|
Commission Regulation (EC) No 1725/2003
of 29 September 2003
adopting certain international accounting standards in
accordance with Regulation (EC) No 1606/2002
of the European Parliament and of the Council
Content |
|
- |
Identifying
reportable segments
Primary and secondary segment
reporting formats
26. The dominant source and
nature of an enterprise's risks and returns should govern
whether its primary segment reporting format will be business
segments or geographical segments. If the enterprise's risks
and rates of return are affected predominantly by differences
in the products and services it produces, its primary format
for reporting segment information should be business segments,
with secondary information reported geographically. Similarly,
if the enterprise's risks and rates of return are affected
predominantly by the fact that it operates in different
countries or other geographical areas, its primary format for
reporting segment information should be geographical segments,
with secondary information reported for groups of related
products and services.
27. An entity’s internal
organisational and management structure and its system of
internal financial reporting to key management personnel (for
example, the board of directors and the chief executive
officer) shall normally be the basis for identifying the
predominant source and nature of risks and differing rates
of return facing the entity and, therefore, for determining
which reporting format is primary and which is secondary,
except as provided in subparagraphs (a) and (b) below:
(a) if an enterprise's
risks and rates of return are strongly affected both by
differences in the products and services it produces and by
differences in the geographical areas in which it operates,
as evidenced by a "matrix approach" to managing the company
and to reporting internally to the key management personnel,
then the enterprise should use business segments as its
primary segment reporting format and geographical segments
as its secondary reporting format; and
(b) if an enterprise's
internal organisational and management structure and its
system of internal financial reporting to the key management
personnel are based neither on individual products or
services or on groups of related products/services nor on
geography, the key management personnel of the enterprise
should determine whether the enterprise's risks and returns
are related more to the products and services it produces or
more to the geographical areas in which it operates and, as
a consequence, should choose either business segments or
geographical segments as the enterprise's primary segment
reporting format, with the other as its secondary reporting
format.
28. For most enterprises, the
predominant source of risks and returns determines how the
enterprise is organised and managed. An enterprise's
organisational and management structure and its internal
financial reporting system normally provide the best
evidence of the enterprise's predominant source of risks and
returns for purpose of its segment reporting. Therefore,
except in rare circumstances, an entity will report segment
information in its financial statements on the same basis as
it reports internally to key management personnel. Its
predominant source of risks and returns becomes its primary
segment reporting format. Its secondary source of risks and
returns becomes its secondary segment reporting format.
29. A "matrix
presentation" - both business segments and geographical
segments as primary segment reporting formats with full
segment disclosures on each basis - often will provide useful
information if an enterprise's risks and rates of return are
strongly affected both by differences in the products and
services it produces and by differences in the geographical
areas in which it operates. This Standard does not require,
but does not prohibit, a "matrix presentation".
30. In
some cases, an enterprise's organisation and internal
reporting may have developed along lines unrelated either to
differences in the types of products and services they
produce or to the geographical areas in which they operate.
For instance, internal reporting may be organised solely by
legal entity, resulting in internal segments composed of
groups of unrelated products and services. In those unusual
cases, the internally reported segment data will not meet
the objective of this Standard. Accordingly, paragraph 27(b)
requires the key management personnel of the enterprise to
determine whether the enterprise's risks and returns are
more product/service driven or geographically driven and to
choose either business segments or geographical segments as
the enterprise's primary basis of segment reporting. The
objective is to achieve a reasonable degree of comparability
with other enterprises, enhance understandability of the
resulting information, and meet the expressed needs of
investors, creditors, and others for information about
product/service-related and geographically-related risks and
returns.
Business and geographical
segments
31. An enterprise's business
and geographical segments for external reporting purposes
should be those organisational units for which information
is reported to the key management personnel for the purpose
of evaluating the unit's past performance and for making
decisions about future allocations of resources, except as
provided in paragraph 32.
32. If an enterprise's
internal organisational and management structure and its
system of internal financial reporting to the key management
personnel are based neither on individual products or
services or on groups of related products/services nor on
geography, paragraph 27(b) requires that the key management
personnel of the enterprise should choose either business
segments or geographical segments as the enterprise's
primary segment reporting format based on their assessment
of which reflects the primary source of the enterprise's
risks and returns, with the other its secondary reporting
format. In that case, the directors and management of the
enterprise must determine its business segments and
geographical segments for external reporting purposes based
on the factors in the definitions in paragraph 9 of this
Standard, rather than on the basis of its system of internal
financial reporting to the board of directors and chief
executive officer, consistent with the following:
(a) if one or more of the
segments reported internally to the directors and management
is a business segment or a geographical segment based on the
factors in the definitions in paragraph 9 but others are not,
subparagraph (b) should be applied only to those internal
segments that do not meet the definitions in paragraph 9 (that
is, an internally reported segment that meets the definition
should not be further segmented);
(b) for those segments
reported internally to the directors and management that do
not satisfy the definitions in paragraph 9, management of
the enterprise should look to the next lower level of
internal segmentation that reports information along product
and service lines or geographical lines, as appropriate
under the definitions in paragraph 9; and
(c) if such an internally
reported lower-level segment meets the definition of
business segment or geographical segment based on the factors in paragraph 9, the criteria in paragraphs 34 and 35
for identifying reportable segments should be applied to
that segment.
