The
objective of this Statement is to prescribe the minimum content
of an interim financial report and to prescribe the principles
for recognition and measurement in a complete or condensed
financial statements for an interim period. Timely and reliable
interim financial reporting improves the ability of investors,
creditors, and others to understand an enterprise’s capacity
to generate earnings and cash flows, its financial condition
and liquidity.
| 1. |
This
Statement does not mandate which enterprises should
be required to present interim financial reports, how
frequently, or how soon after the end of an interim
period. If an enterprise is required or elects to prepare
and present an interim financial report, it should comply
with this Statement.
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| 2. |
A statute
governing an enterprise or a regulator may require an
enterprise to prepare and present certain information
at an interim date which may be different in form and/or
content as required by this Statement. In such a case,
the recognition and measurement principles as laid down
in this Statement are applied in respect of such information,
unless otherwise specified in the statute or by the
regulator.
|
| 3. |
The requirements
related to cash flow statement, complete or condensed,
contained in this Statement are applicable where an
enterprise prepares and presents a cash flow statement
for the purpose of its annual financial report.
|
Definitions
|
| 4. |
The
following terms are used in this Statement with the
meanings specified :
Interim period is a financial reporting period
shorter than a full financial year.
Interim financial report means a financial report
containing either a complete set of financial statements
or a set of condensed financial statements (as described
in this Statement) for an interim period.
|
| 5. |
During the first year of operations
of an enterprise, its annual financial reporting period
may be shorter than a financial year. In such a case,
that shorter period is not considered as an interim period.
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Content of an Interim
Financial Report
|
| 6. |
A complete set of financial
statements normally includes:
- balance sheet;
- statement of profit and loss;
- cash flow statement; and
- notes including those relating to accounting
policies and other statements and explanatory material
that are an integral part of the financial statements.
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| 7. |
In the interest
of timeliness and cost considerations and to avoid repetition
of information previously reported, an enterprise may
be required to or may elect to present less information
at interim dates as compared with its annual financial
statements. The benefit of timeliness of presentation
may be partially offset by a reduction in detail in
the information provided. Therefore, this Statement
requires preparation and presentation of an interim
financial report containing, as a minimum, a set of
condensed financial statements. The interim financial
report containing condensed financial statements is
intended to provide an update on the latest annual financial
statements. Accordingly, it focuses on new activities,
events, and circumstances and does not duplicate information
previously reported.
|
| 8. |
This Statement
does not prohibit or discourage an enterprise from presenting
a complete set of financial statements in its interim
financial report, rather than a set of condensed financial
statements. This Statement also does not prohibit or
discourage an enterprise from including, in condensed
interim financial statements, more than the minimum
line items or selected explanatory notes as set out
in this Statement. The recognition and measurement principles
set out in this Statement apply also to complete financial
statements for an interim period, and such statements
would include all disclosures required by this Statement
(particularly the selected disclosures in paragraph
16) as well as those required by other Accounting Standards.
|
Minimum Components
of an Interim Financial Report
|
| 9. |
An interim financial
report should include, at a minimum, the following components:
- condensed balance sheet;
- condensed statement of profit and loss;
- condensed cash flow statement; and
- selected explanatory notes.
|
Form and Content
of Interim Financial Statements
|
| 10. |
If an
enterprise prepares and presents a complete set of financial
statements in its interim financial report, the form
and content of those statements should conform to the
requirements as applicable to annual complete set of
financial statements.
|
| 11. |
If an
enterprise prepares and presents a set of condensed
financial statements in its interim financial report,
those condensed statements should include, at a minimum,
each of the headings and sub-headings that were included
in its most recent annual financial statements and the
selected explanatory notes as required by this Statement.
Additional line items or notes should be included if
their omission would make the condensed interim financial
statements misleading.
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| 12. |
If an
enterprise presents basic and diluted earnings per share
in its annual financial statements in accordance with
Accounting Standard (AS) 20, Earnings Per Share, basic
and diluted earnings per share should be presented in
accordance with AS 20 on the face of the statement of
profit and loss, complete or condensed, for an interim
period.
|
| 13. |
If an enterprise’s
annual financial report included the consolidated financial
statements in addition to the parent’s separate financial
statements, the interim financial report includes both
the consolidated financial statements and separate financial
statements, complete or condensed.
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| 14. |
Appendix 1 provides illustrative
formats of condensed financial statements.
