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for Accounting Professionals IAS 18 REVENUE 2011 http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng IAS 18 REVENUE IFRS WORKBOOKS (1 million downloaded) Welcome to IFRS Workbooks! These are the latest versions of the legendary workbooks in Russian and English produced by 3 TACIS projects, sponsored by the European Union (2003-2009) and led by PricewaterhouseCoopers. They have also appeared on the website of the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation. The workbooks cover various concepts of IFRS based accounting. They are intended to be practical self-instruction aids that professional accountants can use to upgrade their knowledge, understanding and skills. Each workbook is a self-standing short course designed for approximately of three hours of study. Although the workbooks are part of a series, each one is independent of the others. Each workbook is a combination of Information, Examples, Self-Test Questions and Answers. A basic knowledge of accounting is assumed, but if any additional knowledge is required this is mentioned at the beginning of the section. Having written the first three editions, we want to update them and provide them to you to download. Please tell your friends and colleagues. Relating to the first three editions and updated texts, the copyright of the material contained in each workbook belongs to the European Union and according to its policy may be used free of charge for any non-commercial purpose. The copyright and responsibility of later books and the updates are ours. Our copyright policy is the same as that of the European Union. We wish to especially thank Elizabeth Appraxine (European Union) who administered these TACIS projects, Richard J. Gregson (Partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers) who led the projects and all friends at Bankir.Ru for hosting the books. TACIS project partners included Rosexpertiza (Russia), ACCA (UK), Agriconsulting (Italy), FBK (Russia), and European Savings Bank Group (Brussels). The help of Philip W. Smith (editor of the third edition) and Allan Gamborg, project managers and Ekaterina Nekrasova, Director of PricewaterhouseCoopers, who managed the production of the Russian version (2008-9) is gratefully acknowledged. Glyn R. Phillips, manager of the first two projects conceived the idea, designed the workbooks and edited the first two versions. We are proud to realise his vision. Robin Joyce Professor of the Chair of International Banking and Finance Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation Visiting Professor of the Siberian Academy of Finance and Banking http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Moscow, Russia 2011 Updated 2 IAS 18 REVENUE CONTENTS 1. Introduction and Definitions 1. Introduction and Definitions ..................................... 3 Aim .......................................................................................................3 Objective ...............................................................................................3 Definitions .............................................................................................4 2. Transaction Identification 11 3. Sale of Goods 11 4. Provision of Services 22 5. Interest, Royalties and Dividends .......................... 26 6. Disclosure 36 7.Specific Examples 36 Aim The aim of this workbook is to assist you to understand Revenue according to IFRS. Objective Revenue is the subject of International Accounting Standard 18. IAS 11, 17, 28, 41, IFRS 9 and 11 complement IAS 18. Revenue is income that is derived from ordinary activities of the firm. Income comprises revenue and gains. Sale Of Goods .................................................................................... 36 Provision Of Services .......................................................................... 48 The timing of recognition of revenue is a key issue of the standard. Interest, Royalties And Dividends ....................................................... 57 Revenue is recognised when it is probable that future economic 8. Multiple choice Questions 59 9. Exercise Questions 62 benefits will flow to the firm, and the benefits can be measured. 10.Solutions 63 For banks, IAS 32, IFRS 9 and IFRS 7 provide the presentation, Answers to Multiple Choice Questions: ............................................... 64 Answers to Exercise Questions:.......................................................... 64 recognition, measurement and disclosure of financial instruments. Other sources of income are subject to IAS 18. Of special importance http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 3 IAS 18 REVENUE to banks is the treatment of interest, dividends and royalties covered Multiple element contracts should generally be separated into their in this workbook. constituent parts and each part accounted for separately, unless the The sale of goods (IAS 18) can be distinguished from the sale of commercial effect of each transaction cannot be understood without services under construction (IAS 11) and other contracts (mostly IAS considering the separate components as a single transaction. 18). The seller’s performance under service contracts and The primary issue in accounting for revenue from the sale of goods is when revenue should be recognised. construction contracts is not immediate, and often takes place over several reporting periods. Goods are those items produced and/or purchased for resale, and Revenue recognition involves consideration of whether an asset has been sold and should be de-recognised; and whether the revenue from the sale is collectible and measurable. property held for resale, for example by a property developer. Revenue should be recognised only when the earning process is complete. Consequently different revenue recognition considerations apply. Definitions Revenue Contracts for the sale of goods may be combined with contracts for services. Undertakings in some industries bundle the sale of goods and services into one contract. An example is the provision of software, installation of hardware and Other than increases from contributions by investors, Revenue is the gross inflow of benefits from ordinary activities, when those inflows result in increases in equity. Fair value after-sales customer support by an IT undertaking. The price that would be received to sell an asset, or paid to transfer a liability, in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. (IFRS 13) http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 4 IAS 18 REVENUE Excluded from revenue are amounts collected on behalf of others, such as sales taxes, value added tax and money collected on behalf e) is responsible for the goods while they are stored in its warehouse, but undertaking B bears the risk of obsolete goods. Undertaking B retains product liability. B is therefore responsible for manufacturing defects, and the credit risk rests with B. of a principal, in an agency relationship. Agency arrangements 1. Issue The gross inflows of economic benefits in an agency relationship include amounts collected on behalf of the principal which do not result in increases in equity for the undertaking. Should undertaking B recognise revenue on transfer of goods to undertaking A? Background Undertaking A distributes undertaking B’s products under a distribution agreement. The terms and conditions of the contract are such that undertaking A: a) obtains title to the goods and sells them to third party retailers; b) stores, repackages, transports and invoices the goods sold to third party retailers; c) earns a fixed margin on the products sold to the retailers, but has no flexibility in establishing the sales price; d) has the right to return the goods to undertaking B without penalty; and http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Solution No. Undertaking A is in substance acting as agent for the principal undertaking B. Undertaking B does not transfer the risks and rewards of ownership of the goods to A, and retains continuing managerial involvement with the goods. Undertaking A has the option to return the goods and B bears the product and inventory risks. Undertaking B retains continuing managerial involvement with the goods by being able to set the sales price. Undertaking A should recognise an agency fee or commission revenue in its income statement. Undertaking B should continue to recognise the inventory on its balance sheet. B should only recognise revenue once substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership have been transferred, which will be when A sells the goods to a third party. Whether an undertaking is functioning as an agent or principal is always dependent on the facts and circumstances of the relationship. As a minimum a principal: a) has a contractual relationship with the customer, that is, the customer believes it is doing business with the principal; 5 IAS 18 REVENUE b) is able set the terms of the transactions, such as selling price and payment terms; c) bears the risk associated with inventory; d) bears credit risk; and e) controls the flow of receipts and payments. 2. Agency arrangements Issue Revenue from sales to intermediate parties, such as distributors, dealers or others, for resale is generally recognised when the risks and rewards of ownership have passed. Solution Undertaking A should recognise revenue at the earlier of undertaking B’s receiving payment from the third party or three months after the sale, provided that the goods are not returned. Although legal title of ownership has transferred from undertaking A to undertaking B, the risks and rewards of ownership have not passed from A to B for the following reasons: a) undertaking B has the right to return the clothes and undertaking A is uncertain about the probability of return; and b) undertaking B only has to pay undertaking A once the clothes are sold to third parties or after 3 months if undertaking B does not return the clothes. Measurement When should revenue be recognised in the following example? Background Undertaking A manufactures clothing and has one major dealer, undertaking B. Undertaking A provides undertaking B with an extended credit line whereby A supplies merchandise to B that can be sold on to third parties. B stores the merchandise in its warehouse. Transfer of the legal title of ownership passes to B when it receives the clothes. Undertaking B does not have to pay for the merchandise until it receives the payment from the third party. After three months, undertaking B can either return the clothes to A if they are not sold, or pay undertaking A for the merchandise and keep it. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Revenue should be measured at the fair value of the consideration received, or receivable. A cash sale is recognised at the amount of cash received. The fair value of revenue receivable from a credit sale is the present value of the cash receivable. The difference between the discounted and undiscounted revenue is usually not material for a short credit period and can be ignored. However, present value of the revenue is recognised if a longer, interest-free credit period is given. The discount rate used should be the customer’s borrowing rate, not the seller’s borrowing rate. The difference between the fair value and the nominal amount of the consideration should be deferred in the balance sheet and recognised as interest revenue using the effective interest method. 6 IAS 18 REVENUE Trade discounts and volume rebates should be subtracted from revenue. Once revenue is recognised, any subsequent uncertainty about the collectability of the revenue is recognised as an adjustment to the amount receivable rather than as an adjustment to revenue. Recognition of settlement discounts Solution Management should recognise revenue for 991, being the fair value of the consideration receivable calculated as the gross sales value of 1,000 reduced by the amount of estimated settlement discounts of 9 (1,000 x 45% x 2%). A provision of 9 should also be recognised in order to reflect the obligation to give the settlement discount to the customers. Issue The accounting entries would be as follows: How should management treat settlement discounts at the date of sale? Background 1. At point of sale Dr Trade receivables Cr An undertaking sells canned food and has 100 customers. The delivery of the goods is made on the last day of each month. Standard payment terms require settlement within 45 days of delivery. The undertaking’s policy is to grant a settlement discount of 2% to customers that pay within 15 days of delivery. Past experience shows that 45% of the customers normally pay within 15 days, while the remaining 55% pay after the early settlement period. The undertaking will deliver the next batch of canned foods to its customers on 31 January 20X3. The total invoiced selling price for all deliveries amounted to 1,000. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 1,000 991 Sales revenue 9 Cr Provision against receivables for early settlement The trade receivables balance is presented net of the provision against receivables for early settlement on the face of the balance sheet. 2. At settlement of the discount Dr Provision against receivables for early settlement Cr Trade receivables 9 9 7 IAS 18 REVENUE Where extended credit is given, either interest-free or at an interest The finance company does not have any recourse to A for bad or slow payment by the customer. charge below market rates, future receipts should be discounted to How much revenue should A recognise and when? net present value. Recognition of sales on interest free credit Issue Revenue should be measured at the fair value of the consideration received or receivable. Solution Undertaking A will receive 82 from the finance company in respect of the sale at, or close to, the time of the sale. A should therefore recognise revenue of 82. How should an undertaking recognise revenue on the sale of goods on interest free credit? Undertaking A should derecognise the receivable of 82 on receipt of the consideration from the finance company. The finance company does not have recourse to undertaking A in respect of slow payment or non-payment by the customer. Background Undertaking A is a retailer and offers interest-free credit to a customer as part of its marketing strategy. The interest-free credit is provided by a finance company. Assuming all other terms of the arrangement support the conclusion that undertaking A has transferred substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership of the receivable to the finance company, derecognition is appropriate [IFRS 9]. The legal form of the transaction is that A sells the goods to the customer at 100 and simultaneously the customer enters into a finance arrangement with the finance company. In the following examples, I/B refers to Income Statement and Balance Sheet (SFP) This arrangement results in the finance company settling the customer’s account with the retailer and receiving 100 from the customer over two years. The terms of the finance arrangement provide for undertaking A to receive 82 from the finance company. The finance company receives 100 from the customer over two years. A does not receive any further amounts from the customer or the finance company. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 8 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You exchange corn for two machines. One has a market price of $400. One has no market price, and you exchange corn worth $375 for this machine. The corn exchanged is in inventory, valued at $500. Your revenue = $775, and you have new fixed assets worth $775. Asset 1 Asset 2 Revenue - Corn Sales Cost of corn sales Inventory Assets exchanged for inventory I/B B B I I I DR 400 375 CR 775 500 adjusted for any cash payment or receipt, relating to the transaction. Advertising barter transactions Issue When goods are sold or services rendered in exchange for dissimilar goods or services, the transaction is considered to generate revenue. 500 Where goods are exchanged, revenue is created. Barter transactions Goods may be sold under barter type arrangements whereby the consideration is goods rather than cash. Revenue should only be recognised if the sale represents the completion of the earnings process. This is assumed to be the case where the goods or services exchanges are dissimilar. The exchange of inventory in different locations by petrol retailers, for example, is the exchange of similar goods and does not represent the completion of the earnings process, and consequently no revenue is recorded. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Fair value may be determined as the value of the goods given up, The revenue is measured at fair value of the goods or services received, adjusted by the amount of any cash, or cash equivalents, transferred. When the fair value of the goods or services received cannot be measured reliably, the revenue is measured at the fair value of the goods or services given up. That amount is adjusted by the amount of any cash or cash equivalents transferred. What is the measurement basis of cost of sales in a transaction where both parties exchange advertising services? Background Undertaking A, an internet undertaking, provides advertising on its website for a football club. The football club promotes A on the players’ shirts in return; no cash is exchanged. The fair value of the advertising A provides is 50,000. Solution The measurement basis is the fair value of services that A provides. 