First-Time Application of International Financial Reporting Standards, 20674-20689 [05-7706]
Download as PDF
20674
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 249
[Release Nos. 33–8567; 34–51535;
International Series Release No. 1285; File
No. S7–15–04]
private issuers 3 under the Exchange
Act. It also sets forth disclosure
requirements for registration statements
filed by foreign private issuers under the
Securities Act of 1933 (the ‘‘Securities
Act’’).4 The Commission issued a
proposing release relating to these
amendments on March 11, 2004.5
RIN 3235–AI92
I. Background
First-Time Application of International
Financial Reporting Standards
A. Increasing Use of International
Financial Reporting Standards
Under the leadership of the
International Accounting Standards
Board (‘‘IASB’’), over recent years IFRS
has become widely recognized by
preparers and users of financial
statements. As a result, numerous nonU.S. companies, including many that
are registered with the SEC, are
voluntarily choosing to switch from
their home country accounting
principles to IFRS. In addition, an
increasing number of jurisdictions
around the world are adopting or
incorporating IFRS as their basis of
accounting, as a result of which a large
number of issuers registered with the
SEC will switch to IFRS from their
Previous GAAP.6 For example, in June
2002, the European Union (‘‘EU’’)
adopted a regulation requiring
companies incorporated under the laws
of one of its Member States and whose
securities are publicly traded within the
EU to prepare their consolidated
financial statements for each financial
year 7 starting on or after January 1, 2005
on the basis of accounting standards
issued by the IASB.8 In accordance with
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final amendment to form.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Commission is adopting
amendments to Form 20–F to provide a
one-time accommodation relating to
financial statements prepared under
International Financial Reporting
Standards (‘‘IFRS’’) for foreign private
issuers registered with the SEC. This
accommodation applies to foreign
private issuers that adopt IFRS prior to
or for the first financial year starting on
or after January 1, 2007.
The accommodation permits eligible
foreign private issuers for their first year
of reporting under IFRS to file two years
rather than three years of statements of
income, changes in shareholders’ equity
and cash flows prepared in accordance
with IFRS, with appropriate related
disclosure. The accommodation retains
current requirements regarding the
reconciliation of financial statement
items to generally accepted accounting
principles as used in the United States
(‘‘U.S. GAAP’’).
In addition, the Commission is
amending Form 20–F to require certain
disclosures of all foreign private issuers
that change their basis of accounting to
IFRS.
DATES: Effective Date: May 20, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael D. Coco, Special Counsel,
Office of International Corporate
Finance, Division of Corporation
Finance, at (202) 942–2990, U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission,
450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington, DC
20549–0302, or Susan Koski-Grafer,
Office of the Chief Accountant, at (202)
942–4400, U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20549–1103.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission is amending Form 20–F 1
under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (the ‘‘Exchange Act’’).2 Form 20–
F is the combined registration statement
and annual report form for foreign
1 17
2 15
CFR 249.220f.
U.S.C. 78a et seq.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
3 The term ‘‘foreign private issuer’’ is defined in
Exchange Act Rule 3b–4(c) [17 CFR 240.3b–4(c)]. A
foreign private issuer is a non-government foreign
issuer, except for a company that (1) has more than
50% of its outstanding voting securities owned by
U.S. investors and (2) has either a majority of its
officers and directors residing in or being citizens
of the United States, a majority of its assets located
in the United States, or its business principally
administered in the United States.
4 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
5 ‘‘First-Time Application of International
Financial Reporting Standards,’’ Release No. 33–
8397 (the ‘‘Proposing Release’’).
6 This release and the adopted amendments use
the term ‘‘Previous GAAP’’ to refer to the basis of
accounting that a first-time adopter uses
immediately before adopting IFRS. This usage is
consistent with IFRS. See International Financial
Reporting Standard 1: ‘‘First-time Adoption of
International Financial Reporting Standards,’’ as
issued in June 2003 (‘‘IFRS 1’’), Appendix A.
7 Consistent with Form 20–F, IFRS and general
usage outside the United States, this release uses
the term ‘‘financial year’’ to refer to a fiscal year.
See Instruction 2 to Item 3 of Form 20–F.
8 Regulation (EC) No. 1606/2002 of the European
Parliament and of the Council of 19 July 2002 on
the application of international accounting
standards, Official Journal L. 243, 11/09/2002 P.
0001–0004 (the ‘‘EU Regulation’’). The Commission
commends the EU, as well as Australia and other
jurisdictions, for their efforts relating to IFRS. The
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
these requirements, listed EU
companies not currently using IFRS
must convert from the existing national
accounting standards to IFRS, as
endorsed by the European Union, no
later than 2005.9 Other countries,
including Australia, also have adopted
similar requirements by incorporating
IFRS as or into their own standards for
periods beginning after January 1, 2005.
Foreign private issuers that register
securities with the SEC, and that report
on a periodic basis thereafter under
Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange
Act,10 are generally required to present,
in their annual reports and registration
statements filed with the SEC, audited
statements of income, changes in
shareholders’ equity and cash flows for
each of the past three financial years,
prepared on a consistent basis of
accounting.11 These issuers also are
generally required to present selected
financial data covering each of the past
five financial years.12
B. Proposed Amendments to Form
20–F
At the beginning of year 2003,13 the
IASB had not finalized some of the IFRS
that many foreign private issuers will be
Commission believes broad acceptance of all of
IFRS, and of the IASB standard setting process,
would serve to promote high quality, transparent
and comparable reporting of financial results on a
global basis.
9 Under the EU Regulation, companies meeting
certain criteria will be permitted an extension until
2007.
10 15 U.S.C. 78m(a) or 78o(d). Section 13(a) of the
Exchange Act requires every issuer of a security
registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange
Act [15 U.S.C. 78l] to file with the Commission
such annual reports and other reports as the
Commission may prescribe. Section 15(d) of the
Exchange Act requires each issuer that has filed a
registration statement that has become effective
pursuant to the Securities Act to file such reports
as may be required pursuant to Section 13 in
respect of a security registered pursuant to Section
12, unless the duty to file under Section 15(d) has
been suspended for any financial year.
11 See Item 8.A.2 for Form 20–F. Foreign private
issuers are also required to present audited balance
sheets as of the end of the past two financial years.
12 See Item 3.A.1 of Form 20–F.
13 In several countries the presentation of
financial statements in accordance with IFRS
becomes mandatory for financial years starting on
or after January 1, 2005. This release refers to that
financial year as ‘‘year 2005,’’ regardless of the
actual beginning date of a company’s financial year,
and the three prior financial years as ‘‘year 2002,’’
‘‘year 2003,’’ and ‘‘year 2004,’’ respectively.
Accordingly, the financial statements for those
years are referred to as ‘‘year 2002 financial
statements,’’ ‘‘year 2003 financial statements,’’ and
‘‘year 2004 financial statements.’’ For issuers
adopting IFRS for the first time during another
financial year, the earliest of the three years for
which financial statements are presently required
under Form 20–F is referred to as the ‘‘third
financial year,’’ the second financial year as the
‘‘second financial year,’’ and the financial year in
which an issuer switches to IFRS as the ‘‘most
recent financial year.’’
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
required to apply retrospectively when
they adopt IFRS for the first time for
year 2005. The Commission recognized
that compliance with SEC requirements
could be difficult and burdensome for
foreign issuers switching to IFRS,
because these issuers would have to
implement accounting standards that
were not yet finalized during the
reporting period to which they must be
applied. In response to this concern, the
Commission issued a proposal to amend
Form 20–F to provide an
accommodation to foreign private
issuers that were switching to IFRS
prior to 2007.14 The proposals were
intended to facilitate the transition of
foreign companies to IFRS and to
improve the quality of their financial
disclosure. The proposed amendments
to Form 20–F also required certain
disclosures from foreign private issuers
that change their basis of accounting to
IFRS during any year. This disclosure
relates to certain mandatory and elective
accounting treatments that an issuer
may use in applying IFRS for the first
time and the reconciliation from
Previous GAAP to IFRS required by
IFRS.
C. Comments Received
In response to this proposal, the
Commission received 33 comment
letters from representatives of foreign
issuers, accounting firms, professional
associations, investor associations and
regulators.15 While all of the
commenters supported reducing the
burden on foreign issuers that change
their basis of accounting to IFRS, most
commenters addressed to varying
degrees the questions raised in the
Proposing Release and suggested
modification to the amendments as
proposed. The issues that generated the
most discussion were the following:
• The proposed time frame during
which the accommodation would be
available to a first-time adopter of IFRS;
• The definition of ‘‘first-time
adopter’’ for purposes of determining
eligibility to rely on the
accommodation;
• The need for an unqualified
statement of compliance with IFRS by
an issuer seeking to rely on the
accommodation, particularly with
regard to standards that had not been
endorsed by the EU;
• The proposed inclusion of
condensed U.S. GAAP information for
three years;
• The need for guidance relating to
disclosure under Industry Guide 3 or 6
14 See
the Proposing Release.
comment letters are posted on the
Commission’s Web site at https://www.sec.gov/rules/
proposed/s71504.shtml.
15 These
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
from companies that rely on the
proposed accommodation;
• The presentation of financial
statements for interim periods during
the Transition Year; 16 and
• The proposed disclosure about the
use of exceptions to IFRS by a first-time
adopter.
D. Summary of the Final Amendments
to Form 20–F
The Commission is adopting a new
General Instruction G to Form 20–F to
allow an eligible foreign private issuer
to omit from SEC filings for its first year
of reporting under IFRS the earliest of
the three years of financial statements.
In response to many of the commenters’
concerns, the amendments as adopted
differ in some respects from the
amendments as proposed. In this release
the Commission is:
• Making the accommodation
available to companies that adopt IFRS
as their basis of accounting prior to or
for the first financial year starting on or
after January 1, 2007;
• Clarifying that, except as discussed
in the next point, the accommodation is
available only to a foreign private issuer
that states unreservedly and explicitly
that its financial statements comply
with IFRS and are not subject to any
qualification relating to the application
of IFRS as issued by the IASB;
• Permitting the accommodation to be
available to a foreign private issuer that
prepares its financial statements in
accordance with IFRS as adopted by the
EU if the issuer provides an audited
reconciliation to IFRS as published by
the IASB;
• Not requiring condensed U.S.
GAAP information from companies that
rely on the accommodation;
• Clarifying that companies subject to
Industry Guide 3 or 6 should provide
Industry Guide Information under IFRS
for periods covered by their IFRS
financial statements, with U.S. GAAP or
Previous GAAP information for earlier
years;
• For purposes of complying with
Item 8.A.5 of Form 20–F relating to
interim period financial statements
required to be included in registration
statements and prospectuses during the
Transition Year, permitting issuers to
present IFRS financial statements
covering interim periods, subject to
certain conditions; and
• Clarifying that first-time adopters of
IFRS need not provide quantified
16 The term ‘‘Transition Year’’ refers to the
financial year in which an issuer first changes its
basis of accounting from Previous GAAP to IFRS.
For example, for foreign issuers with a calendar
year-end that are subject to the EU Regulation, the
Transition Year would be the financial year ended
December 31, 2005.
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20675
numerical information on the financial
significance of any exceptions from
IFRS on which they rely.
In many areas, the Commission is
giving first-time adopters significant
flexibility by not prescribing specific
formats, disclosures, legends, or
language to be used in the presentation
of IFRS financial statements. For
example, companies are permitted (but
not required) to include Previous GAAP
financial information or financial
statements, and are permitted to
determine the appropriate information
content and presentation format for the
Previous GAAP–IFRS reconciliation
required under IFRS 1. The Commission
believes a flexible approach is
appropriate because of the large number
of foreign private issuers from several
countries that will be first-time adopters
and the wide variety of circumstances
these issuers will encounter in making
the transition from Previous GAAP to
IFRS. Issuers should assess the
information needs of their shareholders
and the investment community at large
and should provide meaningful, reliable
and transparent information in
connection with their implementation
of IFRS.
The Commission reminds issuers of
their responsibilities under the federal
securities laws to provide investors with
information that is not misleading.17 In
addition, as with all disclosure and
accounting matters involving companies
that make filings under the Securities
Act or the Exchange Act, the SEC staff
may comment on such matters.
II. Discussion of the Amendments To
Permit Omission of IFRS Financial
Statements for the Third Financial Year
A. Eligibility Requirements
The Commission is adopting an
amendment to Form 20–F to allow an
eligible foreign private issuer for its first
year of reporting under IFRS to file two
years rather than three years of
statements of income, shareholders’
equity and cash flows prepared in
accordance with IFRS.
• Annual Reports. A foreign private
issuer is eligible to exclude IFRS
financial statements for the third
financial year from an Annual Report on
Form 20–F if (1) the annual report
relates to the first financial year starting
on or after January 1, 2007 or an earlier
financial year, (2) the issuer adopts IFRS
for the first time by an explicit and
unreserved statement of compliance
17 For example, this responsibility can be found
under Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act
and Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule
10b–5 thereunder.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20676
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
with IFRS,18 and (3) the audited
financial statements for the financial
year to which the annual report relates
are prepared in accordance with IFRS.
• Registration Statements. A foreign
private issuer is eligible to exclude IFRS
financial statements for the third
financial year from a registration
statement under the Securities Act or
the Exchange Act if (1) the most recent
audited financial statements required by
Item 8.A.2 of Form 20–F are for the first
financial year starting on or after
January 1, 2007 or an earlier financial
year, (2) the issuer adopts IFRS for the
first time by an explicit and unreserved
statement of compliance with IFRS, and
(3) the audited financial statements for
the most recent financial year are
prepared in accordance with IFRS.
These adopted eligibility
requirements differ from the proposed
requirements, which would have
permitted a foreign private issuer that is
a first-time adopter of IFRS to omit IFRS
financial statements for the third-year
back from an annual report for a
financial year that begins no later than
January 1, 2007 or from a registration
statement for which the most recent
financial statements are for a financial
year that begins no later than January 1,
2007.
Many commenters noted that under
the amendments as proposed an issuer
that was eligible to defer its adoption of
IFRS until 2007 under the EU
Regulation would not have been eligible
to rely on the accommodation unless it
had a financial calendar year-end.19
They also commented that the proposed
deadline would create difficulties for
companies with a 52/53 week financial
year, which may start later than January
1.
The accommodation as adopted has
been broadened and is available to a
foreign private issuer that adopts IFRS
prior to or for its first financial year
starting on or after January 1, 2007. This
approach matches the extended
compliance period under the EU
Regulation. Under this approach, an
issuer that, for example, has a
September 30 financial year-end could
switch to IFRS for its financial year from
18 Under IFRS 1, an entity is a ‘‘first-time
adopter’’ if the entity’s first IFRS financial
statements are the first annual financial statements
in which the entity adopts IFRS, by an explicit and
unreserved statement in those financial statements
of compliance with IFRS. IFRS 1, paragraph 3.
19 Under the EU Regulation mandating the use of
IFRS, EU Member States may allow companies to
defer their adoption of IFRS until year 2007 if (1)
a company is listed both in the EU and on a nonEU exchange and currently uses internationally
accepted standards as its primary accounting
standards, or (2) a company has only publicly
traded debt securities.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
October 1, 2007 to September 30, 2008
and would be eligible to apply the
accommodation when filing its Form
20–F Annual Report with the SEC by
March 2009.20
Commenters also pointed out that an
issuer that previously claimed
compliance with IAS could be
considered a first-time adopter under
IFRS 1 if it did not include an explicit
and unreserved statement of compliance
with IFRS in its most recent published
annual financial statements. For
example, an issuer that had prepared
financial statements under IAS in prior
years and then in later years switched
back to home country GAAP would be
considered a first-time adopter under
IFRS 1 but would not have been eligible
for the accommodation as proposed.
The Commission has clarified that the
accommodation as adopted is available
to a foreign private issuer that is a ‘‘firsttime adopter.’’ The adopted definition
of first-time adopter in Form 20–F is
consistent with that under IFRS 1. This
approach is intended to avoid situations
in which an issuer could be a first-time
adopter under IFRS 1 but would be
ineligible to rely on the accommodation
because it had prepared its financial
statements in accordance with IAS for
an earlier financial year.
Commenters also expressed concern
over the ability of issuers to make an
unreserved and unqualified statement of
compliance with IFRS if the EU had not
fully endorsed all of the IFRS standards
by the time the issuer produced its
financial statements. This concern
related both to the EU endorsement of
existing standards as well as to the
endorsement of any future standards
that the IASB may adopt for companies
that adopt IFRS in later years. Other
commenters pointed out that Australia
is adopting IFRS into Australian GAAP
which, they asserted, would fully
encompass IFRS. As a result, the
financial statements of Australian
companies would refer to compliance
with Australian GAAP and not
necessarily to IFRS.
As adopted, except as described in
Section II.G for EU issuers, an issuer is
eligible to rely on the accommodation
only if it can state unreservedly and
explicitly that its financial statements
comply with IFRS as published by the
IASB, and if its audited financial
statements are not subject to any
qualification, including qualification
relating to the application of IFRS. In
addition, the issuer’s independent
auditor would be required to opine
without qualification on compliance
20 Annual reports on Form 20–F are due six
months after the end of the financial year.
