{"id":"F2015L01536","name":"AASB 12 - Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities - August 2015","slug":"aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015","collection":"legislative_instrument","jurisdiction":"commonwealth","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":173087,"registerId":"commonwealth-F2015L01536-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"AASB 12 - Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities - August 2015","content":"---\nmeta-content-style-type: text/css\nmeta-content-type: application/xhtml+xml; charset=utf-8\nmeta-generator: Aspose.Words for .NET 20.2\ntitle: Compiled AASB 12 (Mar 2020)\n---\n\n?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"utf-8\" standalone=\"no\"?>\n\n- Compiled AASB Standard AASB 12\n\n\nDisclosure of Interests in Other Entities\n\n \n\nThis compiled Standard applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 July 2021.  Earlier application is permitted for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2017 but before 1 July 2021.  It incorporates relevant amendments made up to and including 6 March 2020.\n\nPrepared on 21 July 2021 by the staff of the Australian Accounting Standards Board.\n\nCompilation no. 3\n\nCompilation date:  30 June 2021\n\n![AASB logo with Australian crest and text identifying the Australian Government and the Australian Accounting Standards Board.](image.001.png)\n\nObtaining copies of Accounting Standards\n\nCompiled versions of Standards, original Standards and amending Standards (see Compilation Details) are available on the AASB website: www.aasb.gov.au.\n\nAustralian Accounting Standards Board\n\nPO Box 204\n\nCollins Street West\n\nVictoria   8007\n\nAUSTRALIA\n\nPhone: (03) 9617 7600\n\nE-mail: standard@aasb.gov.au\n\nWebsite: www.aasb.gov.au\n\nOther enquiries\n\nPhone: (03) 9617 7600\n\nE-mail: standard@aasb.gov.au\n\nCOPYRIGHT\n\n© Commonwealth of Australia 2021\n\nThis compiled AASB Standard contains IFRS Foundation copyright material.  Reproduction within Australia in unaltered form (retaining this notice) is permitted for personal and non-commercial use subject to the inclusion of an acknowledgment of the source.  Requests and enquiries concerning reproduction and rights for commercial purposes within Australia should be addressed to The National Director, Australian Accounting Standards Board, PO Box 204, Collins Street West, Victoria 8007.\n\nAll existing rights in this material are reserved outside Australia.  Reproduction outside Australia in unaltered form (retaining this notice) is permitted for personal and non-commercial use only.  Further information and requests for authorisation to reproduce for commercial purposes outside Australia should be addressed to the IFRS Foundation at www.ifrs.org.\n\nContents\n\nCOMPARISON WITH IFRS 12\n\nACCOUNTING STANDARD\n\nAASB 12 DISCLOSURE OF INTERESTS IN OTHER ENTITIES\n\nfrom paragraph\n\nObjective 1\n\nMeeting the objective 2\n\nScope 5\n\nSignificant judgements and assumptions 7\n\nInvestment entity status 9A\n\nInterests in subsidiaries 10\n\nThe interest that non-controlling interests have in the group’s activities and cash flows 12\n\nThe nature and extent of significant restrictions 13\n\nNature of the risks associated with an entity’s interests in consolidated structured entities 14\n\nConsequences of changes in a parent’s ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result in a loss of control18\n\nConsequences of losing control of a subsidiary during the reporting period 19\n\nInterests in unconsolidated subsidiaries (investment entities) 19A\n\nInterests in joint arrangements and associates 20\n\nNature, extent and financial effects of an entity’s interests in joint arrangements and associates 21\n\nRisks associated with an entity’s interests in joint ventures and associates 23\n\nInterests in unconsolidated structured entities 24\n\nNature of interests 26\n\nNature of risks 29\n\nCommencement of the legislative instrument\n\nWithdrawal of AASB pronouncements Aus31.2\n\nAppendices\n\nA  Defined terms\n\nB  Application guidance\n\nC  Effective date and transition\n\nE  Australian implementation guidance for not-for-profit entities\n\nF  Australian simplified disclosures for Tier 2 entities\n\nCOMPILATION DETAILS\n\nDeleted IFRS 12 text\n\n \n\n \n\navailable on the AASB website\n\nBasis for Conclusions on IFRS 12\n\n \n\n \n\nAustralian Accounting Standard AASB 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities (as amended) is set out in paragraphs 1 – Aus31.2 and Appendices A – C and E – F.  All the paragraphs have equal authority.  Paragraphs in bold type state the main principles.  Terms defined in Appendix A are in italics the first time they appear in the Standard.  AASB 12 is to be read in the context of other Australian Accounting Standards, including AASB 1048 Interpretation of Standards, which identifies the Australian Accounting Interpretations, and AASB 1057 Application of Australian Accounting Standards.  In the absence of explicit guidance, AASB 108 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors provides a basis for selecting and applying accounting policies.\n\n \n\nComparison with IFRS 12\n\nAASB 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities as amended incorporates IFRS 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities as issued and amended by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).  Australian‑specific paragraphs (which are not included in IFRS 12) are identified with the prefix “Aus”.  Paragraphs that apply only to not-for-profit entities begin by identifying their limited applicability.\n\nTier 1\n\nFor-profit entities complying with AASB 12 also comply with IFRS 12.\n\nNot-for-profit entities’ compliance with IFRS 12 will depend on whether any “Aus” paragraphs that specifically apply to not-for-profit entities provide additional guidance or contain applicable requirements that are inconsistent with IFRS 12.\n\nAASB 1053 Application of Tiers of Australian Accounting Standards explains the two tiers of reporting requirements.