New or Revised Financial Reporting Standards Part 2.: Intended Learning Outcomes (Ilos)

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MODULE 3

New or revised financial reporting standards Part 2.

Hi class and welcome to our Module 3: New or revised financial reporting standards Part 2.

For Module 3, we will discuss PFRS 17 – Insurance contracts.

As future CPAs, you need to understand the fair presentation of insurance contracts in financial reporting.

But first, we read our ILO’s.

Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs):

At the end of the topic, the students are expected to be able to:     

Psychomotor:

1. Articulate the nature, recognition, and presentation of PFRS 17 – Insurance contracts 

Affective:

2. Integrate the initial recognition of insurance liability;

Cognitive:                        

3. Solve the measurement of the insurance contract liability/asset.

3.1 IFRS 17 - Insurance contracts

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has published a new standard, IFRS 17 "Insurance contracts" and locally adopted as
PFRS 17.

PFRS 17 supersedes PFRS 4 'Insurance Contracts' and related interpretations and is effective for periods beginning on or after 1 January
2021, with earlier adoption permitted if both PFRS 15 'Revenue from Contracts with Customers' and PFRS 9 'Financial Instruments' has also
been applied.

*** Now it is January 1, 2022.

Objective

The objective of PFRS 17 is to ensure that an entity provides relevant information that faithfully represents those contracts. This information
gives a basis for users of financial statements to assess the effect that insurance contracts have on the entity's financial position, financial
performance, and cash flows. [PFRS 17:1]

Scope

An entity shall apply PFRS 17 Insurance Contracts to [PFRS 17:3]

1. Insurance contracts, including reinsurance contracts, it issues;


2. Reinsurance contracts it holds; and
3. Investment contracts with discretionary participation feature it issues, provided the entity also issues insurance contracts.

Some contracts meet the definition of an insurance contract but have as their primary purpose the provision of services for a fixed fee.

Such issued contracts are in the scope of the standard unless an entity chooses to apply to them PFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with
Customers and provided the following conditions are met: [PFRS 17:8]

1. the entity does not reflect an assessment of the risk associated with an individual customer in setting the price of the contract with
that customer;
2. the contract compensates the customer by providing a service, rather than by making cash payments to the customer; and
3. the insurance risk transferred by the contract arises primarily from the customer’s use of services rather than from uncertainty over
the cost of those services.

3.2 PFRS 17 Key definitions

Insurance contract - A contract under which one party (the issuer) accepts significant insurance risk from another party (the policyholder) by
agreeing to compensate the policyholder if a specified uncertain future event (the insured event) adversely affects the policyholder.

Portfolio of insurance contracts - Insurance contracts subject to similar risks and managed together.

Contractual service margin - A component of the carrying amount of the asset or liability for a group of insurance contracts representing the
unearned profit the entity will recognize as it provides services under the insurance contracts in the group.

Insurance risk - Risk, other than financial risk, transferred from the holders of a contract to the issuer.

Fulfillment cash flows - An explicit, unbiased, and probability-weighted estimate (i.e. expected value) of the present value of the future cash
outflows less the present value of the future cash inflows that will arise as the entity fulfills insurance contracts, including a risk adjustment for
non-financial risk.

Risk adjustment for non-financial risk - The compensation an entity requires for bearing the uncertainty about the amount and timing of the
cash flows arising from non-financial risk as the entity fulfills insurance contracts.

3.3 Separating components from an insurance contract

An insurance contract may contain one or more components that would be within the scope of another standard if they were separate
contracts. For example, an insurance contract may include an investment component or a service component (or both). [PFRS 17:10]

The standard provides the criteria to determine when a non-insurance component is distinct from the host insurance contract.

An entity shall: [PFRS 17:11-12]

1. Apply PFRS 9 Financial Instruments to determine whether there is an embedded derivative to be separated and, if there is, how to
account for such a derivative.
2. Separate from a host insurance contract an investment component if, and only if, that investment component is distinct. The entity
shall apply PFRS 9 to account for the separated investment component.

After performing the above steps, separate any promises to transfer distinct non-insurance goods or services. Such promises are accounted
for under PFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers.

