Ifrs 9 - New Accounting Model For Financial Instruments (To Replace IAS-39)
Ifrs 9 - New Accounting Model For Financial Instruments (To Replace IAS-39)
Ifrs 9 - New Accounting Model For Financial Instruments (To Replace IAS-39)
Page 2
Reasons for replacement of IAS-39
Page 3
Development of IFRS 9
Page 4
Adoption of IFRS 9 in Pakistan
13 Hedge Accounting
Page 5
IFRS 9
Classification and
Measurement of
Financial Assets
Overview
IFRS-9 Conceptual Foundation
Page 7
Existing Classification Requirements
Page 8
Classification of Equity Portfolio
Equity Investments
Trading Non-Trading
Investments Investments
Irrevocable
Fair Value through Fair Value through
Option
profit and loss OCI
Page 9
Classification of Equity Portfolio
Disposal; or
Impairment
Realized gain / losses on AFS equity investments may
no longer be recognized through the P&L account
Debt Instruments
Page 11
Classification of Debt Portfolio (Continued)
Debt instruments
Cash flows are solely payment of Principal and Interest
Page 12
Business Model Test
Page 13
Impact of IFRS 9 on Debt Instruments accounted
for under SBP Regulations
► Considering the stringent (SPPI test) of IFRS-9, non-basic
instruments such as certain equity-convertible debt instruments
will not qualify for ‘Amortized cost’
Page 14
IFRS 9 Impairment
Overview
Why the new IFRS 9 Impairment model?
Page 16
IFRS 9 Impairment Overview
Page 17
Incurred Loan Model under IAS-39
Page 18
Expected Loss Model of IFRS 9
Page 19
Staging of Portfolios for Determination of
Credit Loss Provision
The credit risk has increased significantly since initial recognition
improvement deterioration
12-month
Allowance:
expected credit Lifetime expected credit losses
losses
Criterion: +
Objective evidence
of impairment
Interest
Gross carrying Gross carrying
Gross carrying Net carrying
revenue
amount amount
amount amount
based on:
Page 20
Staging Approach
► Information to take into account for assessment of increased
credit risk
However….
Page 21
ECL Methodology
► An entity’s estimate of expected credit losses must reflect:
► the best available information – historical and forward looking
► an unbiased and probability-weighted estimate of cash flows
associated with a range of possible outcomes (including at least
the possibility that a credit loss occurs and the possibility that no
credit loss occurs).
► the time value of money
► Various approaches can be used.
► For the purposes of estimating ECL, credit exposure may be
grouped based on shared credit risk characteristics such as
industry, collateral type, nature of facility, credit risk ratings etc. This
collective assessment is particularly relevant for retail portfolios.
Page 22
Elements of Credit Loss Determination
1 2 3
Page 23
Key Challenges
Page 24
Business Impact
Page 25
Potential benefits
Page 26
Basel III -
Regulatory
Treatment of
Accounting
Provisions
Basel III – Regulatory Treatment of Accounting
Provisions
► The IRB regulatory EL estimates use a 12 month ECL. IFRS 9
uses a 12 month ECL in Stage 1 and a lifetime ECL in Stages
2 and 3.
Page 28
Basel III – Regulatory Treatment of Accounting
Provisions (Cont…)
► The Basel Committee is supportive of the ECL provisioning
approach and has considered implications on regulatory
capital
► The Basel Committee intends to harmonize regulatory
treatment of accounting provisions for capital adequacy
purposes, which may result in Standardized EL component
under the Standard Credit Risk Approach
► The Basel Committee has recently released a consultative
document on the policy considerations related to the
regulatory treatment of accounting provisions under the Basel
III capital framework
Page 29
IFRS 9
Key
Considerations
Key Considerations for IFRS 9 implementation
Governance
Impact on the Capital
– policies, systems and
Adequacy ratios
oversight
Operational requirements
Treatment of IFRS 9 loan
of the Expected Credit
loss provisions for tax
Loss model – historic data
purposes
and systems
Page 31
End Note
Page 32
Thank You