STANDARD
27
INTERIM
FINANCIAL REPORTING
(Issued in
pursuance of the Minister of Finance Decision No. 12/2005/QD-BTC
dated 15
February 2005)
GENERAL
1.
The objective of this
Standard is to prescribe the minimum content of an interim financial report and
to prescribe the principles for recognition and measurement in preparing and
presenting financial statements for an
interim period. Timely and reliable interim financial reporting improves the
abilities of investors, creditors, and other users to understand an enterprise’s
capacity to generate earnings, cash flows and its financial condition and
liquidity.
2.
This Standard applies if
an enterprise is required to publish an interrim financial report in accoradance
with law and regulations.
The Standard also applies if an enterprise elects to
publish an interim financial report. Enterprises should publish interim
financial reports in accordance with law and regulations.
3.
The following terms are
used in this Standard with the meanings specified :
Interim
period: is a financial reporting period shorter
than a full financial year.
Interim
financial report: is a financial report
containing either a complete set of financial statements as described in VAS 21
“Presentation of financial statements” or a set of condensed financial
statements as described in this Standard for an interim
period.
CONTENTS
Content
of an Interim Financial Report
4.
VAS
21 “Presentation of Financial Statement” defines a set of financial statements
as including the following components:
(a)
a balance sheet;
(b)
an income statement;
(c)
a cash flows statement; and
(d)
notes to the financial statements.
5.
This
Standard defines the minimum content of an
interim
financial report as including condensed financial statements and selected
explanatory notes. The interim financial report is intended to provide an update
on the latest complete set of annual financial statements. Therefore, it focuses
on events, new activities and does not duplicate the information previously
reported.
6.
This
Standard encourages the enterprise to publish a complete set of financial
statements in its interim financial report. This Standard encourages an
enterprise to include in a condensed interim financial statement more than the
minimum line items or selected explanatory notes as set out in this Standard.
The recognition and measurement principles in this Standard apply also to the
complete financial statements for an interim period, and such statements would
include all of those disclosures required by this Standard (particularly the
selected note disclosure in paragraph 13) as well as those required by other
Standards.
Minimum
components of an interim financial report:
7.
A condensed financial
statements for an interim period includes:
(a) condensed balance
sheet;
(b) condensed income
statement;
(c) condensed cash flows
statement; and
(d) selected explanatory
notes
Form
and content of interim financial statements
8.
If an enterprise
publishes a complete set of financial statements in its interim financial
report, the form and content of those statements should conform to the
requirements of VAS 21 “Presentation of financial
statements”.
9.
If an enterprise
publishes a set of condensed financial statements in its interim financial
report, those statements should include, at a minimum, each of the heading and
subtotals that were included in its most recent annual financial statements and
the selected explanatory notes as required by this Standard. Additional line
items or notes should be included if their omission would make the condensed
interim financial statements misleading.
10.
Basic and diluted
earnings per share should be presented on the face of an income statement,
complete or condensed, for an interim period.
11.
A
parent company publishes the consolidated financial statements in accordance
with VAS 25 “Consolidated financial statement and accounting for investment to
subsidiaries” should prepare the condensed consolidated financial report for in
interim period together with its separate interim financial
report.
Selected
explanatory notes
12.
A
user of an enterprise’s interim financial report will also have access to the
most recent annual financial report of that enterprise. It is unnecessary,
therefore, for the notes to an interim financial report to provide relatively
insignificant updates to the information that was already reported in the notes
to the most recent annual report. At an interim date, an explanation of events
and transactions that are significant to the understanding of changes in
financial position and performance of the enterprise since the last annual
reporting date is more useful.
13.
