Revenue – ifrs 15 handbook



Download 2,46 Mb.
Pdf ko'rish
bet375/375
Sana19.04.2022
Hajmi2,46 Mb.
#563056
1   ...   367   368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375
Bog'liq
ifrs15-revenue-handbook

Document Outline

  • IFRS 15 handbook
  • Contents
  • Facing new challenges
  • Overview
    • Organisation of the text
  • 1 Step 1 – Identify the contract with a customer
    • 1.1 Criteria to determine whether a contract exists
      • Assessment focuses on enforceability, not form of the contract
      • Collectability is only a gating question
      • Collectability is assessed based on the amount that the entity expects to receive in exchange for goods or services
      • Judgement is required to differentiate between a collectability issue and a price concession
      • Collectability threshold may be assessed using information derived at the portfolio level
      • Collectability is reassessed only when there is a significant deterioration in the customer’s credit-worthiness
      • Collectability assessment required for contracts with a significant financing component
      • Fiscal funding clauses may affect the assessment of whether a contract exists
      • Enforceable rights and obligations for an expired contract when the entity continues to provide services
      • Free trial period offers
      • Success-based fee arrangements
      • Contracting practices may need to be evaluated by customer class
      • Two definitions of a contract exist in IFRS
      • Minimum purchase requirements
      • Additional steps may be required to create legally enforceable rights and obligations
      • Purchase orders under the same framework agreement may be inter-related
    • 1.2 Contract term
      • Contract term affects many parts of the standard
      • Consideration payable on termination can affect assessment of contract term
      • Compensation is broader than only termination payments
      • Ability of either party to cancel the contract at discrete points in time may limit the contract term
      • Evergreen contracts
      • Only the customer has a right to terminate the contract
    • 1.3 Consideration received before a contract exists
      • Revenue recognition may be deferred for a significant period
      • A receivable is generally not recognised when the collectability threshold is not met
    • 1.4 Combination of contracts
      • Evaluating ‘at or near the same time’ when determining whether contracts should be combined
      • Definition of related parties acquires new significance 
      • No exception for contracts entered into with different divisions of the same entity
      • Additional complexities for sales through distribution channels
  • 2 Step 2 – Identify the performance obligations in the contract
    • 2.1 Distinct goods or services
      • Applying the indicators will require judgement
      • Applying Criterion 2 requires an entity to assess whether there is a transformative relationship between the two items being analysed
      • Separability of risks considered in determining whether goods or services are separately identifiable
      • Goods or services promised to a customer’s customer may be a performance obligation
      • Contractual restrictions may not be determinative
    • 2.2 Implied promises and administrative tasks
      • Only promises that transfer goods or services to the customer can be performance obligations
      • Set-up activities as administrative task
      • Providing end-user documentation is generally an administrative task
      • Distinguishing between an administrative task and a promised good or service 
    • 2.3 Series of distinct goods or services
      • No exemption from applying the series guidance
      • Accounting for a series is intended to provide a simplification of the model
      • Determining the nature of the entity’s promise to the customer is the first step in applying the series guidance
      • Identifying distinct goods or services as a series may affect the allocation of variable consideration
      • Not necessary for goods or services to be provided consecutively 
  • 3 Step 3 – Determine the transaction price
    • Transaction price may include amounts not paid by the customer
      • Transaction price may include fair value of derivative on settlement date
    • 3.1 Variable consideration (and the constraint)
      • Consideration can be deemed to be variable even if the price stated in the contract is fixed
      • A fixed rate per unit of output may be variable consideration
      • Quantity subject to confirmation after delivery is variable consideration
      • Provisional pricing based on market price of commodity
      • Variable consideration or optional purchases
      • Volume discounts or rebates may be variable consideration or may convey a material right
      • A transaction price denominated in a foreign currency does not constitute variable consideration
      • Liquidated damages may represent variable consideration or a product warranty
      • All facts and circumstances are considered when selecting estimation method
      • Expected value method – No need to quantify less probable outcomes
      • Expected value method – Estimated amount does not need to be a possible outcome for an individual contract
      • Historical experience may be a source of evidence
      • A combination of methods may be appropriate
