Wednesday, December 22, 2010

IAS 25

Accounting Standard (AS) 25

(issued 2002)

Interim Financial Reporting

Contents

OBJECTIVE

SCOPE Paragraphs 1-3

DEFINITIONS 4-5

CONTENT OF AN INTERIM FINANCIAL REPORT 6-23

Minimum Components of an Interim Financial Report 9

Form and Content of Interim Financial Statements 10-14

Selected Explanatory Notes 15-17

Periods for which Interim Financial Statements are

required to be presented 18-20

Materiality 21-23

DISCLOSURE IN ANNUAL FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 24-26

RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT 27-41

Same Accounting Policies as Annual 27-35

Revenues Received Seasonally or Occasionally 36-37

Costs Incurred Unevenly During the Financial Year 38

Applying the Recognition and Measurement principles 39

Use of Estimates 40-41

Continued../. .

Interim Financial Reporting 474171

RESTATEMENT OF PREVIOUSLY REPORTED INTERIM

PERIODS 42-43

TRANSITIONAL PROVISION 44

APPENDICES

The following Accounting Standards Interpretation (ASI) relates to AS 25:

 ASI 27 - Applicability of AS 25 to Interim Financial Results

The above Interpretation is published elsewhere in this Compendium.

472 AS 25 (issued 2002)

Accounting Standard (AS) 25*

(issued 2002)

InterimFinancialReporting

(This Accounting Standard includes paragraphs set in bold italic type

and plain type, which have equal authority. Paragraphs in bold italic

type indicate the main principles. This Accounting Standard should be

read in the context of its objective and the Preface to the Statements of

Accounting Standards1.)

Accounting Standard (AS) 25, 'Interim Financial Reporting', 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. If an

enterprise is required or elects to prepare and present an interim financial

report, it should comply with this Standard.2 The following is the text of the

Accounting Standard.

Objective

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 interimfinancial 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.

* Two limited revisions to this Standard have been made in 2004 (one in March

2004 and another in June 2004). Pursuant to the limited revision made in March

2004, paragraph 16 of this Standard has been revised (see footnote 4). Pursuant

to the limited revision made in June 2004, paragraph 29(c) and certain paragraphs

of Appendix 3 to this Standard have been revised to omit the word ‘effective’

at certain places with a view to align the drafting of the Standard with the

corresponding IAS.

1 Attention is specifically drawn to paragraph 4.3 of the Preface, according to which

Accounting Standards are intended to apply only to items which are material.

2 Reference may be made to the section titled ‘Announcements of the Council

regarding status of various documents issued by the Institute of Chartered

Accountants of India’ appearing at the beginning of this Compendium for a detailed

discussion on the implications of the mandatory status of an accounting standard.

Scope

Interim Financial Reporting 473

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.

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 formand/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

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.

3 See also Accounting Standards Interpretation (ASI) 27, published elsewhere in

this Compendium.

474 AS 25 (issued 2002)

Content of an InterimFinancialReport

6. A complete set of financial statements normally includes:

(a) balance sheet;

(b) statement of profit and loss;

(c) cash flow statement; and

(d) notes including those relating to accounting policies and other

statements and explanatory material that are an integral part of

the financial statements.

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 interimdates as compared with

its annual financial statements. The benefit of timeliness of presentationmay

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 interimfinancial statements,more than theminimumline 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 interimperiod, and such statementswould 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

Interim Financial Reporting 475

following components:

(a) condensed balance sheet;

(b) condensed statement of profit and loss;

(c) condensed cash flow statement; and

(d) 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.

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.

14. Appendix 1 provides illustrative formats of condensed financial

statements.

476 AS 25 (issued 2002)

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 interimfinancial 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.

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) 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;

(b) explanatory comments about the seasonality of interim

operations;

(c) 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);

(d) 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;

(e) issuances, buy-backs, repayments and restructuring of debt,

equity and potential equity shares;

(f) dividends, aggregate or per share (in absolute or percentage

terms), separately for equity shares and other shares;

Interim Financial Reporting 477

(g) 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);

(h) material events subsequent to the end of the interim period

that have not been reflected in the financial statements for

the interim period;4

(i) 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

(j) material changes in contingent liabilities since the last

annual balance sheet date.

The above information should normally be reported on a financial yearto-

date basis. However, the enterprise should also disclose any events

or transactions that are material to an understanding of the current

interim period.

