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Statements of Accounting Standards (AS 23)
Accounting for Investments in Associates
in Consolidated Financial Statements
(In this Accounting
Standard, the standard portions have been set in bold italic
These should be read in the context of the background material which
has been set in normal type, and in the context of the ‘Preface
to the Statements of Accounting Standards'.)
Accounting Standard (AS) 23, ‘Accounting
for Investments in Associates in Consolidated Financial Statements’,
issued by the Council of the Institute of Chartered Accountants
of India, comes into effect in respect of accounting periods commencing
on or after 1-4-2002. An enterprise that presents consolidated financial
statements should account for investments in associates in the consolidated
financial statements in accordance with this Standard. The following
is the text of the Accounting Standard.
Objective
The objective of this Statement is to
set out principles and procedures for recognising, in the consolidated
financial statements, the effects of the investments in associates
on the financial position and operating results of a group.
Scope
1. This Statement should be applied
in accounting for investments in associates in the preparation and
presentation of consolidated financial statements by an investor.
2. This Statement does not deal with
accounting for investments in associates in the preparation and
presentation of separate financial statements by an investor.
Definitions
3. For the purpose of this Statement,
the following terms are used with the meanings specified:
An associate is
an enterprise in which the investor has significant influence and
which is neither a subsidiary nor a joint venture3 of the investor.
Significant influence
is the power to participate in the financial and/or operating policy
decisions of the investee but not control over those policies.
Control:
(a) The ownership, directly
or indirectly through subsidiary(ies), of more than one-half of
the voting power of an enterprise; or
(b) control of the composition
of the board of directors in the case of a company or of the composition
of the corresponding governing body in case of any other enterprise
so as to obtain economic benefits from its activities.
A subsidiary is
an enterprise that is controlled by another enterprise (known as
the parent).
A parent is an enterprise
that has one or more subsidiaries.
A group is a parent
and all its subsidiaries.
Consolidated financial
statements are the financial statements of a group presented
as those of a single enterprise.
The equity method
is a method of accounting whereby the investment is initially recorded
at cost, identifying any goodwill/capital reserve arising at the
time of acquisition. The carrying amount of the investment is adjusted
thereafter for the post acquisition change in the investor’s share
of net assets of the investee. The consolidated statement of profit
and loss reflects the investor’s share of the results of operations
of the investee.
Equity is the residual
interest in the assets of an enterprise after deducting all its
liabilities.
4. For the purpose of this Statement,
significant influence does not extend to power to govern the financial
and/or operating policies of an enterprise. Significant influence
may be gained by share ownership, statute or agreement. As regards
share ownership, if an investor holds, directly or indirectly through
subsidiary(ies), 20% or more of the voting power of the investee,
it is presumed that the investor has significant influence, unless
it can be clearly demonstrated that this is not the case. Conversely,
if the investor holds, directly or indirectly through subsidiary(ies),
less than 20% of the voting power of the investee, it is presumed
that the investor does not have significant influence, unless such
influence can be clearly demonstrated. A substantial or majority
ownership by another investor does not necessarily preclude an investor
from having significant influence.
5. The existence of significant influence
by an investor is usually evidenced in one or more of the following
ways:
(a)Representation on the board of directors
or corresponding governing body of the investee;
(b)participation in policy making processes;
(c)material transactions between the
investor and the investee;
(d)interchange of managerial personnel;
or
(e)provision of essential technical
information.
6. Under the equity method, the investment
is initially recorded at cost, identifying any goodwill/capital
reserve arising at the time of acquisition and the carrying amount
is increased or decreased to recognise the investor’s share of the
profits or losses of the investee after the date of acquisition.
Distributions received from an investee reduce the carrying amount
of the investment. Adjustments to the carrying amount may also be
necessary for alterations in the investor’s proportionate interest
in the investee arising from changes in the investee’s equity that
have not been included in the statement of profit and loss. Such
changes include those arising from the revaluation of fixed assets
and investments, from foreign exchange translation differences and
from the adjustment of differences arising on amalgamations.
Accounting for Investments
- Equity Method
7. An investment in an associate
should be accounted for in consolidated financial statements under
the equity method except when:
(a) the investment is acquired
and held exclusively with a view to its subsequent disposal in the
near future; or
(b) the associate operates
under severe long-term restrictions that significantly impair its
ability to transfer funds to the investor.
Investments in such associates
should be accounted for in accordance with Accounting Standard (AS)
13, Accounting for Investments. The reasons for not applying the
equity method in accounting for investments in an associate should
be disclosed in the consolidated financial statements.
8. Recognition of income on the basis
of distributions received may not be an adequate measure of the
income earned by an investor on an investment in an associate because
the distributions received may bear little relationship to the performance
of the associate. As the investor has significant influence over
the associate, the investor has a measure of responsibility for
the associate’s performance and, as a result, the return on its
investment. The investor accounts for this stewardship by extending
the scope of its consolidated financial statements to include its
share of results of such an associate and so provides an analysis
of earnings and investment from which more useful ratios can be
calculated. As a result, application of the equity method in consolidated
financial statements provides more informative reporting of the
net assets and net income of the investor.
9. An investor should discontinue
the use of the equity method from the date that:
(a)it ceases to have significant
influence in an associate but retains, either in whole or in part,
its investment; or
(b)the use of the equity
method is no longer appropriate because the associate operates under
severe long-term restrictions that significantly impair its ability
to transfer funds to the investor.
