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International Financial Reporting Standards The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter, not necessarily those of the IASB or IFRS.

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Presentation on theme: "International Financial Reporting Standards The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter, not necessarily those of the IASB or IFRS."— Presentation transcript:

1 International Financial Reporting Standards The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter, not necessarily those of the IASB or IFRS Foundation. © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org Accounting for insurance contracts—IFRS 4 Joint World Bank and IFRS Foundation ‘train the trainers’ workshop hosted by the ECCB 30 April to 4 May 2012

2 Introduction IFRS 4 applies to insurance contracts issued by any entity, including entities that are not regulated as insurers Includes both insurance and reinsurance contracts issued Also includes reinsurance contracts held It does not address other aspects of accounting by insurers, such as accounting for financial assets 2 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

3 Definition Insurance contract Under an insurance contract, one party (the insurer) accepts significant insurance risk from another party (the policyholder) by agreeing to compensate the policyholder if a specified uncertain future event (the insured event) adversely affects the policyholder Some contracts having the legal form of insurance may not meet that definition Insurance contracts transfer insurance risks (rather than only financial risks) 3 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

4 Definition Insurance contract continued Significant insurance risk significant additional benefits in any scenario (that has commercial substance) not a percentage test contract by contract Unbundling a deposit component Embedded derivatives 4 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

5 IFRS 4 permits insurers to retain most aspects of their previous accounting for insurance contracts This avoids disruption while the IASB works on a comprehensive review of accounting for insurance contracts The nature and extent of judgements and estimates will, therefore, depend largely on that previous accounting Typically this will involve estimates of uncertain cash flows 5 Continuing previous accounting © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

6 Unbundling deposit component Can measure deposit component separately? All rights and obligations recognised? MUST NOT unbundle MAY unbundle MUST unbundle NO YES 6 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

7 Embedded derivatives IFRS 9 requires fair value measurement for many embedded derivatives IFRS 4 exempts embedded derivatives that: are themselves an insurance contract (specific disclosure required); or are an option to surrender insurance contract for fixed amount 7 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

8 Recognition and measurement IAS 8 Hierarchy Criteria to use in developing accounting policy in absence of specific IFRS guidance Exempt under IFRS 4 for insurance contracts issued, and reinsurance contracts held But may not change policy unless result is more relevant and reliable may continue existing practice, but not introduce them 8 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

9 Recognition and measurement Liability adequacy test Use existing test if minimum requirements met: consider current estimates of all contractual cash flows, including embedded options and guarantees recognise any loss immediately in profit or loss Otherwise test using provisions standard (IAS 37) 9 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

10 Recognition and measurement Continue, but may not introduce Non-discounting of insurance liabilities Off-market measurement of contractual rights to investment management fees Non-uniform accounting policies for insurance liabilities of subsidiaries Excessive prudence Future investment spreads (rebuttable presumption) 10 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

11 DPF’s DPF = Discretionary Participation Features Contractual right to additional benefits: likely to be significant portion of total benefits amount or timing contractually at the discretion of the issuer, and contractually based on: performance of specified contracts returns on specified assets, or profit or loss 11 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

12 Insurance contracts with DPF Guaranteed element policyholder has unconditional right must classify as liability Discretionary participation feature may classify as liability, equity or split do not show as mezzanine 12 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

13 Investment contracts with DPF May classify whole contract as liability if so, apply liability adequacy test May classify part or all of DPF in equity reported liability not less than IAS 39 measurement of guaranteed element 13 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

14 Determining whether contracts with the legal form of an insurance contract are insurance contracts as defined in IFRS 4 14 Judgements and estimates © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

15 Insurance ‘models’ Current current Current current with discretionary reserving Cost cost with OCI Cost cost 15 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

16 International Financial Reporting Standards The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter, not necessarily those of the IASB or IFRS Foundation. © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org Accounting for insurance contracts IFRS 4 Phase II Joint World Bank and IFRS Foundation ‘train the trainers’ workshop hosted by the ECCB, 30 April to 4 May 2012 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

