IAS 2: Inventories
Core Principle & Scope

Core Principle: Inventories are measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value (NRV). Cost encompasses all expenditure incurred to bring inventories to their present location and condition.

Scope covers:

  • Assets held for sale in the ordinary course of business (finished goods)
  • Assets in the process of production for such a sale (WIP)
  • Materials and supplies to be consumed in production (raw materials)
Cost Components

Included in Cost: Purchase price + import duties + non-refundable taxes, less trade discounts; conversion costs (direct labour + production overheads based on normal capacity); other directly attributable costs.

Excluded from Cost (expense as incurred): Abnormal waste, storage costs (unless necessary in production), administrative overheads, selling costs, borrowing costs (unless qualifying asset under IAS 23).

Normal Capacity Rule: Fixed overheads are absorbed based on normal (not actual) capacity. Under-absorbed overhead during low output periods is expensed — never deferred into inventory.

Cost Formulas
MethodHow It WorksPermitted?
FIFOOldest units assumed consumed first✔ Yes
Weighted AverageCost averaged over all units; recalculated at each purchase✔ Yes
LIFOMost recent units assumed consumed first✘ Not permitted under IFRS
Specific IDTrack actual cost of each individual item✔ Only for non-interchangeable items

Consistency Rule: The same cost formula must be applied to all inventories of similar nature and use. LIFO is never permitted under IFRS.

NRV — Subsequent Measurement
NRV = Estimated selling price (ordinary course of business) − Estimated costs of completion − Estimated costs necessary to make the sale
  • NRV write-downs recognized as expense in the period of write-down
  • NRV is reassessed at each subsequent reporting date
  • Reversals are required (not optional) when NRV subsequently increases — but only up to original cost
  • For raw materials held for production: use replacement cost as proxy for NRV of finished goods, not the raw material in isolation
Never use LIFO under IFRSNever include abnormal waste in costReassess NRV at each year-endNRV rises → reverse prior write-down (up to cost)
IAS 16: Property, Plant and Equipment
Definition & Recognition

Definition: Tangible items held for use in production/supply of goods or services, for rental, or for administrative purposes; expected to be used during more than one period.

An item of PPE is recognized when:

CriterionDescription
Probable FEBProbable that future economic benefits will flow to the entity
Reliable MeasurementCost of the asset can be measured reliably

Note on Control: "Control" is a Conceptual Framework element of the definition of an asset — it is not a stated recognition criterion within IAS 16 itself and should not be cited as one in exam contexts.

Initial Measurement — Cost

Included: Purchase price (net of discounts) + import duties + non-refundable taxes + directly attributable costs (installation, testing, professional fees) + initial decommissioning provision (IAS 37).

Excluded: Administration overheads, operating losses before full capacity, staff training costs, abnormal waste during construction.

Depreciation
  • Begins when asset is available for use — not when actually used
  • Depreciable amount = Cost (or revalued amount) − Residual value
  • Component accounting: Significant components with different useful lives depreciated separately
  • Residual value and useful life reviewed at each year-end — any change is a change in estimate (prospective under IAS 8)
  • Land is not depreciated (indefinite life) — but can still be impaired
Subsequent Measurement — Two Models

Cost Model: Cost − Accumulated depreciation − Accumulated impairment losses.

Revaluation Model: Fair value at revaluation date − Subsequent accumulated depreciation − Subsequent accumulated impairment.

Revaluation MovementTreatment
Upward revaluationOCI (revaluation surplus) — unless reversing a previous P&L decrease
Downward revaluationFirst deducted from revaluation surplus; excess charged to P&L

Class-by-class: All assets within a class must be revalued with sufficient regularity. On disposal, the revaluation surplus may transfer directly to retained earnings — it is not recycled through P&L.

IAS 21 Interaction — Foreign Currency PPE

Revaluation Model & IAS 21: PPE denominated in foreign currency under the revaluation model is a non-monetary asset measured at fair value. It is translated at the rate when fair value was determined. The exchange difference is embedded in the revaluation movement and recognized in OCI — it must NOT be separated as a standalone exchange gain/loss in P&L.

Key Standard Links
Interactions
  • IAS 16 ↔ IAS 36 (PPE impairment testing)
  • IAS 16 ↔ IAS 40 (transfers to/from investment property)
  • IAS 16 ↔ IAS 23 (borrowing costs capitalization)
  • IAS 16 ↔ IFRS 5 (reclassification as held-for-sale)
  • IAS 16 ↔ IAS 21 (FX on revalued PPE)
IAS 20: Accounting for Government Grants
Core Principle & Recognition

Core Principle: Government grants are recognized as income on a systematic basis over the periods in which the entity recognizes related costs. They shall not be credited directly to equity.

A grant is recognized only when there is reasonable assurance that:

  1. The entity will comply with all conditions attached, and
  2. The grant will be received

Grants received before conditions are met → recognized as deferred income (a liability). Repayment of a grant is treated as a change in accounting estimate — applied prospectively.

Presentation Options
Grant TypeOption AOption B
Related to AssetsDeferred income (released to P&L over asset's useful life)Deducted from asset's carrying amount (reduces future depreciation)
Related to IncomePresented as "other income" separatelyDeducted from the related expense

IAS 41 Override: Grants related to biological assets covered by IAS 41 follow IAS 41's rules — not IAS 20. Unconditional grants recognized in P&L when receivable; conditional grants when conditions are met.

IAS 23: Borrowing Costs
Core Principle

Mandatory Capitalization: Borrowing costs directly attributable to the acquisition, construction or production of a qualifying asset must be capitalized. All other borrowing costs are expensed as incurred.