9 IAS 18 REVENUE The medium of the advertising is dissimilar in nature. The exchange will therefore be regarded as a transaction that generates revenue. Undertaking A will recognise 50,000 as both revenue and cost of sales, being the fair value of the services provided to the football club. The revenues should be disclosed as part of the disclosure of revenues realised from barter transactions. Exchange of dissimilar goods The agreement provides for the travel agency to place radio advertisements to the value of 15,000 and in return the radio broadcaster advertises on the travel agency’s web page. The travel agency has previously sold similar web-site advertising space to others for cash of 10,000. Solution The travel agency should recognise advertising revenue of 10,000 and advertising expenses, also of 10,000. Issue The exchange of goods or services for dissimilar goods or services should be regarded as a transaction, which generates revenue. This is calculated by reference to the value of advertising services provided and not by reference to the value of services received. An undertaking should measure revenue at the fair value of goods or services received in a barter transaction. The medium of the advertising (broadcasting vs web site advertisements) is dissimilar in nature. The sale is therefore regarded as a transaction that generates revenue. However, if the fair value of the goods or services received cannot be measured reliably, the revenue should be measured at the fair value of the goods or services given up. This general principle is clarified for barter transactions involving advertising services. The revenue of such transactions should always be recognised at the fair value of services provided, not the fair value of services received. On what basis should management recognise revenue and costs from a barter transaction? Background A travel agency sells low-price holidays. The agency has entered into an advertising agreement with a radio broadcaster. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Revenue recognition for barter transactions Issue Should management recognise revenue from a barter transaction? Background Undertaking A, an internet undertaking, provides advertising on its website for a football club. The club promotes undertaking A on the players’ shirts in return. No cash is exchanged between A and the football club. The fair value of advertising that A provides is 50,000. Solution Yes, the medium of the advertising is dissimilar in nature. The 10 IAS 18 REVENUE exchange will therefore be regarded as a transaction that generates revenue. Undertaking A will recognise 50,000 as revenue, being the fair value of the services provided to the football club. An undertaking should measure revenue at the fair value of goods or services received in a barter transaction. However, if the fair value of the goods or services received cannot be measured reliably, the revenue should be measured at the fair value of the goods or services given up. Current revenue = $4400, deferred revenue = $600. The $600 is considered a payment in advance of service, and will be recognised as revenue when the services occur, or at the end of the 6-month period. Combined transactions, such as a sale and repurchase agreement, are dealt with as one transaction. 3. Sale of Goods This general principle is clarified for barter transactions involving advertising services. The revenue of such transactions should always be recognised at the fair value of services provided, not the fair value of services received and measured in relation to previous non-barter transactions of similar services with a different counter party. 2. Transaction Identification If a transaction involves a servicing element of the product sold, the revenue relating to the service is spread over the period of the service. A sale is recognised when all the following conditions have been satisfied: 1. The seller has passed to the buyer the significant risks, and rewards of ownership of the goods. 2. The seller no longer has effective control over the goods, nor continuing management involvement normally associated with ownership. 3. Revenue can be measured reliably. 4. It is probable that the seller will receive economic benefits from the transaction. 5. Costs related to the transaction can be reliably measured. An undertaking must make adequate provision for collection risks. Example: You sell a car for $5000 and promise to service it twice in 6 months. The value of each service =$300 http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 11 IAS 18 REVENUE Table: Application of revenue recognition criteria Revenue recognition can be best understood by reference to a number of common commercial situations that are described below: Seller has transferred risks & rewards Title transferred with delivery of Y goods in an unconditional sale arrangement Title transferred with delivery of N goods, in an agency arrangement. Goods are transferred, but seller retains title for credit protection purposes Y Seller has relinquished managerial involvement Y N Y Point at which revenue should be recognised On transfer of goods When agent’s right to return goods is relinquished and/or agent has generated third party revenue On transfer of goods. Credit risk is not a significant risk of ownership http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Example: You sell goods valued at $200, on credit to a customer with a good credit record. Recognise $200 as revenue immediately and an account receivable for $200. I/B B I Accounts receivable Revenue Credit sale Goods transferred, sale Y is unconditional; however, sale price is not fixed until buyer takes delivery of goods Buyer and seller enter in a N layaway sales arrangement. Buyer and seller enter into a bill Y and hold sale arrangement Y N Y DR 200 CR 200 On transfer of goods When buyer takes delivery of goods When the buyer takes title provided the conditions for a bill and hold sale are met 12 IAS 18 REVENUE Buyer takes N delivery of goods, payment to be made subject to satisfactory installation Buyer takes Will depend delivery of on facts and goods, seller circumstances guarantees product performance outside of normal warranty provisions Buyer takes delivery of goods, seller guarantees product performance within normal warranty provisions Buyer takes delivery of goods, seller continues to share in certain benefits. Y N When installation and inspection is complete When seller is no Will depend longer exposed to on facts and circumstances significant risk and has no further performance obligation Y When buyer takes delivery of goods Seller transfers goods to the N buyer, seller has an obligation to repurchase goods Seller transfers goods to the N buyer, seller has an option to repurchase goods at an amount below their fair value N N No sale is recognised, as substantially all the risks and rewards are retained When seller relinquishes purchase option Lay-away sales Issue At what point in the following transaction should revenue be recognised? Will depend on facts and circumstances Will depend on When seller has facts and relinquished right circumstances to significant benefits http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Background Undertaking A enters into a sale agreement (lay-away) to sell 10 television sets at a total price of 15,000 (1,500 per television) to a customer. A has only 5 televisions in stock and set them aside in its inventory. A collects a cash deposit of 1,000 from the customer. The television sets are not released to the customer until the full purchase price is paid. 13 IAS 18 REVENUE gymnasiums. The customer has to finalise the purchase in three months or it forfeits the cash deposit. Undertaking A must either refund the cash deposit to the customer or provide a replacement product if the television sets are damaged or lost. Solution Undertaking A should recognise 15,000 as revenue when the 10 television sets are delivered to the customer. A retains the risk of ownership of the merchandise and does not have an enforceable right to the remainder of the purchase price prior to delivery. The amount of a cash deposit should be recognised as a liability up to that point. The customer may in addition to the purchase of the equipment enter into a servicing agreement for maintenance services provided on a fee for services basis. The price of the equipment and the maintenance package is 100,000. The undertaking also provides maintenance services and equipment sales separately. The price of maintenance contracts is 10,000 a year, and the cost of the equipment when sold separately is 95,000. Undertaking C delivered and installed the equipment on 1 October 20X1. On 1 October 20X1 the customer paid a 20% deposit (20,000). The outstanding balance of 80,000 is payable in accordance with the undertaking’s normal credit terms (60 days). The undertaking has a December year-end. One contract with separate elements Issue The recognition criteria should be applied to separately identifiable components of a single transaction in order to reflect the substance of the transaction. On what basis should management recognise revenue on a contract with separate elements? Background Undertaking C manufactures and supplies fitness equipment to health clubs, schools and corporate undertakings that run private Solution Management should account for the manufacture and supply and the maintenance support as separate elements of the contract. The best indicator that a separate element exists in a bundled contract is that the seller could sell that element unaccompanied by other elements, and that the revenue and costs for each element can be separately identified. The discount of 5,000 that the customer obtains by buying both components should be allocated to each component in proportion to the fair value of the component. Revenue of 90,476 (100,000 x 95,000/105,000) for the sale of the http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 14 IAS 18 REVENUE equipment should be recognised on 1 October 20X1. All of the following conditions that are necessary for the recognition of revenue from the sale of goods are satisfied: a) undertaking C has transferred significant risks and rewards of ownership to the buyer; b) undertaking C has relinquished managerial involvement and effective control over the goods; c) the costs incurred or to be incurred can be measured reliably; d) it is probable that any future economic benefit associated with the revenue will flow to the undertaking; and e) the revenue has a cost or value that can be measured reliably. Revenue of 9,524 (100,000 x 10,000/105,000) that relates to the maintenance contract should be recognised over the 12-month period of the contract (2,381 for the year ended 31 December 20X1, and 7,143 for the year ended 31 December 20X2). The retailer is under no obligation to purchase mittens from F plc over the three-year term of the contract but F plc is prevented by the contract from selling mittens to any other retailer. Can F plc recognise the £500,000 received in cash as revenue on the date the contract is signed, on the basis that F plc has completed its contractual performance at that date? IAS 18 contains the concept of a multiple-element arrangement. This is a contractual arrangement that consists of two or more elements that are, in substance, separate, distinct parts of the contract, one or more of which could be supplied or purchased without the other parts of the contract. IAS 18 states that such elements are separately identifiable. The term separately identifiable is not defined in IAS 18. However, two elements of a contractual arrangement operate independently where one could be supplied independently of the other. The two elements of this contract can be considered to operate independently. F plc has contracted not to supply mittens to any other retailer and has received £500,000 in consideration for this. Recognition of contract signing bonus In addition, F plc has agreed to sell woolly mittens to the retailer at their fair value at the date the contract was signed. F plc is a supplier of woolly mittens. It contracts with a retailer to supply only that retailer with mittens, at £10 per pair (which is the fair value for a pair of such mittens at the date the contract is signed) for a period of three years. However, although F plc has received £500,000 in cash, it has not completed its contractual performance entitling it to keep that consideration. On signing the contract, F plc receives a non-refundable cash payment of £500,000. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Indeed, because F has contracted not to perform (ie, not to supply mittens to any other retailer), it completes its non-performance over time and should recognise the £500,000 revenue over the period of the contract and not on the date the contract is signed. 15 IAS 18 REVENUE The revenue on the sale of each pair of mittens should be recognised as a sale of goods in accordance with IAS 18. The circumstances under which B could not accept the equipment are limited to those in which the equipment does not perform to published specifications. Would the answer be different if the fair value of the mittens is £15 a pair, but F plc sells them for £10 a pair to the retailer? Yes. IAS 18 requires F plc to recognise the consideration for each element of the contract at fair value. To the extent that there is cross-subsidisation between the elements of the contract, the revenue recognised on the completion of each element must be adjusted to ensure compliance with the standard. Solution Revenue should be recognised when title to the equipment passes to undertaking B. The transfer of title coincides with the transfer of risks and rewards of ownership. Undertaking A has not retained significant risks of ownership, and has no further obligations to perform at that point beyond those specified in the warranty agreement. The transfer of legal title normally passes the risks and rewards. Transfer of title Issue At what point is it appropriate to recognise revenue in the following example date of the agreement; transfer of title/delivery date; payment date? Background Undertaking A and undertaking B enter into a sale agreement in which title to a piece of equipment passes to B on delivery. Payment is due thirty days after delivery. Undertaking A is not responsible for any post-delivery services other than those imposed by the terms of the equipment's warranty. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Undertaking A should recognise a liability for returns based on previous experience and other relevant factors. Sales agreement Issue A condition to be satisfied before revenue can be recognised from the sale of goods is that the seller has transferred the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the goods to the buyer. The transfer of significant risks and rewards of ownership requires an examination of the circumstances of the transaction. Should management recognise revenue on the basis of a oral approval from a customer’s management? 16 IAS 18 REVENUE Background Retention of legal title to protect collectability Undertaking A entered into a contract to supply goods to undertaking B in November 20X2. A delivered the goods to B before the December year-end. Issue A’s normal business practice and policy is to enter into a written sales agreement that requires the signatures of the authorised representatives of A and its customer (undertaking B). The sale agreement was signed by undertaking A’s authorised representatives before year-end. The agreement was not signed by B however, because it is awaiting the requisite approval by its legal department. B’s management has orally agreed to the sale, subject to that approval. B’s management believes that its legal department will approve the agreement in the first week of 20X3. Solution No, undertaking A should not recognise revenue before the customer has endorsed the sales agreement. Should a transaction be recognised as a sale if a seller retains the legal title to protect collectability of the amount due? Background Undertaking A operates in a country where it is commonplace to retain title to goods sold as protection against non-payment by a buyer. The retention of the title will enable undertaking A to recover the goods if the buyer defaults on payment. Subsequent to the delivery of the goods to the buyer (undertaking B), undertaking A does not have any control over the goods. Undertaking B makes payments in accordance with the normal credit terms provided by A. Product liability is assumed by B. Settlement is due 14 days after delivery. Solution The terms and conditions set out in the sales agreement will be binding once signed by both undertaking A and undertaking B, and will form the basis for revenue recognition by undertaking A. Yes. Undertaking A has sold the goods to undertaking B. The buyer controls the goods following the delivery and is free to use or dispose of them as it wishes. Prior to that event, A will not be able to assess whether it has transferred the risks and rewards of ownership to B, or has continuing involvement or effective control over the goods to be sold. The most significant risk of ownership, the product risk, has been transferred to B. A’s retention of legal title does not affect the substance of the transaction, which is the sale of goods from A to B. Normal credit risk derived from sales is not a reason to defer revenue recognition. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Undertaking A should therefore derecognise the inventory and recognise the revenue from the sale. 17 IAS 18 REVENUE The retention of credit risk should not prevent the recognition of revenue. Credit risk is not a risk of ownership of goods but a risk of the collection of an amount due. The effect of credit risk should be reflected in the initial measurement of the receivable at fair value. Retention of significant risks means that the sale will not be recognised. For example: Solution A’s management should recognise revenue on the sale of the goods, with an appropriate adjustment to reflect the risk of returns. Management should recognise revenue for the 90% of CD players it does not expect to receive back from customers, and recognise a provision for the 10% of expected returns. The entries to recognise the revenue and the provision will be: 1. If the contract allows the goods to be returned and you cannot reasonably estimate the probability of return, the sale cannot be recognised until customer acceptance is clear. Dr Receivables / cash Cr Revenue Sale of goods with right of return Cr Provision 12,000 10,800 (90% x 12,000) 1,200 (10% x 12,000) Issue How should an undertaking recognise revenue on the sale of goods when it provides a right of return? The entries to recognise the transfer of the goods to the customer will be: Background Dr Undertaking A is a retailer. It has a standard policy of giving refunds on returned goods, whether or not the goods are defective, provided that the goods have not been used. A sells 100 CD players for 120 each. The cost to A of the CD players is 90 each. Typically 10% of A’s customers return this type of product. Cr Cost of sales Inventories 9,000 9,000 The full cost of all 100 CD players is derecognised from inventory and included in cost of sales. On return of the 10% of CD players expected, the following entry will be recorded: How should A account for the 100 CD players sold? http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 18 IAS 18 REVENUE Dr Cr Inventories Sale subject to installation and inspection 900 (10% x 900) 900 Cost of sales Issue Revenue is normally recognised when the buyer accepts delivery, and installation and inspection are complete. Management will also consider whether the returned products should be impaired for damage or obsolescence. At what point is it appropriate for undertaking C to recognise revenue in the following example? Recognition in inventory of the products expected to be returned is not appropriate because A no longer controls the assets. Neither should a receivable be recognised because A does not have the right to receive cash. Background Undertaking C manufactures and installs cable TV satellite dishes at customers’ premises on behalf of cable TV operator B. Undertaking B placed an order with undertaking C to manufacture and install 100 dishes at its customers’ premises on 1 August 20X2. Similarly, management does not reduce the provision by the cost of the inventory expected to be returned because A’s expected cash out flow is the full sales price of the product. Management recognises the refund paid to the customer on return of the CD as follows: Dr Provision Cr Cash 1,200 1,200 1. If installation has not been completed, when the installation is an important part of the contract, recognition does not take place until installation is complete. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Undertaking C has the dishes on stock and expects to install them by the 14 September 20X2. Payment is due 14 days after installation of the dishes. Undertaking C expects to complete most of the installations successfully in one visit. Solution Undertaking C should recognise revenue when the installation is complete. The installation is critical to customer acceptance and payment from undertaking B. The sale of goods is often made subject to satisfactory installation, and the installation is rarely perfunctory or incidental, as it is usually essential to the functionality of the delivered goods. 2. If the sale is contingent on the buyer deriving revenue from resale of the goods, recognition is deferred. 19 IAS 18 REVENUE 3. If the seller provides exceptional cover against unsatisfactory performance of the goods (more than is covered by normal warranty provisions. Example: In March, you supply 5 cars at 400 each to your agent. The contract is a consignment contract and the ownership and risk remains yours. In July, the agent sells the cars for 600 each, but you do not receive the money until August. The agent earns commission at 10% on sales. Revenue is recognised in July, when the cars are sold by the agent. I/B DR CR Consignment inventory-agent B 2.000 Inventory B 2.000 Initial supply- March Cost of sales I 2.000 Consignment inventory-agent B 2.000 Accounts receivable B 3.000 Revenue I 3.000 Revenue recognition-July Cost of Sales Commission Accounts Payable Commission earned in July 10% x 3000 I/B I B DR 300 CR 300 Where foreign exchange control restricts the transfer of the sales proceeds, recognition cannot take place until permission (to transfer funds) is granted. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Once an amount has been recognised in revenue, any risk of nonpayment is treated as a bad, or doubtful debt. Where warranties are given to the buyer, the cost of these will be immediately recognised as an expense. Sales of extended warranty Issue When the outcome of a transaction involving the rendering of services can be estimated reliably, revenue associated with the transaction should be recognised by reference to the transaction’s stage of completion at the balance sheet date. How should management recognise the sale of an extended warranty? Background Undertaking A sells electrical goods. The goods come with a manufacturer’s 1-year warranty. Undertaking A also offers customers the option of purchasing an extended warranty to cover years 2 to 5. The sales price of the extended warranty is 100 and A typically receives valid warranty claims from 4% of customers during the extended warranty period. The average cost of repairing or replacing the goods under the warranty is 600 per valid claim. How should management recognise revenue from the sale of the extended warranties and the associated costs? Solution Management should defer the revenue and recognise it on a straight-line basis over years 2 to 5, which is the period over which 20 IAS 18 REVENUE the extended warranty is provided. example if there was a fire in the property. The costs incurred under the warranty should be charged to cost of sales as incurred. Undertaking A does not sell the windows without the warranty and does not sell warranties for other manufacturers’ products. Management should not recognise a provision for the expected costs of the warranty but should monitor the arrangements to ensure that the expected future cost of the warranty does not exceed the amount of unamortised deferred revenue. Each window sells for 1,000 and undertaking A typically repairs 2% of windows under the warranty. The average cost of a warranty repair is 350. The warranty contract will be onerous if, at any time, the expected future costs of meeting the warranty obligations exceed the unamortised warranty revenue. Management should recognise a provision to the extent that the future warranty costs are estimated to exceed the unamortised warranty revenue. Sales of goods with a long warranty How should management recognise the sales revenue and the warranty cost? Solution Management should recognise revenue of 1,000 when the window is installed and recognise a provision for warranty costs at the same time. The value of the warranty provision recognised should be based on the costs management expects to incur under the warranty (2% x 350 = 7) and discounted according to the expected pattern of cash flows over the 15-year warranty period. Issue How should management recognise the sale of goods with a long warranty? Background Undertaking A sells and fits prefabricated replacement windows for houses. The standard sale includes a 15-year warranty. Undertaking A will repair the window during the warranty period if there is a defect in the product or the installation. The warranty does not cover damage caused by other causes, for http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng If these cannot be measured reliably, the proceeds received should be not be recognised as revenue but as liability until the warranty position is clear. Reliable measurement of costs incurred Issue An undertaking should recognise revenue when: a) the undertaking has transferred significant risks and rewards of ownership of the goods to the buyer; 21 IAS 18 REVENUE b) the undertaking does not retain continuing managerial involvement or control over the goods sold; c) the amount of revenue can be measured reliably; d) it is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the undertaking; and e) the costs incurred or to be incurred in respect of the transaction can be measured reliably. How should management recognise revenue in respect of a sale of equipment for which a warranty has been given but for which no prior experience of warranty costs is available? Background Undertaking A has developed a new engine based on the principles of perpetual motion. Long-term testing of the engine has not been possible because the technology is so new. However, the sale of the first such engine has been agreed, and a one-year warranty for parts and labour has been provided. In theory, if you had no experience of judging warranty costs the whole $3.000 would be recognised as a liability until the warranty position is clear. In practice, a manufacturer would estimate the warranty liability and recognise the sales immediately. Related parties The requirement to measure revenue at fair value applies to nonarm’s length transactions, as well as arm’s length transactions. Revenue transactions with related parties are recorded at the fair value of the consideration received. This is the agreed amount of any monetary consideration and the fair value of any non-monetary assets received 4. Provision of Services Revenue from the provision of services should be recognised by referring to the stage of completion at the balance sheet date. The stage of completion, the costs to date, and the costs to complete the transaction should be reliably measurable. Management is unable to assess the expected costs of the warranty, but was prepared to provide the warranty in order to obtain the first sale. Solution Management should not recognise revenue in respect of the engine sale until the one-year warranty period has expired. Management is not able to assess the likely total cost of the sale, and accordingly does not meet the revenue recognition criteria in respect of reliable measurement of the costs of the sale. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 22 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You are constructing a building for a client. Project revenue is $20m. At what point should management recognise revenue in the following example? Costs to date are $6m, and you estimate that additional costs to completion are $10m. Background Undertaking G is involved in providing tax services. One of its activities is to prepare and file value added tax (VAT) returns on behalf of foreign undertakings. The client has, so far, only approved $4m of the expenditure, as his staff is on holiday for the month. You believe that the $2m ($6-$4m) will be approved). No payment has been received. The tax authorities process the returns and submit cash refunds (if any) to the foreign undertakings via undertaking G. G receives a commission of 5% of VAT refunded. Recognise: $4m as expense (the amount approved) $5m as (accrued) revenue (4/16*$20m). The tax authorities accept seventy-five per-cent of claims without additional service from G. The tax authorities take between three and nine months to process a return. $2m is left as work in progress. ($6m-$4m=$2m) I/B DR Cost of sales I $4m Work in progress B Accounts receivable B $5m Revenue I Revenue recognition Solution Management should recognise revenue when the tax authorities approve the claim. CR $4m $5m Revenue from the rendering of services may be recognised using the percentage of completion method only if the transaction costs and revenue can be measured reliably. Issue The fact that 25% of the claims submitted need to be reprocessed is a rather high percentage of failure, and an indication that G cannot estimate revenue with sufficient reliability. When the outcome of a transaction involving the rendering of services can be estimated reliably, revenue associated with the transaction should be recognised by reference to the transaction’s stage of completion at the balance sheet date. G’s management should disclose a contingent asset in respect of the commission receivable. The revenue and the corresponding receivable should be recognised only after the tax authorities have approved the claim. Recognition of professional fees 1 The costs incurred in preparing the claim should be expensed as http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 23 IAS 18 REVENUE incurred. The costs do not meet the definition of an asset because the flow of economic benefits is contingent on the approval of the claim as noted above. Advances and progress payments received from clients may not Revenue recognition: accounting for TV appearances Example: Percentage of Completion -i On day 1 of a $50 million contract, $5 million is received on account. This should not be fully recognised as revenue until 10% of the work has been successfully completed. A celebrity, Miss Crimson, has agreed with a TV company to make a guest appearance in an episode of a crime thriller to be broadcast on the TV company’s network. Miss Crimson is entitled to a fee of £10,000 when her appearance is filmed and a further £2,000 each time the thriller is repeated on the TV company’s channels. How should Miss Crimson record her earnings from this contract? IAS 18 requires that revenue on a service contract is recognised when the outcome of the transaction can be measured reliably. That is, the revenue flow to the undertaking is probable and the following can be reliably measured: the revenue, the stage of completion of the transaction and the costs to complete the service. As the only revenue that can be measured reliably when Miss Crimson completes her contractual performance is the £10,000 fee, this should be recognised as revenue. Only when the TV company shows repeats should additional amounts of £2,000 be recognised. Revisions to estimates do not mean that the financial outcome of the transaction cannot be reliably measured. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng reflect the stage of completion. Cash Deferred revenue Recording cash receipt on day 1 I/B B B DR $5m Example: Percentage of Completion -ii 10% is now completed, costs total $3m Cost of sales I $3m Work in progress B Deferred revenue B $5m Revenue I Revenue recognition –when 10% of the work is completed CR $5m $3m $5m In the early stages of a transaction, it may be that the profitability cannot be reliably estimated. If it is likely that only the costs will be recovered, recognise only enough revenue to equal the costs. (accounting for the project as breakeven: no profit, no loss). 24 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: Recovery of costs Project revenue is a total of $100 million. $1 million has been spent at the period end, and there are problems that indicate that no profit will be made on the project. Recognise $1million as accrued revenue and $1million as (actual) expenses. Accounts receivable Revenue Revenue recognition Cost of sales Work in progress Recognising expenses I/B B I DR $1m I B $1m CR $1m $1m If it is not probable that the costs will be recovered, no revenue is recognised, and all costs are immediately expensed. Measurement of revenue - free upgrades Issue When the outcome of the transaction involving the rendering of services cannot be estimated reliably, revenue should be recognised only to the extent of the expenses recognised that are recoverable. How does an undertaking’s commitment to provide additional upgrades free of charge affect the recognition of revenue for this contract? Background Undertaking A has a contract to deliver a mobile telecom network, including hardware and software, and to provide specified additional software upgrades free of charge. The total contract revenue is 200 million. The cost of completing the network is estimated to be 150 million; undertaking A has incurred costs of 120 million to date. Example: Expensing costs Project revenue is a total of $80 million. $5 million has been spent by the period end, and the client has serious financial problems. The costs of the specified additional upgrades are estimated to be 30 million, for which undertaking A would normally charge 40 million. Recognise no accrued revenue, and $5 million as (actual) expenses. Solution The upgrade and the contract to deliver the network should be considered as a single contract that has been negotiated for a single total fee. Cost of sales Work in progress Recognising expenses I/B I B DR $5m http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng CR $5m The two contracts are treated as one because the commercial effect cannot be properly understood unless the arrangement is considered as one contract. 