IAS 39 - Financial Instruments - Recognition and Measurement
JAMSHAID MANZOOR
CPA, CMA, MBA, IFRS, UAE Taxation Certified, Advanced Accounting Certified KHDA, Financial Management Certified CPD London, Management Accounting Expert BCC London. Group Risk Management, Taxation & IFRS Manager - UAE
Overview:
Financial Instruments:
Recognition and Measurement outlines the requirements for the recognition and measurement of financial assets, financial liabilities, and some contracts to buy or sell non-financial items. Financial instruments are initially recognised when an entity becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument, and are classified into various categories depending upon the type of instrument, which then determines the subsequent measurement of the instrument (typically amortised cost or fair value). Special rules apply to embedded derivatives and hedging instruments.
IAS 39 was reissued in December 2003, applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2005, and will be largely replaced by IFRS 9 Financial Instruments for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2018. Please go through my relevant article below:
Scope:
Scope Segregations
IAS?39 applies to all types of financial instruments except for the following, which are scoped out of IAS?39:
Leases:
IAS?39 applies to lease receivables and payables only in limited respects:
Financial Guarantees:
IAS 39 applies to financial guarantee contracts issued. However, if an issuer of financial guarantee contracts has previously asserted explicitly that it regards such contracts as insurance contracts and has used accounting applicable to insurance contracts, the issuer may elect to apply either IAS 39 or IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts and now IFRS 17 to such financial guarantee contracts. The issuer may make that election contract by contract, but the election for each contract is irrevocable.
Accounting by the holder is excluded from the scope of IAS 39 and IFRS 4 (unless the contract is a reinsurance contract). Therefore, IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors apply. Those paragraphs specify criteria to use in developing an accounting policy if no IFRS applies specifically to an item. Please go through my relevant articles below:
Loan Commitments:
Loan commitments are outside the scope of IAS 39 if they cannot be settled net in cash or another financial instrument, they are not designated as financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss, and the entity does not have a past practice of selling the loans that resulted from the commitment shortly after origination.
An issuer of a commitment to provide a loan at a below-market interest rate is required initially to recognise the commitment at its fair value;
Subsequently, the issuer will remeasure it at the higher of
a.????The amount recognised under IAS 37 and
b.????The amount initially recognised less, where appropriate, cumulative amortisation recognised in accordance with IAS 18.
An issuer of loan commitments must apply IAS 37 to other loan commitments that are not within the scope of IAS 39 (that is, those made at market or above). Loan commitments are subject to the derecognition provisions of IAS 39. Please go through my relevant articles below:
Contracts to Buy or Sell Financial Items:
Contracts to buy or sell financial items are always within the scope of IAS 39 (unless one of the other exceptions applies).
Contracts to Buy or Sell Non-Financial Items:
Contracts to buy or sell non-financial items are within the scope of IAS?39 if they can be settled net in cash or another financial asset and are not entered into and held for the purpose of the receipt or delivery of a non-financial item in accordance with the entity's expected purchase, sale, or usage requirements. Contracts to buy or sell non-financial items are inside the scope if net settlement occurs. The following situations constitute net settlement:
Weather Derivatives:
Although contracts requiring payment based on climatic, geological, or other physical variable were generally excluded from the original version of IAS?39, they were added to the scope of the revised IAS?39 in December 2003 if they are not in the scope of IFRS 17. Please go through my relevant article below:
Definitions:
IAS?39 incorporates the definitions of the following items from?IAS 32?Financial Instruments: Presentation:
Note: Where an entity applies?IFRS 9?Financial Instruments?prior to its mandatory application date (1 January 2015), definitions of the following terms are also incorporated from IFRS 9: derecognition, derivative, fair value, financial guarantee contract.?The definition of those terms outlined below (as relevant) are those from IAS?39. Please go through my relevant article below:
A?Derivative?is a Financial Instrument:
Common Examples of Financial Instruments Within the Scope of IAS?39
A?Derivative?is a Financial Instrument:
Examples of Derivatives:
Forwards:
Contracts to purchase or sell a specific quantity of a financial instrument, a commodity, or a foreign currency at a specified price determined at the outset, with delivery or settlement at a specified future date. Settlement is at maturity by actual delivery of the item specified in the contract, or by a net cash settlement.