Qualifying Asset: An asset that necessarily takes a substantial period of time to get ready for its intended use or sale. Examples: manufacturing plant, power generation facilities, investment property under construction, real estate developments. Routine inventory items are NOT qualifying assets.

Capitalization Period
PhaseCondition
CommenceALL three conditions met: expenditures are being incurred, borrowing costs are being incurred, AND preparatory activities are in progress
SuspendDuring extended periods when active development is interrupted (not routine administrative delays)
CeaseWhen substantially all activities to prepare the asset for intended use or sale are complete
Calculation
  • Specific borrowing: Actual borrowing costs incurred less investment income earned on temporary investment of those funds
  • General pool: Apply weighted average capitalization rate to expenditure on the qualifying asset. Amount capitalized cannot exceed total borrowing costs incurred in the period
IAS 36: Impairment of Assets
Core Principle & When to Test

Impairment Exists When: Carrying amount > Recoverable amount.
Recoverable Amount = higher of (a) FVLCD and (b) Value in Use (VIU)

Asset TypeWhen to Test
PPE / finite-life intangiblesOnly when impairment indicators exist
GoodwillMandatory annual test
Indefinite-life intangibleMandatory annual test
Intangible not yet available for useMandatory annual test
Value in Use (VIU)
  • Present value of future cash flows expected from the asset in its existing condition
  • Cash flows must NOT include future capex to improve or enhance performance
  • Discount rate: Pre-tax rate — do NOT use a post-tax rate
  • Beyond detailed 5-year projections: extrapolate using steady or declining growth rate
Reversals
  • Permitted for individual assets and non-goodwill CGU assets
  • Reversal capped: carrying amount cannot exceed what it would have been (net of depreciation) had no impairment ever been recognized
  • Goodwill impairment can NEVER be reversed
CGUs and Goodwill Allocation

CGU Definition: The smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash inflows largely independent of cash inflows from other assets or groups.

Impairment Allocation Order within a CGU:
(1) First allocate to goodwill — reduce to nil;
(2) Then allocate remainder pro rata to other assets.
No individual asset may be written below the highest of its own FVLCD, VIU, or zero.

Impairment Indicators
ExternalInternal
Significant decline in market valuePhysical damage or obsolescence
Adverse technology / market / economic changesAsset is idle, restructured or held for disposal
Market interest rate increasesInternal reports show worse-than-expected performance
Net assets exceed market capitalisationSubsidiary acquired exclusively for resale
Impairment Loss Recognition
  • Individual asset: Charged to P&L — unless carried under revaluation model (first reduces revaluation surplus in OCI)
  • After recognition: recalculate depreciation charge on new carrying amount over remaining useful life
IAS 37: Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets
Recognition — Three Criteria (ALL must be met)

Recognize a Provision when:

  1. present obligation (legal or constructive) exists as a result of a past event
  2. It is probable (>50%) that an outflow of economic benefits will be required to settle the obligation
  3. reliable estimate of the amount can be made

Constructive Obligation: Arises from established past practices, published policies or a sufficiently specific statement that creates a valid expectation in the minds of other parties — even without a legal duty.

Measurement
  • Best estimate of the expenditure required to settle the obligation at the reporting date
  • Large populations (e.g., warranties): use expected value (probability-weighted outcomes)
  • Single obligation: use the most likely outcome
  • Time value: Where material, discount using pre-tax risk-free rate. Unwinding of discount = finance cost in P&L
  • Reimbursements (e.g., insurance): recognize as separate asset only when virtually certain
Contingencies Summary
ItemProbabilityTreatment
ProvisionProbable (>50%)Recognize in SOFP
Contingent liabilityPossibleDisclose in notes only
Contingent liabilityRemoteNo disclosure required
Contingent assetProbableDisclose in notes only
AssetVirtually certainRecognize as an asset
Key Application Scenarios

No provision for future operating losses — they do not constitute a present obligation from a past event.

Onerous Contracts: Provision = lower of (cost of fulfilling the contract) and (cost/penalty of terminating it).

Restructuring Provision: Arises only when a detailed formal plan exists AND a valid expectation has been raised in those affected by announcing or starting implementation. A board decision alone — without external communication — is insufficient.

IAS 40: Investment Property
Definition & Initial Measurement

Definition: Property held to earn rentals OR for capital appreciation OR both — NOT for use in production, supply, administration, or sale in the ordinary course of business.

Initial measurement: at cost, including transaction costs (same as IAS 16 initial measurement).

Subsequent Measurement — Policy Choice
ModelDepreciation?Gains / Losses
Fair Value ModelNoneAll FV changes in P&L
Cost ModelYes (per IAS 16)FV disclosed in notes; gains/losses on disposal in P&L

Critical Distinction from IAS 16: Under IAS 40 Fair Value Model, ALL FV gains and losses pass through P&L. Under IAS 16 Revaluation Model, gains pass through OCI. This is one of the most commonly confused treatments in professional exams.

Transfers — Change of Use
Transfer DirectionMeasurement at Transfer Date
Investment Property → PPE (IAS 16)FV at transfer date = deemed cost for IAS 16
Investment Property → InventoriesFV at transfer date = cost for IAS 2
PPE → Investment Property (FV model)Revalue under IAS 16 first; OCI surplus remains in equity
Inventories → Investment Property (FV model)Difference between FV and carrying amount → P&L
IAS 41: Agriculture
Scope & Measurement

Scope: Biological assets (living animals and plants), agricultural produce at the point of harvest, and government grants related to biological assets measured at fair value.

