In completing the comprehensive project to change the conceptual framework, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) confirmed the objective of IFRS financial reporting as providing financial information that is useful to investors and others when deciding whether to provide resources to a company. To read the full article in the Journal of Accountancy, click: New IFRS Conceptual Framework Revises Foundational Reporting Concepts.
-
-
The Appraisal Practice Board of the Appraisal Foundation released The Valuation of Customer-Related Assets. As Karolina Calhoun, senior financial analyst with Mercer Capital, explains, the non-authoritative best practices guidance elaborates on valuation approaches and methodologies that can be used to measure fair value of customer-related intangible assets. To read the full article in Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog, click: Appraisal Foundation Releases Final Guidance on Fair Value Measurement of Customer-Related Assets. This article is republished from Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog. It is reprinted with permission. To subscribe to the blog, visit: http://mercercapital.com/category/financialreportingblog/.
-
The International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation (IPEV) Guidelines were developed in 2005 to set out recommendations on best practices in the valuation of private equity investments. Karolina Calhoun, senior financial analyst with Mercer Capital, looks at the draft amendments to the existing guidelines published in October 2015. To read more about the results of this report in the Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog, click: Updated: Valuation Best Practices for Venture Capital and Private Equity Funds. This article is republished from Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting Blog. It is reprinted with permission. To subscribe to the blog, visit: http://mercercapital.com/category/financialreportingblog/.
-
Moving from Facts to Opinion? ASC 820 under US GAAP and IFRS 13 issued by IASB provide a principal based framework for fair value measurement. Though fair value measurement guidance in US GAAP and IFRS are substantially in the same line, some minor differences exist. This article discusses the IFRS 13 and challenges in its implementation.
-
A recent survey of investment professionals in the CFA Institute reports investor concerns about the use of different accounting standards and rules for SMEs under IFRS and private companies under GAAP. Karolina Grabowicz, a financial analyst with Mercer Capital, reports how the use of different standards adds complexity and costs to financial reporting. Issues also arise over the loss of information due to private company accounting standards that could lead to lower valuations. Read more about the results of this report in the Mercer Capital’s Financial Reporting article, Lower Valuations for Private Companies? This article is republished from Mercer Capital’s…
-
Private companies are subject to several frameworks for financial reporting purposes. In this article, Mark Zyla explains the role of the Private Company Council (PCC) and provides a summary of several recommendations the PCC has made to the FASB regarding accounting for goodwill and business combinations.
-
A Fitch Ratings report has shared serious doubts that the practice principles of the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) would be fully implemented in the U.S. anytime in the near future, as the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) turns colder on the idea. Three sticking points to the merger of the methods remain financial instruments, insurance and leasing. Financial products with U.S. institutions and those following IFRS protocol present many differences, including approaches in application. These fundamental conflicts mean that a one-size-fits-all approach may simply be impossible. U.S. constituents have also raised concerns that the insurance proposal would not only…
-
Financially-sound companies can more easily obtain lines of credit at low interest rates, as well as more easily issue debt financing or issue bonds on better terms. Companies often take advantage of loopholes to present themselves as more profitable than they are. Most do it in a way that they’re not technically breaking the law, but ethics certainly come into question. When should you be concerned and when is the line crossed between creative accounting and fraud? Rakis Christoforou examines this subjective dilemma in an overview published in the FinancialMirror. In a short but valuable look at the subject of…
-
The accounting rulemakers said they are seeking more feedback about whether groups of companies could phase in IFRS and how investors are dealing with the two sets of accounting rules currently existing in the United States. Emily Chasen at WSJ CFO Report writes [trial subscription required] that accounting rulemakers in the U.S. and abroad are calling for collaboration even as U.S. regulators have so far refused to take a clear position on whether they should adopt international accounting rules. But that lack of guidance makes the timing and nature of such cooperation uncertain, the heads of the U.S. and international accounting…
-
U.S.-Based Multinationals Reporting Under IFRS Struggle With Classification of Equities, Liabilities The International Accounting Standards Board agreed with respondents from its public consultation (a study that reached out to industry professionals at all levels in more than 80 countries in 2011) that it needs to better clarify definitions of assets and liabilities for debt instruments, CFO.com reports. That, in turn, should help eliminate some uncertainty when accounting for assets and financial liabilities or nonfinancial liabilities (which can include land and equipment leases). More:
-
Implications of the SEC IFRS Work Plan for Private and Public Issuers; How Slow Adoption May Rewrite GAAP Grant Thornton Audit Services has published a 16-page report providing background and context on IFRS in the United States. The report explores how market forces press the issue, cover SEC final report highlights and reaction to the report, summarizes how some companies are preparing for IFRS today, and offers a set of action steps required to put together a logical, cost-efficient readiness plan:
-
IFRS News Offers Summary of Significant Developments in International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Grant Thornton’s IFRS team publishes a quarterly update on developments in the international accounting arena:
-
Study: More Deals Occur in Countries That Follow Similar Financial-Reporting Standards At CFO.com Kathleen Hoffelder reports that dissimilar national accounting standards and the lack of adherence to international financial reporting rules seem to be a major deterrent to companies eyeing targets beyond their borders, according to a recent academic study. Moreover, cross-border acquisitions by companies of target firms in countries with similar accounting strictures tend to relieve CFOs and other senior executives of financial and administrative burdens, says Shawn Huang, assistant professor at the University of Arkansas and one of the survey’s authors, along with Jere Francis, a professor at…
-
The International Accounting Standards Board plans to establish a formal network to give standard-setting bodies a voice when their countries switch to International Financial Reporting Standards. There is conflict, however, over how the network will operate and whether it would dilute IFRS as a single set of reporting standards. Advocates of such a network say the U.S. will not commit to IFRS without it. In an article called “Long Push for Accounting Standards” sub-titled “The United States is Seen to Be Dragging its Feet in Choosing to Come on Board,” Star Publications (Malaysia)/Reuters reports: SHAREHOLDERS and regulators have long wanted the…
-
No Parties After IFRS Adoption in Canada When measuring the costs of IFRS implementation, there are the not-at-all trivial costs of changing accounting methods. But there are also opportunity costs of spending time becoming IFRS compliant that you could have spent doing something other things. “The greater cost has really been the diversion of intellectual capital during this time period from doing more productive pursuits than the IFRS conversion,” opines a vice president at Canadian Tire. At CFO Journal Emily Chasen reports that IFRS adoption by our neighbors to the north has been anything but easy: If U.S. regulators want to get a…