning for the change

Resources

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Find out more: IFRS resources

IASB web site – www.iasb.org

IFRSs on AcSB website – www.acsbcanada.org

What’s changing when?

Canada/IFRS GAAP Comparisons – 2 levels of detail

Bulletins, Implementation Plan, etc.

Major firms – Newsletters, webcasts, publications, illustrative financial statements

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Find out more: Training

CICA/PICAs

Three-day in-depth course

One-day overview of differences

Web-based learning

Major Accounting Firms – self-study (e.g., www.iasplus.com)

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Conclusions

Biggest changes to financial reporting in recent years

Creates challenges and opportunities

Be prepared for both

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Questions/comments?

[email protected]

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