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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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Dilutive Potential Ordinary Shares
41. Potential ordinary shares shall be treated
as dilutive when, and only when,
their conversion to ordinary shares would decrease earnings
per share or
increase loss per share from continuing operations.
42. An entity uses profit or loss from
continuing operations attributable to the
parent entity as the control number to establish whether
potential ordinary
shares are dilutive or antidilutive. Profit or loss from continuing operations
attributable to the parent entity is adjusted in accordance
with paragraph 12 and excludes items relating to discontinuing
operations.
43. Potential ordinary shares are antidilutive
when their conversion to ordinary
shares would increase earnings per share or decrease loss per share from continuing
operations. The calculation of diluted earnings per share does
not assume conversion, exercise, or other issue of potential
ordinary shares that would have an antidilutive effect on earnings per share.
44. In determining whether potential ordinary
shares are dilutive or antidilutive,
each issue or series of potential ordinary shares is considered
separately rather than in aggregate. The sequence in which
potential ordinary shares are considered may affect whether they are dilutive.
Therefore, to maximise the dilution of basic earnings
per share, each issue or series of potential ordinary shares
is considered in
sequence from the most dilutive to the least dilutive, ie dilutive potential
ordinary shares with the lowest ‘earnings per incremental
share’ are included in the diluted earnings per share calculation before those
with a higher earnings per incremental share. Options
and warrants are generally included first because they do not affect the numerator of
the calculation.
Options,
warrants and their equivalents
45. For the purpose of calculating diluted
earnings per share, an entity shall
assume the exercise of dilutive options and warrants of the
entity. The
assumed proceeds from these instruments shall be
regarded as having
been received from the issue of ordinary shares
at the average
market price of ordinary shares during the period.
The difference
between the number of ordinary shares issued and
the number of
ordinary shares that would have been issued at the
average market
price of ordinary shares during the period shall be
treated as an
issue of ordinary shares for no consideration.
46. Options and warrants are dilutive when
they would result in the issue of
ordinary shares for less than the average market price of
ordinary shares
during the period. The amount of the dilution is the average market price of ordinary
shares during the period minus the issue price.
Therefore, to calculate diluted earnings per share, potential ordinary shares are
treated as consisting of both the following:
(a) a contract to issue a certain number of
the ordinary shares at their
average market price during the period. Such ordinary shares
are assumed to be fairly priced and to be neither dilutive nor antidilutive.
They are ignored in the calculation of diluted earnings
per share.
(b) a contract to issue the remaining ordinary
shares for no consideration.
Such ordinary shares generate no proceeds and have
no effect on profit or loss attributable to ordinary shares outstanding. Therefore,
such shares are dilutive and are added to
the number of ordinary shares outstanding in the calculation of diluted earnings per
share.
47. Options and warrants have a dilutive
effect only when the average market
price of ordinary shares during the period exceeds the
exercise price of
the options or warrants (ie they are ‘in the money’). Previously reported
earnings per share are not retroactively adjusted to
reflect changes in prices of ordinary shares.
47A. For share options and other share-based payment arrangements
to which IFRS 2 Share-based Payment applies, the issue
price referred to in paragraph 46 and the exercise price
referred to in paragraph 47 shall include the fair value
of any goods or services to be supplied to the entity in
the future under the share option or other sharebased
payment arrangement.
48. Employee share options with fixed or
determinable terms and non-vested
ordinary shares are treated as options in the calculation of diluted earnings per
share, even though they may be contingent on
vesting. They are treated as outstanding on the grant date. Performance-based
employee share options are treated as contingently issuable
shares because their issue is contingent upon satisfying specified conditions in
addition to the passage of time.
Convertible instruments
49. The dilutive effect of convertible
instruments shall be reflected in diluted
earnings per share in accordance with paragraphs 33 and 36. 50. Convertible
preference shares are antidilutive whenever the amount of the dividend on such
shares declared in or accumulated for the current period
per ordinary share obtainable on conversion exceeds basic earnings per share.
Similarly, convertible debt is antidilutive whenever
its interest (net of tax and other changes in income or expense) per ordinary
share obtainable on conversion exceeds basic earnings
per share.
51. The redemption or induced conversion of
convertible preference shares
may affect only a portion of the previously outstanding convertible preference
shares. In such cases, any excess consideration referred to in
paragraph 17 is attributed to those shares that are redeemed
or converted for the purpose of determining whether the remaining outstanding
preference shares are dilutive. The shares redeemed
or converted are considered separately from those shares that are not redeemed or
converted.
Contingently issuable shares
52. As in the calculation of basic earnings
per share, contingently issuable ordinary
shares are treated as outstanding and included in the calculation
of diluted earnings per share if the conditions are satisfied (ie the events have
occurred). Contingently issuable shares are included
from the beginning of the period (or from the date of the contingent share
agreement, if later). If the conditions are not satisfied,
the number of contingently issuable shares included in the diluted earnings per
share calculation is based on the number of shares that
would be issuable if the end of the period were the end of the
contingency period.
Restatement is not permitted if the conditions are not
met when the contingency period expires.
53. If attainment or maintenance of a
specified amount of earnings for a period
is the condition for contingent issue and if that amount has been attained at the end
of the reporting period but must be maintained
beyond the end of the reporting period for an additional period, then the
additional ordinary shares are treated as outstanding, if
the effect is dilutive, when calculating diluted earnings per
share. In that
case, the calculation of diluted earnings per share is based
on the number of
ordinary shares that would be issued if the amount of earnings
at the end of the reporting period were the amount of earnings
at the end of the contingency period. Because earnings may change in a future
period, the calculation of basic earnings per share does
not include such contingently issuable ordinary shares until
the end of the
contingency period because not all necessary conditions have been satisfied.
54. The number of ordinary shares contingently
issuable may depend on the future market price of the ordinary
shares. In that case, if the effect is dilutive, the calculation of diluted
earnings per share is based on the number of ordinary shares that would be
issued if the market price at the end of the reporting period were
the market price at the end of the contingency period. If the
condition is based on an average of market prices over a period of time that
extends beyond the end of the reporting period, the average for the
period of time that has lapsed is used. Because the market price may change
in a future period, the calculation of basic earnings per share does
not include such contingently issuable ordinary shares until
the end of the contingency period because not all necessary conditions
have been satisfied.
55. The number of ordinary shares contingently
issuable may depend on future earnings and future prices of the
ordinary shares. In such cases, the number of ordinary shares included in the
diluted earnings per share calculation is based on both conditions
(ie earnings to date and the current market price at the end of the
reporting period). Contingently issuable ordinary shares are not
included in the diluted earnings per share calculation unless both
conditions are met.
56. In other cases, the number of ordinary
shares contingently issuable depends on a condition other than earnings or
market price (for example, the opening of a specific number
of retail stores). In such cases, assuming that the present status
of the condition remains unchanged until the end of the contingency
period, the contingently issuable ordinary shares are included in the
calculation of diluted earnings per share according to the status at
the end of the reporting period.
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