Financial Instruments
Financial Instruments
Financial Instruments
Presentation - IAS 32
Recognition & Measurement – IAS 39
& IFRS 9
Disclosure – IFRS 7
What we will cover this week
Financial instruments
What are they?
How do we value them?
How do we show them in financial
statements?
Relevant standards:
IAS 32, IAS 39, IFRS 7 and IFRS 9
Extra reading required
Elliott and Elliott:
Chapter 12
The most controversial standards
Financial asset:
The lenders have the right to be repaid.
Financial Liability:
The Company is under an obligation to repay
the loan.
The following transaction gives rise to a
Financial Instrument because...
e.g.(2) A Company sells goods to a customer on
credit
The sale on credit creates a contractual
obligation. The contract is a financial instrument
because there is
Financial asset:
The Company now has a trade receivable.
Financial Liability:
The customer now has a trade payable.
The following transaction gives rise to a
Financial Instrument because...
e.g.(3) A Company buys goods from a supplier
on credit
The purchase on credit creates a contractual
obligation. The contract is a financial instrument
because there is a
Financial asset:
The supplier now has a trade receivable.
Financial Liability:
The Company now has a trade payable.
The following transaction gives rise to a
Financial Instrument because...
e.g.(4) A Company deposits money into a bank
account.
A bank deposit creates a contractual obligation.
The contract is a financial instrument because
there is:
Financial asset:
The company has the right to withdraw the
cash.
Financial Liability:
The bank is under an obligation to repay the
cash.
The following transaction gives rise to a
Financial Instrument because...
e.g.(5) A Company overdraws its bank account.
Financial Liability:
The Company is under an obligation to repay
the overdraft.
The following transaction gives rise to a
Financial Instrument because...
e.g.(6) A Company issues ordinary shares.
Financial asset:
The shareholders own the shares.
Equity instrument:
The Company has extra share capital.
The following transaction gives rise to a
Financial Instrument because...
e.g.(7) A Company buys ordinary shares.
Financial asset:
The investing Company owns the shares
Equity instrument:
The issuing Company has extra share capital.
QUIZ TIME
Are the following financial assets or
financial liabilities?
Prepayments for goods and services
e.g. insurance paid in advance
Liability for corporation tax
QUIZ TIME
Are the following financial assets or financial liabilities?
Initial measurement
(i.e. 1st time you recognise it):
Fair value of consideration paid/received i.e.
this is normally cost
FINANCIAL ASSETS;
Subsequent measurement
Subsequent measurement
(i.e. first reporting date AFTER initial measurement)
Depends upon type of asset;
Equity instruments;
AMORTISED COST
Test your understanding
MI plc has the following financial assets:
1. Investments held for trading purposes
Answer:
1. Fair value through income
statement
2. Amortised cost
3. Amortised cost
What’s amortised cost?
Amortised cost takes into account
the internal rate of return and
reflects the value of the
asset/liability on the SFP at the
discounted value
Amortised cost – an example
XYZ plc issues 2 debt instruments, each with a nominal
value of £10,000 and redeemable in 2 years. The
effective interest rate for both instruments is 10%.
Instrument 1
- has a coupon rate of 0% and is redeemed at a
premium of £2,100.
Instrument 2
- has a coupon rate of 2% and is issued at a discount
of £500 and is redeemed at a premium of £1,075.
Question:
How should these debt instruments be accounted for?
Instrument 1
This is a financial liability to be measured at
amortised cost
Record initially at fair value
Carrying value at end of each year is the
amortised cost
What is a derivative?
REMINDER
1. Cash
2. Trade
receivables
3. Trade
payables
4. Derivatives
Quiz – Is it a financial Instrument?
Cash
NO! It is a financial asset, there is no
financial liability of another company
Trade receivables and payables
YES They are financial assets and
liabilities and there is a contract.
Derivatives
YES!
Lecture Example
(Balsawood Airways)
Balsawood Airways signs a contract in
June 2017 to buy 50 Aerobus planes with
phased delivery between June and
September 2018
Cost will be the prevailing market price of
such aircraft at the time of delivery – with
an upper limit for the contract as a whole
of $5,500m and a lower limit of $4,500
Advanced non-returnable payment of
$500m will be required in February 2018
regardless of whether BA changes its
mind and withdraws from the contract.
Balancing payment will be made upon
delivery of the last aircraft
Lecture Example
(Balsawood Airways)
Is there a financial instrument?
Yes – because there is a contract that gives “rise to
both a financial asset of one enterprise and a
financial liability or equity instrument of another
enterprise” (see definition)
Balsawood Airways:
Financial asset
–contractual right to receive 50 Aerobus planes
Financial liability –deposit payable in February 2018
and the balancing payment due later in 2018
Supplier:
Financial asset – cash received
Financial liability – contractual obligation to supply
50 Aerobus planes
Lecture Example
(Balsawood Airways)
Is there a derivative?
Is there a contract – Yes, BA has the contractual
right to the receipt of 50 Aerobus planes
Does its value change in response to the change in a
specified variable – Yes, the contract becomes more
valuable if the market price of 50 Aerobus planes
increases above $5,500 (which is the maximum
BA must pay for the planes). The contract would
then have a value which could be traded
Is there any initial investment – No cost in setting up
the contract
Is it settled at a future date – Yes
IT IS A DERIVATIVE. BA could sell its rights to the
planes to a third party, the value of the contract
would depend upon the movement in the market
price of the planes
IAS 32 / IFRS 7
Presentation & Disclosure
Relevant standards:
IAS 32, IAS 39, IFRS 7 and IFRS 9
To do:
Extra reading:
E&E: Chapter 12
Prepare seminar questions