STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION Also called the “Statement of Financial Condition” or “Balance Sheet”. ● Financial position of an entity at a particular date. ● Economic resources (Assets) ● Economic Obligations (Liabilities) ● Net Assets (Equity/Capital) ● At a specific date. ● Assets = Liabilities + Equity ELEMENTS OF FINANCIAL POSITION Assets ● Present economic resource ○ Right that has the potential to produce economic benefits. ● Controlled by an entity ● Result of past events Liabilities ● Present obligation ○ Unable to avoid the obligation. ○ Identity of the person or entity to whom the obligation is owed is not necessarily known. ● Transfer an economic resource ○ Settled by paying cash, delivering goods or services, exchanging economic resources on unfavorable terms (onerous), creating another obligation to replace the old, or issuing a financial instrument equivalent to an ownership interest. ● Result of past events. ○ Past transaction that the entity has obtained economic benefits or taken action that obliges it to transfer an economic resource. Equity ● Capital of any form of business organization ● Residual interest in the entity’s assets after deducting all liabilities. ● Net assets ● Share Capital ● Share Premium (Additional Paid-In Capital) ● Accumulated Profits or Retained Earnings ● Cumulative Other Comprehensive Income ● Measured depends on the measurement of assets and liabilities. ● Disclosure SFP/SCIE/Notes: ○ For each class of share capital: ■ the number of shares authorized; ■ the number of shares issued and fully paid, and issued but not fully paid; ■ par value per share, or that the shares have no par value; ● a reconciliation of the number of shares outstanding as of the beginning and at the end of the period; ■ the rights, preferences, and restrictions attaching to that class, including restrictions on the distribution of dividends and the repayment of capital; ■ shares in the entity held by the entity or by its subsidiaries or associates (treasury shares) and ■ shares reserved for issue under options and contracts for the sale of shares, including the terms and amounts; and ○ A description of the nature and purpose of each reserve within equity. CONCEPT OF SUBSTANCE OVER FORM ● Substance ○ Parties’ actual intentions for a transaction. ● Form ○ Legal aspect or document evidencing the transaction. ● In case of conflict between substance and for, recognition is given to its substance. INFORMATION TO BE PRESENTED ON THE FACE OF SFP ● Minimum line items: ○ Property, plant, and equipment; ○ Investment property; ○ Intangible assets; ○ Financial assets not disclosed in other headings enumerated below; ○ Investments accounted for using the equity method; ○ Biological assets; ○ Inventories; ○ Trade and other receivables; ○ Cash and cash equivalents; ○ The total of assets classified as held for sale and assets included in disposal groups classified as held for sale under ○ IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations ○ Trade and other payables; ○ Provisions; ○ Financial liabilities not included in other headings above ○ Liabilities and assets for current tax; ○ Deferred tax liabilities; ○ Liabilities included in disposal groups classified as held for sale under IFRS 5. ■ Non-controlling interest, presented within equity (for consolidated statements only); ○ Issued capital and reserves attributable to equity holders of the parent. ● Additional line items and headings may be presented on the face of SFP when the item enhances the relevance of the informations (presented based on): ○ the nature and liquidity of assets; ○ the function of assets within the entity; and ○ the amounts, nature and timing of liabilities. ● Main objective is to provide relevant information to understand the entity’s financial position. REPORTING CLASSIFICATIONS OF THE SFP ● General requirement of IAS 1: classify assets and liabilities into current and non-current. ● If presentation based on liquidity is more relevant, do not apply current and non-current presentation. (Presentation Based on Liquidity - usually banks). ● Regardless of presentation, entity must disclose the amount expected to be recovered or settled within twelve months and beyond twelve months. Current Assets ● Any criteria: ○ Cash or cash equivalents (presentation follow its purpose). ■ Set-aside for long-term purposes (not timing of cash disbursements) = NCA ○ Held for trading. ■ Equity Investments at FVPL ○ Expected to be realized within the normal operating cycle. ○ Expected to be realized within 12 months from balance sheet date (non-trade assets like loan receivables). ● Normal Operating Cycle ○ Time between the acquisition of assets for processing and their realization in cash or cash equivalents. ○ Length of time to complete the following processes: purchase of materials, production of goods, sale of goods, and collection from customers. ○ Classifies trade receivables and inventories as current assets even if they are not expected to be realized ○ in cash or sold within twelve months from the end of the reporting period. ○ If not identifiable, presumed to be 12 months. ● Financial Assets at FVPL ○ Intended to meet the working capital requirements ● Non-current Assets Held for Sale ○ Classified as current assets. ○ Presented separately. Non-Current Assets ● Does not meet any criteria of current assets. ● Property, Plant, and Equipment ○ Tangible assets with an estimated useful life beyond one year. ○ Land, Land Improvements, Buildings, Machinery, Equipment, Furniture, Tools, Returnable Containers, Leasehold Improvements, Natural Resources or Wasting Assets ● Investment Property ○ Land or a building or part of a building (or both) held to earn rentals or for capital appreciation or both. ● Investment in Associates ○ Investment in equity securities of another enterprise that provides the investor significant influence over the investee. ○ Investor does not intend to trade nor dispose of these securities within twelve months from the date of acquisition. ● Deferred Tax Assets ○ Account resulting from temporary difference (book and tax bases of certain assets and liabilities). ○ Arises from inter-period tax allocation. ● Receivables not Due Currently ● Other Non-Current Financial Assets ○ Not realizable within 12 months from the reporting date and are not directly involved in the operating cycle. ○ Bond Retirement Funds, Plant Expansion Fund, Long-term Receivables and Advances to Officers, Financial Assets at FVOCI, and Investment in Debt Securities at Amortized Cost. ● Intangible Assets ○ Identifiable non-monetary assets without physical substance, controlled by the enterprise, and provide the enterprise some rights, privileges, and competitive advantages. ○ Separately identifiable from the entity. Could be reliably measured. Patents, Copyrights, Trademarks, Franchises ○ Goodwill ■ Not identifiable = NCA ■ Purchase Price - FVNA = Goodwill ● Bioligical Assets ○ Living animals and plants held by a companyengaged in raising livestock, forestry, cropping, cultivating orchards and plantations, floriculture, or aquaculture. ○ Distinguished from agricultural produce. ■ Harvested product of the entity’s biological assets ■ Example: Cow - Milk Current Liabilities ● Settled in a normal operating cycle (Trade and Accounts Payable) ● Settled within 12 months from Balance Sheet date (For Non-trade payables like Bonds Payable). ● No right at the end of the reporting period to defer settlement of the liability at least 12 months after the reporting period. ● Held for Trading (FInancial Liability at FVPL) ● Examples: Trade Payables, Accrual for Operating Costs, Bank Overdrafts, Dividends Payable, Current Portion of Long-term Non-Trade Payables. ● Refinancing of Currently Maturing Obligations ○ ○ ● ● Refinancing is done through: ○ Extension of Maturity Date ○ Entering into a borrowing transaction, proceeds of which will be used to settle the maturing obligation. Breach of Covenant Agreement ○ Due and demandable (Current Liability) ○ Not unless there is a grace period provided (NCL). If the following events (breach and refinancing) occur between the reporting period and the date financial statements are authorized for issue: ○ Disclosed as non-adjusitng events to the Notes of the Financial Statements: ■ Refinancing on a long-term basis ■ Rectification of a breach of a long-term loan arrangement ■ The granting by the lender of a period of grace to rectify a braeach of a long-term loan arrangement ending at least twelve months after the reporting period. FORMS OF THE STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION ● No prescribe uniform format by IAS 1. ● May present separate line items when the size, nature, or function of an aggregation of similar items will make the financial information more useful. ● Entity shall exercise its judgment on whether to present additional items separately based on its assessment of: ○ Nature and liquidity of assets ○ Function of assets within the entity ○ Amounts , nature and timing of liabilities. Report Form ● Straight line or vertical presentation of assets, liabilities and equity. Account Form ● T-account ● Assets - left side ● Liabilities and equity - right side Financial Position Form ● Emphasizes the working capital position ● Current Assets - Current Liabilities = Working Capital ● After, NCA are added and NCL deducted, leaving a residual amount (equity or net assets). ● EVENTS AFTER THE REPORTING PERIOD ● Events between the end of the reporting period and the date when financial statements are authorized for issue. ● Classified as adjusiting and non-adjusting events after the reporting period. Adjusting Events After the Reporting Period ● The settlement after the reporting period of a court case confirming that the entity had a present obligation at the reporting date. ● The receipt of information after the reporting period indicating that an asset was impaired at the reporting ● date. ● The determination after the reporting period of the cost of assets purchased, or the proceeds from assets sold during the reporting period. ● The determination after the reporting date of the amount of profit-sharing or bonus payments, if the entity had a present legal obligation or constructive obligation to make such payments as a result of events before the end of the reporting period. ● The discovery of fraud or errors showing that the financial statements are incorrect. Non-Adjusting Events After the Reporting Period ● A major business combination or disposing of a major subsidiary; ● Announcing a plan to discontinue an operation, disposing of assets or settling liabilities attributable to a discontinuing operation, or entering into a binding agreement to sell such assets or settle such liabilities; ● Major purchases and disposals of assets, or expropriation of significant assets by the government; ● The destruction of a major production plant by a fire; ● Announcing or commencing the implementation of a major restructuring; ● Major ordinary share transactions and potential ordinary share transactions; ● Abnormally large changes, after the reporting date, in asset prices or foreign exchange rates; ● Changes in tax rates or tax laws enacted or announced after the reporting period that have a significant effect on current and deferred tax assets and liabilities; ● Entering into significant commitments or contingent liabilities, for example, by issuing significant guarantees; and ● Commencing major litigation arising solely out of events that occurred after the reporting period. NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Present the basis of FS preparation and specific accounting policies used. ● Information required by IFRS that is not presented elsewhere or on the face of the FS (Disclosures). ● Additional information not presented elsewhere in the FS, but relevant. ● Logical sequence with cross-reference to any related information in the notes. ● Notes are generally presented in the following order, which assists users in understanding the financial statements and comparing them with financial statements of other entities (IAS 1) ○ A statement of compliance with IFRS; ○ A summary of significant accounting policies applied; ○ Supporting information for items presented on the face of the statement of financial position, statement of comprehensive income, statement of changes in equity, and statement of cash flows, in the order in which each statement and each line item is presented; and ○ Other disclosures, including ■ contingent liabilities and unrecognized contractual commitments; and ■ non-financial disclosures ● Not all accounts or amounts on the Face of the FS requires notes (significant only). Note 1: Reporting Entity ● Name ● Location ● Date of incorporation ● Parent Note 2: Basis of FS Preparation ● Full PFRS/ PFRS for SME/ PFRS for Small Entity ● Statement of Compliance (in compliance with the applicable Financial Reporting Framework ● Basis of the Consolidated FS Note 3: Significant Accounting Policies ● Measurement basis (or bases) used in preparing the FS ● Other accounting policies used that are relevant. Note 4: Judgments , Estimates, and Assumptions Other Disclosures ● Disclosures of significant events after the reporting period, key sources of estimation, ● ● ● the basis of resolving uncertainties, and information not required by any accounting standard but are necessary to make the financial statements not misleading are also disclosed in the notes. Entity shall also disclose in the notes ○ the amount of dividends proposed or declared before the financial statements are authorized for issue but not recognized as a distribution to equity holders during the period, and the related amount per share; and ○ the amount of any cumulative preference dividends not recognized. Entity shall disclose the following if not disclosed elsewhere in information published with the financial statements ○ the domicile and legal form of the entity, its country of incorporation, and the address of its registered office or principal place of business; ○ a description of the nature of the entity's operations and its principal activities; ○ the name of the parent and the ultimate parent of the group; and ○ if it is a limited life entity, information regarding the length of life. STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME Single most significant financial statement. Most critical measure of an entity’s performance. ● Assessment of the overall financial performance of an entity. COMPREHENSIVE INCOME ● Change in equity from transactions other than those with the owners. ● Excludes contribution from owners and distribution to owners. ● Profit/Loss ○ Income - Expense ■ Conventional Income Statement ● Other Comprehensive Income ○ Mainly of unrealized items of gains and losses that an entity expects to reverse over time. APPROACHES TO MEASUREMENT OF PROFIT Capital Maintenance Approach ● Economist’s view of determining profit. ● Not generally used because it fails to link the information provided with the user’s understanding. ● Profit/Net Income = Ending Capital Beginning Capital ● ● ○ After excluding the transactions with owners. effects of Financial Capital Maintenance ○ Profit = Net Assets, Ending > Net Assets, Beginning ● Physical Capital Maintenance ○ Adoption of the current cost basis of measurement. ○ Profit = Physical Productive Capacity, End > Physical Productive Capacity, Beginning Transaction Approach ● Profit = Income - Expenses ● Accrual Basis ● Helps users better assess the future performance of the entity and its ability to generate cash flows. ELEMENTS OF PERFORMANCE Income ● Increases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of inflows or enhancements of assets or decreases of liabilities that result in increases in equity other than those relating to contribution from equity participants. ● Revenue ○ Revenue-producing activities ● Gains ○ Incidental transactions Expenses ● Decreases in economic benefits during the reporting period in the form of outflows or