\n\n \n\n# Accounting Standard AASB 12\n\nThe Australian Accounting Standards Board made Accounting Standard AASB 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities under section 334 of the Corporations Act 2001 on 7 August 2015.\n\nThis compiled version of AASB 12 applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 July 2021. It incorporates relevant amendments contained in other AASB Standards made by the AASB up to and including 6 March 2020 (see Compilation Details).\n\nAccounting Standard AASB 12\n\nDisclosure of Interests in Other Entities\n\nObjective\n\n1 The objective of this Standard is to require an entity to disclose information that enables users of its financial statements to evaluate:\n\n(a) the nature of, and risks associated with, its interests in other entities; and\n\n(b) the effects of those interests on its financial position, financial performance and cash flows.\n\nAusCF1 AusCF entities are:\n\n(a) not-for-profit entities; and\n\n(b) for-profit entities that are not applying the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting (as identified in AASB 1048 Interpretation of Standards).\n\nFor AusCF entities, the term ‘reporting entity’ is defined in AASB 1057 Application of Australian Accounting Standards and Statement of Accounting Concepts SAC 1 Definition of the Reporting Entity also applies.  For-profit entities applying the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting are set out in paragraph Aus1.1 of the Conceptual Framework.\n\nMeeting the objective\n\n2 To meet the objective in paragraph 1, an entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the significant judgements and assumptions it has made in determining:\n\n(i) the nature of its interest in another entity or arrangement;\n\n(ii) the type of joint arrangement in which it has an interest (paragraphs 7–9);\n\n(iii) that it meets the definition of an investment entity, if applicable (paragraph 9A); and\n\n(b) information about its interests in:\n\n(i) subsidiaries (paragraphs 10–19);\n\n(ii) joint arrangements and associates (paragraphs 20–23); and\n\n(iii) structured entities that are not controlled by the entity (unconsolidated structured entities) (paragraphs 24–31).\n\n3 If the disclosures required by this Standard, together with disclosures required by other Standards, do not meet the objective in paragraph 1, an entity shall disclose whatever additional information is necessary to meet that objective.\n\n4 An entity shall consider the level of detail necessary to satisfy the disclosure objective and how much emphasis to place on each of the requirements in this Standard. It shall aggregate or disaggregate disclosures so that useful information is not obscured by either the inclusion of a large amount of insignificant detail or the aggregation of items that have different characteristics (see paragraphs B2–B6).\n\nScope\n\n5 This Standard shall be applied by an entity that has an interest in any of the following:\n\n(a) subsidiaries\n\n(b) joint arrangements (ie joint operations or joint ventures)\n\n(c) associates\n\n(d) unconsolidated structured entities.\n\n5A Except as described in paragraph B17, the requirements in this Standard apply to an entity’s interests listed in paragraph 5 that are classified (or included in a disposal group that is classified) as held for sale or discontinued operations in accordance with AASB 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations.\n\n6 This Standard does not apply to:\n\n(a) post-employment benefit plans or other long-term employee benefit plans to which AASB 119 Employee Benefits applies.\n\n(b) an entity’s separate financial statements to which AASB 127 Separate Financial Statements applies. However:\n\n(i) if an entity has interests in unconsolidated structured entities and prepares separate financial statements as its only financial statements, it shall apply the requirements in paragraphs 24–31 when preparing those separate financial statements.\n\n(ii) an investment entity that prepares financial statements in which all of its subsidiaries are measured at fair value through profit or loss in accordance with paragraph 31 of AASB 10 shall present the disclosures relating to investment entities required by this Standard.\n\n(c) an interest held by an entity that participates in, but does not have joint control of, a joint arrangement unless that interest results in significant influence over the arrangement or is an interest in a structured entity.\n\n(d) an interest in another entity that is accounted for in accordance with AASB 9 Financial Instruments. However, an entity shall apply this Standard:\n\n(i) when that interest is an interest in an associate or a joint venture that, in accordance with AASB 128 Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures, is measured at fair value through profit or loss; or\n\n(ii) when that interest is an interest in an unconsolidated structured entity.\n\nSignificant judgements and assumptions\n\n7 An entity shall disclose information about significant judgements and assumptions it has made (and changes to those judgements and assumptions) in determining:\n\n(a) that it has control of another entity, ie an investee as described in paragraphs 5 and 6 of AASB 10 Consolidated Financial Statements;\n\n(b) that it has joint control of an arrangement or significant influence over another entity; and\n\n(c) the type of joint arrangement (ie joint operation or joint venture) when the arrangement has been structured through a separate vehicle.\n\n8 The significant judgements and assumptions disclosed in accordance with paragraph 7 include those made by the entity when changes in facts and circumstances are such that the conclusion about whether it has control, joint control or significant influence changes during the reporting period.\n\n9 To comply with paragraph 7, an entity shall disclose, for example, significant judgements and assumptions made in determining that:\n\n(a) it does not control another entity even though it holds more than half of the voting rights of the other entity.\n\n(b) it controls another entity even though it holds less than half of the voting rights of the other entity.\n\n(c) it is an agent or a principal (see paragraphs B58–B72 of AASB 10).