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requirements in IFRS 9, IAS 39, IFRS 7, IFRS 4 and IFRS 16 relating to: • changes in the basis for determining contractual cash flows of financial assets, financial liabilities and lease liabilities;
IFRS 9 must be applied to contracts to buy or sell a non-financial item that can be settled net in cash or another financial instrument, or by exchanging financial instruments, as if those contracts were financial instruments, with one exception.
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments issued on 24 July 2014 is the IASB's replacement of IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement. The Standard includes requirements for recognition and measurement, impairment, derecognition and general hedge accounting.
IFRS 9 is effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2018 with early application permitted. IFRS 9 specifies how an entity should classify and measure financial assets, financial liabilities, and some contracts to buy or sell non-financial items.
IFRS 9 replaces the rules based model in IAS 39 with an approach which bases classification and measurement on the business model of an entity, and on the cash flows associated with each financial asset. This has resulted in: i. Elimination of the ‘held to maturity’, ‘loans and receivables’ and ‘available-for-sale’ categories ...
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments. Objective. The objective of this Standard is to establish principles for the financial reporting of financial assets and financial liabilities that will present relevant and useful information to users of financial statements for their assessment of the amounts, timing and uncertainty of an entity’s future cash flows.
IFRS 9 introduces a single classification and measurement model for financial assets, dependent on both: The entity’s business model objective for managing financial assets. The contractual cash flow characteristics of financial assets.