depletion of assets or incurrences of liabilities that result in decreases in equity other than those relating to contribution from equity participants. ● Operating Expense ○ Primary revenue-producing activities ● Losses ○ Incidental transactions EXPENSE RECOGNITION Associating Cause and Effect ● Directly associating the cost incurred with the specific items of income. ● Matching Principle ○ Entity recognizes expense in the same period when it earns and recognize the related revenues. ● Example: COGS, Sales Commission, Warranty Expense and Premium Expense Systematic and Rational Allocation ● Expects economic benefits from a cost over several reporting periods ● Cannot directly associate the costs with revenues earned. ● Example: Depreciation and Amortization of long-lived assets, insurance, and rent. Immediate Recognition ● Immediately recognize expenditure (expense) ● When such cost produces no future economic benefits ● Future economic benefits do not qualify or cease to qualify for recognition of assets. ● Example: Amounts paid to Lawsuits, Intangibles determine to be worthless, Long-lives assets destroyed by fire, Effects of flood and other casualties, Advertising Expenditures, Research Costs, and Development Costs that do not meet the capitalization criteria. REVENUE RECOGNITION PRINICIPLES ● General Rule: goods are delivered, services are rendered Revenue Recognition Under IFRS 15 (Revenue from Contracts with Customers) ● Approved and issued by IASB in May 2014. ● Effectivity - beginning or after January 1, 2018 ● Five-step Process Revenue Recognition ○ Identifying a contract with a customer; ○ Identifying the performance obligation in the contract; ○ Determining the transaction price; ○ Allocating the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and ○ Recognizing the revenue when or as the entity satisfies a performance obligation ● Contract is within the Scope of IFRS 15 if all conditions are met: ○ The contract has been approved by the parties to the contract; ○ Each party's rights concerning the goods or services to be transferred can be identified; ○ The payment terms can be identified; ○ The contract has commercial substance; and ○ It is probable that the consideration to which the entity is entitled in exchange for the goods or services will be collected. ● Performance Obligation ○ In the form of delivery of goods or services (or bundle of goods or services) that is distinct or a series of distinct goods or services that are substantially the same and that have the same pattern of transfer to the customer. ○ Transaction Price ● Amount the entity expects to be entitled to in exchange for the goods and services transferred. ■ Multiple performance obligations = allocate to stand-alone selling prices ○ When it is to be met by an entity over a period of time, transaction price is allocated as revenue when the performance obligation is proportionately satisfied. ● Revenue is recognized as control of the asset is passed, either over time or at a point in time ● Control of an Asset ○ Ability to direct the use of ans obtain substantially all of the remaining benefits from an asset. ● At a point in time: ○ the entity has a present right to payment for the asset; ○ the customer has legal title to the asset; ○ the entity has transferred physical possession of the asset; ○ the customer has the significant risks and rewards related to the ownership of the asset; and ○ the customer has accepted the asset. ● Over time: ○ the customer simultaneously receives and consumes all of the benefits provided by the entity as the entity performs; ○ the entity's performance creates or enhances an asset that the customer controls as the asset is created; or ○ the entity's performance does not create an asset with an alternative use to the entity, and the entity has an enforceable right to payment for performance completed to date. Special Revenue Recognition Principle ● End of Production Method ○ Recognizes revenue before the actual sales of goods ○ Installment Method ■ Recognizes revenue in direct proportion to collections during the period. ■ Gross Profit Realized = Collections x GP rate based on Sales ○ Cost Recovery Method ■ Used when collection is highly uncertain ■ Most prudent recognition method ■ Collections are first regarded as cost recovery and then a profit realization. ○ Installment and Cost Recovery Method are not applicable for Financial Reporting because they could not find theoretical support under IFRS. CONCEPT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME ● IAS 1 - from Income Statement to Statement of Comprehensive Income ● Change in equity arising from events other than those from transactions with enterprise owners. ● Revenue, gains, expense, losses ● Divided into two: Profit/Loss and Other Comprehensive Income ○ Sum of the two is called Total Comprehensive Income Profit/Loss ● Components of Conventional Income Statement ● Income - Expense = Profit/Loss Other Comprehensive Income ● Items meet the definition of income or expenses, but are excluded from P/L. ● Recycled to P/L (Recycle means if related assets or liabilities are derecognized): ○ Gains and Losses from FOREX ○ Gains and Losses on Remeasurement of Debt Investments at FVOCI ○ Effective Portion of gain and Losses on hedging investment in a Cash Flow Hedge ● Not Recycled to P/L (Recycled to RE when related assets or liabilities are derecognized): ○ Gains or Losses on remeasurement of DBO ○ Gains or Losses on remeasurement of Equity Investments at FVOCI ○ Financial Liability designated at FVPL attributed to Credit Risk ■ If hindi credit risk sa P/L siya. ■ Credit Risk - risk of default or risk that the other party cannot pay its duty when the obligation becomes due ○ Revaluation Surplus Presentation of SCI ● Single Statement ○ Direstso from income to OCI ● Two-statement ○ Presented separately ○ OCI will start with the P/L ■ ○ Clearly shows the entity’s operations result. INFORMATION TO BE PRESENTED ON THE FACE OF SCI ● Profit/Loss (minimum): ○ revenue, presenting separately (a) interest revenue and (b) insurance revenue; ○ gains and losses arising from the derecognition of financial assets measured at amortized cost; ○ insurance service expenses (for insurance companies); ○ finance costs; ○ share of the profit or loss of associates and joint ventures accounted for using the equity method; ○ if a financial asset is reclassified so that it is measured at fair value, any gain or loss arising from a difference between the previous carrying amount and its fair value at the reclassification date; ○ tax expense; ○ a single amount for the discontinued operations ■ (a) the post-tax profit or loss of discontinued operations and ■ (b) the post-tax gain or loss recognized on the measurement to fair value less costs to sell or on the disposal of assets or disposal groups constituting the discontinued operations; ○ profit or loss; ● OCI (minimum): ○ Each component of the other classified by nature and grouped into those that (a) wil be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss and (b) will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss. ○ Share of other comprehensive income of associates and joint ventures accounted for using the equity method and grouped into those that (a) will be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss and (b) will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss. ○ total other comprehensive income; and ○ total comprehensive income ● For Conso FS ○ profit or loss attributable to ■ non-controlling interests, and ■ owners of the parent. total comprehensive income attributable to ■ non-controlling interests, and ■ owners of the parent. ● The following are circumstances that would give rise to the separate disclosure of items of income and expense: ○ write-downs of inventories to net realizable value or of property, plant, and equipment to recoverable amount, as well as reversals of such write-downs; ○ restructurings of the activities of an entity and reversals of any provisions for the cost