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.

4 The Council of the Institute decided to make a limited revision to AS 25 in 2004,

pursuant to which this sub-paragraph has been added in paragraph 16 of AS 25.

This revision comes into effect in respect of accounting periods commencing on or

after 1.4.2004 (see ‘The Chartered Accountant’, March 2004, pp. 1021).

478 AS 25 (issued 2002)

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:

(a) 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;

(b) 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;

(c) 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.

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.

20. Appendix 2 illustrates the periods required to be presented by an

enterprise that reports half-yearly and an enterprise that reports quarterly.

Materiality

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

Interim Financial Reporting 479

“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”.

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.

Disclosure inAnnualFinancial 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 inventorywrite-downs, restructurings, or impairment losses

that were reported in an earlier interim period of the financial year. The

480 AS 25 (issued 2002)

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.

Recognition andMeasurement

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 yearto-

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 interimperiods of

the current financial year.But the principles for recognising assets, liabilities,

income, and expenses for interimperiods are the same as in annual financial

statements.

29. To illustrate:

(a) 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

followif 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 Financial Reporting 481

interimperiod either by accrual of an additional amount of loss or

by reversal of the previously recognised amount;

(b) 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

(c) income tax expense is recognised in each interimperiod based on

the best estimate of the weighted average annual 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 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 itemthatmeets 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.

33. In measuring assets, liabilities, income, expenses, and cash flows

reported in its financial statements, an enterprise that reports only annually is

482 AS 25 (issued 2002)

able to take into account information that becomes available throughout the

financial year. Its measurements are, in effect, on a year-to-date basis.

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 yearend

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.

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

interimperiods of a financial year than in other interimperiods, 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

Interim Financial Reporting 483

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 PreviouslyReported 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 thatwithin the current financial year any change in accounting policy

be applied retrospectively to the beginning of the financial year.

TransitionalProvision

44. On the first occasion that an interim financial report is presented in

484 AS 25 (issued 2002)

accordance with this Statement, the following need not be presented in

respect of all the interim periods of the current financial year:

(a) comparative statements of profit and loss for the comparable

interim periods (current and year-to-date) of the immediately

preceding financial year; and

(b) comparative cash flow statement for the comparable year-todate

period of the immediately preceding financial year.

Appendix 1

Interim Financial Reporting 485

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.

486 AS 25 (issued 2002)

Illustrative Format of Condensed Financial Statements for

an enterprise other than a bank

(A) Condensed Balance Sheet

Figures at the

end of the

current interim

period

Figures at the

end of the

previous

accounting year

I. Sources of Funds

1. Capital

2. Reserve and surplus

3. Minority interests (in case of

consolidated financial

statements)

4. Loan funds:

(a) Secured loans

(b) Unsecured loans

Total

II. Application of Funds

1. Fixed assets

(a) Tangible fixed assets

(b) Intangible fixed assets

2. Investments

3. Current assets, loans and

advances

(a) Inventories

(b) Sundry debtors

(c) Cash and bank balances

(d) Loans and advances

(e) Others

Less: Current liabilities and

provisions

(a) Liabilities

(b) Provisions

Net Current assets

4. Miscellaneous expenditure

to the extent not written off

or adjusted

5. Profit and loss account

Total

Interim Financial Reporting 487

(B) Condensed Statement of Profit and Loss

Three

months

ended

Corresponding

three months of

the previous

accounting year

Year-to-date

figures for

current

period

Year-to-date

figures for

the previous

year

1. Turnover

2. Other Income

Total

3. Changes in inventories

of finished goods and

work in progress

4. Cost of raw materials

and consumables used

5. Salaries, wages and

other staff costs

6. Other expenses

7. Interest

8. Depreciation and

amortisations

Total

9. Profit or loss from

ordinary activities

before tax

10. Extraordinary items

11. Profit or loss before tax

12.Tax expense

13. Profit or loss after tax

14. Minority Interests

(in case of consolidated

financial statements)

15. Net profit or loss for

the period

Earnings Per Share

1. Basic Earnings

Per Share

2. Diluted Earnings

Per Share

488 AS 25 (issued 2002)

(C) Condensed Cash Flow Statement

Year-to-date

figures for the

current period

Year-to-date

figures for the

previous year

1. Cash flows from operating

activities

2. Cash flows from investing

activities

3. Cash flows from financing

activities

4. Net increase/(decrease)

in cash and cash

equivalents

5. Cash and cash equivalents

at beginning of period

6. Cash and cash equivalents

at end of period

(D) Selected ExplanatoryNotes

This part should contain selected explanatory notes as required by paragraph

16 of this Statement.

