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Commission Regulation
(EC) No 2236/2004 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 International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRSs) Nos 1, 3 to 5, International
Accounting Standards (IASs) Nos 1, 10, 12, 14, 16 to 19,
22, 27, 28, 31 to 41 and the interpretations by the
Standard Interpretation Committee (SIC) Nos 9, 22, 28
and 32
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46. A restructuring
is a programme that is planned and controlled by management
and materially changes either the scope of the business
undertaken by an entity or the manner in which the business
is conducted. IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities
and Contingent Assets contains guidance clarifying when
an entity is committed to a restructuring.
47. When an entity
becomes committed to a restructuring, some assets are likely
to be affected by this restructuring. Once the entity is
committed to the restructuring:
(a) its
estimates of future cash inflows and cash outflows for
the purpose of determining value in use reflect the cost
savings and other benefits from the restructuring (based
on the most recent financial budgets/forecasts approved
by management); and
(b) its
estimates of future cash outflows for the restructuring
are included in a restructuring provision in accordance
with IAS 37. Illustrative Example 5 illustrates the
effect of a future restructuring on a value in use
calculation.
48. Until an
entity incurs cash outflows that improve or enhance the
asset’s performance, estimates of future cash flows do not
include the estimated future cash inflows that are expected
to arise from the increase in economic benefits associated
with the cash outflow (see Illustrative Example 6).
49. Estimates of
future cash flows include future cash outflows necessary to
maintain the level of economic benefits expected to arise
from the asset in its current condition. When a
cash-generating unit consists of assets with different
estimated useful lives, all of which are essential to the
ongoing operation of the unit, the replacement of assets
with shorter lives is considered to be part of the
day-to-day servicing of the unit when estimating the future
cash flows associated with the unit. Similarly, when a
single asset consists of components with different estimated
useful lives, the replacement of components with shorter
lives is considered to be part of the day-to-day servicing
of the asset when estimating the future cash flows generated
by the asset.
50.
Estimates of future cash flows shall not include:
(a) cash
inflows or outflows from financing activities; or
(b)
income tax receipts or payments.
51. Estimated
future cash flows reflect assumptions that are consistent
with the way the discount rate is determined. Otherwise, the
effect of some assumptions will be counted twice or ignored.
Because the time value of money is considered by discounting
the estimated future cash flows, these cash flows exclude
cash inflows or outflows from financing activities.
Similarly, because the discount rate is determined on a
pretax basis, future cash flows are also estimated on a
pre-tax basis.
52. The
estimate of net cash flows to be received (or paid) for the
disposal of an asset at the end of its useful life shall be
the amount that an entity expects to obtain from the
disposal of the asset in an arm’s length transaction between
knowledgeable, willing parties, after deducting the
estimated costs of disposal.
53. The estimate
of net cash flows to be received (or paid) for the disposal
of an asset at the end of its useful life is determined in a
similar way to an asset’s fair value less costs to sell,
except that, in estimating those net cash flows:
(a) an entity
uses prices prevailing at the date of the estimate for
similar assets that have reached the end of their useful
life and have operated under conditions similar to those
in which the asset will be used.
(b) the entity
adjusts those prices for the effect of both future price
increases due to general inflation and specific future
price increases or decreases. However, if estimates of
future cash flows from the asset’s continuing use and
the discount rate exclude the effect of general
inflation, the entity also excludes this effect from the
estimate of net cash flows on disposal.
Foreign currency future cash flows
54. Future cash flows are estimated in the currency in which
they will be generated and then discounted using a discount
rate appropriate for that currency. An entity translates the
present value using the spot exchange rate at the date of
the value in use calculation.
Discount rate
55. The discount rate (rates) shall be a pre-tax rate
(rates) that reflect(s) current market assessments of:
(a) the time value of
money;and
(b) the risks specific
to the asset for which the future cash flow estimates
have not been adjusted.
56. A rate that reflects current market assessments of the
time value of money and the risks specific to the asset is
the return that investors would require if they were to
choose an investment that would generate cash flows of
amounts, timing and risk profile equivalent to those that
the entity expects to derive from the asset. This rate is
estimated from the rate implicit in current market
transactions for similar assets or from the weighted average
cost of capital of a listed entity that has a single asset
(or a portfolio of assets) similar in terms of service
potential and risks to the asset under review. However, the
discount rate(s) used to measure an asset’s value in use
shall not reflect risks for which the future cash flow
estimates have been adjusted. Otherwise, the effect of some
assumptions will be double-counted.
57. When an asset-specific rate is not directly available
from the market, an entity uses surrogates to estimate the
discount rate. Appendix A provides additional guidance on
estimating the discount rate in such circumstances.
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