of restructuring; ○ disposals of items of property, plant, and equipment; ○ disposals of investments; ○ Litigation settlements ○ Other reversal provisions Presentation of Expenses ● Nature of Expense ○ Aggregated according to nature ○ Does not show COGS ○ Increase or decrease in inventory = adjustment to Net Purchases ○ Inherent characteristics ○ Example: Dep. Exp, Purchases, Transportation, Salary Expense ● Function of Expense ○ Cost of Sales Method ○ According to their purpose or function ○ Provides more relevant information ○ COGS or Cost of Sales ■ Most significant item deducted from revenue ○ Selling Expense ■ Directly related to sale efforts ○ G&A ■ cost of running the business ○ Other operating expenses - if they does not fall under COGS, SE, and G&A ● Finance Costs ○ Separate line item in P/L ○ Expenditure related to borrowing such as interest expense, discounts lost on merchandise purchases, discounts lost on purchases of other NCA, amortization of discounts on long-term debts, and additional costs ancillary to borrowings. ○ DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS (IFRS 5) ● Presented separately in the SCI ● Enable financial statement users to evaluate its current financial performance and better predict future performance. ● Assessing the ongoing ability of the enterprise to generate cash flows ● Separately part of P/L ● Component of an entity that either has been disposed of or classified as held for sale ● Component of an Entity ○ comprises operations and cash flows that can be distinguished operationally and for financial reporting purposes from the rest of the entity. ○ will have been a cash-generating unit or a group of cash-generating units held for use ● discontinued operation may be a segment, a reporting unit, a subsidiary, or an asset group ● component is classified as a discontinued operation at the date the entity has disposed of the operation of the component or at the date the component meets the criteria to be classified as held for sale. ● Held for Sale if: ○ Carrying amount (asset and liability) will be recovered principally through a sale transaction rather than continuing use ○ Assets must be available for immediate sale in their present condition, and sale must be highly probable RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT ● apply the principles of IAS 36 Impairment of Assets, and IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities, and Contingent of Assets ● Expenses directly resulting from the discontinuance of the segment, such as employees' termination costs and other disposal costs, are reported under the discontinued operations. ● impairment loss is recognized before the actual sale of the discontinued segment if, at the end of the reporting period, the net recoverable value of the segment's net assets is lower than its carrying value. (NRV < CV) PRESENTATION OF DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS IN THE STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME ● Disclose a single amount comprising of: ○ post-tax profit or loss of the discontinued operations; and ○ post-tax gain or loss recognized on the measurement to fair value less costs to sell or on the disposal of the assets or disposal groups constituting the discontinued operation. ● If unit is dispose during the reporting period, include: ○ the after-tax profit or loss from the operations of the discontinued operations ○ the after-tax gain or loss from the disposal of the assets and settlement of the liabilities of the discontinued operations. ● Unit is not disposed: ○ the after-tax profit or loss from the operations of the discontinued operations; and ○ the after-tax loss due to measurement of the net assets to the lower between the carrying amount and fair value less cost to sell. ● An analysis of the single amount presented on the statement of comprehensive income as discontinued operations may be presented in the notes or the face, identifying the section relating to discontinued operations and shown separately from continuing operations. ● The analysis consists of: ○ the revenue, expenses, and pre-tax profit or loss of discontinued operations; ○ the gain or loss recognized on the measurement to fair value less cost to sell or on the disposal of the assets constituting the discontinued operations; and ○ the income tax expense related to (a) and (b). The statement on the next page illustrates how "discontinued operations" is presented on the statement of comprehensive income following the requirements of IFS 5. The format classifies the expenses by function. Earning Per Share ● Public entities are required to present on the Face of SCI. STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY ● ● shows the events and transactions that took place during a reporting period that affected equity information taken from the statement of comprehensive income + all other transactions involving the various shareholders' equity accounts, including transactions with owners. Presented on the Face of SCIE ● Total comprehensive income for the period showing separately the amounts due to owners of the parent and to non-controlling interests; ● For each component of equity, the effect of any retrospective application or retrospective restatement as a result of the change in accounting policy or correction of prior period errors; ● For each component of equity, a reconciliation of the carrying amount at the beginning and the end of the period, separately disclosing changes resulting from ○ profit or loss; ○ each item of other comprehensive income; ○ transactions with owners, showing separately contributions from and distributions to owners. ● Enterprise should disclose any amounts of dividends recognized during the period and the dividends per share either in the statement of changes in equity or the notes to the financial statements. CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING POLICY ● accounting policies are normally adopted from one period to another so that users may compare the financial statements of an enterprise over a period to identify trends in its financial position, performance, and cash flows. ● Entity shall change an accounting policy only if the change: ● Involuntary Change ○ is required by an IFRS; or ● Voluntary Change ○ results in the financial statements providing reliable and more relevant information about the effects of transactions, other events, or conditions on the entity's financial position, financial performance, or cash flows. ○ Transition from one accounting policy, and both old and new policies are generally accepted and follow the prevailing reporting standards. ○ Early application of an IFRS is not a voluntary change. Accounting Treatment for Changes in Accounting Policies Involuntary Change ● With transitional provision - follow the transitional provision. ● No transitional provision - change shall be treated retrospectively unless impracticable. ● Retrospective Application ○ Restating for prior periods. ○ Cumulative effect of such change shall be considered an adjustment to the beginning balance of retained earnings or another component of equity of the earliest prior period presented. ○ Impracticable when the enterprise cannot retrospectively apply the new accounting policy after making every reasonable effort. ○ For a particular prior period, it is impracticable to retrospectively apply a change in an accounting policy if: ■ the effects of the retrospective application are not determinable; ■ the retrospective application requires assumptions about what management's intent would have been in that period; or ■ the retrospective application or retrospective restatement requires significant estimates, and it is impossible to distinguish objectively information about other information from those estimates that provide evidence of circumstances that existed on the date(s) at which those amounts are to be recognized and would have been available for that prior period ● Shall Disclose: ○ the title of the IFRS; ○ when applicable, that