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Chapter 5: International Financial Reporting Standards: Part II Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. Learning Objectives Describe and apply the requirements of IFRS related to the financial reporting of current liabilities, provisions, employee benefits, share-based payment, income taxes, revenue, and financial instruments Explain and analyze the effect of major differences between IFRS and U.S. GAAP related to the financial reporting of current liabilities, provisions, employee benefits, share-based payment, income taxes, revenue, and financial instruments 5-2 Current Liabilities IAS 1, Presentation of Financial Statements, requires classification of liabilities Current liabilities Noncurrent liabilities Current liabilities Expected to settle in normal operating cycle Held for trading purpose Settled within 12 months of balance sheet date Not deferred until 12 months after balance sheet date 5-3 Differences in IFRS and U.S. GAAP: Current Liabilities Refinanced short-term debt IFRS: Long-term, if refinanced prior to balance sheet date U.S. GAAP: Long-term, if refinancing is agreed prior to balance sheet Accounts payable on demand due to violation of debt covenants IFRS: Current, unless lender issued waiver of 12 months by balance sheet date U.S. GAAP: Current, unless lender issued waiver obtained by annual report issuance date Bank overdrafts IFRS: Long-term, if integral part of cash management netted against cash U.S. GAAP: Always treated as current liabilities 5-4 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities, and Contingent Assets IAS 37, Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets, provides guidance for: Reporting liabilities and assets of uncertain timing, amount, or existence Environmental and nuclear decommissioning costs 5-5 Contingent Liability Recognized under IFRS, when: There is a present obligations from past events It is probable that there will be an outflow of resources A reliable estimate of the obligation can be made Constructive obligation: arise from past actions or current statements indicating that a company will accept certain responsibilities No concept of constructive obligation in U.S. GAAP 5-6 Contingent Liability As defined by IAS 37 Possible obligation confirmed by occurrence or nonoccurrence of future event Present obligation not recognized because: No probable outflow of resources Amount cannot be measured reliably Recognized under U.S. GAAP when outflow is probable Only disclosed if outflow possible, and not probable 5-7 Provisions IAS 37 The best estimate of the expenditure required to settle the present obligation Probability-weighted expected value Discounted to present value Recognized under U.S. GAAP at the low end of the range of possible amounts Provision is reversed when outflow of resources is not probable 5-8 Onerous Contract Unavoidable costs of obligation exceed economic benefits to be received Recognize provision for lower of Cost of fulfillment Penalty from non-fulfillment If onerous from entity's own action, no recognition until that action happens 5-9 Restructuring A program planned and controlled by management that changes either: Scope of business Manner in which business is conducted Under IAS 37, a restructuring provision is recognized when: Formal restructuring plan exists There is a valid expectation of the restructuring U.S. GAAP does not allow recognition until liability has been incurred 5-10 Employee Benefits IAS 19, Employee Benefits, covers all forms of employee compensation and benefits Excludes share-based compensation Four types of employee benefits Short-term benefits (compensated absences and bonuses) Post-employment (pensions and medical benefits) Other long-term benefits (deferred compensation and disability) Termination benefits (severance and early retirement) 5-11 Employee Benefits Short-term benefits recognize expense and liability at the time employees provide service Amount recognized is undiscounted Compensated absences (for sick/vacation pay) accrue when services are provided only if: The compensated absences accumulate over time They can be carried forward to future periods For nonaccumulating compensating balances, an expense and liability are recognized Profit sharing and bonus plans An expense and a liability are accrued if: There are present legal or constructive obligation o make such payments The amount can be reasonably measured 5-12 Employee Benefits Post-employment benefits IAS 19 distinguishes between defined contribution plans and defined benefit plans Defined contribution plan Benefits accrue when services are rendered