\n\n(d) it does not have significant influence even though it holds 20 per cent or more of the voting rights of another entity.\n\n(e) it has significant influence even though it holds less than 20 per cent of the voting rights of another entity.\n\nInvestment entity status\n\n9A When a parent determines that it is an investment entity in accordance with paragraph 27 of AASB 10, the investment entity shall disclose information about significant judgements and assumptions it has made in determining that it is an investment entity. If the investment entity does not have one or more of the typical characteristics of an investment entity (see paragraph 28 of AASB 10), it shall disclose its reasons for concluding that it is nevertheless an investment entity.\n\n9B When an entity becomes, or ceases to be, an investment entity, it shall disclose the change of investment entity status and the reasons for the change. In addition, an entity that becomes an investment entity shall disclose the effect of the change of status on the financial statements for the period presented, including:\n\n(a) the total fair value, as of the date of change of status, of the subsidiaries that cease to be consolidated;\n\n(b) the total gain or loss, if any, calculated in accordance with paragraph B101 of AASB 10; and\n\n(c) the line item(s) in profit or loss in which the gain or loss is recognised (if not presented separately).\n\nInterests in subsidiaries\n\n10 An entity shall disclose information that enables users of its consolidated financial statements\n\n(a) to understand:\n\n(i) the composition of the group; and\n\n(ii) the interest that non-controlling interests have in the group’s activities and cash flows (paragraph 12); and\n\n(b) to evaluate:\n\n(i) the nature and extent of significant restrictions on its ability to access or use assets, and settle liabilities, of the group (paragraph 13);\n\n(ii) the nature of, and changes in, the risks associated with its interests in consolidated structured entities (paragraphs 14–17);\n\n(iii) the consequences of changes in its ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result in a loss of control (paragraph 18); and\n\n(iv) the consequences of losing control of a subsidiary during the reporting period (paragraph 19).\n\n11 When the financial statements of a subsidiary used in the preparation of consolidated financial statements are as of a date or for a period that is different from that of the consolidated financial statements (see paragraphs B92 and B93 of AASB 10), an entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the date of the end of the reporting period of the financial statements of that subsidiary; and\n\n(b) the reason for using a different date or period.\n\nThe interest that non-controlling interests have in the group’s activities and cash flows\n\n12 An entity shall disclose for each of its subsidiaries that have non-controlling interests that are material to the reporting entity:\n\n(a) the name of the subsidiary.\n\n(b) the principal place of business (and country of incorporation if different from the principal place of business) of the subsidiary.\n\n(c) the proportion of ownership interests held by non-controlling interests.\n\n(d) the proportion of voting rights held by non-controlling interests, if different from the proportion of ownership interests held.\n\n(e) the profit or loss allocated to non-controlling interests of the subsidiary during the reporting period.\n\n(f) accumulated non-controlling interests of the subsidiary at the end of the reporting period.\n\n(g) summarised financial information about the subsidiary (see paragraph B10).\n\nThe nature and extent of significant restrictions\n\n13 An entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) significant restrictions (eg statutory, contractual and regulatory restrictions) on its ability to access or use the assets and settle the liabilities of the group, such as:\n\n(i) those that restrict the ability of a parent or its subsidiaries to transfer cash or other assets to (or from) other entities within the group.\n\n(ii) guarantees or other requirements that may restrict dividends and other capital distributions being paid, or loans and advances being made or repaid, to (or from) other entities within the group.\n\n(b) the nature and extent to which protective rights of non-controlling interests can significantly restrict the entity’s ability to access or use the assets and settle the liabilities of the group (such as when a parent is obliged to settle liabilities of a subsidiary before settling its own liabilities, or approval of non-controlling interests is required either to access the assets or to settle the liabilities of a subsidiary).\n\n(c) the carrying amounts in the consolidated financial statements of the assets and liabilities to which those restrictions apply.\n\nNature of the risks associated with an entity’s interests in consolidated structured entities\n\n14 An entity shall disclose the terms of any contractual arrangements that could require the parent or its subsidiaries to provide financial support to a consolidated structured entity, including events or circumstances that could expose the reporting entity to a loss (eg liquidity arrangements or credit rating triggers associated with obligations to purchase assets of the structured entity or provide financial support).\n\n15 If during the reporting period a parent or any of its subsidiaries has, without having a contractual obligation to do so, provided financial or other support to a consolidated structured entity (eg purchasing assets of or instruments issued by the structured entity), the entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the type and amount of support provided, including situations in which the parent or its subsidiaries assisted the structured entity in obtaining financial support; and\n\n(b) the reasons for providing the support.\n\n16 If during the reporting period a parent or any of its subsidiaries has, without having a contractual obligation to do so, provided financial or other support to a previously unconsolidated structured entity and that provision of support resulted in the entity controlling the structured entity, the entity shall disclose an explanation of the relevant factors in reaching that decision.