Interest Rate Swaps and Forward Rate Agreements:
Contracts to exchange cash flows as of a specified date or a series of specified dates based on a notional amount and fixed and floating rates.
Futures:
Contracts similar to forwards but with the following differences: futures are generic exchange-traded, whereas forwards are individually tailored. Futures are generally settled through an offsetting (reversing) trade, whereas forwards are generally settled by delivery of the underlying item or cash settlement.
Options:
Contracts that give the purchaser the right, but not the obligation, to buy (call option) or sell (put option) a specified quantity of a particular financial instrument, commodity, or foreign currency, at a specified price (strike price), during or at a specified period of time. These can be individually written or exchange-traded. The purchaser of the option pays the seller (writer) of the option a fee (premium) to compensate the seller for the risk of payments under the option.
Caps and Floors:
These are contracts sometimes referred to as interest rate options. An interest rate cap will compensate the purchaser of the cap if interest rates rise above a predetermined rate (strike rate) while an interest rate floor will compensate the purchaser if rates fall below a predetermined rate.
Embedded Derivatives:
Some contracts that themselves are not financial instruments may nonetheless have financial instruments embedded in them. For example, a contract to purchase a commodity at a fixed price for delivery at a future date has embedded in it a derivative that is indexed to the price of the commodity.
An embedded derivative is a feature within a contract, such that the cash flows associated with that feature behave in a similar fashion to a stand-alone derivative. In the same way that derivatives must be accounted for at fair value on the balance sheet with changes recognised in the income statement, so must some embedded derivatives. IAS?39 requires that an embedded derivative be separated from its host contract and accounted for as a derivative when:
If an embedded derivative is separated, the host contract is accounted for under the appropriate standard (for instance, under IAS?39 if the host is a financial instrument). Appendix A to IAS?39 provides examples of embedded derivatives that are closely related to their hosts, and of those that are not.
Examples of embedded derivatives that are not closely related to their hosts (and therefore must be separately accounted for) include:
If IAS?39 requires that an embedded derivative be separated from its host contract, but the entity is unable to measure the embedded derivative separately, the entire combined contract must be designated as a financial asset as at fair value through profit or loss).
Classification as Liability or Equity:
Since IAS?39 does not address accounting for equity instruments issued by the reporting enterprise but it does deal with accounting for financial liabilities, classification of an instrument as liability or as equity is critical.?IAS-32?Financial Instruments: Presentation?addresses the classification question.
Classification of Financial Assets:
IAS?39 requires financial assets to be classified in one of the following categories:
Those categories are used to determine how a particular financial asset is recognised and measured in the financial statements.
Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss:
This Category has Two Subcategories:
The first includes any financial asset that is designated on initial recognition as one to be measured at fair value with fair value changes in profit or loss.
The second category includes financial assets that are held for trading. All derivatives (except those designated hedging instruments) and financial assets acquired or held for the purpose of selling in the short term or for which there is a recent pattern of short-term profit taking are held for trading.
Available for Sale Financial Assets (AFS):
Are any non-derivative financial assets designated on initial recognition as available for sale or any other instruments that are not classified as as
(a) loans and receivables,
(b) held-to-maturity investments or
(c) financial assets at fair value through profit or loss.
AFS assets are measured at fair value in the balance sheet.
Fair value changes on AFS assets are recognised directly in equity, through the statement of changes in equity, except for interest on AFS assets (which is recognised in income on an effective yield basis), impairment losses and (for interest-bearing AFS debt instruments) foreign exchange gains or losses.
The cumulative gain or loss that was recognised in equity is recognised in profit or loss when an available-for-sale financial asset is derecognised.
