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

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  associate if the local regulatory requirements prevented the investor from disclosing

  such information until the joint venture or associate has released its own financial

  statements. The Interpretations Committee noted that it expected the requirement to

  prepare summarised financial information about a joint venture or associate in IFRS 12

  to lead to the disclosure of summarised information on an individual basis for each joint

  venture or associate that is material to the reporting entity. The Interpretations

  Committee observed that this reflects the IASB’s intentions as described in the Basis for

  Disclosure of interests in other entities 907

  Conclusions to IFRS 12. The Interpretations Committee also noted that there is no

  provision in IFRS 12 that permits non-disclosure of this information (on the grounds of

  confidentially or local regulatory requirements) and that outreach performed indicated

  that there was no significant diversity observed in practice on this issue. Consequently,

  the Interpretations Committee determined that neither an Interpretation nor an

  amendment to a standard was necessary and decided not to add this issue to its agenda.4

  Any entity must also disclose:

  (a) the nature and extent of any significant restrictions (e.g. resulting from borrowing

  arrangements, regulatory requirements or contractual arrangements between

  investors with joint control of or significant influence over a joint venture or

  associate) on the ability of the joint ventures or associates to transfer funds to the

  entity in the form of cash dividends or to repay loans or advances made by the

  entity;

  (b) when the financial statements of a joint venture or associate used in applying the

  equity method are as of a date or for a period that is different from that of the

  entity:

  (i) the date of the end of the reporting period of the financial statements of that

  joint venture or associate; and

  (ii) the reason for using a different date or period.

  (c) the unrecognised share of losses of a joint venture or associate, both for the

  reporting period and cumulatively, if the entity has stopped recognising its share

  of losses of the joint venture or associate when applying the equity method.

  [IFRS 12.22].

  The implication from this wording is that these disclosures in respect of significant

  restrictions, reporting dates and unrecognised losses are required separately for each

  material joint venture or associate.

  A summary of the disclosures required for individually material and, collectively for

  immaterial joint ventures and associates is shown in the table below.

  Topic Material

  joint

  Individually

  ventures and

  immaterial joint

  associates

  ventures and

  associates

  Accounting policy

  ✓

  ×

  Summarised financial information

  ✓

  ✓

  (in aggregate)

  Fair value, if quoted market price is available

  ✓

  ×

  Restrictions on ability to transfer funds

  ✓

  ✓

  (in aggregate)

  Date of financial statements, if different from entity

  ✓

  ✓

  (in aggregate)

  Unrecognised share of losses

  ✓

  ✓

  (in aggregate)

  908 Chapter

  13

  5.1.1

  Summarised financial information of individually material joint

  ventures and associates

  The summarised financial information specified by (b)(ii) of 5.1 above for each material

  joint venture and associate is as follows:

  (a) dividends received;

  (b) summarised financial information for the joint venture or associate including, but

  not necessarily limited to:

  (i) current

  assets;

  (ii) non-current

  assets;

  (iii) current liabilities;

  (iv) non-current

  liabilities;

  (v) revenue;

  (vi) profit or loss from continuing operations;

  (vii) post-tax profit or loss from discontinued operations;

  (viii) other comprehensive income; and

  (ix) total

  comprehensive

  income.

  [IFRS 12.B12].

  Additionally, for material joint ventures (but not associates) the following information

  must be disclosed:

  (a) cash and cash equivalents included in current assets;

  (b) current financial liabilities (excluding trade and other payables and provisions);

  (c) non-current financial liabilities (excluding trade and other payables and provisions);

  (d) depreciation

  and

  amortisation;

  (e) interest

  income;

  (f) interest

  expense;

  and

  (g) income tax expense or income. [IFRS 12.B13].

  The summarised financial information presented must be the 100 per cent amounts

  included in the IFRS financial statements of the joint venture or associate (and not the

  entity’s share of those amounts). However, if the entity accounts for the joint venture or

  associate using the equity method:

  (a) the amounts included in the IFRS financial statements of the joint venture or

  associate must be adjusted to reflect adjustments made by the entity when using

  the equity method, such as the fair value adjustments made at the time of

  acquisition and adjustments for differences in accounting policies; and

  (b) the entity must provide a reconciliation of the summarised financial information

  presented to the carrying amount of its interest in the joint venture or associate.