3.4 Level of aggregation

PFRS 17 requires entities to identify portfolios of insurance contracts, which comprises contracts that are subject to similar risks and managed
together. Contracts within a product line would be expected to have similar risks and hence would be expected to be in the same portfolio if
they are managed together. [PFRS 17:14]

Each portfolio of insurance contracts issued shall be divided into a minimum of [PFRS 17:16]

1. A group of contracts that are onerous at initial recognition, if any;


2. A group of contracts that at initial recognition have no significant possibility of becoming onerous subsequently, if any;
3. and A group of the remaining contracts in the portfolio, if any.

An entity is not permitted to include contracts issued more than one year apart in the same group. [PFRS 17:22]
If contracts within a portfolio would fall into different groups only because law or regulation specifically constrains the entity's practical ability to
set a different price or level of benefits for policyholders with different characteristics, the entity may include those contracts in the same group.
[PFRS 17:20]

3.5 Recognition

An entity shall recognize a group of insurance contracts it issues from the earliest of the following: [PFRS 17:25]

1. the beginning of the coverage period of the group of contracts;


2. the date when the first payment from a policyholder in the group becomes due; and
3. for a group of onerous contracts, when the group becomes onerous.

3.6 Measurement

On initial recognition, an entity shall measure a group of insurance contracts at the total of [PFRS 17:32]

1. the fulfillment cash flows (“FCF”), which comprises of estimates of future cash flows; an adjustment to reflect the time value of money
(“TVM”) and the financial risks associated with the future cash flows; and a risk adjustment for non-financial risk
2. the contractual service margin (“CSM”).

An entity shall include all the future cash flows within the boundary of each contract in the group. The entity may estimate the future cash flows
at a higher level of aggregation and then allocate the resulting fulfillment cash flows to individual groups of contracts. [PFRS 17:33]

The estimates of future cash flows shall be current, explicit, unbiased, and reflect all the information available to the entity without undue cost
and effort about the amount, timing, and uncertainty of those future cash flows. They should reflect the perspective of the entity, provided that
the estimates of any relevant market variables are consistent with observable market prices. [PFRS 17:33]

3.7 Discount rates

The discount rates applied to the estimate of cash flows shall: [PFRS 17:36]

1. reflect the time value of money (TVM), the characteristics of the cash flows and the liquidity characteristics of the insurance
contracts;
2. be consistent with observable current market prices (if any) of those financial instruments whose cash flow characteristics are
consistent with those of the insurance contracts; and
3. exclude the effect of factors that influence such observable market prices but do not affect the future cash flows of the insurance
contracts.

Risk adjustment for non-financial risk

The estimate of the present value of the future cash flows is adjusted to reflect the compensation that the entity requires for bearing the
uncertainty about the amount and timing of future cash flows that arise from non-financial risk. [PFRS 17:37]

3.8 Contractual service margin (CSM)

The CSM represents the unearned profit of the group of insurance contracts that the entity will recognize as it provides services in the future.
This is measured on initial recognition of a group of insurance contracts at an amount that, unless the group of contracts is onerous, results in
no income or expenses arising from [PFRS 17:38]

1. the initial recognition of an amount for the FCF;


2. the derecognition at that date of any asset or liability recognized for insurance acquisition cash flows; and
3. any cash flows arising from the contracts in the group on that date.

3.9 Subsequent measurement

On subsequent measurement, the carrying amount of a group of insurance contracts at the end of each reporting period shall be the sum of
[PFRS 17:40]

1. the liability for remaining coverage comprising: (a) the FCF related to future services and (b) the CSM of the group at that date;
2. the liability for incurred claims, comprising the FCF related to past service allocated to the group at that date.
3.10 Onerous contracts

An insurance contract is onerous at initial recognition if the total of the FCF, any previously recognized acquisition cash flows, and any cash
flows arising from the contract at that date is a net outflow.

