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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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Definitions
8. The following terms are used in
this Standard with the meanings specified:
An active market is a market in which
all the following conditions exist:
(a) the items traded in the market
are homogeneous;
(b) willing buyers and sellers can
normally be found at any time; and
(c) prices are available to the
public.
The agreement date for a business
combination is the date that a substantive agreement between
the combining parties is reached and, in the case of
publicly listed entities, announced to the public. In the
case of a hostile takeover, the earliest date that a
substantive agreement between the combining parties is
reached is the date that a sufficient number of the
acquiree’s owners have accepted the acquirer’s offer for the
acquirer to obtain control of the acquiree.
Amortisation is the systematic
allocation of the depreciable amount of an intangible asset
over its useful life.
An asset is a resource:
(a) controlled by an entity as a
result of past events; and
(b) from which future economic
benefits are expected to flow to the entity.
Carrying amount is the amount at which
an asset is recognised in the balance sheet after deducting
any accumulated amortisation and accumulated impairment
losses thereon.
Cost is the amount of cash or cash
equivalents paid or the fair value of other consideration
given to acquire an asset at the time of its acquisition or
construction, or, when applicable, the amount attributed to
that asset when initially recognised in accordance with the
specific requirements of other IFRSs, eg IFRS 2 Share-based
Payment.
Depreciable amount is the cost of an
asset, or other amount substituted for cost, less its
residual value.
Development is the application of
research findings or other knowledge to a plan or design for
the production of new or substantially improved materials,
devices, products, processes, systems or services before the
start of commercial production or use.
Entity-specific value is the present
value of the cash flows an entity expects to arise from the
continuing use of an asset and from its disposal at the end
of its useful life or expects to incur when settling a
liability.
Fair value of an asset is the amount
for which that asset could be exchanged between
knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length
transaction.
An impairment loss is the amount by
which the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its
recoverable amount.
An intangible asset is an identifiable
non-monetary asset without physical substance.
Monetary assets are money held and
assets to be received in fixed or determinable amounts of
money.
Research is original and planned
investigation undertaken with the prospect of gaining new
scientific or technical knowledge and understanding.
The residual value of an intangible
asset is the estimated amount that an entity would currently
obtain from disposal of the asset, after deducting the
estimated costs of disposal, if the asset were already of
the age and in the condition expected at the end of its
useful life.
Useful life is:
(a) the period over which an asset
is expected to be available for use by an entity; or
(b) the number of production or
similar units expected to be obtained from the asset by
an entity.
Intangible Assets
9. Entities frequently expend
resources, or incur liabilities, on the acquisition,
development, maintenance or enhancement of intangible
resources such as scientific or technical knowledge, design
and implementation of new processes or systems, licences,
intellectual property, market knowledge and trademarks (including
brand names and publishing titles). Common examples of items
encompassed by these broad headings are computer software,
patents, copyrights, motion picture films, customer lists,
mortgage servicing rights, fishing licences, import quotas,
franchises, customer or supplier relationships, customer
loyalty, market share and marketing rights.
10. Not all the items described in
paragraph 9 meet the definition of an intangible asset, ie
identifiability, control over a resource and existence of
future economic benefits. If an item within the scope of
this Standard does not meet the definition of an intangible
asset, expenditure to acquire it or generate it internally
is recognised as an expense when it is incurred. However, if
the item is acquired in a business combination, it forms
part of the goodwill recognised at the acquisition date (see
paragraph 68).
Identifiability
11. The definition of an intangible
asset requires an intangible asset to be identifiable to
distinguish it from goodwill. Goodwill acquired in a
business combination represents a payment made by the
acquirer in anticipation of future economic benefits from
assets that are not capable of being individually identified
and separately recognised. The future economic benefits may
result from synergy between the identifiable assets acquired
or from assets that, individually, do not qualify for
recognition in the financial statements but for which the
acquirer is prepared to make a payment in the business
combination.
12. An asset meets the identifiability
criterion in the definition of an intangible asset when it:
(a) is separable, ie is capable of
being separated or divided from the entity and sold,
transferred, licensed, rented or exchanged, either
individually or together with a related contract, asset
or liability;
or
(b) arises from contractual or
other legal rights, regardless of whether those rights
are transferable or separable from the entity or from
other rights and obligations.
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