08.31.2012

Hedge Accounting Vexes Buy Side

08.31.2012
Terry Flanagan

Accounting for derivatives transactions is a vital component of hedging strategy, yet many companies find the compilation of the vast documentation necessary to justify accounting treatment a daunting task.

“When organizations elect to comply with hedge accounting standards, one of the most important considerations is documentation,” said Gurpreet Banwait, senior product manager of web systems at Fincad, a financial analytics provider. “Given its importance, many companies find putting together adequate documentation to be their biggest challenge. It is important that formal documentation is in place to support the hedge relationship.”

Accounting for derivative financial instruments under the International Accounting Standards is covered by IAS39 (Financial Instrument: Recognition and Measurement).

IAS39 requires that all derivatives are marked to market, with changes in the mark-to-market being taken to the profit and loss account.

For many entities, this would result in a significant amount of profit and loss volatility arising from the use of derivatives.

An entity can mitigate the profit and loss effect arising from derivatives used for hedging, through the process of hedge accounting.

“Genuine derivatives transactions may at times increase earnings volatility as they are marked to market at each reporting date without necessarily being referenced to the underlying transaction being hedged,” said Neville Dumasia, advisory partner and risk leader at accountancy firm Ernst & Young. “This challenge can be addressed by adopting the principles of hedge accounting.”

To achieve the benefits of hedge accounting, however, requires a large amount of compliance work involving documenting the hedge relationship, and both prospectively and retrospectively proving that the hedge relationship is effective.

“Solutions do exist that can simplify some or all of the processes required for compliance,” Banwait at Fincad said. “Although new accounting standards may make complying with hedge accounting standards even easier, the requirement for adequate and detailed documentation will not go away.”

The issue of hedge accounting has also figured prominently in the Greek debt crisis.

In July, the European Securities and Markets Authority (Esma), the pan-European regulator, issued a comment letter to the International Financial Reporting Standards’ (IFRS) Interpretations Committee regarding its decision to deny Esma’s previous request to clarify the accounting for different aspects of restructuring Greek government bonds under IAS 39.

“Esma does not agree with the committee’s conclusion not to add the subject to its active agenda nor to recommend the board to perform further work,” according to the comment letter.

In April, Esma had submitted a request to the IFRS Interpretations Committee, asking to clarify the accounting of the exposure to Greek sovereign debt, arguing that IAS 39 does not offer enough guidance in this respect.

“European enforcers of IFRS note varying accounting practices for debt restructurings by lenders due to the lack of clear guidance which leads in turn to decreased comparability between financial statements,” Esma said in April.

There are three basic requirements that must be satisfied in order for hedge accounting to be applied to any eligible hedge relationship, according to Banwait.

First, formal documentation of the hedge relationship should exist at the time of designation (inception of the hedge).

Second, at inception and each period thereafter, an entity must demonstrate that the relationship is expected to be highly effective on a go-forward basis (prospectively) and has actually been effective since the date of designation (retrospectively).

Third, during each period an entity must recognize any ineffectiveness in profit or loss.

Pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments and other institutional asset owners are sitting on vast troves of data -- but extracting value from that data is more challenging than ever.

#AssetOwners #DataQuality

Technology costs in asset management have grown disproportionately, but McKinsey research finds the increased spending hasn’t consistently translated into higher productivity.
#AI #Fiance

We're in the FINAL WEEK for the European Women in Finance Awards nominations – don't miss your chance to spotlight the incredible women driving change in finance!
#WomenInFinance #FinanceAwards #FinanceCommunity #EuropeanFinance @WomeninFinanceM

ICYMI: @marketsmedia sat down with EDXM CEO Tony Acuña-Rohter to discuss the launch of EDXM International’s perpetual futures platform in Singapore and what it means for institutional crypto trading.
Read the full interview: https://bit.ly/45xRUWh

Load More

Related articles

  1. This makes a traditionally hard-to-access market available to crypto-native investors and institutions.

  2. UK Launches Asset Management Review

    They will create 1,800 jobs across London, Edinburgh, Belfast and Manchester.

  3. From The Markets

    U.S. ETF Assets Reach Record

    Year-to-date net inflows of $798.77bn are an all-time high.

  4. The ETF gives exposure to euro sovereigns through a climate transition-focused investment strategy.

  5. Pool tokens allow a range of already tokenised assets to be put together into a new token.

We're Enhancing Your Experience with Smart Technology

We've updated our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy to introduce AI tools that will personalize your content, improve our market analysis, and deliver more relevant insights.These changes take effect on Aug 25, 2025.
Your data remains protected—we're simply using smart technology to serve you better. [Review Full Terms] | [Review Privacy Policy] By continuing to use our services after Aug 25, 2025, you agree to these updates.

Close the CTA