Liability reduces when contributions are made Defined benefit plan Two major issues Calculation of the net defined benefit liability (or asset) Calculation of the defined benefit cost 5-13 Post-employment benefits Net defined benefit liability (asset) Balance sheet amount calculated as: + Present value of the defined benefit obligation (PVDBO) − Fair value of plan assets (FVPA) Asset recognized is limited to the larger of Surplus Asset ceiling No asset ceiling under U.S. GAAP 5-14 Post-employment benefits Defined benefit cost reported in income Net income Components include Current service cost Past service cost and gains and losses on settlements Net interest on the net defined benefit liability (asset) Remeasurements of net defined benefit liability (asset) Other comprehensive income 5-15 Other post-employment benefits IAS 19 does not provide separate guidance for other post-employment benefits U.S. GAAP provides more guidance for measurement of post-employment medical benefits 5-16 Share-based Payment IFRS 2, Share-based Payment, sets out measurement principles and specific requirements for three types of share-based payment transactions Equity-settled share-based payment Cash-settled share-based payment Choice-of-settlement share-based payment IFRS 2 and U.S. GAAP are substantially similar 5-17 Equity-Settled Share-Based Payment Payments to non-employees for goods and services IFRS measurement Fair value of goods or services, if determined Fair value of the equity instrument U.S. GAAP measurement Fair value of instrument at earlier of Commitment for performance When performance completed 5-18 Equity-Settled Share-Based Payment Payments to employees Measured at the fair value of the equity instruments Consider vesting conditions Total compensation cost Recognized as compensation expense Estimate of options vested to be revised throughout the vesting period Recognition of associated compensation expense Straight-line over service period for cliff vesting Amortize each installment (tranche) over their vesting period for Graded vesting U.S. GAAP allows choice of accelerated or straight-line recognition 5-19 Modification of Stock Option Plans Types of modification Length Vesting conditions Result of fair value change Increase in fair value Increase compensation cost by the same amount Decrease in fair value No change in compensation cost deducted U.S. GAAP Fair value determines compensation expense No minimum compensation as under IFRS 5-20 Cash-Settled Share-Based Payment Cash payment on stock price increase above predetermined level Recognize fair value as a liability using option-pricing model Measure on each balance sheet date Under U.S. GAAP, classify certain cash-settled payments as equity Under IFRS, classify as liability 5-21 Choice-of-settlement Share-based Payment Allow entity to choose equity settlement or cash settlement If present obligation to settle in cash, treat as cash-settled If obligation settled in equity, treat as equity-settled Treat as compound financial instrument when receiving entity chooses equity settlement or cash settlement Fair value split into separate debt and equity components Remeasure debt component must be remeasured at fair value balance sheet date Apply cash settlement against debt component Transfer equity settlement to equity 5-22 Income Taxes IAS 12, Income Taxes, similar to U.S. GAAP Asset-and-liability approach Deferred tax assets and liabilities For temporary differences For operating loss tax credit carry forwards Under IFRS, measure on the basis of tax laws and rates enacted or substantively enacted Under U.S. GAAP, measure on the basis of actually enacted tax laws and rates Account for double taxation effects and differences in rates 5-23 Income Taxes Recognition of Deferred Tax Asset Under IFRS, recognize if future realization probable IAS 12 provides a more stringent threshold U.S. GAAP, recognize if realization is more likely than not Disclosures IFRS requires Extensive disclosures of tax expense Explanation of hypothetical expense based on two approaches Compare statutory tax expense in the home country and effective tax expense Compare weighted-average statutory tax rate across jurisdictions and tax expense based on the effective tax rate IFRS vs. U.S. GAAP IFRS application can cause temporary differences 5-24 Income Taxes Financial Statement Presentation U.S. GAAP Deferred tax assets and liabilities Current Non-current Based on underlying asset or liability Tax loss or credit carry-forwards Timing of expected realization IAS 1 Deferred tax assets and liabilities Only noncurrent 5-25 Revenue recognition IAS 18, Revenue covers revenues from Sale