25 IAS 18 REVENUE Undertaking A should recognise revenue on a percentage of completion basis, as it is able to determine reliably the: a) amount of contract revenue; b) costs to complete the contract; and Example: You sell $3000 of good that cost $2500s. Experience tells you that warranty costs will be 2% of revenue. Recognise the revenue of $3000 immediately and create a warranty provision for $60 ($3000*2%) and recognise the warranty expense immediately in the income statement. c) the stage of completion. Undertaking A may determine the stage of completion from: the proportion of costs incurred to date; the percentage of physical work complete; or services performed to date. Using costs incurred to date as the basis, undertaking A has completed 66% (120/180) of the project and should recognise 132 million as revenue (200 x 66%). To recapitulate: The three options in calculating Revenue, depending on the level of knowledge of the transaction’s final outcome are: 1. Anticipating a profit: Percentage of completion method. 2. Anticipating Break-Even: Recovery of costs, only. 3. Anticipating a loss: Non-recovery of costs (but full expensing of costs). Cash Revenue Sale Cost of sales Inventory Warranty costs Warranty provision Warranty provision I/B B I DR 3.000 I B I B 2.500 CR 3.000 2.500 60 60 Interest should be recognised on a time-proportion basis, reflecting the effective yield of the asset. (The effective yield takes account any fees, discount, or premium, at which the financial instrument was issued.) Example: You make a loan of $500m at 12% interest for a year. Interest is only paid at the end of the period. Accrue interest receivable of $5m each month. Please also see IAS 11 Construction Contracts workbook. 5. Interest, Royalties and Dividends Revenue should be recognised as follows: http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Accounts receivable Interest receivable Revenue recognition each month I/B B I DR $5m CR $5m 26 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You make a $20.000 loan at 10% for 2 years. Interest is applied annually and paid at the end of each year. Your administration fee is $400 and paid in advance. Accruing interest and recognising fees at the end of year 1 Effective Interest Rate The administration fee is treated as deferred revenue $400 and will be recognised over the 2 year loan period. Both the nominal and effective interest rates, by definition, are Cash inflows from this loan are: to yield the same amount of interest. Year 0 +400 1 +2000 Nominal rate: Invest $1 at 9.65% compounded quarterly. 2 At the end+2000 of one year: Total 4400 or 2200 per year. So the effective interest rate (produces the same amount of cash flow is 11%. So 11.00% of 20,000 = $2200 will be recognised as income in each year. Year 1 beginning Loan receivable Cash Cash Deferred revenue fees Providing loan and receiving fee I/B B B B B Annually Accrued Interest receivable Deferred revenue fees Interest income Fee income I/B B B I I DR 20.000 = $1.10 Effective rate therefore is 10% Effective rate: Invest $1 at i% pa. You receive interest only once! CR Therefore: = $1.10 20.000 400 400 So a nominal rate of 9.35% quarterly has an effective rate of 10% i.e you receive with the same amount of interest. Royalties should be recognised on an accruals basis, based on the relevant contract. DR 2000 200 CR 2000 200 http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 27 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You sell the US rights to your book at $1 per book. Payment is to be made every six months in arrears. The licence entitles the cinema operator to show the film an unlimited amount of times throughout the period of the agreement. The cinema operator cannot cancel the licence agreement and the distributor cannot be required to refund any part of the fee to the cinema operator in any circumstances. In month 1, 400.000 copies are sold in the US. In month 2, 1 million copies are sold. Accrue royalty income of $400.000 for month 1 and $1million for month 2. Accounts receivable Revenue Revenue recognition-month 1 Accounts receivable Revenue Revenue recognition-month 2 I/B B I DR $400.000 B I $1m CR $400.000 $1m Licence agreement in substance a sale Issue Royalties accrue in accordance with the terms of the relevant agreement, and are usually recognised on that basis, unless the substance of the agreement suggests it is more appropriate to recognise revenue on some other systematic and rational basis. Solution Revenue should be recognised in full once the licence is granted to the cinema operator and it is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the distributor. The substance of the agreement is that the film distributor does not have any remaining obligations to perform under the terms of the non-cancellable agreement. The film distributor is also only entitled to the non-refundable fixed fee and no additional amounts from box office receipts. The distributor has transferred substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership to the cinema operator. The transaction is, in substance, a sale of the licence. Licence agreements How should management recognise royalty revenue? Issue Royalties shall be recognised on an accrual basis in accordance with the substance of the relevant agreement. Background A film distributor grants a licence for a fixed fee to a cinema operator in respect of its new film. When should undertaking A recognise the licence fee in the following example? http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 28 IAS 18 REVENUE Background Undertaking A grants a licence to a customer to use its web-site, which contains proprietary databases. The licence allows the customer to use the web-site for a two-year period (1 January 20X1 to 31 December 20X2). The licence fee of 60,000 is payable on 1 January 20X1. Solution The substance of the agreement is that the customer is paying for a service that is delivered over time. Although undertaking A will not incur incremental costs in serving the customer, it will incur costs to maintain the web-site. The revenue from the licence fees should be accrued over the period of the agreement that reflects the provision of the service. How should management recognise royalty revenue? Background A film distributor grants a licence to a cinema operator. The licence entitles the theatre to show the film twice in location A in the following year in return for a percentage of the box office receipts. The distributor expects to license the film to other operators in other locations. Solution The film distributor should recognise the revenue on the dates the film is shown. The substance of the agreement is that the film distributor will only be able to measure the amount of revenue from the licence once the event (when the films are shown) has occurred. The undertaking has an obligation to provide services for the next 2 years, therefore the fee of 60,000 received on 1 January 20X1 should be recognised as a liability (deferred income). The nature of the agreement is that the distributor has not sold the rights but assigned them for a specific period in a specific location. Each month for the period January 20X1 to December 20X2, an amount of 2,500 should be released from deferred income and recognised as income to reflect the service that is delivered. The revenue-generating event is the licensee’s showing of the film. This contrasts with situations in which the distributor transfers substantially all the risks and rewards associated with the film. Revenue contingent on future event Dividends should be recognised only when the shareholder has a Issue Royalties accrue in accordance with the terms of the relevant agreement, and are usually recognised on that basis unless the substance of the agreement suggests it is more appropriate to recognise revenue on some other systematic and rational basis. legal right to receive payment. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 29 IAS 18 REVENUE Dividends Issue What amount should be recognised as dividend income in the following example, and at what date? The directors’ declaration of the interim dividend was sufficient to establish A’s right to receive the dividend. However, A is not entitled to receive the final dividend until the shareholders approve it. Undertaking A should recognise a dividend of 100 (2,000 x 0.05) in respect of the interim dividend on the 2,000 shares purchased in Background During the year ended 31 December 20X1, undertaking A made the following investments in undertaking B (a listed undertaking): January 20X1. 1 January 2,000 shares, registered on 28 February 20X1; 15 June 5,000 shares, registered on 10 July 20X1; 5 October 3,000 shares, registered on 20 December 20X1 29 December 1,000 shares, registration outstanding. Example: You have purchased a preferred share. It will pay 3% dividend each quarter, 4 weeks after the board declares the dividend. B’s directors declared an interim dividend on 31 July 20X1 of 0.05 per share, with a last registration date of 30 June 20X1. This dividend declaration does not require shareholder approval. The dividend was paid on 30 September 20X1. At 31 December 20X1, B’s directors proposed a final dividend of 0.15 per share, with a last date of registration of 30 November 20X1. Shareholders approved the proposed final dividend at the annual general meeting on 31 January 20X2, and the dividend was paid on 31 March 20X2. Undertaking A and undertaking B both have a December year-end. Solution A’s management should recognise dividend income at 31 December 20X1 in respect of the interim dividend, but should not recognise dividend income in respect of the final dividend. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Accrue the dividend receivable when the board declares the dividend each quarter. If the directors declared their intention to declare a dividend, no accrual would be made as no legal rights arise from an intention. I/B DR CR Accounts receivable B $3 Dividend receivable I $3 Revenue recognition-following declaration of dividend If the board does not declare a dividend, none must be accrued for this share. Where unpaid interest, or dividends, had accrued before the acquisition of a financial instrument, the next receipt of interest, or 30 IAS 18 REVENUE dividend, will be spilt between pre-acquisition and post-acquisition Dividends from pre-acquisition earnings periods. The pre-acquisition portion is deducted from the cost of the Issue financial instrument. Only the post-acquisition portion is recognised Dividends that are declared from pre-acquisition net income are deducted from the cost of the investment. as revenue. Example: You buy a bond for $105 on April 1. It has a face value of $100. It pays interest of 20% every December 31st. The price you paid therefore includes 3 months of accrued interest. (The $105 includes $5 accrued interest.) Even though you have only owned it for 9 months, you will receive the full 20% interest on December 31st. When you receive the interest, it will be spilt between pre-acquisition ($5) and post-acquisition periods ($15). The pre-acquisition portion ($5) is deducted from the cost of the financial instruments. Investment Accrued interest on bonds Cash Purchase of bond Cash Accrued interest on bonds Interest received Receipt of interest I/B B B B DR 100 5 B B I 20 CR 105 5 15 Only the post-acquisition portion is recognised as revenue ($15). Next year, the whole $20 will be recognised as interest received. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng How should dividends from pre-acquisition earnings be recognised in the acquirer’s financial statements? Background Undertaking A acquired 16,000 ordinary shares of undertaking B 80% of B’s ordinary share capital - as at 31 December 20X1. B’s retained profit at the date of acquisition amounted to 4,000. B’s shareholders had declared a dividend of 0.10 per share at 30 November 20X1. The dividend is payable in January 20X1. Undertaking A paid 19,200 for the investment in undertaking B. Both A and B have a December year-end. Solution The dividend that B’s shareholders declared on 30 November 20X1 arises from pre-acquisition earnings. Undertaking A should recognise its relevant portion (80%) of the dividend in its separate financial statements as follows: Dr Current account - undertaking B Cr Investment - undertaking B 1,600 1,600 31 IAS 18 REVENUE The above journal entry will result in A recognising an investment in undertaking B for an amount of 17,600 (19,200 - 1,600). In the consolidated financial statements, no further adjustment is necessary, because the carrying amount of A’s investment in B and A’s portion of B’s equity has been changed equally. Undertaking’s B dividend liability has to be eliminated against undertaking’s A dividend receivable. Interest and dividends on financial instruments Undertaking A is applying IFRS 7, Financial Instruments: Disclosure, and is considering the presentation of interest income, interest expense and dividend income on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss. Should these items of income and expense be reported as part of net gains or net losses on these financial instruments or disclosed separately as part of interest income, interest expense or dividend income? IFRS 7 allows an accounting policy choice between these two treatments. Undertaking A should apply its chosen policy consistently and disclose the policy adopted. Interest income is the charge for the use of cash or cash equivalents or amounts due to the undertaking under IAS 18. Dividend income is the distribution of profits to holders of equity investments in proportion to their holdings of a particular class of capital. The nature of dividend income is therefore different from interest http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng income and it is possible to adopt one treatment for interest income and interest expense and a different treatment for dividend income. However, the reporting of interest income should be consistent with that of interest expense. IAS 18 requires undertakings to disclose the amount of dividend income, if significant. Therefore, if undertaking A reports dividend income from equity investments as part of net gains or net losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss (FVTPL), the amount of dividend income on financial assets at FVPTL should be disclosed in the notes. OTHER REVENUE summary What is other revenue? The main source of an undertaking’s revenue arises from the sales of goods and the provision of services. Other sources such as interest, dividends, royalties and government grants (see IAS 20) provide another element of revenue. Items of other revenue are disclosed within sales revenue or other operating income, depending on the nature of the undertaking’s operations. Other revenue should be distinguished from gains that arise from: fair value gains on the revaluation of PPE, investment property, financial instruments, foreign exchange gains and gains on sale and leaseback transactions. 32 IAS 18 REVENUE Initial recognition The general revenue recognition criteria apply to the recognition of other revenue. Revenue may be recognised when: a) it is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the undertaking; and b) the amount of revenue can be measured reliably. More specific recognition guidance is set out below for key items of other revenue. Interest income An undertaking should recognise interest income using the effective interest method. The effective interest rate is the rate that exactly discounts estimated future cash payments or receipts through the expected life or duration of the financial instrument to the net carrying amount of the financial asset or financial liability. different where the initial carrying amount (fair value) of a financial asset differs from its face value or amount to be received at maturity. Certain transactions may include elements both of interest and other financial service fees. For these transactions, an undertaking must differentiate between fees that are part of the asset’s effective yield, fees that are earned as services are provided and fees earned on the execution of a significant act. Reviewing a borrower's credit rating or registering charges, for example, are necessary and integral parts of the lending process. Fees for performing such services should be deferred and recognised as an adjustment to the effective yield. Commitment fees should be considered in the effective yield on an asset when it is probable that the transaction will take place and the commitment is not a derivative under IFRS 9. The fee should be recognised as revenue on expiry if the commitment expires without the transaction having taken place. The estimated cash flows include all contractual terms of the financial instrument (for example, prepayment, call and similar options) but exclude future credit losses. Dividends The calculation includes all fees and points paid or received that are an integral part of the effective interest rate, transaction costs, and all other premiums or discounts. Dividend income should be recognised when a shareholder's right to receive payment is established. Dividends may be recognised at the date they are declared, depending on local laws. The actual rate of interest a lender charges may or may not be the same as or different from the effective rate. These rates are http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Dividends declared by directors but which do not require Cash dividends 33 IAS 18 REVENUE shareholder approval should be recognised from the date on which the directors make their irrevocable declaration. Dividends that are proposed by directors but require approval by shareholders should not be recognised until the shareholder approval has been given. Dividends sometimes arise from pre-acquisition earnings. These dividends should be deducted from the cost of the undertaking’s investment. The costs associated with the supply of these rights are normally substantially incurred before the period of use commences. The costs incurred during the period of use are often minimal. Royalty revenue should be recognised on an accrual basis in accordance with the substance of the agreement. Revenue is earned over the course of the contract as the customer accesses the benefits of the asset. Typically this will be on a straight-line basis over the life of the agreement. Non-cash dividends Some listed companies arrange for ordinary shareholders to elect to receive their dividends in the form of additional shares rather than in cash. The share equivalent is sometimes referred to as a scrip dividend or a stock dividend, and consists of shares issued and fully paid up. The receipt of scrip dividends is in substance the receipt of a cash dividend, with a simultaneous reinvestment of the proceeds in the issue of new shares. Revenue arising from the scrip dividend should be recognised on the same basis as that for a cash dividend. Royalties Royalty revenue arises from the sale of rights to use an intangible asset, often for a defined period of time. The rights are generally long-term. Examples include rights to use films and software. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng However, if the receipt of the revenue is contingent on some future event, the revenue should only be recognised when it is probable that revenue will be received. This may not be until after the event has occurred. The sale of an indefinite right to use an intangible asset with negligible post sales support, however, would justify immediate recognition of revenue. Such a transaction is, in substance, more like a sale of goods and if no material obligation remains with the undertaking, there is no reason to defer recognition of the revenue. Government grants Government grants may be of a capital nature, such as a contribution towards the acquisition of an asset, or of a revenue nature, for example, a contribution to defray an expense, or a mixture of both. Grants may be monetary or take the form of a transfer of a non34 IAS 18 REVENUE monetary asset. Grants should be recognised provided there is reasonable assurance that the undertaking will comply with their conditions and the grants will be received. The basis of recognition should match the grant with the related costs. Compensation for past expenses or losses or for immediate financial support should be recognised in income in the period in which it becomes receivable. Government grants are sometimes received as part of a package to which a number of conditions are attached. Management should evaluate these conditions to determine whether they give rise to constructive or legal obligations that should be recognised as liabilities. dividend should be measured at fair value. In the case of the government grant this would be the fair value of a non-monetary asset, and for a scrip dividend the cash equivalent of the dividend. Other revenue is usually recognised at its nominal amount, as it is not normally deferred beyond one accounting period and the impact of discounting is therefore not material. Presentation Insurance recoveries Items of other revenue are usually presented in the income statement as other operating income. Government grants related to income may alternatively be deducted in reporting the related expense. A potential insurance recovery is an example of a contingent asset. Disclosure Contingent assets are not recognised in the financial statements, since this may result in the recognition of revenue that will not be realised. An undertaking should disclose: Only when it becomes virtually certain that an insurance claim will result in an inflow of economic benefits are the asset and the related revenue recognised in the financial statements. Initial measurement Other revenue should be measured at the fair value of the consideration received or receivable. Interest income should be recognised using the effective interest method as set out in IFRS 9. Non-cash revenue derived from a government grant, or a scrip http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng a) its revenue recognition policies, including those relating to items of other revenue; b) the nature and extent of government grants recognised in the financial statements; c) any unfulfilled conditions or other contingencies attaching to government assistance that has been recognised; and d) separate disclosure should be made of revenue arising from the provision of services and royalty revenue. 35 IAS 18 REVENUE 6. Disclosure Disclosure includes Accounting policies used for revenue recognition, including Background A significant portion (more than 50 per cent) of undertaking A’s revenues and cost of sales result from barter transactions. These transactions are properly recognised in the income statement in accordance with IAS 18. methods of determining the stage of completion of transactions for services. Revenue should be split, to show separately, revenue arising from: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Sale of goods. Provision of services. Interest. Royalties. Dividends. 1. Revenue from the exchange of goods, or services, should be identified in each category. 2. Any contingent liabilities, or assets, such as warranty claims should be identified in each category. Barter transactions Issue Undertakings present additional line items, headings and subtotals on the face of the income statement when such presentation is of relevance to the understanding of the financial performance of an undertaking. Solution The nature of barter transactions is significantly different from that of cash transactions. A significant proportion of A’s total revenue and total cost of sales relates to barter transactions. An analysis of revenues and cost of sales on the face of the income statement is appropriate to highlight attention to the undertaking’s reliance on such transactions. 7. Specific Examples Sale Of Goods 1. “Bill and Hold” Buyer takes title but delivery is delayed. The seller recognises Revenue when the buyer takes title, if: 1. delivery will be made 2. the product is identified and ready for delivery 3. delayed delivery is agreed 4. usual payment terms apply. Should revenues and expenses relating to barter transactions be disclosed separately? http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 36 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You are about to deliver your monthly consignment of goods, when your client’s warehouse burns down. He asks you to store them, at his risk, until he can find alternative storage. The title to the good and risk has passed to the customer. Revenue is recognised immediately. Inventory Inventory – held on behalf of customer Transfer of ownershiip Accounts receivable Revenue Revenue recognition I/B B I I/B B I DR CR 100 100 DR 100 100,000 game consoles at 50 each. The wholesaler has a stock of 120,000 consoles at 31 December 20X2. The contract contains specific instructions with regard to the timing and location of the delivery. Undertaking W must deliver the consoles to the customer in the following reporting period at a date to be specified by the customer. Undertaking W cannot use the 100,000 consoles to satisfy other sales orders. Customer A has made a deposit of 15,000 at the time the contract was signed. Usual payment terms apply. CR Solution The conditions for revenue recognition have been met (as below) and undertaking W can recognise 100,000 game consoles as sold. 100 The criteria for recognition of revenue in a bill and hold sale are: Bill and hold sales Issue Revenue from bill and hold sales is recognised when the buyer takes title provided certain conditions are met. Revenue is not recognised when there is simply an intention to acquire or manufacture the goods in time for delivery. a) that delivery has been delayed at the buyer’s request; b) it is probable that delivery will be made; c) the item is on hand, identified and ready for delivery and cannot be used to satisfy other orders; d) the buyer specifically acknowledges the deferred delivery instructions in writing; and the seller’s usual payment terms apply. How should management recognise revenue from a bill and hold sale? 2. Installation and inspection. Background Undertaking W entered into a contract on 31 December 20X2 to supply video game consoles to customer A. The contract is for Where the contract specifies delivery, installation and inspection, all must be completed to recognise revenue. Exceptionally revenue may be recognised on delivery, if installation and inspection are short and straightforward. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 37 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You sell domestic refrigerators to a retail chain. They must be inspected prior to acceptance, but the inspector is ill. None have been rejected in the last 2 years. A 60% deposit is paid when the contract is signed. The deposit is not refundable. The remaining 40% is paid when the customer accepts the installation. Solution Revenue can be recognised immediately. Combined sale of goods and installation Issue Revenue is normally recognised when the buyer accepts delivery, and installation and inspection are complete. When should a retailer recognise revenue for the sale of products subject to installation? The retailer should recognise revenue when the customer accepts the installation of the kitchen. The recognition of revenue based on stage of completion would not be appropriate because the earnings process will not be complete until the kitchen is ready to be used and accepted by the customer. This is a single-element sale, as the installation is sold together with the kitchen. Background 3. On approval, with a limited right of return. Undertaking A is a retailer that sells and installs kitchen appliances and units. The products are always sold inclusive of the installation at the customer’s premises. Revenue is recognised upon the buyer’s acceptance, or the time for rejection has passed. Undertaking A sold a customer a full set of kitchen appliances, cabinets and worktops. Example: You sell curtains to a retailer. Written notification of rejection must be made within 10 days. For internal reporting purposes, management divides the sales price into the following elements: At the end of 10 days, if none have been rejected, revenue can be recognised. Kitchen appliances and materials: 4,500 4. Consignment sales and sales using agents. Labour required for installation: 1,500 The agent resells the goods before paying the seller. Revenue is recognised when the goods are resold. The period of installation is estimated to be four weeks. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 38 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: In April, you supply 5 cars to your agent. The contract is a consignment contract. In July, the agent sells the cars, but you do not receive the money until September. I/B DR CR Consignment inventory-agent B 500 Inventory B 500 Initial supply- April Cost of sales I 500 Consignment inventory-agent B 500 Accounts receivable B 1.000 Revenue I 1.000 Revenue recognition-July Recording delivery of books to client Cash Accounts receivable Deferred Income Revenue Revenue recognition on receipt of cash B I B B 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 6. Payment by instalments followed by delivery. Recognition of revenue is on delivery. If experience shows that most clients pay all of their instalments, revenue recognition may Revenue is recognised in July, when the cars are sold by the agent. take place when most of the payments have been made, and the 5. Cash-on-delivery sales. goods are ready for delivery. Revenue recognition occurs when delivery is complete and cash has been paid. Example: You sell books via the Internet. Clients can pay on receipt of the books. Example: You are building a house costing $60,000. You accept deposits and progress payments, prior to the house being finished. When it is finished, 10% of the total price of $100.000 remains unpaid, but you anticipate receipt in the next few days. When your agent has received the cash, having delivered the goods, the revenue can be recognised. I/B DR CR Cost of sales I 500 Inventory B 500 Accounts receivable B 1.000 Deferred Income B 1.000 If the work is complete, revenue may be recognised. I/B DR Cost of sales I 60.000 Work in progress B Accounts receivable B 10.000 Client deposits B 90.000 Revenue I http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng CR 60.000 100.000 39 IAS 18 REVENUE Revenue recognition on building completion Example: You sell a portfolio of shares in March for $5.000, with a contract to repurchase them for $5.250 in September (6 months). 7. Payments in advance of manufacture. Example: A foreign buyer pays for your goods at the start of each month. They are shipped in the middle of the month, and he accepts delivery at the end of each month. Recognise revenue when the goods are accepted. I/B DR CR Cash B 100 Deferred Income - Payments in B 100 advance Cash received at start of month Goods Shipped B 80 Inventory B 80 Shipment made- mid month Deferred Income - Payments in B 100 advance Revenue I 100 Cost of Sales I 80 Goods Shipped B 80 Revenue recognition on acceptance of goods 8. Sales and repurchases of the same items, which are really financing transactions. Treat as a financing transaction, rather than recognise revenue. This is primarily a finance transaction, and no revenue should be recognised. Monthly, an interest accrual of 250/6 would be made. I/B DR Cash B 5000 Investment B Cash received, investment ‘sold’ Borrowing cost I 250 Investment B 5000 Cash B Investment repurchased CR 5000 5250 Sale with repurchase rights/obligations Issue A sale and repurchase agreement is in substance a financing arrangement and does not give rise to revenue when the seller has retained the risks and rewards of ownership, even though legal title has been transferred. Should an undertaking recognise revenue on the sale of goods when repurchase rights exist? Background The management of undertaking A is considering the following two alternative transactions: a) sale of inventory to a bank for 500,000 with an obligation to repurchase the inventory at a later stage; or http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 40 IAS 18 REVENUE b) sale of inventory to a bank for 500,000 with an option to repurchase the inventory any time up to 12 months from the date of sale. Sale subject to share of future benefits The repurchase price in both alternatives is 500,000 plus an imputed financing cost. The bank is required to provide substantially the same quality and quantity of inventory as was sold to it (that is, the bank is not required to return precisely the same physical inventory as was originally sold to it). What are the circumstances under which an undertaking retains a continuing involvement in an asset? The fair value of the inventory sold to the bank is 1,000,000. Solution Management should recognise the transactions as follows: a) Sale with repurchase obligation: management should not recognise revenue on the transfer of the inventory to the bank. The inventory should remain on undertaking A’s balance sheet and the proceeds from the bank should be recognised as a collateralised borrowing. Even though the inventory repurchased from the bank is not the inventory sold, it is in substance the same asset. The substance of the transaction is that the sale and repurchase are linked transactions, and undertaking A does not transfer the risks and rewards associated with the inventory to the bank. b) Sale with repurchase option: management should not recognise revenue unless and until the option is allowed to lapse. The inventory should remain on undertaking A’s balance sheet and the proceeds recognised as a collateralised borrowing until A’s right to repurchase the inventory lapses. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng Issue Background Undertaking A owns a hotel resort located in the Bahamas. The resort includes a casino that is housed in a separate building that is part of the premises of the entire hotel resort. The casino’s patrons are largely tourists and non-resident visitors. Undertaking A operates the hotel and other facilities on the hotel resort, including the casino. During the year, the casino was sold to undertaking B. A and B agree that A will operate the casino for its remaining useful life. Undertaking A will receive 85% of the net profit of the casino as operator fees, and the remaining 15% will be paid to undertaking B. A has also provided a guarantee to B that the casino will have net profits of at least 10 million. Solution Undertaking A should not recognise the arrangement as a sale of the casino, as it continues to enjoy substantially all of its risks and rewards and has a continuing involvement in its management. The transaction is in substance a financing arrangement and the proceeds should be recognised as a borrowing. 