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Huawei Investment & Holding Co., Ltd.
iv. Timing of revenue recognition
The Group determines at contract inception
whether it transfers the control of a
good or service underlying a POB to the
customer over time or at a point in time.
A POB is satisfied and related revenue
is recognised over time, if one of the
following criteria is met:
■
The customer simultaneously receives
and consumes the benefits provided by
the Group’s performance as the Group
performs;
■
The Group’s performance creates or
enhances an asset that the customer
controls as the asset is created or
enhanced; or
■
The Group’s performance does not
create an asset with an alternative
use to the Group and the Group has
an enforceable right to payment for
performance completed to date.
If a POB is not satisfied and the control
over the related good or service is not
transferred over time in accordance with
the
above criteria, it is satisfied and
revenue is recognised at a point in time.
Most Carrier Business contracts include
multiple POBs for which revenue is
recognised when the Group transfers
control of each obligation, either at a point
in time such as delivery or acceptance,
or over time as the obligation is being
fulfilled or the customer obtains control of
the goods and/or services. Some Carrier
Business construction contracts represent a
single or a few POBs for which revenue is
recognised over the delivery period.
Within the Enterprise Business certain
solution build contracts constitute a single
or a small number of POBs for which
revenue is recognised over the delivery
period. For the remaining contracts with
multiple POBs, revenue is recognised as and
when control related to each obligation is
transferred, either at a point in time, such
as delivery or acceptance, or over time,
as the obligation is being fulfilled and the
customer obtains control of the goods and/
or services.
Sales of terminal devices and accessories
by the Consumer Business to distribution
channels are recognised when control of
the goods has transferred.
In most cases,
this is when the sell-in to the channel
occurs; however, in a limited number of
cases, this is when the goods are sold to
the second tier distribution channels or
end-users.
v. Variable consideration
Revenue is measured at the fair value of
the consideration received or receivable,
adjusted at contract inception for penalties,
price concessions, returns, trade discounts,
volume rebates and other sales incentives,
such as coupons, provided that the level of
expected return of goods, volume rebates
and other incentives given can be estimated
reliably and that revenue is only recognised
to the extent that it is highly probable
that a significant reversal in the amount
of cumulative revenue recognised will
not occur. When making an estimate for
variable consideration, the Group considers
several factors, including but not limited to,
contract commitments, business practices,
historical experience, customer take-up
rates, and expected purchase volumes.
vi. Significant financing component
In the Carrier Business and Enterprise
Business, payments are generally received
according to the payment milestones set
out in the contracts before or after the
obligations are fulfilled, usually including
advance payments, delivery payments and
completion payments. In the Consumer
Business and certain business units under
the Enterprise Business, advance payments
are commonly received. Advance payments
are usually received less than one year
ahead of satisfaction of a performance
obligation.
The amount of consideration in a sales
contract is adjusted for the existence
of significant financing component in
determining the transaction price only
when the payment terms exceed one year
in duration between performance and
payment.
2020 Annual Report
97
The Group recognises interest income
where payment is received more than
one year in arrears of satisfaction of
a
performance obligation, reflecting a
deemed lending of cash to a customer.
Such interest income is presented in finance
income. The consideration attributable to
other goods and services in the contract is
reduced by a corresponding amount and is
included within revenue.
The Group adopts the practical expedient
under IFRS 15
Revenue from Contracts with
Customers
(IFRS 15), and does not account
for the significant financing components
where the Group anticipates at contract
inception that the timing difference
between transfer of control of a good or
service to a customer, and the customer
paying for that good or service will be one
year or less.
vii. Stand-alone selling prices (SSP)
The transaction price of a contract with
a customer is allocated to each POB in
proportion to its SSP. The Carrier Business
and Enterprise Business primarily use
estimated SSP and the Consumer Business
uses directly observable SSP.
Within the Carrier Business and the
Enterprise Business, the Group establishes
the SSP for products mainly using an
average price approach by product
category. Average price of a product is
calculated with reference to the historical
stand-alone product
sale transactions for
the product and the product category is
determined with reference to the product
family and geographical region.
For services that are regularly sold on a
stand-alone basis, most of such services are
customised and priced on a project basis,
therefore the transaction prices generally
reflect the SSP. For the services where an
observable transaction price is unavailable
such as the services sold in a bundle with
products, the Group determines the SSP
using a cost-plus approach, taking into
account several factors, including but not
limited to labour cost, competition and
company business strategy.
When a significant discount is granted and
is specifically attributable to one or more
POBs that discount is allocated to the
identified POB(s) if the allocation reflects
the Group’s regular sales pattern. In all
other cases the discount is allocated to the
contract overall.
viii. Contract assets and liabilities
When revenue
is recognised under a
contract with a customer before the Group
becomes unconditionally entitled to the
consideration under the relevant payment
terms of the contract, a contract asset is
recognised. Contract assets are reclassified
to trade receivables when the right to
consideration becomes unconditional.
When consideration is received (or the
right to consideration is unconditional)
before the related revenue is recognised, a
contract liability is recognised.
For a single contract with the customer,
either a net contract asset or a net contract
liability is presented. For multiple contracts,
contract assets and contract liabilities of
unrelated contracts are not presented on a
net basis.
Trade receivables are recognised when the
right to consideration under a revenue
contract becomes unconditional, regardless
of the billing date.
ix. Refund liabilities
A refund liability, such as the accrued
rebates to customers and other sales-based
incentives granted, is recognised when
the Group receives consideration from the
customer and expects to refund some or
all of that consideration to the customer.
Refund liabilities are presented in Other
liabilities in the
consolidated statement of
financial position.
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Huawei Investment & Holding Co., Ltd.
x. Contract costs
Certain incremental acquisition costs
(those paid to acquire a contract such as
commission) and fulfilment costs (those
incurred to deliver services to customers)
are initially capitalised to the extent that
the costs are recoverable, and subsequently
recognised as expense over the period of
expected benefit, which is generally the
associated contract duration.
Incremental acquisition costs incurred in its
major businesses are minimal and generally
expensed immediately.
The Group recognises a contract cost
impairment when the carrying amount
of unamortised contract costs exceeds
the difference between the remaining
consideration expected to recover and the
associated costs relating to providing those
goods and services under the contract.
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