the change in accounting policy is made in accordance with transitional provisions; ○ the nature of the change in accounting policy; ○ when applicable, ○ a description of the transitional provisions when applicable, the transitional provisions that might affect future periods; ○ for the current period and each prior period presented, to the extent practicable, the amount of the adjustment for each financial line item affected and for basic and diluted earnings per share; ○ the amount of the adjustment relating to periods before those presented, to the extent practicable; and ○ if retrospective application is impracticable, the circumstances that led to the existence of that condition and a description of how and from when the change in accounting policy has been applied. Voluntary Change ● apply the change retrospectively, adjusting the opening balance of each affected component of the equity for the prior periods presented and other comparative amounts disclosed for the prior periods presented as if the new accounting policy had always been applied, unless it is impracticable to do so. ● Shall disclose: ○ the nature of the change in accounting policy; ○ the reasons why applying the new accounting policy provides reliable and more relevant information; ○ for the current period and each prior period presented, the extent practicable, the amount of the adjustment for each financial statement line item affected and for basic and diluted earnings per share; ○ the amount of the adjustment relating to periods before those presented to the extent practicable; and ○ if retrospective application is impracticable, the circumstances that led to the existence of that condition and a description of how and from when the change in accounting policy has been applied. ● In all instances that require a restatement of prior periods presented, present three sets of statements of financial position: ○ at the end of the current period, ○ at the end of the previous period/s, and ○ at the beginning of the earliest prior period presented. ○ In all these circumstances, when an additional statement of financial position is required, the statement of financial position at the beginning of the earliest prior period presented shall have been adjusted to give effect to the retrospective application of accounting policy, reclassification of financial statement element or any other retrospective restatement. ERRORS ● presence of errors and other misstatements may affect the measurement of the financial statement elements and the evaluation of the decision-makers. ● misstatements must be rectified, and appropriate disclosures must be made. ● May result from: ○ mathematical mistakes; ○ failure to apply appropriate accounting policies; ○ misinterpretation of facts;fraud; or ○ simply oversights. ● Detects error = take action to free from error ● Material Prior Period Error ○ Errors from past - discovered in the current ○ Accounted as prior period adjustments and require a restatement of comparative prior period FS. ○ Effects - excluded from determining P/L. ○ Adjustment to RE or other components. Accounting Treatment ● Retrospective ○ restating the comparative amounts for the prior period(s) presented in which the error occurred; or ○ if the error occurred before the earliest prior period, restating the opening balances of assets, liabilities, and equity for the earliest prior period presented. ● Shall disclose: ○ the nature of prior period error; ○ for each prior period presented, to the extent practicable, the amount of the correction: ■ for each financial statement line item affected; and ■ (if the company is required to present earnings per share information) for basic and diluted earnings per share; ○ the amount of the correction at the beginning of the earliest prior period presented; and ● if retrospective restatement is impracticable for a particular prior period, the circumstances that led to the existence of that condition, and a description of how and from when the error has been corrected. OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME REPORTED IN THE STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY ● Must be classified based on nature. ● Presentation is made in the second section of the SCI ● Cumulative amount is transferred to SCIE. ● When a component of other comprehensive income is a frequent and material transaction in an entity, a separate column is shown for this item in the statement of changes in equity; ● Otherwise, a single column would suffice for the different components of other comprehensive income. ○ STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Cash receipts and cash disbursements during a period. ● Determining an entity’s short-term viability (ability to pay its obligations). ● Assess the ability of the enterprise to remain solvent (pay its expenses, repay debts, and provide returns to the investors and creditors). ● Historical cash and cash equivalents changes during a reporting period. ● Provides information that enable users to evaluate the changes in net assets of an enterprise and its financial structures. CASH EQUIVALENTS ● short-term, highly liquid investments that are both: ○ Readily convertible to known amounts of cash. ○ Subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value. ● Short maturity (3 months or less from the date of acquisition). ● Enterprise should disclose the components of cash and cash equivalents, and present a reconciliation of the amounts in the Statement of Financial Position. ● Enterprise should also disclose in the Notes to the FS the policy it adopts in determining the composition of its cash and cash equivalents. ● CASH FLOW ACTIVITIES ● Transaction that results in the inflow and outflow of cash and cash equivalents. Conversion of cash to cash equivalents, and vice versa = not cash flow activities. PRESENTATION OF STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ● Classification by activity provides information that allows users to assess the impact of those activities on the financial position of the enterprise and the amount of its cash and cash equivalents. ● Cash and Cash Equivalent Balance (SCF) = Cash an Cash Equivalent Balance (SFP) OPERATING ACTIVITIES ● How an enterprise generated sufficient cash to repay loans, maintain the operating capability, pay dividends, adn make new investments without recourse to external financing. ● Derived from principal revenue-producing activities. ● Result from the transactions and other events that determine the Profit/Loss. ● Examples: ○ Cash receipts from the sale of goods and rendering of services. ○ Cash receipts from royalties, fees, commissions, and other revenue. ○ Cash payment to suppliers for goods and services. ○ Cash payments to and on behalf of the employees. ○ Cash receipts and payments of an insurance enterprise for premiums and claims, annuities, and other policy benefits. ○ Cash payments or refunds of income taxes unless they can be specifically identified with financing and investing activities. ○ Cash receipts and payments from contracts held for dealing or trading purposes. INVESTING ACTIVITIES ● Represent the extent to which expenditures have been made for resources intended to generate future income and cash flows. ● Affect non-trade assets, most are Non-Current Assets. ● Examples: ○ Cash payments to acquire PPE, intangibles, and other long-term assets. (includes capitalized development cosrs and self-constructed PPE) ○ Cash receipts from sales of PPE, intangibles, an other long-term assets. ○ Cash payments to acquire investments in equity or debt instruments or other ● enterprises and interests in joint ventures. ○ Cash receipts from sales of investments in equity or debt instruments or other enterprises and interests in joint ventures. ○ Cash advances and loans made to other parties (except by a financial institution). ○ Cash receipts from the repayment of advances and loans made to other parties. ○ Cash payments for future contracts, forward contracts, option contracts, and swap