      • Constraint assessment made against cumulative revenue
      • Specified level of confidence included in constraint requirements
      • Constraint introduces an element of prudence
    • 3.2 Significant financing component
      • Assessment is undertaken at the individual contract level
      • No significant financing component if the timing of transfer of goods or services is at the customer’s discretion
      • Contracts with a payment scheduled for part-way through the performance period may contain a significant financing component
      • Contracts with material right may contain a significant financing component
      • Limited examples in the standard of when payments have a primary purpose other than financing
      • Accounting for long-term and multiple-element arrangements with a significant financing component may be complex
      • Using an interest rate that is explicitly specified in the contract may not be appropriate
      • Interest income recognised from a significant financing component may be presented as ‘revenue’ but not ‘revenue from contracts with customers’
      • Advance payments may affect EBITDA
      • Application of the practical expedient to a contract with multiple performance obligations
      • A contract with an implied interest rate of zero may contain a financing component
      • Interest accrued on a contract liability is a borrowing cost eligible for capitalisation
    • 3.3 Non-cash consideration
      • Constraint does not apply when variation is due to the form of non-cash consideration
      • Transfers of assets from customers
      • Barter transactions involving advertising services
    • 3.4 Consideration payable to a customer
      • Payments to distributors and retailers may be for distinct goods or services
      • Slotting fees
      • Nomination fees
      • Scope of consideration payable to a customer is wider than payments made under the contract
      • Consideration payable may include payments made outside a direct distribution chain
      • Amounts payable to a customer may be either variable consideration or consideration payable to a customer
    • 3.5 Sales taxes
  • 4 Step 4 – Allocate the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract
    • 4.1 Determine stand-alone selling prices
      • The standard does not contain a reliability threshold
      • Judgement is often required to estimate stand-alone selling price
      • Single good or service may have more than one stand-alone selling price
      • If there is a range of observable prices, then a stated contract price within the range may be an acceptable stand-alone selling price
      • Using a range to estimate stand-alone selling prices
      • The residual approach is an estimation technique, not an allocation method
      • In contracts for intellectual property or other intangible products, a residual approach may be appropriate for determining a stand-alone selling price
      • The assessment of whether it is appropriate to use a residual approach should be made separately for each good or service
      • Consideration allocated is unlikely to be zero or close to zero
    • 4.2 Allocate the transaction price
      • Allocating the transaction price may be simple if stated contract prices are acceptable estimates of stand-alone selling price
      • Additional calculations are necessary if the stand-alone selling price of one or more performance obligations differs from its stated contract price
      • Analysis is required when a large number of goods or services are bundled in various ways
      • Determination of ‘regularly sells’ is a key judgement
      • Guidance on allocating a discount typically applies to contracts with at least three performance obligations
      • Variable consideration allocation guidance is applied before the guidance on allocating discounts
      • Evaluating whether the allocation objective is met when allocating variable consideration to a distinct service period in a series
    • 4.3 Changes in the transaction price
  • 5 Step 5 – Recognise revenue when or as the entity satisfies a performance obligation
    • 5.1 Transfer of control
      • Use of control concept to recognise revenue aligns with the accounting for assets
    • 5.2 Performance obligations satisfied over time
      • Differences in assumptions used when applying Criteria 1 and 3
      • Determining whether a commodity transfers over time may depend on Criterion 1
      • Application to service concession arrangements
      • Many factors to consider when evaluating alternative use
      • Evaluating whether costs of rework are significant
      • A right to payment may be established by relevant laws and regulations
      • Use of legal opinion when assessing enforceability of right to payment
      • Agreements for the construction of real estate may have different patterns of transfer of control
      • Enforceable right to payment for standard materials used as inputs
      • Termination of an over-time contract
    • 5.3 Measuring progress towards complete satisfaction of a performance obligation
      • Determining which measure of progress to apply is not a free choice
      • Single method of measuring progress is used for a performance obligation
      • Certain sales agent arrangements may be over-time
      • Measure of progress for stand-ready obligations is not always straight‑line