An entity shall recognize a loss in profit or loss for the net outflow, resulting in the carrying amount of the liability for the group being equal to
the FCF and the CSM of the group being zero. [PFRS 17:47]

On subsequent measurement, if a group of insurance contracts becomes onerous (or more onerous), that excess shall be recognized in profit
or loss. Additionally, the CSM cannot increase and no revenue can be recognized until the onerous amount previously recognized has been
reversed in profit or loss as part of a service expense. [PFRS 17:48-49]

3.11 Presentation in the statement of financial position

Derecognition

An entity shall derecognize an insurance contract when it is extinguished, or if any of the conditions of a substantive modification of an
insurance contract are met. [PFRS 17:74]

Presentation in the statement of financial position

An entity shall present separately in the statement of financial position the carrying amount of groups of [PFRS 17:78]

1. insurance contracts issued that are assets;


2. insurance contracts issued that are liabilities;
3. reinsurance contracts held that are assets; and
4. reinsurance contracts held that are liabilities.

3.12 Presentation in the statement of financial performance

Recognition and presentation in the statement(s) of financial performance

An entity shall disaggregate the amounts recognized in the statement(s) of financial performance into [PFRS 17:80]

1. an insurance service result, comprising insurance revenue and insurance service expenses; and
2. insurance finance income or expenses.

Income or expenses from reinsurance contracts held shall be presented separately from the expenses or income from insurance contracts
issued. [PFRS 17:82]

Insurance service result

An entity shall present in profit or loss revenue arising from the groups of insurance contracts issued, and insurance service expenses arising
from a group of insurance contracts it issues, comprising incurred claims and other incurred insurance service expenses. Revenue and
insurance service expenses shall exclude any investment components. An entity shall not present premiums in the profit or loss if that
information is inconsistent with the revenue presented. [IFRS 17:83-85]

Insurance finance income or expenses

Insurance finance income or expenses comprises the change in the carrying amount of the group of insurance contracts arising from: [IFRS
17:87]

1. the effect of the time value of money and changes in the time value of money; and
2. the effect of changes in assumptions that relate to financial risk; but
3. (c) excluding any such changes for groups of insurance contracts with direct participating insurance contracts that would instead
adjust the CSM.

An entity has an accounting policy choice between including all of insurance finance income or expense for the period in profit or loss or
disaggregating it between an amount presented in profit or loss and an amount presented in other comprehensive income (“OCI”). [IFRS
17:88-90]

3.13 Premium paid at the beginning of the contract


Here are the journal entries when the premium is paid and allocated at the beginning of the insurance contract.

On September 1, 2020, the entity received P1,200,000 cash premiums.     

Paid Insurance acquisition cash flows of           P180,000.     

The entity expected premium receipts allocated to coverage of 4 periods.  

3.14 Premium paid the end of the contract

Here are the journal entries when the premium is paid and allocated at the end of the insurance contract.                                            

On September 1, 2020, the entity paid Insurance acquisition cash flows of            P180,000.     

The entity expected premium receipts allocated to coverage of 4 periods.  

The entity will receive a premium of P1,200,000 at the end of the insurance contract.     

Reminder: Insurance contract asset is used when the premium is paid the end of the contract or every period.

3.15 Insurance contract

The Insurance contract (asset) / liability is the sum of the present value of estimated future cash flows, risk adjustment for non-financial risk,
and contractual service margin.

Insurance contract liability occurs if CSM is greater than FCF while an insurance contract asset transpires when CSM is lesser than FCF.

Here is the equation:


3.16 Insurance contract (asset) / liability

Let us apply the concepts by solving the illustrative problem:

3.17 Summary

1. The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has published a new standard, IFRS 17 'Insurance contracts' and locally
adopted as PFRS 17.
2. The new standard requires insurance liabilities to be measured at a current fulfillment value and provides a more uniform
measurement and presentation approach for all insurance contracts.
3. These requirements are designed to achieve the goal of a consistent, principle-based accounting for insurance contracts.
4. PFRS 17 supersedes PFRS 4 'Insurance Contracts' and related interpretations and is effective for periods beginning on or after 1
January 2021, with earlier adoption permitted if both PFRS 15 'Revenue from Contracts with Customers' and PFRS 9 'Financial
Instruments' has also been applied.

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