Notes To The Financial Statements
Notes To The Financial Statements
Notes To The Financial Statements
present information about the basis of preparation of the financial statements and the specific
accounting policies used
disclose any information required by IFRSs that is not presented elsewhere in the financial
statements and
provide additional information that is not presented elsewhere in the financial statements but is
relevant to an understanding of any of them
Notes should be cross-referenced from the face of the financial statements to the relevant note.
PAS 1.114 suggests that the notes should normally be presented in the following order:
a statement of compliance with IFRSs
a summary of significant accounting policies applied, including:
o the measurement basis (or bases) used in preparing the financial statements
o the other accounting policies used that are relevant to an understanding of the financial
statements
supporting information for items presented on the face of the statement of financial position
(balance sheet), statement of comprehensive income (and income statement, if presented),
statement of changes in equity and statement of cash flows, in the order in which each
statement and each line item is presented other disclosures, including:
o contingent liabilities (see IAS 37) and unrecognised contractual commitments
o non-financial disclosures, such as the entity's financial risk management objectives and
policies (see IFRS 7)
Disclosure of judgements. New in the 2003 revision to IAS 1, an entity must disclose, in the summary of
significant accounting policies or other notes, the judgments, apart from those involving estimations,
that management has made in the process of applying the entity's accounting policies that have the
most significant effect on the amounts recognised in the financial statements.
Disclosure of key sources of estimation uncertainty. Also new in the 2003 revision to IAS 1, an entity
must disclose, in the notes, information about the key assumptions concerning the future, and other key
sources of estimation uncertainty at the end of the reporting period, that have a significant risk of
causing a material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities within the next financial
year. These disclosures do not involve disclosing budgets or forecasts.
The following other note disclosures are required by IAS 1.126 if not disclosed elsewhere in information
published with the financial statements:
Other disclosures
In addition to the distributions information in the statement of changes in equity (see above), the
following must be disclosed in the notes: [IAS 1.137] " the amount of dividends proposed or declared
before the financial statements were authorised for issue but not recognised as a distribution to owners
during the period, and the related amount per share and " the amount of any cumulative preference
dividends not recognised.
Capital disclosures
An entity should disclose information about its objectives, policies and processes for managing capital.
[IAS 1.134] To comply with this, the disclosures include:
qualitative information about the entity's objectives, policies and processes for managing
capital, including:
o description of capital it manages o nature of external capital requirements, if any o
how it is meeting its objectives
o quantitative data about what the entity regards as capital changes from one period
to another
o whether the entity has complied with any external capital requirements and
o if it has not complied, the consequences of such non-compliance.
IAS 1.136A requires the following additional disclosures if an entity has a puttable instrument that is
classified as an equity instrument:
summary quantitative data about the amount classified as equity
the entity's objectives, policies and processes for managing its obligation to repurchase or
redeem the instruments when required to do so by the instrument holders, including any
changes from the previous period
the expected cash outflow on redemption or repurchase of that class of financial instruments
and
information about how the expected cash outflow on redemption or repurchase was
determined.
Terminology
The 2007 comprehensive revision to IAS 1 introduced some new terminology. Consequential
amendments were made at that time to all of the other existing IFRSs, and the new terminology has
been used in subsequent IFRSs including amendments. IAS 1.8 states: "Although this Standard uses the
terms 'other comprehensive income', 'profit or loss' and 'total comprehensive income', an entity may
use other terms to describe the totals as long as the meaning is clear. For example, an entity may use
the term 'net income' to describe profit or loss." Also, IAS 1.57(b) states: "The descriptions used and the
ordering of items or aggregation of similar items may be amended according to the nature of the entity
and its transactions, to provide information that is relevant to an understanding of the entity's financial
position."
Term before 2007 revision of IAS 1 Term as amended by IAS 1 (2007)
balance sheet statement of financial position
cash flow statement statement of cash flows
income statement statement of comprehensive income(income
statement is retained in case of a two-
statement approach)
recognised in the income statement recognised in profit or loss
recognised [directly] in equity
(only for OCI components) recognised in other comprehensive income
recognised [directly] in equity (for recognised outside profit or loss
recognition both in OCI and equity) (either in OCI or equity)
removed from equity and recognised in reclassified from equity to profit or loss
profit or loss ('recycling') as a reclassification adjustment
Standard or/and Interpretation IFRSs
on the face of In
equity holders owners (exception for 'ordinary equity holders')
balance sheet date end of the reporting period
reporting date end of the reporting period
after the balance sheet date after the reporting period
On 16 June 2011, the IASB published amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements. The
amendments to IAS 1 retain the 'one or two statement' approach at the option of the entity and only
revise the way other comprehensive income is presented: requiring separate subtotals for those
elements which may be 'recycled' (e.g. cash-flow hedging, foreign currency translation), and those
elements that will not (e.g. fair value through OCI items under IFRS 9).