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International GAAP® 2019: Generally Accepted Accounting Practice under International Financial Reporting Standards

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by International GAAP 2019 (pdf)


  An investor holds an option to acquire the majority of shares in the investee, which is not currently

  exercisable. However, the option is exercisable before the next scheduled shareholder meeting, and before

  the next special shareholder meeting could be held (based on the investee’s governance policies).

  When considering solely the exercise period, the investor’s option would be a substantive right that gives the

  investor power (since it would give the holder a majority of shares). This is because the investor does have

  the current ability to direct the investee’s relevant activities when decisions need to be made, i.e. at the next

  scheduled shareholder meeting or next special shareholder meeting.

  However, when concluding whether an investor has power over the investee in real fact patterns, all relevant facts

  and circumstances would be considered, to evaluate whether the option is substantive, not solely the exercise period.

  In contrast, if the next shareholders’ meeting occurs (or could be held) before the option

  is exercisable, that option would not be a right that would give the holder the current

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  ability to direct the investee’s activities (and therefore would not give the holder power).

  This is consistent with the conclusion for Scenario D in Example 6.7 at 4.2.1 above.

  IFRS 10 does not contain separate requirements for different types of potential voting

  rights; that is, employee options are subject to the same requirements as those that are

  held by a third party. However, it would be unlikely that an option held by an employee

  would give that employee power (or control) over an investee in practice, usually

  because the employee options represent a small percentage of the outstanding shares,

  even if exercised. However, in a very small, privately owned entity it would be possible

  for an employee (such as a member of management) to have power, if an option gives

  the employee the current ability to direct the relevant activities, or if the employee has

  other interests in the investee.

  It should be noted that the IASB considered, but did not change, similar requirements

  in IAS 28 related to how options are considered when evaluating whether an investor

  has significant influence. That is, IAS 28 does not incorporate the IFRS 10 concept of

  evaluating whether an option is substantive (see Chapter 11 at 4.3). Accordingly, an

  option might give power under IFRS 10, but the same option might not result in

  significant influence under IAS 28.

  Simply holding a currently exercisable option that, if exercised, would give the investor

  more than half of the voting rights in an investee is not sufficient to demonstrate control

  of the investee. All facts and circumstances must be considered to assess whether an

  investor has power over an investee, including whether an option is substantive

  (including, but not limited to consideration of the exercise period). This may require

  considerable judgement to be exercised.

  4.3.5

  Contractual arrangement with other vote holders

  A contractual arrangement between an investor and other vote holders can give the

  investor the right to exercise voting rights sufficient to give the investor power, even if

  the investor does not have voting rights sufficient to give it power without the

  contractual arrangement. However, a contractual arrangement might ensure that the

  investor can direct enough other vote holders on how to vote to enable the investor to

  make decisions about the relevant activities. [IFRS 10.B39].

  It should be noted that the contractual arrangement has to ensure that investor can

  direct the other party to vote as required. Where the arrangement is merely that the

  parties agree to vote the same way, that would only represent joint control; defined

  as the contractually agreed sharing of control of an arrangement, which exists only

  when decisions about the relevant activities require the unanimous consent of the

  parties sharing control. [IFRS 11 Appendix A]. Joint control is discussed in more detail in

  Chapter 12 at 4.

  In some jurisdictions, investors holding a certain number of issued shares of a public

  company may be able to obtain proxy votes from other shareholders by public request

  or other means for voting at shareholder meetings. The question as to whether the

  investor has the ability to obtain a majority of votes (and hence power over an investee)

  through control of proxy votes will depend on the specific facts and circumstances of

  the process such as, for example, the investor’s freedom to use the proxy vote and

  whether any statements of voting intent must be provided by the investor as a condition

  Consolidated financial statements 405

  of obtaining the proxy vote. A situation where, for example, proxies must be requested

  each year would make it more difficult to demonstrate that the investor had power as a

  result of its ability to obtain proxy votes.

  4.3.6

  Additional rights from other contractual arrangements

  Other decision-making rights, in combination with voting rights, can give an investor

  the current ability to direct the relevant activities. For example, the rights specified

  in a contractual arrangement in combination with voting rights may be sufficient to

  give an investor the current ability to direct the manufacturing processes of an

  investee or to direct other operating or financing activities of an investee that

  significantly affect the investee’s returns. However, in the absence of any other

  rights, economic dependence of an investee on the investor (such as relations of a

  supplier with its main customer) does not lead to the investor having power over the

  investee. [IFRS 10.B40].