contracts, except when the contracts are held for dealing, on trading purposes, or the payments are classified as financing activities. ○ Cash receipts from future contracts, forward contracts, option contracts, and swap contracts, except when the contracts are held for dealing, on trading purposes, or the payments are classified as financing activities. FINANCING ACTIVITIES ● useful in predicting claims on future cash flows by providers of capital to the enterprise. ● Transactions with non-trade creditors and shareholders. ● Examples: ○ Cash proceeds from issuing shares or other equity instruments. ○ Cash payments to owners to acquire or redeem the enterprise’s shares. ○ Cash proceeds from issuing debentures, loans, notes, bonds, mortgages, and other short or long-term borrowings. ○ Cash repayments of amounts borrowed. ○ Cash payments by a lessee for the reduction of the outstanding lease liability. Interest and Dividends ● Disclosed separately. ● Shall be classified consistently from period to period as either operating, investing or financing activities. ● Generally, operating (Interest Paid, Interest and Dividends Received enter the determination of Profit/Loss). ● Interest Paid ○ Burden of financing (alternately shown under Financing Activities). ● Interest and Dividends Received Fruits of investments (may be classified as Investing Activities). ● Dividends Paid ○ Distributions to shareholders (finace providers). ○ Financing Activity ○ Alternately, operating activities to assist users in determining the ability of an enterprise to pay dividends out of operating cash flows. Taxes on Income ● Separately disclosed. ● Generally, operating activities. ● However, if it's identifiable to a specific activity, it will fall under that classification. ● Example: ○ Tax of cash flow from financing activity = tax will be classified to financing activity. FOREIGN CURRENCY CASH FLOWS ● Unrealized gains and losses arising from changes in foreign currency exchange rates are not cash flows. ● However, effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents held or due in a foreign currency is reported in the SCF to reconcile cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period. ● Separate item in the SCF. NON-CASH TRANSACTIONS ● Not reported in the SCF. ● If material, disclose elsewhere in the FS ● Examples: ○ Acquisition of assets either by assuming directly related liability or through finance lease. ○ Acquisition of an enterprise by issuing securities. ○ Conversion of debt to equity. REPORTING CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES A. DIRECT METHOD ● Shows the major classes of gross cash receipts and gross cash payments. ● Encouraged by IAS 7 (provides valuable information in estimation of future cash flows). ● Accrual Basis to Cash Basis (considering changes in the related accounts in the SFP). B. INDIRECT METHOD ● Adjusts the profit or loss for the effects of non-cash transactions, any deferrals or accruals, and items of income or expense associated with investing or financing activities. ● Adjusting Profit/Loss for the Effects of: ○ Changes in current assets and current Liabilities involved in the company’s ○ ● ● operating cycle that affected cash flows differently than profit. ○ Non-cash items such as depreciation, deferred taxes, unrealized foreign currency gains and losses, undistributed earnings of associates. ○ All other items for which the cash effects are investing or financing cash flows. Provides a valuable link between the SCF and the P/L in the SCI and account balances in SFP. Preparers prefer this method (easier and more convenient) Adjustment to P/L Increase Assets in Current - Decrease Assets in Current + Increase Liabilities in Current + Decrease Liabilities in Current - EARNINGS PER SHARE Objective: ○ Improve the comparison of performance information among different enterprises in the same period. ○ Performance information of the same entity between reporting periods. ● Metric used by potential investors. ● Ordinary Shareholders (Net Income or Net Loss). ● Preference Shareholders (Fixed Rate of Dividends). PRESENTATION OF EARNINGS PER SHARE ● Required to be presented in the Face of Statement of Comprehensive Income, if: ○ Ordinary shares are publicly traded. ○ In the process of issuing shares to the public. ● Private entity (presentation is optional). ● Continuing Operations (Face of P/L) ● Discontinued Operations (Face of P/L or Disclose in Notes) ● Consolidate FS (Face of P/L) ● Separate FS (Optional, but not consolidated amount. Use own EPS). ● Increase of BEPS = More attractive the Company. ● BASIC EARNINGS PER SHARE ● Provide a measure of interests of each ordinary share in the performance of the entity. ● Shall be calculated for P/L attributable to the enterprise’s ordinary shares. ● Ordinary Shares: equity instrument that is subordinate to all other classes of equity instruments. Net Income or Net Loss - Preference Shares Dividend BEPS = WANOSO THE NUMERATOR ● Profit/Loss after making adjustments: ○ Amounts of preference dividends ○ Redemption premium payable on preference shares ○ Other similar effects of preference shares classified as equity Adjustments to Profit for Amount of Preference Dividend ● Deducted from P/L. ● Fixed rate that Preference Shareholders are entitled to receive during the period (current period). ● CUMULATIVE ○ Whether or not declared. (for the period only) ○ Declared + Undeclared ● NON-CUMULATIVE ○ Declared during the period. Adjustments for Differences in Settlement of Preference Shares ● May be repurchased or retired. CV of Pref. Share = Share Capital + Share Premium ● ● ● ● Total issue price = cash inflow Redemption price = cash outflow CV of PS > Redemption Price = GAIN CV of PS < Redemption Price = LOSS BEPS = Net Income or Net Loss - Preference Shares Dividend + Gain WANOSO BEPS = Net Income or Net Loss - Preference Shares Dividend - Loss WANOSO THE DENOMINATOR Weighted Average Number of Ordinary Shares Outstanding (WANOSO) ● Basis for the per share amounts reported (for EPS). ● Weighted by the fraction of period they are outstanding. ○ To find the equivalent number of whole shares outstanding for the year. Period Indicators: Issuance of Shares Issuance Date Business Combination Acquisition Date Conversion to Ordinary Shares Conversion Date Purchase Shares Acquisition Date of Treasury Settlement of Liability Settlement Date Subscribed Shares Subscription Date Adjusting for the Effects of Bonus Issue/Stock Dividends and Share Split ● If present, restatement of the shares outstanding before the bonus issue or share split is required. ● Retrospective Treatment ○ Assumed to be outstanding since the beginning of the earliest period presented or at the date of issuance of the shares (before the split or bonus issue), whichever comes later. ● Restated because these transactions do not change the shareholder’s investment, but only increase the number of ordinary shares representing the investment. Adjusting for the Effects of Stock Rights ● Issued: Exercise Price < FV of Shares (often) ○ Includes a bonus element Net Income or Net Loss - Preference Shares Dividend BEPS = WANOSO before Rights Issuance + WANOSO OF SR Share Rights Wanoso: WANOSO of Share Rights = (Number of Share Rights Outstanding before Exercise + Numbers of Shared Issued in the Exercise) (Adjustment Factor) Adjustment Factor: Fair Value Rights-On AF = Theoretical Value of Ex-Rights FV Share Rights-On = FV of Shares immediately prior to the Exercise of Rights Theoretical Value of Ex-Rights: TV of ER = Fair Value Rights-On — Theoretical Value Rights-On Theoretical Value Rights-On: FV Rights-On — Exercise Price TVRO = Number of Share per Rights + 1 DILUTED EARNINGS PER SHARE ● Profit/Loss attributable to ordinary equity holders of the entity. ● Profit/Loss from continuing operations attributable to those equity holders. ● Provide a measure of the interest of each ordinary share in the performance of an entity while giving effect to all dilutive potential ordinary shares outstanding