Loans and Receivables:
Are non-derivative financial assets with fixed or determinable payments that are not quoted in an active market, other than held for trading or designated on initial recognition as assets at fair value through profit or loss or as available-for-sale.
Loans and receivables for which the holder may not recover substantially all of its initial investment, other than because of credit deterioration, should be classified as available for sale.
Loans and receivables are measured at amortised cost.
Held to Maturity:
Are non-derivative financial assets with fixed or determinable payments that an entity intends and is able to hold to maturity and that do not meet the definition of loans and receivables and are not designated on initial recognition as assets at fair value through profit or loss or as available for sale.
Held to maturity investments are measured at amortised cost.
If an entity sells a held to maturity investment other than in insignificant amounts or as a consequence of a non-recurring, isolated event beyond its control that could not be reasonably anticipated, all of its other held-to-maturity investments must be reclassified as available for sale for the current and next two financial reporting years.
Held-to-maturity investments are measured at amortised cost.
Classification of Financial Liabilities:
IAS?39 recognises two classes of financial liabilities:
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The category of financial liability at fair value through profit or loss has two subcategories:
A financial liability that is designated by the entity as a liability at fair value through profit or loss upon initial recognition.
A financial liability classified as held for trading, such as an obligation for securities borrowed in a short sale, which have to be returned in the future.
Initial Recognition:
IAS?39 requires recognition of a financial asset or a financial liability when, and only when, the entity becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument, subject to the following provisions in respect of regular way purchases.
Regular way purchases or sales of a Financial Asset:
A regular way purchase or sale of financial assets is recognised and derecognised using either trade date or settlement date accounting.
The method used is to be applied consistently for all purchases and sales of financial assets that belong to the same category of financial asset as defined in IAS?39 (note that for this purpose assets held for trading form a different category from assets designated at fair value through profit or loss).
The choice of method is an accounting policy.
IAS?39 requires that all financial assets and all financial liabilities be recognised on the balance sheet.
That includes all derivatives. Historically, in many parts of the world, derivatives have not been recognised on company balance sheets.
The argument has been that at the time the derivative contract was entered into, there was no amount of cash or other assets paid.
Zero cost justified non-recognition, notwithstanding that as time passes and the value of the underlying variable (rate, price, or index) changes, the derivative has a positive (asset) or negative (liability) value.
Initial Measurement:
Initially, financial assets and liabilities should be measured at fair value (including transaction costs, for assets and liabilities not measured at fair value through profit or loss).
Measurement Subsequent to Initial Recognition:
Subsequently, financial assets and liabilities (including derivatives) should be measured at fair value, with the following exceptions:
Fair value is the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm's length transaction, provides a hierarchy to be used in determining the fair value for a financial instrument:
Amortised cost is calculated using the effective interest method. The effective interest rate is the rate that exactly discounts estimated future cash payments or receipts through the expected life of the financial instrument to the net carrying amount of the financial asset or liability. Financial assets that are not carried at fair value though profit and loss are subject to an impairment test. If expected life cannot be determined reliably, then the contractual life is used.
Fair Value Option:
IAS?39 permits entities to designate, at the time of acquisition or issuance, any financial asset or financial liability to be measured at fair value, with value changes recognised in profit or loss. This option is available even if the financial asset or financial liability would ordinarily, by its nature, be measured at amortised cost – but only if fair value can be reliably measured.
The revisions limit the use of the option to those financial instruments that meet certain conditions:
Once an instrument is put in the fair-value-through-profit-and-loss category, it cannot be reclassified out with some exceptions.
Available for Sale Option for Loans and Receivables:
IAS?39 permits entities to designate, at the time of acquisition, any loan or receivable as available for sale, in which case it is measured at fair value with changes in fair value recognised in equity.
Impairment:
A financial asset or group of assets is impaired, and impairment losses are recognised, only if there is objective evidence as a result of one or more events that occurred after the initial recognition of the asset.
An entity is required to assess at each balance sheet date whether there is any objective evidence of impairment.