  [IFRS 12.B14].

  Disclosure of interests in other entities 909

  In January 2015, the Interpretations Committee discussed the basis on which an

  entity should prepare the required summarised financial information for joint

  ventures and associates. The Interpretations Committee observed that a reporting

  entity that has subsidiaries should present the summarised financial information

  required about a joint venture or associate that is material to the reporting entity

  based on the consolidated financial statements for the joint venture or associate. If

  it does not have subsidiaries, the presentation should be based on the financial

  statements of the joint venture or associate in which its own joint ventures or

  associates are equity-accounted. The Interpretations Committee noted that these

  views are consistent with paragraph 14 of IFRS 12, which requires that the amounts

  included in the financial statements of the joint venture or associate must be

  adjusted to reflect adjustments made by the reporting entity using the equity method

  (see (a) above). Consequently, the Interpretations Committee decided that neither

  an interpretation nor an amendment to a standard was necessary and decided not to

  add this issue to its agenda.5

  The standard does not specify what components should be included in the

  reconciliation required by (b) above. As clarified by the Interpretations Committee, the

  amounts included in the IFRS financial statements of the joint venture or associate<
br />
  should be adjusted to reflect fair value and accounting policy adjustments per (a) above.

  The implication is that this should also include the reporting entity’s goodwill

  attributable to the joint venture or associate. However, this is only the goodwill

  attributable to the reporting entity’s share of the joint venture or associate. The goodwill

  attributable to the rest of the joint venture or associate is presumably not known. Care

  will therefore be needed in presenting any such goodwill and in adequately explaining

  how the summarised IFRS financial information reconciles to the carrying amount of

  the reporting entity’s interest in the joint venture or associate. Any pre-existing goodwill

  in the books of the joint venture or associate at the time it became a joint venture or

  associate of the reporting entity should be eliminated from the amounts in (a) as a fair

  value adjustment.

  An entity may present the summarised financial information required on the basis of the

  joint venture’s or associate’s financial statements if:

  (a) the entity measures its interest in the joint venture or associate at fair value in

  accordance with IAS 28; and

  (b) the joint venture or associate does not prepare IFRS financial statements and

  preparation on that basis would be impracticable or cause undue cost. In that case,

  the entity must disclose the basis on which the summarised financial information

  has been prepared. [IFRS 12.B15].

  This implies that the summarised financial information of the joint venture or associate

  can be prepared on a non-IFRS basis in those circumstances where both conditions (a)

  and (b) are satisfied.

  910 Chapter

  13

  Where a joint venture or associate measured at fair value in accordance with IAS 28

  does prepare IFRS financial statements, or where the preparation of IFRS financial

  information would not be impracticable or cause undue cost, it would appear that the

  summarised financial information disclosed should be the unadjusted IFRS numbers of

  the joint venture or associate (as compared to the adjusted basis used where the equity

  method is applied).

  In principle, the IASB concluded that the disclosure requirements for joint ventures and

  associates should be the same for all entities regardless of whether those entities are

  venture capital organisations, mutual funds, unit trusts or similar entities which are

  permitted by IAS 28 to hold investments in joint ventures and associates at fair value.

  [IFRS 12.BC60].

  Nevertheless, the minimum line item disclosures required for material associates

  are less than those required for material joint ventures on the grounds that, in the

  IASB’s opinion, an entity is generally more involved with joint ventures than with

  associates because joint control means that an entity has a veto over decisions

  relating to the relevant activities of the joint venture. Accordingly, the IASB

  considers that the different nature of the relationship between a joint venturer and

  its joint ventures from that between an investor and its associates warrants a

  different level of detail in the disclosures of summarised financial information.

  [IFRS 12.BC50-51].

  IFRS 12 requires that an entity should present the summarised financial information for

  each material joint venture on a ‘100 per cent’ basis and reconcile that to the carrying

  amount of its investment in the joint venture or associate. An alternative would be to

  present summarised financial information for each material joint venture on the basis of

  the reporting entity’s proportionate interest in the joint venture. However, the IASB

  rejected that alternative approach on the grounds that it would be confusing to present

  the assets, liabilities and revenue of a joint venture or associate when the entity has

  neither rights to, nor obligations for, the assets and liabilities of the joint ventures or

  associates. [IFRS 12.BC49].