  • Biological assets: measured at fair value less costs to sell at each reporting date; all changes in P&L
  • If FV cannot be reliably measured (rare): use cost less depreciation and impairment
  • Agricultural produce at point of harvest: FV less costs to sell = deemed cost under IAS 2 for all subsequent accounting
Government Grants — IAS 41 vs IAS 20
Grant Type (IAS 41)Recognition Timing
Unconditional grant (biological assets at FV)P&L when the grant becomes receivable
Conditional grant (biological assets at FV)P&L only when all conditions have been met

Common Pitfall: IAS 41 overrides IAS 20 for grants related to biological assets measured at FV less costs to sell. Once produce is harvested, IAS 41 no longer applies — IAS 2 governs all subsequent accounting.

IFRS 13: Fair Value Measurement
Definition & Key Concepts

Definition: The price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. This is an exit price — not an entry price.

Non-Financial Assets: FV assumes highest and best use from the perspective of market participants — even if the entity's current use differs. Rebuttable presumption: current use IS the highest and best use.

Principal vs Most Advantageous Market: Use the principal market (greatest volume) if accessible. If no principal market, use the most advantageous market (maximizes net proceeds after transport — but NOT transaction costs). FV is never adjusted for transaction costs.

Fair Value Hierarchy
LevelInput TypeExampleAudit Risk
Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets/liabilitiesListed equity sharesLowest
Level 2Observable inputs (other than Level 1)Interest rate swap using observable yield curvesMedium
Level 3Unobservable inputs — entity's own assumptionsUnlisted entity valued by DCF modelHighest
Audit Insight

Level 3 measurements carry the highest audit risk — they require significant management judgement and are most susceptible to bias. Auditors should challenge key assumptions, request sensitivity analyses, and evaluate whether alternative valuation techniques were considered.

IFRS 5: Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations
Classification Criteria — Held for Sale (ALL must be met)

Measurement: Lower of carrying amount and fair value less costs to sell (FVLCTS) when an asset's carrying amount will be recovered principally through a sale transaction.

  • Asset available for immediate sale in its present condition
  • Sale is highly probable: management committed, active programme to locate a buyer, asset marketed at reasonable price
  • Expected to complete within 12 months of classification (limited extensions permitted)

IAS 10 Interaction: If held-for-sale criteria are met after the reporting date but before authorization → non-adjusting event. Do NOT reclassify the asset in the current year's financial statements.

Measurement & Presentation
  • Remeasure under the relevant standard (IAS 16/IAS 38) immediately before reclassification
  • Then remeasure at lower of carrying amount and FVLCTS
  • No depreciation or amortization while classified as held-for-sale
  • Subsequent increases in FVLCTS: recognized as a gain only up to cumulative impairment previously recognized under IFRS 5
Discontinued Operations
  • Post-tax profit/loss presented as a single line item below profit from continuing operations
  • Comparative P&L statements are restated to show the discontinued operation separately
  • Assets and liabilities of disposal groups presented separately on the face of SOFP — never offset
IAS 38: Intangible Assets
Definition & Recognition

Definition: An identifiable non-monetary asset without physical substance. Three elements: (1) identifiability — separable or arising from contractual/legal rights; (2) control; (3) future economic benefits.

Acquisition RouteInitial Measurement
Separately purchasedCost = purchase price + directly attributable costs
Business combination (IFRS 3)Fair value at acquisition date
Internally generatedSubject to Research vs. Development rules
Government grantAt fair value OR nominal amount + directly attributable costs
Research vs. Development — PIRATE Criteria

Research: Always expense as incurred — no exception.

Development: Capitalize ONLY when ALL six criteria are met:

  1. Probable future economic benefits
  2. Intention to complete and use or sell
  3. Resources available to complete development
  4. Ability to use or sell the intangible
  5. Technical feasibility of completing development
  6. Expenditure can be measured reliably

Never capitalize internally generated: goodwill, brands, mastheads, publishing titles, customer lists — these are specifically excluded by IAS 38.

Subsequent Measurement
Useful LifeModelTreatment
FiniteCost modelAmortize over useful life; impairment test on indicators
FiniteRevaluation modelOnly if active market exists (extremely rare)
IndefiniteCost (no amortization)Mandatory annual impairment test + indicator-based testing; review classification annually

Indefinite ≠ Infinite: Indefinite means no foreseeable limit on the period of net cash inflows. Must be reviewed annually. If useful life becomes determinable → reclassify to finite (change in accounting estimate — applied prospectively).

Important Clarification

IAS 38 does not prohibit ALL internally generated intangibles as a blanket rule. The standard draws a clear distinction: research costs must always be expensed, while development costs may be capitalized if all six PIRATE criteria are satisfied. The blanket prohibition applies only to specific categories: internally generated goodwill, brands, mastheads, publishing titles, and customer lists.

Never capitalize research costsNever capitalize development until all 6 criteria metIndefinite life → annual impairment, no amortization
IFRS 6: Exploration for and Evaluation of Mineral Resources
Scope, Recognition & Measurement

Scope: Expenditures incurred after obtaining legal rights to explore in a specific area, but before technical feasibility and commercial viability of extraction have been established.

  • Entity determines its own accounting policy for which expenditures qualify as exploration and evaluation (E&E) assets — must be consistent (per IAS 8)
  • E&E assets classified as tangible (e.g., drilling rigs) or intangible (e.g., drilling rights, licences) — subsequent measurement follows IAS 16 or IAS 38 accordingly
  • Impairment test when facts and circumstances suggest carrying amount may exceed recoverable amount (IFRS 6 specifies its own indicators rather than full IAS 36 requirements)

Audit Insight: IFRS 6 is a temporary standard — entities must reclassify E&E assets once technical feasibility and commercial viability are established. At that point, normal IAS 16/IAS 38 rules apply. Auditors should challenge whether entities are deferring reclassification to avoid full IAS 36 impairment testing.

IAS 8: Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors
1. Accounting Policy Changes

When Permitted: (a) Required by a new or revised IFRS, or (b) The change results in information that is more relevant and faithfully representative.

