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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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Equity Instruments
AG13. Examples of
equity instruments include non-puttable ordinary shares, some
types of preference shares (see paragraphs AG25 and AG26), and
warrants or written call options that allow the holder to
subscribe for or purchase a fixed number of non-puttable
ordinary shares in the issuing entity in exchange for a fixed
amount of cash or another financial asset. An entity’s
obligation to issue or purchase a fixed number of its own
equity instruments in exchange for a fixed amount of cash or
another financial asset is an equity instrument of the entity.
However, if such a contract contains an obligation for the
entity to pay cash or another financial asset, it also gives
rise to a liability for the present value of the redemption
amount (see paragraph AG27(a)). An issuer of non-puttable
ordinary shares assumes a liability when it formally acts to
make a distribution and becomes legally obligated to the
shareholders to do so. This may be the case following the
declaration of a dividend or when the entity is being wound up
and any assets remaining after the satisfaction of liabilities
become distributable to shareholders.
AG14. A purchased
call option or other similar contract acquired by an entity
that gives it the right to reacquire a fixed number of its own
equity instruments in exchange for delivering a fixed amount
of cash or another financial asset is not a financial asset of
the entity. Instead, any consideration paid for such a
contract is deducted from equity.
Derivative Financial
Instruments
AG15. Financial
instruments include primary instruments (such as receivables,
payables and equity instruments) and derivative financial
instruments (such as financial options, futures and forwards,
interest rate swaps and currency swaps). Derivative financial
instruments meet the definition of a financial instrument and,
accordingly, are within the scope of this Standard.
AG16. Derivative
financial instruments create rights and obligations that have
the effect of transferring between the parties to the
instrument one or more of the financial risks inherent in an
underlying primary financial instrument. On inception,
derivative financial instruments give one party a contractual
right to exchange financial assets or financial liabilities
with another party under conditions that are potentially
favourable, or a contractual obligation to exchange financial
assets or financial liabilities with another party under
conditions that are potentially unfavourable. However, they
generally (This is true of most, but not all derivatives, eg
in some cross-currency interest rate swaps principal is
exchanged on inception (and re-exchanged on maturity) do not
result in a transfer of the underlying primary financial
instrument on inception of the contract, nor does such a
transfer necessarily take place on maturity of the contract.
Some instruments embody both a right and an obligation to make
an exchange. Because the terms of the exchange are determined
on inception of the derivative instrument, as prices in
financial markets change those terms may become either
favourable or unfavourable.
AG17. A put or call
option to exchange financial assets or financial liabilities (ie
financial instruments other than an entity’s own equity
instruments) gives the holder a right to obtain potential
future economic benefits associated with changes in the fair
value of the financial instrument underlying the contract.
Conversely, the writer of an option assumes an obligation to
forgo potential future economic benefits or bear potential
losses of economic benefits associated with changes in the
fair value of the underlying financial instrument. The
contractual right of the holder and obligation of the writer
meet the definition of a financial asset and a financial
liability, respectively. The financial instrument underlying
an option contract may be any financial asset, including
shares in other entities and interest-bearing instruments. An
option may require the writer to issue a debt instrument,
rather than transfer a financial asset, but the instrument
underlying the option would constitute a financial asset of
the holder if the option were exercised. The option-holder’s
right to exchange the financial asset under potentially
favourable conditions and the writer’s obligation to
exchange the financial asset under potentially unfavourable
conditions are distinct from the underlying financial asset to
be exchanged upon exercise of the option. The nature of the
holder’s right and of the writer’s obligation are not
affected by the likelihood that the option will be exercised.