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
with IFRS. A foreign private issuer that
had not complied with all IFRS in effect
as published by the IASB would not be
able to make the required unreserved
statement of compliance with IFRS and
would not be eligible to rely on the
accommodation the Commission has
adopted.21
Some countries may adopt IFRS by
incorporating them into their home
country standards. Australia, for
example, has taken this approach. For
purposes of eligibility to rely on the
accommodation, an Australian issuer
would need to assert its compliance
with both IFRS and Australian GAAP.22
Some commenters noted that the
proposal did not address whether an
issuer that has published audited IFRS
financial statements for the third
financial year should include them in
its SEC filings. If an issuer has
voluntarily published audited IFRS
financial statements for the third
financial year, or has been required to
do so pursuant to other regulations, then
the burdens associated with including
those financial statements in SEC filings
would appear low. In addition, the
Commission believes investors should
have access to those financial
statements in SEC filings. As a result,
the adopted amendments require that an
issuer that has published audited IFRS
financial statements for three years
include all three years of IFRS financial
statements in its SEC filings.
Some commenters recommended that,
for the same reasons for which it applies
to foreign private issuers that file
securities documents under the
Securities Act and Exchange Act, the
accommodation should be extended to
the financial statements of entities
prepared under Rules 3–05, 3–09, 3–10,
and 3–16 of Regulation S–X.23 The
Commission views the adopted
amendments as applying to those
21 The circumstances under which an audit report
containing a disclaimer or qualification would be
accepted are extremely limited. See Instruction to
Item 8.A.3 of Form 20–F.
22 In making this assertion, an Australian issuer
may rely on the view that Australian GAAP
complies with IFRS. This approach of relying on
the home country standard setter’s compliance with
IFRS does not apply to an issuer from another
country that adopts IFRS as its home country GAAP
within the time frame to which the accommodation
applies, although such an issuer could assert its
compliance with its home country GAAP, as well
as its compliance with IFRS, if appropriate.
23 Rule 3–05 relates to financial statements of
businesses acquired or to be acquired; Rule 3–09
relates to separate financial statements of nonconsolidated subsidiaries and 50-percent or less
owned persons; Rule 3–10 relates to financial
statements of guarantors and issuers of guaranteed
securities registered or being registered; and Rule 3–
16 relates to the financial statements of affiliates
whose securities collateralize an issue registered or
being registered.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
financial statements, provided that the
entities meet the definition of foreign
business in Rule 1.02(l) of Regulation S–
X.24 The Commission similarly views
the amendments as applying to the
financial statements of a target company
in a business combination transaction
included in a Securities Act registration
statement on Form S–4 25 or Form F–4 26
or a proxy or information statement
under the Exchange Act.27
B. Primary Financial Statements
1. IFRS Financial Statements
With respect to the consolidated
financial statements and other financial
information required by Item 8.A of
Form 20–F, the Commission is adopting
the amendments as proposed to allow
eligible foreign private issuers for their
first year of reporting under IFRS to
present in their SEC filings during that
year only two years of audited IFRS
financial statements instead of three
years. Eligible companies are permitted
to omit audited financial statements for
the earliest of the three years when
providing the financial statements
required by Item 8.A.2. All instructions
to Item 8, including instructions
requiring audits in accordance with U.S.
generally accepted auditing standards
will continue to apply.28 Commenters
did not raise concerns with these
aspects of the amendments.
2. Condensed U.S. GAAP Financial
Information
The Commission proposed amending
Form 20–F to require companies that
present two years of IFRS financial
statements in their SEC filings also to
24 That
rule defines a foreign business as a
business that is majority owned by persons who are
not citizens or residents of the United States and
is not organized under the laws of the United States
or any state thereof, and either (1) more than 50
percent of its assets are located outside the United
States; or (2) the majority of its executive officers
and directors are not United States citizens or
residents.
25 17 CFR 239.13.
26 17 CFR 239.34.
27 Under the Exchange Act, proxy statements are
filed on Schedule 14A (17 CFR 240.14a–101) and
information statements are filed on Schedule 14C
(17 CFR 240.14c–101).
28 Although the instructions to Item 8 continue to
refer to U.S. generally accepted auditing standards
(‘‘GAAS’’), the Commission notes that under the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (‘‘PCAOB’’) now has
broad authority to set standards for audits of U.S.
public companies. In Audit Committee Standard
No. 1, the PCAOB directed auditors to cease
referring to GAAS in audit reports relating to
financial statements of issuers and instead to refer
to the ‘‘standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States).’’ See
‘‘Commission Guidance Regarding the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board’s Auditing
and Related Professional Practice Standard No. 1,’’
Release No. 33–8422 (May 14, 2004).
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
present, as part of their U.S. GAAP
reconciliation, audited condensed U.S.
GAAP information for three years in a
level of detail consistent with that
required by Article 10 of Regulation S–
X for interim financial statements.
Under the amendments as adopted,
issuers relying on the accommodation
will not be required to provide this
condensed U.S. GAAP information.
Commenters had diverging views on
the proposal. Some commenters
supported the proposal to require three
years of condensed U.S. GAAP
information in order to have three-year
trend information that would be
beneficial to investors without being
unduly burdensome to issuers. Other
commenters claimed that the cost and
burden to issuers of preparing
condensed U.S. GAAP information
would outweigh the benefits to
investors. One commenter noted that
the preparation of condensed U.S.
GAAP information would create an
unnecessary burden to companies
because investors would have available
a reconciliation from Previous GAAP to
U.S. GAAP and a reconciliation from
IFRS to U.S. GAAP, which would allow
them to sufficiently assess U.S. GAAP
trend information on a three-year basis.
After evaluating the benefits in relation
to the expected costs, the Commission is
not adopting the proposal to require the
presentation of condensed U.S. GAAP
information. Companies relying on the
accommodation will continue to be
required to provide an audited
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP for the two
years of financial statements prepared in
accordance with IFRS.29
3. Previous GAAP Financial Statements
The Commission is adopting
amendments that will allow but not
require any issuer that switches to IFRS
to include, incorporate by reference, or
refer to Previous GAAP financial
information. These amendments are
adopted as proposed. Issuers that elect
to include or incorporate by reference
financial information prepared in
accordance with Previous GAAP must
include or incorporate narrative
disclosure of its operating and financial
review and prospects under Item 5 of
Form 20–F for the reporting periods
covered by Previous GAAP financial
information.
The proposing release solicited
comment on the presentation of
Previous GAAP information. The
amendments as adopted do not
prescribe the specific placement of any
Previous GAAP information, although
the adopted amendments prohibit its
PO 00000
29 See
Items 17(c) and 18 of Form 20–F.
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20677
presentation in a side-by-side columnar
format with IFRS information. The
Commission believes this will help to
avoid potential confusion and
inappropriate comparisons between the
two.
An issuer that includes, incorporates
by reference or refers to Previous GAAP
selected financial data or financial
information in an SEC disclosure
document must also include appropriate
cautionary language with respect to that
data to avoid inappropriate comparison
with information presented under IFRS.
Issuers electing to include or
incorporate Previous GAAP financial
information must disclose, at an
appropriate prominent location, that the
filing contains financial information
based on the issuer’s Previous GAAP,
which is not comparable to financial
information based on IFRS. The
amendments as adopted do not specify
particular legends or language that
should be used by issuers that include
or incorporate Previous GAAP
information. The Commission believes
that appropriate language may vary
depending on the use made of Previous
GAAP information.
Commenters expressed wide support
for the proposal to permit but not
require Previous GAAP information,
with appropriate labels and legends.
There was more divergence on the issue
of its format and location. The
Commission believes a flexible
approach is best suited to allowing an
issuer to determine the format and
placement of Previous GAAP
information based on its use.
C. Selected Financial Data
The Commission is adopting the
amendments as proposed to permit firsttime adopters to provide, pursuant to
Item 3.A of Form 20–F, selected
financial data based on IFRS for the two
most recent financial years. First-time
adopters that present two years of IFRS
selected financial data would continue
to be required to provide five years of
selected data based on U.S. GAAP,
unless the instructions to Item 3.A
permit the issuer to provide U.S. GAAP
data for a shorter time.30 The
amendments neither require nor
30 The instructions to Item 3.A of Form 20–F
require a company to include selected financial
data on a basis reconciled to U.S. GAAP for those
periods for which the company was required to
reconcile the primary annual financial statements
in an SEC filing. Therefore, a foreign private issuer
may be permitted to present fewer than five years
of U.S. GAAP information under selected financial
data in the years immediately after its initial SEC
registration. This permits a company to build up a
five-year history of U.S. GAAP information. This
accommodation is not affected by these
amendments.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20678
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
prohibit inclusion, incorporation by
reference or reference to selected
financial data presented on the basis of
Previous GAAP, although as with the
audited financial statements, Previous
GAAP information should not be
presented in a side-by-side columnar
format with IFRS information.31
The Commission did not receive
extensive comment on the proposal as it
relates to selected financial data. One
commenter noted that the proposal did
not appear to reflect the Commission
practice of allowing an issuer to build
up to a five-year presentation of selected
financial data, and could appear to
suggest that a full five years of IFRS
selected financial data would be
required in the years following an
issuer’s first time adoption of IFRS. The
Commission notes the amendments do
not affect the ability of an issuer to rely
on the Instruction to Item 3.A. in years
subsequent to becoming a first-time
adopter of IFRS, thereby allowing that
issuer to build up to a five-year history
of selected financial data based on IFRS.
D. Operating and Financial Review and
Prospects
The Commission is adopting as
proposed an instruction in new General
Instruction G to Form 20–F to clarify
how issuers should present their
disclosure under Item 5 of Form 20–F
relating to operating and financial
review and prospects. The adopted
instruction specifies that in providing
that disclosure, management should
focus on the IFRS financial statements
from the past two financial years, as
well as the reconciliation to U.S. GAAP
for the same two financial years. The
discussion also should explain any
differences between IFRS and U.S.
GAAP that are not otherwise discussed
in the reconciliation and that the issuer
believes are necessary for an
understanding of the financial
statements as a whole.32 Management
should not include in this section any
discussion relating to financial
statements prepared in accordance with
Previous GAAP.
31 While issuers are not permitted to have a sideby-side columnar format that combines information
based on two or more sets of accounting principles,
a format that presents the same information on a
single page or table would be permitted, assuming
there are appropriate legends and explanations. For
example, an issuer could present selected financial
data in a single page as follows: IFRS for years 2004
and 2005; below that U.S. GAAP for years 2001
through 2005; and below that Previous GAAP for
years 2001 through 2004. Companies are generally
free to choose the presentation of selected financial
data that they feel is appropriate for their situation.
32 This is the existing requirement under Form
20–F, Instruction 2 to Item 5.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
E. Other Disclosures
1. Business and Derivatives Disclosure
The Commission is adopting as
proposed an instruction in new General
Instruction G to Form 20–F to clarify
that for companies preparing their
financial statements under IFRS, the
reference to accounting principles in
Item 4, ‘‘Information on the Company,’’
refers to IFRS and not to either Previous
GAAP or U.S. GAAP.33 The
Commission is also adopting as
proposed an instruction in General
Instruction G to clarify that for
companies preparing their financial
statements under IFRS, derivatives and
market risk disclosure provided in
response to Item 11 would be based on
IFRS.
Commenters widely concurred with
the proposals to include instructions
clarifying that both business operations
disclosure pursuant to Item 4 and
derivatives disclosure pursuant to Item
11 of Form 20–F should refer to the
financial information prepared in
accordance with IFRS.
2. Disclosure Pursuant to Industry
Guides
The Commission did not propose, nor
is it adopting, any specific amendments
with respect to information to be
disclosed pursuant to Industry Guide 3
(Statistical Disclosure by Bank Holding
Companies) or Industry Guide 6
(Disclosures Concerning Unpaid Claims
and Claim Adjustment Expenses of
Property-Casualty Insurance
Underwriters).34 The Commission
believes that foreign issuers that switch
to IFRS and to which these Guides
apply do not need a general
accommodation.
The Commission solicited comment
on behalf of the staff on whether
amendments would be appropriate to
address the information required under
Industry Guide 3 or Industry Guide 6 in
the context of first-time adopters
changing their basis of accounting to
IFRS. The general view expressed in the
comments submitted by issuers subject
to Industry Guide 3 or 6 is that they
should be permitted to present only two
years of Industry Guide information
33 Under Item 4 of Form 20–F, an issuer must
provide information about its business operations,
the products it makes and the services it provides,
and the factors that affect its business. The financial
information that is included in response to this
requirement is generally based on the primary
financial statements of the issuer.
34 Industry Guides serve as expressions of the
policies and practices of the Division of Corporation
Finance. They are of assistance to issuers, their
counsel and others preparing registration
statements and reports, as well as to the
Commission’s staff.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
under IFRS, consistent with the
presentation of their primary financial
statements. Commenters thought it an
unreasonable burden to restate the
earliest of three years of information
under IFRS, and that there would be no
significant benefit to investors from
such a restatement.
Industry Guide disclosure is intended
to provide a ‘‘track-record’’ of trend
information such as loan quality
information for banks providing
disclosure under Industry Guide 3 or
property casualty loss reserve
development under Industry Guide 6.
The Commission recognizes that the
switch to IFRS will impact the Industry
Guide disclosure of first-time adopters,
who may not have available prior years
of Industry Guide information prepared
under IFRS. Although the staff does not
intend to amend the Industry Guides
requirements, the staff believes and
intends to apply the Industry Guides
such that a first-time adopter of IFRS
who relies on the adopted amendments
to Form 20–F will be in compliance
with existing Industry Guide standards
if it provides two years of Industry
Guide information under IFRS, with
information provided under U.S. GAAP
or Previous GAAP to cover earlier years
as required by the Industry Guides, as
applicable.
F. Financial Statements and
Information for Interim Periods During
the Transition Year in Registration
Statements, Prospectuses and Other
Filings
As noted in the Proposing Release,
there are many difficult and unique
issues relating to the appropriate
presentation of financial information
during the Transition Year. Some
commenters had useful suggestions in
this area, which are reflected in the
adopted amendments to Form 20–F.
Because these issues affect foreign
private issuers that are switching to
IFRS and that will use the
accommodation to omit financial
statements for the third financial year,
the Commission believes it is
appropriate to provide specific guidance
and relief with respect to the financial
information included in SEC filings.
1. Exchange Act Reporting
Foreign private issuers that are subject
to the reporting requirements under
Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange
Act are required to furnish Reports on
Form 6–K.35 These reports on Form 6–
K generally consist of material
information that a foreign private issuer
publishes or makes public voluntarily or
35 Rules
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
13a–16 and 15d–16.
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
in accordance with home market
requirements. There is no requirement
under Form 6–K to present any specific
financial information, either reconciled
to U.S. GAAP or otherwise.
The Commission is not imposing any
additional requirements under Form 6–
K for companies that are switching from
Previous GAAP to IFRS. If a foreign
private issuer is not filing a registration
statement or using a prospectus under
the Securities Act or filing an initial
registration statement under the
Exchange Act, the amendments the
Commission is adopting will not affect
the interim period financial information
that is required to be filed with or
furnished to the SEC.36 When a foreign
private issuer publishes material
financial information, whether fully or
partly in accordance with IFRS,37 it
should consider whether that
information should be furnished on a
Form 6–K Report.
2. Financial Information in Securities
Act Registration Statements and
Prospectuses and Initial Exchange Act
Registration Statements Used Less Than
Nine Months After the Financial Year
End
In registration statements and
prospectuses under the Securities Act
and initial registration statements under
the Exchange Act, if the document is
dated less than nine months after the
end of the last audited financial year,
foreign private issuers are not required
to include interim period financial
information. However, if a foreign
private issuer has published interim
period financial information, Item 8.A.5
of Form 20–F requires these registration
statements and prospectuses to include
that information.38 The intent of this
requirement is to ensure that the
information available in U.S. offering
documents is as current as information
that is available elsewhere.
36 If a Form 6–K Report is incorporated by
reference into a registration statement or
prospectus, then the issuer should refer to the relief
outlined below and in new General Instruction G
to Form 20–F.
37 The Committee of European Securities
Regulators (‘‘CESR’’), for example, has encouraged
European companies to provide investors with
quantified information regarding the impact of the
change to IFRS as soon as sufficiently reliable
information is available. See CESR, ‘‘European
Regulation on the Application of IFRS in 2005:
Recommendation for Additional Guidance
Regarding the Transition to IFRS,’’ (December 2003)
(‘‘CESR Recommendation’’).
38 Under Item 512(a)(4) of Regulation S–K, a
foreign private issuer that registers securities on a
shelf registration statement basis is required to
undertake to include any financial statements
required by Item 8.A of Form 20–F at the start of
any delayed offering or throughout a continuous
offering.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
Generally, this interim period
financial information is not required to
be reconciled to U.S. GAAP because
(among other reasons) the U.S. GAAP
reconciliation relating to the year-end
audited financial statements provides
investors with a roadmap for evaluating
the extent to which U.S. GAAP
adjustments might impact interim
period financial information. To the
extent there are new reconciling items
or the issuer has made a change in its
accounting principles with respect to
the interim period, the issuer must
quantify material reconciling items that
have not previously been addressed in
the audited financial statements, and
must provide narrative disclosures
about the differences in accounting
principles used.39
On occasion, a foreign private issuer
may publicly disclose interim financial
information that is prepared using
accounting standards different from
those used in its SEC filings.40 In this
instance, investors will not have the
benefit of the roadmap and will not be
able to evaluate the reconciling items
between home country GAAP and U.S.
