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OBJECTIVE
1. The objective
of this IFRS is to specify the financial reporting for insurance contracts by any entity that issues such contracts
(described in this IFRS as an insurer) until the Board
completes the second phase of its project on insurance
contracts.
In particular, this IFRS requires:
(a) limited
improvements to accounting by insurers for
insurance contracts.
(b) disclosure that identifies and explains the amounts in
an insurer’s financial statements
arising from insurance contracts and helps users of those financial statements understand the
amount, timing and uncertainty of future cash flows from insurance contracts.
SCOPE
2. An entity shall
apply this IFRS to:
(a) insurance contracts (including
reinsurance contracts)
that it issues and reinsurance contracts that it holds.
(b) financial
instruments that it issues with a discretionary
participation feature (see paragraph 35). IFRS 7
Financial Instruments: Disclosures requires
disclosure about financial instruments, including
financial instruments that contain such features.
3. This IFRS does
not address other aspects of accounting by insurers, such as
accounting for financial assets held by insurers
and financial liabilities issued by insurers (see IAS 32 and
IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement),
except in the transitional provisions in paragraph 45.
4. An entity shall
not apply this IFRS to:
(a) product warranties issued directly by a manufacturer,
dealer or retailer (see IAS 18 Revenue and IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets).
(b) employers’ assets and liabilities under employee benefit
plans (see IAS 19 Employee Benefits and IFRS 2 Share-based Payment) and retirement benefit obligations reported by
defined benefit retirement plans (see IAS 26 Accounting and Reporting by Retirement Benefit Plans).
(c) contractual
rights or contractual obligations that are contingent on the
future use of, or right to use, a nonfinancial item (for example, some licence fees, royalties, contingent
lease payments and similar items), as well as a lessee’s residual value guarantee embedded in a finance
lease (see IAS 17 Leases, IAS 18 Revenue and IAS 38
Intangible Assets).
(d) financial
guarantee contracts unless the issuer has previously
asserted explicitly that it regards such contracts as
insurance contracts and has used accounting applicable
to insurance contracts, in which case the issuer may
elect to apply either IAS 39 and IAS 32 or this Standard
to such financial guarantee contracts. The issuer may
make that election contract by contract, but the
election for each contract is irrevocable.
(e) contingent consideration payable or receivable in a
business combination (see IFRS 3 Business Combinations).
(f) direct insurance contracts that the entity holds (ie
direct insurance contracts in which the entity is the policyholder). However, a
cedant shall apply this IFRS to reinsurance
contracts that it holds.
5. For ease of
reference, this IFRS describes any entity that issues an
insurance contract as an insurer, whether or not the
issuer is regarded as an insurer for legal or supervisory
purposes.
6. A reinsurance
contract is a type of insurance contract. Accordingly, all
references in this IFRS to insurance contracts
also apply to reinsurance contracts.
Embedded
derivatives
7. IAS 39 requires an entity to separate some embedded
derivatives from their host contract, measure them at fair value and include changes in their fair value in profit or loss.
IAS 39 applies to derivatives embedded in an insurance
contract
unless the embedded derivative is itself an insurance
contract.
8. As an exception
to the requirement in IAS 39, an insurer need not separate,
and measure at fair value, a policyholder’s
option to surrender an insurance contract for a fixed amount
(or for an amount based on a fixed amount and an interest
rate), even if the exercise price differs from the carrying
amount of the host insurance liability. However, the
requirement
in IAS 39 does apply to a put option or cash surrender
option embedded in an insurance contract if the surrender
value varies in response to the change in a financial
variable (such as an equity or commodity price or index), or
a
nonfinancial variable that is not specific to a party to the
contract. Furthermore, that requirement also applies if the
holder’s ability to exercise a put option or cash surrender
option is triggered by a change in such a variable (for
example,
a put option that can be exercised if a stock market index
reaches a specified level).
9. Paragraph 8 applies equally to options to surrender a
financial instrument containing a discretionary
participation
feature.
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