during the period. ● Decrease in BEPS or Increase in BLPS (because of POS - continuing operations only) POTENTIAL ORDINARY SHARES ● AS IF APPROACH: as if converted or exercised at the time they were initially issued. ● Financial instrument or another contract that gives the holder the right to acquire ordinary shares at a specified price for a given period. ● Convertible Bonds Payable ○ POS when converted. Dilutive if conversion decreases BEPS or increases BLPS ● Convertible Prefernce Shares ○ Dilutive if conversion decreases BEPS or increases BLPS ● Share Options and Warrants ○ Dilutive “in the money” - favorable to holder ○ CALL OPTION: option to buy ■ Exercise Price < Average Market Price (mas mataas probability na bumili - Increase in OS = Increase in WANOSO) ○ PUT OPTION: option to sell ■ Exercise Price > Average Market Price (incentive na magbenta - Increase in OS = Increase in WANOSO) DILUTION ● Reduction in EPS or increase in LPS from the assumption that the entity converted or exercised the POS upon fulfilling certain conditions DILUTIVE ● Conversion or exercise would decrease the BEPS or increase BLPS from continuing operations ● Most to Least Dilutive ○ Compute for the incremental EPS. ○ The least amount of incremental EPS is the most dilutive. ○ Kapag present lahat ng POS, need na i-rank lagi ○ Dilutive and Incremental EPS = inverse relationship ○ If base sa rankings may anti-dilutive na lumitaw yung mas mababa na EPS yung piliin. ANTI-DILUTIVE ● Conversion or exercise would increase BEPS or decrease BLPS. ● Effects are ignored. ○ ADJUSTMENTS: SOURCE ADJUSTMENT TO NUMERATOR ADJUSTMENT TO DENOMINATOR Convertible PS +Preference Shares Dividend (yung sa convertible lang - POS) +WANOSO POS Convertible BP +After-Tax Interest Expense +WANOSO POS Share Options None +WANOSO POS SHARE OPTIONS ● Adjustment Factor for WANOSO POS AF = Average Market Price — Exercise Price Average Market Price INTERIM FINANCIAL REPORTING AND OPERATING SEGMENTS INTERIM FINANCIAL REPORT ● Period that is less than 1 year or 12 months. ● Covers a period shorter than a full financial year (Interim Financial Report). ● Reports quarte, monthly, or at other intervals. ● Required to or may elect to provide less information at interim dates than its usual annual Financial Statements. ● Improves the ability of users to understand an enterprise’s capacity to generate earnings and cash flows and its financial condition and liquidity. ● To update the latest complete set of annual financial statements. ● Focuses on new activities, events, and circumstances, and does not duplicate information previously reported. ● Beneficial to users - information is provided earlier which can be used for decision making. ● Contains either: ○ Complete Set of FS (PAS 1) or ○ Set of Condensed FS (PAS 34) MINIMUM COMPONENTS AND CONTENTS OF AN INTERIM FINANCIAL REPORT ● Shall include, at a minimum, the following: ○ a condensed statement of financial position; ○ a condensed statement of comprehensive income, prepared as either: ■ a single condensed statement; or ■ a condensed separate statement of profit or loss and a condensed statement of comprehensive income; ○ a condensed statement of changes in equity; ○ a condensed statement of cash flows; and ○ selected explanatory notes. ● Condensed statements should include, at a minimum, each of the headings and subtotals contained in its most recent annual financial statements and the selected explanatory notes. ● Additional line items or notes shall be included if their omission would make the condensed interim financial statements misleading. ● Face of the SCI should present the BEPS and DEPS, whether the FS are condensed or complete. PERIODS COVERED BY INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ● Interim reports should include interim financial statements as follows: ○ Statement of financial position as of the end of the current interim period and as at the immediately preceding year-end; ○ Statements of comprehensive income for the current interim period and cumulatively for the current year financial year to date and comparative statements of comprehensive income for the same interim period and cumulatively for the preceding financial year to date. ○ Statement showing changes in equity cumulatively for the current year and the year-to-date period of the immediately preceding financial year. ○ Statement of cash flows cumulatively for the current year and the year-to-date period of the immediately preceding financial year. ● If the current interim period is the third quarter of 2022, the interim report should include: statements of financial position as of September 30, 2022, and as of December 31, 2021; ○ statements of comprehensive income for the quarter ended September 30, 2022, and for the nine months ended September 30, 2022, with comparative statements for the quarter ended September 30, 2021, and for the nine months ended September 30, 2021; ○ statements of changes in equity for the nine months ended September 30, 2022, and for the nine months ended September 30, 2022; ○ statements of cash flows for the nine months ended September 30, 2022, and for the nine months ended September 30, 2021. SELECTED EXPLANATORY NOTES AND OTHER DISCLOSURES ● Must include significant events and transactions to update the relevant information presented in the most recent annual financial statements. Such information must include the following: ○ write-down of inventories to net realizable value, and reversal of such write-down; ○ recognition of asset impairment loss and reversal of such impairment; ○ reversal of provisions for restructuring costs; ○ acquisition and disposal of items of property, plant, and equipment (PPE) as well as commitment to purchase items of PPE; ○ litigation settlements; ○ correction of prior period errors; ○ changes in circumstances that affect the fair value of financial assets and financial liabilities; ○ unremedied loan default and breach of loan agreement; ○ related party transactions; ○ transfers between fair value hierarchy in measuring the fair value of financial instruments; ○ changes in the classification of financial assets; and ○ changes in contingent liabilities and contingent assets. ● Present the following information either in the notes or by cross-reference from the interim financial statements to some other reports issued by the entity: ○ A statement that the same accounting policies and methods of computations are followed in the interim financial statements as compared with the most recent annual financial statements or if those policies or methods have been changed in the current financial year, a description of the nature and effect of the change; ○ Explanatory comments about the seasonality or cyclicality of interim operations; ○ The nature and amount of items affecting assets, liabilities, equity, profit, or cash flows that are unusual because of their nature, size, or incidence; ○ 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; ○ Issuances, repurchases, and repayments of debt and equity securities; ○ Dividends paid (aggregate or per share) separately for ordinary shares and other shares; ○ Segment revenue and segment result of business segments or geographical segments; ○ Total assets and total liabilities of reportable segments if those amounts materially differ from those reported in the most recent annual financial statements; ○ Disaggregation of revenue from contracts with customers; ○ Material events after the end of the interim period that have not been reflected in the financial statements for the interim period; ○ Information on the fair value of financial instruments; and ○ The effect of changes in the composition of the enterprise during the interim period, including business combinations, acquisitions or disposal of subsidiaries, restructurings; and discontinuing operations; and RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT OF REVENUE AND EXPENSES ● Same as annual FS. ● Matching Principle ○ ● Two Views - both views are used ○ Integral ■ Integral