17 Project objective Improve comparability in the accounting for insurance contracts through: coherent, principles-based framework for all types of insurance contracts (no need for ‘add-on’ rules) transparent reporting of changes in insurance contract liability transparent reporting of economic value of embedded options and guarantees 17 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

18 Urgent need for change IFRS 4 exempts insurers from developing relevant and reliable accounting policies wide range of accounting for different types of contracts inconsistent application across jurisdictions exempts requirement for uniform accounting policies across a group 18 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

19 What are we trying to do? Updated measurement of insurance contract liabilities that captures all features of the contract Presentation that gives information about drivers of performance Disclosures about inherent risk and uncertainty 19 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

20 Building block approach Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin The amounts the insurer expects to collect from premiums and pay out for claims, benefits and expenses, estimated using up-to-date information An adjustment that reflects the time value of money An assessment of the difference between an uncertain liability and a liability whose amount is certain Contract profit (reported over the life of the contract) Total insurance liability 20 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

21 The model: Key features Investors are not indifferent to time value of money Reflects best available information Reflects the difference between an uncertain liability and a liability whose amount is certain New updated information is more relevant than old information Updated estimates and assumptions Current measurement of risk Reflect time value of money Market consistent estimates 21 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

22 Which cash flows? Confirmed use of expected value of cash flows incurred, considering all relevant information +Add guidance that not all possible scenarios need to be identified and quantified Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin An explicit, unbiased and probability- weighted estimate of the future cash outflows less the future cash inflows that will arise as the insurer fulfils the insurance contract 22 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

23 Which cash flows? continued Acquisition costs Premium received Expenses Premium received Claim payment Recognition point: Contract starts when coverage period begins Contract boundary: Contract ends when: Not required to provide coverage Can reprice to reflect risks of policyholder When insurer can reprice to reflect risk of portfolio Included in cash flows: All direct costs of originating and all directly attributable costs incurred in fulfilling a portfolio of insurance contracts 23 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

24 Time value of money Confirm discount rate: –reflect only characteristics of the insurance contract liability –current and updated each reporting period +Guidance on determining the discount rate –‘top-down’ and ‘bottom-up’ –remove any factors not relevant to the liability Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin A discount rate that adjusts cash flows for the time value of money 24 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

25 Residual margin Confirm no gain at inception Adjust for changes in estimates of cash flows Adjustments made prospectively Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin A residual margin that eliminates any gain at inception of the contract 25 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

26 Reinsurance assets Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin = = = ≠ Reinsured part of cedant’s liability Cedant’s reinsurance asset Calibrated to direct contract premium Calibrated to reinsurance contract premium Same inputs and assumptions 26 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

27 Reinsurance assets ED: symmetry with underlying liability losses at inception recognised over contract term gains at inception recognised immediately Tentative decisions: use same estimates for reinsurance asset and underlying direct insurance liability gains recognised over contract term losses recognised immediately if for past events, otherwise deferred Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin 27 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

28 Short duration contracts Liability for remaining coverage reduced over coverage period Onerous contract test when facts and circumstances indicate Claims liability discounted if material Eligible for this approach if outcome reasonably approximates BBA –12 month practical expedient –approach is permitted, not required Cash flows Time value of money Risk adjustment Residual margin 28 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

29 Presentation: remaining questions Provide information about premiums, claims and expenses Still to conclude: level of disaggregation on the income statement separately disclose short and long term contracts treatment of deposits in premium income presentation in other comprehensive income 29 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

30 Next steps Complete remaining topics Assess whether any differences between IASB and FASB can be reconciled Review draft or re-expose (early 2012) 30 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

31 Questions or comments? Expressions of individual views by members of the IASB and its staff are encouraged. The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter. Official positions of the IASB on accounting matters are determined only after extensive due process and deliberation. © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org

32 32 The requirements are set out in International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), as issued by the IASB at 1 January 2012 with an effective date after 1 January 2012 but not the IFRSs they will replace. The IFRS Foundation, the authors, the presenters and the publishers do not accept responsibility for loss caused to any person who acts or refrains from acting in reliance on the material in this PowerPoint presentation, whether such loss is caused by negligence or otherwise. 32 © IFRS Foundation | 30 Cannon Street | London EC4M 6XH | UK. www.ifrs.org


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