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IAS 1-Presentation of Financial Statements ( summary with examples )

Objective

IAS 1 sets out the overall requirements for the presentation of financial statements, ensuring comparability, transparency, and fair presentation across periods and between entities.


1. Purpose of Financial Statements

The purpose is to provide information about:

That information helps users (investors, creditors, regulators, etc.) make economic decisions.


2. Components of Financial Statements

IAS 1 requires a complete set of financial statements to include:

  1. Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet)

  2. Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income (OCI)

  3. Statement of Changes in Equity

  4. Statement of Cash Flows (IAS 7)

  5. Notes (summary of significant accounting policies and explanatory information)

  6. Comparative information for the preceding period


🧾 Example – Components

A manufacturing company’s financial report for 2024 includes:


3. Fair Presentation and Compliance

Financial statements must:

Any departure from IFRS is permitted only in extremely rare cases to achieve fair presentation.


4. Going Concern

An entity must prepare financial statements on a going concern basis, unless management intends to liquidate or cease trading.

Example

If a company loses its major customer but secures a new investor, it is still a going concern.
But if it plans to close within 6 months, statements must be prepared on a liquidation basis.


5. Accrual Basis of Accounting

All financial statements (except cash flow statement) must be prepared using the accrual basis, i.e., transactions are recognized when they occur, not when cash is received or paid.

Example

A company delivers goods in December 2024 but receives payment in January 2025.
→ Revenue is recognized in 2024, not in 2025.


6. Consistency of Presentation

Presentation and classification should be consistent year-to-year unless:


7. Materiality and Aggregation

Example

If “Office Supplies” = $100 and “Advertising Expense” = $10,000, you can combine both as Administrative Expenses since the smaller item is immaterial.


8. Current vs Non-current Classification

Assets and liabilities must be presented as current or non-current.

Category Definition Example
Current Assets Expected to be realized within 12 months Inventory, trade receivables
Non-current Assets Expected to be used >12 months Property, Plant & Equipment
Current Liabilities Payable within 12 months Trade payables, short-term loans
Non-current Liabilities Payable after 12 months Long-term debt, pension obligations

9. Structure and Content of the Statements

(a) Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet)

Minimum line items:

Example:

Assets $ Liabilities & Equity $
Cash 10,000 Trade Payables 5,000
Inventory 15,000 Loan Payable 10,000
PPE 25,000 Equity 35,000
Total 50,000 Total 50,000

(b) Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income

Can be presented as:

  1. Single Statement (profit + OCI together), or

  2. Two Statements (profit/loss separate from OCI)

Example:

Item $
Revenue 100,000
Cost of Sales (60,000)
Gross Profit 40,000
Operating Expenses (15,000)
Profit Before Tax 25,000
Tax Expense (5,000)
Profit for the Year 20,000
Other Comprehensive Income (gain on revaluation) 2,000
Total Comprehensive Income 22,000

(c) Statement of Changes in Equity

Shows:

Example:

Particulars Share Capital Retained Earnings Total
Opening balance 50,000 20,000 70,000
Profit for the year 10,000 10,000
Dividend (5,000) (5,000)
Closing balance 50,000 25,000 75,000

(d) Notes


10. Comparative Information

Show corresponding amounts from the previous period for all statements and notes, unless a standard permits otherwise.


Key Summary Table

Topic Requirement
Objective Fair presentation and comparability
Components 5 main statements + notes
Basis Accrual and going concern
Classification Current vs non-current
Comparative info Required
Offsetting Not allowed unless IFRS permits
Consistency Same presentation unless justified change

Example in Practice

ABC Ltd prepares IFRS financial statements for the year ended 31 Dec 2024.
It uses the accrual basis, presents assets and liabilities as current/non-current, and includes a Statement of Profit or Loss and OCI and Notes.
When it changes depreciation method in 2025, it discloses and restates prior-year comparatives as required by IAS 8.

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