Modul 6 Full Disclosure in Financial Reporting2 PDF
Modul 6 Full Disclosure in Financial Reporting2 PDF
Modul 6 Full Disclosure in Financial Reporting2 PDF
Financial Accounting
Full Disclosure in
Financial Reporting
By
MUH. ARIEF EFFENDI,SE,MSI,AK,QIA
Requires that statements and their notes present all information that
is relevant to the users’ understanding .
Objectives of Financial Reporting
Investors
Profit-oriented Relevant Creditors
companies Employees
Labor unions
Not-for-profit Customers
Entities Suppliers
Financial
Information Government
Households agencies
Financial
intermediaries
Relevant of Financial Information
Market share
Capital expenditures
Market growth
Earnings
Cash flow by business segment
Competitive landscape
Revenue by product type
Relevant of Significant Informations
Quality of management
Regulatory environment
Customer churn rate
Pricing strategy
Growth strategy
Significant operating costs by category
Sales and marketing strategy
Number of customers by type
Cost per gross additional customer
Strategic alliances
Research & development activities
Breadth of product offerings
Brand equity
Supply of Financial Information
Type of Disclosures:
Mandatory Disclosures: accounting policies, critical
considerations
The following are disclosure costs :
Information production cost.
Competitive disadvantage.
Litigation exposure.
Political exposure..
What are the suppliers’ disclosure
incentives?
Criterion Thresholds
Segment revenue Is more than ten percent of the
combined revenue of all
operating segments
Segment profit or loss Is ten percent or more of the
greater of: the combined profit
of all operating segments not
showing a loss, or the combined
loss of all operating segments
reporting a loss
Ten percent or more of the
Identifiable assets combined assets of all operating
segments
Required Segmented Information
Arens (2005) :
Fraudulent financial reporting (FFR) is an intentional misstatement or omission
of amounts or disclosure with the intent to deceive users.
Most cases of FFR involve the intentional misstatement of amounts not disclosures.
For example, Worldcom is reported to have capitalized as fixed asset, billions
dollars that should have been expensed.
Omission of amounts are less common, but a company can overstate income by
omitting account payable and other liabilities. Although less frequent, several
notable cases of FFR involved adequate disclosure.
For example, a central issue in the Enron case was whether the company had
adequately disclosed obligations to
affiliates known as specialm purpose entities.
Fraudulent Financial Reporting (FFR) :
Definition