Interim Financial Reporting 489

Illustrative Format of Condensed Financial Statements for

a Bank

(A) Condensed Balance Sheet

Figures at the

end of the

current interim

period

Figures at the

end of the

previous

accounting year

I. Capital and Liabilities

1. Capital

2. Reserve and surplus

3. Minority interests

(in case of consolidated

financial statements)

4. Deposits

5. Borrowings

6. Other liabilities and

provisions

Total

II. Assets

1. Cash and balances with

Reserve Bank of India

2. Balances with banks and

money at call and short

notice

3. Investments

4. Advances

5. Fixed assets

(a) Tangible fixed assets

(b) Intangible fixed assets

6. Other Assets

Total

490 AS 25 (issued 2002)

(B) Condensed Statement of Profit and Loss

Three

months

ended

Corresponding

threemonthsof

theprevious

accountingyear

Year-to-date

figuresfor

current

period

Year-to-date

figuresfor

theprevious

year

1. Interest earned

(a) Interest/discount on

advances/bills

(b) Interest on

Investments

(c) Interest on balances

with Reserve Bank

of India and other

inter banks funds

(d) Others

2. Other Income

Total Income

1. Interest expended

2. Operating expenses

(a) Payments to and

provisions for

employees

(b) Other operating

expenses

3. Total expenses

(excluding provisions

and contingencies)

4. Operating profit (profit

before provisions and

contingencies)

5. Provisions and

contingencies

6. Profit or loss from

ordinary activities

before tax

7. Extraordinary items

8. Profit or loss before tax

9. Tax expense

Interim Financial Reporting 491

(B) Condensed Statement of Profit and Loss (Contd.)

Three

months

ended

Corresponding

threemonthsof

theprevious

accountingyear

Year-to-date

figuresfor

current

period

Year-to-date

figuresfor

theprevious

year

10. Profit or loss after tax

11. Minority Interests

(in case of consolidated

financial statements)

12. Net profit or loss for

the period

Earnings Per Share

1. Basic Earnings

Per Share

2. Diluted Earnings

Per Share

(C) Condensed Cash Flow Statement

Year-to-date

figures for the

current period

Year-to-date

figures for the

previous year

1. Cash flows from operating

activities

2. Cash flows from investing

activities

3. Cash flows from financing

activities

4. Net increase/(decrease)

in cash and cash

equivalents

5. Cash and cash equivalents

at beginning of period

6. Cash and cash equivalents

at end of period

(D) Selected ExplanatoryNotes

This part should contain selected explanatory notes as required by paragraph

16 of this Statement.

492 AS 25 (issued 2002)

Appendix 2

Illustration of Periods Required to Be Presented

This Appendix, which is illustrative and does not form part of the

Accounting Standard, provides examples to illustrate application of the

principles in paragraphs 18 and 19. The purpose of the appendix is to

illustrate the application of the Accounting Standard to assist in

clarifying its meaning.

Enterprise Preparing and Presenting Interim Financial Reports

Half-Yearly

1. An enterprise whose financial year ends on 31 March, presents

financial statements (condensed or complete) for following periods in its

half-yearly interim financial report as of 30 September 2001:

Balance Sheet:

As at 30 September 2001 31 March 2001

Statement of Profit and Loss:

6 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

Cash Flow Statement5:

6 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

Enterprise Preparing and Presenting Interim Financial Reports

Quarterly

2. An enterprise whose financial year ends on 31 March, presents

financial statements (condensed or complete) for following periods in its

interim financial report for the second quarter ending 30 September 2001:

5 It is assumed that the enterprise prepares a cash flow statement for the purpose

of its Annual Report.