GAAP. As a result, the interim financial
information disclosed pursuant to Item
8.A.5 would have to be supplemented
with a U.S. GAAP reconciliation.
During the Transition Year, a foreign
private issuer that is switching to IFRS
may publish interim financial
information either fully or partly in
accordance with IFRS and will likely
not have filed audited year-end IFRS
financial statements in its most recent
Form 20–F Annual Report. A strict
interpretation of Item 8.A.5 would
therefore normally require that the
issuer provide a U.S. GAAP
reconciliation relating to the IFRS
interim financial information.
The Commission recognizes the
significant burdens associated with the
changeover to a new basis of accounting
and the benefits to investors of having
companies publish financial
information in accordance with IFRS
during the Transition Year. As a result,
the Commission does not believe a U.S.
GAAP reconciliation is necessary in this
circumstance, and is including within
new Instruction G to Form 20–F a
provision that would permit a foreign
private issuer to include IFRS financial
information pursuant to the last three
sentences of Item 8.A.5 without either
descriptive or quantified U.S. GAAP
39 Instruction 3(a) and (b) to Item 8.A.5 of Form
20–F.
40 This may occur when an issuer whose audited
financial statements included in its Annual Report
on Form 20–F are prepared in accordance with U.S.
GAAP publishes interim financial information
prepared using home country GAAP.
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20679
reconciling information. Because
companies may publish interim
financial information that does not fully
comply with IFRS during the Transition
Year, this relief extends to information
that makes reference to IFRS but that
may not be fully in accordance with
IFRS.41 In addition, recognizing that
foreign private issuers may present IFRS
financial information covering a full
financial year as well as interim periods,
this relief also extends to annual yearend financial information that a foreign
private issuer may publish during the
Transition Year. Because such data may
not be comparable to the issuer’s
historical or future data or to other
issuers and not accompanied by a U.S.
GAAP reconciliation, such published
information should be accompanied by
a statement that the information is not
in compliance with IFRS and other
appropriate cautionary language.
This relief only applies to documents
described above that are used prior to
nine months after the end of a foreign
private issuer’s financial year.
Documents that are used subsequent to
nine months after financial year end are
addressed in the next section.
3. Financial Statements in Securities
Act Registration Statements and
Prospectuses and Initial Exchange Act
Registration Statements Used More
Than Nine Months After the Financial
Year End
In registration statements and
prospectuses under the Securities Act
and initial registration statements under
the Exchange Act, if the document is
dated more than nine months after the
end of the last audited financial year,
foreign private issuers must provide
consolidated interim period financial
statements covering at least the first six
months of the financial year and the
comparative period for the prior
financial year.42 These unaudited
interim period financial statements
must be prepared using the same basis
41 An issuer may be unable to comply fully with
IFRS for interim financial statements during the
Transition Year due to subsequent changes that may
be made to standards or the development of
interpretive material. Because of the potential for
such changes, the accounting policies that an issuer
applies in preparing its preliminary opening
balance sheet may not be the same as those to be
applied to the final opening balance sheet when
that issuer prepares it first complete IFRS financial
statements.
CESR, for example, has recommended that
companies switching to IFRS in 2005 apply in their
2005 interim financial reports at least the IAS/IFRS
recognition and measurement principles that will
be applicable at year end. See CESR Press Release,
‘‘Preparing for the Implementation of International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS),’’ CESR/03–
514 (December 30, 2003).
42 Item 8.A.5 of Form 20–F and Item 512(a)(4) of
Regulation S–K
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20680
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
of accounting as the audited financial
statements contained or incorporated by
reference in the document and include
or incorporate by reference a
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP.43
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission noted the difficulties faced
by foreign private issuers in switching
to IFRS during the Transition Year and
solicited comment on various
approaches to the presentation of
interim period financial information.
Because the Commission believes
investors need a basis to compare
interim period financial statements with
annual financial statements, especially
in connection with offerings or initial
listings of securities that take place in
the late months of the Transition Year
or the early part of the year thereafter,
the Commission does not believe it is
appropriate to apply for situations after
nine months the same approach
described above for situations prior to
nine months.
The Commission received helpful
suggestions from various commenters
who noted that condensed U.S. GAAP
financial information can be used as an
information bridge between annual and
interim periods to which different
accounting standards are applied. The
revisions incorporate this approach.
In this area, the Commission is
providing first-time adopters with a
number of options to comply with its
requirements. This is appropriate
because the Commission wants to
encourage foreign companies to
continue to access the U.S. public
capital markets during the Transition
Year. In addition, this flexible approach
balances the information needs of
investors with the information resources
that various companies may have
available. The Commission is amending
Form 20–F to provide four options for
foreign private issuers that are first-time
adopters, that are or will be eligible to
use the two-year financial statement
accommodation and that are required to
provide interim period financial
statements in Securities Act or
Exchange Act documents used after
nine months from financial year end:
• The Previous GAAP Option
• The IFRS Option
• The U.S. GAAP Condensed
Information Option, and
• The Case-by-Case Option.
Each of these options is described
below. In addition, the Commission
reminds issuers that, regardless of the
option selected, when interim period
financial statements are required to be
presented under Item 8.A.5, those
financial statements must be
43 Items
17(c) and 18 of Form 20–F.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
accompanied by disclosure based on the
accounting principles in the option used
that is made pursuant to Item 5 of Form
20–F ‘‘Operating and Financial Review
and Prospects.’’
information should provide a level of
detail consistent with that required by
Article 10 of Regulation S–X for interim
financial statements.
(a) The Previous GAAP Option
A foreign private issuer may present
three years of audited Previous GAAP
financial statements as well as Previous
GAAP interim financial statements for
the current year and comparable prior
year period, all reconciled to U.S.
GAAP. For example, a 2005 first time
adopter would present audited financial
statements for 2002, 2003 and 2004 and
unaudited financial statements for the
six months (or nine months) of 2004 and
2005, all in accordance with Previous
GAAP and reconciled to U.S. GAAP.
This option generally reflects the
application of the Commission’s current
rules, without any specific relief.
Some first-time adopters may find
that they are not able to comply fully
with any of the options outlined above
and yet have available comparable
financial information based on a
combination of Previous GAAP, IFRS
and U.S. GAAP. The Commission does
not believe these foreign private issuers
should necessarily be foreclosed from
publicly offering or listing their
securities in the United States. Foreign
companies in this situation are
encouraged to contact the Office of
International Corporate Finance in the
Division in the Division of Corporation
Finance, in writing and well in advance
of any filing deadlines, for guidance
relating to interim period financial
statements.
(b) The IFRS Option
A foreign private issuer may present
two years of audited financial
statements as well as interim financial
statements for the current year and
comparable prior year period, all
prepared in accordance with IFRS and
reconciled to U.S. GAAP. For example,
a 2005 first-time adopter would present
audited financial statements for 2003
and 2004 and unaudited financial
statements for the six months (or nine
months) of 2004 and 2005, all in
accordance with IFRS and reconciled to
U.S. GAAP. This option generally
reflects the application of current rules,
with the relief afforded through the
amendments being adopted in this
release that permit a first-time adopter
to omit IFRS financial statements for the
third financial year.
(c) The U.S. GAAP Condensed
Information Option
A foreign private issuer may present:
(i) Audited Previous GAAP financial
statements for the prior three years,
reconciled to U.S. GAAP (e.g., 2002,
2003, and 2004); (ii) unaudited IFRS
financial statements for the current and
prior year comparable interim periods,
reconciled to U.S. GAAP (e.g., six
months or nine months of 2004 and
2005); and (iii) unaudited condensed
U.S. GAAP balance sheets and income
statements for the most recent prior
financial year and the current and prior
year comparable interim periods (e.g.,
full year 2004 and six months or nine
months of 2004 and 2005).
This option allows foreign companies
to use condensed U.S. GAAP
information to bridge the gap in interim
information between Previous GAAP
and IFRS. The condensed U.S. GAAP
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(d) The Case-by-Case Option
G. Issuers Using IFRS as Adopted by the
European Union
While the EU has adopted, as
published by the IASB, almost all
international financial reporting
standards, it has recently adopted a
regulation endorsing IAS 39 ‘‘Financial
Instruments: Recognition and
Measurement’’ with the exception of
certain provisions on the use of the full
fair value option and on hedge
accounting.44 EU listed companies are
required only to comply with those
accounting standards that have been
adopted by the EU. As such, it is
possible for an EU company to comply
with EU accounting regulations but still
produce financial statements that are
not fully compliant with IFRS. Under
EU guidance, companies that apply the
EU-adopted version of IAS 39 should
refer in their accounting policies to IFRS
‘‘as adopted by the EU.’’ 45 The EUadopted accounting standards are
referred to in this release as ‘‘EU
GAAP.’’ EU GAAP would appear to
constitute a comprehensive body of
accounting standards for purposes of
Item 8.A.2 and Item 17 and 18 of Form
20–F and would be accepted in SEC
44 See European Commission Press Release
‘‘Accounting standards: Commission endorses IAS
39,’’ November 19, 2004; IP/04/1385 available at
https://europa.eu.int/comm/internal_market/
accounting/index_en.htm.
45 See ‘‘IAS 39 Financial Instruments:
Recognition and Measurement—Frequently Asked
Questions (FAQ);’’ European Commission Memo/
04/265, Brussels, November 19, 2004. As noted in
that release, while it is possible that the EU may
not adopt other parts of IFRS as written by the
IASB, the European Commission believes that full
endorsement of standards published by the IASB is
preferable.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
filings by EU companies.46 As with
other issuers relying on the
accommodation, issuers that use EU
GAAP would be required to include a
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP.
Some commenters raised the issue of
whether the use of EU GAAP would
have an impact on the eligibility
requirements under the accommodation.
An EU issuer that prepares financial
statements for its local markets under
EU GAAP could use those same
financial statements in its SEC filings
and still qualify for the accommodation
if it also provides a reconciliation to
IFRS as published by the IASB. This
reconciliation would relate to the two
financial years for which the issuer
would provide EU GAAP financial
statements under the accommodation.
The reconciliation of EU GAAP to IFRS
as published by the IASB should
contain information relating to financial
statement line items and footnote
disclosure equivalent to that required
under IFRS.47 The reconciliation would
need to be audited by the issuer’s
independent auditor.
An issuer that applies EU GAAP also
would continue to be required to
provide an audited reconciliation to
U.S. GAAP.48 An issuer that applies EU
GAAP may use the reconciliation to
IFRS as published by the IASB as the
basis for their reconciliation to U.S.
GAAP, although using EU GAAP
financial statements as the basis for the
U.S. GAAP reconciliation also would be
an acceptable approach.
The reconciliation to IFRS as
published by the IASB would provide
the basis for the following other
disclosure required under the
accommodation:
• Selected financial data provided
pursuant to Item 3.A of Form 20–F
would include relevant items based on
the reconciliation to IFRS as published
by the IASB as well as to U.S. GAAP;
and
• The discussion under Item 5 of
Form 20–F relating to the operating and
46 An issuer that uses EU GAAP may, in note 1
to its financial statements, describe that body of
accounting principles using any term it deems
appropriate to designate reliance on the IFRS
standards that the EU has adopted.
47 For example, an issuer applying EU GAAP will
include financial statement footnote disclosure that
complies with IAS 32 ‘‘Financial Instruments:
Disclosure and Presentation’’ even if the issuer does
not fully apply IAS 39 relating to hedge accounting,
as permitted under EU GAAP. The EU GAAP–IFRS
reconciliation should disclose the financial
statement effects and appropriate information in
accordance with IAS 32, in respect of the full
application of IAS 39 if different from that under
EU GAAP.
48 The U.S. GAAP reconciliation may be in
accordance with Item 17 or Item 18 of Form 20–F,
as appropriate. See General Instruction E(c) to Form
20–F.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
financial review and prospects should
focus on the financial statements
prepared in accordance with EU GAAP.
In the same manner as required for the
U.S. GAAP reconciliation, this
discussion should explain any
differences between EU GAAP and IFRS
as published by the IASB that are not
otherwise discussed in the
reconciliation and that the issuer
believes are necessary for an
understanding of the financial
statements taken as a whole.
With regard to interim financial
statements in a registration statement or
prospectus, the provision in new
Instruction G to Form 20–F that permits
a foreign private issuer to include
published IFRS financial information
pursuant to the last three sentences of
Item 8.A.5 without either descriptive or
quantified U.S. GAAP reconciling
information also applies to information
that is prepared in accordance with EU
GAAP. Additionally, EU issuers that
provide interim financial information
under the IFRS Option should present
two years of annual financial statements
as well as current and comparable prior
year interim financial statements
prepared in accordance with EU GAAP,
with the reconciliation to IFRS as
published by the IASB and the
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP as
described above.
III. Disclosures About First-Time
Adoption of IFRS
The Commission is adopting
amendments to Form 20–F to require
certain disclosures by all first-time
adopters of IFRS regardless of the year
in which they change their basis of
accounting. These requirements relate to
the issuer’s reliance on any of the
exceptions to the general restatement
and measurement principles allowed
under IFRS 1 and to the reconciliation
of Previous GAAP financial statements
to IFRS.
A. Disclosure About Exceptions to IFRS
The Commission is adopting largely
as proposed amendments to Item 5 of
Form 20–F requiring an issuer to
provide disclosure relating to its
application of any of the mandatory or
elective exceptions under IFRS 1. Under
these amendments, an issuer must
identify the items to which an exception
was applied, describe which accounting
principle it used, and explain how it
applied that principle. When relying on
an elective exception, an issuer must
include, where material, qualitative
disclosure of the impact on the issuer’s
financial condition, changes in financial
condition and results of operations.
When relying on a mandatory
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20681
exception, an issuer must describe the
exception as provided for in IFRS 1 and
state that it complied. This disclosure
would be contained in an issuer’s
disclosure pursuant to Item 5, which
provides information on the issuer’s
financial and operating review and
prospects. First-time adopters must
provide this type of information under
paragraph 38 of IFRS 1, which generally
requires an explanation of how the
transition to IFRS would affect an
issuer’s financial position. However,
because paragraph 38 does not
specifically reference disclosure related
to the use of exceptions, the
Commission believes more guidance
through the amendments to Form 20–F
to be appropriate.
Some commenters opposed these
amendments, noting that the cost of
providing the disclosures in relation to
elective exceptions would likely
outweigh the benefit to investors.
Because issuers would generally apply
elective exceptions where the
information could not be assembled
without undue cost, some commenters
thought it unreasonable to require those
companies to try to determine the
significance of the exception and the
impact that the application of the
alternative accounting policies would
have had on the issuer’s reported
financial condition. Some commenters
indicated that issuers should determine
for themselves what information, if any,
they should provide in response to Item
5 of Form 20–F with regard to their use
of the elective and mandatory
exceptions, and that separate disclosure
requirements would be duplicative.
Some commenters said information
provided under the proposed
requirements would be useful to
investors and would complement
disclosure provided under Item 5.
Another commenter favored the
proposals because discussion of the
IFRS 1 exemptions would already be
required under paragraph 38 of IFRS 1.
Other commenters supported the
proposed qualitative disclosures, but
opposed any requirement to provide
quantitative disclosures not already
required by IFRS 1 as such information
would be burdensome for issuers to
obtain.
In the proposal, the Commission did
not intend to require companies to
provide a quantification of the financial
statement effects of using a specific
exception. As a result, there should not
be significant costs associated with
providing the required disclosure. In
addition, when companies provide
information as to the use of an
exception, it does not have to appear in
the notes to the audited financial
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20682
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
statements, although there would be no
objection to including such information
in the notes.
The Commission has revised the
amendment to clarify that companies
are not required to provide quantified
numerical information in their
explanation of the financial significance
of an exception. Rather, the qualitative
disclosure required by these
amendments is intended to give
investors some information as to the
magnitude of the effect of an exception
on an issuer’s financial statements in
qualitative terms. This information will
permit investors to better understand
the significant items that impact the
consistency and comparability between
companies for past and future periods.
For example, a substantial portion of
the issuer’s assets or operations may
have been obtained in a prior business
combination transaction accounted for
as a pooling of interests under both
Previous GAAP and in the first IFRS
financial statements based on an
elective exception in IFRS 1. If that
election had not been used, the
transaction would have been accounted
for as a purchase under IFRS 3. Under
the adopted amendments, the issuer
would describe that, absent the
exception:
• The business combination would
have been accounted for as a purchase
under IFRS 3;
• The [applicable entity] would have
been identified as the acquirer;
• The fair value of the entire purchase
consideration of [dollar amount] would
have been recognized in the financial
statements at that time;
• The purchase consideration would
have been allocated to the following
major categories of acquired tangible
and intangible assets and liabilities
based on their fair values: [naming the
categories];
• Goodwill would have been
recognized, if applicable;
• The fair values of the acquired
assets would have been amortized to
expense over their respective useful
lives; and
• The approximate amount of the
acquiree’s revenues and assets (or
percentage of the issuer’s corresponding
totals) at the time of the business
combination, to illustrate the magnitude
of the use of the exemption [stating the
amounts or percentages].
If the accounting treatment that would
have been applied under IFRS 3 is
consistent with the treatment under U.S.
GAAP, the issuer may satisfy the
adopted disclosure requirement by
cross-referencing the applicable
portions of the U.S. GAAP
reconciliation.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
Similar broad disclosure should be
provided for the use of other exceptions
under IFRS 1.
