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Commission Regulation
(EC) No 2237/2004 of 29 December 2004 amended
by
Regulation (EC) No 2237/2004
and
Regulation (EC) No 1864/2005
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Interest Rate Risk
67. For each class
of financial assets and financial liabilities, an entity
shall disclose information about its exposure to
interest rate risk, including:
(a) contractual
repricing or maturity dates, whichever dates are
earlier;
and
(b) effective
interest rates, when applicable.
68. An entity
provides information about its exposure to the effects of
future changes in the prevailing level of interest rates.
Changes in market interest rates have a direct effect on the
contractually determined cash flows associated with some
financial assets and financial liabilities (cash flow interest
rate risk) and on the fair value of others (fair value
interest rate risk).
69. Information
about maturity dates (or repricing dates when they are earlier)
indicates the length of time for which interest rates are
fixed, and information about effective interest rates
indicates the levels at which they are fixed. Disclosure of
this information provides users of financial statements with a
basis for evaluating the fair value interest rate risk to
which an entity is exposed and, thus, the potential for gain
or loss. For instruments that are repriced to a market rate of
interest before maturity, disclosure of the period until the
next repricing is more important for this purpose than
disclosure of the period to maturity.
70. To supplement
the information about contractual repricing and maturity dates,
an entity may elect to disclose information about expected
repricing or maturity dates when those dates differ
significantly from the contractual dates. For example, such
information may be particularly relevant when an entity is
able to predict, with reasonable reliability, the amount of
fixed rate mortgage loans that will be repaid before maturity
and it uses this information as the basis for managing its
interest rate risk exposure. The additional information
includes disclosure that it is based on management’s
expectations of future events and an explanation of the
assumptions made about repricing or maturity dates and how
those assumptions differ from the contractual dates.
71. An entity
indicates which of its financial assets and financial
liabilities are:
(a) exposed to fair
value interest rate risk, such as financial assets and
financial liabilities with a fixed interest rate;
(b) exposed to cash
flow interest rate risk, such as financial assets and
financial liabilities with a floating interest rate that is
reset as market rates change; and
(c) not directly
exposed to interest rate risk, such as some investments in
equity instruments.
72. The requirement
in paragraph 67(b) applies to bonds, notes, loans and similar
financial instruments involving future payments that create a
return to the holder and a cost to the issuer reflecting the
time value of money. The requirement does not apply to
financial instruments such as investments in equity
instruments and derivative instruments that do not bear a
determinable effective interest rate. For example, even though
instruments such as interest rate derivatives (including swaps,
forward rate agreements and options) are exposed to fair value
or cash flow risk from changes in market interest rates,
disclosure of an effective interest rate is not required.
However, when providing effective interest rate information,
an entity discloses the effect on its interest rate risk
exposure of hedging transactions such as interest rate swaps.
73. An entity may
become exposed to interest rate risk as a result of a
transaction in which no financial asset or financial liability
is recognised on its balance sheet. In such circumstances, the
entity discloses information that permits users of its
financial statements to understand the nature and extent of
its exposure. For example, when an entity has a commitment to
lend funds at a fixed interest rate, the disclosure normally
includes the stated principal, interest rate and term to
maturity of the amount to be lent and the significant terms of
the transaction giving rise to the exposure to interest rate
risk.
74. The nature of an
entity’s business and the extent of its activity in
financial instruments determine whether information about
interest rate risk is presented in narrative form, in tables
or by using a combination of the two. When an entity has a
variety of financial instruments exposed to fair value or cash
flow interest rate risk, it may adopt one or more of the
following approaches to presenting information:
(a) The carrying
amounts of financial instruments exposed to interest rate risk
may be presented in tabular form, grouped by those that are
contracted to mature or be repriced in the following periods
after the balance sheet date:
(i) in one year or
less;
(ii) in more than
one year but not more than two years;
(iii) in more than
two years but not more than three years;
(iv) in more than
three years but not more than four years;
(v) in more than
four years but not more than five years; and
(vi) in more than
five years.
(b) When the
performance of an entity is significantly affected by the
level of its exposure to interest rate risk or changes in
that exposure, more detailed information is desirable. An
entity such as a bank may disclose, for example, separate
groupings of the carrying amounts of financial instruments
contracted to mature or be repriced:
(i) in one month
or less after the balance sheet date;
(ii) in more than
one month but not more than three months after the balance
sheet date; and
(iii) in more than
three months but not more than twelve months after the
balance sheet date.
(c) Similarly, an
entity may indicate its exposure to cash flow interest rate
risk through a table indicating the aggregate carrying amount
of groups of floating rate financial assets and financial
liabilities maturing within various future time periods.
(d) Interest rate
information may be disclosed for individual financial
instruments. Alternatively, weighted average rates or a range
of rates may be presented for each class of financial
instrument. An entity may group into separate classes
instruments denominated in different currencies or having
substantially different credit risks when those factors result
in instruments having substantially different effective
interest rates.
75. In some
circumstances, an entity may be able to provide useful
information about its exposure to interest rate risks by
indicating the effect of a hypothetical change in market
interest rates on the fair value of its financial instruments
and future profit or loss and cash flows. Such information may
be based on, for example, an assumed one percentage point (100
basis points) change in market interest rates occurring at the
balance sheet date. The effects of a change in interest rates
include changes in interest income and expense relating to
floating rate financial instruments and gains or losses
resulting from changes in the fair value of fixed rate
instruments. The reported interest rate sensitivity may be
restricted to the direct effects of an interest rate change on
interest-bearing financial instruments recognised at the
balance sheet date because the indirect effects of a rate
change on financial markets and individual entities cannot
normally be predicted reliably. When disclosing interest rate
sensitivity information, an entity indicates the basis on
which it has prepared the information, including any
significant assumptions.
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