      • Milestone method may not depict pattern of performance
      • A performance obligation may be partially satisfied before the contract is identified 
      • Borrowing costs when revenue is recognised over time
      • Design and production services – A units-of-delivery method or a units-of-production method may not be appropriate 
      • No guidance on the timing and pattern of the recognition of margin on uninstalled materials
      • No detailed guidance on identifying inefficiencies and wasted materials
      • Consideration does not need to be a fixed amount per unit to recognise revenue at the amount that the entity has a right to invoice
      • Arrangements that include a contractual minimum
      • Practical expedient may not be available when a contract includes a significant up-front fee 
      • Rebates, credits and refunds generally preclude application of the practical expedient
    • 5.4 Performance obligations satisfied at a point in time
      • Judgement may be required to determine the point in time at which control transfers
      • Potential challenges may exist in determining the accounting for some delivery arrangements 
      • Indirect channels and sell-in vs sell-through
    • 5.5 Repurchase agreements
      • An approach that focuses on the repurchase price
      • Requirements for repurchase agreements not applicable to arrangements with a guaranteed resale amount
      • Conditional forwards or call options
      • Right of first refusal 
    • 5.6 Consignment arrangements
    • 5.7 Bill-and-hold arrangements
    • 5.8 Customer acceptance
  • 6 Scope
    • 6.1 In scope
      • Determining whether an activity is ‘ordinary’ may require judgement
      • Sales of by-products may be in the scope of the standard
    • 6.2 Out of scope
      • Product and service warranties – Revenue vs provisions standard
      • Contributions in non-exchange transactions are outside the scope of the standard
      • Settlement of imbalances in non-monetary exchanges
    • 6.3 Partially in scope
      • In some cases, there will be little or no residual amount remaining to allocate
      • A counterparty may be both a collaborator and a customer
      • Rate-regulated entities applying specific requirements do not apply the standard to movements in regulatory deferral account balances
      • Parts of the standard apply to sales of non-financial assets
      • Financial services fees – Revenue vs financial instruments standard
      • Determining the contract term when a contract contains lease and non-lease components
    • 6.4 Portfolio approach
      • Entities need to consider costs vs benefits of portfolio approach
      • No specific guidance on assessing whether portfolio approach can be used
  • 7 Contract costs
    • 7.1 Costs of obtaining a contract
      • Practical expedient applies if the amortisation period is less than one year
      • Capitalising commission when associated liability is accrued
      • Judgement required for multiple-tier commissions
    • 7.2 Costs of fulfilling a contract
      • Applicability of the cost capitalisation guidance in the revenue standard
      • Judgement needed in determining whether cost capitalisation criteria are met
      • Judgement needed in determining whether to capitalise learning curve costs
      • Costs in excess of constrained transaction price
      • Transportation services and costs
      • Back-end-loaded costs
    • 7.3 Amortisation
      • Amortisation period may need to include anticipated contracts
      • Anticipated contracts included when determining whether practical expedient applies
      • Judgement is required when contracts include recurring commissions
      • Systematic amortisation for contract assets related to multiple performance obligations
      • No correlation with the accounting for non-refundable up-front fees
      • Presentation of amortisation costs may often depend on the nature of the entity and its industry
    • 7.4 Impairment
      • Impairment model specifically for capitalised contract costs
      • Specific anticipated contracts are considered in impairment test
      • Discounting may be relevant for long-term contracts
  • 8 Contract modifications
    • 8.1 Identifying a contract modification
      • Assessment focuses on enforceability
      • Criteria to determine when a modification is approved
      • Contract claims are evaluated using the guidance on contract modifications
      • Partial contract terminations are accounted for as contract modifications
    • 8.2 Accounting for a contract modification
      • Different approaches for common types of contract modifications
      • Distinct goods or services in a series that are treated as a single performance obligation are considered separately
      • Interaction of new contracts with pre-existing contracts needs to be considered
      • Accounting for contract asset on termination of an existing contract and creation of a new one
  • 9 Licensing
    • 9.1 Licences of intellectual property
      • Different accounting for a licence and sale of IP
      • No definition of intellectual property
      • IP that forms part of tangible asset
      • Distinguishing between a licence and service
    • 9.2 Determining whether a licence is distinct
      • Assessing whether a licence is distinct may require significant judgement