B. Reconciliation From Previous GAAP
The Commission is adopting as
proposed a new instruction 3 to Item 8
of Form 20–F to require that the
mandatory reconciliation from Previous
GAAP to IFRS give ‘‘sufficient data to
enable users to understand the material
adjustments to the balance sheet and
income statement,’’ and, if presented
under Previous GAAP, the cash flow
statement. The Commission did not
propose, and is not adopting, specific
form or content requirements. It notes,
however, that a reconciliation following
example 11 under Implementation
Guidance 63 (‘‘IG 63’’) of IFRS 1 will
meet the requirement that it is adopting.
Similarly, a reconciliation based on the
form and content provisions of Item 17
of Form 20–F would meet the
requirement.
Most commenters did not oppose the
proposal and did not feel that following
the example given in IG 63 would be
unduly burdensome. Many commenters
shared the view that the Commission
should not specify form and content
requirements for the reconciliation from
Previous GAAP to IFRS, because
companies will develop formats based
on IFRS 1 in ways suitable to their
individual circumstances. Other
commenters indicated that IFRS’s
requirements regarding the presentation
of differences between IFRS and
Previous GAAP were sufficient. Because
each issuer’s situation will be different,
the Commission does not believe a
prescriptive approach to the information
to be included in the reconciliation
would be practicable or desirable.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
A. Background
The final rule amendment contains
‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).49 The titles of the affected
collections of information are:
(1) ‘‘Form 20–F’’ (OMB Control No.
3235–0288);
(2) ‘‘Form F–1’’ (OMB Control No.
3235–0258);
(3) ‘‘Form F–2’’ (OMB Control No.
3235–0257);
(4) ‘‘Form F–3’’ (OMB Control No.
3235–0256); and
(5) ‘‘Form F–4’’ (OMB Control No.
3235–0325).
These forms were adopted pursuant to
the Securities Act and Exchange Act
PO 00000
49 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and set forth the disclosure
requirements for annual reports and
registration statements filed by foreign
private issuers to provide material
information to investors. The hours and
costs associated with preparing, filing
and sending these forms constitute
reporting and cost burdens imposed by
each collection of information. An
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and
a person is not required to respond to,
a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. The disclosure is mandatory.
There would be no mandatory retention
period for the information disclosed,
and responses to the disclosure
requirements would not be kept
confidential. The Commission
published a notice requesting comment
on the collection of information
requirements in the Proposing Release
and submitted these requirements to the
Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) for review in accordance with
the PRA.50 The OMB approved those
estimates.
The Commission received several
comment letters on the proposals, and
has revised the final amendments in
response to these comments. Some of
the revisions have impacted the
assumptions and estimates used in the
analysis made under the Paperwork
Reduction Act. The Commission is
revising its previous burden estimates
because of these revisions.
The Commission is adopting the new
General Instruction G to Form 20–F to
allow an eligible foreign private issuer
to omit from SEC filings for its first year
of reporting under IFRS the earliest of
the three years of financial statements.
The adopted amendments make the
accommodation available to companies
that adopt IFRS as their basis of
accounting prior to or for the financial
year starting on or after January 1, 2007.
This is different from the proposal,
which would have granted the
accommodation to a foreign private
issuer that adopted IFRS for the first
time for a fiscal year that begins no later
than January 1, 2007. This change was
made in response to comments
indicating that the amendments as
proposed may have lead to situations in
which an issuer that met the IFRS 1
definition of first-time adopter would be
ineligible to rely on the accommodation.
Because this change to the period
during which the accommodation
applies will affect only timing, the
Commission assumes that it will have
no impact on the burden estimates.
Because the provision of the third year
of financial statements under a
50 44
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11.
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
comprehensive body of accounting
standards is not calculated as a burden
for PRA purposes, eliminating the third
year of IFRS financial statements is not
a burden reduction.
In response to comments that the
proposed amendments regarding
condensed U.S. GAAP financial
information would be excessively
burdensome to issuers, the final
amendments do not require an issuer
that relies on the accommodation to
provide condensed U.S. GAAP
information. Although the proposals
relating to condensed U.S. GAAP
financial information would have
increased in the burden estimates, not
requiring that information in the final
amendments will have a neutral effect
on the PRA burden.51
The amendments relating to Previous
GAAP financial information are adopted
as proposed, for which commenters
expressed wide support. The
Commission estimates that the
requirement for appropriate cautionary
language from any issuer that includes,
incorporates by reference or refers to
Previous GAAP financial information in
an SEC disclosure document will result
in a two hour burden increase.
The Commission is adopting a flexible
approach with regard to the
presentation of interim financial
statements, under which an issuer that
provides interim financial statements
may elect to provide disclosure under
one of four options described in Section
II.F.3.52 This approach differs from the
proposal, which was consistent with
current requirements before the
amendment. Commenters cited the
potential burden of maintaining
financial statements under both
Previous GAAP and IFRS in their
opposition to the proposed approach, to
which they suggested alternatives. The
Commission believes that the
51 In the Proposing Release the Commission
estimated that the accommodation would represent
an overall PRA burden increase of 2 percent, the
majority of which would have been attributable to
the proposed requirement for condensed U.S.
GAAP financial information.
52 It is estimated that approximately 10 percent of
the roughly 400 issuers that will rely on the
accommodation will be subject to the provisions
regarding interim financial statements. Of these, it
is assumed that 10 percent (or four issuers), will
select the Previous GAAP Option, 60 percent (or 24
issuers) will use the IFRS Option, 20 percent (or 8
issuers) will use the Condensed U.S. GAAP
Information Option, and 10 percent (or 4 issuers)
will use the Case-by-Case Option. The Previous
GAAP Option does not represent a change from
existing rules and therefore would not cause a
burden increase. The IFRS Option avoids a future
increase but does not increase the burden, and the
U.S. GAAP Option and the Case-by-Case Option
represent slight increases because they would call
for information that had not been previously
required.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
amendments regarding interim financial
statements will lead to a two hour
increase in the burden estimates related
to the accommodation.
To rely on the accommodation as
adopted, issuers that comply with EU
GAAP must provide a reconciliation to
IFRS as published by the IASB, while
all others must provide an explicit and
unreserved statement of compliance
with IFRS.53 Because developments
related to EU GAAP occurred
subsequent to the issuance of the
Proposing Release, the amendments as
proposed did not include these
conditions. The Commission believes
the reconciliation to IFRS as published
by the IASB for issuers using EU GAAP
will lead to a one hour increase in the
burden estimates related to the
accommodation.
In total, the Commission estimates
that the amendments related to the
accommodation described in Section II
will account for a one-time increase of
five hours to the PRA burden associated
with Forms 20–F, F–1, F–2, F–3 and F–
4, respectively. The Commission also
estimates that, of the amendments
described in Section III that affect all
first-time IFRS adopters, the disclosure
about IFRS exceptions will cause a onetime increase of 1.5 per cent in the
number of burden hours required to
prepare each form while the
amendments regarding the
reconciliation from Previous GAAP
would not cause any increase in the
burden estimates. Accordingly, an
issuer that adopts IFRS prior to or for its
2007 financial year will accrue both the
five hour burden and the 1.5 percent
burden increase. An issuer that adopts
IFRS later than its 2007 financial year
will accrue only the 1.5 percent
increase.
For purposes of the Paperwork
Reduction Act, the Commission
estimates that the one-time incremental
increase in the paperwork burden for all
first-time adopters of IFRS relying on
the accommodation and providing the
disclosure related to first-time adoption
of IFRS would be approximately 4,273
hours of company time and
approximately $3,845,700 for the
services of outside professionals. The
Commission estimates that the
incremental increase in the paperwork
burden for all first-time adopters of IFRS
after that period would be
approximately 3,727 hours of company
time and approximately $3,354,300 for
the services of outside professionals. It
estimated the average number of hours
53 It is estimated that 10 of the 400 issuers that
are expected to rely on the accommodation will use
EU GAAP.
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20683
each entity spends completing the forms
and the average hourly rate for outside
professionals.54 That estimate includes
the time and the cost of in-house
preparers, reviews by executive officers,
in-house counsel, outside counsel,
independent auditors and members of
the audit committee.55
B. Burden and Cost Estimates Related to
the Accommodation
1. Form 20–F
Form 20–F is the combined
registration statement and annual report
for foreign private issuers under the
Exchange Act. It also presents the
disclosure requirements for registration
statements filed by foreign private
issuers under the Securities Act. The
Commission estimates that currently
1,036 issuers file Form 20–Fs each year.
It also estimates that these issuers incur
25% of the burden required to produce
the Form 20–Fs, resulting in 677,298
annual burden hours incurred by issuers
out of a total of 2,709,192 annual burden
hours. Thus, the Commission estimates
that 2,615 total burden hours per
response are currently required to
prepare the Form 20–F. The
Commission further estimates that
outside professionals account for 75%
of the burden at an average cost of $300
per hour for a total cost of $609,568,200.
The Commission estimates that the
accommodation will affect
approximately 35% of the 1,036 issuers
that file on Form 20–F.56 The
Commission therefore expects that each
of 363 issuers will have an increase of
5 hours in the number of hours required
to prepare their Form 20–F, for a total
increase of 1,815 hours. It expects that
these issuers will bear 25% of these
54 For convenience, the estimated PRA hour
burdens have been rounded to the nearest whole
number.
55 In connection with other recent rulemakings,
Commission staff has had discussions with several
private law firms and accounting firms to estimate
an hourly rate of $300 as the cost of outside
professionals that assist companies in preparing
these disclosures. For Securities Act registration
statements, the staff also considers additional
reviews of the disclosure by underwriter’s counsel
and underwriters.
56 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the actual number of foreign private issuers that
(1) Are incorporated in countries that will require
or permit the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005;
(2) are incorporated in countries that presently
permit but do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have
filed either an annual report and/or a registration
statement on Form 20–F between January 1 and
December 31, 2003; and (4) appear current with
their reporting obligations under the Exchange Act
as of December 31, 2003, to the actual number of
the applicable forms that were filed between
January 1 and December 1, 2003. For purposes of
this estimate the approximate number of foreign
private issuers that currently provide IFRS financial
statements in their SEC filings (50) has been
excluded.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20684
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
increased burden hours (454 hours). It
further expects that outside firms will
bear 75% of the increased burden hours
(1,362 hours) at an average cost of $300
per hour for a total of $408,600 in
increased costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
foreign private issuers in the
preparation of Form 20–F to 677,752
burden hours. The Commission further
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual burden
associated with Form 20–F preparation
to 2,711,008 burden hours, which will
increase the average number of burden
hours per response to 2,617. It also
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual costs attributed
to the preparation of Form 20–F by
outside firms to $609,976,800.
2. Form F–1
The Commission estimates that
currently 42 foreign private issuers file
registration statements on Form F–1
each year. It also estimates that these
issuers bear 25% of the burden required
to produce a Form F–1, resulting in
18,895 annual burden hours incurred by
issuers out of a total of 75,580 annual
burden hours. Thus, the Commission
estimates that 1,800 total burden hours
per response are currently required to
prepare a registration statement on Form
F–1. It further estimates that outside
professionals account for 75% of the
burden to produce a Form F–1 at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
cost of $17,005,500.
The Commission estimates that the
accommodation will affect
approximately 30% of the 42 issuers
that file registration statements on Form
F–1.57 It therefore expects that each of
13 issuers will have a five hour increase
in the number of hours required to
prepare a registration statement on Form
F–1, for a total increase of 65 hours. The
Commission expects that these issuers
will bear 25% of these increased burden
hours (16 hours). It further expects that
outside firms will bear 75% of the
increased burden hours (48 hours) at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
of $14,400 in increased costs.
57 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the number of foreign private issuers that (1) are
incorporated in countries that will require or permit
the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005; (2) are
incorporated in countries that presently permit but
do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have filed a Form
F–1 between January 1 and December 31, 2003; and
(4) appear current with their reporting obligations
under the Exchange Act as of December 31, 2003,
to the actual number of registration statements on
Form F–1 that were filed between January 1 and
December 1, 2003.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
foreign private issuers in the
preparation of Form F–1 to 18,911
burden hours. It also estimates that the
amendments will increase the total
annual burden associated with Form F–
1 preparation to 75,644 burden hours,
which will increase the average number
of burden hours per response to 1,801.
It further estimates that the amendments
will increase the total annual costs
attributed to the preparation of Form F–
1 by outside firms to $17,019,900.
3. Form F–2
The Commission estimates that
currently one foreign private issuer files
a registration statement on Form F–2
each year. It also estimates that the
issuer incurs 25% of the burden
required to produce a Form F–2
resulting in 710 annual burden hours
incurred by that issuer out of a total of
2,840 annual burden hours. Thus, the
Commission estimates that 2,840 total
burden hours per response are currently
required to prepare a registration
statement on Form F–2. It further
estimates that outside professionals
account for 75% of the burden to
produce a Form F–2 at an average cost
of $300 per hour for a total cost of
$639,000.
Because the Commission does not
expect that the accommodation will
affect the one issuer that files a
registration statement on Form F–2, it is
not revising the burden estimates for
that form.58
4. Form F–3
The Commission estimates that 102
foreign private issuers file registration
statements on Form F–3 each year. It
also estimates that issuers incur 25% of
the burden required to produce a Form
F–3 resulting in 4,159 annual burden
hours incurred by issuers out of a total
of 16,636 annual burden hours. Thus, it
estimates that 163 total burden hours
per response are currently required to
prepare a registration statement on Form
F–3. It further estimates that outside
professionals account for 75% of the
burden to produce a Form F–3 at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
cost of $3,743,100.
The Commission estimates that the
accommodation will affect
approximately 45% of the 102 issuers
that file registration statements on Form
F–3.59 It therefore expects that each of
58 The Commission has proposed to eliminate
Form F–2. See ‘‘Securities Offering Reform,’’
Release No. 33–8501 (November 3, 2004).
59 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the number of foreign private issuers that (1) Are
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
46 issuers will have a burden increase
of five hours, for a total increase of 230
hours. It expects that these issuers will
bear 25% of this increased burden (58
hours). It further expects that outside
firms will bear 75% of the increased
burden hours (174 hours) at an average
cost of $300 per hour for a total of
$52,200 in increased costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
foreign private issuers in the
preparation of Form F–3 to 4,217
burden hours. It further estimates that
the amendments will increase the total
annual burden associated with Form F–
3 preparation to 16,868 burden hours,
which will increase the average number
of burden hours per response to 165. It
also estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual costs attributed
to the preparation of Form F–3 by
outside firms to $3,795,300.
5. Form F–4
The Commission estimates that 68
foreign private issuers file registration
statements on Form F–4 each year. It
also estimates that these issuers incur
25% of the burden required to produce
a Form F–4 resulting in 24,503 annual
burden hours incurred by foreign
private issuers out of a total of 98,012
annual burden hours. Thus, it estimates
that 1,441 total burden hours per
response are currently required to
prepare a registration statement on Form
F–4. It further estimates that outside
professionals account for 75% of the
burden to produce a Form F–4 at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
cost of $22,052,700.
The Commission estimates that the
accommodation will affect
approximately 20% of the 68 issuers
that file registration statements on Form
F–4.60 It therefore expects that each of
14 foreign private issuers will have a
burden increase of five hours, for a total
incorporated in countries that will require or permit
the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005; (2) are
incorporated in countries that presently permit but
do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have filed a Form
F–3 between January 1 and December 31, 2003; and
(4) appear current with their reporting obligations
under the Exchange Act as of December 31, 2003,
to the actual number of registration statements on
Form F–3 that were filed between January 1 and
December 1, 2003.
60 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the number of foreign private issuers that (1) are
incorporated in countries that will require or permit
the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005; (2) are
incorporated in countries that presently permit but
do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have filed a Form
F–4 between January 1 and December 31, 2003; and
(4) appear current with their reporting obligations
under the Exchange Act as of December 31, 2003,
to the actual number of registration statements on
Form F–4 that were filed between January 1 and
December 1, 2003.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
increase of 70 hours. It expects that
issuers will bear 25% of these increased
burden hours (18 hours). It further
expects that outside firms will bear 75%
of the increased burden hours (54 hours)
at an average cost of $300 per hour for
a total of $16,200 in increased costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
foreign private issuers in the
preparation of Form F–4 to 24,521
burden hours. It further estimates that
the amendments will increase the total
annual burden associated with Form F–
4 preparation to 98,084 burden hours,
which will increase the average number
of burden hours per response to 1,442.
It further estimates that the amendments
will increase the total annual costs
attributed to the preparation of Form F–
4 by outside firms to $22,068,900.
C. Burden and Cost Estimates Related to
the Disclosure About First-Time
Adoption of IFRS
1. Form 20–F
The Commission estimates that
currently foreign private issuers file
1,036 Form 20–Fs each year,
approximately 35% of which will be
impacted by the amendments.61 The
Commission therefore expects that each
of 363 issuers will have a burden
increase of 1.5 per cent (39 hours) in the
number of hours required to prepare
their Form 20–F, for a total increase of
14,157 hours. It also expects that issuers
will bear 25% of these increased burden
hours (3,539 hours), and that outside
firms will bear 75% of the increased
burden hours (10,617 hours) at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
of $3,185,100 in increased costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
foreign private issuers in the
preparation of Form 20–F to 680,837
burden hours. The Commission further
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual burden
associated with Form 20–F preparation
to 2,723,348 burden hours, which will
61 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the actual number of foreign private issuers that
(1) are incorporated in countries that will require
or permit the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005;
(2) are incorporated in countries that presently
permit but do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have
filed either an annual report and/or a registration
statement on Form 20–F between January 1 and
December 31, 2003; and (4) appear current with
their reporting obligations under the Exchange Act
as of December 31, 2003, to the actual number of
the applicable forms that were filed between
January 1 and December 1, 2003. For purposes of
this estimate the approximate number of foreign
private issuers that currently provide IFRS financial
statements in their SEC filings (50) has been
excluded.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
increase the average number of burden
hours per response to 2,629. It also
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual costs attributed
to the preparation of Form 20–F by
outside firms to $612,753,300.