\n\n17 An entity shall disclose any current intentions to provide financial or other support to a consolidated structured entity, including intentions to assist the structured entity in obtaining financial support.\n\nConsequences of changes in a parent’s ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result in a loss of control\n\n18 An entity shall present a schedule that shows the effects on the equity attributable to owners of the parent of any changes in its ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result in a loss of control.\n\nConsequences of losing control of a subsidiary during the reporting period\n\n19 An entity shall disclose the gain or loss, if any, calculated in accordance with paragraph 25 of AASB 10, and:\n\n(a) the portion of that gain or loss attributable to measuring any investment retained in the former subsidiary at its fair value at the date when control is lost; and\n\n(b) the line item(s) in profit or loss in which the gain or loss is recognised (if not presented separately).\n\nInterests in unconsolidated subsidiaries (investment entities)\n\n19A An investment entity that, in accordance with AASB 10, is required to apply the exception to consolidation and instead account for its investment in a subsidiary at fair value through profit or loss shall disclose that fact.\n\n19B For each unconsolidated subsidiary, an investment entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the subsidiary’s name;\n\n(b) the principal place of business (and country of incorporation if different from the principal place of business) of the subsidiary; and\n\n(c) the proportion of ownership interest held by the investment entity and, if different, the proportion of voting rights held.\n\n19C If an investment entity is the parent of another investment entity, the parent shall also provide the disclosures in 19B(a)–(c) for investments that are controlled by its investment entity subsidiary. The disclosure may be provided by including, in the financial statements of the parent, the financial statements of the subsidiary (or subsidiaries) that contain the above information.\n\n19D An investment entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the nature and extent of any significant restrictions (eg resulting from borrowing arrangements, regulatory requirements or contractual arrangements) on the ability of an unconsolidated subsidiary to transfer funds to the investment entity in the form of cash dividends or to repay loans or advances made to the unconsolidated subsidiary by the investment entity; and\n\n(b) any current commitments or intentions to provide financial or other support to an unconsolidated subsidiary, including commitments or intentions to assist the subsidiary in obtaining financial support.\n\n19E If, during the reporting period, an investment entity or any of its subsidiaries has, without having a contractual obligation to do so, provided financial or other support to an unconsolidated subsidiary (eg purchasing assets of, or instruments issued by, the subsidiary or assisting the subsidiary in obtaining financial support), the entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the type and amount of support provided to each unconsolidated subsidiary; and\n\n(b) the reasons for providing the support.\n\n19F An investment entity shall disclose the terms of any contractual arrangements that could require the entity or its unconsolidated subsidiaries to provide financial support to an unconsolidated, controlled, structured entity, including events or circumstances that could expose the reporting entity to a loss (eg liquidity arrangements or credit rating triggers associated with obligations to purchase assets of the structured entity or to provide financial support).\n\n19G If during the reporting period an investment entity or any of its unconsolidated subsidiaries has, without having a contractual obligation to do so, provided financial or other support to an unconsolidated, structured entity that the investment entity did not control, and if that provision of support resulted in the investment entity controlling the structured entity, the investment entity shall disclose an explanation of the relevant factors in reaching the decision to provide that support.\n\nInterests in joint arrangements and associates\n\n20 An entity shall disclose information that enables users of its financial statements to evaluate:\n\n(a) the nature, extent and financial effects of its interests in joint arrangements and associates, including the nature and effects of its contractual relationship with the other investors with joint control of, or significant influence over, joint arrangements and associates (paragraphs 21 and 22); and\n\n(b) the nature of, and changes in, the risks associated with its interests in joint ventures and associates (paragraph 23).\n\nNature, extent and financial effects of an entity’s interests in joint arrangements and associates\n\n21 An entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) for each joint arrangement and associate that is material to the reporting entity:\n\n(i) the name of the joint arrangement or associate.\n\n(ii) the nature of the entity’s relationship with the joint arrangement or associate (by, for example, describing the nature of the activities of the joint arrangement or associate and whether they are strategic to the entity’s activities).\n\n(iii) the principal place of business (and country of incorporation, if applicable and different from the principal place of business) of the joint arrangement or associate.\n\n(iv) the proportion of ownership interest or participating share held by the entity and, if different, the proportion of voting rights held (if applicable).\n\n(b) for each joint venture and associate that is material to the reporting entity:\n\n(i) whether the investment in the joint venture or associate is measured using the equity method or at fair value.\n\n(ii) summarised financial information about the joint venture or associate as specified in paragraphs B12 and B13.