An enterprise should
include the following information in the notes to its interim financial
statements, if material and if not disclosed elsewhere in the interim financial
report. The information should normally be reported on the financial
year-to-date basic. However, the enterprise should also disclose any events or
transactions that are material to an understanding of the current t interim
period:
(a)
a statement
that the same accounting policies and methods of computation are followed in the
interim financial statements as compared with the most recent annual financial
statements or, if those policies and
methods have been changed, a description of the nature and effect of the
change;
(b)
explanatory
comments about the seasonality and cyclicality of interim
operations;
(c)
the nature and
amount of items affecting assets, liabilities, equity, net income or cash flows
that are unusual because of their nature, size, or
incidence;
(d)
note
disclosure of changes in accumulated owner equity for the period to the date of
interim financial report and corresponding notes that are comparable to the same
period of the most recent financial year;
(e)
nature and
amount of changes in accounting estimates of amounts reported in prior interim
period 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;
(f)
issuances,
repurchases, and repayments of debt and equity
securities;
(g)
dividend paid
(aggregate or per share) separately for ordinary shares and other
shares;
(h)
segment
revenue and segment results from business segments or geographial segments,
whichever is the enterprise’s primary basis of segment
reporting;
(i)
the material
events subsequent to the end of the interim period that have not been reflected
in the financial statements for the interim
period;
(j)
effect of the
changes in the composition of the enterprise during the interim period,
including business combinations, acquisition or disposal of subsidiaries,
long-term investments, restructings, and discontinuing operations; and
(j) the changes in the contingent liabilities and
contingent assets since the last annual balance sheet
date.
14.
Other accounting standard specifies
disclosure that should be made in financial statements. In that context,
financial statements means complete sets of financial statements of the type
normally included in an annual financial report and sometimes included in other
reports. The disclosures required by those other Standards are not required if
an enterprise’s interim financial report includes only condensed financial
reports and selected explanatory notes rather than a full set of financial
statements.
Disclosure of
compliance with Vietnamese Accounting Standards and System.
15.
If an
enterprise’s interim financial report is in compliance with this standard, that
fact should be disclosed. An interim financial report should not be
described as complying the Vietnamese Accounting Standards unless it complies
with the Vietnamese accounting standard and the guideline on implementation of
Vietnamese accounting standard of Ministry of Finance.
Periods for
which interim financial statements are required to be presented
16. interim
financial report should interim financial statements (condensed or complete) for
as follow:
(a)
balance sheet
as of the end of the current interim period and comparative balance sheet as of
the end of the immediately preceding financial
year;
(b)
income
statements for the current interim period and cumulatively for the current
financial year to date, with comparative income statements for the comparable
interim periods of the immediately preceding financial
year;
(c)
cash flow
statement cumulatively for the current financial year to date, with a
comparative statement for the comparable year-to-date period of the immediately
preceding financial year.
17.
For an enterprise whose business is
highly seasonal, financial information for the twelve months ending on the
interim reporting date and comparative information for the prior twelve-month
period may be useful.
Materiality
18. In deciding
how to recognise, measure, classify, or disclose an item for interim financial
reporting purposes, materiality should be assessed in relation to the interim
period financial data. In making assessments of materiality, it should be
recognised that interim measurements may rely on estimates to a greater extent
than measurements of annual financial data.
19. VAS 01 “Framework” defines “An intem is material if its
omission or misstatement could significantly misstate the financial statements
influencing the economic decision of users of the financial statements”. VAS 29
“Changes in accounting policies, accounting estimate and the fundamental errors”
requires disclosure changes in accounting estimates, fundamental errors, and
changes in accounting policies. VAS 29 does not privide
quantitative guidance as to materiality.
20.
While judgement is always required
in assessing materiality for financial statements preparation purposes, this
Standard bases the recognition and disclosure decision on data for the interim
period by itself for reasons of understandability of the interim figures. Thus,
for example, unusual or extraordinary items, changes in accounting policies or
estimates, and fundamental errors are recognised and disclosed on the basis of
materiality in relation to interim period data to avoid misleading inferences
that might result from non-disclosure. The overriding goal is to ensure that an
interim financial report includes all information that is relevant to
understanding an enterprise’s financial position and performance during the
interim period.