AG18. Another
example of a derivative financial instrument is a forward
contract to be settled in six months’ time in which one
party (the purchaser) promises to deliver CU1,000,000 cash in
exchange for CU1,000,000 face amount of fixed rate government
bonds, and the other party (the seller) promises to deliver
CU1,000,000 face amount of fixed rate government bonds in
exchange for CU1,000,000 cash. During the six months, both
parties have a contractual right and a contractual obligation
to exchange financial instruments. If the market price of the
government bonds rises above CU1,000,000, the conditions will
be favourable to the purchaser and unfavourable to the seller;
if the market price falls below CU1,000,000, the effect will
be the opposite. The purchaser has a contractual right (a
financial asset) similar to the right under a call option held
and a contractual obligation (a financial liability) similar
to the obligation under a put option written; the seller has a
contractual right (a financial asset) similar to the right
under a put option held and a contractual obligation (a
financial liability) similar to the obligation under a call
option written. As with options, these contractual rights and
obligations constitute financial assets and financial
liabilities separate and distinct from the underlying
financial instruments (the bonds and cash to be exchanged).
Both parties to a forward contract have an obligation to
perform at the agreed time, whereas performance under an
option contract occurs only if and when the holder of the
option chooses to exercise it.
AG19. Many other
types of derivative instruments embody a right or obligation
to make a future exchange, including interest rate and
currency swaps, interest rate caps, collars and floors, loan
commitments, note issuance facilities and letters of credit.
An interest rate swap contract may be viewed as a variation of
a forward contract in which the parties agree to make a series
of future exchanges of cash amounts, one amount calculated
with reference to a floating interest rate and the other with
reference to a fixed interest rate. Futures contracts are
another variation of forward contracts, differing primarily in
that the contracts are standardised and traded on an exchange.
Contracts to Buy or
Sell Non-Financial Items (paragraphs 8-10)
AG20. Contracts to
buy or sell non-financial items do not meet the definition of
a financial instrument because the contractual right of one
party to receive a non-financial asset or service and the
corresponding obligation of the other party do not establish a
present right or obligation of either party to receive,
deliver or exchange a financial asset. For example, contracts
that provide for settlement only by the receipt or delivery of
a non-financial item (eg an option, futures or forward
contract on silver) are not financial instruments. Many
commodity contracts are of this type. Some are standardised in
form and traded on organised markets in much the same fashion
as some derivative financial instruments. For example, a
commodity futures contract may be bought and sold readily for
cash because it is listed for trading on an exchange and may
change hands many times. However, the parties buying and
selling the contract are, in effect, trading the underlying
commodity. The ability to buy or sell a commodity contract for
cash, the ease with which it may be bought or sold and the
possibility of negotiating a cash settlement of the obligation
to receive or deliver the commodity do not alter the
fundamental character of the contract in a way that creates a
financial instrument. Nevertheless, some contracts to buy or
sell non-financial items that can be settled net or by
exchanging financial instruments, or in which the
non-financial item is readily convertible to cash, are within
the scope of the Standard as if they were financial
instruments (see paragraph 8).
AG21. A contract
that involves the receipt or delivery of physical assets does
not give rise to a financial asset of one party and a
financial liability of the other party unless any
corresponding payment is deferred past the date on which the
physical assets are transferred. Such is the case with the
purchase or sale of goods on trade credit.
AG22. Some contracts
are commodity-linked, but do not involve settlement through
the physical receipt or delivery of a commodity. They specify
settlement through cash payments that are determined according
to a formula in the contract, rather than through payment of
fixed amounts. For example, the principal amount of a bond may
be calculated by applying the market price of oil prevailing
at the maturity of the bond to a fixed quantity of oil. The
principal is indexed by reference to a commodity price, but is
settled only in cash. Such a contract constitutes a financial
instrument.
AG23. The definition
of a financial instrument also encompasses a contract that
gives rise to a non-financial asset or non-financial liability
in addition to a financial asset or financial liability. Such
financial instruments often give one party an option to
exchange a financial asset for a non-financial asset. For
example, an oil-linked bond may give the holder the right to
receive a stream of fixed periodic interest payments and a
fixed amount of cash on maturity, with the option to exchange
the principal amount for a fixed quantity of oil. The
desirability of exercising this option will vary from time to
time depending on the fair value of oil relative to the
exchange ratio of cash for oil (the exchange price) inherent
in the bond. The intentions of the bondholder concerning the
exercise of the option do not affect the substance of the
component assets. The financial asset of the holder and the
financial liability of the issuer make the bond a financial
instrument, regardless of the other types of assets and
liabilities also created.
AG24.
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