Taxation Determination

TD 2013/21

Income tax: can a consolidated special purpose financial report of a head company of a tax consolidated group satisfy clause 1.1 of Schedule 2 to the Income Tax Assessment Regulations 1997 where transactions within the same category are translated using inconsistent methodologies?

  • Please note that the PDF version is the authorised version of this ruling.
    There is a Compendium for this document: TD 2013/21EC .

Preamble

This publication provides you with the following level of protection:

This publication (excluding appendixes) is a public ruling for the purposes of the Taxation Administration Act 1953.

A public ruling is an expression of the Commissioner's opinion about the way in which a relevant provision applies, or would apply, to entities generally or to a class of entities in relation to a particular scheme or a class of schemes.

If you rely on this ruling, the Commissioner must apply the law to you in the way set out in the ruling (unless the Commissioner is satisfied that the ruling is incorrect and disadvantages you, in which case the law may be applied to you in a way that is more favourable for you - provided the Commissioner is not prevented from doing so by a time limit imposed by the law). You will be protected from having to pay any underpaid tax, penalty or interest in respect of the matters covered by this ruling if it turns out that it does not correctly state how the relevant provision applies to you.

Ruling

1. No.

Example: Consolidated financial report prepared by a tax consolidated group

2. Gyro Pty Ltd is the head company of a tax consolidated group and is required to prepare a financial report under the Corporations Act 2001 (Corporations Act). It has two wholly owned subsidiaries (Spyro Pty Ltd and Tyro Pty Ltd) that are the only subsidiary members of the tax consolidated group. Both Spyro Pty Ltd and Tyro Pty Ltd prepare special purpose financial statements.

3. Spyro Pty Ltd translates each of its foreign currency denominated transactions occurring in the current month at the spot exchange rate at the time of the transaction. By contrast, Tyro Pty Ltd translates each of its foreign currency denominated transactions occurring in the current month at the spot exchange rate at the end of the previous month. Gyro Pty Ltd prepares special purpose financial statements that encompass financial information of itself as the parent entity and its subsidiaries. The relevant foreign currency denominated transactions entered into by Tyro Pty Ltd and Spyro Pty Ltd are material both individually and in aggregate.

4. The consolidated special purpose financial statements prepared by Gyro Pty Ltd do not apply relevant accounting policies consistently and therefore do not satisfy all of the requirements of clause 1.1 of Schedule 2 to the Income Tax Assessment Regulations 1997 (the Regulations).[1]

Date of effect

5. When the final Determination is issued, it is proposed to apply both before and after its date of issue. However, the Determination will not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of issue of the Determination (see paragraphs 75 to 77 of Taxation Ruling TR 2006/10).

Commissioner of Taxation
23 October 2013

Appendix 1 - Explanation

This Appendix is provided as information to help you understand how the Commissioner's view has been reached. It does not form part of the binding public ruling.

Special purpose financial statements

6. The Australian financial reporting framework broadly consists of two regimes. Entities that are required to prepare a financial report for the purposes of the Corporations Act must prepare either general purpose financial statements (GPFS)[2] or special purpose financial statements (SPFS).

7. In broad terms, the accounting standards each state that they apply, amongst other things, to GPFS[3], or financial statements that are, or held out, to be GPFS. This means that such financial statements comply with the International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted in Australia and any other reporting regime devised by the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB) for the preparation of GPFS.

8. Financial statements that do not follow all the accounting standards are generally prepared by non-reporting entities and are referred to as SPFS. Only a subset of the accounting standards has mandatory application in respect of these entities.[4]

Special translation rules

9. Subdivision 960-C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) requires that for income tax purposes, an amount in foreign currency to be translated into an Australian dollar amount. It sets out the basic rules for identifying the exchange rate to be used for this translation.

10. The objects of Subdivision 960-C of the ITAA 1997 are set out in section 960-49 of the ITAA 1997. One of those objects is stated in paragraph 960-49(b):

(b) to ensure that the rules for identifying the exchange rate for the translation of a foreign currency amount into Australian dollars:

(i)
reflect an appropriate prevailing exchange rate; and
(ii)
take into account, as appropriate, commercial practices for the translation of foreign currency amounts into Australian dollars.

11. The table in subsection 960-50(6) of the ITAA 1997 sets out special translation rules that specify the exchange rate to be used for particular amounts that are relevant to an entity's income tax liability. Items 1 to 11 of the table require amounts to be translated into Australian currency 'at the exchange rate applicable' at various times referred to in the item.