Interim Financial Reporting 493

Balance Sheet:

As at 30 September 2001 31 March 2001

Statement of Profit and Loss:

6 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

3 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

Cash Flow Statement:

6 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

Enterprise whose business is highly seasonal Preparing and

Presenting Interim Financial Reports Quarterly

3. An enterprise whose financial year ends on 31 March, may present

financial statements (condensed or complete) for the following periods

in its interim financial report for the second quarter ending 30

September

2001:

Balance Sheet:

As at 30 September 2001 31 March 2001

30 September 2000

Statement of Profit and Loss:

6 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

3 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

12 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

Cash Flow Statement:

6 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

12 months ending 30 September 2001 30 September 2000

494 AS 25 (issued 2002)

Appendix 3

Examples ofApplying theRecognition andMeasurement

Principles

This Appendix, which is illustrative and does not form part of the

Accounting Standard, provides examples of applying the general

recognition and measurement principles set out in paragraphs 27-38 of

this Standard. The purpose of the appendix is to illustrate the

application of the Accounting Standard to assist in clarifying its

meaning.

Gratuity and Other Defined Benefit Schemes

1. Provisions in respect of gratuity and other defined benefit schemes for

an interim period are calculated on a year-to-date basis by using the

actuarially determined rates at the end of the prior financial year, adjusted

for significant market fluctuations since that time and for significant

curtailments, settlements, or other significant one-time events.

Major Planned Periodic Maintenance or Overhaul

2. The cost of a major planned periodic maintenance or overhaul or other

seasonal expenditure that is expected to occur late in the year is not

anticipated for interim reporting purposes unless an event has caused the

enterprise to have a present obligation. The mere intention or necessity to

incur expenditure related to the future is not sufficient to give rise to an

obligation.

Provisions

3. This Statement requires that an enterprise apply the same criteria for

recognising and measuring a provision at an interim date as it would at the

end of its financial year. The existence or non-existence of an obligation to

transfer economic benefits is not a function of the length of the reporting

period. It is a question of fact subsisting on the reporting date.

Year-End Bonuses

4. The nature of year-end bonuses varies widely. Some are earned simply

Interim Financial Reporting 495

by continued employment during a time period. Some bonuses are earned

based on monthly, quarterly, or annual measure of operating result. They

may be purely discretionary, contractual, or based on years of

historical precedent.

5. A bonus is anticipated for interim reporting purposes if, and only if, (a)

the bonus is a legal obligation or an obligation arising from past practice for

which the enterprise has no realistic alternative but to make the payments,

and (b) a reliable estimate of the obligation can be made.

Intangible Assets

6. An enterprise will apply the definition and recognition criteria for an

intangible asset in the same way in an interim period as in an annual period.

Costs incurred before the recognition criteria for an intangible asset are met

are recognised as an expense. Costs incurred after the specific point in time

at which the criteria are met are recognised as part of the cost of an

intangible asset. "Deferring" costs as assets in an interim balance sheet in

the hope that the recognition criteria will be met later in the financial year is

not justified.

Other Planned but Irregularly Occurring Costs

7. An enterprise's budget may include certain costs expected to be

incurred irregularly during the financial year, such as employee training

costs. These costs generally are discretionary even though they are planned

and tend to recur from year to year. Recognising an obligation at an interim

financial reporting date for such costs that have not yet been incurred

generally is not consistent with the definition of a liability.

Measuring Income Tax Expense for Interim Period

8. Interim period income tax expense is accrued using the tax rate that

would be applicable to expected total annual earnings, that is, the estimated

average annual effective income tax rate applied to the pre-tax income of

the interim period.

9. This is consistent with the basic concept set out in paragraph 27 that the

same accounting recognition and measurement principles should be applied

in an interim financial report as are applied in annual financial statements.

Income taxes are assessed on an annual basis. Therefore, interim period

496 AS 25 (issued 2002)

income tax expense is calculated by applying, to an interim period's pre-tax

income, the tax rate that would be applicable to expected total annual

earnings, that is, the estimated average effective annual income tax rate.

That estimated average annual income tax rate would reflect the tax rate

structure expected to be applicable to the full year's earnings including

enacted or substantively enacted changes in the income tax rates scheduled

to take effect later in the financial year. The estimated average annual

income tax rate would be re-estimated on a year-to-date basis, consistent

with paragraph 27 of this Statement. Paragraph 16(d) requires disclosure of

a significant change in estimate.