  Example 6.18 below reflects an example from IFRS 10 of a situation where an investor

  with less than a majority of the voting rights is considered to have power of the investee,

  taking into account rights under a contractual arrangement. [IFRS 10.B43 Example 5].

  Example 6.18: Less than a majority of voting rights combined with additional

  rights under a contractual arrangement

  Investor A holds 40% of the voting rights of an investee and twelve other investors each hold 5% of the voting

  rights of the investee. A shareholder agreement grants investor A the right to appoint, remove and set the

  remuneration of management responsible for directing the relevant activities. To change the agreement, a

  two-thirds majority vote of the shareholders is required. In this case, investor A concludes that the absolute

  size of the investor’s holding and the relative size of the other shareholdings alone are not conclusive in

  determining whether the investor has rights sufficient to give it power. However, investor A determines that

  its contractual right to appoint, remove and set the remuneration of management is sufficient to conclude that

  it has power over the investee. The fact that investor A might not have exercised this right or the likelihood

  of investor A exercising its right to select, appoint or remove management shall not be considered when

  assessing whether investor A has power.

  4.4 Contractual

  arrangements

  Power stems from existing rights. Sometimes, the relevant activities are not directed

  through voting rights, but rather, are directed by other means, such as th
rough one or

  more contractual arrangements. [IFRS 10.11]. For example, an investor might have the

  contractual ability to direct manufacturing processes, operating activities, or determine

  financing of an investee through a contract or other arrangement.

  Similarly, when voting rights cannot have a significant effect on an investee’s returns,

  such as when voting rights relate to administrative tasks only and contractual

  arrangements determine the direction of the relevant activities, the investor needs to

  assess those contractual arrangements in order to determine whether it has rights

  sufficient to give it power over the investee. To determine whether an investor has

  rights sufficient to give it power, the investor considers the purpose and design of the

  investee (see paragraphs B5-B8 of IFRS 10 discussed at 3.2 above) and the

  requirements in paragraphs B51-B54 (discussed below) together with paragraphs B18-

  B20 (see 4.5 below). [IFRS 10.B17].

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  6

  When these contractual arrangements involve activities that are closely related to the

  investee, then these activities are, in substance, an integral part of the investee’s overall

  activities, even though they may occur outside the legal boundaries of the investee.

  Therefore, explicit or implicit decision-making rights embedded in contractual

  arrangements that are closely related to the investee need to be considered as relevant

  activities when determining power over the investee. [IFRS 10.B52].

  When identifying which investor, if any, has power over an investee, it is important to

  review the contractual arrangements that the investor and the investee entered into.

  This analysis should include the original formation documents and governance

  documents of the investee, as well as the marketing materials provided to investors and

  other contractual arrangements entered into by the investee.

  It is common that the relevant activities of a structured entity are directed by contractual

  arrangement. This is discussed further at 4.4.1 below.

  4.4.1 Structured

  entities

  IFRS 12 defines a structured entity as an entity that has been designed so that voting

  or similar rights are not the dominant factor in deciding who controls the entity,

  such as when any voting rights relate to administrative tasks only and the relevant

  activities are directed by means of contractual arrangements. [IFRS 12 Appendix A].

  Therefore, an entity that is controlled by voting rights is not a structured entity.

  Accordingly, although it might be thought that an entity that receives funding from

  third parties following a restructuring is a structured entity, this would not be the

  case, if that entity continues to be controlled by voting rights after the restructuring.

  [IFRS 12.B24].

  A structured entity often has some or all of the following features:

  • restricted activities;

  • a narrow and well-defined objective, such as:

  • holding a tax-efficient lease;

  • carrying out research and development activities;

  • funding an entity; or

  • providing investment opportunities for investors by passing on risks and

  rewards associated with assets to investors;

  • insufficient equity to finance its activities without subordinated financial support;

  and

  • financing in the form of multiple contractually-linked instruments to investors that

  create concentrations of credit or other risks (tranches). [IFRS 12.B22].

  Examples of structured entities include:

  • securitisation vehicles;

  • asset-backed financings; and

  • some investment funds. [IFRS 12.B23].

