Business Standard

Accounting for turbulence in new financial year

The spillover of compliance requiremen­ts from FY20 to FY21 makes experts wary of the ripple effect on business financials

- SUDIPTO DEY

The spillover of compliance requiremen­ts from FY20 to FY21 makes experts wary of the ripple effect on business financials. SUDIPTO DEY writes

On April 1 every year, businesses unroll their budgets and targets for the new financial year. This financial year -- FY21 -- is different. As a relief from the pandemic situation, some compliance requiremen­ts of the previous financial year (FY20) split over to the new one, at a time when business sentiment is at a record low.

Dinesh Kanabar, CEO, Dhruva Advisors, captures the dilemma that many CFOS and auditors are grappling with: “How can business budget for revenues? If you cannot budget for revenues, how you will budget for costs?” he wonders.

As corporate India takes uncertain steps into a new financial year, experts say resources of businesses would be stretched to manage various compliance­s like filings of annual financial results, completion of the audit of financial statements within prescribed timelines, filing of tax returns, and ensuring various approvals from board of directors and audit committee.

“Since there will be a delay in closure of books and compliance­s for FY20, there will be an overhang effect on compliance­s for FY21,” says Rakesh Nangia, chairman, Nangia Andersen Consulting.

MP Vijay Kumar, chief finance officer, Sify Technologi­es agrees. “This is an exceptiona­l period. There would be an accumulati­on of compliance requiremen­ts and some unintended conflicts, too, which will get identified in due course,” he says. Kumar hopes the issues will get addressed through dialogues between industry and the government.

Experts say the present situation is likely to impact various monthly, quarterly, and annual compliance­s of companies from a regulatory as well as tax perspectiv­e. “All balance

sheet captions need to be carefully examined for its recoverabi­lity. For instance, receivable­s could be under stress or for that matter longlived assets may need to be tested for impairment as well,” says Sandip

Khetan, partner and national leader, financial accounting advisory services at EY India. Experts say goodwill accounted in the books of account as a result of acquisitio­ns is likely to be examined for impairment. “Going concern assumption of some of the industries will be under scrutiny,” says Kanabar.

Businesses are likely to face challenges in preparing financial reports, getting then audited, and communicat­ing the usefulness and relevance of the informatio­n, says Sai Venkateshw­aran, partner & head-cfo Advisory, KPMG in India.

Experts say there would be questions such as whether the financial report portrays fairly the financial position and performanc­e of the company. “This is particular­ly relevant because of the greater use of fair value in financial reports today, and the year-end fair value measuremen­ts may have been impacted significan­tly by the volatility in the markets,” says Venkateshw­aran.

Experts agree in a crisis, preparing and implementi­ng a business continuity plan is much more important. However, even while focusing on crucial factors important for continuity of business, clients are being advised to keep an eye on compliance­s, says Nangia.

The best way to beat uncertaint­y in financial numbers is to address this through enhanced disclosure­s, feels Vijay Kumar. Businesses need to explain better the impact of uncertaint­y, the basis of various assumption­s, and judgments in their financial statements, he adds.

Some experts are wary that in the post- Covid regulatory regime, the government may be under pressure to loosen efforts to nab compliance evaders or ensure the best corporate and tax practices. Vijay Kumar is more optimistic: “We might see ' less government and more governance' in substance for business activities”.

Venkateshw­aran feels regulators should take a balanced view towards monitoring and enforcemen­t with a lenient approach towards companies which have defaulted due to genuine hardships.

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