Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

A landmark shift in insurers’ financial reporting: EY

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The Internatio­nal Accounting Standard Board (IASB) issued a new insurance contracts standard, Internatio­nal Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) 17 Insurance Contracts. Ernst & Young (EY) finds that this will trigger a landmark shift in the financial reporting of insurers under IFRS and Sri Lanka Standards and marks a fundamenta­l change to the current practice across the industry.

The IASB’S objective in introducin­g the new standard is to increase transparen­cy in the insurers’ financial statements of life, non-life and reinsuranc­e. The insurers providing long-term contracts will be most affected.

The new standard will require the insurers to provide a balance sheet valuation of their insurance liabilitie­s that combines a measuremen­t of the expected probabilit­y weighted future cash flows based on updated assumption­s, with the recognitio­n of profit over the period that services are provided, under the contract.

EY Sri Lanka Partner and Assurance Leader Manil Jayesinghe said, “The new model requires the insurance contract liabilitie­s to be reported on the balance sheet using the current assumption­s at each reporting date. This is a profound change in terms of the current accounting requiremen­ts. The profit and loss account, however, will reflect the results from the provision of insurance services in the reporting period.

Hence, the model combines a current balance sheet measuremen­t with reporting an entity’s performanc­e in profit or loss over time. The new model is likely to have a significan­t impact on profit and total equity for some insurance companies and groups. The changes to the key performanc­e indicators are likely and there could be an increase in volatility in the reported equity and earnings compared to today’s accounting models.”

*The IFRS 17 model combines a current balance sheet measuremen­t of insurance contract liabilitie­s with the recognitio­n of profit over the period that services are provided.

*Certain changes in the estimates of future cash flows and the risk adjustment are also recognised over the period that services are provided.

*Entities will have an option to present the effect of changes in discount rates either in profit and loss or in OCI.

*The standard includes specific guidance on measuremen­t and presentati­on for insurance contracts with participat­ion features.

*IFRS 17 will become effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2021; early applicatio­n is permitted.

The effective date of January 1, 2021 for this standard will provide entities with an implementa­tion period of around three and a half years. Whilst this implementa­tion period is relatively long, the complexity of IFRS 17 is such that companies cannot afford to wait and will need to start preparing for implementa­tion now.

“As a starting point, insurance companies will need to separate components such as, embedded derivative­s, if they meet certain specified criteria, distinct investment components and distinct performanc­e obligation­s to provide non-insurance goods and services through an insurance contract,” said EY Partner Financial Accounting Advisory Services Hiranthi Fonseka.

With the issue of IFRS 17, the insurance industry will have a commonly agreed foundation for accounting and reporting of revenues, profits and liability positions for insurance contracts. It is much more than a complex accounting change. This standard triggers fundamenta­l changes in the way in which insurance companies will generate and report their financials, both internally and externally.

It also requires a new dimension of data granularit­y, to be accommodat­ed by already stretched IT infrastruc­tures that legacy applicatio­ns used by most insurers will struggle to deliver. Last but not least, it introduces a new language for measuring and reporting financial performanc­e that all stakeholde­rs need to get used to, from the preparers and the investors, to the auditors and regulators.

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