  Consolidated financial statements 407

  Management needs to evaluate whether it controls a structured entity using the same

  approach as for ‘traditional entities’ (those that are controlled through voting rights). That

  is, management evaluates whether an investor has power over the relevant activities,

  exposure to variable returns and the ability to affect those returns through its power over

  the structured entity, as shown in the diagram at 3.1 above. Frequently, as discussed above,

  the relevant activities of a structured entity are directed by contractual arrangement.

  For some investees, relevant activities occur only when particular circumstances arise

  or events occur. The investee may be designed so that the direction of its activities and

  its returns are predetermined unless and until those particular circumstances arise or

  events occur. In this case, only the decisions about the investee’s activities when those

  circumstances or events occur can significantly affect its returns and thus be relevant

  activities. The circumstances or events need not have occurred for an investor with the

  ability to make those decisions to have power. The fact that the right to make decisions

  is contingent on circumstances arising or an event occurring does not, in itself, make

  those rights protective. [IFRS 10.B53].

  This is illustrated in Example 6.19 below, which is summarised from an example

  included in IFRS 10. [IFRS 10.B53 Example 11].

  Example 6.19: Power through contractual arrangements

  An investee’s only business activity, as specified in its founding documents, is to purchase receivables and

  service them on a day-to-day basis for its investor. The servicing includes collecting the principal and interest

  payments as they fall due and passing them on to the investor. For any receivable in default, the investee is

  required to automatically put the receivable in default to the investor, as contractually agreed in the put

  agreement between the investor and the investee.

  The relevant activity is managing the receivables in default because it is the only activity that can significantly

  affect the investee’s returns. Managing the receivables before default is not a relevant activity because it does

  not require substantive decisions to be made that could significantly affect the investee’s returns – the

  activities before default are predetermined and amount only to collecting cash flows as they fall due and

  passing them on to investors.

  The purpose and design of the investee gives the investor decision-making authority over the relevant activity.

  The terms of the put agreement are integral to the overall transaction and the establishment of the investee.

  Therefore, the put agreement, together with the founding documents of the investee, gives the investor power

  over the investee. This is the case, even though:

  • the investor takes ownership of the receivables only in the event of default; and

  • the investor’s exposures to variable returns are not technically derived from the investee (because the

  receivables in default are no longer owned by the investee and are managed outside the legal boundaries

  of the investee).

  To conclude whether the investor has control, it would also need to assess whether the other two criteria are

  met, i.e. it has exposure to variable returns from its involvement with the investee (see 5 below) and the ability

  to use its power over the investee to affect the amount of its returns (see 6 below). [IFRS 10.7, B2].

  IFRS 10 also includes a much simpler example where the only assets of an investee are

  receivables and when the purpose and design of the inve
stee are considered, it is

  determined that the only relevant activity is managing the receivables upon default. In

  this situation, the party that has the ability to manage the defaulting receivables has

  power over the investee, irrespective of whether any of the borrowers have defaulted.

  [IFRS 10.B53 Example 12].

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  6

  An investor may have an explicit or implicit commitment to ensure that an investee

  continues to operate as designed. Such a commitment may increase the investor’s

  exposure to variability of returns and thus increase the incentive for the investor to

  obtain rights sufficient to give it power. Therefore a commitment to ensure that an

  investee operates as designed may be an indicator that the investor has power, but does

  not, by itself, give an investor power, nor does it prevent another party from having

  power. [IFRS 10.B54].

  Notwithstanding the fact that the same approach is used to evaluate control for

  structured entities and traditional entities, it is still important to identify which entities

  are structured entities. This is because certain disclosure requirements of IFRS 12 apply

  only to structured entities, as discussed in Chapter 13.

  4.5

  Other evidence of power

  In some circumstances, it may be difficult to determine whether an investor’s rights give

  it power over an investee. In such cases, the investor considers other evidence that it has

  the current ability to direct an investee’s relevant activities unilaterally. Consideration is

  given, but is not limited, to the following factors, which, when considered together with

  its rights, the indicators of a special relationship with the investee and the extent of the

  investor’s exposure to variability of returns (see below), may provide evidence that the

  investor’s rights are sufficient to give it power over the investee:

  • the investor can, without having the contractual right to do so, appoint, approve or

  nominate the investee’s key management personnel (or Board of Directors) who

  have the ability to direct the relevant activities;

  • the investor can, without having the contractual right to do so, direct the

  investee to enter into, or veto any changes to, significant transactions for the

 

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