Treatment: Retrospective application — restate comparative information; adjust opening retained earnings of the earliest period presented.

  • If impracticable to restate all prior periods: restate from earliest practicable date
2. Changes in Accounting Estimates

Arise from: New information or developments — e.g., revision of useful life, changes in ECL estimates, revision of warranty provisions.

Treatment: Prospective — applied from current period and future periods only. No restatement of comparatives.

  • Disclose nature and amount of the change, and expected impact on future periods where practicable
3. Prior Period Errors

Definition: Omissions or misstatements arising from a failure to use, or misuse of, reliable information that was available when financial statements were authorized.

Treatment: Retrospective restatement — comparatives restated as if the error had never occurred; cumulative effect in opening retained earnings of the earliest period presented.

Distinguishing Estimate from Policy: If uncertainty was always present and you are refining the measurement → change in estimate (prospective). If you are changing the accounting treatment or basis → change in policy (retrospective). When the distinction is unclear, IAS 8 presumes it is a change in estimate.

New IFRS requires change → Retrospective (policy)New information refines measurement → Prospective (estimate)Error discovered → Retrospective restatementNever change a policy merely for convenience
IAS 10: Events After the Reporting Period
Classification

Scope: Events (favourable and unfavourable) that occur between the reporting date and the date the financial statements are authorized for issue.

TypeDefinitionTreatment
AdjustingProvides evidence of conditions that existed at the reporting dateAdjust carrying amounts in the financial statements
Non-AdjustingEvidence of conditions that arose after the reporting dateDisclose if material (no adjustment)
Illustrative Examples
EventClassification
Settlement of lawsuit existing at year-endAdjusting
Customer bankruptcy (balance at year-end)Adjusting
Post year-end sale of inventory confirming NRVAdjusting
Major restructuring announced after year-endNon-Adjusting
Factory destroyed by fire after year-endNon-Adjusting
Post-period dividends declaredNon-Adjusting
Key Test

Did the condition exist at the reporting date? Yes → Adjusting. Arose after → Non-Adjusting. Going concern is the exception: if going concern is no longer appropriate after year-end, restate the financial statements accordingly.

IAS 24: Related Party Disclosures
Who Is a Related Party?

Objective: Ensure financial statements contain disclosures so users can understand the possibility that an entity's financial position and performance may have been affected by related party relationships and transactions.

  • All members of a group (parent, subsidiaries, fellow subsidiaries, associates, joint ventures)
  • Key Management Personnel (KMP) and their close family members — those having authority and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the entity (includes executive and non-executive directors)
  • Entities controlled, jointly controlled or significantly influenced by KMP or their close family
  • Post-employment benefit plans for employees of the entity or a related entity
Disclosure Requirements
  • Name of the parent and, if different, the ultimate controlling party
  • KMP compensation in total and by five categories: short-term, post-employment, other long-term, termination, share-based payments
  • For each type of related party transaction: nature, amounts, outstanding balances, terms and conditions, provisions for irrecoverable balances
  • Disclose related party relationships even when no transactions have occurred

Key Rule: Disclosures are required even if no monetary consideration is exchanged. Statements that transactions were conducted at arm's length must NOT be made unless this assertion can be substantiated.

IFRS 15: Revenue from Contracts with Customers
The Five-Step Model

Core Principle: Recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled.

1Identify the contract — approved, rights and payment terms identifiable, collection probable
2Identify performance obligations (POs) — is each promised good/service distinct on its own AND in the context of the contract?
3Determine the transaction price — variable consideration constraint, significant financing component, non-cash consideration
4Allocate transaction price to POs — based on relative standalone selling prices (SSP)
5Recognize revenue when (or as) each PO is satisfied — point-in-time vs. over-time
Step 3 — Variable Consideration Constraint

Correct Treatment: Variable consideration is estimated using the expected value method or most likely amount method. It is included in transaction price only to the extent it is highly probable that a significant reversal of cumulative revenue recognized will NOT occur when the uncertainty is resolved.

Step 5 — Over-Time vs. Point-in-Time

Revenue recognized over time if ANY ONE criterion is met:

  1. Customer simultaneously receives and consumes benefits as entity performs
  2. Entity's performance creates or enhances an asset the customer controls as it is created
  3. Entity's performance does not create an asset with alternative use AND entity has an enforceable right to payment for performance completed to date

If none met → point-in-time recognition when control transfers to the customer.

Contract Assets, Liabilities & Receivables
ItemArises When
Contract AssetRevenue recognized exceeds amounts billed (performance has outpaced billing)
Contract LiabilityCash received exceeds revenue recognized (deferred revenue / advances)
ReceivableUnconditional right to payment exists (only time passage required)
IFRS 16: Leases
Definition & Lease Term

Lease Definition: A contract that conveys the right to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in exchange for consideration. Control requires: (1) right to obtain substantially all economic benefits from use, AND (2) right to direct the use of the identified asset.

Lease Term: Non-cancellable period + optional extensions if reasonably certain to exercise + optional terminations if reasonably certain NOT to terminate. Reassess on significant events within lessee's control.

Lessee — Initial Recognition
Lease Liability = PV of future lease payments (rate implicit in lease; or lessee's IBR if not determinable) ROU Asset = Lease liability at commencement + Initial direct costs (lessee) + Prepayments made at or before commencement − Lease incentives received + Estimated dismantling / restoration costs (IAS 37)

Exemptions (straight-line expense): Short-term leases (term ≤ 12 months) and leases of low-value assets.