Disclosure in annual financial
statements
21. If an estimate
of an amount reported in an interim period is changed significantly during the
final interim period of the financial year but a separate financial report is
not published for that final interim period, the nature and amount of that
change in estimate should be disclosed in a note to the annual financial
statements for that financial year.
22.
VAS 29 “Changes in accounting
policies, estimates and fundamental errors” requires disclosure of the nature
and (if practicable) the amount of a change in accounting estimate that either
has a material effect in the current
period or is expected to have material effect in subsequent periods. The
paragraph 13 d) of this Standard requires similar disclosure in an interim
financial report. Examples, include changes in the estimate in the final interim
period relating to inventory write down, restructurings that were reported in an earlier interim period of the financial
year. The disclosure required in the preceding paragraph is consistent with VAS
29 “Changes in accounting policies, estimates, and fundamental errors” to narrow
in scope-relating only to the changes in estimate.
Recognition and
measurement
Same
accounting policies as annual financial statements
23. An enterprise
should apply the same accounting policies in its interim financial statements as
are applied in its annual financial statements, except for accounting policy
changes made after the date of the most recent annual financial statements that
are to be reflected in the next annual financial statements. However, the annual
and interim reports of enterprise should not affect the measurement of its
annual results. To achieve that objective, measurements for interim reporting
purposes should be made on a year-to-date basis.
24.
Requiring that an enterprise apply
the same accounting policies in its interim financial statements as in its
annual statements may seem to suggest that interim period measurements are made
as if each interim period stands alone as an independent reporting period.
However, by providing that the frequency of an enterprise’s reporting should not
affect the measurement of its annual results. Year-to-date measurements may
involve changes in estimates of amounts reported in prior interim periods of the
current financial year. But the principles for recognising assets, liabilities,
income, and expenses for interim periods are the same as in annual financial
statements.
25.
The rules for recognition and
measurement for interim reporting are:
(a) the principles for recognising and measuring losses from
inventory write-downs, restructurings, or impairments in an interim period are
the same as those that an enterprise would follow if it prepared only annual
financial statements. However, if such items are recognised and measured in one
interim period and the estimate changes in a subsequent interim period of that
financial year, the original estimate is changed in the subsequent interim
period either by accrual of an additional amount of loss or by reversal of the
previously recognised amount;
(b)
a cost that does not meet the
definition of an asset at the end of an interim period is not deferred on the
balance sheet either to await future information as to whether it has met the
definition of an asset or to smooth earnings over interim periods within a
financial year; and
(c) income tax expense is recognised in each interim period
based on the best estimate of the weighted average annual income tax rate
expected for the full financial year. Amounts accrued for income tax expense in
one interim period may have to be adjusted in a subsequent interim period of
that financial year if the estimate of the annual income tax rate
changes.
26.
Under VAS 01 “Framework”, the
financial statements should reflect factos relating to the enterprise’s
financial position and performance, and such factors should be reported item by
item. The definitions of assets, liabilities, revenue, and other income and
expenses are fundamental to recognition, both at annual and interim financial
reporting dates.
27.
For assets, the same tests of future
economic benefits apply at interim dates and at the end of an enterprise’s
financial year. Costs that, by their nature, would not qualify as assets at
financial year end would not qualify at interim dates either. Similarly, a
liability at an interim reporting date must represent an existing obligation at
that date, just as it must at an annual reporting date.
28.
An essential characteristic of
income (revenue) and expenses is that the related inflows and outflows of assets
and liabilities have already taken place. If those inflows or outflows have
taken place, the related revenue and expense are recognised; otherwise they are
not recognised. The Framework says that “expenses are recognised in the income
statement when a decrease in future economic benefits related to a decrease in
an asset or an increase of a liability has arisen that can be measured
reliably.... The Framework does not allow the recognition of items in the
balance sheet which do not meet the definition of assets or
liabilities.”
