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Commission Regulation
(EC) No 2236/2004 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 International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRSs) Nos 1, 3 to 5, International
Accounting Standards (IASs) Nos 1, 10, 12, 14, 16 to 19,
22, 27, 28, 31 to 41 and the interpretations by the
Standard Interpretation Committee (SIC) Nos 9, 22, 28
and 32
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Unbundling of deposit components
10. Some insurance contracts contain both an insurance
component and a deposit component. In some cases, an insurer
is
required or permitted to unbundle those components:
(a) unbundling is required if both the following conditions
are met:
(i) the insurer can measure the deposit component (including
any embedded surrender options) separately (ie without considering the insurance component).
(ii) the insurer’s accounting policies do not otherwise
require it to recognise all obligations and rights arising from the deposit component.
(b) unbundling is
permitted, but not required, if the insurer can measure the
deposit component separately as in (a)(i) but its accounting policies require it to recognise all
obligations and rights arising from the deposit component, regardless of the basis used to measure those rights and
obligations.
(c) unbundling is prohibited if an insurer cannot measure
the deposit component separately as in (a)(i).
11. The following
is an example of a case when an insurer’s accounting
policies do not require it to recognise all obligations
arising from a deposit component. A cedant receives
compensation for losses from a reinsurer, but the contract
obliges the cedant to repay the compensation in future years.
That obligation arises from a deposit component. If the
cedant’s accounting policies would otherwise permit it to
recognise the compensation as income without recognising
the resulting obligation, unbundling is required.
12. To unbundle a
contract, an insurer shall:
(a) apply this IFRS to the insurance component.
(b) apply IAS 39 to the deposit component.
Recognition and
measurement
Temporary
exemption from some other IFRSs
13. Paragraphs 10-12 of IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes
in Accounting Estimates and Errors specify criteria for an
entity to
use in developing an accounting policy if no IFRS applies
specifically to an item. However, this IFRS exempts an
insurer
from applying those criteria to its accounting policies for:
(a) insurance contracts that it issues (including related
acquisition costs and related intangible assets, such as
those described in paragraphs 31 and 32);
and
(b) reinsurance contracts that it holds.
14. Nevertheless,
this IFRS does not exempt an insurer from some implications
of the criteria in paragraphs 10-12 of
IAS 8. Specifically, an insurer:
(a) shall not recognise as a liability any provisions for
possible future claims, if those claims arise under
insurance contracts that are not in existence at the reporting date
(such as catastrophe provisions and equalisation provisions).
(b) shall carry out the
liability adequacy test described in
paragraphs 15-19.
(c) shall remove an insurance liability (or a part of an
insurance liability) from its balance sheet when, and only
when, it is extinguished — ie when the obligation specified in the
contract is discharged or cancelled or expires.(d) shall not
offset:
(i) reinsurance assets against the related insurance
liabilities;
or
(ii) income or expense from reinsurance contracts against
the expense or income from the related insurance contracts.
(e) shall consider whether its reinsurance assets are
impaired (see paragraph 20).
Liability
adequacy test
15. An insurer shall assess at each reporting date whether
its recognised insurance liabilities are adequate, using
current estimates of future cash flows under its insurance
contracts. If that assessment shows that the carrying
amount of its insurance liabilities (less related deferred
acquisition costs and related intangible assets,
such as those discussed in paragraphs 31 and 32) is
inadequate in the light of the estimated future cash flows,
the entire deficiency shall be recognised in profit or loss.
16. If an insurer applies a liability adequacy test that
meets specified minimum requirements, this IFRS imposes no
further
requirements. The minimum requirements are the following:
(a) The test considers current estimates of all contractual
cash flows, and of related cash flows such as claims handling costs, as well as cash flows resulting from embedded options
and guarantees.
(b) If the test shows that the liability is inadequate, the
entire deficiency is recognised in profit or loss.
17. If an
insurer’s accounting policies do not require a liability
adequacy test that meets the minimum requirements of
paragraph
16, the insurer shall:
(a) determine the carrying amount of the relevant insurance
liabilities (*) less the carrying amount of:
(i) any related
deferred acquisition costs;
and
(ii) any related intangible assets, such as those acquired
in a business combination or portfolio transfer (see
paragraphs 31 and 32). However, related reinsurance assets are not
considered because an insurer accounts for them separately (see paragraph 20).
(b) determine
whether the amount described in (a) is less than the
carrying amount that would be required if the relevant insurance liabilities were within the scope of IAS 37
Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets.
If
it is less, the insurer shall recognise the entire difference
in profit or loss and decrease the carrying amount of the related deferred acquisition costs or related intangible
assets or increase the carrying amount of the relevant
insurance liabilities.
18. If an
insurer’s liability adequacy test meets the minimum
requirements of paragraph 16, the test is applied at the
level
of aggregation specified in that test. If its liability
adequacy test does not meet those minimum requirements, the
comparison
described in paragraph 17 shall be made at the level of a
portfolio of contracts that are subject to broadly similar
risks and managed together as a single portfolio.
19. The amount
described in paragraph 17(b) (ie the result of applying IAS
37) shall reflect future investment margins (see
paragraphs 27-29) if, and only if, the amount described in
paragraph 17(a) also reflects those margins.
(*) The relevant
insurance liabilities are those insurance liabilities (and
related deferred acquisition costs and related intangible
assets) for which
the insurer’s accounting policies do not require a liability
adequacy test that meets the minimum requirements of
paragraph 16.
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