January 2023
Top tutor Tom Clendon tackles a subject that many students struggle with in the exam hall.
Question
Why do gains and losses sometimes appear in the Profit or Loss account (P&L), but other gains and losses are recognised in equity and included in Other Comprehensive Income (OCI)?
Answer
Whether the gain or loss appears in the P&L or is reported directly in equity and included in OCI is a matter determined by individual accounting standards. It is a rules-based approach.
The default is, however, that gains & losses appear in the P&L.
The following accounting standards require that certain gains and losses are recognised in equity and reported in OCI.
β’ IAS16 Property Plant & Equipment and revaluation gains and losses: But the devil is in the detail! This is because sometimes revaluation gains and losses are recognised in P&L. Revaluation gains are in recognised in equity, unless they are a reversal of a loss previously recognised in P&L. And revaluation losses are recognised in equity only if they can be offset against previous gains relating to the same asset.
β’ IAS 21 Foreign Currency and the group exchange differences arising on the retranslation of an overseas subsidiary: However, itβs worth noting that foreign exchange differences at the individual company stage are recognised in P&L.
β’ IAS 19 Employee Benefits and the remeasurement gain or loss that arises on defined benefit pension schemes.
β’ IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and the gains or losses on financial assets designated as Fair Value Through OCI.
β’ IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and the gain or loss on derivatives designated as a cash flow hedge (to the extent they are effective).
Observation and conclusion
I observe that the above gains and losses recognised directly in equity and reported in OCI tend to be:
β’ unrealised
β’ not from operating activities, and
β’ non-recurring in nature
Thus, the exclusion of these gains and losses from the P&L results in reported profits being more representative of underlying earnings than would otherwise be the case. This means when it comes to taking historic profits reported in P&L and extrapolating them into the future, the reported profits are relatively more predictable (and therefore more relevant).
However, having excluded such gains and losses from the P&L it means that the P&L is an incomplete record of gains and losses recognised in the period. This is addressed by including those gains and losses excluded from P&L and presenting them in OCI. In this way a total comprehensive income figure is reported. This figure is the aggregate of the P&L and OCI and so is all gains & losses recognised in the reporting period. Thus, users are presented with a complete picture (which therefore ensures a faithful representation).
And everyone wants information to be presented in a way that is relevant and a faithful representation; after all, that is what ensures that that information is useful to the users of the financial statements.
β’ Tom Clendon is an online ACCA SBR lecturer and podcaster β see www.tomclendon.co.uk. If you have a question for Tom WhatsApp him on 07725 350793