      • Customer’s option to purchase additional licences
    • 9.3 Determining the nature of a distinct licence
      • Franchise licences generally provide a right to access IP
      • Only consider licensor’s activities that do not transfer a good or service to the customer
      • Effect of different attributes of a licence on determining the nature of the entity’s promise
      • Entity’s activities that significantly affect the IP
      • Cost and effort to undertake activities are not the focus of the analysis
    • 9.4 Timing and pattern of revenue recognition
      • Application of the general guidance on performance obligations satisfied at a point in time
    • 9.5 Contractual restrictions and attributes of licences
      • No explicit guidance on distinguishing attributes of a licence from additional licences
      • Distinguishing attributes of a single licence from additional promises to transfer licences
      • Substantial break between periods during which a customer is able to use (or access) IP
    • 9.6 Sales- or usage-based royalties
      • Exception for sales- or usage-based royalties aligns the accounting for different licence types
      • Judgement is required to assess when a licence of IP is ‘predominant’
      • Application of royalties exception to milestone payments
      • Guaranteed minimum payment – Right-to-use licence
      • Guaranteed minimum payment – Right-to-access licence
      • Variable royalty rates – Right-to-use licence
      • Variable royalty rates – Right-to-access licence
      • Allocating sales- or usage-based royalties to multiple performance obligations
  • 10 Other application issues
    • 10.1 Sale with a right of return
      • Partial refunds are measured based on the portion expected to be refunded
      • Restocking fees and costs
      • Conditional right of return
      • Historical experience may be a source of evidence for estimating returns
    • 10.2 Warranties
      • A refund for defective services may be variable consideration rather than a warranty
      • Defective product returns in exchange for compensation 
      • Liquidated damages and similar types of contractual terms
      • Some warranty arrangements may be in the scope of the insurance standard
      • ‘Reasonably account’ threshold is undefined
      • Length of the warranty period is an indicator of the type of warranty, but is not always determinative
      • Repairs outside the warranty period as a customary practice
      • An ‘extended warranty’ may be a service-type warranty or an assurance-type warranty
    • 10.3 Principal vs agent considerations
      • Unit of account is the specific good or service
      • The specified good or service may be a right
      • Principal-agent indicators support application of the general control principle, but cannot override it
      • Certain conditions may help with control determination
      • No individual indicator is generally determinative
      • Providing a specific integration service is determinative
      • Entity obtains only flash title before transfer to the customer
      • Entity may still be principal for tangible asset even if it does not take physical possession
      • No specific guidance on allocating a discount when an entity is a principal for part of the arrangement and an agent for the other part
      • Estimating gross revenue as a principal
    • 10.4 Customer options for additional goods or services
      • Determining whether a material right exists requires an evaluation of both quantitative and qualitative factors
      • Customers’ options that provide accumulating rights are assessed in aggregate
      • Exercise of a material right
      • Estimate of the likelihood of exercise of an option is not revised
      • Estimating the stand-alone selling price of ‘free’ gift cards and coupons
      • Coupons issued at the point of sale
      • Volume discounts and rebates
      • Evaluating optional purchases at a discount compared with the original contract
      • A cancellable contract may contain a material right
      • Alternative approach not limited to renewal options
      • More than one acceptable approach to determine the expected goods or services to be provided
      • No significant financing component in most customer loyalty programmes 
      • Cancellable customer loyalty programmes may be implicit performance obligations
      • Treatment of customer credit card arrangements
      • Residual approach generally not appropriate for determining stand-alone selling price of loyalty points
      • Amounts payable to third party loyalty programme operators 
    • 10.5 Customers’ unexercised rights (breakage)
      • Constraint applies even though consideration amount is known
      • Breakage does not constitute variable consideration
      • Prepaid stored-value products may be financial liabilities
      • Portfolio of data can be used for estimating expected breakage
    • 10.6 Non-refundable up-front fees
      • Quantitative and qualitative indicators are considered when assessing up-front fees
      • Determining whether a non-refundable up-front fee relates to the transfer of a promised good or service 
      • Up-front fee may need to be allocated
      • Deferral period for non-refundable up-front fee depends on whether the fee provides a material right
