Summary of Chapters
Summary of Chapters
Summary
Financial claim carries an obligation on the issuer to pay interest periodically and to
redeem the claim at a stated value in one of three ways:
on demand;
Financial claims can take the form of any financial asset, such as money, bank deposit
accounts, bonds, shares, loans, life insurance policies, etc.
The lender of funds holds the borrower’s financial claim and is said to hold a financial
asset.
Lenders’ requirements:
Liquidity.
Borrowers’ requirements:
Funds at a particular specified date.
Funds for a specific period of time.
Funds at the lowest possible cost.
Financial intermediaries can bridge the gap between borrowers and lenders and
reconcile their often incompatible needs and objectives.
Financial intermediaries help minimize the with direct lending
o particularly transactions costs and
those derived from information asymmetries
Transactions costs
The costs of monitoring the borrowers; and the eventual enforcements costs should the
borrower not fulfil its commitments.
Asymmetric information
Lenders are also faced with the problems caused by asymmetric information.
These problems arise because one party has better information than the counterparty.
In this context, the borrower has better information about the investment (in terms of risk
and returns of the project) than the lender.
In a net shell
Transaction costs and information asymmetries are examples of market
failures;
that is, they act as obstacles to the efficient functioning of financial
markets.
One solution is the creation of organized financial markets. However,
transaction costs and information asymmetries, though reduced, still
remain
Modern banks offer a wide range of financial services, including:
• Deposit and lending services
• Payment services
• Investment, pensions and insurance services
• E-banking
Banking Activities:
• Accepting deposits
• Issuing e-money (digital money)
• Dealing in investments (as principal or agent)
• Managing and/or Advising on investments
• Advising on investments
• Arranging deals in investments and arranging regulated mortgage activities
• Advising on regulated mortgage contracts.
Banking business has experienced substantial change over the last 30 years.
Banks have transformed their operations from relatively narrow activities to full service
financial firms.
Banks can be classified based on their clients or function:
1. Retail Banks
2. Private Banking
3. Corporate Banking
4. Investment Banking
PARTS OF FINANCIAL SYSTEM
1. Money
2. Financial Instruments
To transfer resources from savers to investors and to transfer risk to those best equipped
to bear it.
3. Financial Markets
To buy and sell financial instruments.
4. Financial Institutions
5. Regulatory Agencies
Chater two
Recognition
Measurement
Impairment
Derecognition and
IFRS 9 OBJECTIVE
The objective of this Standard is to establish principles for the financial reporting of financial
assets and financial liabilities that will present relevant and useful information to users of
financial statements for their assessment of the amounts, timing and uncertainty of an entity’s
future cash flows.”
Financial Asset
A. Cash;
C. Contractual right to receive cash from another party (e.g., loans, receivables, and
bonds).
D. A contract that may or will be settled in the entity’s own equity instrument
IFRS 9 RECOGNITION
D. When an entity first recognizes a financial liability, it shall classify it in accordance with
paragraphs 4.2.1 and 4.2.2 and measure it in accordance with paragraph 5.1.1. (Par 3.1.1).
F. The standard combines the ‘risk and rewards approach’ and ‘control approach.
(a) the contractual rights to the cash flows from the financial asset expire, or
(b) it transfers the financial asset as set out in paragraphs 3.2.4 and 3.2.5 and the transfer
qualifies for derecognition in accordance with paragraph 3.2.6
− Liability or Equity
− Rathbone Co issues 2,000 convertible bonds at the start of 20X2.The bonds have a three
year term, and are issued at par with a face value of $1,000 per bond, giving total
proceeds of $2,000,000. Interest is payable annually in arrears at a nominal annual
interest rate of 6%. Each bond is convertible at any time up to maturity into 250 ordinary
shares.
− When the bonds are issued, the prevailing market interest rate for similar debt without
conversion options is 9%.
− Required
− Solution
− Principal
− Interest
− Many entities issue preference shares which must be redeemed by the issuer for a
fixed (or determinable) amount at a fixed (or determinable) future date.
− Alternatively, the holder may have the right to require the issuer to redeem the
shares at or after a certain date for a fixed amount.
− In such cases, the issuer has an obligation. Therefore the instrument is a financial
liability and should be classified as such.
− Treasury Shares
− No gain or loss shall be recognized in profit or loss on the purchase, sale, issue or
cancellation of an entity’s own equity instruments.
However, an obligation to purchase own equity instruments for cash or another financial asset
gives rise to a financial liability for the present value of the redemption amount
− Disclosures:
− Objectives
− Qualitative description
− Quantitative data
− Level of information
share-based payments
insurance contracts
DISCLOSURES TYPES
Accounting
Risk
Accounting Disclosures
– measurement categories
– reclassifications
– fair value
Financial assets
collateral
RISK DISCLOSURES
Credit Risk
maximum exposure to credit risk, past due and impaired financial assets, collateral
Liquidity Risk
Market Risk
– sensitivity analysis
Capital Disclosures
nature of requirements
Risk Disclosures
Qualitative Information
Quantitative Information
concentrations
Qualitative Disclosures:
− Its objectives, policies and processes for managing the risk and the methods used
to measure the risk and
Qualitative Disclosures
about the credit quality of financial assets that are neither past due nor impaired
For ex - the amounts of credit exposures for each external credit grade
Market Risks
Open positions in interest rate, currency and equity products, all of which are exposed to general
and specific market movements
Quantitative Disclosures
Summary quantitative data about its exposure to that risk at the reporting date.
Based on the information provided to key management, such as the board of
directors or chief executive officer.
Quantitative Disclosures
Summary quantitative data about its exposure to that risk at the reporting date.
Includes
the amount of the risk exposure associated with all financial instruments
sharing that characteristic
Disclosure of Concentrations of Risk
Geographical
Currency
Industry
Market
Type of counterparty