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IFRS 9 – Financial Instruments

IFRS 9 – Financial Instruments. IFRS 9 - Key Principles and Areas of Difference. Impact on the financial statements could be pervasive. Hedge Accounting. Classification & Measurement. Impairment. Classification & Measurement - Financial Liabilities. Amortized Cost.

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IFRS 9 – Financial Instruments

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  1. IFRS 9 – Financial Instruments

  2. IFRS 9 - Key Principles and Areas of Difference Impact on the financial statements could be pervasive Hedge Accounting Classification & Measurement Impairment

  3. Classification & Measurement - Financial Liabilities Amortized Cost Non-substantial modificationsaccounted for differently Financial Liabilities FVTPL Held for trading Not recycled Measure at FVTPL (specific criteria) Own credit risk: FV gains/losses in OCI FVTPL Fair Value Option Other FV gains/losses presented in P/L

  4. Classification & Measurement – Financial assets Business Model Held to Collect Held to Collect and Sell Other Any (1-3) • No longer separate non-closely related EDs Cash Flows SPPI (Solely Payments of Principal and Interest) Not SPPI Classification Amortized Cost FVTOCI with recycling FVTPL FVTPL Equity instrument Fair Value Option FVTPL FVTOCI without recycling

  5. Classification & Measurement - Financial Liabilities Accounting for the modification or exchange of debt that does not result in derecognition IAS 39 No gain or loss recognized IFRS 9 Gain or loss recognized VS Amortized cost recalculated by discounting modified contractual cash flows at original EIR, revised for transaction costs only Effect of modified cash flows spread over remaining term by revising EIR

  6. Impairment –Expected Credit Loss OverviewScope Financial assets in the scope of IFRS 9 Contract assets (IFRS 15) Lease receivables (IFRS 16) Certain financial guarantees (unless at FVTPL) Written loan commitments (unless at FVTPL) Subsequent measurement …………. FVTPL / FVOCI Option for certain equity instruments AC FVOCI Outside the scope of the impairment model Within the scope of the impairment model

  7. 12 month ECL Gross carrying amount Gross carrying amount Net carrying amount Expected Credit Loss OverviewImpairment – general model Changes in credit risk since initial recognition Objective evidence of impairment?? Significant increase in credit risk? STAGE 2 STAGE 1 STAGE 3 Lifetime ECL Lifetime ECL Loss allowance Apply effective interest rate to ……..

  8. Expected Credit Loss OverviewExpected loss allowance : 12-month vs lifetime • Stage 2 • Lifetime ECLs are the total expected cash shortfalls arising from all possible default events over the life of the loan • Assets migrate to this bucket if the credit risk has increased significantly since initial recognition (unless ‘low credit risk’) • Stage 1 • 12 month ECL reflects the cash shortfalls over the life of the loan arising from a default in the next 12 months • Most assets begin in this bucket • Effect of the entire credit loss on a financial instrument weighted by the probability that this loss will occur in the next 12 months 12-month expected losses Life time expected losses Examples • Loan of CU 10m • Expected 12% probability to default over lifetime • Entire loss that would arise on default is 15% • Lifetime ECL = CU 180,000 (10m x 12% x 15%) • Loan of CU 10m • Expected 2% probability to default in next 12 months • Entire loss that would arise on default is 10% • 12 month ECL = CU 20,000 (10m x 2% x 10%) Note: Discounting has been ignored in the simplified example

  9. Expected Credit Loss OverviewTransfer out of stage 1 – significant increases in credit risk Significant increase in credit risk? Stage 1 Stage 2 Relative model Credit risk on initial recognition Current credit risk compare Reporting date Initial recognition

  10. Expected Credit Loss OverviewTransfer into Stage 3 – indicators that an instrument is credit impaired Breach of contract (e.g. past due or default) Lenders grant a concession relating to the borrower’s financial difficulty Significant financial difficulty of the borrower Credit impaired Probable bankruptcy or other financial reorganisation Disappearance of an active market for the instrument

  11. Hedge Accounting Hedge accounting remains optional under IFRS 9. Entities may choose to apply hedge accounting in order to reduce volatility in the income statement or in OCI. The three types of hedges remain the same under IFRS 9. However, some of the hedge accounting mechanics are different. In particular, IFRS 9 changes the mechanics applied when a hedge of a future transaction results in the recognition of a non-financial item. The hedge effectiveness requirements are very different under IFRS 9 compared to IAS 39. Retrospective hedge effectiveness test no longer required. Prospective test required, but test is whether an “economic relationship” exists between hedged item and hedging instrument. (no longer an 80-125% numerical threshold to pass). In most cases economic relationship may be demonstrated qualitatively This remains a key requirement under IFRS 9. Hedge accounting is applied prospectively from the point the qualifying criteria are satisfied, notably hedge documentation. Hedge documentation requirements are different under IFRS 9 compared to IAS 39.

  12. Q & A

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