Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Ten Minutes - Revised Schedule VI (Part 2/3)
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Ten Minutes - Revised Schedule VI (Part 1/3)
Friday, January 20, 2012
TRUE & FAIR: HOW MUCH?
While reading through the annual report of one of the listed company (TRF Ltd – A Tata Enterprise) in India my attention was drawn to a small paragraph in the ANNEXURE TO NOTICE - Explanatory Statements pursuant to Section 173(2) of the Companies Act, 1956. Although, the paragraph was concise but it provided enormous information on the company’s profitability.
Reasons for loss or inadequate profits:
The financial mis-statements were noticed in a particular division for earlier years. This was done by a group of officers who were discharged from the Company and Company has initiated necessary legal proceedings against them. A new team, who had taken charge of the division had reviewed the costs of the projects under execution and corrected the same where ever necessary. Consequently, the Company had to book losses in the division bringing down the overall profits of the Company.
This paragraph quite evidently mentions “mis-statements” by group of officers in a division. The company has initiated legal proceedings against them. Is it an indication by the company that money has been siphoned off by this group of officers or alternatively can we believe that the company has detected fraud in this division?
The highlights section in the annual report throws light on the profitability.
Consolidated PBT 2009- 10: 7,387 lakhs Rupees
Consolidated PBT: 2010- 11: 712 lakhs Rupees
Fall in profits by: 90.36%
The company has a functioning audit committee since 1997 which meets the representative of internal auditors (Big 4 company) and statutory auditors (another Big 4 company) regularly. To any one’s guess what is discussed regularly in such meeting with representatives of Big 4s.
The auditor’s report (Big 4 is a statutory auditor) states that:
Based on our audit and on consideration of the reports of other auditors on separate financial statements and on other financial information of the components, and to the best of our information and according to the explanations given to us, in our opinion the Consolidated Financial Statements give a true and fair view in conformity with the accounting principles generally accepted in India
Few questions which I do not know who will answer:
Did the auditors not detect the fraud when the company initiated legal action against a group of officers of a particular division?
Did the auditors not read the annual report of the company?
Did the auditors not find the drop in profitability compared to earlier year by 91% alarming and material?
What was the corporate governance from the audit committee’s perspective?
Who is answerable to the present shareholders of the company?
And finally;
HOW MUCH TRUE & FAIR WERE/ ARE THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS OPINED BY THE AUDITORS?
For your reference and read as a case study of corporate governance link of the company annual report is attached.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
The Companies (Accounting Standards) Amendment Rules, 2011
” 46A. (1) In respect of accounting periods commencing on or after the 1st April, 2011, for an enterprise which had earlier exercised the option under paragraph 46 and at the option of any other enterprise (such option to be irrevocable and to be applied to all such foreign currency monetary items), the exchange differences arising on reporting of long-term foreign currency monetary items at rates different from those at which they were initially recorded during the period, or reported in previous financial statements , in so far as they relate to the acquisition of a depreciable capital asset, can be added to or deducted from the cost of the asset and shall be depreciated over the balance life of the asset, and in other cases, can be accumulated in a “Foreign Currency Monetary Item Translation Difference Account” in the enterprise’s financial statements and amortized over the balance period of such long term asset or liability, by recognition as income or expense in each of such periods, with the exception of exchange differences dealt with in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 15 of the said rules.
(2) To exercise the option referred to in sub-paragraph (1), an asset or liability shall be designated as a long term foreign currency monetary item, if the asset or liability is expressed in a foreign currency and has a term of twelve months or more at the date of origination of the asset or the liability:
Provided that the option exercised by the enterprise shall disclose the fact of such option and of the amount remaining to be amortized in the financial statements of the period in which such option is exercised and in every subsequent period so long as any exchange difference remains unamortized.”
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Presentation of Financial Instruments - Liability vs. Equity
Under IFRS the issuer should classify the instrument, or its component parts, as a financial liability or equity in accordance with the ‘substance’ of contractual arrangement on initial recognition, and the definitions of financial liability and an equity instrument. The classification is made at the date of issue and is not revised later.
The critical feature in differentiating a financial liability from an equity instrument is the existence of a contractual obligation on one party to the financial instrument (the issuer) either to deliver cash or another financial asset to the other party (the holder) or to exchange another financial instrument with the holder under potentially unfavorable conditions.
