320 likes | 808 Views
CHAPTER 18 Accounting values and reporting. Contents. Accounting values Measurement focus Expanding the boundaries of the accounting model Fair value measurement The IASB’s mixed-attribute model Comprehensive income Efficient market hypothesis. Accounting values.
E N D
Contents • Accounting values • Measurement focus • Expanding the boundaries of the accounting model • Fair value measurement • The IASB’s mixed-attribute model • Comprehensive income • Efficient market hypothesis
Accounting values • Different value perspectives • Entry value • Exit value • Value in use • Entry and exit values are market values • Market buying price and market selling price of an item • Value in use is an entity-specific value • Specific to the company that uses the item • Incorporates management intentions
Value in use • Value in use is the incremental firm value from continuing use of the item • Estimate the future net cash flows expected to arise from the continuing use and ultimate disposal of the item and discount these to present value • More subjective and unique to the item
Values in the accounting model • Entry values are basic to the historical cost model (initial measurement) • Replacement cost as a (potential) revised entry cost for subsequent measurement • Exit values are used both as a control and as a measurement base for subsequent measurement • Net realizable value • Fair value remeasurement
Values in the accounting model (cont.) • Value in use is used as a control measure only • Threshold value to arrive at an estimate of the recoverable amount of an asset • IAS 36 Impairment of Assets
Deprival value • Deprival value rests on a comparison of a current entry value (replacement cost) and the recoverable amount • Value to the business - what the loss to the business would be if it were obliged to forfeit the asset in question
Fig. 18.1 Deprival value Replacement cost Deprivalvalue = lower of Higher of Net realizable value or Value in use
Measurement focus • The income statement articulates with the balance sheet: the values in both statements are not derived independently of each other • Balance sheet focus: measure balance sheet values independently on different dates and the changes will determine profit or loss of the intervening period
Measurement focus (cont.) • Income statement focus: measure income with the balance sheet representing unabsorbed costs (assets) and anticipated expenditure (current liabilities) and financing • The IASB’s view tends to a mixed focus
Expanding the boundaries of the accounting model • Standard setters tend to give more emphasis on representing the current economic status of the company’s assets and liabilities in addition to its completed transactions • Drive towards earlier recognition of (changes in) assets and liabilities than takes place under the completed transaction approach • General issue of recognising changes in economic value
Executory contracts • Executory contracts are binding contracts where the company has entered into an agreement but fulfilment of the terms has not been completed • Steps to bring executory contracts within the boundaries of the financial accounting model • Treatment of onerous contracts (IAS 37) • Recognising assets and liabilities from executory contracts that are financial instruments (IAS 39)
Fair value measurement • Fair value is the amount for which an asset could be exchanged or a liability settled between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction • Fair value has been introduced in IFRS as • A means of putting a value on an incomplete transaction • A measurement attribute for subsequent measurement in a number of significant standards
Fair value measurement • Fair value is a market-based measurement and as such not affected by factors specific to a particular company • If available, an observable market price in an active market is the best evidence of fair value • But what if a) there is more than one market price, b) the market is illiquid, c) there are no recent prices, and d) there is no market for the specific item to be measured ?
Fair value measurement hierarchy • Need for a formal hierarchy which recognizes different market circumstances in how a fair value is derived • Bottom layer = fair value entirely derived using a model and company data with no market inputs • Reliability concerns
The IASB’s mixed-attribute model • In IFRS, fair value accounting has come to complement historical cost accounting in several domains • Main fair value requirements: • IFRS 3 Business Combinations • IAS 36 Impairment of Assets • IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and ContingentAssets • IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement • IAS 40 Investment Property • IAS 41 Agriculture
Financial instruments • Financial instruments include cash, receivables, payables, equity and debt instruments as well as derivatives and some commodity contracts • IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement establishes principles for recognizing and measuring financial instruments
Derivative financial instruments • Derivatives are defined as financial instruments exhibiting three characteristics: • Their value changes in response to a change in some market-related underlying variable • It requires no or relatively small initial investment • It is settled at a future date • The potentially significant future cash flow consequences of these risky contracts bring them within the scope of the definition of assets and liabilities with fair value as the most relevant measurement attribute
Four categories of financial instrument (IAS 39) • A financial asset or liability at fair value through profit or loss (includes financial instruments held with a view to short-term profit taking and derivatives) • Held-to-maturity investments and liabilities • Loans and receivables • Available-for-sale assets
IAS 39 measurement rules • The four different categories of financial instruments (financial assets and financial liabilities) are measured and reported (treatment of fair value changes) differently after initial recognition • Fair value option: a company has the option to designate a qualified financial instrument on initial recognition as one to be measured at fair value with fair value changes in profit or loss
Fig. 18.2 IAS 39 – Measurement bases of financial assets Measurement of financial assets General: Fair value Specific: Amortised cost (historical cost) Exception: Hedge Accounting If no reliable fair value estimate determinable Loans and receivables Held-to-maturity investments
Fig. 18.3 IAS 39 – Measurement bases of financial liabilities Measurement of financial liabilities General: Amortised cost (historical cost) Specific: Fair value Exception: Hedge Accounting Those designated using the fair value option Held for trading liabilities (including derivatives)
Hedge accounting • Hedge accounting rules apply if a financial instrument (usually a derivative) qualifys as an effective hedging instrument • Hedge accounting will try to match any gain or loss that arises due to movements in the hedged item (the result of the hedged risk) with corresponding (but opposite) movements in the hedging instrument
Fig. 18.4 IAS 39 – Accounting for changes in fair value of financial instruments Remeasurement gains or losses on financial instruments (Changes in fair value) Available-for-sale Held for trading (including derivatives) Fair value option Special treatment Hedge Accounting Profit or loss of period in which fair value changes occur Directly in equity (through Statement of Changes in Equity) Recycling of cumulative gain or loss to profit or loss on disposal or impairment
IAS 40 Investment property • IAS 40 covers tangible fixed assets of property which are held as an investment for the purpose of earning rental or for capital appreciation • Choice between an historical cost model and a fair value model (with changes recognized in the income statement)
IAS 41 Agriculture • IAS 41 covers valuation of biological assets and agricultural produce at the point of harvest • Required measurement at fair value less estimated point-of-sale costs from initial recognition up to the point of harvest, with changes in fair value to be include in profit or loss
Comprehensive income • Comprehensive income encompasses all recognized changes in assets and liabilities from transactions or other events except those related to transactions with shareholders in their capacity as owners
Comprehensive income (cont.) • It includes net income (as traditionally defined) and other comprehensive income • Other comprehensive income (OCI) is the result of remeasurements that are accounted for directly in equity • Recycling of other comprehensive income at transaction completion needed?
Fig. 18.5 Comprehensive income Changes in equity Transactions with shareholders Transactions with others than shareholders • Share issue • Dividends • Retirement of shares… Net profit or loss Other comprehensive income recycling Accumulated OCI Share capital Share premium Retained profit Reserves
Extended measurement of income income Traditional transaction-based (historical cost realized) profit + economic gains and losses (remeasurements) = Comprehensive income
Efficient market hypothesis • A strongly efficient financial market is one where the price of a security compounds all public information about the security • In such a context taking the market price without research would be an efficient way to invest • Challenges the benefits of financial statement analysis