Variable Lease Payments
TypeIn Lease Liability?
Linked to an index or rate (e.g., CPI)Yes — at commencement rate; reassess on trigger events
NOT linked to index or rate (e.g., % of sales)No — expense in the period incurred
Lessee — Subsequent Measurement
  • Lease liability: Accrue interest using effective interest method; reduce by cash payments
  • ROU asset: Depreciated on straight-line basis over shorter of lease term and useful life — unless ownership transfer or purchase option exercise is reasonably certain (then over full useful life)
  • ROU asset subject to impairment testing under IAS 36

Current Portion of Lease Liability: Represents the principal repayment expected within the next 12 months — i.e., the reduction in the liability's carrying amount over the coming year. Finance costs are a separate P&L charge and do NOT determine the current/non-current split.

Sale and Leaseback

Genuine Sale (IFRS 15 satisfied): Derecognize the original asset; recognize ROU asset and lease liability; recognize gain only in relation to rights transferred to the buyer.

NOT a Genuine Sale: Treat as a financing arrangement — asset remains on SOFP; cash received = financial liability.

Lessor — Finance vs. Operating Lease
Finance LeaseOperating Lease
TestSubstantially all risks and rewards transferred to lesseeLessor retains risks and rewards
SOFPDerecognize asset; recognize net investment (lease receivable)Keep asset on SOFP; depreciate
IncomeFinance income — effective interest basisLease income — straight-line basis
IFRS 2: Share-based Payment
Equity-Settled Share-based Payments

Measured at FV of equity instruments at grant date — never remeasured subsequently. Total charge spread over the vesting period on a cumulative basis. Credit entry → equity (share-based payment reserve).

Cumulative charge at period end = (Estimated options expected to vest × Grant-date FV per option) × (Elapsed vesting period ÷ Total vesting period)
Vesting Conditions
Condition TypeReflected in Grant-date FV?Adjust for Non-Achievement?
Service conditionNoYes — adjust number expected to vest
Non-market performance (e.g., EPS target)NoYes — adjust number expected to vest
Market condition (e.g., share price target)Yes — via option pricing modelNo — recognize full charge regardless
Cash-Settled Share-based Payments (SARs)

Recognize a liability (not equity). Remeasure at FV at each reporting date and at settlement date — changes recognized in P&L. Same cumulative cost spreading logic as equity-settled. On settlement: derecognize liability; any difference recognized in P&L.

Modifications & Cancellations
  • Beneficial modification (e.g., reduction in exercise price): recognize incremental FV at modification date; spread over remaining vesting period
  • Detrimental modification (e.g., increase in exercise price): continue recognizing original grant-date FV — never reduce the total charge
  • Cancellation: Accelerate remaining unrecognized charge — recognize immediately in P&L
IAS 33: Earnings Per Share
Basic EPS
Basic EPS = Profit or loss attributable to ordinary equity holders of the parent ÷ Weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding
Weighted Average Shares — Adjustments
Capital EventTreatment
Bonus issue / scrip dividendTreated as always in issue — restate prior period EPS retroactively
Rights issue (with bonus element)Adjust for bonus fraction (TERP ÷ actual cum-rights price); restate comparative EPS
Issue at full market priceTime-apportion from date of issue; no retrospective adjustment
Share buybackRemove from weighted average from date of buyback
Diluted EPS
  • Assumes all dilutive potential ordinary shares converted at start of period (or date of issue if later)
  • Numerator adjustment: Add back interest/dividends saved on convertibles (net of tax)
  • Denominator adjustment: Add notional shares issued on conversion/exercise
  • Treasury stock method (options): Notional proceeds used to buy shares at period's average market price; only the excess (dilutive increment) added to denominator
  • Diluted EPS disclosed only if it is lower than basic EPS — antidilutive instruments always excluded

Presentation Rule: Both basic and diluted EPS must be shown on the face of the P&L for both continuing operations and total profit/loss. EPS figures based on OCI items must NOT be presented on the face of financial statements — OCI items do not affect EPS.

IAS 12: Income Taxes
Temporary Differences
Temporary Difference = Carrying amount of asset/liability in SOFP − Its tax base
TypeConditionDeferred Tax
Taxable TDCA of asset > Tax baseDTL (Deferred Tax Liability)
Deductible TDCA of asset < Tax baseDTA (Deferred Tax Asset)
Recognition Rules
ItemRuleExceptions
DTLRecognize for ALL taxable TDsInitial recognition exception; goodwill
DTAOnly to extent probable sufficient taxable profit availableReassess recoverability at every reporting date
  • Both DTAs and DTLs always presented as non-current
  • Net only when legally enforceable right to set off AND same tax authority
Presentation — Follow the Underlying Item
Tax Relates ToRecognized In
Items in P&LP&L
Items in OCI (e.g., revaluation gain, actuarial gains)OCI
Equity transactionsEquity
Revaluation gain in OCI → deferred tax in OCIGoodwill → no DTL recognizedAlways reassess DTA recoverability at year-end
IFRS 8: Operating Segments
Management Approach & Definitions

Management Approach: Segments are identified and reported based on how the CODM internally reviews and manages the business — even if that basis differs from full IFRS measurement principles.

CODM (Chief Operating Decision Maker): The function — not necessarily a single person — that allocates resources and assesses performance. Often the CEO, Board, or Executive Committee.

Quantitative Thresholds (10% Tests)

An operating segment is reportable if it meets any one of:

  • Revenue (internal + external) ≥ 10% of combined revenue of all segments
  • Reported profit or absolute loss ≥ 10% of combined profit/loss of all profitable/loss-making segments
  • Assets ≥ 10% of combined assets of all segments

75% Floor Test: Reportable segments must in aggregate account for at least 75% of total external revenue. If not met, additional segments must be designated as reportable even if they fail the 10% tests.