\n\n(iii) if the joint venture or associate is accounted for using the equity method, the fair value of its investment in the joint venture or associate, if there is a quoted market price for the investment.\n\n(c) financial information as specified in paragraph B16 about the entity’s investments in joint ventures and associates that are not individually material:\n\n(i) in aggregate for all individually immaterial joint ventures and, separately,\n\n(ii) in aggregate for all individually immaterial associates.\n\n21A An investment entity need not provide the disclosures required by paragraphs 21(b)–21(c).\n\n22 An entity shall also disclose:\n\n(a) the nature and extent of any significant restrictions (eg resulting from borrowing arrangements, regulatory requirements or contractual arrangements between investors with joint control of or significant influence over a joint venture or an associate) on the ability of joint ventures or associates to transfer funds to the entity in the form of cash dividends, or to repay loans or advances made by the entity.\n\n(b) when the financial statements of a joint venture or associate used in applying the equity method are as of a date or for a period that is different from that of the entity:\n\n(i) the date of the end of the reporting period of the financial statements of that joint venture or associate; and\n\n(ii) the reason for using a different date or period.\n\n(c) the unrecognised share of losses of a joint venture or associate, both for the reporting period and cumulatively, if the entity has stopped recognising its share of losses of the joint venture or associate when applying the equity method.\n\nRisks associated with an entity’s interests in joint ventures and associates\n\n23 An entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) commitments that it has relating to its joint ventures separately from the amount of other commitments as specified in paragraphs B18–B20.\n\n(b) in accordance with AASB 137 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets, unless the probability of loss is remote, contingent liabilities incurred relating to its interests in joint ventures or associates (including its share of contingent liabilities incurred jointly with other investors with joint control of, or significant influence over, the joint ventures or associates), separately from the amount of other contingent liabilities.\n\nInterests in unconsolidated structured entities\n\n24 An entity shall disclose information that enables users of its financial statements:\n\n(a) to understand the nature and extent of its interests in unconsolidated structured entities (paragraphs 26–28); and\n\n(b) to evaluate the nature of, and changes in, the risks associated with its interests in unconsolidated structured entities (paragraphs 29–31).\n\n25 The information required by paragraph 24(b) includes information about an entity’s exposure to risk from involvement that it had with unconsolidated structured entities in previous periods (eg sponsoring the structured entity), even if the entity no longer has any contractual involvement with the structured entity at the reporting date.\n\n25A An investment entity need not provide the disclosures required by paragraph 24 for an unconsolidated structured entity that it controls and for which it presents the disclosures required by paragraphs 19A–19G.\n\nNature of interests\n\n26 An entity shall disclose qualitative and quantitative information about its interests in unconsolidated structured entities, including, but not limited to, the nature, purpose, size and activities of the structured entity and how the structured entity is financed.\n\n27 If an entity has sponsored an unconsolidated structured entity for which it does not provide information required by paragraph 29 (eg because it does not have an interest in the entity at the reporting date), the entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) how it has determined which structured entities it has sponsored;\n\n(b) income from those structured entities during the reporting period, including a description of the types of income presented; and\n\n(c) the carrying amount (at the time of transfer) of all assets transferred to those structured entities during the reporting period.\n\n28 An entity shall present the information in paragraph 27(b) and (c) in tabular format, unless another format is more appropriate, and classify its sponsoring activities into relevant categories (see paragraphs B2–B6).\n\nNature of risks\n\n29 An entity shall disclose in tabular format, unless another format is more appropriate, a summary of:\n\n(a) the carrying amounts of the assets and liabilities recognised in its financial statements relating to its interests in unconsolidated structured entities.\n\n(b) the line items in the statement of financial position in which those assets and liabilities are recognised.\n\n(c) the amount that best represents the entity’s maximum exposure to loss from its interests in unconsolidated structured entities, including how the maximum exposure to loss is determined. If an entity cannot quantify its maximum exposure to loss from its interests in unconsolidated structured entities it shall disclose that fact and the reasons.\n\n(d) a comparison of the carrying amounts of the assets and liabilities of the entity that relate to its interests in unconsolidated structured entities and the entity’s maximum exposure to loss from those entities.\n\n30 If during the reporting period an entity has, without having a contractual obligation to do so, provided financial or other support to an unconsolidated structured entity in which it previously had or currently has an interest (for example, purchasing assets of or instruments issued by the structured entity), the entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) the type and amount of support provided, including situations in which the entity assisted the structured entity in obtaining financial support; and\n\n(b) the reasons for providing the support.\n\n31 An entity shall disclose any current intentions to provide financial or other support to an unconsolidated structured entity, including intentions to assist the structured entity in obtaining financial support.