10. To the extent practicable, a separate estimated average annual effective

income tax rate is determined for each governing taxation law and applied

individuallytotheinterimperiodpre-taxincomeunder suchlaws.Similarly, if

different income tax rates apply to different categories of income (such as

capital gains or income earned in particular industries), to the extent

practicable a separate rate is applied to each individual category of interim

period pre-tax income.While that degree of precision is desirable, itmay not

be achievable in all cases, and a weighted average of rates across such

governing taxation laws or across categories of income is used if it is a

reasonable approximation of the effect of using more specific rates.

11. As illustration, an enterprise reports quarterly, earns Rs. 150 lakhs pretax

profit in the first quarter but expects to incur losses of Rs 50 lakhs in each

of the three remaining quarters (thus having zero income for the year), and is

governed by taxation laws according to which its estimated average annual

income tax rate is expected to be 35 per cent. The following table shows the

amount of income tax expense that is reported in each quarter:

Tax

(Amount in Rs. lakhs)

1st 2nd 3rd 4th

Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Annual

Expense 52.5 (17.5) (17.5) (17.5) 0

Difference in Financial Reporting Year and Tax Year

12. If the financial reporting year and the income tax year differ, income

tax expense for the interim periods of that financial reporting year is

measured using separate weighted average estimated effective tax rates for

Tax Expense 30 30 40 40 140

Interim Financial Reporting 497

each of the income tax years applied to the portion of pre-tax income earned

in each of those income tax years.

13. To illustrate, an enterprise's financial reporting year ends 30

September and it reports quarterly. Its year as per taxation laws ends 31

March. For the financial year that begins 1 October, Year 1 ends 30

September of Year 2, the enterprise earns Rs 100 lakhs pre-tax each

quarter. The estimated weighted average annual income tax rate is 30 per

cent in Year 1 and 40 per cent in Year 2.

(Amount in Rs. lakhs)

Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Year

Ending Ending Ending Ending Ending

31 Dec. 31 Mar. 30 June 30 Sep. 30 Sep.

Year 1 Year 1 Year 2 Year 2 Year 2

Tax Deductions/Exemptions

14. Tax statutes may provide deductions/exemptions in computation of

income for determining tax payable. Anticipated tax benefits of this type for

the full year are generally reflected in computing the estimated annual

effective income tax rate, because these deductions/exemptions are

calculated on an annual basis under the usual provisions of tax statutes. On

the other hand, tax benefits that relate to a one-time event are recognised in

computing income tax expense in that interim period, in the same way that

special tax rates applicable to particular categories of income are not blended

into a single effective annual tax rate.

Tax Loss Carryforwards

15. A deferred tax asset should be recognised in respect of carryforward

tax losses to the extent that it is virtually certain, supported by convincing

evidence, that future taxable income will be available against which the

deferred tax assets can be realised. The criteria are to be applied at the end

of each interim period and, if they are met, the effect of the tax loss

carryforward is reflected in the computation of the estimated average annual

effective income tax rate.

498 AS 25 (issued 2002)

16. To illustrate, an enterprise that reports quarterly has an operating loss

carryforward of Rs 100 lakhs for income tax purposes at the start of the

current financial year forwhich a deferred tax asset has not been recognised.

The enterprise earns Rs 100 lakhs in the first quarter of the current year and

expects toearnRs100lakhs ineachof thethreeremainingquarters.Excluding

the loss carryforward, the estimated average annual income tax rate is

expected to be 40 per cent. The estimated payment of the annual tax on Rs.

400 lakhs of earnings for the current year would be Rs. 120 lakhs {(Rs. 400

lakhs - Rs. 100 lakhs) x 40%}. Considering the loss carryforward, the

estimated average annual effective income tax rate would be 30%{(Rs. 120

lakhs/Rs. 400 lakhs) x 100}. This average annual effective income tax rate

would be applied to earnings of each quarter.Accordingly, tax expensewould

be as follows:

(Amount in Rs. lakhs)

1st 2n d 3rd 4th

Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Annual

Tax Expense 30.00 30.00 30.00 30.00 120.00

Contractual or Anticipated Purchase Price Changes

17. Volume rebates or discounts and other contractual changes in the

prices of goods and services are anticipated in interim periods, if it is

probable that they will take effect. Thus, contractual rebates and discounts

are anticipated but discretionary rebates and discounts are not anticipated

because the resulting liabilitywould not satisfy the conditions of recognition,

viz., that a liabilitymust be a present obligationwhose settlement is expected

to result in an outflow of resources.

