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Mena banks back impairment accounting plans

Dubai, August 28, 2011

Majority of the banks in the Middle East and North Africa region expect impairment accounting proposals to improve financial statements, according to a survey by leading audit firm Deloitte.

The Mena-headquartered banks believe that International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS 9) impairment accounting proposals will boost financial statements compared to those prepared using the current IAS 39 rules, said the new Deloitte inaugural global banking IFRS 9 impairment survey.

Many of the 56 institutions that were surveyed in Europe, Asia Pacific, North America and the Mena region revealed that they have laid the framework for meeting the proposed effective date of 2015 for implementing the IFRS 9 impairment accounting proposals.

Just over half will have started their enactment by the end of 2011, and nearly 90 per cent will have started by 2012, the survey added.

Broadly defined, impairment accounting addresses the timing of when loan losses are recognized in financial statements.

During the financial crisis, the current incurred loss model was widely criticized because losses recognized were ‘too little, and too late,’ the Deloitte report said.

New rules on impairment accounting are being developed jointly by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and the US Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), and will see a shift away from an incurred loss model to an expected loss model.

Once finalized, these proposals will form part of IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, the accounting standard to replace IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement.

Despite progress being made in relation to the accounting change, there remains some industry skepticism.

Deloitte’s survey showed that just over a quarter of banking groups are unconvinced that the introduction of an expected loss model will make financial statements more useful and over half believe it will result in a lack of comparability between institutions.

Survey respondents also said it was likely regulators would find expected loss numbers more useful than shareholders.

Commenting on the findings, Abbas Ali Mirza, audit partner at Deloitte in the UAE said, 'In addition to the major changes brought to classification and measurement of financial assets which are now driven by business models rather than intention and ability, impairment accounting is an additional area of change affecting the financial statements of major banking groups globally and in the Mena region, within the foreseeable future.'

'While the rule changes are designed to increase transparency around loan loss provisioning, survey respondents indicated that it is likely that regulators would find the detail most useful,' he remarked.

'It was also found that it may be difficult for those without technical accounting backgrounds to understand how the changes affect loan loss accounting and, consequently, loan pricing,' he added.-TradeArabia News Service




Tags: banks | Financial | IFRS | Deloitte | Impairment | accounting plan |

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