\n\nCommencement of the legislative instrument\n\nAus31.1 [Repealed]\n\nWithdrawal of AASB pronouncements\n\nAus31.2 This Standard repeals AASB 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities issued in August 2011.  Despite the repeal, after the time this Standard starts to apply under section 334 of the Corporations Act (either generally or in relation to an individual entity), the repealed Standard continues to apply in relation to any period ending before that time as if the repeal had not occurred.\n\n[Note: When this Standard applies under section 334 of the Corporations Act (either generally or in relation to an individual entity), it supersedes the application of the repealed Standard.]\n\n \n\nAppendix A  Defined terms\n\nThis appendix is an integral part of the Standard.\n\n| income from a structured entity | For the purpose of this Standard, income from a structured entity includes, but is not limited to, recurring and non-recurring fees, interest, dividends, gains or losses on the remeasurement or derecognition of interests in structured entities and gains or losses from the transfer of assets and liabilities to the structured entity. |\n| --- | --- |\n| interest in another entity | For the purpose of this Standard, an interest in another entity refers to contractual and non-contractual involvement that exposes an entity to variability of returns from the performance of the other entity. An interest in another entity can be evidenced by, but is not limited to, the holding of equity or debt instruments as well as other forms of involvement such as the provision of funding, liquidity support, credit enhancement and guarantees. It includes the means by which an entity has control or joint control of, or significant influence over, another entity. An entity does not necessarily have an interest in another entity solely because of a typical customer supplier relationship.<br>Paragraphs B7–B9 provide further information about interests in other entities.<br>Paragraphs B55–B57 of AASB 10 explain variability of returns. |\n| structured entity | An entity that has been designed so that voting or similar rights are not the dominant factor in deciding who controls the entity, such as when any voting rights relate to administrative tasks only and the relevant activities are directed by means of contractual arrangements.<br>Paragraphs B22–B24 provide further information about structured entities. |\n\n\n \n\nThe following terms are defined in AASB 127, AASB 128, AASB 10 and AASB 11 Joint Arrangements and are used in this Standard with the meanings specified in those Standards:\n\n• associate\n\n• consolidated financial statements\n\n• control of an entity\n\n• equity method\n\n• group\n\n• investment entity\n\n• joint arrangement\n\n• joint control\n\n• joint operation\n\n• joint venture\n\n• non-controlling interest\n\n• parent\n\n• protective rights\n\n• relevant activities\n\n• separate financial statements\n\n• separate vehicle\n\n• significant influence\n\n• subsidiary.\n\n \n\nAppendix B  Application guidance\n\nThis appendix is an integral part of the Standard. It describes the application of paragraphs 1–31 and has the same authority as the other parts of the Standard.\n\nB1 The examples in this appendix portray hypothetical situations. Although some aspects of the examples may be present in actual fact patterns, all relevant facts and circumstances of a particular fact pattern would need to be evaluated when applying AASB 12.\n\nAggregation (paragraph 4)\n\nB2 An entity shall decide, in the light of its circumstances, how much detail it provides to satisfy the information needs of users, how much emphasis it places on different aspects of the requirements and how it aggregates the information. It is necessary to strike a balance between burdening financial statements with excessive detail that may not assist users of financial statements and obscuring information as a result of too much aggregation.\n\nB3 An entity may aggregate the disclosures required by this Standard for interests in similar entities if aggregation is consistent with the disclosure objective and the requirement in paragraph B4, and does not obscure the information provided. An entity shall disclose how it has aggregated its interests in similar entities.\n\nB4 An entity shall present information separately for interests in:\n\n(a) subsidiaries;\n\n(b) joint ventures;\n\n(c) joint operations;\n\n(d) associates; and\n\n(e) unconsolidated structured entities.\n\nB5 In determining whether to aggregate information, an entity shall consider quantitative and qualitative information about the different risk and return characteristics of each entity it is considering for aggregation and the significance of each such entity to the reporting entity. The entity shall present the disclosures in a manner that clearly explains to users of financial statements the nature and extent of its interests in those other entities.\n\nB6 Examples of aggregation levels within the classes of entities set out in paragraph B4 that might be appropriate are:\n\n(a) nature of activities (eg a research and development entity, a revolving credit card securitisation entity).\n\n(b) industry classification.\n\n(c) geography (eg country or region).\n\nInterests in other entities\n\nB7 An interest in another entity refers to contractual and non-contractual involvement that exposes the reporting entity to variability of returns from the performance of the other entity. Consideration of the purpose and design of the other entity may help the reporting entity when assessing whether it has an interest in that entity and, therefore, whether it is required to provide the disclosures in this Standard. That assessment shall include consideration of the risks that the other entity was designed to create and the risks the other entity was designed to pass on to the reporting entity and other parties.