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Commission Regulation (EC) No
2237/2004 of 29 December 2004 amending Regulation (EC) No 1725/2003
adopting certain international accounting standards in accordance
with Regulation (EC) No 1606/2002 of the European Parliament and of
the Council, as regards IAS No 32 and IFRIC 1
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Appendix A
Application Guidance IAS 32 Financial
Instruments: Disclosure and
Presentation
This appendix is an
integral part of the Standard.
AG1. This
Application Guidance explains the application of particular
aspects of the Standard.
AG2. The Standard
does not deal with the recognition or measurement of financial
instruments. Requirements about the recognition and
measurement of financial assets and financial liabilities are
set out in IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and
Measurement.
Definitions (paragraphs
11-14)
Financial Assets and
Financial Liabilities
AG3. Currency (cash)
is a financial asset because it represents the medium of
exchange and is therefore the basis on which all transactions
are measured and recognised in financial statements. A deposit
of cash with a bank or similar financial institution is a
financial asset because it represents the contractual right of
the depositor to obtain cash from the institution or to draw a
cheque or similar instrument against the balance in favour of
a creditor in payment of a financial liability.
AG4. Common examples
of financial assets representing a contractual right to
receive cash in the future and corresponding financial
liabilities representing a contractual obligation to deliver
cash in the future are:
(a) trade accounts
receivable and payable;
(b) notes receivable
and payable;
(c) loans receivable
and payable; and
(d) bonds receivable
and payable.
In each case, one
party’s contractual right to receive (or obligation to pay)
cash is matched by the other party’s corresponding
obligation to pay (or right to receive).
AG5. Another type of
financial instrument is one for which the economic benefit to
be received or given up is a financial asset other than cash.
For example, a note payable in government bonds gives the
holder the contractual right to receive and the issuer the
contractual obligation to deliver government bonds, not cash.
The bonds are financial assets because they represent
obligations of the issuing government to pay cash. The note is,
therefore, a financial asset of the note holder and a
financial liability of the note issuer.
AG6. ‘Perpetual’
debt instruments (such as ‘perpetual’ bonds, debentures
and capital notes) normally provide the holder with the
contractual right to receive payments on account of interest
at fixed dates extending into the indefinite future, either
with no right to receive a return of principal or a right to a
return of principal under terms that make it very unlikely or
very far in the future. For example, an entity may issue a
financial instrument requiring it to make annual payments in
perpetuity equal to a stated interest rate of 8 per cent
applied to a stated par or principal amount of CU1,000 ( In
this guidance, monetary amounts are denominated in ‘currency
units’ (CU).). Assuming 8 per cent to be the market rate of
interest for the instrument when issued, the issuer assumes a
contractual obligation to make a stream of future interest
payments having a fair value (present value) of CU1,000 on
initial recognition. The holder and issuer of the instrument
have a financial asset and a financial liability, respectively.
AG7. A contractual
right or contractual obligation to receive, deliver or
exchange financial instruments is itself a financial
instrument. A chain of contractual rights or contractual
obligations meets the definition of a financial instrument if
it will ultimately lead to the receipt or payment of cash or
to the acquisition or issue of an equity instrument.
AG8. The ability to
exercise a contractual right or the requirement to satisfy a
contractual obligation may be absolute, or it may be
contingent on the occurrence of a future event. For example, a
financial guarantee is a contractual right of the lender to
receive cash from the guarantor, and a corresponding
contractual obligation of the guarantor to pay the lender, if
the borrower defaults. The contractual right and obligation
exist because of a past transaction or event (assumption of
the guarantee), even though the lender’s ability to exercise
its right and the requirement for the guarantor to perform
under its obligation are both contingent on a future act of
default by the borrower. A contingent right and obligation
meet the definition of a financial asset and a financial
liability, even though such assets and liabilities are not
always recognised in the financial statements.
Some of these contingent rights and obligations may be
insurance contracts within the scope of IFRS 4.
AG9. Under IAS 17 Leases
a finance lease is regarded as primarily an entitlement of
the lessor to receive, and an obligation of the lessee to pay,
a stream of payments that are substantially the same as
blended payments of principal and interest under a loan
agreement. The lessor accounts for its investment in the
amount receivable under the lease contract rather than the
leased asset itself. An operating lease, on the other hand, is
regarded as primarily an uncompleted contract committing the
lessor to provide the use of an asset in future periods in
exchange for consideration similar to a fee for a service. The
lessor continues to account for the leased asset itself rather
than any amount receivable in the future under the contract.
Accordingly, a finance lease is regarded as a financial
instrument and an operating lease is not regarded as a
financial instrument (except as regards individual payments
currently due and payable).
AG10. Physical
assets (such as inventories, property, plant and equipment),
leased assets and intangible assets (such as patents and
trademarks) are not financial assets. Control of such physical
and intangible assets creates an opportunity to generate an
inflow of cash or another financial asset, but it does not
give rise to a present right to receive cash or another
financial asset.
AG11. Assets (such
as prepaid expenses) for which the future economic benefit is
the receipt of goods or services, rather than the right to
receive cash or another financial asset, are not financial
assets. Similarly, items such as deferred revenue and most
warranty obligations are not financial liabilities because the
outflow of economic benefits associated with them is the
delivery of goods and services rather than a contractual
obligation to pay cash or another financial asset.
AG12. Liabilities or
assets that are not contractual (such as income taxes that are
created as a result of statutory requirements imposed by
governments) are not financial liabilities or financial assets.
Accounting for income taxes is dealt with in IAS 12 Income
Taxes. Similarly, constructive obligations, as defined in
IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and
Contingent Assets, do not arise from contracts and are not
financial liabilities.
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