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IAS 28 – Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures ( summary with examples )

Objective

IAS 28 prescribes the accounting for investments in associates and joint ventures using the equity method, ensuring the investor’s financial statements reflect their share of profit or loss and other comprehensive income of these investments.


🧾 1. Scope

  • Associates: Entities over which the investor has significant influence, but not control or joint control.

  • Joint Ventures: Joint arrangements where parties have joint control and rights to net assets (as opposed to joint operations, which follow proportional consolidation).

Significant influence is generally presumed if the investor holds 20% to 50% of voting power, unless evidence shows otherwise.


💡 2. Key Definitions

Term Meaning
Associate An entity over which the investor has significant influence.
Joint Venture A joint arrangement whereby parties with joint control have rights to the net assets of the arrangement.
Equity Method Accounting method where the investment is initially recognized at cost and adjusted for investor’s share of post-acquisition profits/losses and other comprehensive income.

⚙️ 3. Accounting Using the Equity Method

Initial Recognition

  • Investment is recognized at cost.

  • Include transaction costs directly attributable to acquisition.

Journal Example:

Dr Investment in Associate 500,000
  Cr Cash/Bank 500,000

Subsequent Measurement

  • Increase investment for share of profit

  • Decrease investment for share of losses and dividends received

Equity Method Formula:

Investment Carrying Amount=Cost+Share of Post-Acquisition Profits/LossesDividends Received


📊 4. Example 1 – Associate Profit Share

Scenario:

  • Investor holds 30% in Associate A

  • Associate A reports net profit = $200,000

  • Dividend paid by Associate = $50,000

Calculation:

  • Share of profit = 30% × $200,000 = $60,000

  • Dividend received = 30% × $50,000 = $15,000

Journal Entries:

  1. Record share of profit:

Dr Investment in Associate 60,000
  Cr Share of Profit of Associate 60,000
  1. Record dividend received:

Dr Cash 15,000
  Cr Investment in Associate 15,000

Carrying amount of investment increases by net $45,000 ($60k – $15k).


🔄 5. Impairment

  • If investment’s recoverable amount falls below carrying amount → recognize impairment loss (IAS 36 rules apply).

  • Impairment loss cannot be reversed if using the equity method, except if recoverable amount increases later.


🧩 6. Joint Ventures

  • Accounted for using the equity method in the investor’s financial statements.

  • Similar to associates, the investor recognizes share of profit or loss and dividends received.

Example 2 – Joint Venture

  • Investor owns 40% of Joint Venture B

  • Net profit JV B = $100,000

  • Dividend = $20,000

Journal Entries:

Dr Investment in JV 40,000 (40% × 100,000)
  Cr Share of Profit of JV 40,000
Dr Cash 8,000 (40% × 20,000)
  Cr Investment in JV 8,000

🔀 7. Losses Beyond Investment

  • If share of losses exceeds carrying amount, investment is reduced to zero.

  • Investor discontinues recognition of further losses unless they have legal or constructive obligation to fund the associate/joint venture.

Example 3:

  • Investment carrying amount = $50,000

  • Share of loss = $60,000 → investment = $0

  • Remaining $10,000 loss not recognized unless obligation exists.


📈 8. Special Adjustments

  1. Fair Value Adjustments: Only if investment is measured at fair value under IFRS 9 for financial instruments (optional for listed associates).

  2. Acquisition of additional interest: Adjust carrying amount; no remeasurement of previously held interest.

  3. Disposal of interest: Recognize gain or loss in profit or loss.

Example 4 – Disposal:

  • Investment carrying amount = $200,000

  • Sold 50% for $120,000

  • Gain = $120,000 – $100,000 (50% of carrying amount) = $20,000

Dr Cash 120,000
  Cr Investment in Associate 100,000
 
Cr Gain on Disposal 20,000

🧾 9. Disclosure Requirements

Entities must disclose:

  • Name and nature of significant associates/joint ventures

  • Percentage of ownership interest

  • Summarized financial information (assets, liabilities, revenue, profit)

  • Nature and extent of restrictions on ability to transfer funds (e.g., dividends)

  • Reconciliation of carrying amounts at start and end of period


🧩 10. Summary Table

Item Treatment Example
Associate Equity method 30% interest, share of profit recognized
Joint Venture Equity method 40% ownership, share of net profit
Dividends received Reduce carrying amount $15,000 dividend reduces investment
Excess losses Reduce to zero, no further recognition Investment $50k, share of loss $60k → investment $0
Disposal Recognize gain/loss Sell part of investment → gain/loss in P/L

🎯 11. Key Points

  • Significant influence ≈ 20–50% voting power

  • Equity method = recognize share of profit/loss + dividends received

  • Losses beyond carrying amount → stop recognizing unless obligated

  • Joint ventures also use equity method

  • Disclosure required for transparency

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