\n\nB8 A reporting entity is typically exposed to variability of returns from the performance of another entity by holding instruments (such as equity or debt instruments issued by the other entity) or having another involvement that absorbs variability. For example, assume a structured entity holds a loan portfolio. The structured entity obtains a credit default swap from another entity (the reporting entity) to protect itself from the default of interest and principal payments on the loans. The reporting entity has involvement that exposes it to variability of returns from the performance of the structured entity because the credit default swap absorbs variability of returns of the structured entity.\n\nB9 Some instruments are designed to transfer risk from a reporting entity to another entity. Such instruments create variability of returns for the other entity but do not typically expose the reporting entity to variability of returns from the performance of the other entity. For example, assume a structured entity is established to provide investment opportunities for investors who wish to have exposure to entity Z’s credit risk (entity Z is unrelated to any party involved in the arrangement). The structured entity obtains funding by issuing to those investors notes that are linked to entity Z’s credit risk (credit-linked notes) and uses the proceeds to invest in a portfolio of risk-free financial assets. The structured entity obtains exposure to entity Z’s credit risk by entering into a credit default swap (CDS) with a swap counterparty. The CDS passes entity Z’s credit risk to the structured entity in return for a fee paid by the swap counterparty. The investors in the structured entity receive a higher return that reflects both the structured entity’s return from its asset portfolio and the CDS fee. The swap counterparty does not have involvement with the structured entity that exposes it to variability of returns from the performance of the structured entity because the CDS transfers variability to the structured entity, rather than absorbing variability of returns of the structured entity.\n\nSummarised financial information for subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates (paragraphs 12 and 21)\n\nB10 For each subsidiary that has non-controlling interests that are material to the reporting entity, an entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) dividends paid to non-controlling interests.\n\n(b) summarised financial information about the assets, liabilities, profit or loss and cash flows of the subsidiary that enables users to understand the interest that non-controlling interests have in the group’s activities and cash flows. That information might include but is not limited to, for example, current assets, non-current assets, current liabilities, non-current liabilities, revenue, profit or loss and total comprehensive income.\n\nB11 The summarised financial information required by paragraph B10(b) shall be the amounts before inter-company eliminations.\n\nB12 For each joint venture and associate that is material to the reporting entity, an entity shall disclose:\n\n(a) dividends received from the joint venture or associate.\n\n(b) summarised financial information for the joint venture or associate (see paragraphs B14 and B15) including, but not necessarily limited to:\n\n(i) current assets.\n\n(ii) non-current assets.\n\n(iii) current liabilities.\n\n(iv) non-current liabilities.\n\n(v) revenue.\n\n(vi) profit or loss from continuing operations.\n\n(vii) post-tax profit or loss from discontinued operations.\n\n(viii) other comprehensive income.\n\n(ix) total comprehensive income.\n\nB13 In addition to the summarised financial information required by paragraph B12, an entity shall disclose for each joint venture that is material to the reporting entity the amount of:\n\n(a) cash and cash equivalents included in paragraph B12(b)(i).\n\n(b) current financial liabilities (excluding trade and other payables and provisions) included in paragraph B12(b)(iii).\n\n(c) non-current financial liabilities (excluding trade and other payables and provisions) included in paragraph B12(b)(iv).\n\n(d) depreciation and amortisation.\n\n(e) interest income.\n\n(f) interest expense.\n\n(g) income tax expense or income.\n\nB14 The summarised financial information presented in accordance with paragraphs B12 and B13 shall be the amounts included in the Australian-Accounting-Standards financial statements of the joint venture or associate (and not the entity’s share of those amounts). If the entity accounts for its interest in the joint venture or associate using the equity method:\n\n(a) the amounts included in the Australian-Accounting-Standards financial statements of the joint venture or associate shall be adjusted to reflect adjustments made by the entity when using the equity method, such as fair value adjustments made at the time of acquisition and adjustments for differences in accounting policies.\n\n(b) the entity shall provide a reconciliation of the summarised financial information presented to the carrying amount of its interest in the joint venture or associate.\n\nB15 An entity may present the summarised financial information required by paragraphs B12 and B13 on the basis of the joint venture’s or associate’s financial statements if:\n\n(a) the entity measures its interest in the joint venture or associate at fair value in accordance with AASB 128; and\n\n(b) the joint venture or associate does not prepare Australian-Accounting-Standards financial statements and preparation on that basis would be impracticable or cause undue cost.\n\n In that case, the entity shall disclose the basis on which the summarised financial information has been prepared.\n\nB16 An entity shall disclose, in aggregate, the carrying amount of its interests in all individually immaterial joint ventures or associates that are accounted for using the equity method. An entity shall also disclose separately the aggregate amount of its share of those joint ventures’ or associates’:\n\n(a) profit or loss from continuing operations.\n\n(b) post-tax profit or loss from discontinued operations.\n\n(c) other comprehensive income.\n\n(d) total comprehensive income.\n\n An entity provides the disclosures separately for joint ventures and associates.\n\nB17 When an entity’s interest in a subsidiary, a joint venture or an associate (or a portion of its interest in a joint venture or an associate) is classified (or included in a disposal group that is classified) as held for sale in accordance with AASB 5, the entity is not required to disclose summarised financial information for that subsidiary, joint venture or associate in accordance with paragraphs B10–B16.