41 IAS 18 REVENUE Sale and repurchase agreement Undertaking C manufactures trucks. C sells a fleet of trucks to undertaking D and provides a volume discount of 25% from the market price of the trucks. The size of the volume discount is typical for the market. As part of the sales transaction, C grants D a repurchase option. This option entitles D to require C to repurchase the vehicles after six years for 30% of the price paid by D. The expected economic life of the trucks is 15 years and at the date of the sales transaction, the repurchase option is expected to be in the money. How should undertakings C and D each account for the transaction? Accounting by undertaking C: Undertaking C should account for the transaction as an operating lease under IAS 17, Leases, and continue to recognise the trucks as PPE. C has not transferred the significant risks and rewards of ownership that would be required by IAS 18, in order to recognise a sale. This is because C retains the residual value risk associated with the trucks. Accounting by undertaking D: Undertaking D should also account for the transaction as an operating lease in accordance with IAS 17. It should recognise the amount paid net of the repurchase option price as an operating lease prepayment, which should be amortised on a straightline basis over the six years to the option exercise date. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng The repurchase option meets the definition of a receivable under IFRS 9 and D should measure it at amortised cost. 9. Subscriptions to publications. Recognise revenue on a straight-line basis over time. If the product price varies, use the percentage completion method, by value. Example: You sell a 3-year subscription to your monthly magazine. Recognise the revenue by as 1/36 of the revenue when each month’s magazine is issued. I/B DR CR Cash B 36 Deferred revenue B 36 Cash received Deferred revenue B 1 Revenue I 1 Revenue recognition on magazine issue If the price rises each year, then split the subscription to match the different price levels of each year. 10. Instalment sales. Interest portion is recognised as interest earned, using the imputed rate of interest. The sale price is the present value of the payments (net of interest). The instalments are discounted by the imputed rate of interest. 42 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You sell a car, costing $8000, for $10.000, payable in instalments over one year. The rate of interest is 10%. Interest is included in the price. Recognise immediately revenue of $9.091(10000/110%) and interest receivable of $909, matched by an accounts receivable of $10.000. The interest receivable of 909 would be recognised monthly over the year in which it is received. I/B DR CR Cost of sales I 8.000 Inventory B 8.000 Accounts receivable B 10.000 Interest receivable I 909 Revenue I 9.091 Recording sale and interest charge Sales suspense Recording conditional sale of house Sales suspense Revenue Revenue recognition on repair of roof B B I 100.000 100.000 100.000 Agreements for the Construction of Real Estate - IAS 11 or IAS 18? Background In the real estate industry, undertakings that undertake the construction of real estate, directly or through subcontractors, may enter into agreements with one or more buyers before construction is complete. 11. Real estate sales. Such agreements take diverse forms. Normally, revenue is recognised when title is transferred. Review the contract, and national law, to see if the seller has further substantial obligations to perform to complete the sale. For example, undertakings that undertake the construction of residential real estate may start to market individual apartments or houses while construction is still in progress, or even before it has begun. Example: You sell a house, but have committed your firm to repair the roof. Your roofer is away for 2 months. Each buyer enters into an agreement with the undertaking to acquire a specified unit when it is ready for occupation. Defer recognition of the sale until the roof is repaired. I/B DR Cost of sales I 90.000 Inventory B Cash B 100.000 CR Typically, the buyer pays a deposit to the undertaking that is refundable only if the undertaking fails to deliver the completed unit in accordance with the contracted terms. 90.000 http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 43 IAS 18 REVENUE The balance of the purchase price is normally paid to the undertaking only when the buyer obtains possession of the unit. Undertakings that undertake the construction of commercial or industrial real estate may enter into an agreement with a single buyer. The buyer may be required to make progress payments between the time of the initial agreement and contractual completion. Construction may take place on land the buyer owns or leases before construction begins. In addition to the construction of real estate, such agreements may include the delivery of other goods or services. Issues 1. Is the agreement within the scope of IAS 11 or IAS 18? 2. When should revenue from the construction of real estate be recognised? The following analysis assumes that the undertaking has decided that it will retain neither continuing managerial involvement to the degree usually associated with ownership nor effective control over the constructed real estate to an extent that would preclude recognition of some or all of the consideration as revenue. If recognition of some of the consideration as revenue is precluded, the following discussion applies only to the part of the agreement for which revenue will be recognised. Within a single agreement, an undertaking may contract to deliver goods or services in addition to the construction of real estate (eg a sale of land or provision of property management services). Under IAS 18, such an agreement may need to be split into separately identifiable components including one for the construction of real estate. The fair value of the total consideration received or receivable for the agreement shall be allocated to each component. If separate components are identified, the undertaking analyses each component for the construction of real estate in order to determine whether that component is within the scope of IAS 11 or IAS 18. The segmenting criteria of IAS 11 then apply to any component of the agreement that is determined to be a construction contract. The following analysis also applies to a component for the construction of real estate identified within an agreement that includes other components. Determining whether the agreement is within the scope of IAS 11 or IAS 18 Determining whether an agreement for the construction of real estate is within the scope of IAS 11 or IAS 18 depends on the terms of the agreement and all the surrounding facts and circumstances. Such a determination requires judgement with respect to each agreement. IAS 11 applies when the agreement meets the definition of a construction contract set out in IAS 11: ‘a contract specifically http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 44 IAS 18 REVENUE negotiated for the construction of an asset or a combination of assets …’ An agreement for the construction of real estate meets the definition of a construction contract when the buyer is able to specify the major structural elements of the design of the real estate before construction begins and/or specify major structural changes once construction is in progress (whether or not it exercises that ability). When IAS 11 applies, the construction contract also includes any contracts or components for the rendering of services that are directly related to the construction of the real estate. 2. When the agreement is an agreement for the rendering of services If the undertaking is not required to acquire and supply construction materials, the agreement may be only an agreement for the rendering of services in accordance with IAS 18. In this case, IAS 18 requires revenue to be recognised by reference to the stage of completion of the transaction using the percentage of completion method. 3. When the agreement is an agreement for the sale of goods In contrast, an agreement for the construction of real estate in which buyers have only limited ability to influence the design of the real estate, for example, to select a design from a range of options specified by the undertaking, or to specify only minor variations to the basic design, is an agreement for the sale of goods within the scope of IAS 18. Accounting for revenue from the construction of real estate 1. When the agreement is a construction contract When the agreement is within the scope of IAS 11 and its outcome can be estimated reliably, the undertaking shall recognise revenue by reference to the stage of completion of the contract activity in accordance with IAS 11. The agreement may not meet the definition of a construction contract and therefore be within the scope of IAS 18. In this case, the undertaking shall determine whether the agreement is for the rendering of services or for the sale of goods. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng If the undertaking is required to provide services together with construction materials in order to perform its contractual obligation to deliver the real estate to the buyer, the agreement is an agreement for the sale of goods and the criteria for recognition of revenue set out in IAS 18 apply. The undertaking may transfer to the buyer control and the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the work in progress in its current state as construction progresses. In this case, the undertaking shall recognise revenue by reference to the stage of completion using the percentage of completion method. The undertaking may transfer to the buyer control and the significant risks and rewards of ownership of the real estate in its entirety at a single time (eg at completion, upon or after delivery). 45 IAS 18 REVENUE In this case, the undertaking shall recognise revenue only when all the criteria are satisfied. (ii) the amount of advances received. Real estate sales When the undertaking is required to perform further work on real estate already delivered to the buyer, it shall recognise a liability and an expense in accordance with IAS 18. The liability shall be measured in accordance with IAS 37. When the undertaking is required to deliver further goods or services that are separately identifiable from the real estate already delivered to the buyer, it would have identified the remaining goods or services as a separate component of the sale. Disclosures When an undertaking recognises revenue using the percentage of completion method for agreements that meet the criteria in IAS 18 continuously as construction progresses, it shall disclose: (i) how it determines which agreements meet all the criteria in IAS 18 continuously as construction progresses; Undertaking D operates a property development business. This involves the undertaking purchasing plots of undeveloped land in residential areas with the intention of building housing complexes on the land. In order to obtain financing at an early stage of the process, undertaking D advertises the developments at a discount well in advance of building the housing. Customers who wish to own a property may purchase them before any building has commenced. The customer pays a 15% deposit initially, with the remainder payable once the property is completed and transferred into the customer’s name. When customers purchase the housing they must choose one of three designs specified by undertaking D. The customer may decide the type of tiling, flooring and wall colour of their property. (ii) the amount of revenue arising from such agreements in the period; and Should undertaking D account for the .off plan. sales as construction contracts under IAS 11, Construction Contracts, or sale of goods under IAS 18? (iii) the methods used to determine the stage of completion of agreements in progress. IAS 11 is applicable to transactions when an undertaking is providing a service as opposed to selling goods. For the agreements that are in progress at the reporting date, the undertaking shall also disclose: In order to conclude whether undertaking D is providing a service that meets the definition of a construction contract, undertaking D needs to demonstrate that: (i) the aggregate amount of costs incurred and recognised profits (less recognised losses) to date; and http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng (a) there is a contract; and (b) the contract is specifically negotiated 46 IAS 18 REVENUE for the construction of an asset. Although there is a contract between undertaking D and customers, the customers cannot specifically negotiate the significant elements of construction of the asset. As an analogy, assume undertaking D sold widgets instead of property. Undertaking D could enter into sales of widgets before it had finished production of a batch of stock. In this case, it would be clear that IAS 18 and not IAS 11 would be the applicable standard. As such, undertaking D should account for sales under IAS 18 and not IAS 11. The two components of the contract, being the construction of the pipeline and the operation, should be separated and accounted for individually. IAS 11, Construction Contracts, should be applied to the construction element and IAS 18, applied to the operating element. The present value of the total fees receivable under the contract should be allocated to the two components based on relative fair value. The revenue on both components should be recognised on a percentage-of-completion basis. The construction component will be recognised on the basis of costs incurred to costs to complete under IAS 11. Revenue recognition for a pipeline – IAS 11 + IAS 18 Undertaking B has won a contract to construct and operate a gas pipeline. B will construct the pipeline and the associated infrastructure necessary to operate it. It will then operate it for 20 years. B will receive fees under the contract over the 20-year period. It will receive a reimbursement of construction costs over the five years following construction plus an annual fee over the 20-year operating period. Consequently the profit. that B will earn for the construction of the pipeline is included within the annual fee it will receive. How should B recognise the revenue it receives for constructing and operating the pipeline? http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng The operation includes transporting of the gas, tracking use of the pipeline by customers, invoicing customers, maintenance, etc. The operation of the pipeline is therefore provided using an indeterminate number of acts. The revenue for the operation should therefore be recognised on a straight-line basis under IAS 18. The revenue recognised under both standards in advance of the cash received gives rise to a financial receivable. IAS 11, IAS 18 and IFRS 9, require the receivable to be recognised initially at fair value. Consequently the difference between the gross fees receivable under the contract and the present value of the revenue recognised should be recorded as interest income using the effective interest method as required by IAS 18. 47 IAS 18 REVENUE Provision Of Services current liabilities. 12. Installation fees. The customer is entitled to demand repayment of the connection fee at any time by requesting disconnection of the service. The obligation is therefore a financial liability to pay cash and is recognised in accordance with IAS 32. Recognised by the stage of completion. Example: You are installing a computer network in 5 identical buildings for a client, under a single contract. Recognise 20% of revenue on completion of installation in each building. Recognition of connection fees Undertaking B supplies electricity to industrial customers. It charges the customer a connection fee before it will connect the customer to the electricity supply network. The connection fee is refundable to the customer if the customer decides it no longer requires the electricity supply. There is no minimum notice period that the customer must give undertaking B of its request to disconnect. Undertaking B may deduct the cost of disconnecting the customer from the amount refundable. Undertaking B has many longestablished customers that are not expected to request disconnection in the foreseeable future. B’s management is considering how it should account for the connection fees that it receives from its customers. B’s management should recognise the connection fees received as http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng The full amount of the liability must be recognised as a liability in accordance with IFRS 9. It is not possible to reduce the amount of the liability based on the expected level and timing of disconnection requests. 