2. Form F–1
The Commission estimates that 42
foreign private issuers file registration
statements on Form F–1 each year,
approximately 30% of which will be
impacted by the amendments.62 It
therefore expects that each of 13 issuers
will have an increase of 1.5 per cent (27
hours) in the number of burden hours
required to prepare their registration
statements on Form F–1, for a total
increase of 351 hours. The Commission
expects that issuers will bear 25% of
these increased burden hours (88
hours), and that outside firms will bear
75% of the reduced burden hours (264
hours) at an average cost of $300 per
hour for a total of $79,200 in increased
costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
foreign private issuers in the
preparation of Form F–1 to 18,983
burden hours. It also estimates that the
amendments will increase the total
annual burden associated with Form F–
1 preparation to 75,932 burden hours,
which will increase the average number
of burden hours per response to 1,808.
It further estimates that the amendments
will increase the total annual costs
attributed to the preparation of Form F–
1 by outside firms to $17,084,700.
3. Form F–2
Because the Commission does not
expect that the amendments affect the
one issuer that files a registration
statement on Form F–2, it is not revising
the burden estimates for that form.63
4. Form F–3
The Commission estimates that
approximately 102 foreign private
issuers file registration statements on
Form F–3 each year, 45% of which will
62 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the number of foreign private issuers that (1) are
incorporated in countries that will require or permit
the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005; (2) are
incorporated in countries that presently permit but
do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have filed a Form
F–1 between January 1 and December 31, 2003; and
(4) appear current with their reporting obligations
under the Exchange Act as of December 31, 2003,
to the actual number of registration statements on
Form F–1 that were filed between January 1 and
December 1, 2003.
63 The Commission has proposed to eliminate
Form F–2. See ‘‘Securities Offering Reform,’’
Release No. 33–8501 (November 3, 2004).
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20685
be impacted by the amendments.64 It
therefore expects that each of 46 issuers
will have an increase of 1.5 per cent (2
hours) in the number of burden hours
required to prepare their registration
statements on Form F–3, for a total
increase of 92 hours. It expects that
issuers will bear 25% of this increased
burden hours (23 hours), and that
outside firms will bear 75% of the
increased burden hours (69 hours) at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
of $20,700 in increased costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20-F will
increase the annual burden incurred by
issuers in the preparation of Form F–3
to 4,182 burden hours. It further
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual burden
associated with Form F–3 preparation to
16,728 burden hours, which will
increase the average number of burden
hours per response to 164. It also
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual costs attributed
to the preparation of Form F–3 by
outside firms to $3,763,800.
5. Form F–4
The Commission estimates 68 foreign
private issuers file registration
statements on Form F–4 each year,
approximately 20% of which will be
impacted by the amendments.65 It
therefore expects that each of 14 issuers
will have an increase of 1.5 per cent (22
hours) in the number of burden hours
required to prepare their registration
statements on Form F–4, for a total
increase of 308 hours. It expects that
issuers will bear 25% of these increased
burden hours (77 hours), and that
outside firms will bear 75% of the
increased burden hours (23 hours) at an
average cost of $300 per hour for a total
of $69,300 in increased costs.
Thus, the Commission estimates that
the amendments to Form 20–F will
64 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the number of foreign private issuers that (1) are
incorporated in countries that will require or permit
the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005; (2) are
incorporated in countries that presently permit but
do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have filed a Form
F–3 between January 1 and December 31, 2003; and
(4) appear current with their reporting obligations
under the Exchange Act as of December 31, 2003,
to the actual number of registration statements on
Form F–3 that were filed between January 1 and
December 1, 2003.
65 This figure is based on the estimate of the ratio
of the number of foreign private issuers that (1) are
incorporated in countries that will require or permit
the use of IFRS beginning in year 2005; (2) are
incorporated in countries that presently permit but
do not require the use of IFRS; (3) have filed a Form
F–4 between January 1 and December 31, 2003; and
(4) appear current with their reporting obligations
under the Exchange Act as of December 31, 2003,
to the actual number of registration statements on
Form F–4 that were filed between January 1 and
December 1, 2003.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20686
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
increase the annual burden incurred by
issuers in the preparation of Form F–4
to 24,580 burden hours. It further
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual burden
associated with Form F–4 preparation to
98,320 burden hours, which will
increase the average number of burden
hours per response to 1,446. It further
estimates that the amendments will
increase the total annual costs attributed
to the preparation of Form F–4 by
outside firms to $22,122,000.
D. New Burden Estimates
Based on the preceding analysis and
assuming that the number of
respondents for each of the affected
forms remains unchanged, the five hour
burden increase due to the proposed
accommodation and the further 1.5 per
cent increase due to the proposed
disclosure requirements for all first-time
IFRS adopters will, together, increase
the total burden estimates for companies
from 677,298 hours to 681,291 for Form
20–F (an increase from 2,615 hours to
2,631 hours per form), from 18,895
hours to 18,999 hours for Form F–1 (an
increase from 1,800 hours to 1,809
hours per form), from 4,159 hours to
4,240 for Form F–3 (an increase from
163 hours to 166 hours per form), and
from 24,503 hours to 24,598 hours for
Form F–4 (an increase from 1,441 hours
to 1,447 hours per form). As discussed
above, after year 2007 the five hour
burden increase from the proposed
accommodation will no longer apply
and only the 1.5 per cent increase due
to the proposed disclosure requirements
for all first-time IFRS adopters will
remain.
V. Cost-Benefit Analysis
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission solicited comments on the
expected costs and benefits of the
proposed amendments to Form 20–F, as
well as on any other costs and benefits
that could result from the adoption of
those proposed amendments. In
response, commenters expressed
widespread support for the relief that
the proposal would provide to eligible
issuers by permitting them to file two
rather than three years of financial
information for the financial year they
switch to IFRS. However, several
commenters maintained that the
proposals regarding condensed U.S.
GAAP financial information and
financial statements for interim periods
during the Transition Year would
impose costs on foreign private issuers
that were unnecessary to achieve the
rule’s purpose and that outweighed the
potential benefits to investors. The
Commission has modified the final
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
amendments in response to these
concerns, thereby eliminating some of
the potential costs that issuers may have
incurred under the amendments as
proposed.
Although none of the commenters
provided quantitative data to support
their views, the Commission has revised
the amendments to Form 20–F in
response to the concerns that the
commenters expressed. The
Commission expects that the adopted
amendments to Form 20–F will result in
the following benefits and costs.66
A. Expected Benefits
The amendments to Form 20–F will
benefit foreign private issuers that adopt
IFRS, either voluntarily or by mandate,
by facilitating their compliance with
SEC disclosure requirements as those
issuers transition from their Previous
GAAP to IFRS. By permitting eligible
issuers to provide two rather than three
years of financial statements prepared in
accordance with IFRS, the amendments
will allow those issuers to avoid the
retroactive application of accounting
standards that may not have been
finalized during the earliest reporting
period to which they would have to be
applied in order to provide financial
statements that were in compliance with
SEC filing requirements.
By eliminating the third year of IFRS
financial statements, the
accommodation also benefits issuers by
aligning SEC requirements with the
IFRS 1 standard, which requires only
one year of comparative information for
the year IFRS is adopted. Through the
amendments to Form 20–F, the
Commission is eliminating the need for
financial statements that would have
been required by SEC rules but not
otherwise. In years after their Transition
Year, when the accommodation will no
longer apply, issuers will have available
IFRS financial statements for the
financial year that they were permitted
to exclude under the accommodation.
The amendments also will benefit
investors in several ways. First, the
accommodation will improve the clarity
and quality of the financial disclosure
that first-time adopters of IFRS provide
in their SEC filings, thereby enhancing
investor understanding. By clarifying
the level of information required in the
reconciliation of Previous GAAP
information to IFRS, for example, the
amendments will provide investors with
a comparable level of reconciliation
information between companies that
will enable them to understand the
66 It is estimated these amendments will affect
approximately 400 foreign private issuers.
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
material impact of the switch to IFRS on
each issuer’s financial statements.
The accommodation also is expected
to benefit investors by encouraging the
use of IFRS as a high quality body of
accounting principles designed to
accurately reflect the issuer’s financial
position. By reducing the burden of
financial reporting in registration
statements filed by first-time adopters of
IFRS, the accommodation will
encourage those issuers either to enter
or to continue their participation in the
U.S. capital market, which will further
benefit investors by increasing their
investment possibilities. These benefits
will likely lead to a more efficient
allocation of capital.
B. Expected Costs
The amendments to Form 20–F could
result in some costs to issuers relying on
the accommodation, although those
costs should be minimal as they relate
principally to how information required
under rules existing prior to these
amendments should be presented when
based on primary financial statements
based on IFRS.
One area in which issuers relying on
the accommodation may face increased
cost relates to the provision of interim
financial statements. The Commission
has adopted a flexible approach that
provides an isuer with a number of
options as to how to comply with the
requirements. Although the costs of
providing disclosure under the different
options may vary, issuers providing
interim financial information may select
the approach that they deem most
suitable to mitigate these potential
burdens.
The elements of the adopted
amendments that apply to all first-time
adopters of IFRS will also lead to some
increased costs to issuers. The
amendments that clarify the level of
information that the reconciliation from
Previous GAAP to IFRS should contain
are not expected to result in increased
costs to issuers, because they do not
require additional disclosure beyond
what first-time adopters of IFRS must
provide to comply with IFRS 1. The
amendments relating to the use of any
exceptions to IFRS will require
additional disclosure, and consequently
are expected to result in some increased
costs for companies that are required to
provide that disclosure.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification
Under Section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act,67 the
Commission certified that, when
67 5
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
U.S.C. 605(b).
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
adopted, the proposed amendment to
Form 20–F under the Exchange Act
would not have a significant impact on
a substantial number of small entities. It
included this certification in Part VII of
the Proposing Release. While the
Commission encouraged written
comments regarding this certification,
none of the commenters responded to
this request.
VII. Promotion of Efficiency,
Competition and Capital Formation
Analysis
Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange
Act 68 requires the Commission, when
adopting rules under the Exchange Act,
to consider the anti-competitive effects
of any rule it adopts. Furthermore,
Section 2(b) of the Securities Act 69 and
Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act 70
require the Commission, when engaging
in a rulemaking that requires it to
consider or determine whether an action
is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, to consider whether the action
will promote efficiency, competition
and capital formation.
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission considered the proposed
amendment to Form 20–F in light of the
standards set forth in the above
statutory sections. It requested comment
on whether, if adopted, the proposed
Form 20–F amendment would result in
any anti-competitive effects or promote
efficiency, competition and capital
formation. The Commission further
encouraged commenters to provide
empirical data or other facts to support
their views on any anti-competitive
effects or any burdens on efficiency,
competition or capital formation that
might result from adoption of the
proposed Form 20–F amendments. It
received no comments in response to
these requests.
The adopted amendments allowing
first-time adopters of IFRS to file two
rather than three years of IFRS financial
statements in their SEC filings are
designed to increase efficiency,
competition and capital formation by
alleviating the burden and cost that
eligible companies would face if
required to recast under IFRS their
results for the third year back for
inclusion in annual reports and
registration statements filed with the
SEC. The amendments are intended to
promote market efficiency by
eliminating financial disclosure that
would be costly to produce and would
be of questionable value to investors. As
a result of the more reliable disclosure
68 15
U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
U.S.C. 77b(b).
70 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
69 15
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
that companies will provide under the
amendments, investors will be able to
make more informed investment
decisions and capital may be allocated
on a more efficient basis.
The amendments adopted to require
all foreign companies that change their
basis of accounting to IFRS to provide
information relating to IFRS exceptions
on which they relied and to satisfy a
required level of information in their
reconciliation from Previous GAAP to
IFRS should increase efficiency,
competition and capital formation by
enabling investors to base their
investment decisions on a better
understanding of the financial
information of those companies. This
should lead to a more efficient
allocation of capital.
20687
G. First-Time Application of
International Financial Reporting
Standards.
(a) Omission of Certain Required
Financial Statements. An issuer that
changes the body of accounting
principles used in preparing its
financial statements presented pursuant
to Item 8.A.2 (‘‘Item 8.A.2’’) to
International Financial Reporting
Standards (‘‘IFRS’’) published by the
International Accounting Standards
Board (‘‘IASB’’) may omit the earliest of
the three years of audited financial
statements required by Item 8.A.2 if the
issuer satisfies the conditions set forth
in this Instruction G. For purposes of
this instruction, the term ‘‘financial
year’’ refers to the first financial year
beginning on or after January 1 of the
same calendar year.
VIII. Statutory Basis
(b) Applicable Documents. This
General Instruction G shall be available
The Commission is adopting
amendments to Exchange Act Form 20– only for the following registration
statements and annual reports:
F pursuant to Sections 6, 7, 10, and
(1) Registration Statements. This
19(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 as
instruction shall be available for
amended, and Sections 3, 12, 13, 15, 23
registration statements if:
and 36 of the Securities Exchange Act
(A) The issuer’s most recent audited
of 1934.
financial statements required by Item
Text of Amendments
8.A.2 are for the 2007 financial year or
an earlier financial year;
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 249
(B) The issuer adopts IFRS for the first
time by an explicit and unreserved
Reporting and recordkeeping
statement of compliance with IFRS; and
requirements, Securities.
(C) The audited financial statements
I In accordance with the foregoing, the
for the issuer’s most recent financial
Commission is amending Title 17,
year for which audited financial
Chapter II of the Code of Federal
statements are required by Item 8.A.2
Regulations as follows:
are prepared in accordance with IFRS.
(2) Annual Reports. This instruction
PART 249—FORMS, SECURITIES
shall be available for annual reports if:
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
(A) The annual report relates to the
2007 financial year or an earlier
I 1. The authority citation for part 249
financial year;
continues to read, in part, as follows:
(B) The issuer adopts IFRS for the first
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq. and 7201
time by an explicit and unreserved
et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise
statement of compliance with IFRS; and
noted.
(C) The audited financial statements
for the issuer’s financial year to which
*
*
*
*
*
the annual report relates are prepared in
I 2. Amend Form 20–F (referenced in
accordance with IFRS.
§ 249.220f) by adding General
(c) Selected Financial Data. The
Instruction G, Instruction 4 to Item 5, and selected historical financial data
Instruction 3 to Item 8 to read as follows: required pursuant to Item 3.A shall be
Note: The text of Form 20–F does not, and
based on financial statements prepared
this amendment will not, appear in the Code
in accordance with IFRS and shall be
of Federal Regulations.
presented for the two most recent
financial years. The issuer shall present
Form 20–F
selected historical financial data in
accordance with U.S. GAAP for the five
Registration Statement Pursuant to
most recent financial years, except as
Section 12(b) or (g) of the Securities
the issuer is otherwise permitted to omit
Exchange Act of 1934
U.S. GAAP information for any of the
*
*
*
*
*
earliest of the five years pursuant to
Item 3.A.1.
General Instructions
(d) Information on the Company. The
reference in Item 4.B to ‘‘the body of
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
20688
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
accounting principles used in preparing
the financial statements’’ means IFRS
and not the basis of accounting that the
issuer previously used (‘‘Previous
GAAP’’) or accounting principles used
only to prepare the U.S. GAAP
reconciliation.
(e) Operating and Financial Review
and Prospects. The issuer shall present
the information required pursuant to
Item 5. The discussion should focus on
the financial statements for the two
most recent financial years prepared in
accordance with IFRS. The issuer
should refer to the reconciliation to U.S.
GAAP for those years and discuss any
aspects of the differences between IFRS
and U.S. GAAP, not otherwise
discussed in the reconciliation, that the
issuer believes are necessary for an
understanding of the financial
statements as a whole. No part of the
discussion should relate to financial
statements prepared in accordance with
Previous GAAP.
(f) Financial Information.
(1) General. With respect to the
financial information required by Item
8.A, all instructions contained in Item 8,
including the instruction requiring
audits in accordance with U.S. generally
accepted auditing standards, shall
apply.
(2) Interim Period Financial
Information in a Registration Statement
or Prospectus. This instruction shall
apply when an issuer is changing the
body of accounting principles used in
preparing its financial statements
presented pursuant to Item 8.A.2 to
IFRS. This instruction shall be available
during the financial year in which the
issuer is changing its accounting
principles to IFRS and during the
financial year thereafter until the date as
of which the issuer is required to
comply with Item 8.A.4.
(A) Instruction 3 of the Instructions to
Item 8.A.5 shall not apply to published
financial information that is prepared
with reference to IFRS. This General
Instruction G(f)(2)(A) shall be available
for any financial information for any
interim or annual financial period that
the issuer publishes that is prepared
with reference to IFRS.
