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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)


  As described in the Basis for Conclusions, the Board considered whether to permit the

  exception to consolidation to be ‘rolled up’ to a non-investment entity parent but rejected

  this approach. This was despite the fact that the majority of respondents to the Investment

  Entities Exposure Draft argued that if fair value information was more relevant than

  consolidation at an investment entity subsidiary level, it is also more relevant at the non-

  investment entity parent level. According to the Board, non-investment entities do not

  have the unique business models of investment entities; they have other substantial

  activities besides investing or do not manage substantially all of their investments on a fair

  value basis. Consequently, in the Board’s view, the argument for a fair value measurement

  is weakened at non-investment entity level. [IFRS 10.BC276-278].

  The Board also noted the following in arriving at its conclusion:

  • concern that a non-investment entity could achieve different accounting outcomes by

  holding subsidiaries directly or indirectly through an investment entity; [IFRS 10.BC280]

  • practical difficulties when a non-investment entity parent and an investment entity

  invest in the same investment or when an investment entity subsidiary holds a

  subsidiary that invests in the equity of a non-investment entity parent; [IFRS 10.BC281]

  • although US GAAP permits ‘rolled up’ accounting in certain circumstances, this is

  linked to industry-specific guidance that is not generally contained in IFRSs;

  [IFRS 10.BC282] and

  • inconsistency with the roll-up of fair value accounting option permitted by IAS 28.

  However, the Board thought it was important to retain the fair value accounting

  460 Chapter

  6

  that is currently allowed for venture capital organisations, mutual funds, unit trusts

  and similar entities and that the differences between using equity accounting and

  fair value accounting was considered to be smaller than between consolidation and

  fair value measurement for investments in subsidiaries. [IFRS 10.BC283].

  Ultimately, due to concerns about potential abuses, the Board considered that the

  investment entity exception is not retained by a non-investment entity parent in its

  consolidated financial statements.

  11 FUTURE

  DEVELOPMENTS

  11.1 The revised Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting

  The IASB issued the revised Conceptual Framework in March 2018, which contains

  various concepts that might, at a future date, result in changes to IFRS 10:

  • a reporting entity is an entity that chooses, or is required, to prepare financial

  statements;

  • a reporting entity can be a single entity or a portion of an entity or can comprise

  more than one entity. A reporting entity is not necessarily a legal entity;

  • sometimes one entity (the parent) has control over another entity (the subsidiary).

  If a reporting entity comprises both the parent and its subsidiaries, the reporting

  entity’s financial statements are referred to as ‘consolidated financial statements’.

  If a reporting entity is the parent alone, the reporting entity’s financial statements

  are referred to as ‘unconsolidated financial statements’;

  • the information about the assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses of both

  the parent and subsidiaries as a single reporting entity provided in consolidated

  financial statements is useful for existing and potential investors, lenders and other

  creditors of the parent in their assessment of the prospects of future net cash

  inflows to the parent;

  • the IASB is of the view that the information provided in unconsolidated financial

  statements is typically not sufficient to meet the information needs of existing and

  potential investors, lenders and other creditors of the parent, and accordingly,

  when consolidated financial statements are required, unconsolidated financial

  statements cannot serve as a substitute for consolidated financial statements;

  • an entity controls an economic resource if it has the present ability to direct the

  use of the economic resource and obtain the benefits that flow from it;

  • financial statements prepared for two or more entities that do not have a

  parent-subsidiary relationship with each other are referred to as combined

  financial statements;

  • determining the appropriate boundary of a reporting entity can be difficult if the

  reporting entity: (a) is not a legal entity; and (b) does not comprise only legal entities

  linked by a parent-subsidiary relationship. In such cases, determining the boundary

  of the reporting entity is driven by the information needs of the primary users of

  the reporting entity’s financial statements. Those users need relevant information

  Consolidated financial statements 461

  that faithfully represents what it purports to represent. Faithful representation

  requires that:

  • the boundary of the reporting entity does not contain an arbitrary or

  incomplete set of economic activities;

