|
COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 108/2006 of 11 January 2006
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.
Content |
|
- |
Other disclosures
Accounting policies
21. In accordance with paragraph 108 of IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements, an entity
discloses, in the summary of significant accounting
policies, the measurement basis (or bases) used in
preparing the financial statements and the other
accounting policies used that are relevant to an
understanding of the financial statements.
Hedge accounting
22. An
entity shall disclose the following separately for
each type of hedge described in IAS 39 (ie fair
value hedges, cash flow hedges, and hedges of net
investments in foreign operations):
(a) a
description of each type of hedge;
(b) a
description of the financial instruments designated
as hedging instruments and their fair values at the
reporting date; and
(c) the
nature of the risks being hedged.
23. For cash flow hedges, an entity shall disclose:
(a) the
periods when the cash flows are expected to occur
and when they are expected to affect profit or loss;
(b) a
description of any forecast transaction for which
hedge accounting had previously been used, but which
is no longer expected to occur;
(c) the
amount that was recognised in equity during the
period;
(d) the
amount that was removed from equity and included in
profit or loss for the period, showing the amount
included in each line item in the income statement;
and
(e) the
amount that was removed from equity during the
period and included in the initial cost or other
carrying amount of a non-financial asset or
non-financial liability whose acquisition or
incurrence was a hedged highly probable forecast
transaction.
24. An entity shall disclose separately:
(a) in
fair value hedges, gains or losses:
(i) on
the hedging instrument; and
(ii)
on the hedged item attributable to the hedged
risk.
(b) the
ineffectiveness recognised in profit or loss that
arises from cash flow hedges; and
(c) the
ineffectiveness recognised in profit or loss that
arises from hedges of net investments in foreign
operations.
Fair value
25. Except as set out in paragraph 29, for each class of
financial assets and financial liabilities (see
paragraph 6), an entity shall disclose the fair value of
that class of assets and liabilities in a way that
permits it to be compared with its carrying amount.
26. In disclosing fair values, an entity shall group
financial assets and financial liabilities into classes,
but shall offset them only to the extent that their
carrying amounts are offset in the balance sheet.
27. An entity shall disclose:
(a) the
methods and, when a valuation technique is used, the
assumptions applied in determining fair values of
each class of financial assets or financial
liabilities. For example, if applicable, an entity
discloses information about the assumptions relating
to prepayment rates, rates of estimated credit
losses, and interest rates or discount rates.
(b)
whether fair values are determined, in whole or in
part, directly by reference to published price
quotations in an active market or are estimated
using a valuation technique (see paragraphs
AG71-AG79 of IAS 39).
(c)
whether the fair values recognised or disclosed in
the financial statements are determined in whole or
in part using a valuation technique based on
assumptions that are not supported by prices from
observable current market transactions in the same
instrument (ie without modification or repackaging)
and not based on available observable market data.
For fair values that are recognised in the financial
statements, if changing one or more of those
assumptions to reasonably possible alternative
assumptions would change fair value significantly,
the entity shall state this fact and disclose the
effect of those changes. For this purpose,
significance shall be judged with respect to profit
or loss, and total assets or total liabilities, or,
when changes in fair value are recognised in equity,
total equity.
(d) if (c)
applies, the total amount of the change in fair
value estimated using such a valuation technique
that was recognised in profit or loss during the
period.
28. If the market for a financial instrument is not
active, an entity establishes its fair value using a
valuation technique (see paragraphs AG74-AG79 of IAS
39). Nevertheless, the best evidence of fair value at
initial recognition is the transaction price (ie the
fair value of the consideration given or received),
unless conditions described in paragraph AG76 of IAS 39
are met. It follows that there could be a difference
between the fair value at initial recognition and the
amount that would be determined at that date using the
valuation technique. If such a difference exists, an
entity shall disclose, by class of financial instrument:
(a) its
accounting policy for recognising that difference in
profit or loss to reflect a change in factors
(including time) that market participants would
consider in setting a price (see paragraph AG76A of
IAS 39); and
(b) the
aggregate difference yet to be recognised in profit
or loss at the beginning and end of the period and a
reconciliation of changes in the balance of this
difference.
29. Disclosures of fair value are not required:
(a) when the carrying amount is a reasonable
approximation of fair value, for example, for financial
instruments such as short-term trade receivables and
payables;
(b) for an investment in equity instruments that do not
have a quoted market price in an active market, or
derivatives linked to such equity instruments, that is
measured at cost in accordance with IAS 39 because its
fair value cannot be measured reliably; or
(c) for a contract containing a discretionary
participation feature (as described in IFRS 4) if the
fair value of that feature cannot be measured reliably.
30. In the
cases described in paragraph 29(b) and (c), an
entity shall disclose information to help users of
the financial statements make their own judgements
about the extent of possible differences between the
carrying amount of those financial assets or
financial liabilities and their fair value,
including:
(a) the
fact that fair value information has not been
disclosed for these instruments because their fair
value cannot be measured reliably;
(b) a
description of the financial instruments, their
carrying amount, and an explanation of why fair
value cannot be measured reliably;
(c)
information about the market for the instruments;
(d)
information about whether and how the entity intends
to dispose of the financial instruments; and
(e) if
financial instruments whose fair value previously
could not be reliably measured are derecognised,
that fact, their carrying amount at the time of
derecognition, and the amount of gain or loss
recognised.
Previous |
Index |
Next
|