Depreciation and Amortisation

18. Depreciation and amortisation for an interim period is based only on

assets owned during that interim period. It does not take into account asset

acquisitions or disposals planned for later in the financial year.

Inventories

19. Inventories are measured for interim financial reporting by the same

principles as at financial year end. AS 2 on Valuation of Inventories,

Interim Financial Reporting 499

establishes standards for recognising and measuring inventories.

Inventories pose particular problems at any financial reporting date because

of the need to determine inventory quantities, costs, and net realisable

values. Nonetheless, the same measurement principles are applied for

interim inventories. To save cost and time, enterprises often use estimates to

measure inventories at interim dates to a greater extent than at annual

reporting dates. Paragraph 20 below provides an example of how to apply

the net realisable value test at an interim date.

Net Realisable Value of Inventories

20. The net realisable value of inventories is determined by reference to

selling prices and related costs to complete and sell the inventories. An

enterprise will reverse a write-down to net realisable value in a subsequent

interim period as it would at the end of its financial year.

Foreign Currency Translation Gains and Losses

21. Foreign currency translation gains and losses are measured for interim

financial reporting by the same principles as at financial year end in

accordance with the principles as stipulated in AS 11 on Accounting for the

Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates6 .

Impairment of Assets

22. Accounting Standard on Impairment of Assets7 requires that an

impairment loss be recognised if the recoverable amount has declined below

carrying amount.

23. An enterprise applies the same impairment tests, recognition, and

reversal criteria at an interim date as it would at the end of its financial year.

That does not mean, however, that an enterprise must necessarily make a

detailed impairment calculation at the end of each interimperiod. Rather, an

enterprise will assess the indications of significant impairment since the end

of the most recent financial year to determine whether such a calculation is

needed.

6 AS 11 has been revised in 2003, and titled as ‘The Effects of Changes in Foreign

Exchanges Rates’. The revised Standard is published elsewhere in this

Compendium.

7 Accounting Standard (AS) 28, ‘Impairment of Assets’, specifies the requirements

relating to impairment of assets.

500 AS 25 (issued 2002)

Appendix 4

Examples of the Use of Estimates

This Appendix, which is illustrative and does not form part of the

Accounting Standard, provides examples to illustrate application of the

principles in this Standard. The purpose of the appendix is to illustrate

the application of the Accounting Standard to assist in clarifying its

meaning.

1. Provisions: Determination of the appropriate amount of a provision

(such as a provision for warranties, restructuring costs, gratuity, etc.) may

be complex and often costly and time-consuming. Enterprises sometimes

engage outside experts to assist in annual calculations. Making similar

estimates at interim dates often involves updating the provision made in the

preceding annual financial statements rather than engaging outside experts

to do a new calculation.

2. Contingencies: Measurement of contingencies may involve obtaining

opinions of legal experts or other advisers. Formal reports fromindependent

experts are sometimes obtainedwith respect to contingencies. Such opinions

about litigation, claims, assessments, and other contingencies and

uncertainties may or may not be needed at interim dates.

3. Specialised industries: Because of complexity, costliness, and time

involvement, interimperiod measurements in specialised industriesmight be

less precise than at financial year end. An example is calculation of

insurance reserves by insurance companies.

Accounting Standard (AS) 26

(issued 2002)

Intangible Assets

501

Contents

OBJECTIVE

SCOPE Paragraphs 1-5

DEFINITIONS 6-18

Intangible Assets 7-18

Identifiability 11-13

Control 14-17

Future Economic Benefits 18

RECOGNITION AND INITIAL MEASUREMENT OF AN

INTANGIBLE ASSET 19-54

Separate Acquisition 24-26

Acquisition as Part of an Amalgamation 27-32

Acquisition by way of a Government Grant 33

Exchanges of Assets 34

Internally Generated Goodwill 35-37

Internally Generated Intangible Assets 38-54

Research Phase 41-43

Development Phase 44-51

Cost of an Internally Generated Intangible Asset 52-54

Continued../. .