  • including that set of economic activities within the boundary of the reporting

  entity results in neutral information; and

  • a description is provided of how the boundary of the reporting entity was

  determined and of what constitutes the reporting entity.10

  The revised Conceptual Framework is effective immediately for the IASB and the IFRS

  Interpretations Committee. For preparers who develop accounting policies based on

  the Conceptual Framework, it is effective for annual periods beginning on or after

  1 January 2020.

  11.2 Post-Implementation Review of IFRS 10

  The IASB aims to start the Post-Implementation Review of IFRS 10 in 2019 or early 2020.11

  References

  1 Regulation (EC) No. 1606/2002 of the European 3 IFRIC Update, January 2010, p.2.

  Parliament and of the Council of 19 July 2002 on

  4

  Effect analysis IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial

  the application of international accounting

  Statements and IFRS 12 Disclosure of Interests in

  standards, preamble para. (3).

  Other Entities, IASB, September 2011, pp.25-26.

  2

  Agenda paper for the meeting of the 5

  IFRIC Update, May 2015, pp.7-8.

  Accounting Regulatory Committee on 24th 6

  IFRIC Update, September 2013, p.3.

  November 2006 (document ARC/19/2006), 7

  IFRIC Update, January 2015, p.10.

  Subject: Relationship between the IAS 8

  IFRIC Update, March 2017, pp.7-8.

  Regulation and the 4th and 7th Company Law

  9

  IFRIC Update, March 2014, p.4.

  Directives – Meaning of ‘Annual Accounts’,

  10 Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting,

  European Commission: Internal Market and

  IASB, March 2018, paras. 3.10-3.18, 4.20.

  Services DG: Free movement of capital, 11 IASB Update, June 2018.

  company law and corporate governance:

  Accounting/RC MX D(2006), 7

  November

  2006, para. 5.1.

  462 Chapter

  6

  463

  Chapter 7

  Consolidation

  procedures and

  non-controlling interests
/>
  1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 467

  2 CONSOLIDATION PROCEDURES .................................................................. 467

  2.1

  Basic principles ..................................................................................................... 467

  2.2 Proportion

  consolidated

  ..................................................................................... 468

  2.2.1

  Attribution when non-controlling interests change in an

  accounting period ................................................................................. 470

  2.3

  Consolidating foreign operations ..................................................................... 470

  2.4 Intragroup

  eliminations

  .......................................................................................

  471

  2.5

  Non-coterminous accounting periods .............................................................. 472

  2.6 Consistent

  accounting policies .......................................................................... 473

  3 CHANGES IN CONTROL ................................................................................ 473

  3.1

  Commencement and cessation of consolidation ........................................... 473

  3.1.1

  Acquisition of a subsidiary that is not a business ........................... 474

  3.2

  Accounting for a loss of control ......................................................................... 474

  3.3

  Accounting for a loss of control where an interest is retained in the

  former subsidiary .................................................................................................. 476

  3.3.1

  Interest retained in the former subsidiary – financial asset ........ 477

  3.3.2

  Interest retained in the former subsidiary – associate or

  joint venture .......................................................................................... 478

  3.3.2.A

  Conflict between IFRS 10 and IAS 28

  (September 2014 amendments not applied) ............... 479

  3.3.2.B

  Conflict between IFRS 10 and IAS 28

  (September 2014 amendments applied) ......................... 482

  464 Chapter

  7

  3.3.2.C

  Examples of accounting for sales or

  contributions to an existing associate ......................... 483

  3.3.2.D

  Determination of the fair value of the retained

  interest in a former subsidiary which is an

  associate or joint venture .............................................. 484

  3.3.2.E

  Presentation of comparative information for a

  former subsidiary that becomes an investee

  accounted for using the equity method...................... 485

  3.3.3

  Interest retained in the former subsidiary – joint

  operation ............................................................................................... 485

  3.4

  Loss of control in multiple arrangements ........................................................ 487

  3.5

  Other comprehensive income .......................................................................... 488