From the date of discontinuing
the use of the equity method, investments in such associates should
be accounted for in accordance with Accounting Standard (AS) 13,
Accounting for Investments. For this purpose, the carrying amount
of the investment at that date should be regarded as cost thereafter.
Application of the Equity
Method
10. Many of the procedures appropriate
for the application of the equity method are similar to the consolidation
procedures set out in Accounting Standard (AS) 21, Consolidated
Financial Statements. Furthermore, the broad concepts underlying
the consolidation procedures used in the acquisition of a subsidiary
are adopted on the acquisition of an investment in an associate.
An investment in an associate is accounted
for under the equity method from the date on which it falls within
the definition of an associate. On acquisition of the investment
any difference between the cost of acquisition and the investor’s
share of the equity of the associate is described as goodwill or
capital reserve, as the case may be.
12. Goodwill/capital reserve
arising on the acquisition of an associate by an investor should
be included in the carrying amount of investment in the associate
but should be disclosed separately.
13. In using equity method
for accounting for investment in an associate, unrealised profits
and losses resulting from transactions between the investor (or
its consolidated subsidiaries) and the associate should be eliminated
to the extent of the investor’s interest in the associate. Unrealised
losses should not be eliminated if and to the extent the cost of
the transferred asset cannot be recovered.
14. The most recent available financial
statements of the associate are used by the investor in applying
the equity method; they are usually drawn up to the same date as
the financial statements of the investor. When the reporting dates
of the investor and the associate are different, the associate often
prepares, for the use of the investor, statements as at the same
date as the financial statements of the investor. When it is impracticable
to do this, financial statements drawn up to a different reporting
date may be used. The consistency principle requires that the length
of the reporting periods, and any difference in the reporting dates,
are consistent from period to period.
15. When financial statements with a
different reporting date are used, adjustments are made for the
effects of any significant events or transactions between the investor
(or its consolidated subsidiaries) and the associate that occur
between the date of the associate’s financial statements and the
date of the investor’s consolidated financial statements.
16. The investor usually prepares consolidated
financial statements using uniform accounting policies for the like
transactions and events in similar circumstances. In case an associate
uses accounting policies other than those adopted for the consolidated
financial statements for like transactions and events in similar
circumstances, appropriate adjustments are made to the associate’s
financial statements when they are used by the investor in applying
the equity method. If it is not practicable to do so, that fact
is disclosed along with a brief description of the differences between
the accounting policies.
17. If an associate has outstanding
cumulative preference shares held outside the group, the investor
computes its share of profits or losses after adjusting for the
preference dividends whether or not the dividends have been declared.
18. If, under the equity method, an
investor’s share of losses of an associate equals or exceeds the
carrying amount of the investment, the investor ordinarily discontinues
recognising its share of further losses and the investment is reported
at nil value. Additional losses are provided for to the extent that
the investor has incurred obligations or made payments on behalf
of the associate to satisfy obligations of the associate that the
investor has guaranteed or to which the investor is otherwise committed.
If the associate subsequently reports profits, the investor resumes
including its share of those profits only after its share of the
profits equals the share of net losses that have not been recognised.
19. Where an associate presents consolidated
financial statements, the results and net assets to be taken into
account are those reported in that associate’s consolidated financial
statements.
20. The carrying amount
of investment in an associate should be reduced to recognise a decline,
other than temporary, in the value of the investment, such reduction
being determined and made for each investment individually.
Contingencies
21. In accordance with Accounting Standard
(AS) 4, Contingencies and Events Occurring After the Balance Sheet
Date, the investor discloses in the consolidated financial statements:
(a)its share of the contingencies and
capital commitments of an associate for which it is also contingently
liable; and
(b)those contingencies that arise because
the investor is severally liable for the liabilities of the associate.
Disclosure
22. In addition to the
disclosures required by paragraph 7 and 12, an appropriate listing
and description of associates including the proportion of ownership
interest and, if different, the proportion of voting power held
should be disclosed in the consolidated financial statements.
23. Investments in associates
accounted for using the equity method should be classified as long-term
investments and disclosed separately in the consolidated balance
sheet. The investor’s share of the profits or losses of such investments
should be disclosed separately in the consolidated statement of
profit and loss. The investor’s share of any extraordinary or prior
period items should also be separately disclosed.
24. The name(s) of the
associate(s) of which reporting date(s) is/are different from that
of the financial statements of an investor and the differences in
reporting dates should be disclosed in the consolidated financial
statements.
25. In case an associate
uses accounting policies other than those adopted for the consolidated
financial statements for like transactions and events in similar
circumstances and it is not practicable to make appropriate adjustments
to the associate’s financial statements, the fact should be disclosed
along with a brief description of the differences in the accounting
policies.
Transitional Provisions
26. On the first occasion
when investment in an associate is accounted for in consolidated
financial statements in accordance with this Statement, the carrying
amount of investment in the associate should be brought to the amount
that would have resulted had the equity method of accounting been
followed as per this Statement since the acquisition of the associate.
The corresponding adjustment in this regard should be made in the
retained earnings in the consolidated financial statements.
1 Attention is specifically drawn
to paragraph 4.3 of the Preface, according to which accounting standards
are intended to apply only to material items.
2 Accounting Standard (AS) 13, ‘Accounting
for Investments’, is applicable for accounting for investments in
associates in the separate financial statements of an investor.
3 A separate accounting standard on
‘Financial Reporting of Interests in Joint Ventures’, which is being
formulated, will define the term ‘joint venture’ and specify the
requirements relating to accounting for investments in joint ventures.
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