of goods, rendering of services Interest, royalties Dividends U.S. GAAP 200 authoritative pronouncements General Measurement Principle Fair value of consideration received or Receivable Multiple elements transaction Split transaction into multiple elements or Combine multiple transactions into one 5-26 Revenue recognition Sale of Goods—5 Criteria Transfer of significant risks and rewards to buyer No effective control maintained or management involvement Can measure revenue reliably Probable future economic benefits flow to seller Selling costs can be measured reliably Rendering of Service Revenue recognized in proportion to extent of services rendered U.S. GAAP Percentage-of-completion for service contracts not allowed 5-27 Revenue recognition Interest, Royalties and Dividends Interest Recognized on effective yield basis Royalties Recognized on accrual basis Based on relevant agreement Dividends Recognized when shareholder’s right to payment established Exchange of Goods or Services If similar—no gain or loss If dissimilar—recognize fair value of what is received adjusted for cash paid or received 5-28 Revenue recognition Construction Contracts Revenues and expenses recognized using the percentageof-completion method Two types Fixed-price contract Cost-plus contract Cost-plus contract Economic benefits flow to the entity Contract costs Clearly identified Reliably measured29 Fixed-price contract Revenues measurable Costs and stage of completion measurable 5-29 IAS 18, Revenue IASB-FASB Revenue Recognition Project Both boards working since 2002 June 2010—joint Exposure Draft “Revenue from Contracts with Customers” 5 steps: Identify the contract Identify separate performance obligations in the contract Determine the transaction price Allocate the transaction price to the separate performance obligations Recognize the revenue allocated to each performance obligation when the entity satisfies each performance obligation 5-30 Financial Instruments Standards IAS 32, Financial Instruments: Presentation IAS 39, Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement IFRS 7, Financial Instruments: Disclosure IFRS 9, Financial Instruments—issued in November 2009 to replace IAS 39—effective 2015 Definitions IAS 32—a financial instrument is any contract that gives rise to both a financial asset of one entity and a financial liability or equity instrument of another entity 5-31 Financial Instruments Definitions IAS 32—a financial instrument gives rise to Financial asset of one entity Financial liability or equity instrument of another entity Financial asset Cash Contractual right to: Receive cash or other financial asset Exchange financial assets or financial liabilities under potentially favorable conditions An equity instrument of another entity A contract that will or may be settled in entity’s own equity instruments 5-32 Financial Instruments Financial liability A contractual obligation to Deliver cash or another financial asset Exchange financial assets or financial liabilities Under potentially unfavorable conditions A contract that will or may be settled in the equity’s own equity instruments 5-33 Financial Instruments Liability or Equity IAS 32 Financial instruments to be classified As financial liabilities or Equity or both Compound Financial Instruments Both a liability and equity element (e.g. convertible bond) Split accounting With and without method 5-34 Financial Instruments Classification of Financial Assets and Liabilities Classification of financial asset: Fair value through profit or loss (FVPL) Held-to-maturity investments Loans and receivables Available-for-sale financial assets Financial liabilities: Fair value through profit or loss (FVPL) Measured at amortized cost Measurement of Financial Instruments Initial—fair value (normally = amount paid or received) Subsequent—cost, amortized cost, or fair value 5-35 Financial Instruments Available-for-Sale Financial Asset Denominated in a Foreign Currency Two components The change in fair value in the foreign currency A foreign exchange gain or loss From exchange rate changes Impairment IAS 39 requires assessment of impairement Derecognition Appropriate if Contractual rights to the cash flows expired Financial asset has been transferred 5-36 Financial Instruments Derivatives Financial instruments swaps Whose value changes with change in A specified interest rate,financial instrument price, Commodity price, foreign exchange rate, Index, credit rating, or other variable. IFRS 39 Derivatives measured at fair value Receivables Measured Initially at fair value Subsequently, at amortized cost using effective interest method 5-37 End of Chapter 5 5-38