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Application of the
Equity Method
13. An
investment in an associate shall be accounted for using
the equity method except when:
(a)
the investment is classified as held for sale in
accordance with IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for
Sale and Discontinued Operations;
(b) the exception in
paragraph 10 of IAS 27, allowing a parent that
also has an investment in an associate not to present
consolidated
financial statements, applies; or
(c) all of the
following apply:
(i) the investor
is a wholly-owned subsidiary, or is a partially-owned
subsidiary of another entity and its other
owners, including those not otherwise entitled to
vote,
have been informed about, and do not object to, the
investor not applying the equity method;
(ii) the investor’s
debt or equity instruments are not traded in a
public market (a domestic or foreign stock exchange
or an over-the-counter market, including local
and regional markets);
(iii) the investor
did not file, nor is it in the process of filing,
its financial statements with a securities commission
or other regulatory organisation, for the purpose
of issuing any class of instruments in a public market;
and
(iv) the ultimate or
any intermediate parent of the investor produces
consolidated financial statements available for
public use that comply with International Financial
Reporting Standards.
14.
Investments described in paragraph 13(a) shall be
accounted for in accordance with IFRS 5.
15. When an
investment in an associate previously classified as held
for sale no longer meets the criteria to be so
classified,
it shall be accounted for using the equity method as
from the date of its classification as held for sale.
Financial
statements for the periods since classification as held
for sale shall be amended accordingly.
16. [deleted]
17. The recognition
of income on the basis of distributions received may not be an
adequate measure of the income earned by an investor on an
investment in an associate because the distributions received
may bear little relation to the performance of the associate.
Because the investor has significant influence over the
associate, the investor has an interest in the associate’s
performance and, as a result, the return on its investment.
The investor accounts for this interest by extending the scope
of its financial statements to include its share of profits or
losses of such an associate. As a result, application of the
equity method provides more informative reporting of the net
assets and profit or loss of the investor.
18. An investor
shall discontinue the use of the equity method from the
date that it ceases to have significant influence over
an associate and shall account for the
investment in accordance with IAS 39 from that
date, provided the associate does not become a subsidiary
or a joint venture as defined in IAS 31.
19. The carrying
amount of the investment at the date that it ceases to
be an associate shall be regarded as its cost on initial
measurement as a financial asset in accordance
with IAS 39.
20. Many of the
procedures appropriate for the application of the equity
method are similar to the consolidation procedures described
in IAS
27. Furthermore, the
concepts underlying the procedures used in accounting for the
acquisition of a subsidiary are also adopted in accounting for
the acquisition of an investment in an associate.
21. A group’s
share in an associate is the aggregate of the holdings in that
associate by the parent and its subsidiaries. The holdings of
the group’s other associates or joint ventures are ignored
for this purpose. When an associate has subsidiaries,
associates, or joint ventures, the profits or losses and net
assets taken into account in applying the equity method are
those recognised in the associate’s financial statements (including
the associate’s share of the profits or losses and net
assets of its associates and joint ventures), after any
adjustments necessary to give effect to uniform accounting
policies (see paragraphs 26 and 27).
22. Profits and
losses resulting from ‘upstream’ and ‘downstream’
transactions between an investor (including its consolidated
subsidiaries) and an associate are recognised in the investor’s
financial statements only to the extent of unrelated investors’
interests in the associate. ‘Upstream’ transactions are,
for example, sales of assets from an associate to the investor.
‘Downstream’ transactions are, for example, sales of
assets from the investor to an associate. The investor’s
share in the associate’s profits and losses resulting from
these transactions is eliminated.
23. An investment in an associate is
accounted for using the equity method from the date on which
it becomes an associate. On acquisition of the investment
any difference between the cost of the investment and the
investor’s share of the net fair value of the associate’s
identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities
is accounted for in accordance with IFRS 3 Business
Combinations. Therefore:
(a) goodwill relating to an associate
is included in the carrying amount of the investment.
However, amortisation of that goodwill is not permitted and
is therefore not included in the determination of the
investor’s share of the associate’s profits or losses.
(b) any excess of the investor’s share
of the net fair value of the associate’s identifiable
assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities over the cost
of the investment is excluded from the carrying amount of
the investment and is instead included as income in the
determination of the investor’s share of the associate’s
profit or loss in the period in which the investment is
acquired.
Appropriate adjustments to the investor’s share of the
associate’s profits or losses after acquisition are also
made to account, for example, for depreciation of the
depreciable assets based on their fair values at the
acquisition date. Similarly, appropriate adjustments to the
investor’s share of the associate’s profits or losses after
acquisition are made for impairment losses recognised by the
associate, such as for goodwill or property, plant and
equipment.
24. The most recent
available financial statements of the associate are used
by the investor in applying the equity method. When the
reporting dates of the investor and the associate are
different, the associate prepares, for the use
of the investor, financial statements as of the
same date as the financial statements of the investor unless
it is impracticable to do so.
25. When, in
accordance with paragraph 24, the financial statements of
an associate used in applying the equity method are
prepared as of a different reporting date from
that of the investor, adjustments shall be made
for the effects of significant transactions or events that
occur between that date and the date of the investor’s
financial statements. In any case, the
difference between the reporting date of the
associate and that of the investor shall be no more than three
months. The length of the reporting periods and any
difference in the reporting dates shall be the
same from period to period.
26. The investor’s
financial statements shall be prepared using uniform accounting
policies for like transactions and events in similar circumstances.
27. If an associate
uses accounting policies other than those of the investor for
like transactions and events in similar circumstances,
adjustments shall be made to conform the associate’s
accounting policies to those of the investor when the
associate’s financial statements are used by the investor in
applying the equity method.
28. If an associate
has outstanding cumulative preference shares that are held by
parties other than the investor and classified as equity, the
investor computes its share of profits or losses after
adjusting for the dividends on such shares, whether or not the
dividends have been declared.
29. If an investor’s
share of losses of an associate equals or exceeds its interest
in the associate, the investor discontinues recognising its
share of further losses. The interest in an associate is the
carrying amount of the investment in the associate under the
equity method together with any long-term interests that, in
substance, form part of the investor’s net investment in the
associate. For example, an item for which settlement is
neither planned nor likely to occur in the foreseeable future
is, in substance, an extension of the entity’s investment in
that associate. Such items may include preference shares and
long-term receivables or loans but do not include trade
receivables, trade payables or any long-term receivables for
which adequate collateral exists, such as secured loans.
Losses recognised under the equity method in excess of the
investor’s investment in ordinary shares are applied to the
other components of the investor’s interest in an associate
in the reverse order of their seniority (ie priority in
liquidation).
30. After the
investor’s interest is reduced to zero, additional losses
are provided for, and a liability is recognised, only to the
extent that the investor has incurred legal or constructive
obligations or made payments on behalf of the associate. If
the associate subsequently reports profits, the investor
resumes recognising its share of those profits only after its
share of the profits equals the share of losses not recognised.
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