33. Under this Standard, most
entities will identify their business and geographical
segments as the organisational units for which information
is reported to key management personnel or the senior
operating decision maker, which in some cases may be a group
of people, for the purpose of evaluating each unit’s past
performance and for making decisions about future
allocations of resources. And even if an enterprise must
apply paragraph 32 because its internal segments are not
along product/service or geographical lines, it will look to
the next lower level of internal segmentation that reports
information along product and service lines or geographical
lines rather than construct segments solely for external
reporting purposes. This approach of looking to an
enterprise's organisational and management structure and its
internal financial reporting system to identify the
enterprise's business and geographical segments for external
reporting purposes is sometimes called the "management
approach", and the organisational components for which
information is reported internally are sometimes called "operating
segments".
Reportable segments
34. Two or more internally
reported business segments or geographical segments that are
substantially similar may be combined as a single business
segment or geographical segment. Two or more business segments
or geographical segments are substantially similar only if:
(a) they exhibit similar
long-term financial performance; and
(b) they are similar in all
of the factors in the appropriate definition in paragraph 9.
35. A business segment or
geographical segment should be identified as a reportable
segment if a majority of its revenue is earned from sales to
external customers and:
(a) its revenue from sales
to external customers and from transactions with other
segments is 10 % or more of the total revenue, external and
internal, of all segments; or
(b) its segment result,
whether profit or loss, is 10 % or more of the combined
result of all segments in profit or the combined result of
all segments in loss, whichever is the greater in absolute
amount; or
(c) its assets are 10 % or
more of the total assets of all segments.
36. If an internally reported
segment is below all of the thresholds of significance in
paragraph 35:
(a) that segment may be
designated as a reportable segment despite its size;
(b) if not designated as a
reportable segment despite its size, that segment may be
combined into a separately reportable segment with one or
more other similar internally reported segment(s) that are
also below all of the thresholds of significance in
paragraph 35 (two or more business segments or geographical
segments are similar if they share a majority of the factors
in the appropriate definition in paragraph 9); and
(c) if that segment is not
separately reported or combined, it should be included as an
unallocated reconciling item.
37. If total external revenue
attributable to reportable segments constitutes less than 75 %
of the total consolidated or enterprise revenue, additional
segments should be identified as reportable segments, even if
they do not meet the 10 % thresholds in paragraph 35, until at
least 75 % of total consolidated or enterprise revenue is
included in reportable segments.
38. The 10 % thresholds in this
Standard are not intended to be a guide for determining
materiality for any aspect of financial reporting other than
identifying reportable business and geographical segments.
39. By limiting reportable
segments to those that earn a majority of their revenue from
sales to external customers, this Standard does not require
that the different stages of vertically integrated operations
be identified as separate business segments. However, in some
industries, current practice is to report certain vertically
integrated activities as separate business segments even if
they do not generate significant external sales revenue. For
instance, many international oil companies report their
upstream activities (exploration and production) and their
downstream activities (refining and marketing) as separate
business segments even if most or all of the upstream product
(crude petroleum) is transferred internally to the
enterprise's refining operation.
40. This Standard encourages, but
does not require, the voluntary reporting of vertically
integrated activities as separate segments, with appropriate
description including disclosure of the basis of pricing
inter-segment transfers as required by paragraph 75.
41. If an enterprise's
internal reporting system treats vertically integrated
activities as separate segments and the enterprise does not
choose to report them externally as business segments, the
selling segment should be combined into the buying segment(s)
in identifying externally reportable business segments unless
there is no reasonable basis for doing so, in which case the
selling segment would be included as an unallocated
reconciling item.
42. A segment identified as a
reportable segment in the immediately preceding period because
it satisfied the relevant 10 % thresholds should continue to
be a reportable segment for the current period notwithstanding
that its revenue, result, and assets all no longer exceed the
10 % thresholds, if the management of the enterprise judges
the segment to be of continuing significance.
43. If a segment is identified
as a reportable segment in the current period because it
satisfies the relevant 10 % thresholds, prior period segment
data that is presented for comparative purposes should be
restated to reflect the newly reportable segment as a separate
segment, even if that segment did not satisfy the 10 %
thresholds in the prior period, unless it is impracticable to
do so.
Previous |
Index |
Next
|