Required Disclosures
  • Revenue (internal and external), interest income/expense, depreciation and amortization, material items, equity-method income, income tax, capital expenditure
  • Segment assets and liabilities — if regularly provided to the CODM
  • Reconciliation of each segment total to the corresponding financial statement total

Entity-wide Disclosures: Revenue by product/service line; revenue by geography; major customer information — if ≥ 10% of total external revenue comes from a single external customer.

IAS 19: Employee Benefits
Defined Contribution vs. Defined Benefit

Defined Contribution: Entity's obligation limited to fixed contributions to a separate fund. All investment and actuarial risk rests with the employee. Contributions payable = expense in P&L; unpaid = accrual.

Defined Benefit: Entity promises a specified retirement benefit. Both actuarial and investment risk rest with the entity. Requires actuarial valuations using the Projected Unit Credit Method.

Net Defined Benefit Liability (Asset) = PV of Defined Benefit Obligation (DBO) − Fair Value of Plan Assets
Three Components of Defined Benefit Cost
ComponentRecognized InNotes
Current service costP&L — operating costBenefits earned in the current period; increases DBO
Past service costP&L — immediatelyPlan amendment or curtailment; no spreading
Net interest costP&L — finance costNet DB liability × discount rate
Actuarial remeasurementsOCI — never recycledExperience adjustments + assumption changes

Past Service Cost: Recognized immediately in P&L on the date of the plan amendment or curtailment. There is no longer any corridor approach or vesting-period spreading under IAS 19 (post-2011 amendment).

Always use high-quality corporate bond rate as discount rateNever recycle actuarial remeasurements from OCI to P&L
IAS 21: The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates
Transaction Date & Year-End Retranslation

Key Distinction: Monetary items → closing rate. Non-monetary items at historical cost → historical rate (no retranslation, no exchange difference).

Item TypeYear-End RateExchange Difference
Monetary itemsClosing rateP&L
Non-monetary (cost model)No retranslationNone
Non-monetary (FV/revaluation)Rate when FV was determinedOCI (IAS 16) or P&L (IAS 40/41)

Revaluation Model & IAS 21: Exchange difference on revalued non-monetary FX assets is embedded in the revaluation movement. It must NOT be separated as a standalone exchange gain or loss in P&L — the entire movement (including the currency element) is recognized in OCI. This is frequently misapplied.

Translation of Foreign Operations
ItemRate Used
Assets and liabilitiesClosing rate
Income and expensesTransaction date rate (or average rate as practical approximation)
Exchange differencesRecognized in OCI — foreign currency translation reserve (FCTR)

Disposal of Foreign Operation: The cumulative translation reserve (FCTR) is recycled to P&L on disposal of the foreign operation.

Monetary → closing rate → P&L differenceNon-monetary (cost) → historical rate → no differenceForeign operation B/S → closing rate; P&L → transaction rate; difference → OCI (FCTR)
IFRS 9: Financial Instruments
Financial Assets — Classification (Debt Instruments)
CategoryBusiness ModelSPPI?Gains/Losses
Amortised CostHold to collect contractual cash flowsPassesInterest income in P&L only; FV changes not recognized
FVTOCI (Debt)Hold to collect AND sellPassesInterest in P&L; FV in OCI; OCI recycled to P&L on disposal
FVTPLOther / hold to sell / tradingFails or N/AAll FV changes in P&L
Equity Investments
  • Default: FVTPL — all gains/losses in P&L; transaction costs expensed immediately
  • Irrevocable election (non-trading only): FVTOCI — gains/losses in OCI; NEVER recycled to P&L; dividends still in P&L

Critical Distinction: Debt at FVTOCI → OCI IS recycled to P&L on disposal. Equity at FVTOCI → OCI is NEVER recycled to P&L. Frequently tested.

Expected Credit Loss (ECL) — Impairment
StageConditionECL Allowance
Stage 1No SICR since initial recognition12-month ECL; interest on gross
Stage 2SICR — but not credit-impairedLifetime ECL; interest on gross
Stage 3Credit-impaired (objective evidence of default)Lifetime ECL; interest on net

Trade Receivables: Simplified approach — always lifetime ECL without stage assessment. Provision matrix permitted.

Derecognition

Financial assets: Derecognize when contractual rights expire, OR when transferred AND substantially all risks and rewards transferred to the transferee. If neither transferred nor retained → assess control.

Financial liabilities: Derecognize when the obligation is discharged, cancelled or expires. Substantial modification (≥10% PV difference using original EIR) → derecognize old; recognize new at FV.

Hedge Accounting
TypeHedged ItemEffective Portion
Fair Value HedgeExposure to FV changes of recognized asset/liability or firm commitmentBoth instrument and hedged item adjusted to FV → P&L (offsetting)
Cash Flow HedgeExposure to variability in future cash flowsOCI (cash flow hedge reserve); reclassified to P&L when hedged item affects P&L
Net Investment HedgeCurrency risk in net investment in foreign operationOCI — recycled to P&L on disposal of investment

Qualifying Criteria: Formal documentation at inception; economic relationship between instrument and hedged item; credit risk does not dominate the relationship; hedge ratio consistent with risk management.

IAS 28: Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures
Significant Influence & The Equity Method

Significant Influence: The power to participate in financial and operating policy decisions — but not control or joint control. Presumed at 20–50% ownership (rebuttable). Indicators include: board representation, material intercompany transactions, interchange of managerial personnel.

Equity Method: Investment initially at cost; subsequently adjusted for: investor's share of post-acquisition profits/losses (P&L), share of OCI, and dividends received (which reduce carrying amount).

Goodwill within Investment: Goodwill embedded in the investment is not separately tested — the entire investment carrying amount is tested as a single asset under IAS 36.