Note that a restriction on the ability of the issuer to satisfy an obligation, such as lack of access to foreign currency to repay a foreign currency loan, does not negate the existence of liability.
Scenario: An obligation to pay dividends
IStaR Ltd. issues 100,000 preference shares with a fixed rate of dividend @ 7% at par for INR 1 million. According to the terms of the contract, the directors of IStaR Ltd. have to compulsorily pay dividend following the date of issue.
Solution:
In substance, ‘preference share’ issue is a liability as IStaR Ltd. has a contractual obligation to deliver cash to the holder of preference shares by way of dividends. In short, only if the distributions to the holders of preference shares, whether cumulative or non-cumulative, are at the discretion of the issuer, then the shares are equity instruments.
Monday, August 8, 2011
Every Business is the Same Inside – Part 1
This post is abstracts of a chapter from a book What the CEO wants you to know? Understanding business in today’s times has been a myth and this book ensures that for being a successful businessperson you know what it takes to conduct a business. The fundamentals of business understanding stands true in every environment and economy.
Business acumen requires understanding the building blocks of money making. Think back to how you learned physics or chemistry. First you had to understand the parts of an atom: electrons, protons and neutrons. Once you understood the parts and how they interact, you were ready to develop your knowledge. It’s the same in business.
When 2 business people talk, whether or not they are in the same industry, whether or not they talk openly, they always try to gauge: Is her business making money? How is her business making money? Business people have an insatiable desire to cut through the complexity to the fundamental building blocks of money making.
Money making in business has three parts: cash generation, return on assets (a combination of margin and velocity) and growth. True businesspeople understand them individually as well as the relationships between them. Add consumers to these 3 parts of money making – cash generation, return on assets and growth – and you have the core, or nucleus, of any business.
Cash generation, margin, velocity, and return on assets, growth and customers: Everything else about a business emanates from this nucleus. Does the business generate cash and earn a good return on assets? Are we retaining customers? Is the business growing? If so, common sense tells you that the business is doing well. A large, complex company will eventually falter if core is not right.
Don’t let your formal education or the size of your company obscure the simplicity of your business. Cut through the nucleus of the business. If your business shows deterioration in one or more of the basic components of money making, use common sense to fix it. If you do, you are on your way to thinking and acting like a true businessperson and a successful CEO!
Cash generation: cash gives you the ability to stay in business. It is a company’s oxygen supply. Lack of cash, decreasing cash or consumption of cash spells trouble, even if the other elements of money making – such as margin and velocity – look good. Most people understand cash on a small scale, in their own everyday life. If the bills are due before the salary arrives, what happens? In a large company, however some people loose sight of cash. Many think that’s the responsibility of the finance department. But everybody in the company must be aware that his actions use cash or generate cash. A sales rep that negotiates for a 30 day payment from a customer versus 45 days is cash wise. A plant manager whose poor scheduling results in the accumulation of a lot of inventory consumes cash. Smart businesspeople know that generating cash can help grow the business. Invested wisely, cash improves the company’s money making ability. There’s a psychological component to cash: when a company has its own cash rather than borrowed money, senior managers are more inclined to make bold investments that have greater potential for rewards.
The latter part on margin, velocity, return on assets, growth and customers will follow in my next article.
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Day 1 Profit or Loss
The transaction price (i.e. consideration given towards assets and consideration received towards liabilities) is normally the best evidence of the fair value of a financial instrument at initial recognition.
An exception to this general rule exists where the fair value of an instrument is evidenced by comparison with other observable current market transactions in the same instrument (i.e. without modification or repackaging) or based on valuation technique whose variables include only data from observable markets.
Where there is strong, market-based evidence of the fair value of the financial instrument, the instrument is initially recognized at the fair value and an immediate day 1 profit and loss may arise. Using unobservable inputs to calculate a fair value different to the transaction price on day 1 involves a high degree of subjectivity and therefore this cannot be used as fair value on initial recognition of a financial instrument. In such a situation, the instrument is initially recognized at its transaction price, and consequently day 1 profit and loss would not be recognized upon initial recognition.
When day 1 profit and loss has not been recognized for the above reason and therefore included in the initial carrying amount, IAS 39 requires a gain or loss to be recognized subsequently only to the extent that it arises from a change in a factor (including time) that market participants would consider in setting a price.