13. Service fees / after sales support included in the price of the product. Recognised over the period of the services / support. Example: You sell a car for $15.000, including a year’s warranty. The fair value of the warranty is $1.200. Under the terms of the warranty the car will be brought to you for quarterly servicing. Recognise $13.800 as revenue for the sale immediately, and $300 as service revenue when the car has each service. Debit: Cash $15.000. Credit: Revenue $ 13.800, Deferred revenue $1.200 I/B DR CR Cash B 15.000 Warranty provision B 1.200 Revenue I 13.800 Initial sale 48 IAS 18 REVENUE Warranty provision Revenue Transfer when each service is provided B I 300 300 14. Advertising commissions. Example: A client signs two insurance policies, which will give your firm a commission of policy (1) $100 and policy (2) $120. For policy (1) all payments are made immediately and for policy (2) payments will be made monthly over 1 year. Example: In July, as an agent, you book for a client, an advertisement to appear in both the November and December issues of a magazine. Your commission is $500. Recognise $250 each time the advertisement appears. I/B DR CR Cash (or accounts receivable) B 500 Deferred revenue B 500 Record of booking Deferred revenue B 250 Revenue I 250 Transfer each time advertisement appears The payments for policy (2) will be collected at the client’s home each month. The commission element of each collection will be $10. Recognise commission of $100 now, and $10 each time payment is collected. I/B DR CR Accounts receivable B 220 Deferred revenue commission B 120 Revenue commission I 100 Signing of the policy Deferred revenue B 10 Revenue I 10 Cash B 10 Accounts receivable B 10 Transfer when each payment is collected 15. Insurance agency commissions. 16. Financial service fees- Integral part of the effective yield. Recognition when received, or receivable. Deferred and recognised over the life of the policy, if further services are required. Origination fees relating to initiating a loan, such as credit checking and loan documentation, should be deferred and recognised as an adjustment to the effective interest rate. In each period, they are recognised as fees. Recognised when the specific advertisement appears. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 49 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You provide a $10000 loan at 10% for 2 years. Interest is paid at the end of each year. Your administration fee is $200 and paid in advance. I/B DR CR Loan receivable B 10.000 Cash B 10.000 Cash B 200 Deferred revenue B 200 Providing loan and receiving fee Accrue interest monthly, and recognise the fees monthly using the effective interest rate calculation. The effective yield of the loan is 11%. (Interest of $2000+ $200 fees) / $10000 loan = 11% p.a. Loan origination fees Issue Financial service fees should be distinguished between fees that are an integral part of a financial instrument’s effective interest rate, fees that are earned as services are provided and fees that are earned on the execution of a significant act. Should loan origination fees be recognised as an integral part of the financial instrument’s effective yield, or as fees earned for services provided? Interest of 8% that is equal to the market rate is payable annually. The loan origination fees amount to 2,000 and are paid by B to A on 1 January 20X1. Solution Loan origination fees charged by A are an integral part of establishing a loan. These fees are deferred and recognised as an adjustment to the effective yield. The effective yield is the interest needed to discount all the cash flows (8,000 for 5 years and the principle amount of 100,000) to the present value of 98,000. In this case the effective yield obtained by a DCF calculation is approximately 8.51% and therefore the undertaking recognises a finance cost at 8.51% on the carrying amount in each period. The journal entries for the recognition of the transaction are set out below: 1 January 20X1 Dr Loan (100,000 less 2,000) 98,000 Cr Cash 98,000 Background Undertaking A grants a loan to undertaking B for 100,000 on 1 January 20X1. The loan is repayable at 31 December 20X5. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 50 IAS 18 REVENUE Cr Interest income [(98,703+397)x8.51] 8,431 31 December 20X1 Dr Dr Cr 8,000 31 December 20X5 Cash Dr Cash 8,000 Loan 337 Dr Loan 469 8,337 Cr Interest income [(99,100+431)x8.51] 8,469 Interest income (98,000x8.51%) 31 December 20X2 Dr Dr Cr Cash 8,000 Dr Cash 100,000 Loan 366 Cr Loan 100,000 8,366 Interest income [(98,000+337)*8,51%] Commitment fees are considered to be fees for the ongoing 31 December 20X3 Dr Cash 8,000 involvement. They should be deferred and recognised as an Dr Loan 397 adjustment to the effective interest rate. Recognition will occur at Cr Interest income [(98,337+366)x8.51%] 8,397 the expiry of the commitment, if the loan is not drawn down. 31 December 20X4 Dr Cash 8,000 Dr Loan 431 http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 51 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You offer a $10.000 loan facility at 10% for 2 years. Interest is paid at the end of each year. Your commitment fee is $360 and paid in advance. The loan is drawn down on the 1st day of year 2. I/B DR CR Cash B 360 Deferred revenue B 360 Loan receivable B 10.000 Cash B 10.000 Receiving fee (day 1) and providing loan (1st day of year 2) Accrue interest monthly, including the commitment fee using the effective interest rate. Background Undertaking A commits to extend a loan to undertaking B and charges a commitment fee of 8,000. The commitment period is 2 years. Undertaking A retains the fee if B does not draw down on the loan facility. The effective yield of the loan is 13.6%. (Interest of $1.000+ $360 fees) / $10.000 loan = 13.6%. Solution The fee should be amortised and recognised as an adjustment to the effective yield from when the loan is drawn down. The fees should be recognised in full at the end of the two-year period if B did not as expected draw down on the loan. If the loan had never been drawn down, recognise the fees at the end of year 2. Undertaking A cannot settle the commitment net in cash. Undertaking A did not designate the commitment as a financial liability through profit or loss and does not expect to sell the resulting loan. Undertaking A considers it probable that B will draw down the loan facility. Commitment fees to originate a loan The loan commitment fee arises on a commitment that is not subject to IFRS 9. Issue Financial service fees should be distinguished between fees that are an integral part of a financial instrument’s effective interest rate, fees that are earned as services are provided and fees that are earned on the execution of a significant act. The fee is compensation for ongoing involvement with the acquisition of a financial instrument if it is probable that the undertaking will enter into a specific lending arrangement. Should the commitment fees to originate a loan be recognised as part of the financial instrument’s effective yield or as fees earned for services provided? http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 52 IAS 18 REVENUE 17. Financial service fees - Fees for servicing a loan. Fees to be recognised when the services are provided. Example: You provide a loan for 1 year. You have a service fee of $4.000, payable in advance. Each quarter, you will audit your client’s accounts, and review the results, to confirm that there has been no breach of the covenant contained in the loan contract. I/B DR CR Cash B 4.000 Deferred revenue B 4.000 Loan receivable B 100.000 Cash B 100.000 Accruing interest and recognising fees Recognise $1.000 of fee income on completion of each review. Deferred revenue B 1.000 Revenue I 1.000 Transfer following each review Example: You organise a syndicated loan for $1.000m. You provide 10% of the funds. You receive 6% interest, while the other syndicate members receive only 5%. Loan receivable Cash Provision of loans I/B B B DR $100 m CR $100 m Each year, you record $5 million as interest receivable, and $1 million as syndication fees. Cash B $6 m Interest receivable I $5 m Fees-syndication I $1 m Each receipt of interest & fees 19. Admission fees. Recognition occurs when the event takes place. Examples are commissions on the allotment of shares, placement fees relating to loans and loan syndication fees. Example: In May, you sell tickets for a concert that will take place in July: I/B DR CR Cash B 100 Deferred revenue B 100 Revenue is recognised on completion, assuming involvement then ceases. If part of the loan is retained, with a higher effective yield, the additional yield is the syndication fee, which should be recognised, when the syndication is completed. Revenue will be recognised after the concert in July: I/B DR Deferred revenue B 100 Revenue I 18. Financial service fees – Fees earned for a specific act. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng CR 100 53 IAS 18 REVENUE 20. Initiation, entrance and membership fees. services at prices lower than those charged to non-members, revenue is recognised on a basis that reflects the timing, nature and value of the benefits provided. Recognition reflects the timing of the services provided. Example: To become a student member of an accounting body, you have to pay $165 registration fee and $180 annual membership. The $165 can be recognised as the accounting body’s revenue when you are registered: Cash Revenue Deferred revenue I/B B I B DR 345 Background Undertaking X is a travel agency. It provides its customers with access to a variety of discounted services in return for an annual membership fee to be paid up front. CR 165 180 The membership fee will be recognised at the rate of $15 per month: I/B DR CR Deferred revenue B 15 Revenue I 15 Recognition of professional fees 2 Issue Membership fees are recognised as revenue: when there is no significant uncertainty about collection; if the fee permits membership only; and all other services or products are paid for separately; or if there is a separate annual subscription. If the fee entitles the member to services or publications to be provided during the membership period or to purchase goods or http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng At what point should the undertaking recognise revenue in the following example? Customers have the right to cancel the arrangement at any time and receive a full refund of the fee if they have not used any of the services. Based on historical experience, undertaking X is able to predict cancellation rates in the future within a fairly narrow band. Undertaking X has over 5 million registered members. Solution The fee should be recognised on a basis that reflects the timing, nature and value of the discounted services that X provides. For example, where the discounted services must be taken throughout the period, then undertaking X should recognise revenue rateably throughout the period. At the period end, assuming that customers had taken advantage of all available discounted services, then undertaking X would recognise the total membership fee. Alternatively, had the fee entitled a customer to membership only, and all other products and services are paid for separately at full 54 IAS 18 REVENUE price, then the undertaking should recognise the fee when there is no significant uncertainty about its collectability. Undertaking X should recognise a provision for refunds based on historical experience. The corresponding entry should be to reduce revenue. 21. Franchise fees – Supplies of equipment and other tangible assets. Recognition occurs when the items are delivered, or title passes. Example: As part of the contract, your fast-food franchisee must buy cooking equipment from you costing $15.000. Title passes when the equipment has been installed, and has been inspected by the local authorities. I/B DR CR Cash B $15.000 Deferred revenue B $15.000 Recording the receipt of cash for the cooking equipment. Where subsequent fees do not cover the cost of ongoing services, part of the initial fee should be deferred and recognised when subsequent services have been provided. Example: You run a fast-food franchise business. You charge an annual franchise fee of $20.000, payable at the start of the year. You also charge a monthly fee of $1.500 for which you provide a fixed amount of food with a value of $1.800 each month, including your standard profit margin of $300. Any additional food is charged separately. Recognise only $16400 ($20000-($300*12)=$16400) as fee income at the start of the year. Consider the remainder as a payment in advance of the monthly fee, and therefore recognise $1.800 per month. Recognise the sale when the inspection has been satisfactorily completed: I/B DR CR Deferred revenue B $15.000 Revenue I $15.000 I/B Cash B Revenue I Deferred revenue B Recording receipt of the annual franchise fee. I/B Cash B Revenue I Deferred revenue B Accounting monthly for the food 22. Franchise fees – Initial and subsequent services. 23. Franchise fees – Continuing. Recognition reflects the timing of the services provided. Recognition reflects the timing of the services provided, or the passage of time, depending on the franchisor’s commitment. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng DR $20.000 CR $16.400 $3.600 DR 1.500 CR 1.800 300 55 IAS 18 REVENUE Example: You run a car dealer franchise network. $10.000 of the franchise fee, that you charge your franchisees, is for the training of 20 staff of your franchisee: Cash Deferred revenue – training I/B B B DR 10.000 I/B I B DR CR 10.000 200,000 for the initial supply of special equipment related to branding, assistance with site location and staff training; and 600,000 as an advance fee for the access to the franchise. Of the 200,000: 110,000 represents the sale of assets (with a cost of 75,000), which are delivered immediately; 90,000 relates to services of assistance and staff training for a period of 5 months (with a cost of 60,000). Receipt of Franchise Fee Revenue Deferred revenue-training Each time one is trained, credit $500 to fees CR 500 500 Recognition of franchise fees Issue Franchise fees are recognised as revenue on a basis that reflects the purpose for which the fees were charged. How should a franchisor recognise the initial and subsequent payments received for the franchise agreement? Background A franchisor of a chain of children’s clothes shops grants a franchise for a period of 4 years. The franchisee pays an initial fee and continuing franchise fees. The franchisee will pay an up front fee of 800,000 for the following: http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng These assets and services are fully delivered in the first year. Subsequently, the franchisee will pay a quarterly franchise fee of 100,000 for the use of continuing rights. Solution The franchisor should recognise revenue of 110,000 and costs of 75,000 for the sale of the equipment on delivery. The franchisor should recognise revenue of 90,000 related to the services based on the stage of completion of the services, as the costs are incurred, during the period of 5 months. The franchisor should recognise 600,000 relating to the access to the franchise as revenue on a straight-line basis over the period of the contract, that is, 4 years. The fee is a continuing franchise fee, even though the franchisee pays the fee up-front. The subsequent payments of 100,000 should be recognised as the right is used, that is, on a straight-line basis over the three-months period covered by the payment. 56 IAS 18 REVENUE 24. Franchise fees – Agency Transactions. If the franchisor orders supplies for the franchisee at no profit, no Cash Revenue Accounts receivable I/B B I B DR 6.000 CR 8.000 2.000 revenue, nor cost, is recognised. Example: You run a fast-food franchise business. You insist that your franchisees have a health and safety audit each year, organised by you, recharged at cost. I/B DR CR Cash B 50 Audit costs I 50 Accounts receivable franchisee B 50 Audit costs I 50 Show this as a recharge, rather than revenue. 25. Fees from customised software development. Recognition is based on the percentage completion method. Provision should be made for after-sales service. Example: You have a contract worth $25000 to produce software. $5000 of this sum is allocated to after-sales support. 40% of the development has been completed. The client has paid $6000 so far, and will pay the remainder on completion. Recognise 40%($25000-$5000) = $8000 of revenue. The $5000 for after sales support will be amortised over the period to which it relates. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng The payment of $6000 has no impact on the revenue recognised. Such payments improve cash flow. Interest, Royalties And Dividends 26. Licence fees and royalties. Recognition is based on the substance of the contract. In general, they will be spread, on a straight-line basis, over the life of the project. If rights are sold for an unlimited time, without further service involved, then this can be treated as a sale. Examples: You sell the rights to your drug to the Ukraine for $10 million for 5 years. Recognise $2 million per year. I/B DR CR Cash B 10million Revenue I 2million Deferred revenue B 8million Receipt of cash and recognition of the revenue from year 1. You sell the rights to your drug in the US for $50 million, for an unlimited amount of time, but subject to your help in successfully obtaining the approval of the Federal Drug Agency (FDA) for the drug. 57 IAS 18 REVENUE Recognise the $50million as a sale only when the drug receives FDA approval. IFRIC 13 – Accounting for Customer Loyalty Programmes - IFRS News September 2007 Customer loyalty programmes are widespread – retailers, airlines, hotels, telecoms operators and similar businesses are all offering incentives to gain customer loyalty. There seem to be almost as many different accounting treatments as there are programmes. IFRIC 13, Customer Loyalty Programmes, was published to create consistency in accounting for customer loyalty plans. The interpretation is applicable to all undertakings that grant awards as part of a sales transaction (including awards that can be redeemed forgoods or services not supplied by the undertaking). Impact of the interpretation When a customer buys goods or services and receives a loyalty incentive (an award credit), this is treated as a multiple element arrangement. Revenue earned by the seller under the transaction is consequently split between the elements –, between the goods or services and the award credit (at fair value). The revenue allocated to the award credit is deferred and only recognised when the award credit is used. The seller determines a fair value for the award credit (which will generally be based on the fair value that the customer will receive) and then estimates the likely number of awards that will be redeemed. The fair value of revenue estimated in this way is deferred. The seller must maintain detailed customer data to estimate the expected levels of redemption, and keep that estimate up to date. Changes in the estimate of redemptions after award credits have been issued affect the rate at which the deferred revenue is recognised but do not alter the amount of deferred revenue. The undertaking may be the principal in the scheme or it may be acting as an agent for the third party running the scheme. The undertaking is a principal when it has the obligation to satisfy the awards demanded by participants, and the accounting follows the model described above. The undertaking is an agent when it pays the third party for each award point, and the third party has the obligation to satisfy the awards requested. The undertaking acting as an agent recognises commission income, which: • is the difference between the consideration allocated to the incentive and the amount payable to the third party supplying the incentive; and • is deferred until the third party is obliged to supply the awards and is entitled to receive consideration for doing so. What happens if the undertaking is going to make a loss? What does this mean to those who offer award credits? When an award credit is issued, it may reduce the margin that an http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 58 IAS 18 REVENUE undertaking will receive on a subsequent sale of the goods. However, provided this reduction in margin does not cause the undertaking to make a loss, the undertaking is not permitted to recognise a provision for the margin reduction. If there is expected to be a loss on sale of the later item using the award credits, the award credit arrangement is accounted for as an onerous contract and a provision is recognised. The retailer should treat the coupon as a discount against revenue when the customers redeem them. The coupon encourages the customers to spend, rather than being a cost of promoting the stores. The cost of the newspaper advertisement should be expensed when the newspaper is published. 8. Multiple choice Questions Accounting treatment of free discount coupons Choose the answer closest to that you believe to be correct. Issue Revenue is the gross inflow of economic benefits during the period that is generated in the course of the ordinary activities of an undertaking. Those inflows should result in increases in equity, other than increases relating to contributions from equity participants. How should a retailer account for the distribution of discount coupons? Background A clothing retailer has launched a new promotional campaign. It publishes a coupon in a national newspaper giving a discount of 5% off any purchase over 50 in any of the retailer’s stores. The retailer’s normal gross margin on sales is 60%. Solution The retailer should not recognise the distribution of coupons in its financial statements. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 1. Revenue: 1) Includes gains. 2) Is the gross inflow of economic benefits of the ordinary activities, when those inflows result in increases in equity, other than increases relating to contributions from investors. 3) Includes sales taxes and value added tax. 2. Fair Value 1) Is the value for which an asset could be sold, or a liability extinguished, between willing, independent traders. 2) Is the value agreed between related parties. 3) Is based on historical cost. 3. Trade discounts and volume rebates should: 1) Be ignored. 2) Be subtracted from revenue. 3) Be shown in the balance sheet under equity. 59 IAS 18 REVENUE 4. Where interest-free, long-term credit is given, 1) Revenue should not be recognised until cash is received. 2) Future receipts should be discounted to net present value. 3) A bad debt provision should be created. 5. Where goods are exchanged: 1) No bookkeeping is necessary. 2) Cash is never involved. 3) Revenue is created. 6. A Transaction involves after sales service: 1) It is no longer regarded as revenue. 2) The revenue relating to the service is spread over the period of the service. 3) It is always a credit transaction. 7. Combined transactions, such as a sale and repurchase agreement: 1) Are dealt with as one transaction. 2) Must be shown separately. 3) Are illegal. 8. When is a sale recognised? 1) Whenever the seller decides to recognise it. 2) At the end of each accounting period. 3) When certain conditions have been satisfied. 1) The best reason to defer revenue recognition. 2) Not a reason to defer revenue recognition. 3) Detailed in the audit report. 10. Retention of significant risks means that: 1) The sale will not be recognised. 2) There is no problem with revenue recognition. 3) Insurance is mandatory. 11. If the sale is contingent on the buyer deriving revenue from resale of the goods: 1) It should never be recognised as a sale. 2) It should receive shareholder approval. 3) Recognition is deferred. 12. Where foreign exchange control jeopardises the transfer of the sales proceeds: 1) Recognition cannot take place until permission to transfer funds is granted. 2) The sale is cancelled. 3) A bad debt provision should be created. 13. Once an amount has been recognised in revenue, any risk of non-payment is treated as: 1) A reduction in revenue 2) A bad, or doubtful debt expense. 3) A charge to accounts payable. 9. Normal credit risk derived from sales is: http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 60 IAS 18 REVENUE 14. Where warranties are given to the buyer, the cost of these will be recognised: 1) As an expense. 2) As a reduction in revenue. 3) In the following period. 19. If the costs will probably be recovered, recognise: 1) All revenue. 2) Only that amount of revenue, equal to the costs. 3) No revenue. 20. Interest revenue should be recognised on a: 15. Revenue from the provision of services should be recognised by referring to the: 1) Original estimates. 2) Payments received in advance. 3) Stage of completion at the balance sheet date. 1) Time-proportion basis, reflecting the effective yield of the asset. 2) Cash basis. 3) Time-proportion basis, reflecting collection periods. 21. Royalties should be recognised on: 16. The stage of completion, the costs to date, and the costs to complete the transaction should be: 1) Ignored. 2) Listed in the accounts. 3) Reliably measurable. 17. Revisions to estimates: 1) Mean that the financial outcome of the transaction cannot be reliably measured. 2) Mean that the financial outcome of the transaction can be reliably measured. 3) Cancel the transaction. 1) A cash basis. 2) An accruals basis. 3) An actual basis. 22. Dividends should be recognised: 1) On a cash basis. 2) On an accruals basis. 3) When the shareholder has a legal right to receive payment. 18. Advances and progress payments received from clients: 1) Is proof of the stage of completion. 2) May not reflect the stage of completion. 3) Should be booked to accounts payable. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 61 IAS 18 REVENUE 9. Exercise Questions Decide when, and how much, revenue can be recognised in each of the following situations. Provide debits and credits for your answer, where revenue is recognized. 1. You are about to deliver your monthly consignment of goods, when your client’s delivery service ceases business. He asks you to store them, at his risk, until he can find alternative transport. 7. A buyer pays for your goods on the 5th of each month. They are shipped on the 10th of the month, and he accepts delivery on the 15th of each month. 8. You sell a portfolio of shares in January for $10.000, with a contract to repurchase them for $10.500 in March. 9. You sell a 5-year subscription to your hardware support service, payable in advance. 10. You sell a machine for $100.000, payable in instalments over one year. The rate of interest is 10%. Interest is included in the price. 2. You sell carpets to a retail chain. They must be inspected prior to acceptance, but the inspector is ill. None have been rejected in the last 3 years. 11. You sell a hotel, but have committed your firm to repair the drains. Your repairer is away for 2 months. 3. You sell radiators to a wholesaler. Written notification of rejection must be made within 30 days. 12. You are installing a telephone network in 20 identical buildings for a client, under a single contract. 4. In April, you supply 40 computers to your agent. The contract is a consignment contract. In November, the agent sells the computers, but you do not receive the money until December. 13. You sell a photocopier for $30.000, including a year’s warranty. The fair value of the warranty is $2.400. The copier will require quarterly services. 5. You sell software via the Internet. Clients can pay on receipt of the software. 14. In July, as an agent, you book a band to appear once in March and once in May at a dance hall. Your commission is $4.000. 6. You build warehouses. You accept deposits and progress payments, prior to the warehouse being finished. When it is finished, 2% of the total payment remains unpaid, but is likely to be paid soon. 15. A client signs an insurance policy, which will give your firm a commission of $5.000. Payments will be made monthly over 2 years. The payments will be collected at the client’s home. The commission element of each collection will be $100. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 62 IAS 18 REVENUE 16. You provide a $100.000 loan at 12% for 3 years. Interest is paid at the end of each year. Your administration fee is $3.600 and paid in advance. 17. You offer a $100.000 loan facility at 15% for 4 years. Interest is paid at the end of each year. Your commitment fee is $4.800 and paid in advance. The loan is drawn down on the 1st day of year 3. 24. $30.000 of your franchise fee is for the training of 60 staff of your franchisee. 25. You insist that your franchisees have a financial and operational internal audit each year, organised by you, recharged at cost. 26. You have a contract worth $50.000 to produce software. 18. You provide a loan for 4 years. You have a service fee of $32.000, payable in advance. Each quarter, you will audit your client’s accounts, and review the results, to confirm that there has been no breach of covenant (the loan contract). 19. You organise a syndicated loan for $2.000 million. You provide 5% of the funds. You receive 8% interest, while the other syndicate members receive only 6%. 20. In October, you sell tickets for an exhibition that will take place in December. 21. To become a member of a car club, you have to pay $100 registration fee and $600 annual membership. How does the car club recognise its revenue? $10.000 of this sum is allocated to after-sales support. 20% of the development has been completed. The client has paid $18.000 so far, and will pay the remainder on completion. 27. You sell the rights to your trademark to the Georgia for $70 million for 10 years. 28. You sell the rights to your drug in the US and Europe for $100 million, for an unlimited amount of time, but subject to your help in successfully obtaining the approval of the Federal Drug Agency (FDA) for the drug. 22. As part of the contract, your car service franchisee must buy equipment for the service bays from you. Title passes when the equipment has been installed, and has been inspected by the local authorities. 23. You charge an annual franchise fee of $80.000, payable at the start of the year. You also charge a monthly fee of $6.000. You provide a fixed amount of supplies with a value of $7.200 each month, including your standard profit margin of $1.200. Any additional supplies are charged separately. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 10. Solutions 63 IAS 18 REVENUE Answers to Multiple Choice Questions: 1. 2) 2. 1) 3. 2) 4. 2) 5. 3) 6. 2) 7. 1) 8. 3) 9. 2) 10. 1) 11. 3) 12. 1) 13. 2) 14. 1) 15. 3) 16. 3) 17. 2) 18. 2) 19. 2) 20. 1) 21. 2) 22. 3) Answers to Exercise Questions: 1. Revenue can be recognised immediately. Debit: Account receivable. Credit: Revenue. 2. Revenue can be recognised immediately. Debit: Account receivable. Credit: Revenue. 3. At the end of 30 days, if none have been rejected, revenue can be recognised. Debit: Account receivable. Credit: Revenue. (after 30 days) 4. Revenue is recognised in November, when the computers are sold by the agent. Debit: Account receivable. Credit: Revenue. (in November). 5. When your agent has received the cash, having delivered the software, the revenue can be recognised. Debit: Cash. Credit: Revenue. http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 6. If the work is complete, revenue may be recognised. Debit: Account receivable, deferred revenue. Credit: Revenue. 7. Recognise revenue when the goods are accepted. Debit: Deferred revenue. Credit: Revenue. 8. This is primarily a finance transaction, and no revenue should be recognised. 9. Divide the revenue by 60, and recognise 1/60 of the revenue each month. Debit: Cash. Credit: Deferred revenue. (on day 1) Debit deferred revenue. Credit Revenue. (monthly) 10. Recognise immediately revenue of $90.909 (100.000/110%) and interest receivable of $9.091, matched by an accounts receivable of $100.000. Debit: Accounts receivable $100.000. Credit: Revenue $90.909, Interest receivable $9.091. 11. Defer recognition of the sale until the drains are repaired. Debit: Cash. Credit: Deferred revenue. 12. Recognise 5% of revenue on completion of installation in each building. Debit: Account receivable. Credit: Revenue. (for each installation) 13. Recognise $27.600 as revenue for the sale immediately, and $600 as service revenue when the photocopier has each service. Debit: Cash $30.000. Credit: Revenue $27.600, Deferred revenue $2.400. 14. Recognise $2.000 each time the band appears. Debit: Account receivable $2.000. Credit: Deferred revenue $2.000 each time. 64 IAS 18 REVENUE 15. Recognise commission of $2.600 now, and $100 each time payment is collected. Debit: Account receivable $5.000. Credit: Revenue $2.600, Deferred revenue $2.400. 16. Accrue interest monthly, and recognise the fees monthly ($100 each month). Debit: Loan receivable $100.000, Cash $3.600. Credit: Cash $100.000, Deferred revenue $3.600. (on day 1) Debit: Account receivable $1.000, deferred revenue $100. Credit: Interest receivable $1.000, fee income $100. (monthly). 17. Accrue interest monthly in years 3 and 4, and recognise $200 of fees each month in years 3 and 4. Debit Account receivable $4.800 Credit: Deferred revenue $4.800. (on day1) Debit: Loan receivable $100.000. Credit: Cash $100.000. (on drawdown) Debit: Account receivable $1.250, deferred revenue $200. Credit: Interest receivable $1.250, fee income $200. (monthly after drawdown) 18. Recognise $2.000 of fee income on completion of each review. Debit: Cash $32.000. Credit: Deferred revenue $32.000. (on day1) Debit: Deferred revenue $2.000. Credit: Fee Income $2.000. (after review) http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 19. Each year, you record $6 million as interest receivable, and $2 million as syndication fees. Debit: Loan receivable $100 million. Credit: Cash $100 million. (on day1) Debit: Cash $8 million. Credit: Interest receivable $6 million, fees $2 million. (when interest is received) 20. Revenue will be recognised after the exhibition in December. Debit: Cash. Credit: Deferred revenue (in October). 21. The $100 can be recognised as the car club’s revenue when you are registered. The membership fee will be recognised at the rate of $50 per month. Debit: Cash $700. Credit: Revenue $100, Deferred revenue $600. 22. Recognise the sale when the inspection has been satisfactorily completed. Debit: Account receivable. Credit: Deferred revenue. (on day1) Debit: Deferred revenue. Credit: Revenue. (after inspection). 23. Recognise only $65.600 ($80.000-($1200*12)=$65.600) as fee income at the start of the year. Consider the remainder as a payment in advance of the monthly fee, and recognise it at the rate of $1.200 per month to add to the monthly fee. Debit: Cash $80.000. Credit: Revenue $65.600, Deferred revenue. $14.400. (on day1) Debit: Deferred revenue $1.200. Credit: Revenue $1.200. (monthly). 65 IAS 18 REVENUE 24. Each time one is trained, credit $500 to fees. Debit: Deferred revenue $500. Credit: Revenue $500. 25. Show this as a recharge, rather than revenue. Debit: Accounts receivable. Credit: Recharges-internal audit fees. 26. Recognise 20%($50.000-$10.000) = $8.000 of revenue. Debit: Cash $18.000. Credit: Revenue $8.000, Deferred revenue. $10.000. 27. Recognise $7million per year. Debit: Cash $70 million. Credit: Revenue $7 million, Deferred revenue. $63 million. (Year 1) 28. Recognise the $100 million as a sale only when the drug receives FDA approval. Debit: Accounts receivable $100 million. Credit: Deferred revenue. $100 million Note: Material from the following PricewaterhouseCoopers publications has been used in this workbook: -Applying IFRS -IFRS News -Accounting Solutions http://bankir.ru/technology/vestnik/uchebnye-posobiya-po-msfoeng 66