(B) An issuer that is required to
provide interim financial statements
under the first sentence of Item 8.A.5
may satisfy the requirements of that
item by providing one of the following:
(1) Three financial years of audited
financial statements and interim
financial statements (which may be
unaudited) for the current and
comparable prior year period, prepared
in accordance with Previous GAAP and
reconciled to U.S. GAAP as required by
Item 17(c) or 18, as applicable;
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
Jkt 205001
(2) Two financial years of audited
financial statements and interim
financial statements (which may be
unaudited) for the current and
comparable prior year period, prepared
in accordance with IFRS and reconciled
to U.S. GAAP as required by Item 17(c)
or 18, as applicable; or
(3) Three financial years of audited
financial statements prepared in
accordance with Previous GAAP and
reconciled to U.S. GAAP as required by
Item 17(c) or 18, as applicable; interim
financial statements (which may be
unaudited) for the current and
comparable prior year period prepared
in accordance with IFRS and reconciled
to U.S. GAAP as required by Item 17(c)
or 18, as applicable; and condensed
financial information prepared in
accordance with U.S. GAAP for the
most recent financial year and the
current and comparable prior year
interim period (the form and content of
this financial information shall be in a
level of detail substantially similar to
that required by Article 10 of Regulation
S–X).
Instruction: An issuer that is unable to
provide information that complies with
Instruction G.(f)(2)(B) but has available
comparable financial information based
on a combination of Previous GAAP,
IFRS and U.S. GAAP should contact the
Office of International Corporate
Finance in the Division of Corporation
Finance, in writing and well in advance
of any filing deadlines, to discuss its
interim period financial information.
(g) Quantitative and Qualitative
Disclosures about Market Risk.
Information in the document that
responds to Item 11 shall be presented
on the basis of IFRS.
(h) Financial Statements. A document
to which this Instruction G applies shall
include financial statements that
comply with Item 17 or 18 as follows:
(1) Financial Statements in
Accordance with IFRS. The issuer may
omit the earliest of the three years of
financial statements required by Item
8.A.2.
(2) U.S. GAAP Information. The U.S.
GAAP reconciliation required by Item
17(c) or 18 shall relate to the same
periods covered by the financial
statements prepared in accordance with
IFRS.
Instructions: 1. An eligible issuer
relying on this General Instruction G
may elect to include, refer to, or
incorporate by reference financial data
prepared in accordance with Previous
GAAP. An issuer electing to include,
refer to, or incorporate by reference
Previous GAAP financial information
shall prominently disclose, at an
appropriate location in the document,
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that the document includes, refers to, or
incorporates by reference, as applicable,
financial statements and other financial
information based on both IFRS and
Previous GAAP, and that the
information based on Previous GAAP is
not comparable to information prepared
in accordance with IFRS.
2. Companies electing to include or
incorporate by reference Previous GAAP
financial information shall:
a. Present or incorporate by reference
selected historical financial data
prepared in accordance with Previous
GAAP for the four financial years prior
to the most recent financial year.
b. Present or incorporate by reference
operating and financial review and
prospects information pursuant to Item
5 that focuses on the financial
statements for the two most recent
financial years prior to the most recent
financial year that were prepared in
accordance with Previous GAAP. The
discussion need not refer to the
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP. No part of
the discussion should relate to financial
statements prepared in accordance with
IFRS.
c. Include or incorporate by reference
comparative financial statements
prepared in accordance with Previous
GAAP that cover the two financial years
prior to the most recent financial year.
3. Companies electing to include or
incorporate by reference Previous GAAP
financial information shall not present
that information side-by-side with IFRS
financial information.
4. An issuer that has published
audited financial statements prepared
in accordance with IFRS for each of the
three latest financial years shall include
all three years of audited IFRS financial
statements in its SEC filings.
(i) Special Instruction for Certain
European Issuers. An issuer that
changes the body of accounting
principles used in preparing its
financial statements presented pursuant
to Item 8.A.2 to IFRS as adopted by the
European Union (‘‘EU GAAP’’), and is
otherwise eligible, is permitted to rely
on this General Instruction G if it also
provides the following information,
which shall relate to the same financial
years for which the issuer provides
audited financial statements:
(1) An audited reconciliation to IFRS
as published by the IASB that contains
information relating to financial
statement line items and footnote
disclosure equivalent to that required
under IFRS as published by the IASB.
(2) The audited reconciliation to U.S.
GAAP specified by Item 17 or 18, as
appropriate, that must begin either with
IFRS as published by the IASB or with
EU GAAP.
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
(3) Selected financial data pursuant to
Item 3.A shall include information
based on the reconciliation to IFRS as
published by the IASB.
(4) Information required pursuant to
Item 5 that refers to the reconciliation to
IFRS as published by the IASB and to
the reconciliation to U.S. GAAP and
discusses any aspects of the differences
between EU GAAP, IFRS as published
by the IASB and U.S. GAAP not
otherwise discussed in the
reconciliation that the issuer believes
are necessary for an understanding of
the financial statements as a whole.
*
*
*
*
*
i. An indication of the items or class
of items to which the exception was
applied; and
ii. A description of what accounting
principle was used and how it was
applied;
b. Include, where material, qualitative
disclosure of the impact on financial
condition, changes in financial
condition and results of operations that
the treatment specified by IFRS would
have had absent the election to rely on
the exception.
*
*
*
*
*
Item 5. Operating and Financial Review
and Prospects
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
4. To the extent the primary financial
statements reflect the use of exceptions
permitted or required by IFRS 1, the
issuer shall:
a. Provide detailed information as to
the exceptions used, including:
14:59 Apr 19, 2005
*
*
*
*
Instructions to Item 8:
*
Instructions to Item 5:
VerDate jul<14>2003
Item 8. Financial Information
Jkt 205001
*
*
*
*
3. If the primary financial statements
included in the document represent the
first filing by the issuer with the SEC of
consolidated financial statements
prepared in accordance with IFRS, the
notes to the financial statements
prepared in accordance with IFRS shall
disclose the following:
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
20689
a. The reconciliation from Previous
GAAP to IFRS required by IFRS 1 shall
be presented in a form and level of
information sufficient to explain all
material adjustments to the balance
sheet and income statement and, if
presented under Previous GAAP, to the
cash flow statement; and
b. To the extent the primary financial
statements reflect the use of exceptions
permitted or required by IFRS 1, the
issuer shall identify each exception
used, including:
i. An indication of the items or class
of items to which the exception was
applied; and
ii. A description of what accounting
principle was used and how it was
applied.
*
*
*
*
*
By the Commission.
Dated: April 12, 2005.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–7706 Filed 4–19–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
E:\FR\FM\20APR2.SGM
20APR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 75 (Wednesday, April 20, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 20674-20689]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-7706]
[[Page 20673]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part III
Securities and Exchange Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
17 CFR Part 249
First-Time Application of International Financial Reporting Standards;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 75 / Wednesday, April 20, 2005 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 20674]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 249
[Release Nos. 33-8567; 34-51535; International Series Release No. 1285;
File No. S7-15-04]
RIN 3235-AI92
First-Time Application of International Financial Reporting
Standards
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final amendment to form.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commission is adopting amendments to Form 20-F to provide
a one-time accommodation relating to financial statements prepared
under International Financial Reporting Standards (``IFRS'') for
foreign private issuers registered with the SEC. This accommodation
applies to foreign private issuers that adopt IFRS prior to or for the
first financial year starting on or after January 1, 2007.
The accommodation permits eligible foreign private issuers for
their first year of reporting under IFRS to file two years rather than
three years of statements of income, changes in shareholders' equity
and cash flows prepared in accordance with IFRS, with appropriate
related disclosure. The accommodation retains current requirements
regarding the reconciliation of financial statement items to generally
accepted accounting principles as used in the United States (``U.S.
GAAP'').
In addition, the Commission is amending Form 20-F to require
certain disclosures of all foreign private issuers that change their
basis of accounting to IFRS.
DATES: Effective Date: May 20, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael D. Coco, Special Counsel,
Office of International Corporate Finance, Division of Corporation
Finance, at (202) 942-2990, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission,
450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington, DC 20549-0302, or Susan Koski-
Grafer, Office of the Chief Accountant, at (202) 942-4400, U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington,
DC 20549-1103.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is amending Form 20-F \1\
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Exchange Act'').\2\
Form 20-F is the combined registration statement and annual report form
for foreign private issuers \3\ under the Exchange Act. It also sets
forth disclosure requirements for registration statements filed by
foreign private issuers under the Securities Act of 1933 (the
``Securities Act'').\4\ The Commission issued a proposing release
relating to these amendments on March 11, 2004.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 17 CFR 249.220f.
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
\3\ The term ``foreign private issuer'' is defined in Exchange
Act Rule 3b-4(c) [17 CFR 240.3b-4(c)]. A foreign private issuer is a
non-government foreign issuer, except for a company that (1) has
more than 50% of its outstanding voting securities owned by U.S.
investors and (2) has either a majority of its officers and
directors residing in or being citizens of the United States, a
majority of its assets located in the United States, or its business
principally administered in the United States.
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
\5\ ``First-Time Application of International Financial
Reporting Standards,'' Release No. 33-8397 (the ``Proposing
Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Background
A. Increasing Use of International Financial Reporting Standards
Under the leadership of the International Accounting Standards
Board (``IASB''), over recent years IFRS has become widely recognized
by preparers and users of financial statements. As a result, numerous
non-U.S. companies, including many that are registered with the SEC,
are voluntarily choosing to switch from their home country accounting
principles to IFRS. In addition, an increasing number of jurisdictions
around the world are adopting or incorporating IFRS as their basis of
accounting, as a result of which a large number of issuers registered
with the SEC will switch to IFRS from their Previous GAAP.\6\ For
example, in June 2002, the European Union (``EU'') adopted a regulation
requiring companies incorporated under the laws of one of its Member
States and whose securities are publicly traded within the EU to
prepare their consolidated financial statements for each financial year
\7\ starting on or after January 1, 2005 on the basis of accounting
standards issued by the IASB.\8\ In accordance with these requirements,
listed EU companies not currently using IFRS must convert from the
existing national accounting standards to IFRS, as endorsed by the
European Union, no later than 2005.\9\ Other countries, including
Australia, also have adopted similar requirements by incorporating IFRS
as or into their own standards for periods beginning after January 1,
2005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ This release and the adopted amendments use the term
``Previous GAAP'' to refer to the basis of accounting that a first-
time adopter uses immediately before adopting IFRS. This usage is
consistent with IFRS. See International Financial Reporting Standard
1: ``First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting
Standards,'' as issued in June 2003 (``IFRS 1''), Appendix A.
\7\ Consistent with Form 20-F, IFRS and general usage outside
the United States, this release uses the term ``financial year'' to
refer to a fiscal year. See Instruction 2 to Item 3 of Form 20-F.
\8\ Regulation (EC) No. 1606/2002 of the European Parliament and
of the Council of 19 July 2002 on the application of international
accounting standards, Official Journal L. 243, 11/09/2002 P. 0001-
0004 (the ``EU Regulation''). The Commission commends the EU, as
well as Australia and other jurisdictions, for their efforts
relating to IFRS. The Commission believes broad acceptance of all of
IFRS, and of the IASB standard setting process, would serve to
promote high quality, transparent and comparable reporting of
financial results on a global basis.
\9\ Under the EU Regulation, companies meeting certain criteria
will be permitted an extension until 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foreign private issuers that register securities with the SEC, and
that report on a periodic basis thereafter under Section 13(a) or 15(d)
of the Exchange Act,\10\ are generally required to present, in their
annual reports and registration statements filed with the SEC, audited
statements of income, changes in shareholders' equity and cash flows
for each of the past three financial years, prepared on a consistent
basis of accounting.\11\ These issuers also are generally required to
present selected financial data covering each of the past five
financial years.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 15 U.S.C. 78m(a) or 78o(d). Section 13(a) of the Exchange
Act requires every issuer of a security registered pursuant to
Section 12 of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. 78l] to file with the
Commission such annual reports and other reports as the Commission
may prescribe. Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act requires each
issuer that has filed a registration statement that has become
effective pursuant to the Securities Act to file such reports as may
be required pursuant to Section 13 in respect of a security
registered pursuant to Section 12, unless the duty to file under
Section 15(d) has been suspended for any financial year.
\11\ See Item 8.A.2 for Form 20-F. Foreign private issuers are
also required to present audited balance sheets as of the end of the
past two financial years.
\12\ See Item 3.A.1 of Form 20-F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Proposed Amendments to Form 20-F
At the beginning of year 2003,\13\ the IASB had not finalized some
of the IFRS that many foreign private issuers will be
[[Page 20675]]
required to apply retrospectively when they adopt IFRS for the first
time for year 2005. The Commission recognized that compliance with SEC
requirements could be difficult and burdensome for foreign issuers
switching to IFRS, because these issuers would have to implement
accounting standards that were not yet finalized during the reporting
period to which they must be applied. In response to this concern, the
Commission issued a proposal to amend Form 20-F to provide an
accommodation to foreign private issuers that were switching to IFRS
prior to 2007.\14\ The proposals were intended to facilitate the
transition of foreign companies to IFRS and to improve the quality of
their financial disclosure. The proposed amendments to Form 20-F also
required certain disclosures from foreign private issuers that change
their basis of accounting to IFRS during any year. This disclosure
relates to certain mandatory and elective accounting treatments that an
issuer may use in applying IFRS for the first time and the
reconciliation from Previous GAAP to IFRS required by IFRS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ In several countries the presentation of financial
statements in accordance with IFRS becomes mandatory for financial
years starting on or after January 1, 2005. This release refers to
that financial year as ``year 2005,'' regardless of the actual
beginning date of a company's financial year, and the three prior
financial years as ``year 2002,'' ``year 2003,'' and ``year 2004,''
respectively. Accordingly, the financial statements for those years
are referred to as ``year 2002 financial statements,'' ``year 2003
financial statements,'' and ``year 2004 financial statements.'' For
issuers adopting IFRS for the first time during another financial
year, the earliest of the three years for which financial statements
are presently required under Form 20-F is referred to as the ``third
financial year,'' the second financial year as the ``second
financial year,'' and the financial year in which an issuer switches
to IFRS as the ``most recent financial year.''
\14\ See the Proposing Release.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Comments Received
In response to this proposal, the Commission received 33 comment
letters from representatives of foreign issuers, accounting firms,
professional associations, investor associations and regulators.\15\
While all of the commenters supported reducing the burden on foreign
issuers that change their basis of accounting to IFRS, most commenters
addressed to varying degrees the questions raised in the Proposing
Release and suggested modification to the amendments as proposed. The
issues that generated the most discussion were the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ These comment letters are posted on the Commission's Web
site at https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s71504.shtml.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed time frame during which the accommodation
would be available to a first-time adopter of IFRS;
The definition of ``first-time adopter'' for purposes of
determining eligibility to rely on the accommodation;
The need for an unqualified statement of compliance with
IFRS by an issuer seeking to rely on the accommodation, particularly
with regard to standards that had not been endorsed by the EU;
The proposed inclusion of condensed U.S. GAAP information
for three years;
The need for guidance relating to disclosure under
Industry Guide 3 or 6 from companies that rely on the proposed
accommodation;
The presentation of financial statements for interim
periods during the Transition Year; \16\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The term ``Transition Year'' refers to the financial year
in which an issuer first changes its basis of accounting from
Previous GAAP to IFRS. For example, for foreign issuers with a
calendar year-end that are subject to the EU Regulation, the
Transition Year would be the financial year ended December 31, 2005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed disclosure about the use of exceptions to
IFRS by a first-time adopter.
D. Summary of the Final Amendments to Form 20-F
The Commission is adopting a new General Instruction G to Form 20-F
to allow an eligible foreign private issuer to omit from SEC filings
for its first year of reporting under IFRS the earliest of the three
years of financial statements. In response to many of the commenters'
concerns, the amendments as adopted differ in some respects from the
amendments as proposed. In this release the Commission is:
Making the accommodation available to companies that adopt
IFRS as their basis of accounting prior to or for the first financial
year starting on or after January 1, 2007;
Clarifying that, except as discussed in the next point,
the accommodation is available only to a foreign private issuer that
states unreservedly and explicitly that its financial statements comply
with IFRS and are not subject to any qualification relating to the
application of IFRS as issued by the IASB;
Permitting the accommodation to be available to a foreign
private issuer that prepares its financial statements in accordance
with IFRS as adopted by the EU if the issuer provides an audited
reconciliation to IFRS as published by the IASB;
Not requiring condensed U.S. GAAP information from
companies that rely on the accommodation;
Clarifying that companies subject to Industry Guide 3 or 6
should provide Industry Guide Information under IFRS for periods
covered by their IFRS financial statements, with U.S. GAAP or Previous
GAAP information for earlier years;
For purposes of complying with Item 8.A.5 of Form 20-F
relating to interim period financial statements required to be included
in registration statements and prospectuses during the Transition Year,
permitting issuers to present IFRS financial statements covering
interim periods, subject to certain conditions; and
Clarifying that first-time adopters of IFRS need not
provide quantified numerical information on the financial significance
of any exceptions from IFRS on which they rely.
In many areas, the Commission is giving first-time adopters
significant flexibility by not prescribing specific formats,
disclosures, legends, or language to be used in the presentation of
IFRS financial statements. For example, companies are permitted (but
not required) to include Previous GAAP financial information or
financial statements, and are permitted to determine the appropriate
information content and presentation format for the Previous GAAP-IFRS
reconciliation required under IFRS 1. The Commission believes a
flexible approach is appropriate because of the large number of foreign
private issuers from several countries that will be first-time adopters
and the wide variety of circumstances these issuers will encounter in
making the transition from Previous GAAP to IFRS. Issuers should assess
the information needs of their shareholders and the investment
community at large and should provide meaningful, reliable and
transparent information in connection with their implementation of
IFRS.