part of the accounting period. ■ Periods are all related or there is connection between the periods. ■ Cost, expenses, and revenues incurred that benefit the other period should be allocated to the periods benefited. ○ Independent ■ Considered a discrete or separate period. ■ Cost, expenses, and revenues should be immediately reported on the period it was incurred. ■ ○ Example: Change in Accounting Policy ○ Retrospective Approach REPORTING BY OPERATING SEGMENT ● Interim reporting provides additional and updated information about an enterprise’s operations ● Further information about an entity's operations is also provided through reporting by enterprise components called operating segments ● Operating Segments, prescribes the requirements for reporting financial information by segment. ● Segment information aims to inform users about the different types of products and services an enterprise produces and the various geographical areas in which it operates. ● Helps financial statement users better understand the enterprise's past performance, assess its risks and returns, and make more informed judgments about the enterprise. ● Reporting by operating segments is required for enterprises whose equity or debt securities are publicly traded and those in the process ● of issuing equity and debt securities in the public securities market. ● Shall comply with all the requirements of IFRS 8. OPERATING SEGMENTS ● Engage in business activities. ○ Have its own source of profit or losses primary activity. ● Operating results are regularly reviewed by the Chief Operating Decision Maker ○ “chief operating decision maker" refers to a function, not necessarily a manager with a specific title. ○ May be the chief executive officer, chief operating officer, or a group of executive directors or officers. ○ Function: ■ Assess the performance of operating segments ■ Allocate resources to operating segments. ● Discrete financial information is available IDENTIFYING OPERATING SEGMENTS ● Based on the components of the business that the entity considers significant for internal management reporting purposes. ● Segments are identified based on internal reports that the chief operating officer makes to allocate enterprise resources and assess business performance. ● An entity may group some components to form one operating segment if they have similar economic characteristics. ● IFS 8 allows the aggregation of two or more segments if the segments are similar in each of the following respects: ○ Nature of the products or services ○ Nature of the production processes ○ Type or class of customers for the products or services ○ Methods used to distribute the products or provide the services ○ If applicable, the nature of the regulatory environment. IDENTIFYING REPORTABLE SEGMENTS ● Reportable Segment is an operating segment for which segment information must be disclosed. ● An entity shall present a reconciliation between the information disclosed for reportable segments and the aggregated information in the consolidated or individual financial statements. ● Reportable if qualifies under the Quantitative Thresholds: ○ Revenue Test ■ Revenue (external and internal) of the segment is ≥ 10% of Total revenue (external and internal) of all operating segment ○ Asset Test ■ Assets of the segment are ≥ 10% of Total assets of all operating segment ○ Profit/Loss Test ■ Compute Total P/L separately absolute value ■ Profit / loss of the segment is ≥ 10% of the greater in absolute amount of either: ● Total profit of operating segments with profit ● Total loss of operating segments with losses ● External Revenue Reporting ○ Should be met to be considered reportable after meeting the quantitative threshold. ○ External Revenue of Reportable Segments 75% ≥ Total external revenue of all operating segment ○ Not met, additional segments are included even if none of the quantitative thresholds are met Manegement Approach ● Looking to an entity's organizational and management structure and its internal financial reporting system to identify the entity's segments for external reporting.\ ● If segment did not meet any of Thresholds, management can deemed it as necessary to be reportable. SEGMENT'S FINANCIAL INFORMATION ● Provide the users of financial statements with additional information on the nature and financial effects of an entity's business activities and the economic environment in which the entity operates. ● An entity shall report the following information about the identified reportable operating segments: ○ general information, such as factors to identify the entity's reportable segments and types of products and services from which reportable segments derive its revenues; basis for aggregation of segments and the segments aggregated on that basis; ○ information about profit or loss and total assets; ○ information on liabilities if such information is provided to the chief operating decision maker. Measuring and Reporting Segment Profit or Loss ● An entity shall report information on profit or loss for each reportable segment. ● Emphasized is the adoption of the management approach, which implies that those revenues and expenses that the chief operating officer monitors for the segment constitute the items included in the measurement of the segment’s profit/loss. ○ ● ● The following information about a reportable segment shall also be disclosed if such information is reported to the chief operating decision profit or loss: ○ maker, even if they are not included in the measurement of the segment's revenues from external customers ○ revenues from transactions with other operating segments of the same entity ○ interest revenue ○ interest expense ○ depreciation and amortization ○ material items of income and expenses that warrant separate presentation on the statement of comprehensive income ○ the entity's interest in profit or loss of associates and joint ventures accounted for by the equity method ○ income tax expense or benefit ○ material non-cash items other than depreciation or amortization. For each reportable segment, an entity shall report interest revenue separate from interest expense unless the majority of the segment's revenue is composed of interest and the chief decision-making officer relies on net interest revenue to assess the segment's performance. Measuring and Reporting Segment Assets and Liabilities ● An entity shall report a measure of assets and liabilities for each reportable segment if such amounts are reported to the chief operating decision maker. ● The following shall be disclosed even if not included in segment assets if they are reported to the chief operating decision maker of the entity: ○ the amount of investment in associates and joint ventures accounted for by the equity method; and ○ the amounts of additions to non-current assets other than financial instruments, deferred tax assets, post-employment benefit assets, and rights arising under insurance contracts: ● If certain assets, liabilities, income, and expenses have been included in segment information through the reasonable basis of allocation, such basis must be disclosed. ENTITY-WIDE DISCLOSURES ● The following information must be provided if not disclosed as part of reportable segment information: ● revenues from external customers for each product and service, unless the cost to develop such information is considered excessive; ● revenues from external customers attributed to the country's domicile and attributed to all foreign countries from which the revenues are derived; ● non-current assets located in the country of domicile and located in foreign countries, except assets arising from financial instruments, deferred tax, employee benefits, and insurance contracts; ● the extent of its reliance on a major customer. For this purpose, if enterprise revenue from a single external customer amounts to at least 10% of the total enterprise revenue, then such customer is a major customer. Likewise, a group of entities under common control is considered a single customer.