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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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Control
13. An entity controls an asset if the entity has the power
to obtain the future economic benefits flowing from the
underlying
resource and to restrict the access of others to those
benefits. The capacity of an entity to control the future
economic
benefits from an intangible asset would normally stem from
legal rights that are enforceable in a court of law. In
the absence of legal rights, it is more difficult to
demonstrate control. However, legal enforceability of a
right is not a
necessary condition for control because an entity may be
able to control the future economic benefits in some other
way.
14. Market and technical knowledge may give rise to future
economic benefits. An entity controls those benefits if, for
example, the knowledge is protected by legal rights such as
copyrights, a restraint of trade agreement (where permitted)
or by a legal duty on employees to maintain confidentiality.
15. An entity may have a team of skilled staff and may be
able to identify incremental staff skills leading to future
economic
benefits from training. The entity may also expect that the
staff will continue to make their skills available to
the entity. However, an entity usually has insufficient
control over the expected future economic benefits arising
from
a team of skilled staff and from training for these items to
meet the definition of an intangible asset. For a similar
reason,
specific management or technical talent is unlikely to meet
the definition of an intangible asset, unless it is
protected
by legal rights to use it and to obtain the future economic
benefits expected from it, and it also meets the other
parts of the definition.
16. An entity may have a portfolio of customers or a market
share and expect that, because of its efforts in building
customer
relationships and loyalty, the customers will continue to
trade with the entity. However, in the absence of legal
rights to protect, or other ways to control, the
relationships with customers or the loyalty of the customers
to the
entity, the entity usually has insufficient control over the
expected economic benefits from customer relationships and
loyalty for such items (eg portfolio of customers, market
shares, customer relationships and customer loyalty) to meet
the definition of intangible assets. In the absence of legal
rights to protect customer relationships, exchange
transactions
for the same or similar non-contractual customer
relationships (other than as part of a business combination)
provide evidence that the entity is nonetheless able to
control the expected future economic benefits flowing from
the
customer relationships. Because such exchange transactions
also provide evidence that the customer relationships are
separable, those customer relationships meet the definition
of an intangible asset.
Future economic benefits
17. The future economic benefits flowing from an intangible
asset may include revenue from the sale of products or
services,
cost savings, or other benefits resulting from the use of
the asset by the entity. For example, the use of
intellectual
property in a production process may reduce future
production costs rather than increase future revenues.
Recognition and measurement
18. The
recognition of an item as an intangible asset requires an
entity to demonstrate that the item meets:
(a) the
definition of an intangible asset (see paragraphs 8-17);
and
(b) the
recognition criteria (see paragraphs 21-23).
This requirement
applies to costs incurred initially to acquire or internally
generate an intangible asset and those incurred subsequently
to add to, replace part of, or service it.
19. Paragraphs
25-32 deal with the application of the recognition criteria
to separately acquired intangible assets, and paragraphs
33-43 deal with their application to intangible assets
acquired in a business combination. Paragraph 44 deals with
the initial measurement of intangible assets acquired by way
of a government grant, paragraphs 45-47 with exchanges of
intangible assets, and paragraphs 48-50 with the treatment
of internally generated goodwill. Paragraphs 51-67 deal with
the initial recognition and measurement of internally
generated intangible assets.
20. The nature of
intangible assets is such that, in many cases, there are no
additions to such an asset or replacements of part of it.
Accordingly, most subsequent expenditures are likely to
maintain the expected future economic benefits embodied in
an existing intangible asset rather than meet the definition
of an intangible asset and the recognition criteria in this
Standard. In addition, it is often difficult to attribute
subsequent expenditure directly to a particular intangible
asset rather than to the business as a whole. Therefore,
only rarely will subsequent expenditure — expenditure
incurred after the initial recognition of an acquired
intangible asset or after completion of an internally
generated intangible asset — be recognised in the carrying
amount of an asset. Consistently with paragraph 63,
subsequent expenditure on brands, mastheads, publishing
titles, customer lists and items similar in substance (whether
externally acquired or internally generated) is always
recognised in profit or loss as incurred. This is because
such expenditure cannot be distinguished from expenditure to
develop the business as a whole.
21. An
intangible asset shall be recognised if, and only if:
(a) it
is probable that the expected future economic benefits
that are attributable to the asset will flow to the
entity; and
(b) the
cost of the asset can be measured reliably.
22. An
entity shall assess the probability of expected future
economic benefits using reasonable and supportable
assumptions that represent management’s best estimate of the
set of economic conditions that will exist over the useful
life of the asset.
23. An entity uses
judgement to assess the degree of certainty attached to the
flow of future economic benefits that are attributable to
the use of the asset on the basis of the evidence available
at the time of initial recognition, giving greater weight to
external evidence.
24. An
intangible asset shall be measured initially at cost.
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