However, the standards do not further elaborate what constitutes a change in a factor. Since there is little clarity as to when this “hidden” day 1 profit and loss can be recognized, this day 1 profit and loss could be deferred until all market inputs become observable, or instead released over the life of the instrument on a systematic basis.
For example, a bank charges a fee for issuing a short-term loan commitment that is higher than the bank’s estimate of the fair value of the loan commitment using its proprietary valuation model. The bank does not recognize an upfront gain but measures the derivative loan commitment at the transaction price.
The bank should recognize in earnings observable changes in the fair value of the derivative that have occurred subsequent to initial recognition that a market participant would consider in setting a price. Unless the bank can demonstrate objectively that the fair value of the derivative loan commitment has changed due to changes in mortgage rates or other factors (that would qualify as observable market data) occurring subsequent to initial recognition, the bank should not recognize a change in the fair value of the loan commitment as profit.
To illustrate, the bank received `500,000 to issue the loan commitment and the bank’s proprietary model valued the commitment at `300,000. The bank would initially recognize a derivative liability at `500,000 equivalent to the cash received. Assume that at the next measurement date, adjusting the valuation model for observable market changes, the estimated value was `200,000 (a decrease of `100,000 from the previous model estimate). The bank reduces the derivative liability to `400,000 and recognizes `100,000 as a fair value movement in earnings. The initial difference of `200,000 (`500,000 minus `300,000) can be either amortized or deferred (and recognized in profit or loss at the maturity date if the loan commitment was not exercised, or included in the carrying amount of the loan and recognized in profit or loss through the effective interest rate, if the loan commitment was exercised).
In accordance with IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures, if such day 1 profit and loss exists, an entity shall disclose by class of financial instrument a) its accounting policy for recognizing that difference in profit or loss to reflect a change in factors (including time) that market participants would consider in setting a price and b) the aggregate difference yet to be recognized in profit or loss at the beginning and end of the period and a reconciliation of changes in the balance of this difference.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
IFRS 7 – FAIR VALUE HIERARCHY
As a part of the disclosure requirements for fair value measurements, an entity should classify the financial instruments measured at fair value using a ‘fair value hierarchy’ that reflects the significance of the inputs used in making the measurements. IFRS 7 consist of fair value hierarchy in its required disclosures to increase the comparability and consistency.
A new standard “Fair Value Measurements” by IASB is expected to come by April 2011 on the lines of Statement No. 157 or ASC 820 of the US GAAP as a part of joint project of FASB and IASB.
As per existing IFRS 7, the fair value hierarchy has three different levels:
Level 1 inputs are quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the reporting entity has the ability to access at the measurement date. A quoted price in an active market provides the most reliable evidence of fair value and should be used to measure fair value whenever available, except as follows:
- In some situations, a quoted price in an active market might not represent fair value at the measurement date. That might be the case if, for example, significant events (announcements) occur after the close of a market but before the measurement date. If the quoted price is adjusted for new information, the adjustment renders the fair value measurement a lower level measurement.
Level 1 input instrument is listed equities, listed debt, listed investment fund.
Level 2 inputs are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. If the asset or liability has a specified (contractual) term, a Level 2 input must be observable for substantially the full term of the asset or liability. Level 2 inputs include the following:
- Quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active.
- Quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets.
- Inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability (e.g. yield curves).
- Inputs that are derived principally from or corroborated by observable market data by correlation or other means (market-corroborated inputs).
Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability. Unobservable inputs should reflect the reporting entity’s own assumptions which assumptions the market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability (including assumptions about risk). The reporting entity’s own data used to develop unobservable inputs should be adjusted if information is reasonably available without undue cost and effort that indicates that market participants would use different assumptions.
As explained above, the level is determined by the inputs used to determine fair value. There are some misperceptions about how to determine where in the hierarchy a fair value measurement falls. For example, one misperception is that the valuation model utilized affects the level determination. Instead, one must analyze the inputs used in the model to determine their significance and the hierarchy level.
The inputs with the most significance will determine the level of the fair value measurement.
