Phnom Penh HR

IFRS 8 – Operating Segments ( summary with examples )

IFRS 8 – Operating Segments

IFRS 8 requires entities to provide information about operating segments so that users can evaluate the nature and financial performance of an entity’s different business activities and the economic environments in which it operates.
It uses the “management approach”—segments are based on internal reports reviewed by the Chief Operating Decision Maker (CODM).


1. Definition and Key Concepts

Operating Segment

A component of an entity:

Example:
A company with three divisions:


Chief Operating Decision Maker (CODM)

The person or group responsible for allocating resources and assessing performance.
Examples: CEO, COO, or a management committee.


Reportable Segments

Operating segments must be reported if they meet any of the quantitative thresholds:

Example:
Segments revenue:



2. Required Disclosures for Reportable Segments

General Information


Information About Profit or Loss

Entities must disclose for each reportable segment:

Example:
Segment: Electronics


Segment Assets and Liabilities

Only required if reviewed by CODM.

Example:
If the CEO reviews assets for each segment but not liabilities → only asset disclosure is required.



3. Measurement Principles

Basis of Segmentation

Amounts reported must follow the same accounting policies used in internal management reports—may differ from IFRS amounts.

Example:
Management uses cash basis for internal reporting → segment results follow this, with reconciliation shown later.


Reconciliations Required

Reconcile segment totals to entity totals:

Example:
Total segment profit: $12m
Adjustments (IFRS-based): –$2m
→ Entity profit = $10m (reconciled and disclosed)



4. Entity-wide Disclosures

Required even if only one reportable segment exists.

Products and Services

Revenue by major product lines.

Geographical Areas

Example:
Revenue:

→ Must be disclosed regardless of segment structure.


Major Customers

If revenues from a single customer ≥ 10% of total revenue → disclose.

Example:
Company A earns $100m total revenue.
Customer X contributes $15m → significant; must disclose (but not name the customer).



5. Practical Example – Segment Reporting Summary

A manufacturing group has 3 operating segments:

  1. Food

  2. Beverages

  3. Packaging

CODM reviews profit and assets by segment.
Revenue (external):

Reportable segments:

Disclose separately:

Exit mobile version