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Selected Explanatory
Notes
|
| 15. |
A user of
an enterprise’s interim financial report will ordinarily
have access to the most recent annual financial report
of that enterprise. It is, therefore, not necessary
for the notes to an interim financial report to provide
relatively insignificant updates to the information
that was already reported in the notes in the most recent
annual financial report. At an interim date, an explanation
of events and transactions that are significant to an
understanding of the changes in financial position and
performance of the enterprise since the last annual
reporting date is more useful.
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| 16. |
An enterprise
should include the following information, as a minimum,
in the notes to its interim financial statements, if
material and if not disclosed elsewhere in the interim
financial report:
-
a statement that the
same accounting policies are followed in the interim
financial statements as those followed in the most
recent annual financial statements or, if those
policies have been changed, a description of the
nature and effect of the change;
-
explanatory comments
about the seasonality of interim operations;
-
the nature and amount
of items affecting assets, liabilities, equity,
net income, or cash flows that are unusual because
of their nature, size, or incidence (see paragraphs
12 to 14 of Accounting Standard (AS) 5, Net Profit
or Loss for the Period, Prior Period Items and Changes
in Accounting Policies);
-
the nature and amount
of changes in estimates of amounts reported in prior
interim periods of the current financial year or
changes in estimates of amounts reported in prior
financial years, if those changes have a material
effect in the current interim period;
-
issuances, buy-backs,
repayments and restructuring of debt, equity and
potential equity shares;
-
dividends, aggregate
or per share (in absolute or percentage terms),
separately for equity shares and other shares;
-
segment revenue, segment
capital employed (segment assets minus segment liabilities)
and segment result for business segments or geographical
segments, whichever is the enterprise’s primary
basis of segment reporting (disclosure of segment
information is required in an enterprise’s interim
financial report only if the enterprise is required,
in terms of AS 17, Segment Reporting, to disclose
segment information in its annual financial statements);
-
the effect of changes
in the composition of the enterprise during the
interim period, such as amalgamations, acquisition
or disposal of subsidiaries and long-term investments,
restructurings, and discontinuing operations; and
- material changes in contingent liabilities
since the last annual balance sheet date.
The above information should
normally be reported on a financial year - to - date
basis. However, the enterprise should also disclose
any events or transactions that are material to an understanding
of the current interim period.
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| 17. |
Other Accounting
Standards specify disclosures that should be made in
financial statements. In that context, financial statements
mean complete set of financial statements normally included
in an annual financial report and sometimes included
in other reports. The disclosures required by those
other Accounting Standards are not required if an enterprise’s
interim financial report includes only condensed financial
statements and selected explanatory notes rather than
a complete set of financial statements.
|
Periods for which
Interim Financial Statements are required to be presented
|
| 18. |
Interim
reports should include interim financial statements
(condensed or complete) for periods as follows:
-
balance sheet
as of the end of the current interim period and
a comparative balance sheet as of the end of the
immediately preceding financial year;
-
statements of
profit and loss for the current interim period and
cumulatively for the current financial year to date,
with comparative statements of profit and loss for
the comparable interim periods (current and year-to-date)
of the immediately preceding financial year;
-
cash flow statement
cumulatively for the current financial year to date,
with a comparative statement for the comparable
year-to-date period of the immediately preceding
financial year.
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| 19. |
For an enterprise
whose business is highly seasonal, financial information
for the twelve months ending on the interim reporting
date and comparative information for the prior twelve-month
period may be useful. Accordingly, enterprises whose
business is highly seasonal are encouraged to consider
reporting such information in addition to the information
called for in the preceding paragraph.
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| 20. |
Appendix 2
illustrates the periods required to be presented by
an enterprise that reports half-yearly and an enterprise
that reports quarterly.
|
| 21. |
In deciding
how to recognise, measure, classify, or disclose an
item for interim financial reporting purposes, materiality
should be assessed in relation to the interim period
financial data. In making assessments of materiality,
it should be recognised that interim measurements may
rely on estimates to a greater extent than measurements
of annual financial data.
|
| 22. |
The Preface
to the Statements of Accounting Standards states that
“The Accounting Standards are intended to apply only
to items which are material.” The Framework for the
Preparation and Presentation of Financial Statements,
issued by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of
India, states that “information is material if its misstatement
(i.e., omission or erroneous statement) could influence
the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of
the financial information.”
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| 23. |
Judgement
is always required in assessing materiality for financial
reporting purposes. For reasons of understandability
of the interim figures, materiality for making recognition
and disclosure decision is assessed in relation to the
interim period financial data. Thus, for example, unusual
or extraordinary items, changes in accounting policies
or estimates, and prior period items are recognised
and disclosed based on materiality in relation to interim
period data. The overriding objective is to ensure that
an interim financial report includes all information
that is relevant to understanding an enterprise’s financial
position and performance during the interim period.
