FRC amends FRS 100, FRS 101, FRS 102, FRS 104 and FRS 105
20 October 2020
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has issued 'Amendment to FRS 101 – Effective
date of IFRS 17', 'Amendments to FRS 102 The Financial Reporting Standard
applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland and FRS 105 The Financial Reporting
Standard applicable to the Micro-entities Regime - COVID-19-related rent
concessions' and 'Amendments to FRS 104 Interim Financial Reporting - Going
concern'.
The amendment to FRS 101 changes the effective date of an amendment to the definition
of a qualifying entity made in July 2019, effectively allowing relevant insurers to
continue to apply FRS 101 for a further two years. The revised effective date for
the new definition of a qualifying entity is accounting periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2023. Consequential amendments have also been made to FRS 100 and
FRS 102.
The amendments to FRS 102 and FRS 105, which were consulted on in Financial Reporting
Exposure Draft (FRED) 76, introduce explicit requirements for accounting for
temporary rent concessions for operating leases occurring as a direct consequence of
COVID-19. Amendments have been made to Section 20 Leases of FRS 102 which
require entities to recognise changes in operating lease payments that arise from
COVID-19-related rent concessions on a systematic basis over the periods that the
change in lease payments is intended to compensate. The FRC considers that this
would best reflect the economic substance of the benefit of these concessions and
their temporary nature and improve the consistency of reporting for users of
financial statements. The requirements only apply to temporary rent concessions
occurring as a direct consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, when any reduction in
lease payments affects only payments originally due on or before 30 June 2021. A
similar amendment has been made to FRS 105. The effective date for these amendments
is accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020, with early application
permitted.
The amendments to FRS 104, which were consulted in in FRED 75, clarify the
requirement to assess the going concern basis of accounting and require the
disclosure of any related material uncertainties when preparing interim financial
statements in accordance with FRS 104. These amendments address an unintentional
difference between FRS 104 and related IFRS requirements. IFRS Standards require
management to assess an entity’s ability to continue as a going concern and disclose
any related material uncertainties when preparing interim financial statements.
Although these requirements are not contained within IAS 34 Interim Financial
Reporting they apply to condensed interim financial statements prepared in
accordance with IAS 34. FRS 104, which is based on the requirements of IAS 34, did
not previously contain any explicit requirements covering the assessment and
reporting on the going concern basis of accounting. However FRS 104 currently
requires an entity to include a statement that the same accounting policies are
applied in the interim financial statements as compared with the most recent annual
financial statements, which would include a statement about the going concern basis
of accounting. The amendments to FRS 104 introduce requirements covering going
concern in a similar way to EU-adopted IFRS Standards. They are intended to ensure
consistency in this regard going forward. The amendments are effective for interim
periods beginning on or after 1 January 2021, with earlier application
permitted.
A press release with links to all of the amendments is available
on the FRC website.