CFM16235 - Accounting for financial instruments: IAS 32 and IAS 39: recognition and measurement of impairment losses
Treatment of impairment losses
The recognition and measurement of an impairment loss depends on
the category of asset on which it arises.
The concept of impairment is irrelevant to
fair value through profit and loss (FVTPL) assets,
because these are in any case stated at fair value with decreases
(or increases) in fair value going through the income statement.
A
held-to-maturity (HTM) or
loans and receivables (L&R) asset is impaired
if the present value, at the original effective interest rate, of
the expected future cash flows - the recoverable amount - is less
than the carrying amount. The difference is charged to the income
statement. If the recoverable amount later increases due to an
event subsequent to the original impairment, then the impairment is
reversed to that extent, provided that this does not state the
asset at more than amortised original cost. The credit is to the
income statement.
Available-for-sale (AFS) assets, for which changes
in fair value are reported in equity, are impaired if there is the
objective evidence referred to in
CFM16230 that fair value is less than
what amortised cost would have been. In such case the difference is
'recycled' out of cumulative losses held in equity and is charged
into the income statement, even though the financial asset has not
been sold or otherwise derecognised.
If, in a subsequent period, the fair value of a debt
instrument classified as AFS increases and the increase can be
objectively related to an event occurring after the impairment loss
was recognised in the income statement, the impairment loss is
reversed, with the amount of the reversal recognised in the income
statement.
There is an example at
CFM16235a.
Impairments relating to shares or other equity assets
classified as AFS are not reversed. The same applies to any
impairment loss on unquoted shares or other equity assets that are
carried at cost because no reliable measure of their fair value
exists.