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Disclosure in Annual
Financial Statements
|
| 24. |
An
enterprise may not prepare and present a separate financial
report for the final interim period because the annual
financial statements are presented. In such a case,
paragraph 25 requires certain disclosures to be made
in the annual financial statements for that financial
year.
|
| 25. |
If an
estimate of an amount reported in an interim period
is changed significantly during the final interim period
of the financial year but a separate financial report
is not prepared and presented for that final interim
period, the nature and amount of that change in estimate
should be disclosed in a note to the annual financial
statements for that financial year.
|
| 26. |
Accounting
Standard (AS) 5, Net Profit or Loss for the Period,
Prior Period Items and Changes in Accounting Policies,
requires disclosure, in financial statements, of the
nature and (if practicable) the amount of a change in
an accounting estimate which has a material effect in
the current period, or which is expected to have a material
effect in subsequent periods. Paragraph 16(d) of this
Statement requires similar disclosure in an interim
financial report. Examples include changes in estimate
in the final interim period relating to inventory write-downs,
restructurings, or impairment losses that were reported
in an earlier interim period of the financial year.
The disclosure required by the preceding paragraph is
consistent with AS 5 requirements and is intended to
be restricted in scope so as to relate only to the change
in estimates. An enterprise is not required to include
additional interim period financial information in its
annual financial statements.
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Recognition
and Measurement
Same Accounting Policies as Annual
|
| 27. |
An enterprise
should apply the same accounting policies in its interim
financial statements as are applied in its annual financial
statements, except for accounting policy changes made
after the date of the most recent annual financial statements
that are to be reflected in the next annual financial
statements. However, the frequency of an enterprise’s
reporting (annual, half-yearly, or quarterly) should
not affect the measurement of its annual results. To
achieve that objective, measurements for interim reporting
purposes should be made on a year-to-date basis.
|
| 28. |
Requiring
that an enterprise apply the same accounting policies
in its interim financial statements as in its annual
financial statements may seem to suggest that interim
period measurements are made as if each interim period
stands alone as an independent reporting period. However,
by providing that the frequency of an enterprise’s reporting
should not affect the measurement of its annual results,
paragraph 27 acknowledges that an interim period is
a part of a financial year. Year-to-date measurements
may involve changes in estimates of amounts reported
in prior interim periods of the current financial year.
But the principles for recognising assets, liabilities,
income, and expenses for interim periods are the same
as in annual financial statements.
|
| 29. |
To illustrate:
-
the principles for recognising
and measuring losses from inventory write-downs,
restructurings, or impairments in an interim period
are the same as those that an enterprise would follow
if it prepared only annual financial statements.
However, if such items are recognised and measured
in one interim period and the estimate changes in
a subsequent interim period of that financial year,
the original estimate is changed in the subsequent
interim period either by accrual of an additional
amount of loss or by reversal of the previously
recognised amount;
-
a cost that does not
meet the definition of an asset at the end of an
interim period is not deferred on the balance sheet
date either to await future information as to whether
it has met the definition of an asset or to smooth
earnings over interim periods within a financial
year; and
-
income tax expense is
recognised in each interim period based on the best
estimate of the weighted average annual effective
income tax rate expected for the full financial
year. Amounts accrued for income tax expense in
one interim period may have to be adjusted in a
subsequent interim period of that financial year
if the estimate of the annual effective income tax
rate changes.
|
| 30. |
Under the
Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of Financial
Statements, recognition is the “process of incorporating
in the balance sheet or statement of profit and loss
an item that meets the definition of an element and
satisfies the criteria for recognition”. The definitions
of assets, liabilities, income, and expenses are fundamental
to recognition, both at annual and interim financial
reporting dates.
|
| 31. |
For assets,
the same tests of future economic benefits apply at
interim dates as they apply at the end of an enterprise’s
financial year. Costs that, by their nature, would not
qualify as assets at financial year end would not qualify
at interim dates as well. Similarly, a liability at
an interim reporting date must represent an existing
obligation at that date, just as it must at an annual
reporting date.
|
| 32. |
Income is
recognised in the statement of profit and loss when
an increase in future economic benefits related to an
increase in an asset or a decrease of a liability has
arisen that can be measured reliably. Expenses are recognised
in the statement of profit and loss when a decrease
in future economic benefits related to a decrease in
an asset or an increase of a liability has arisen that
can be measured reliably. The recognition of items in
the balance sheet which do not meet the definition of
assets or liabilities is not allowed.