12. The general rules are modified by the Regulations.[5] Subregulation 960-50.01(1) of the Regulations modifies the table in subsection 960-50(6) of the ITAA 1997 by adding items 11A (exchange rate that is reasonable having regard to the circumstances) and 12.

13. Item 12 of the table provides that, as an alternative to the result mentioned in any of the items 1-11A of the table in subsection 960-50(6) of the ITAA 1997, the amount may be translated into Australian currency using any of the rules set out in Schedule 2 to the Regulations. The rules that apply for item 12 are contained in Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Regulations, which allows the translation of foreign currency amounts into Australian currency or an applicable functional currency using the rates used in preparation of an audited financial report, daily rates or average rates.

14. Clause 1.1 of Schedule 2 to the Regulations allows an entity to translate amounts using the exchange rate in its financial report provided that the financial report meets certain requirements. Clause 1.1 provides:

For item 12 of the table in subsection 960-50(6) of the Act, as modified, if:

(a)
a financial report (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) prepared by an entity:

(i)
complies with the accounting standards under the Corporations Act 2001; and
(ii)
translates amounts into Australian currency using particular exchange rates; and
(iii)
has been audited in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001; and

(b)
the entity, or another entity, wishes to translate an amount into Australian currency in accordance with that item, using the exchange rate used in that financial report to translate a corresponding amount;

the entity mentioned in paragraph (b) must translate all amounts into Australian currency using the exchange rates that were used in that financial report to translate corresponding amounts.

15. The purpose of the Regulations that modify the table in subsection 960-50(6) is to reduce taxpayers' compliance costs by allowing amounts in a foreign currency to be translated into Australian currency using rates of exchange other than those otherwise prescribed in the income tax law.[6]

Complies with the accounting standards

16. The first requirement for clause 1.1 to apply is that there is a 'financial report'. This takes its meaning from the Corporations Act and is defined (in section 9 of that Act) as 'an annual financial report or half year financial report prepared under Chapter 2M'. An annual financial report consists of financial statements, notes to the financial statements and the directors' declaration about the statements and notes.[7]

17. Some reports prepared under Chapter 2M of the Corporations Act may be specifically directed to not have to comply with some or all of the accounting standards[8] and still be a 'financial report'. However having a financial report is a necessary but not sufficient condition for the application of clause 1.1.

18. The financial report must be one that also 'complies with the accounting standards' as required by subparagraph 1.1(a)(i).

19. Whilst the regulation looks to the report, its focus is on compliance with the accounting standards, not on whether or not the report was prepared in accordance with the standards more generally.[9] In this sense, compliance is to be measured by reference to the accounting standards that apply to the entity.

20. Having regard to the application provisions of the accounting standards themselves, a non-reporting entity that is required to prepare financial reports under Chapter 2M of the Corporations Act must comply with the following accounting standards:

AASB 101 Presentation of Financial Statements
AASB 107 Statement of Cash Flows
AASB 108 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors
AASB 1031 Materiality
AASB 1048 Interpretation of Standards, and
AASB 1054 Australian Additional Disclosures.

21. Paragraph 13 of AASB 108 specifically deals with the consistency in the selection and application of an entity's accounting policies. Paragraph 13 provides:

An entity shall select and apply its accounting policies consistently for similar transactions, other events and conditions, unless an Australian Accounting Standard specifically requires or permits categorisation of items for which different policies may be appropriate. If an Australian Accounting Standard requires or permits such categorisation, an appropriate accounting policy shall be selected and applied consistently to each category.

22. An entity that applies one methodology to translate one set of foreign currency transactions and a different methodology to another set of transactions of the same kind in the preparation of its financial statements will not comply with AASB 108. For this reason, such a financial report does not comply with the accounting standards, for the purposes of subparagraph 1.1(a)(i).

23. In the case of a tax consolidated group, the effect of the single entity rule[10] is that a head company and its subsidiary members are taken for relevant purposes to be a single taxpayer. The subsidiary members of a group are taken to be part of the head company and the transactions of the subsidiary members are taken to have been undertaken by the head company. Where that head company prepares a consolidated SPFS having regard to the transactions of its subsidiaries, and adopts different translation methodologies for the same category of transactions, then this financial report will similarly not satisfy the requirements of AASB 108, and for this reason, cannot be said to comply with the accounting standards, for the purposes of subparagraph 1.1(a)(i).

