All Pensions Accounting articles – Page 25

  • Features

    Plan the work, work the plan

    March 2011 (Magazine)

    Another month, another discussion about other comprehensive income. But more than that, the extraordinary meeting of the International Accounting Standards Board on 2 February served to underline a maxim that the London-based standard setter has consistently ignored: plan the work and work the plan.

  • Features

    Repeating the pensions mistake

    February 2011 (Magazine)

    Think back to 2006. Armed with a vague plan for its supposedly joint effort with the US Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) set out to address the measurement challenges presented by so-called contribution-based promises. For its part, we were led to understand that the ...

  • Features

    Presenting Failures

    January 2011 (Magazine)

    The IASB’s discussion of pensions accounting in November posed some of the hitherto unanswered questions about the drive to converge IFRS and US GAAP: at precisely what time are accounting standards going to be set?

  • Features

    Corridor demolished

    December 2010 (Magazine)

    The corridor is no more. On 20 October, members of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) voted to scrap the IAS19 deferral mechanism. In its place comes the net interest approach.

  • Features

    Risk-analysis wonderland

    November 2010 (Magazine)

    In its recently published exposure draft on pensions accounting, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) proposed that entities should present a sensitivity analysis to show how changes in key actuarial assumptions might reasonably be expected to affect:

  • Features

    Reality check

    October 2010 (Magazine)

    The read across from US GAAP to IFRS is far from easy, despite the efforts of consultants such as Towers Watson and auditors KPMG to break it down. For example, the pensions comparison in the August 2009 edition of KPMG’s ‘IFRS Compared to US GAAP’, runs to 17 pages.

  • Features

    OK, but...

    September 2010 (Magazine)

    Stephen Bouvier reviews reactions to the IASB’s April exposure draft on IAS19

  • Features

    Better late than never

    July 2010 (Magazine)

    On 29 April the IASB published its proposals to revamp IAS 19, employee benefits, which “aims to make fundamental improvements to the recognition, presentation and disclosure of defined benefit plans by mid-2011. These improvements will make it easier for users of financial statements to understand how defined benefit (DB) plans affect a company’s financial position, financial performance and cash flows.”

  • Features

    Open and above board

    June 2010 (Magazine)

    A chat about catching a plane would seem on the face of it to be a fairly innocuous event. Indeed, amid much fanfare, North Korea’s Kim Jong-Il recently jetted into China. Chairman of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) Sir David Tweedie’s staff, however, demanded that his trip to Japan be shrouded in more secrecy than the dictator’s.

  • Features

    Do as I say, not as I do

    May 2010 (Magazine)

    Consider this statement by International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) member Patricia McConnell in June 2006: “Is General Motors necessarily bankrupt because it has a huge pension obligation? No, as long as you can look at future obligations and say it will pay down that liability.”

  • News

    IASB 'willing to listen' on pensions accounting (updated)

    2010-03-12T11:25:00Z

    GLOBAL – The IASB has confirmed it is willing to listen to alternative proposals to using mark-to-market pricing for pensions accounting standards.

  • Features

    Presentation revisited

    March 2010 (Magazine)

    The most controverisal aspect of the IASB’s shake-up of financial statement presentation is the move to a so-called single statement of comprehensive income.

  • Features

    Presentation matters

    February 2010 (Magazine)

    The IASB’s joint work on financial statement presentation alongside its US counterpart the FASB, has largely been the stalking horse of the IASB’s efforts to revise IAS19. The FSP project has as its objective the development of an accounting standard that will mandate how entities organise the financial information in their financial statements.

  • Features

    A handmaid’s tale

    January 2010 (Magazine)

    The memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the International Accounting Standards Board and its US counterpart, the Financial Accounting Standards Board is key to understanding why European businesses are in danger of drowning in what increasingly resembles a tide of accounting effluent.

  • News

    LCP study confirms wide variances in discount rates

    2009-11-26T15:45:00Z

    [16:45 CET 26-11] EUROPE - The discount rates used by some of the world’s largest listed companies varied wildly last year when measuring the value of their European pension funds for accounting purposes, according to a report by Lane Clark & Peacock.

  • News

    ASB maintains support for risk free discount rate

    2009-11-20T15:45:00Z

    [16:45 CET 20-11] UK – The Accounting Standards Board (ASB) has reiterated its view that pension fund accounting should use ‘risk free’ discount rates, as evidence suggests the UK AA corporate bond rate reduced the level of reported liabilities making schemes appear stronger than they were.

  • Features

    Sorry, we forgot

    November 2009 (Magazine)

    At IASB’s July staff meeting on pensions, two concerns sprang to mind. One was the risk of too many cooks spoiling the broth. The other was that in addition to the other woes that have plagued her project, senior project manager Anne McGeachin has had human resource management added to the list.

  • Features

    Doing mortality to death

    September 2009 (Magazine)

    To invest time following the progress of International Accounting Standards Board’s (IASB) pensions project is generally to waste part of an otherwise productive existence.

  • Features

    Euro lottery

    July 2009 (Magazine)

    The final meeting of the IASB’s Standards Advisory Council in 2007 was memorable for two reasons. First, participants, including the German delegates, were required to stand and observe a one-minute silence to honour British war dead. Second, of particular interest to those Belgian entities hit by a recent IASB decision ...

  • Features

    A lack of Euro vision

    June 2009 (Magazine)