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| 33. |
In measuring
assets, liabilities, income, expenses, and cash flows
reported in its financial statements, an enterprise
that reports only annually is able to take into account
information that becomes available throughout the financial
year. Its measurements are, in effect, on a year-to-date
basis.
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| 34. |
An enterprise
that reports half-yearly, uses information available
by mid-year or shortly thereafter in making the measurements
in its financial statements for the first six-month
period and information available by year-end or shortly
thereafter for the twelve-month period. The twelve-month
measurements will reflect any changes in estimates of
amounts reported for the first six-month period. The
amounts reported in the interim financial report for
the first six-month period are not retrospectively adjusted.
Paragraphs 16(d) and 25 require, however, that the nature
and amount of any significant changes in estimates be
disclosed.
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| 35. |
An enterprise
that reports more frequently than half-yearly, measures
income and expenses on a year-to-date basis for each
interim period using information available when each
set of financial statements is being prepared. Amounts
of income and expenses reported in the current interim
period will reflect any changes in estimates of amounts
reported in prior interim periods of the financial year.
The amounts reported in prior interim periods are not
retrospectively adjusted. Paragraphs 16(d) and 25 require,
however, that the nature and amount of any significant
changes in estimates be disclosed.
|
Revenues Received
Seasonally or Occasionally
|
| 36. |
Revenues
that are received seasonally or occasionally within
a financial year should not be anticipated or deferred
as of an interim date if anticipation or deferral would
not be appropriate at the end of the enterprise’s financial
year.
|
| 37. |
Examples include
dividend revenue, royalties, and government grants.
Additionally, some enterprises consistently earn more
revenues in certain interim periods of a financial year
than in other interim periods, for example, seasonal
revenues of retailers. Such revenues are recognised
when they occur.
|
Costs Incurred
Unevenly During the Financial Year
|
| 38. |
Costs
that are incurred unevenly during an enterprise’s financial
year should be anticipated or deferred for interim reporting
purposes if, and only if, it is also appropriate to
anticipate or defer that type of cost at the end of
the financial year.
|
Applying the Recognition
and Measurement principles
|
| 39. |
Appendix 3
provides examples of applying the general recognition
and measurement principles set out in paragraphs 27
to 38.
|
Use of Estimates
|
| 40. |
The measurement procedures
to be followed in an interim financial report should be
designed to ensure that the resulting information is reliable
and that all material financial information that is relevant
to an understanding of the financial position or performance
of the enterprise is appropriately disclosed. While measurements
in both annual and interim financial reports are often
based on reasonable estimates, the preparation of interim
financial reports generally will require a greater use
of estimation methods than annual financial reports.
|
| 41. |
Appendix 4 provides examples
of the use of estimates in interim periods.
|
Restatement of
Previously Reported Interim Periods
|
| 42. |
A change
in accounting policy, other than one for which the transition
is specified by an Accounting Standard, should be reflected
by restating the financial statements of prior interim
periods of the current financial year.
|
| 43. |
One objective
of the preceding principle is to ensure that a single
accounting policy is applied to a particular class of
transactions throughout an entire financial year. The
effect of the principle in paragraph 42 is to require
that within the current financial year any change in
accounting policy be applied retrospectively to the
beginning of the financial year.
|
Transitional Provision
|
| 44. |
On the first
occasion that an interim financial report is presented
in accordance with this Statement, the following need
not be presented in respect of all the interim periods
of the current financial year:
-
comparative statements
of profit and loss for the comparable interim periods
(current and year-to-date) of the immediately preceding
financial year; and
-
comparative cash flow
statement for the comparable year-to-date period
of the immediately preceding financial year.
|
Appendix 1
|
Illustrative Format
of Condensed Financial Statements
|
| This
Appendix, which is illustrative and does not form part
of the Accounting Standard, provides illustrative format
of condensed financial statements. The purpose of the
appendix is to illustrate the application of the Accounting
Standard to assist in clarifying its meaning.
Paragraph 11 of the Accounting Standard provides that
if an enterprise prepares and presents a set of condensed
financial statements in its interim financial report,
those condensed statements should include, at a minimum,
each of the headings and sub-headings that were included
in its most recent annual financial statements and the
selected explanatory notes as required by the Standard.
Additional line items or notes should be included if
their omission would make the condensed interim financial
statements misleading.
The purpose of the following illustrative format is
primarily to illustrate the requirements of paragraph
11 of the Standard. It may be noted that these illustrative
formats are subject to the requirements laid down in
the Standard including those of paragraph 11.
|
| Illustrative Format
of Condensed Financial Statements for an enterprise other
than a bank |
| (A)
Condensed Balance Sheet |