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Commission Regulation
(EC) No 1725/2003 of 29 September
2003 amended by Regulation (EC) No 2236/2004
and Regulation (EC) No 1910/2005
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Disclosure
General
118. An entity shall disclose the
following for each class of intangible assets,
distinguishing between internally generated intangible
assets and other intangible assets:
(a) whether the useful lives are
indefinite or finite and, if finite, the useful lives or
the amortisation rates used;
(b) the amortisation methods used
for intangible assets with finite useful lives;
(c) the gross carrying amount and
any accumulated amortisation (aggregated with
accumulated impairment losses) at the beginning and end
of the period;
(d) the line item(s) of the income
statement in which any amortisation of intangible assets
is included;
(e) a reconciliation of the
carrying amount at the beginning and end of the period
showing:
(i) additions, indicating
separately those from internal development, those
acquired separately, and those acquired through
business combinations;
(ii) assets classified as held
for sale or included in a disposal group classified
as held for sale in accordance with IFRS 5 and other
disposals;
(iii) increases or decreases
during the period resulting from revaluations under
paragraphs 75, 85 and 86 and from impairment losses
recognised or reversed directly in equity in
accordance with IAS 36 Impairment of Assets (if
any);
(iv) impairment losses
recognised in profit or loss during the period in
accordance with IAS 36 (if any);
(v) impairment losses reversed
in profit or loss during the period in accordance
with IAS 36 (if any);
(vi) any amortisation
recognised during the period;
(vii) net exchange differences
arising on the translation of the financial
statements into the presentation currency, and on
the translation of a foreign operation into the
presentation currency of the entity; and
(viii) other changes in the
carrying amount during the period.
119. A class of intangible assets is a
grouping of assets of a similar nature and use in an
entity’s operations. Examples of separate classes may
include:
(a) brand names;
(b) mastheads and publishing
titles;
(c) computer software;
(d) licences and franchises;
(e) copyrights, patents and other
industrial property rights, service and operating rights;
(f) recipes, formulae, models,
designs and prototypes; and
(g) intangible assets under
development.
The classes mentioned above are
disaggregated (aggregated) into smaller (larger) classes if
this results in more relevant information for the users of
the financial statements.
120. An entity discloses information
on impaired intangible assets in accordance with IAS 36 in
addition to the information required by paragraph 118(e)(iii)-(v).
121. IAS 8 requires an entity to
disclose the nature and amount of a change in an accounting
estimate that has a material effect in the current period or
is expected to have a material effect in subsequent periods.
Such disclosure may arise from changes in:
(a) the assessment of an
intangible asset’s useful life;
(b) the amortisation method; or
(c) residual values.
122. An entity shall also disclose:
(a) for an intangible asset
assessed as having an indefinite useful life, the
carrying amount of that asset and the reasons supporting
the assessment of an indefinite useful life. In giving
these reasons, the entity shall describe the factor(s)
that played a significant role in determining that the
asset has an indefinite useful life.
(b) a description, the carrying
amount and remaining amortisation period of any
individual intangible asset that is material to the
entity’s financial statements.
(c) for intangible assets acquired
by way of a government grant and initially recognised at
fair value (see paragraph 44):
(i) the fair value initially
recognised for these assets;
(ii) their carrying amount;
and
(iii) whether they are
measured after recognition under the cost model or
the revaluation model.
(d) the existence and carrying
amounts of intangible assets whose title is restricted
and the carrying amounts of intangible assets pledged as
security for liabilities.
(e) the amount of contractual
commitments for the acquisition of intangible assets.
123. When an entity describes the
factor(s) that played a significant role in determining that
the useful life of an intangible asset is indefinite, the
entity considers the list of factors in paragraph 90.
Intangible assets measured after
recognition using the revaluation model
124. If intangible assets are
accounted for at revalued amounts, an entity shall disclose
the following:
(a) by class of intangible assets:
(i) the effective date of the
revaluation;
(ii) the carrying amount of
revalued intangible assets; and
(iii) the carrying amount that
would have been recognised had the revalued class of
intangible assets been measured after recognition
using the cost model in paragraph 74;
(b) the amount of the revaluation
surplus that relates to intangible assets at the
beginning and end of the period, indicating the changes
during the period and any restrictions on the
distribution of the balance to shareholders; and
(c) the methods and significant
assumptions applied in estimating the assets’ fair
values.
125. It may be necessary to aggregate
the classes of revalued assets into larger classes for
disclosure purposes. However, classes are not aggregated if
this would result in the combination of a class of
intangible assets that includes amounts measured under both
the cost and revaluation models.
Research and development expenditure
126. An entity shall disclose the
aggregate amount of research and development expenditure
recognised as an expense during the period.
127. Research and development
expenditure comprises all expenditure that is directly
attributable to research or development activities (see
paragraphs 66 and 67 for guidance on the type of expenditure
to be included for the purpose of the disclosure requirement
in paragraph 126).
Other information
128. An entity is encouraged, but not
required, to disclose the following information:
(a) a description of any fully
amortised intangible asset that is still in use; and
(b) a brief description of
significant intangible assets controlled by the entity
but not recognised as assets because they did not meet
the recognition criteria in this Standard or because
they were acquired or generated before the version of
IAS 38 Intangible Assets issued in 1998 was
effective.
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