-
Recent Posts
- How To Integrate Continuous Improvement Into Your Organization’s Culture And Daily Activities
- Identify The Strengths Of Your Services And Where Improvements Can Be Leveraged
- How To Succeed In A Continually Changing And Unstructured Workplace
- 6 tips to get back in touch with an old colleague
- Paving the Last Mile of Big Data Analytics
- Important Considerations For An Organizational Restructuring
- Elevator Speech 2.0 = Elevator Dialogue
- 4 ways to qualify a lead
- Is the Trusted Advisor Still Trusted?
- 5 things you must do to win your first client.
Categories
Archives
KPMG: Limited amendments to IFRS 9 – limited only in name
December 15, 2012
By Rob Starr, Content Manager, Big4.com
KPMG welcomes the proposed limited amendments to IFRS 9 that were issued today by the IASB as a step towards completing its plan to reform financial instruments accounting under IFRS. The project is a joint one with the US FASB and responds to calls from the G20 for a single set of high-quality global accounting standards.
The proposals introduce a new measurement category for financial assets that are managed both in order to collect contractual cash flows and for sale – such as some bond investment portfolios. This new category will require the measurement of the asset at fair value, with fair value changes being recognised outside P&L and in ‘other comprehensive income’ or OCI. Some financial assets that an entity previously expected to measure at amortised cost under the existing IFRS 9 model may have to be classified in this new category – this may have the consequence of increasing volatility in reported equity and, for financial institutions, regulatory capital.
Another significant change introduced by the proposals is that entities will be allowed to early apply the own credit requirements in IFRS 9 for financial liabilities measured under the fair value option without having to early apply IFRS 9 in its entirety. Current standards require the impact of changes in own credit risk on these liabilities to be recognised in P&L – leading to a large boost in a bank’s profits when its creditworthiness deteriorates. Under IFRS 9, these gains and losses too would be excluded from reported profits.
Fans
Followers
Members
Members
Subscribe