24. A non-reporting entity that is required to prepare a financial report for Corporations Act purposes that applies a consistent methodology to the translation of foreign currency transactions of the same kind in its financial report, will comply with the accounting standards for the purposes of subparagraph 1.1(a)(i), provided the entity has complied with all of the accounting standards it is required to apply (these accounting standards are set out in paragraph 20). For a non-reporting entity, such reports will often be SPFS.

25. Except as described in paragraph 26, a non-reporting entity that is not required to and does not prepare a financial report for Corporations Act purposes is not within the ambit of subparagraph 1.1(a)(i). Such an entity can not be regarded as having complied with the accounting standards if the accounting standards do not in any way apply to that entity.

26. Nonetheless, if such an entity chooses to prepare a financial report within the meaning of the Corporations Act, the Commissioner accepts that it will be within the ambit of subparagraph 1.1(a)(i) if it at least complies with those accounting standards applied by non-reporting entities that are required to prepare financial reports for Corporations Act purposes. These standards are set out in paragraph 20 above.

27. There are also instances where a non-reporting entity that is not otherwise required to prepare a financial report for Corporations Act purposes may become required to do so under a shareholder or Australian Securities and Investments Commission direction.[11] Such directions may also specify which accounting standards (and to what extent) that report is to comply with. As such financial reports are therefore likely to contain a varying degree of compliance with accounting standards, they are not specifically addressed in this Determination.

© AUSTRALIAN TAXATION OFFICE FOR THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA

You are free to copy, adapt, modify, transmit and distribute this material as you wish (but not in any way that suggests the ATO or the Commonwealth endorses you or any of your services or products).

Footnotes

All legislative references are to Schedule 2 of the Regulations unless otherwise indicated.

General purpose financial statements consist of two Tiers of reporting requirements: Tier 1 (full International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted in Australia) and Tier 2 (Reduced Disclosure Requirements). See AASB 1053 Application of Tiers of Australian Accounting Standards.

There are some standards which contain other application criteria. For example, AASB 8 Operating Segments limits its application to for-profit entities and AASB 1004 Contributions limits its application to not-for-profit entities.

Non-reporting entities that are required to prepare financial reports under the Corporations Act are only compelled to apply a limited set of accounting standards (see paragraph 20 of this Determination).

See subsections 960-50(7) and 960-50(8) of the ITAA 1997.

See Explanatory Statement accompanying the Income Tax Assessment Amendment Regulations 2005 (No. 2).

Subsection 295(1) of the Corporations Act.

For example, see paragraph 293(3)(a) of the Corporations Act.

Compare TD 2013/D8

Section 701-1 of the ITAA 1997.

Sections 293, 294, 294A and 294B of the Corporations Act.

TD 2012/D12

References

ATO references:
NO 1-4HH8IDK

ISSN: 1038-8982

Related Rulings/Determinations:

TR 2006/10
TD 2013/D8

Subject References:
accounting standards
foreign currency
financial statements

Legislative References:
ITAA 1997 701-1
ITAA 1997 Subdiv 960-C
ITAA 1997 960-49
ITAA 1997 960-49(b)
ITAA 1997 960-50(6)
ITAA 1997 960-50(6) item 11A
ITAA 1997 960-50(6) item 12
ITAA 1997 960-50(7)
ITAA 1997 960-50(8)
ITAR 1997 Sch 2
ITAR 1997 Sch 2 Pt 1
ITAR 1997 Sch 2 1.1
ITAR 1997 Sch 2 1.1(a)(i)
Corporations Act 2001
Corporations Act 2001 9
Corporations Act 2001 Ch 2M
Corporations Act 2001 293
Corporations Act 2001 293(3)(a)
Corporations Act 2001 294
Corporations Act 2001 294A
Corporations Act 2001 294B
Corporations Act 2001 295(1)

Other References:
AASB 8 Operating Segments
AASB 101 Presentation of Financial Statements
AASB 107 Statement of Cash Flows
AASB 108 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors
AASB 1004 Contributions
AASB 1031 Materiality
AASB 1048 Interpretation of Standards
AASB 1053 Application of Tiers of Australian Accounting Standards
AASB 1054 Australian Additional Disclosures