29. In measuring the assets, liabilities, income, expenses,
and cash flows reported in its financial statements, an enterprise that reports
only annually is able to take into account information that becomes available
throughout the financial year. Its measurements are, in effect, on a yearto-date
basis.
30.
An enterprise that reports for
interim period uses information available at that preiod in making the
measurements in its financial statements for the period and information
available by year-end or shortly thereafter for the twelve-month period. The
twelvemonth measurements will reflect possible changes in estimates of amounts
reported for the period. The amounts reported in the interim financial report
for the first six-month period are not retrospectively adjusted. Paragraphs
13(d) and 21 require, however, that the nature and amount of any significant
changes in estimates be disclosed.
31.
An enterprise that reports for the
period measures income and expenses on a year-to-date basis for each interim
period using information available when each set of financial statements is
being prepared. Amounts of revenue, other income and expenses reported in the
current interim period will reflect any changes in estimates of amounts reported
in prior interim periods of the financial year. The amounts reported in prior
interim periods are not retrospectively adjusted. Paragraphs 13(d) and 21
require, however, that the nature and amount of any significant changes in
estimates be disclosed.
Revenues
received seasonally, cyclically, and occasionally
32. Revenues that
are received seasonally, cyclically, or occasionally within a financial year
should not be anticipated or deferred as of an interim date if anticipation or
deferral would not be appropriate at the end of the enterprise’s financial year.
33. Examples include dividend, seasional revenue, royalties,
and government grants. Additionally, some enterprises consistently earn more
revenues in certain interim periods of a financial year than in other interim
periods, for example, seasonal revenues of retailers. Such revenues are recognised when
they occur.
Costs
incurred unevenly during the financial year
34. Costs that are
incurred unevenly during an enterprise’s financial year should be anticipated or
deferred for interim reporting purposes if, and only if, it is also appropriate
to anticipate or defer that type of cost at the end of the financial
year.
Uses
of estimates
35. The measurement procedures to be followed in
an interim financial report should be designed to ensure that the resulting
information is reliable and that all material financial information that is
relevant to enterprise is appropriately disclosed. While measurements in both
annual and interim financial reports are often based on reasonable estimates,
the preparation of interim financial reports generally will require a greater
use of estimation methods than annual financial
reports.
Restatement
of previously reported interim periods
36. A change in
accounting policy, other than one for which the transition is specified by a new
Accounting Standard, should be reflected by:
(a)
restating
the financial statements of the prior
interim periods of the current financial
year and the comparable interim periods of any prior financial years (see
paragraph 16) in accordance with VAS 29 “Changes in accounting policies,
estimates, and fundamental errors”; or
(b)
when it is impracticable to determine the
effect ofapplying a new accounting policy to prior periods, adjusting the
financial statements of prior interim periods of the current financial year, and
comparable interim periods of prior financial years to apply the new accounting
policy prospectively from the earliest date
practicable.
37.
One objective of the paragraph 36 is
to ensure that a single accounting policy is applied to a particular class of
transactions throughout an entire financial year. Under VAS 29 “Changes in
accounting policies, estimates, and fundamental errors”, a change in accounting
policy is reflected by retrospective application, with restatement of prior
period financial data, if practicable. However, if the amount of the adjustment
relating to prior financial years is not reasonably determinable, then under VAS
29 “Changes in accounting policies, estimates, and fundamental errors” the new
policy is applied prospectively. An allowed alternative is to include the entire
cumulative retrospective adjustment in the determination of net profit or loss
for the period in which the accounting policy is changed. The effect of the
principle in paragraph 36 is to require that within the current financial year
any change in accounting policy be applied retrospectively to the beginning of
the financial year.
38. To allow
accounting changes to be reflected as of an interim date within the financial
year leading to two differing accounting policies to be applied to a particular
class of transactions within a single financial year would be interim allocation
difficulties, obscured operating results, and complicated analysis and
understandability of interim period information.