  3.6 Deemed

  disposal .................................................................................................. 492

  3.7

  Demergers and distributions of non-cash assets to owners ........................ 493

  3.7.1

  Scope of IFRIC 17 ................................................................................ 493

  3.7.2 Recognition

  and

  measurement in IFRIC 17 .................................... 494

  3.7.3 Presentation

  and disclosure .............................................................. 495

  4 CHANGES IN OWNERSHIP INTEREST WITHOUT A LOSS OF

  CONTROL ...................................................................................................... 495

  4.1

  Reattribution of other comprehensive income ............................................. 496

  4.2

  Goodwill attributable to non-controlling interests ....................................... 498

  4.3

  Non-cash acquisition of non-controlling interests ....................................... 500

  4.4 Transaction costs ................................................................................................. 500

  4.5

  Contingent consideration on purchase of a non-controlling

  interest .................................................................................................................... 501

  5 NON-CONTROLLING INTERESTS ................................................................ 502

  5.1

  The definition of non-controlling interests .................................................... 502

  5.2

  Initial measurement of non-controlling interests ......................................... 503

  5.2.1

  Initial measurement of non-controlling interests in a

  business combination ......................................................................... 503

  5.2.2

  Initial measurement of non-controlling interests in a

  subsidiary (that is not a business combination) ............................. 506

  5.2.3

  Measurement of non-controlling interests where an

  associate holds an interest in a subsidiary ...................................... 506

  5.3

  Presentation of non-controlling interests ........................................................ 507

  5.4 Non-controlling

  interests

  classified as financial liabilities .......................... 508

  5.5

  Subsequent measurement of non-controlling interests ............................... 509

  5.5.1

  Loss-making subsidiaries .................................................................... 510

  6 CALL AND PUT OPTIONS OVER NON-CONTROLLING INTERESTS ............. 510

  6.1

  Call options only .................................................................................................... 511

  Consolidation procedures and non-controlling interests 465

  6.1.1

  Options giving the acquirer present access to returns

  associated with that ownership interest ........................................... 511

  6.1.2

  Options not giving the acquirer present access to returns

  associated with that ownership interest .......................................... 512

  6.2

  Put options only .................................................................................................... 513

  6.2.1

  The financial liability for the NCI put .............................................. 514

  6.2.2

  The NCI put provides a present ownership interest ..................... 516

  6.2.3

  The NCI put does not provide a present ownership

  interest .................................................................................................... 516

  6.2.3.A

  Non-controlling interest is not recognised –

  financial liability recognised (Approach
1) .................. 517

  6.2.3.B Full

  recognition

  of

  non-controlling interest

  (Approach 2) ..................................................................... 518

  6.2.3.C

  Partial recognition of non-controlling interest

  (Approach 3) ...................................................................... 518

  6.2.3.D Non-controlling

  interest is subsequently

  derecognised (Approach 4) ............................................ 519

  6.2.4

  Assessing whether multiple transactions should be

  accounted for as a single arrangement ............................................ 520

  6.2.4.A

  Identifying a linked transaction ................................... 520

  6.2.4.B

  Accounting for the linked transaction ......................... 521

  6.3

  Combination of call and put options ................................................................ 523

  6.4

  Call and put options entered into in relation to existing non-

  controlling interests .............................................................................................. 523

  6.5

  Put options over non-controlling interests – Interpretations

  Committee and IASB developments ................................................................. 523

  6.6

  Put and call options in separate financial statements .................................... 525

  7 FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS ............................................................................ 526

  7.1

  Sale or Contribution of Assets between an Investor and its

  Associate or Joint Venture (Amendments to IFRS 10 and IAS 28) ............ 526

  7.2

  Sale or contribution of assets to a joint operation (where the entity

  has joint control or is a party to the joint operation) ..................................... 527

  7.3 Fair

  value

  measurement: unit of account ........................................................ 527

  7.4

  Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Equity project .................... 528

  7.5

  Mandatory purchase of non-controlling interests ........................................ 529

  466 Chapter

  7

  List of examples

 

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