      • Consideration of whether a non-refundable up-front fee gives rise to a significant financing component
      • Up-front fees in the funds and insurance industries
    • 10.7 Sales outside ordinary activities
      • Judgement required to identify ordinary activities
      • Accounting for a non-current non-financial asset held for sale may result in a gain or loss on transfer of control because consideration may differ from fair value
      • Applying transaction price guidance on measuring consideration received or receivable
      • Little difference in accounting for sales of real estate to customers and non-customers
      • Transfers to inventory are still possible if specific criteria are met
  • 11 Presentation
    • 11.1 Statement of financial position
      • Contract asset and contract liability – Based on past performance
      • Single contract asset or contract liability for contracts with multiple performance obligations
      • Contract assets and contract liabilities for multiple contracts are not netted
      • Impairment assessment of contract assets for contracts with multiple performance obligations
      • Impairment assessment of contract assets when the consideration is variable
      • Classification as current vs non-current
      • Presentation of costs to obtain and costs to fulfil a contract in the statement of financial position
      • Receivable vs contract asset – Distinction based on unconditional right to consideration
      • Receivable vs contract asset – Refund obligations do not impact the analysis
      • Milestone payments under over-time contracts
      • Recognising a receivable when the consideration is variable
    • 11.2 Statements of profit or loss and cash flows
      • Presenting ‘revenue from contracts with customers’ separately on the face of the statement of profit or loss is not required
      • Interest income recognised from a significant financing component may be presented as ‘revenue’ but not ‘revenue from contracts with customers’
      • Presentation of amortisation costs in the statement of profit or loss
      • Classification of cash flows related to contract costs depends on the nature of the activity
  • 12 Disclosure
    • 12.1 Annual disclosure
      • Revenue is a gross number
      • No minimum number of categories required
      • Disaggregation of revenue may be at a different level from segment disclosures
      • Changes in the transaction price may need to be disclosed
      • Remaining performance obligation disclosures may differ from backlog disclosures
      • Contract renewals are included only if they provide a material right
      • Certain contracts can be excluded from remaining performance obligation disclosures
      • Constrained transaction price is used in the remaining performance obligation disclosures
      • Greater specificity in the revenue standard
    • 12.2 Interim disclosures
      • Extent of interim revenue disclosures requires judgement 
  • 13 Effective date and transition
    • 13.1 Transition
    • 13.2 Retrospective method
      • All contracts (open and closed) under previous requirements require consideration
      • Cost and income tax line items may also require adjustment
      • Regulatory requirements need to be considered
      • Relief provided by practical expedient 1
      • Limited hindsight allowed
      • Use of the practical expedient may bring forward revenue recognition
      • Exemption from restating for contract modifications that occur before the start of the earliest period presented
      • Disclosure relief only
    • 13.3 Cumulative effect method
      • Dual reporting still required
      • Cumulative effect method reduces comparability
      • Choosing to apply the cumulative effect method to all contracts may improve comparability 
      • Contract modification practical expedient simplifies implementation but reduces comparability
    • 13.4 Consequential amendments to other IFRS requirements
    • 13.5 First-time adoption
  • Guidance referenced
  • Detailed contents
  • Index of examples
  • Index of KPMG insights
  • About this publication 
    • Content 
  • Keeping in touch
  • Acknowledgments

Download 2,46 Mb.

Do'stlaringiz bilan baham:
1   ...   367   368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375




Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©hozir.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling

kiriting | ro'yxatdan o'tish
    Bosh sahifa
юртда тантана
Боғда битган
Бугун юртда
Эшитганлар жилманглар
Эшитмадим деманглар
битган бодомлар
Yangiariq tumani
qitish marakazi
Raqamli texnologiyalar
ilishida muhokamadan
tasdiqqa tavsiya
tavsiya etilgan
iqtisodiyot kafedrasi
steiermarkischen landesregierung
asarlaringizni yuboring
o'zingizning asarlaringizni
Iltimos faqat
faqat o'zingizning
steierm rkischen
landesregierung fachabteilung
rkischen landesregierung
hamshira loyihasi
loyihasi mavsum
faolyatining oqibatlari
asosiy adabiyotlar
fakulteti ahborot
ahborot havfsizligi
havfsizligi kafedrasi
fanidan bo’yicha
fakulteti iqtisodiyot
boshqaruv fakulteti
chiqarishda boshqaruv
ishlab chiqarishda
iqtisodiyot fakultet
multiservis tarmoqlari
fanidan asosiy
Uzbek fanidan
mavzulari potok
asosidagi multiservis
'aliyyil a'ziym
billahil 'aliyyil
illaa billahil
quvvata illaa
falah' deganida
Kompyuter savodxonligi
bo’yicha mustaqil
'alal falah'
Hayya 'alal
'alas soloh
Hayya 'alas
mavsum boyicha


yuklab olish