502

RECOGNITION OF AN EXPENSE 55-58

Past Expenses not to be Recognised as an Asset 58

SUBSEQUENT EXPENDITURE 59-61

MEASUREMENT SUBSEQUENT TO INITIAL

RECOGNITION 62

AMORTISATION 63-80

Amortisation Period 63-71

Amortisation Method 72-74

Residual Value 75-77

Review of Amortisation Period and Amortisation Method 78-80

RECOVERABILITY OF THE CARRYING AMOUNT –

IMPAIRMENT LOSSES 81-86

RETIREMENTS AND DISPOSALS 87-89

DISCLOSURE 90-98

General 90-95

Research and Development Expenditure 96-97

Other Information 98

TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS 99-100

APPENDICES

Accounting Standard (AS) 26*

(issued 2002)

IntangibleAssets

(This Accounting Standard includes paragraphs set in bold italic type

and plain type, which have equal authority. Paragraphs in bold italic

type indicate the main principles. This Accounting Standard should be

read in the context of its objective and the Preface to the Statements of

Accounting Standards1.)

Accounting Standard (AS) 26, 'Intangible Assets', issued by the Council of

the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, comes into effect in respect

of expenditure incurred on intangible items during accounting periods

commencing on or after 1-4-2003 and ismandatory in nature2 fromthat date

for the following:

* It may be noted that the Institute has issued an Announcement in 2003 titled

‘Applicability of Accounting Standard (AS) 26, Intangible Assets, to

Intangible Items’ (published in ‘The Chartered Accountant’, November 2003, pp.

479). The Announcement deals with the issue as to what should be the

treatment of the expenditure incurred on intangible items, which were treated as

deferred revenue expenditure and ordinarily spread over a period of 3 to 5 years

before AS 26 became mandatory and which do not meet the definition of an

‘asset’ as per AS 26. The full text of the above Announcement has been

reproduced in the section titled

‘Announcements of the Council regarding status of various documents issued

by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India’ appearing at the beginning

of this Compendium.

It may also be noted that a limited revision to this Standard has been made in

2004, pursuant to which paragraph 1 of this Standard has been revised (see

footnote 4). Pursuant to this limited revision, which comes into effect in respect

of accounting periods commencing on or after 1-4-2003, the above

Announcement stands superseded to the extent it deals with VRS expenditure,

from the aforesaid date (see ‘The Chartered Accountant’, April 2004, pp.1157).

1 Attention is specifically drawn to paragraph 4.3 of the Preface, according to which

Accounting Standards are intended to apply only to items which are material.

2 Reference may be made to the section titled ‘Announcements of the Council

regarding status of various documents issued by the Institute of Chartered

Accountants of India’ appearing at the beginning of this Compendium for a

detailed discussion on the implications of the mandatory status of an accounting

standard.

504 AS 26 (issued 2002)

(i) Enterprises whose equity or debt securities are listed on a

recognised stock exchange in India, and enterprises that are in

the process of issuing equity or debt securities that will be listed

on a recognised stock exchange in India as evidenced by the

board of directors' resolution in this regard.

(ii) All other commercial, industrial and business reporting enterprises,

whose turnover for the accounting period exceeds Rs. 50 crores.

In respect of all other enterprises, the Accounting Standard comes into effect

in respect of expenditure incurred on intangible items during accounting

periods commencing on or after 1-4-2004 and is mandatory in nature from

that date.

Earlier application of the Accounting Standard is encouraged.

In respect of intangible items appearing in the balance sheet as on the

aforesaid date, i.e., 1-4-2003 or 1-4-2004, as the case may be, the Standard

has limited application as stated in paragraph 99. Fromthe date of this Standard

becoming mandatory for the concerned enterprises, the following stand

withdrawn:

(i) Accounting Standard (AS) 8, Accounting for Research and

Development;

(ii) Accounting Standard (AS) 6, Depreciation Accounting, with

respect to the amortisation (depreciation) of intangible

assets; and

(iii) Accounting Standard (AS) 10, Accounting for Fixed Assets -

paragraphs 16.3 to 16.7, 37 and 38.

The following is the text of the Accounting Standard.

Objective

The objective of this Statement is to prescribe the accounting treatment for

intangible assets that are not dealt with specifically in another Accounting

Standard. This Statement requires an enterprise to recognise an intangible

asset if, and only if, certain criteria are met. The Statement also specifies

Intangible Assets 505

how to measure the carrying amount of intangible assets and requires certain

disclosures about intangible assets.