Another misperception is that the higher the risk, the lower in the hierarchy the fair value measurement falls. For example, if the counterparty credit risk is high and that input is significant, it has been assumed that the fair value measurement is Level 3. However, the correct answer is based on how observable the counterparty credit risk is. If an entity’s credit-risk rating is published and/or available from many sources, that would be considered observable and a Level 2 input, therefore making the fair value measurement a Level 2. However, if the risk rating is determined using data gathered by a client and not from observable sources, the input would be Level 3.
Example:
An instrument for which there is currently no active market. A consensus pricing mechanism is used to determine its fair value.
The consensus pricing mechanism gets its inputs from market participants. These participants may determine the fair value by using models with unobservable inputs. The quotes that the participants provide to the consensus pricing mechanism are not binding bids and are not necessarily supported by prices from observable current market transactions.
Response:
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Revised Schedule VI
1. Applies to all companies following non-converged Indian Accounting Standards
2. No possibility of conflict between Accounting Standard and Schedule VI as on modification of accounting standards prescribed under the companies act, Schedule VI would stand modified accordingly
3. The disclosure requirement of revised Schedule VI are in addition to that required by Accounting Standards prescribed under the Companies Act
4. All disclosures required by Companies Act to be made in notes to accounts
5. Cross-referencing each line item with notes and vice versa required
6. Unit of measurement selected to used uniformly in financial statements
7. One year comparatives required
8. Classification of all assets and liabilities into current and non-current
9. Definition of current asset and current liability in line with converged Ind AS 1 or IAS 1
10. Nature and purpose of each reserve to be stated only for those aggregated under “Other Reserves”
11. Debit balance of Profit and Loss Account to be shown as negative figure in Surplus
12. Reserve and Surplus balance can be negative
13. Period and amount of continuing default as on the balance sheet date in repayment of loans and interest to be separately specified
14. Dividends proposed to be disclosed
15. Expenses in Statement of Profit and Loss to be classified based on nature of expenses
16. Gain / Loss on foreign currency transaction to be separated into finance costs and other expenses
17. Disclosure of quantitative details of goods diluted.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Govt deferred IFRS implementation
Indian Accounting Standards Converged with IFRS Notified
Friday, February 18, 2011
IFRS in India from 1-April-2011
Source: http://pib.nic.in/newsite/erelease.aspx?relid=69867 Ministry of Corporate Affairs 17-February, 2011 16:56 IST Convergence of Indian Accounting Standards with International Financial Reporting Standards |
Availability of essential financial information about a company to its shareholders and other stakeholders in accordance with internationally accepted financial norms is considered as an integral and important part of good corporate governance. To ensure this and to implement the G-20 commitment to achieve a single set of high quality global accounting standards, the Government has taken a decision to achieve convergence of Indian Accounting Standards with IFRS in a phased manner beginning with April, 2011 in accordance with the roadmap suggested by Core Group and Technical Groups set up by the Government. India's commitment to the policy of 'convergence' of Indian Accounting Standards with IFRS would allow it to consider local economic conditions and environment while preparing converged accounting standards, thus duly and adequately safeguarding the interests of Indian companies/enterprises. The convergence with IFRS would provide reliable and comparable financial information to investors globally. Such converged accounting standards also aim at bringing more transparency in financial matters, thus seek to protect the interests of investors and improve standards of good corporate governance. They would also enhance the global competitiveness of Indian Industry. The ICAI has been taking a number of measures for capacity building through various training programmes and workshops etc. The Industry Associations have also been conducting various seminars and conferences to get acquainted with various practical issues involved in the convergence process. The Industry has always expressed a feeling of readiness on the matter. The concerns expressed by them at various stages have been redressed through issue of suitable clarifications. Press Releases were also issued from time to time for awareness of all stakeholders. Such Press Releases are available on this Ministry's website at www.mca.gov.in. The proposed converged accounting standards have been prepared after following a detailed consultative exercise through issue of exposure drafts by Accounting Standards Board (ASB) of Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI), examination of comments received thereon and thereafter consideration of such standards by ICAI, National Advisory Committee on Accounting Standards (NACAS) and thereafter by Central Government (MCA) in consultation with M/o Law and Justice. The revised Schedule VI (Format of Financial Statements), Schedule XIV (Depreciation Rate) and proposed converged accounting standards are ready and are proposed to be notified shortly. |