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Commission Regulation (EC) No
2238/2004 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 IASs IFRS 1, IASs Nos 1 to 10, 12 to 17, 19
to 24, 27 to 38, 40 and 41 and SIC Nos 1 to 7, 11 to 14, 18 to 27
and 30 to 33
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Recognition
16. Investment
property shall be recognised as an asset when, and only
when:
(a) it is probable
that the future economic benefits that are associated
with the investment property will flow to the entity;
and
(b) the cost of the
investment property can be measured reliably.
17. An entity
evaluates under this recognition principle all its investment
property costs at the time they are incurred. These costs
include costs incurred initially to acquire an investment property and costs incurred subsequently to add to, replace
part of, or service a property.
18. Under the
recognition principle in paragraph 16, an entity does not
recognise in the carrying amount of an investment property the
costs of the day-to-day servicing of such a property. Rather,
these costs are recognised in profit or loss as incurred.
Costs of day-to-day servicing are primarily the cost of labour
and consumables, and may include the cost of minor parts. The
purpose of these expenditures is often described as for the
‘repairs and maintenance’ of the property.
19. Parts of
investment properties may have been acquired through
replacement. For example, the interior walls may be
replacements of original walls. Under the recognition
principle, an entity recognises in the carrying amount of an
investment property the cost of replacing part of an existing
investment property at the time that cost is incurred if the
recognition criteria are met. The carrying amount of those
parts that are replaced is derecognised in accordance with the
derecognition provisions of this Standard.
Measurement at
Recognition
20. An investment
property shall be measured initially at its cost. Transaction
costs shall be included in the initial measurement.
21. The cost of a
purchased investment property comprises its purchase price and
any directly attributable expenditure. Directly attributable
expenditure includes, for example, professional fees for legal
services, property transfer taxes and other transaction costs.
22. The cost of a
self-constructed investment property is its cost at the date
when the construction or development is complete. Until that
date, an entity applies IAS 16. At that date, the property
becomes investment property and this Standard applies (see
paragraphs 57(e) and 65).
23. The cost of an
investment property is not increased by:
(a) start-up costs
(unless they are necessary to bring the property to the
condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the
manner intended by management),
(b) operating losses
incurred before the investment property achieves the planned
level of occupancy, or
(c) abnormal amounts
of wasted material, labour or other resources incurred in
constructing or developing the property.
24. If payment for
an investment property is deferred, its cost is the cash price
equivalent. The difference between this amount and the total
payments is recognised as interest expense over the period of
credit.
25. The initial cost
of a property interest held under a lease and classified
as an investment property shall be as prescribed for a
finance lease by paragraph 20 of IAS 17, ie the asset
shall be recognised at the lower of the fair
value of the property and the present value of
the minimum lease payments. An equivalent amount
shall be recognised as a liability in accordance with that
same paragraph.
26. Any premium paid
for a lease is treated as part of the minimum lease payments
for this purpose, and is therefore included in the cost of the
asset, but is excluded from the liability. If a property
interest held under a lease is classified as investment
property, the item accounted for at fair value is that
interest and not the underlying property. Guidance on
determining the fair value of a property interest is set out
for the fair value model in paragraphs 33-52. That guidance is
also relevant to the determination of fair value when that
value is used as cost for initial recognition purposes.
27. One or more
investment properties may be acquired in exchange for a
non-monetary asset or assets, or a combination of monetary and
non-monetary assets. The following discussion refers to an
exchange of one non-monetary asset for another, but it also
applies to all exchanges described in the preceding sentence.
The cost of such an investment property is measured at fair
value unless (a) the exchange transaction lacks commercial
substance or (b) the fair value of neither the asset received
nor the asset given up is reliably measurable. The acquired
asset is measured in this way even if an entity cannot
immediately derecognise the asset given up. If the acquired
asset is not measured at fair value, its cost is measured at
the carrying amount of the asset given up.
28. An entity
determines whether an exchange transaction has commercial
substance by considering the extent to which its future cash
flows are expected to change as a result of the transaction.
An exchange transaction has commercial substance if:
(a) the
configuration (risk, timing and amount) of the cash flows of
the asset received differs from the configuration of the cash
flows of the asset transferred, or
(b) the
entity-specific value of the portion of the entity’s
operations affected by the transaction changes as a result of
the exchange, and
(c) the difference
in (a) or (b) is significant relative to the fair value of the
assets exchanged.
For the purpose of
determining whether an exchange transaction has commercial
substance, the entity-specific value of the portion of the
entity’s operations affected by the transaction shall
reflect post-tax cash flows. The result of these analyses may
be clear without an entity having to perform detailed
calculations.
29. The fair value
of an asset for which comparable market transactions do not
exist is reliably measurable if (a) the variability in the
range of reasonable fair value estimates is not significant
for that asset or (b) the probabilities of the various
estimates within the range can be reasonably assessed and used
in estimating fair value. If the entity is able to determine
reliably the fair value of either the asset received or the
asset given up, then the fair value of the asset given up is
used to measure cost unless the fair value of the asset
received is more clearly evident.
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