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a UK company, limited by guarantee. All rights reserved.
5 Step 5 – Recognise revenue when or as the entity satisfies a performance obligation | 149
5.4 Performance obligations satisfied at a point in time
|
The ‘benefits’ of an asset are the potential cash flows –
inflows or savings in
outflows – that can be obtained directly or indirectly, including by:
– using the asset to:
- produce goods or provide services (including public services);
- enhance the value of other assets; and
- settle liabilities or reduce expenses;
– selling or exchanging the asset;
– pledging
the asset to secure a loan; and
– holding the asset.
IFRS 15.38
The standard includes indicators of when the transfer of control occurs.
... a present
obligation
to pay
... physical
possession
... legal title
... risks and
rewards of
ownership
...
accepted
the asset
Indicators that control has passed include a customer having...
Relevant considerations include the following.
– In some cases, possession of legal title is a protective right and may not coincide
with the transfer of control of the goods or services to a customer – e.g. when a
seller retains title solely as protection against the customer’s failure to pay.
– In consignment arrangements (see
Section 5.6
) and some repurchase
arrangements (see
Section 5.5
), an entity may
have transferred physical
possession but still retain control. Conversely, in bill-and-hold arrangements
(see
Section 5.7
) an entity may have physical possession of an asset that the
customer controls.
– In some arrangements, a customer may obtain control
of an asset before it
has physical possession – e.g. a bank purchasing a fixed amount of gold from a
mine may be able to sell the gold for immediate physical settlement before the
refinement process is completed.
– When evaluating the risks and rewards of ownership, an entity excludes any risks
that give rise to a separate performance obligation in
addition to the performance
obligation to transfer the asset. In some cases, the customer may have the
rewards of ownership, but not the risks. This does not necessarily preclude the
customer from having control. An entity considers whether
the other indicators
are more relevant and the customer’s ability to direct the use of and obtain
substantially all of the benefits from the asset.
– An entity needs to assess whether it can objectively determine that a good
or service provided to a customer conforms to the specifications agreed in a
contract (see
Section 5.8
).
© 2019 KPMG IFRG Limited, a UK company, limited by guarantee. All rights reserved.
150 | Revenue – IFRS 15 handbook
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