If any such evidence exists, the entity is required to do a detailed impairment calculation to determine whether an impairment loss should be recognised.
The amount of the loss is measured as the difference between the asset's carrying amount and the present value of estimated cash flows discounted at the financial asset's original effective interest rate.
Assets that are individually assessed and for which no impairment exists are grouped with financial assets with similar credit risk statistics and collectively assessed for impairment.
If, in a subsequent period, the amount of the impairment loss relating to a financial asset carried at amortised cost or a debt instrument carried as available-for-sale decreases due to an event occurring after the impairment was originally recognised, the previously recognised impairment loss is reversed through profit or loss.
Impairments relating to investments in available-for-sale equity instruments are not reversed through profit or loss.
Financial Guarantees:
A financial guarantee contract is a contract that requires the issuer to make specified payments to reimburse the holder for a loss it incurs because a specified debtor fails to make payment when due.
Under IAS?39 as Amended, Financial Guarantee Contracts are Recognised:
If the financial guarantee contract was issued in a stand-alone arm's length transaction to an unrelated party, its fair value at inception is likely to equal the consideration received, unless there is evidence to the contrary.
i.???????????????The amount determined in accordance with?IAS 37?Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets?and
ii.?????????????The amount initially recognised less, when appropriate, cumulative amortisation recognised in accordance with IAS 18?Revenue. (If specified criteria are met, the issuer may use the fair value option in IAS?39. Furthermore, different requirements continue to apply in the specialised context of a 'failed' derecognition transaction.)
Some credit-related guarantees do not, as a precondition for payment, require that the holder is exposed to, and has incurred a loss on, the failure of the debtor to make payments on the guaranteed asset when due. An example of such a guarantee is a credit derivative that requires payments in response to changes in a specified credit rating or credit index. These are derivatives and they must be measured at fair value under IAS?39. Please go through my relevant article below:
Derecognition of a Financial Asset:
The basic premise for the derecognition model in IAS?39 is to determine whether the asset under consideration for derecognition is:
Once the asset under consideration for derecognition has been determined, an assessment is made as to whether the asset has been transferred, and if so, whether the transfer of that asset is subsequently eligible for derecognition.
An asset is transferred if either the entity has transferred the contractual rights to receive the cash flows, or the entity has retained the contractual rights to receive the cash flows from the asset, but has assumed a contractual obligation to pass those cash flows on under an arrangement that meets the following three conditions:
Once an entity has determined that the asset has been transferred, it then determines whether or not it has transferred substantially all of the risks and rewards of ownership of the asset. If substantially all the risks and rewards have been transferred, the asset is derecognised. If substantially all the risks and rewards have been retained, derecognition of the asset is precluded.
If the entity has neither retained nor transferred substantially all of the risks and rewards of the asset, then the entity must assess whether it has relinquished control of the asset or not.
If the entity does not control the asset, then derecognition is appropriate; however, if the entity has retained control of the asset, then the entity continues to recognise the asset to the extent to which it has a continuing involvement in the asset.
Derecognition of a Financial Liability:
A financial liability should be removed from the balance sheet when, and only when, it is extinguished, that is, when the obligation specified in the contract is either discharged or cancelled or expires.
Where there has been an exchange between an existing borrower and lender of debt instruments with substantially different terms, or there has been a substantial modification of the terms of an existing financial liability, this transaction is accounted for as an extinguishment of the original financial liability and the recognition of a new financial liability.
A gain or loss from extinguishment of the original financial liability is recognised in profit or loss.
Hedge Accounting:
IAS?39 permits hedge accounting under certain circumstances provided that the hedging relationship is:
Hedging Instruments:
·??????Hedging instrument is an instrument whose fair value or cash flows are expected to offset changes in the fair value or cash flows of a designated hedged item.