Scope

1. This Statement should be applied by all enterprises in accounting

for intangible assets, except:

(a) intangible assets that are covered by another Accounting

Standard;

(b) financial assets3;

(c) mineral rights and expenditure on the exploration for, or

development and extraction of, minerals, oil, natural gas and

similar non-regenerative resources; and

(d) intangible assets arising in insurance enterprises from

contracts with policyholders.

4This Statement should not be applied to expenditure in respect of

termination benefits5 also.

2. If another Accounting Standard deals with a specific type of intangible

asset, an enterprise applies that Accounting Standard instead of this

Statement. For example, this Statement does not apply to:

3 A financial asset is any asset that is :

(a) cash;

(b) a contractual right to receive cash or another financial asset from another

enterprise;

(c) a contractual right to exchange financial instruments with another

enterprise under conditions that are potentially favourable; or

(d) an ownership interest in another enterprise.

4 The Council of the Institute decided to make a limited revision to AS 26 in 2004,

pursuant to which the last sentence has been added to paragraph 1. This

revision comes into effect in respect of accounting periods commencing on or

after 1.4.2003 (see ‘The Chartered Accountant’, April 2004, pp. 1157).

5 Accounting Standard (AS) 15 (revised 2005), Employee Benefits, which comes

into effect in respect of accounting periods commencing on or after 1-4-2006,

specifies the requirements relating to accounting for ‘Termination Benefits’.

506 AS 26 (issued 2002)

(a) intangible assets held by an enterprise for sale in the ordinary

course of business (seeAS 2, Valuation of Inventories, andAS 7,

Accounting for Construction Contracts6);

(b) deferred tax assets (seeAS 22,Accounting for Taxes on Income);

(c) leases that fall within the scope of AS 19, Leases; and

(d) goodwill arising on an amalgamation (see AS 14, Accounting for

Amalgamations) and goodwill arising on consolidation (see AS

21, Consolidated Financial Statements).

3. This Statement applies to, among other things, expenditure on advertising,

training, start-up, research and development activities. Research

and development activities are directed to the development of

knowledge. Therefore, although these activities may result in an asset

with physical substance (for example, a prototype), the physical element

of the asset is secondary to its intangible component, that is the knowledge

embodied in it. This Statement also applies to rights under licensing

agreements for items such as motion picture films, video recordings,

plays, manuscripts, patents and copyrights. These items are excluded from

the scope of AS 19.

4. In the case of a finance lease, the underlying assetmay be either tangible

or intangible. After initial recognition, a lessee deals with an intangible asset

held under a finance lease under this Statement.

5. Exclusions from the scope of an Accounting Standard may occur if

certain activities or transactions are so specialised that they give rise to

accounting issues that may need to be dealt with in a different way. Such

issues arise in the expenditure on the exploration for, or development and

extraction of, oil, gas and mineral deposits in extractive industries and in the

case of contracts between insurance enterprises and their policyholders.

Therefore, this Statement does not apply to expenditure on such activities.

However, this Statement applies to other intangible assets used (such as

computer software), and other expenditure (such as start-up costs), in

extractive industries or by insurance enterprises. Accounting issues of

specialised nature also arise in respect of accounting for discount or premium

6 This Standard has been revised and titled as ‘Construction Contracts’. The

revised AS 7 is published elsewhere in this Compendium.

Intangible Assets 507

relating to borrowings and ancillary costs incurred in connection with the

arrangement of borrowings, share issue expenses and discount allowed on

the issue of shares.Accordingly, this Statement does not apply to such items

also.

Definitions

6. The following terms are used in this Statement with the meanings

specified:

An intangible asset is an identifiable non-monetary asset, without

physical substance, held for use in the production or supply of goods or

services, for rental to others, or for administrative purposes.

An asset is a resource:

(a) controlled by an enterprise as a result of past events; and

(b) from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to

the enterprise.

Monetary assets are money held and assets to be received in fixed or

determinable amounts of money.

Non-monetary assets are assets other than monetary assets.

Research is original and planned investigation undertaken with the

prospect of gaining new scientific or technical knowledge and

understanding.

Development is the application of research findings or other knowledge

to a plan or design for the production of new or substantially improved

materials, devices, products, processes, systems or services prior to the

commencement of commercial production or use.

Amortisation is the systematic allocation of the depreciable amount of

an intangible asset over its useful life.

Depreciable amount is the cost of an asset less its residual value.

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