The Commission reminds issuers of their responsibilities under the
federal securities laws to provide investors with information that is
not misleading.\17\ In addition, as with all disclosure and accounting
matters involving companies that make filings under the Securities Act
or the Exchange Act, the SEC staff may comment on such matters.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ For example, this responsibility can be found under
Sections 11 and 12(a)(2) of the Securities Act and Section 10(b) of
the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Discussion of the Amendments To Permit Omission of IFRS Financial
Statements for the Third Financial Year
A. Eligibility Requirements
The Commission is adopting an amendment to Form 20-F to allow an
eligible foreign private issuer for its first year of reporting under
IFRS to file two years rather than three years of statements of income,
shareholders' equity and cash flows prepared in accordance with IFRS.
Annual Reports. A foreign private issuer is eligible to
exclude IFRS financial statements for the third financial year from an
Annual Report on Form 20-F if (1) the annual report relates to the
first financial year starting on or after January 1, 2007 or an earlier
financial year, (2) the issuer adopts IFRS for the first time by an
explicit and unreserved statement of compliance
[[Page 20676]]
with IFRS,\18\ and (3) the audited financial statements for the
financial year to which the annual report relates are prepared in
accordance with IFRS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Under IFRS 1, an entity is a ``first-time adopter'' if the
entity's first IFRS financial statements are the first annual
financial statements in which the entity adopts IFRS, by an explicit
and unreserved statement in those financial statements of compliance
with IFRS. IFRS 1, paragraph 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration Statements. A foreign private issuer is
eligible to exclude IFRS financial statements for the third financial
year from a registration statement under the Securities Act or the
Exchange Act if (1) the most recent audited financial statements
required by Item 8.A.2 of Form 20-F are for the first financial year
starting on or after January 1, 2007 or an earlier financial year, (2)
the issuer adopts IFRS for the first time by an explicit and unreserved
statement of compliance with IFRS, and (3) the audited financial
statements for the most recent financial year are prepared in
accordance with IFRS.
These adopted eligibility requirements differ from the proposed
requirements, which would have permitted a foreign private issuer that
is a first-time adopter of IFRS to omit IFRS financial statements for
the third-year back from an annual report for a financial year that
begins no later than January 1, 2007 or from a registration statement
for which the most recent financial statements are for a financial year
that begins no later than January 1, 2007.
Many commenters noted that under the amendments as proposed an
issuer that was eligible to defer its adoption of IFRS until 2007 under
the EU Regulation would not have been eligible to rely on the
accommodation unless it had a financial calendar year-end.\19\ They
also commented that the proposed deadline would create difficulties for
companies with a 52/53 week financial year, which may start later than
January 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Under the EU Regulation mandating the use of IFRS, EU
Member States may allow companies to defer their adoption of IFRS
until year 2007 if (1) a company is listed both in the EU and on a
non-EU exchange and currently uses internationally accepted
standards as its primary accounting standards, or (2) a company has
only publicly traded debt securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The accommodation as adopted has been broadened and is available to
a foreign private issuer that adopts IFRS prior to or for its first
financial year starting on or after January 1, 2007. This approach
matches the extended compliance period under the EU Regulation. Under
this approach, an issuer that, for example, has a September 30
financial year-end could switch to IFRS for its financial year from
October 1, 2007 to September 30, 2008 and would be eligible to apply
the accommodation when filing its Form 20-F Annual Report with the SEC
by March 2009.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Annual reports on Form 20-F are due six months after the
end of the financial year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also pointed out that an issuer that previously claimed
compliance with IAS could be considered a first-time adopter under IFRS
1 if it did not include an explicit and unreserved statement of
compliance with IFRS in its most recent published annual financial
statements. For example, an issuer that had prepared financial
statements under IAS in prior years and then in later years switched
back to home country GAAP would be considered a first-time adopter
under IFRS 1 but would not have been eligible for the accommodation as
proposed.
The Commission has clarified that the accommodation as adopted is
available to a foreign private issuer that is a ``first-time adopter.''
The adopted definition of first-time adopter in Form 20-F is consistent
with that under IFRS 1. This approach is intended to avoid situations
in which an issuer could be a first-time adopter under IFRS 1 but would
be ineligible to rely on the accommodation because it had prepared its
financial statements in accordance with IAS for an earlier financial
year.
Commenters also expressed concern over the ability of issuers to
make an unreserved and unqualified statement of compliance with IFRS if
the EU had not fully endorsed all of the IFRS standards by the time the
issuer produced its financial statements. This concern related both to
the EU endorsement of existing standards as well as to the endorsement
of any future standards that the IASB may adopt for companies that
adopt IFRS in later years. Other commenters pointed out that Australia
is adopting IFRS into Australian GAAP which, they asserted, would fully
encompass IFRS. As a result, the financial statements of Australian
companies would refer to compliance with Australian GAAP and not
necessarily to IFRS.
As adopted, except as described in Section II.G for EU issuers, an
issuer is eligible to rely on the accommodation only if it can state
unreservedly and explicitly that its financial statements comply with
IFRS as published by the IASB, and if its audited financial statements
are not subject to any qualification, including qualification relating
to the application of IFRS. In addition, the issuer's independent
auditor would be required to opine without qualification on compliance
with IFRS. A foreign private issuer that had not complied with all IFRS
in effect as published by the IASB would not be able to make the
required unreserved statement of compliance with IFRS and would not be
eligible to rely on the accommodation the Commission has adopted.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ The circumstances under which an audit report containing a
disclaimer or qualification would be accepted are extremely limited.
See Instruction to Item 8.A.3 of Form 20-F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some countries may adopt IFRS by incorporating them into their home
country standards. Australia, for example, has taken this approach. For
purposes of eligibility to rely on the accommodation, an Australian
issuer would need to assert its compliance with both IFRS and
Australian GAAP.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ In making this assertion, an Australian issuer may rely on
the view that Australian GAAP complies with IFRS. This approach of
relying on the home country standard setter's compliance with IFRS
does not apply to an issuer from another country that adopts IFRS as
its home country GAAP within the time frame to which the
accommodation applies, although such an issuer could assert its
compliance with its home country GAAP, as well as its compliance
with IFRS, if appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters noted that the proposal did not address whether an
issuer that has published audited IFRS financial statements for the
third financial year should include them in its SEC filings. If an
issuer has voluntarily published audited IFRS financial statements for
the third financial year, or has been required to do so pursuant to
other regulations, then the burdens associated with including those
financial statements in SEC filings would appear low. In addition, the
Commission believes investors should have access to those financial
statements in SEC filings. As a result, the adopted amendments require
that an issuer that has published audited IFRS financial statements for
three years include all three years of IFRS financial statements in its
SEC filings.
Some commenters recommended that, for the same reasons for which it
applies to foreign private issuers that file securities documents under
the Securities Act and Exchange Act, the accommodation should be
extended to the financial statements of entities prepared under Rules
3-05, 3-09, 3-10, and 3-16 of Regulation S-X.\23\ The Commission views
the adopted amendments as applying to those
[[Page 20677]]
financial statements, provided that the entities meet the definition of
foreign business in Rule 1.02(l) of Regulation S-X.\24\ The Commission
similarly views the amendments as applying to the financial statements
of a target company in a business combination transaction included in a
Securities Act registration statement on Form S-4 \25\ or Form F-4 \26\
or a proxy or information statement under the Exchange Act.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Rule 3-05 relates to financial statements of businesses
acquired or to be acquired; Rule 3-09 relates to separate financial
statements of non-consolidated subsidiaries and 50-percent or less
owned persons; Rule 3-10 relates to financial statements of
guarantors and issuers of guaranteed securities registered or being
registered; and Rule 3-16 relates to the financial statements of
affiliates whose securities collateralize an issue registered or
being registered.
\24\ That rule defines a foreign business as a business that is
majority owned by persons who are not citizens or residents of the
United States and is not organized under the laws of the United
States or any state thereof, and either (1) more than 50 percent of
its assets are located outside the United States; or (2) the
majority of its executive officers and directors are not United
States citizens or residents.
\25\ 17 CFR 239.13.
\26\ 17 CFR 239.34.
\27\ Under the Exchange Act, proxy statements are filed on
Schedule 14A (17 CFR 240.14a-101) and information statements are
filed on Schedule 14C (17 CFR 240.14c-101).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Primary Financial Statements
1. IFRS Financial Statements
With respect to the consolidated financial statements and other
financial information required by Item 8.A of Form 20-F, the Commission
is adopting the amendments as proposed to allow eligible foreign
private issuers for their first year of reporting under IFRS to present
in their SEC filings during that year only two years of audited IFRS
financial statements instead of three years. Eligible companies are
permitted to omit audited financial statements for the earliest of the
three years when providing the financial statements required by Item
8.A.2. All instructions to Item 8, including instructions requiring
audits in accordance with U.S. generally accepted auditing standards
will continue to apply.\28\ Commenters did not raise concerns with
these aspects of the amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Although the instructions to Item 8 continue to refer to
U.S. generally accepted auditing standards (``GAAS''), the
Commission notes that under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (``PCAOB'') now has broad
authority to set standards for audits of U.S. public companies. In
Audit Committee Standard No. 1, the PCAOB directed auditors to cease
referring to GAAS in audit reports relating to financial statements
of issuers and instead to refer to the ``standards of the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States).'' See
``Commission Guidance Regarding the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board's Auditing and Related Professional Practice
Standard No. 1,'' Release No. 33-8422 (May 14, 2004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Condensed U.S. GAAP Financial Information
The Commission proposed amending Form 20-F to require companies
that present two years of IFRS financial statements in their SEC
filings also to present, as part of their U.S. GAAP reconciliation,
audited condensed U.S. GAAP information for three years in a level of
detail consistent with that required by Article 10 of Regulation S-X
for interim financial statements. Under the amendments as adopted,
issuers relying on the accommodation will not be required to provide
this condensed U.S. GAAP information.
Commenters had diverging views on the proposal. Some commenters
supported the proposal to require three years of condensed U.S. GAAP
information in order to have three-year trend information that would be
beneficial to investors without being unduly burdensome to issuers.
Other commenters claimed that the cost and burden to issuers of
preparing condensed U.S. GAAP information would outweigh the benefits
to investors. One commenter noted that the preparation of condensed
U.S. GAAP information would create an unnecessary burden to companies
because investors would have available a reconciliation from Previous
GAAP to U.S. GAAP and a reconciliation from IFRS to U.S. GAAP, which
would allow them to sufficiently assess U.S. GAAP trend information on
a three-year basis. After evaluating the benefits in relation to the
expected costs, the Commission is not adopting the proposal to require
the presentation of condensed U.S. GAAP information. Companies relying
on the accommodation will continue to be required to provide an audited
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP for the two years of financial statements
prepared in accordance with IFRS.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See Items 17(c) and 18 of Form 20-F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Previous GAAP Financial Statements
The Commission is adopting amendments that will allow but not
require any issuer that switches to IFRS to include, incorporate by
reference, or refer to Previous GAAP financial information. These
amendments are adopted as proposed. Issuers that elect to include or
incorporate by reference financial information prepared in accordance
with Previous GAAP must include or incorporate narrative disclosure of
its operating and financial review and prospects under Item 5 of Form
20-F for the reporting periods covered by Previous GAAP financial
information.
The proposing release solicited comment on the presentation of
Previous GAAP information. The amendments as adopted do not prescribe
the specific placement of any Previous GAAP information, although the
adopted amendments prohibit its presentation in a side-by-side columnar
format with IFRS information. The Commission believes this will help to
avoid potential confusion and inappropriate comparisons between the
two.
An issuer that includes, incorporates by reference or refers to
Previous GAAP selected financial data or financial information in an
SEC disclosure document must also include appropriate cautionary
language with respect to that data to avoid inappropriate comparison
with information presented under IFRS. Issuers electing to include or
incorporate Previous GAAP financial information must disclose, at an
appropriate prominent location, that the filing contains financial
information based on the issuer's Previous GAAP, which is not
comparable to financial information based on IFRS. The amendments as
adopted do not specify particular legends or language that should be
used by issuers that include or incorporate Previous GAAP information.
The Commission believes that appropriate language may vary depending on
the use made of Previous GAAP information.
Commenters expressed wide support for the proposal to permit but
not require Previous GAAP information, with appropriate labels and
legends. There was more divergence on the issue of its format and
location. The Commission believes a flexible approach is best suited to
allowing an issuer to determine the format and placement of Previous
GAAP information based on its use.
C. Selected Financial Data
The Commission is adopting the amendments as proposed to permit
first-time adopters to provide, pursuant to Item 3.A of Form 20-F,
selected financial data based on IFRS for the two most recent financial
years. First-time adopters that present two years of IFRS selected
financial data would continue to be required to provide five years of
selected data based on U.S. GAAP, unless the instructions to Item 3.A
permit the issuer to provide U.S. GAAP data for a shorter time.\30\ The
amendments neither require nor
[[Page 20678]]
prohibit inclusion, incorporation by reference or reference to selected
financial data presented on the basis of Previous GAAP, although as
with the audited financial statements, Previous GAAP information should
not be presented in a side-by-side columnar format with IFRS
information.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ The instructions to Item 3.A of Form 20-F require a company
to include selected financial data on a basis reconciled to U.S.
GAAP for those periods for which the company was required to
reconcile the primary annual financial statements in an SEC filing.
Therefore, a foreign private issuer may be permitted to present
fewer than five years of U.S. GAAP information under selected
financial data in the years immediately after its initial SEC
registration. This permits a company to build up a five-year history
of U.S. GAAP information. This accommodation is not affected by
these amendments.
\31\ While issuers are not permitted to have a side-by-side
columnar format that combines information based on two or more sets
of accounting principles, a format that presents the same
information on a single page or table would be permitted, assuming
there are appropriate legends and explanations. For example, an
issuer could present selected financial data in a single page as
follows: IFRS for years 2004 and 2005; below that U.S. GAAP for
years 2001 through 2005; and below that Previous GAAP for years 2001
through 2004. Companies are generally free to choose the
presentation of selected financial data that they feel is
appropriate for their situation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission did not receive extensive comment on the proposal as
it relates to selected financial data. One commenter noted that the
proposal did not appear to reflect the Commission practice of allowing
an issuer to build up to a five-year presentation of selected financial
data, and could appear to suggest that a full five years of IFRS
selected financial data would be required in the years following an
issuer's first time adoption of IFRS. The Commission notes the
amendments do not affect the ability of an issuer to rely on the
Instruction to Item 3.A. in years subsequent to becoming a first-time
adopter of IFRS, thereby allowing that issuer to build up to a five-
year history of selected financial data based on IFRS.
D. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects
The Commission is adopting as proposed an instruction in new
General Instruction G to Form 20-F to clarify how issuers should
present their disclosure under Item 5 of Form 20-F relating to
operating and financial review and prospects. The adopted instruction
specifies that in providing that disclosure, management should focus on
the IFRS financial statements from the past two financial years, as
well as the reconciliation to U.S. GAAP for the same two financial
years. The discussion also should explain any differences between IFRS
and U.S. GAAP that are not otherwise discussed in the reconciliation
and that the issuer believes are necessary for an understanding of the
financial statements as a whole.\32\ Management should not include in
this section any discussion relating to financial statements prepared
in accordance with Previous GAAP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ This is the existing requirement under Form 20-F,
Instruction 2 to Item 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Other Disclosures
1. Business and Derivatives Disclosure
The Commission is adopting as proposed an instruction in new
General Instruction G to Form 20-F to clarify that for companies
preparing their financial statements under IFRS, the reference to
accounting principles in Item 4, ``Information on the Company,'' refers
to IFRS and not to either Previous GAAP or U.S. GAAP.\33\ The
Commission is also adopting as proposed an instruction in General
Instruction G to clarify that for companies preparing their financial
statements under IFRS, derivatives and market risk disclosure provided
in response to Item 11 would be based on IFRS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Under Item 4 of Form 20-F, an issuer must provide
information about its business operations, the products it makes and
the services it provides, and the factors that affect its business.
The financial information that is included in response to this
requirement is generally based on the primary financial statements
of the issuer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters widely concurred with the proposals to include
instructions clarifying that both business operations disclosure
pursuant to Item 4 and derivatives disclosure pursuant to Item 11 of
Form 20-F should refer to the financial information prepared in
accordance with IFRS.
2. Disclosure Pursuant to Industry Guides
The Commission did not propose, nor is it adopting, any specific
amendments with respect to information to be disclosed pursuant to
Industry Guide 3 (Statistical Disclosure by Bank Holding Companies) or
Industry Guide 6 (Disclosures Concerning Unpaid Claims and Claim
Adjustment Expenses of Property-Casualty Insurance Underwriters).\34\
The Commission believes that foreign issuers that switch to IFRS and to
which these Guides apply do not need a general accommodation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Industry Guides serve as expressions of the policies and
practices of the Division of Corporation Finance. They are of
assistance to issuers, their counsel and others preparing
registration statements and reports, as well as to the Commission's
staff.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission solicited comment on behalf of the staff on whether
amendments would be appropriate to address the information required
under Industry Guide 3 or Industry Guide 6 in the context of first-time
adopters changing their basis of accounting to IFRS. The general view
expressed in the comments submitted by issuers subject to Industry
Guide 3 or 6 is that they should be permitted to present only two years
of Industry Guide information under IFRS, consistent with the
presentation of their primary financial statements. Commenters thought
it an unreasonable burden to restate the earliest of three years of
information under IFRS, and that there would be no significant benefit
to investors from such a restatement.