·??????All derivative contracts with an external counterparty may be designated as hedging instruments except for some written options. A non-derivative financial asset or liability may not be designated as a hedging instrument except as a hedge of foreign currency risk
·??????For hedge accounting purposes, only instruments that involve a party external to the reporting entity can be designated as a hedging instrument. This applies to intragroup transactions as well (with the exception of certain foreign currency hedges of forecast intragroup transactions – see below). However, they may qualify for hedge accounting in individual financial statements.
Hedged Items:
Hedged item is an item that exposes the entity to risk of changes in fair value or future cash flows and is designated as being hedged.
A Hedged Item can be:
Effectiveness:
IAS?39 requires hedge effectiveness to be assessed both prospectively and retrospectively.
To qualify for hedge accounting at the inception of a hedge and, at a minimum, at each reporting date, the changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item attributable to the hedged risk must be expected to be highly effective in offsetting the changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedging instrument on a prospective basis, and on a retrospective basis where actual results are within a range of 80% to 125%.
All hedge ineffectiveness is recognised immediately in profit or loss (including ineffectiveness within the 80% to 125% window).
Categories of Hedges:
A?Fair Value Hedge:
Is a hedge of the exposure to changes in fair value of a recognised asset or liability or a previously unrecognised firm commitment or an identified portion of such an asset, liability or firm commitment, that is attributable to a particular risk and could affect profit or loss.
The gain or loss from the change in fair value of the hedging instrument is recognised immediately in profit or loss. At the same time the carrying amount of the hedged item is adjusted for the corresponding gain or loss with respect to the hedged risk, which is also recognised immediately in net profit or loss.
A?Cash Flow Hedge:
Is a hedge of the exposure to variability in cash flows that:
i.????????????????Is attributable to a particular risk associated with a recognised asset or liability (such as all or some future interest payments on variable rate debt) or a highly probable forecast transaction and
ii.???????????????Could affect profit or loss.
The portion of the gain or loss on the hedging instrument that is determined to be an effective hedge is recognised in other comprehensive income.
If a hedge of a forecast transaction subsequently results in the recognition of a financial asset or a financial liability, any gain or loss on the hedging instrument that was previously recognised directly in equity is 'recycled' into profit or loss in the same period(s) in which the financial asset or liability affects profit or loss.
If a hedge of a forecast transaction subsequently results in the recognition of a non-financial asset or non-financial liability, then the entity has an accounting policy option that must be applied to all such hedges of forecast transactions:
A?Hedge of a Net Investment in a Foreign Operation:
As defined in?IAS 21?The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates?is accounted for similarly to a cash flow hedge. Please go through my relevant article below:
A?Hedge of the Foreign Currency Risk of a Firm Commitment:
May be accounted for as a fair value hedge or as a cash flow hedge.
Discontinuation of Hedge Accounting:
Hedge accounting must be discontinued prospectively if:
For the purpose of measuring the carrying amount of the hedged item when fair value hedge accounting ceases, a revised effective interest rate is calculated.
If hedge accounting ceases for a cash flow hedge relationship because the forecast transaction is no longer expected to occur, gains and losses deferred in other comprehensive income must be taken to profit or loss immediately. If the transaction is still expected to occur and the hedge relationship ceases, the amounts accumulated in equity will be retained in equity until the hedged item affects profit or loss.
If a hedged financial instrument that is measured at amortised cost has been adjusted for the gain or loss attributable to the hedged risk in a fair value hedge, this adjustment is amortised to profit or loss based on a recalculated effective interest rate on this date such that the adjustment is fully amortised by the maturity of the instrument.
Amortisation may begin as soon as an adjustment exists and must begin no later than when the hedged item ceases to be adjusted for changes in its fair value attributable to the risks being hedged.
Disclosure:
In 2003 all disclosures about financial instruments were moved to IAS 32, so IAS 32 was renamed?Financial Instruments: Disclosure and Presentation. Please go through my relevant article below:
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Deputy Manager Reporting, Budgets & Taxation at Pakistan Industrial Development Corporation (Pvt.) Ltd.
2 年Such a great work...Kindly also share IFRS9 if possible for you....