MFRS140 Investment Property
MFRS140 Investment Property
MFRS140 Investment Property
LEARNING OUTCOME
AT THE END OF THIS TOPIC, YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO:
Investment Property
Property – (LAND or BUILDING - or part of building -
or both) held to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or
both, not for:
use in the production or supply of goods or services or for
administrative purposes, or
sale in the ordinary course of business.
Held for long-term capital appreciation rather than for short-term sale in the
ordinary course of business
Held for a currently undetermined future use.(if an entity is undecided whether
it will use the land as owner-occupied property or for short-term sale in the
ordinary course of business, the land is regarded as held for capital
appreciation.
Owned by the entity and leased out under one or more operating leases
Being constructed or developed for future use as investment property
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Example:
• In this case, New Bhd shall apply its judgement to determine whether the
criteria for investment property are met or whether the property is more of
an owner-occupied property. New Bhd may conclude that the 12 storey of
building as investment property, while the storeys be classified as owner –
occupied property as stream of cash flows is more rental cash flows .
• The building rental out is an item of investment property for New Bhd and
accounted for under MFRS 140 while the owner-occupied property is
accounted under MFRS 116
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An entity owns a building that it rents out to independent third parties under
operating leases in return for rental payments. The entity provides cleaning,
security and maintenance services for the lessees of the building.
Can the building be considered as an asset under invesment
property ?
Answer:
• If the services provided by the entity are insignificant to the arrangement as
a whole, the the property is investment property. In most cases cleaning,
security and maintenance services will be insignificant and hence the
building would be classified as investment property.
• When the services provided are significant the property should be classified
as property, plant and equipment. For example, if an entity owns and
manages a hotel, services provided to guests are significant to the
arrangement as a whole.
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An entity ( parent) owns a building that it rents out to its subsidiary under an
operating lease in return for rental payment. The subsidiary uses the building
as a retail outlet for its products.
Can the building be considered as an asset under invesment
property ?
Answer:
In the consolidated financial statements of the parent the building is not
classified as an item of investment property. The consolidated financial
statements present the parent and its subsidiariary as a single entity. The
consolidated entity uses the building for the supply of goods. Thefore the
building is accounted for by the consolidated group as an item of property,
plant and equipment.
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It is probable that the future economic benefits (rental income and appreciation in the value) that
are associated with the investment property will flow to entity, and
Initial Measurement
Sate Bhd also incurs the following costs in connection with the purchase of the property.
Legal and agency fees RM2,000,000
Soft launching cost to market for tenants RM300,000
Feng Shui cost for re-arrangements of interiors RM150,000
General administrative expenses RM100,000
Required:
Determine the cost of the investment property on initial recognition.
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Answer:
Purchase price RM80,000,000
Transaction costs – legal and agency fees RM2,000,000
Total costs RM82,000,000
Cost Model
Any gain or loss arising from a change in fair value is recognized in SOCI for
the period in which it arises.
A willing seller is not over-eager, not forced to sell at any price, not one who is
prepared to hold out for a price not considered reasonable in current market
conditions
An entity must ensure that assets and liabilities are not double-counted:
Equipments – lifts or air conditioning – included in the fair value is not recognized
separately as property, plant and equipment
Furniture included in the fair value of an office building is not recognized separately as
property, plant and equipment
Any recognized lease liability is added back to determine the carrying amount
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Example:
Questions
Journal entries:
Questions
1. Explain the accounting treatment on 1 July 2010, 30 June 2011 and 30 June
2012
2. Show the journal entries on 1 July 2010, 30 June 2011 and 30 June 2012.
3. Prepare SOCI (extract) FTYE 30 June 2011 and 30 June 2012
4. Prepare SOFP (extract) as at 30 June 2011 and 30 June 2012
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The carrying amount of the building on 30 June 2011 and 2012 is RM4,500,000 and RM4,100,000
respectively.
Consequently, changes in the fair value of the investment property will be recognized in SOPL.
RM1,500,000 (4.5M-3.0M) is credited as income for the year ended 30 June 2011 and RM400,000
(4.1M-4.5M) is treated as expense for year ended 30 June 2012.The building is not depreciated by
using this fair value model.
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2011 2012
Change in fair value of IP RM1,500,000 RM400,000
(income) (expense)
2011 2012
Investment property RM4,500,000 RM 4,100,000
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MFRS116 PPE to End of owner For investment property carried at fair value
MFRS140 IP occupation model, apply MFRS116 up to the date of
(accounted as change in use. Any difference at that date
fair value model) between the carrying amount of the property
under MFRS116 and its fair value should be
treated the same way as a revaluation under
MFRS116.
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On 1 January 2009, Lalai Bhd acquired a building for rental purposes at a cost of
RM4,000,000. The building has an estimated useful life of 40 years. On 1 January
2011, the fair value of the building was RM3,610,000. On 1 January 2014, the
building was used as its head office and the fair value of the building on this date
was RM4,200,000.
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Questions
OR
On 1 January 2009, Lalai Bhd acquired a building for rental purposes at a cost of
RM4,000,000. The building has an estimated useful life of 40 years. On 1 January
2011, the fair value of the building was RM3,610,000. On 1 January 2014, the
building was used as its head office and the fair value of the building on this date
was RM4,200,000.
Required:
1. Explain the accounting treatment on the date of transfer (1.1.2014)
2. Show the journal entries on 1 January 2014.
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Required:
1. Explain the accounting treatment on the date of transfer (1.1.2014)
2. Show the journal entries on 1 January 2014.
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Accounting treatment
If Selesa Bhd adopts the cost model for its MFRS116 owner occupied property,
the initial cost of the MFRS140 investment property shall be the carrying
amount of the property on the date of transfer (1 January 2014) of
RM6,400,000. (8,000,000 – (8,000,000/40 x 8)
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OR
Dr. MFRS140 IP RM6,400,000
Cr. MFRS116 Building RM6,400,000
On 1 January 2006 – Selesa Bhd acquired a building for own use at a cost of
RM8,000,000. The building was depreciated on a straight-line basis over 40 years.
On 1 January 2014, the fair value of the building was RM8,400,000. On this date,
the building was rented out to non-related organizations.
Required:
1. Explain the accounting treatment on the date of transfer (1.1.2014)
2. Show the journal entries on 1 January 2014.
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Accounting treatment
The building is treated as investment property under MFRS 140 on
1 January 2014, and is measured at the fair value of RM8,400,000.
Any difference between the property’s carrying amount and its fair
value is treated as revaluation under MFRS 116.
Disclosure
An entity shall disclose:
Whether the fair value model or cost model has been applied
Fair value model- reconciliation of carrying amount at beginning and end of
period
Cost model – depreciation method, useful lives, gross carrying amount and
accumulated depreciation at beginning and end of period
Criteria it uses to distinguish investment property from owner occupied
property
Methods and assumptions used to determine fair value
Rental income, operating expenses and changes in fair value