  Summarised financial information is not required for material joint operations since

  assets and liabilities arising from joint operations are the reporting entity’s own

  assets and liabilities and consequently are recognised separately in the entity’s

  financial statements. They are accounted for in accordance with the requirements

  of applicable IFRSs, and are therefore subject to the disclosure requirements of

  those IFRSs. [IFRS 12.BC52]. Since an investment in a joint operation is not considered

  to represent an investment in a separate entity, a joint operation also cannot be a

  structured entity.

  BP disclose summarised financial information for material associates as illustrated below.

  Disclosure of interests in other entities 911

  Extract 13.6: BP p.l.c. (2017)

  Notes on financial statements [extract]

  15. Investments in associates [extract]

  BP owns 19.75% of the voting shares of Rosneft which are listed on the MICEX stock exchange in Moscow

  and its global depository receipts are listed on the London Stock Exchange. The Russian federal government,

  through its investment company JSC Rosneftegaz, owned 50.0% plus one share of the voting shares of Rosneft

  at 31 December 2017.

  [...]

  The value of BP’s 19.75% shareholding in Rosneft based on the quoted market share price of $4.99 per share

  (2016 $6.50 per share) was $10,444 million at 31 December 2017 (2016 $13,604 million).

  The following table provides summarized financial information relating to Rosneft. This information is

  presented on a 100% basis and reflects adjustments made by BP to Rosneft’s own results in applying the equity

  method of accounting. BP adjusts Rosneft’s results for the accounting required under IFRS relating to BP’s

  purchase of its interest in Rosneft and the amortization of the deferred gain relating to the disposal of BP’s

  interest in TNK-BP. These adjustments have increased the reported profit for 2017, as shown in the table

  below, compared with the equivalent amount in Russian roubles that we expect Rosneft to report in its own

  financial statements under IFRS.

  $ million

  Gross amount

  2017

  2016 2015

  Sales and other operating revenues

  103,028

  74,380

  84,071

  Profit before interest and taxation

  9,949

  7,094

  12,253

  Finance costs

  2,228

  1,747 3,696

  Profit before taxation

  7,721

  5,347 8,557

  Taxation

  1,742

  1,797 1,792

  Non-controlling interests

  1,311

  273 30

  Profit for the year

  4,668

  3,277 6,735

  Other comprehensive income

  2,810

  4,203 (4,111)

  Total comprehensive income

  7,478

  7,480 2,624

  Non-current assets

  158,719

  129,403

  Current assets

  39,737

  37,914

  Total assets

  198,456

  167,317

  Current liabilities

  66,506

  46,284

  Non-current liabilities

  70,704

  71,980

  T
otal liabilities

  137,210

  118,264

  Net assets

  61,246

  49,053

  Less: non-controlling interests

  10,314

  7,316

  50,932

  41,737

  The group received dividends, net of withholding tax, of $314 million from Rosneft in 2017 (2016 $332 million and

  2015 $271 million).

  912 Chapter

  13

  5.1.2

  Financial information of individually immaterial joint ventures and

  associates

  An entity must disclose, in aggregate, the carrying amount of its interests in all

  individually immaterial joint ventures or associates that are accounted for using the

  equity method. An entity must also disclose separately the aggregate amount of its share

  of those joint ventures’ or associates’:

  (a) profit or loss from continuing operations;

  (b) post-tax profit or loss from discontinued operations;

  (c) other comprehensive income; and

  (d) total

  comprehensive

  income.

  Separate disclosures are required for joint ventures and associates. [IFRS 12.B16].

  IFRS 12 does not specifically require a reporting entity’s share of (a) to (d) to be disclosed

  for material joint ventures or associates.

  IFRS 12 clarifies that this financial information is not required when a joint venture or

  associate is held for sale in accordance with IFRS 5. [IFRS 12.B17].

  Glencore plc disclose the following information about individual immaterial associates:

 

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