Industry Guide disclosure is intended to provide a ``track-record''
of trend information such as loan quality information for banks
providing disclosure under Industry Guide 3 or property casualty loss
reserve development under Industry Guide 6. The Commission recognizes
that the switch to IFRS will impact the Industry Guide disclosure of
first-time adopters, who may not have available prior years of Industry
Guide information prepared under IFRS. Although the staff does not
intend to amend the Industry Guides requirements, the staff believes
and intends to apply the Industry Guides such that a first-time adopter
of IFRS who relies on the adopted amendments to Form 20-F will be in
compliance with existing Industry Guide standards if it provides two
years of Industry Guide information under IFRS, with information
provided under U.S. GAAP or Previous GAAP to cover earlier years as
required by the Industry Guides, as applicable.
F. Financial Statements and Information for Interim Periods During the
Transition Year in Registration Statements, Prospectuses and Other
Filings
As noted in the Proposing Release, there are many difficult and
unique issues relating to the appropriate presentation of financial
information during the Transition Year. Some commenters had useful
suggestions in this area, which are reflected in the adopted amendments
to Form 20-F. Because these issues affect foreign private issuers that
are switching to IFRS and that will use the accommodation to omit
financial statements for the third financial year, the Commission
believes it is appropriate to provide specific guidance and relief with
respect to the financial information included in SEC filings.
1. Exchange Act Reporting
Foreign private issuers that are subject to the reporting
requirements under Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act are
required to furnish Reports on Form 6-K.\35\ These reports on Form 6-K
generally consist of material information that a foreign private issuer
publishes or makes public voluntarily or
[[Page 20679]]
in accordance with home market requirements. There is no requirement
under Form 6-K to present any specific financial information, either
reconciled to U.S. GAAP or otherwise.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Rules 13a-16 and 15d-16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is not imposing any additional requirements under
Form 6-K for companies that are switching from Previous GAAP to IFRS.
If a foreign private issuer is not filing a registration statement or
using a prospectus under the Securities Act or filing an initial
registration statement under the Exchange Act, the amendments the
Commission is adopting will not affect the interim period financial
information that is required to be filed with or furnished to the
SEC.\36\ When a foreign private issuer publishes material financial
information, whether fully or partly in accordance with IFRS,\37\ it
should consider whether that information should be furnished on a Form
6-K Report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ If a Form 6-K Report is incorporated by reference into a
registration statement or prospectus, then the issuer should refer
to the relief outlined below and in new General Instruction G to
Form 20-F.
\37\ The Committee of European Securities Regulators (``CESR''),
for example, has encouraged European companies to provide investors
with quantified information regarding the impact of the change to
IFRS as soon as sufficiently reliable information is available. See
CESR, ``European Regulation on the Application of IFRS in 2005:
Recommendation for Additional Guidance Regarding the Transition to
IFRS,'' (December 2003) (``CESR Recommendation'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Financial Information in Securities Act Registration Statements and
Prospectuses and Initial Exchange Act Registration Statements Used Less
Than Nine Months After the Financial Year End
In registration statements and prospectuses under the Securities
Act and initial registration statements under the Exchange Act, if the
document is dated less than nine months after the end of the last
audited financial year, foreign private issuers are not required to
include interim period financial information. However, if a foreign
private issuer has published interim period financial information, Item
8.A.5 of Form 20-F requires these registration statements and
prospectuses to include that information.\38\ The intent of this
requirement is to ensure that the information available in U.S.
offering documents is as current as information that is available
elsewhere.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Under Item 512(a)(4) of Regulation S-K, a foreign private
issuer that registers securities on a shelf registration statement
basis is required to undertake to include any financial statements
required by Item 8.A of Form 20-F at the start of any delayed
offering or throughout a continuous offering.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Generally, this interim period financial information is not
required to be reconciled to U.S. GAAP because (among other reasons)
the U.S. GAAP reconciliation relating to the year-end audited financial
statements provides investors with a roadmap for evaluating the extent
to which U.S. GAAP adjustments might impact interim period financial
information. To the extent there are new reconciling items or the
issuer has made a change in its accounting principles with respect to
the interim period, the issuer must quantify material reconciling items
that have not previously been addressed in the audited financial
statements, and must provide narrative disclosures about the
differences in accounting principles used.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Instruction 3(a) and (b) to Item 8.A.5 of Form 20-F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On occasion, a foreign private issuer may publicly disclose interim
financial information that is prepared using accounting standards
different from those used in its SEC filings.\40\ In this instance,
investors will not have the benefit of the roadmap and will not be able
to evaluate the reconciling items between home country GAAP and U.S.
GAAP. As a result, the interim financial information disclosed pursuant
to Item 8.A.5 would have to be supplemented with a U.S. GAAP
reconciliation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ This may occur when an issuer whose audited financial
statements included in its Annual Report on Form 20-F are prepared
in accordance with U.S. GAAP publishes interim financial information
prepared using home country GAAP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During the Transition Year, a foreign private issuer that is
switching to IFRS may publish interim financial information either
fully or partly in accordance with IFRS and will likely not have filed
audited year-end IFRS financial statements in its most recent Form 20-F
Annual Report. A strict interpretation of Item 8.A.5 would therefore
normally require that the issuer provide a U.S. GAAP reconciliation
relating to the IFRS interim financial information.
The Commission recognizes the significant burdens associated with
the changeover to a new basis of accounting and the benefits to
investors of having companies publish financial information in
accordance with IFRS during the Transition Year. As a result, the
Commission does not believe a U.S. GAAP reconciliation is necessary in
this circumstance, and is including within new Instruction G to Form
20-F a provision that would permit a foreign private issuer to include
IFRS financial information pursuant to the last three sentences of Item
8.A.5 without either descriptive or quantified U.S. GAAP reconciling
information. Because companies may publish interim financial
information that does not fully comply with IFRS during the Transition
Year, this relief extends to information that makes reference to IFRS
but that may not be fully in accordance with IFRS.\41\ In addition,
recognizing that foreign private issuers may present IFRS financial
information covering a full financial year as well as interim periods,
this relief also extends to annual year-end financial information that
a foreign private issuer may publish during the Transition Year.
Because such data may not be comparable to the issuer's historical or
future data or to other issuers and not accompanied by a U.S. GAAP
reconciliation, such published information should be accompanied by a
statement that the information is not in compliance with IFRS and other
appropriate cautionary language.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ An issuer may be unable to comply fully with IFRS for
interim financial statements during the Transition Year due to
subsequent changes that may be made to standards or the development
of interpretive material. Because of the potential for such changes,
the accounting policies that an issuer applies in preparing its
preliminary opening balance sheet may not be the same as those to be
applied to the final opening balance sheet when that issuer prepares
it first complete IFRS financial statements.
CESR, for example, has recommended that companies switching to
IFRS in 2005 apply in their 2005 interim financial reports at least
the IAS/IFRS recognition and measurement principles that will be
applicable at year end. See CESR Press Release, ``Preparing for the
Implementation of International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRS),'' CESR/03-514 (December 30, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This relief only applies to documents described above that are used
prior to nine months after the end of a foreign private issuer's
financial year. Documents that are used subsequent to nine months after
financial year end are addressed in the next section.
3. Financial Statements in Securities Act Registration Statements and
Prospectuses and Initial Exchange Act Registration Statements Used More
Than Nine Months After the Financial Year End
In registration statements and prospectuses under the Securities
Act and initial registration statements under the Exchange Act, if the
document is dated more than nine months after the end of the last
audited financial year, foreign private issuers must provide
consolidated interim period financial statements covering at least the
first six months of the financial year and the comparative period for
the prior financial year.\42\ These unaudited interim period financial
statements must be prepared using the same basis
[[Page 20680]]
of accounting as the audited financial statements contained or
incorporated by reference in the document and include or incorporate by
reference a reconciliation to U.S. GAAP.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Item 8.A.5 of Form 20-F and Item 512(a)(4) of Regulation S-
K
\43\ Items 17(c) and 18 of Form 20-F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the Proposing Release, the Commission noted the difficulties
faced by foreign private issuers in switching to IFRS during the
Transition Year and solicited comment on various approaches to the
presentation of interim period financial information. Because the
Commission believes investors need a basis to compare interim period
financial statements with annual financial statements, especially in
connection with offerings or initial listings of securities that take
place in the late months of the Transition Year or the early part of
the year thereafter, the Commission does not believe it is appropriate
to apply for situations after nine months the same approach described
above for situations prior to nine months.
The Commission received helpful suggestions from various commenters
who noted that condensed U.S. GAAP financial information can be used as
an information bridge between annual and interim periods to which
different accounting standards are applied. The revisions incorporate
this approach.
In this area, the Commission is providing first-time adopters with
a number of options to comply with its requirements. This is
appropriate because the Commission wants to encourage foreign companies
to continue to access the U.S. public capital markets during the
Transition Year. In addition, this flexible approach balances the
information needs of investors with the information resources that
various companies may have available. The Commission is amending Form
20-F to provide four options for foreign private issuers that are
first-time adopters, that are or will be eligible to use the two-year
financial statement accommodation and that are required to provide
interim period financial statements in Securities Act or Exchange Act
documents used after nine months from financial year end:
The Previous GAAP Option
The IFRS Option
The U.S. GAAP Condensed Information Option, and
The Case-by-Case Option.
Each of these options is described below. In addition, the
Commission reminds issuers that, regardless of the option selected,
when interim period financial statements are required to be presented
under Item 8.A.5, those financial statements must be accompanied by
disclosure based on the accounting principles in the option used that
is made pursuant to Item 5 of Form 20-F ``Operating and Financial
Review and Prospects.''
(a) The Previous GAAP Option
A foreign private issuer may present three years of audited
Previous GAAP financial statements as well as Previous GAAP interim
financial statements for the current year and comparable prior year
period, all reconciled to U.S. GAAP. For example, a 2005 first time
adopter would present audited financial statements for 2002, 2003 and
2004 and unaudited financial statements for the six months (or nine
months) of 2004 and 2005, all in accordance with Previous GAAP and
reconciled to U.S. GAAP. This option generally reflects the application
of the Commission's current rules, without any specific relief.
(b) The IFRS Option
A foreign private issuer may present two years of audited financial
statements as well as interim financial statements for the current year
and comparable prior year period, all prepared in accordance with IFRS
and reconciled to U.S. GAAP. For example, a 2005 first-time adopter
would present audited financial statements for 2003 and 2004 and
unaudited financial statements for the six months (or nine months) of
2004 and 2005, all in accordance with IFRS and reconciled to U.S. GAAP.
This option generally reflects the application of current rules, with
the relief afforded through the amendments being adopted in this
release that permit a first-time adopter to omit IFRS financial
statements for the third financial year.
(c) The U.S. GAAP Condensed Information Option
A foreign private issuer may present: (i) Audited Previous GAAP
financial statements for the prior three years, reconciled to U.S. GAAP
(e.g., 2002, 2003, and 2004); (ii) unaudited IFRS financial statements
for the current and prior year comparable interim periods, reconciled
to U.S. GAAP (e.g., six months or nine months of 2004 and 2005); and
(iii) unaudited condensed U.S. GAAP balance sheets and income
statements for the most recent prior financial year and the current and
prior year comparable interim periods (e.g., full year 2004 and six
months or nine months of 2004 and 2005).
This option allows foreign companies to use condensed U.S. GAAP
information to bridge the gap in interim information between Previous
GAAP and IFRS. The condensed U.S. GAAP information should provide a
level of detail consistent with that required by Article 10 of
Regulation S-X for interim financial statements.
(d) The Case-by-Case Option
Some first-time adopters may find that they are not able to comply
fully with any of the options outlined above and yet have available
comparable financial information based on a combination of Previous
GAAP, IFRS and U.S. GAAP. The Commission does not believe these foreign
private issuers should necessarily be foreclosed from publicly offering
or listing their securities in the United States. Foreign companies in
this situation are encouraged to contact the Office of International
Corporate Finance in the Division in the Division of Corporation
Finance, in writing and well in advance of any filing deadlines, for
guidance relating to interim period financial statements.
G. Issuers Using IFRS as Adopted by the European Union
While the EU has adopted, as published by the IASB, almost all
international financial reporting standards, it has recently adopted a
regulation endorsing IAS 39 ``Financial Instruments: Recognition and
Measurement'' with the exception of certain provisions on the use of
the full fair value option and on hedge accounting.\44\ EU listed
companies are required only to comply with those accounting standards
that have been adopted by the EU. As such, it is possible for an EU
company to comply with EU accounting regulations but still produce
financial statements that are not fully compliant with IFRS. Under EU
guidance, companies that apply the EU-adopted version of IAS 39 should
refer in their accounting policies to IFRS ``as adopted by the EU.''
\45\ The EU-adopted accounting standards are referred to in this
release as ``EU GAAP.'' EU GAAP would appear to constitute a
comprehensive body of accounting standards for purposes of Item 8.A.2
and Item 17 and 18 of Form 20-F and would be accepted in SEC
[[Page 20681]]
filings by EU companies.\46\ As with other issuers relying on the
accommodation, issuers that use EU GAAP would be required to include a
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See European Commission Press Release ``Accounting
standards: Commission endorses IAS 39,'' November 19, 2004; IP/04/
1385 available at https://europa.eu.int/comm/internal--market/
accounting/index--en.htm.
\45\ See ``IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and
Measurement--Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ);'' European Commission
Memo/04/265, Brussels, November 19, 2004. As noted in that release,
while it is possible that the EU may not adopt other parts of IFRS
as written by the IASB, the European Commission believes that full
endorsement of standards published by the IASB is preferable.
\46\ An issuer that uses EU GAAP may, in note 1 to its financial
statements, describe that body of accounting principles using any
term it deems appropriate to designate reliance on the IFRS
standards that the EU has adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters raised the issue of whether the use of EU GAAP
would have an impact on the eligibility requirements under the
accommodation. An EU issuer that prepares financial statements for its
local markets under EU GAAP could use those same financial statements
in its SEC filings and still qualify for the accommodation if it also
provides a reconciliation to IFRS as published by the IASB. This
reconciliation would relate to the two financial years for which the
issuer would provide EU GAAP financial statements under the
accommodation. The reconciliation of EU GAAP to IFRS as published by
the IASB should contain information relating to financial statement
line items and footnote disclosure equivalent to that required under
IFRS.\47\ The reconciliation would need to be audited by the issuer's
independent auditor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ For example, an issuer applying EU GAAP will include
financial statement footnote disclosure that complies with IAS 32
``Financial Instruments: Disclosure and Presentation'' even if the
issuer does not fully apply IAS 39 relating to hedge accounting, as
permitted under EU GAAP. The EU GAAP-IFRS reconciliation should
disclose the financial statement effects and appropriate information
in accordance with IAS 32, in respect of the full application of IAS
39 if different from that under EU GAAP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An issuer that applies EU GAAP also would continue to be required
to provide an audited reconciliation to U.S. GAAP.\48\ An issuer that
applies EU GAAP may use the reconciliation to IFRS as published by the
IASB as the basis for their reconciliation to U.S. GAAP, although using
EU GAAP financial statements as the basis for the U.S. GAAP
reconciliation also would be an acceptable approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ The U.S. GAAP reconciliation may be in accordance with Item
17 or Item 18 of Form 20-F, as appropriate. See General Instruction
E(c) to Form 20-F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The reconciliation to IFRS as published by the IASB would provide
the basis for the following other disclosure required under the
accommodation:
Selected financial data provided pursuant to Item 3.A of
Form 20-F would include relevant items based on the reconciliation to
IFRS as published by the IASB as well as to U.S. GAAP; and
The discussion under Item 5 of Form 20-F relating to the
operating and financial review and prospects should focus on the
financial statements prepared in accordance with EU GAAP. In the same
manner as required for the U.S. GAAP reconciliation, this discussion
should explain any differences between EU GAAP and IFRS as published by
the IASB that are not otherwise discussed in the reconciliation and
that the issuer believes are necessary for an understanding of the
financial statements taken as a whole.
With regard to interim financial statements in a registration
statement or prospectus, the provision in new Instruction G to Form 20-
F that permits a foreign private issuer to include published IFRS
financial information pursuant to the last three sentences of Item
8.A.5 without either descriptive or quantified U.S. GAAP reconciling
information also applies to information that is prepared in accordance
with EU GAAP. Additionally, EU issuers that provide interim financial
information under the IFRS Option should present two years of annual
financial statements as well as current and comparable prior year
interim financial statements prepared in accordance with EU GAAP, with
the reconciliation to IFRS as published by the IASB and the
reconciliation to U.S. GAAP as described above.
III. Disclosures About First-Time Adoption of IFRS
The Commission is adopting amendments to Form 20-F to require
certain disclosures by all first-time adopters of IFRS regardless of
the year in which they change their basis of accounting. These
requirements relate to the issuer's reliance on any of the exceptions
to the general restatement and measurement principles allowed under
IFRS 1 and to the reconciliation of