Intragroup Transactions & Losses
DirectionDescriptionTreatment
UpstreamAssociate sells to investorEliminate unrealized profit to the extent of investor's % interest
DownstreamInvestor sells to associateEliminate unrealized profit to the extent of investor's % interest

Losses Exceeding Investment: Recognize losses until investment (and long-term interests forming part of net investment) is reduced to nil. Further losses recognized as a liability only when a legal or constructive obligation exists to fund the associate.

IFRS 11: Joint Arrangements
Definition & Classification

Definition: An arrangement over which two or more parties have joint control — where decisions about relevant activities require the unanimous consent of all parties sharing control.

Joint OperationJoint Venture
StructureUsually no separate legal entity; parties have direct rights to assets and obligations for liabilitiesStructured through a separate legal entity
RightsRights to assets and obligations for liabilities directlyRights to net assets only
AccountingEach party recognizes its own share of assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses line by lineEquity method per IAS 28
Important Rules

No Proportionate Consolidation: A joint venture structured through a separate entity must be accounted for using the equity method — proportionate consolidation is NOT permitted under IFRS 11.

Classification Note: A separate legal entity does not automatically make the arrangement a joint venture. The legal structure AND the substance of contractual arrangements together determine classification.

IFRS 3: Business Combinations
Acquisition Method & Goodwill

Core Principle: All business combinations use the acquisition method. The acquirer recognizes all identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities of the acquiree at fair values at the acquisition date.

Goodwill = Purchase Consideration (at FV) + Fair Value of NCI at acquisition date − Fair Value of Net Identifiable Assets (FVNA)
NCI Measurement — Two Methods
MethodNCI Measured AtEffect
Full GoodwillFair value of NCI (includes NCI's share of goodwill)Higher goodwill + higher NCI equity
Partial GoodwillNCI's proportionate share of FVNALower goodwill + lower NCI equity
Acquisition-Related Costs
Cost TypeTreatment
Direct costs (professional fees, due diligence)Expense in P&L
Costs of issuing debt instrumentsDeducted from carrying amount of liability
Costs of issuing equity instrumentsDeducted from equity (share premium)
Bargain Purchase & Contingent Consideration

Bargain Purchase (Negative Goodwill): Reassess all FVs and consideration. If still negative after reassessment → recognize as a gain in P&L immediately.

Contingent Consideration: Recognized at FV at acquisition date. Subsequent changes: if equity → not remeasured; if financial liability → remeasured at FV through P&L at each reporting date.

Measurement Period: Provisional FVs may be adjusted retrospectively within 12 months of acquisition date if new information comes to light about facts existing at acquisition date. Adjustments restate goodwill. After 12 months → all adjustments recognized through P&L.

IFRS 10: Consolidated Financial Statements
Definition of Control — Three Elements (ALL required simultaneously)

Core Principle: An investor controls an investee — and must consolidate — when it is exposed to variable returns AND has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the investee.

ElementDescription
PowerExisting rights giving the current ability to direct relevant activities that significantly affect returns
Variable ReturnsInvestor's returns can vary — positively or negatively (dividends, residual interests, credit risk)
LinkageInvestor uses its power to affect the amount of its returns from the investee
Consolidation Procedures & NCI
  • Combine assets, liabilities, equity, income, expenses and cash flows line by line
  • Eliminate all intragroup balances, transactions, income and expenses in full
  • Uniform accounting policies: Adjust subsidiary accounts to parent's policies before consolidation
  • Reporting date: Same date for all entities; if unavoidable, maximum gap of three months

Non-Controlling Interests (NCI): Presented within equity in consolidated SOFP, separately from parent shareholders' equity. Losses continue to be allocated to NCI even when this results in a negative NCI balance.

Common Pitfall: Majority shareholding (>50%) does not automatically mean control — it can be overridden by contractual restrictions. Conversely, an investor may control with less than 50% if it has practical control (e.g., widely dispersed shareholding of remaining shares).

Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting
Status & Definitions of Elements

Status: The Conceptual Framework is NOT an IFRS Standard. Where a conflict exists between the Framework and a specific IFRS Standard, the Standard always prevails.

ElementFramework Definition
AssetA present economic resource controlled by the entity as a result of past events
LiabilityA present obligation of the entity to transfer an economic resource as a result of past events
EquityThe residual interest in the assets after deducting all liabilities
IncomeIncreases in assets or decreases in liabilities resulting in increases in equity, other than contributions from equity holders
ExpensesDecreases in assets or increases in liabilities resulting in decreases in equity, other than distributions to equity holders

Framework vs. Individual Standards: "Control" appears in the Framework as part of the definition of an asset. It is NOT carried forward as a recognition criterion within IAS 16 or IAS 38. Recognition criteria within standards are typically: (1) probable future economic benefits, and (2) reliable measurement.

Qualitative Characteristics
FundamentalEnhancing
Relevance (including materiality)Comparability
Faithful Representation (complete, neutral, free from error)Verifiability
Timeliness
Understandability
IESBA Ethical Principles
  • Integrity — Honest and straightforward in all professional relationships
  • Objectivity — Do not allow bias or conflict of interest to override professional judgement
  • Professional Competence & Due Care — Maintain knowledge and skill; act diligently
  • Confidentiality — Respect confidentiality; do not disclose without proper authority
  • Professional Behaviour — Comply with laws and regulations; avoid actions that discredit the profession
Measurement Bases
  • Historical cost — entry price; what was paid
  • Fair value — exit price (IFRS 13)
  • Value in Use / Fulfilment value — entity-specific PV of cash flows
  • Current cost — current entry price for equivalent asset
IFRS 18: Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements
Three Mandatory Income Statement Categories

Purpose: IFRS 18 improves comparability by requiring standardized income statement categories, mandatory subtotals, and regulated disclosure of Management Performance Measures (MPMs).

CategoryContent
OperatingRevenue and expenses from main business activities — all items not classified as investing or financing
InvestingReturns on investments in associates, JVs; income on cash and investments not integral to operations
FinancingFinance costs on liabilities (interest on borrowings, lease interest); FV changes on financial liabilities at FVTPL due to own credit risk
Mandatory Subtotals
  • Operating profit or loss
  • Profit or loss before financing and income tax
  • Profit or loss before income tax
  • Profit or loss from continuing operations
  • Profit or loss (total)
Management Performance Measures (MPMs)

MPMs — Permitted but Regulated: Entities may continue using entity-specific measures (e.g., Adjusted EBITDA). However, MPMs must be disclosed in a single dedicated note — not on the face of financial statements — accompanied by: (i) description and reason for use; (ii) reconciliation to the most directly comparable IFRS-defined subtotal; (iii) tax and NCI effects of each MPM.

Expense Classification
  • Choose: nature of expense (materials, staff, depreciation) OR function (cost of sales, distribution, administration) OR a mixed presentation
  • If function chosen → nature information (staff costs and depreciation at minimum) required in the notes
  • P&L is the default for all income/expenses unless a specific IFRS requires OCI recognition
Exam Tip

EPS (IAS 33) is calculated on profit or loss — OCI items do NOT affect EPS. Restatement of comparative financial statements is required when an entity changes classification of income or expenses between the three categories.

IFRS S1: General Requirements for Sustainability-related Financial Disclosures
Objective & Four Disclosure Pillars

Objective: Require disclosure of sustainability-related risks and opportunities that could reasonably be expected to affect the entity's cash flows, access to finance, or cost of capital over the short, medium or long term.

PillarWhat is Disclosed
GovernanceHow the governing body oversees, and management manages, sustainability-related risks and opportunities
StrategyHow identified risks and opportunities affect the entity's business model, strategy, and financial position; scenario analysis
Risk ManagementProcesses to identify, assess, prioritize and monitor sustainability-related risks; integration with overall risk management
Metrics & TargetsPerformance metrics and quantitative targets used to measure, monitor and manage material sustainability-related risks
Connected Information

Connected Information: IFRS S1 requires sustainability disclosures to be made in the same report as the related financial statements, enabling users to understand the connections between sustainability information and financial information.

IFRS S2: Climate-related Disclosures
Physical vs. Transition Risks
Risk CategorySub-typeExamples
PhysicalAcuteExtreme weather: hurricanes, floods, wildfires
PhysicalChronicSea level rise, rising temperatures, shifting precipitation
TransitionPolicy & legalCarbon pricing, emission trading schemes, litigation
TransitionTechnologyShifts to lower-emission tech; stranded asset risk
TransitionMarket & reputationalChanging customer/investor preferences; brand value impact
GHG Emissions — Scope 1, 2 and 3

Scope 1: Direct GHG emissions from sources owned or controlled by the entity.

Scope 2: Indirect GHG emissions from the generation of purchased or acquired electricity, heat or steam.

Scope 3: All other indirect GHG emissions in the entity's upstream and downstream value chain (supply chain and product use by customers). Required if material — may involve significant estimation uncertainty.

IFRS 19: Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures
Purpose & Eligibility Criteria

Purpose: Allows eligible subsidiaries to apply reduced disclosure requirements while retaining full IFRS recognition, measurement and presentation requirements.

An entity is eligible when:

  • The entity is a subsidiary (not a parent, associate or JV)
  • No public accountability: instruments are NOT traded in a public market AND the entity is NOT a financial institution regulated to hold public assets
  • An ultimate or intermediate parent produces IFRS-compliant consolidated financial statements that are publicly available and include the subsidiary
Key Rules & Limitations

Disclosure-only Standard: IFRS 19 does NOT modify recognition, measurement or presentation requirements — full IFRS Recognition and Measurement continues to apply.

IFRS 19 does NOT reduce disclosure requirements for: IAS 33 (EPS), IFRS 8 (Operating Segments), or IFRS 17 (Insurance Contracts). The election to apply IFRS 19 must be explicitly disclosed.

IFRS for Small and Medium-Sized Entities (SMEs)
Eligibility & Scope

Eligibility: For entities that do not have public accountability AND publish general purpose financial statements for external users. Eligibility is determined by a test of public accountability — NOT by quantitative size thresholds.

Exam Trap: A listed (publicly traded) entity can NEVER use IFRS for SMEs — regardless of its actual size. Public accountability (listing status, or being a financial institution regulated to hold public assets) is the sole disqualifier. Size thresholds are irrelevant.

Topics Omitted from IFRS for SMEs
  • Interim financial reporting
  • Segment reporting (IFRS 8 equivalent)
  • Earnings per share (IAS 33 equivalent)
  • Insurance contracts (IFRS 17 equivalent)
  • Assets classified as held-for-sale (IFRS 5 equivalent)
Key Simplifications vs. Full IFRS
AreaFull IFRSIFRS for SMEs
R&D costsResearch expensed; development capitalized if PIRATE criteria metAll R&D expensed as incurred — no capitalization
Goodwill & indefinite intangiblesAnnual impairment test; no amortizationAmortized over useful life (max 10 years if not determinable)
PPE & IntangiblesCost or revaluation modelCost model only — revaluation not permitted
Investment propertyFV model or cost modelFV if reliably measurable without undue cost/effort; otherwise cost model
Financial instrumentsFull IFRS 9 — SPPI test, ECL modelSimplified — amortised cost or FV; incurred loss model (not ECL)
Borrowing costsCapitalize on qualifying assets (mandatory)All borrowing costs expensed as incurred