\n\nCommitments for joint ventures (paragraph 23(a))\n\nB18 An entity shall disclose total commitments it has made but not recognised at the reporting date (including its share of commitments made jointly with other investors with joint control of a joint venture) relating to its interests in joint ventures. Commitments are those that may give rise to a future outflow of cash or other resources.\n\nB19 Unrecognised commitments that may give rise to a future outflow of cash or other resources include:\n\n(a) unrecognised commitments to contribute funding or resources as a result of, for example:\n\n(i) the constitution or acquisition agreements of a joint venture (that, for example, require an entity to contribute funds over a specific period).\n\n(ii) capital-intensive projects undertaken by a joint venture.\n\n(iii) unconditional purchase obligations, comprising procurement of equipment, inventory or services that an entity is committed to purchasing from, or on behalf of, a joint venture.\n\n(iv) unrecognised commitments to provide loans or other financial support to a joint venture.\n\n(v) unrecognised commitments to contribute resources to a joint venture, such as assets or services.\n\n(vi) other non-cancellable unrecognised commitments relating to a joint venture.\n\n(b) unrecognised commitments to acquire another party’s ownership interest (or a portion of that ownership interest) in a joint venture if a particular event occurs or does not occur in the future.\n\nB20 The requirements and examples in paragraphs B18 and B19 illustrate some of the types of disclosure required by paragraph 18 of AASB 124 Related Party Disclosures.\n\nInterests in unconsolidated structured entities (paragraphs 24–31)\n\nStructured entities\n\nB21 A structured entity is an entity that has been designed so that voting or similar rights are not the dominant factor in deciding who controls the entity, such as when any voting rights relate to administrative tasks only and the relevant activities are directed by means of contractual arrangements.\n\nB22 A structured entity often has some or all of the following features or attributes:\n\n(a) restricted activities.\n\n(b) a narrow and well-defined objective, such as to effect a tax-efficient lease, carry out research and development activities, provide a source of capital or funding to an entity or provide investment opportunities for investors by passing on risks and rewards associated with the assets of the structured entity to investors.\n\n(c) insufficient equity to permit the structured entity to finance its activities without subordinated financial support.\n\n(d) financing in the form of multiple contractually linked instruments to investors that create concentrations of credit or other risks (tranches).\n\nB23 Examples of entities that are regarded as structured entities include, but are not limited to:\n\n(a) securitisation vehicles.\n\n(b) asset-backed financings.\n\n(c) some investment funds.\n\nB24 An entity that is controlled by voting rights is not a structured entity simply because, for example, it receives funding from third parties following a restructuring.\n\nNature of risks from interests in unconsolidated structured entities (paragraphs 29–31)\n\nB25 In addition to the information required by paragraphs 29–31, an entity shall disclose additional information that is necessary to meet the disclosure objective in paragraph 24(b).\n\nB26 Examples of additional information that, depending on the circumstances, might be relevant to an assessment of the risks to which an entity is exposed when it has an interest in an unconsolidated structured entity are:\n\n(a) the terms of an arrangement that could require the entity to provide financial support to an unconsolidated structured entity (eg liquidity arrangements or credit rating triggers associated with obligations to purchase assets of the structured entity or provide financial support), including:\n\n(i) a description of events or circumstances that could expose the reporting entity to a loss.\n\n(ii) whether there are any terms that would limit the obligation.\n\n(iii) whether there are any other parties that provide financial support and, if so, how the reporting entity’s obligation ranks with those of other parties.\n\n(b) losses incurred by the entity during the reporting period relating to its interests in unconsolidated structured entities.\n\n(c) the types of income the entity received during the reporting period from its interests in unconsolidated structured entities.\n\n(d) whether the entity is required to absorb losses of an unconsolidated structured entity before other parties, the maximum limit of such losses for the entity, and (if relevant) the ranking and amounts of potential losses borne by parties whose interests rank lower than the entity’s interest in the unconsolidated structured entity.\n\n(e) information about any liquidity arrangements, guarantees or other commitments with third parties that may affect the fair value or risk of the entity’s interests in unconsolidated structured entities.\n\n(f) any difficulties an unconsolidated structured entity has experienced in financing its activities during the reporting period.\n\n(g) in relation to the funding of an unconsolidated structured entity, the forms of funding (eg commercial paper or medium-term notes) and their weighted-average life. That information might include maturity analyses of the assets and funding of an unconsolidated structured entity if the structured entity has longer-term assets funded by shorter-term funding.\n\n \n\nAppendix C  Effective date and transition\n\nThis appendix is an integral part of the Standard and has the same authority as the other parts of the Standard.\n\nEffective date and transition\n\nC1 An entity shall apply this Standard for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2016. Earlier application is permitted for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2014 but before 1 January 2016.\n\nC1A–  C1B [Deleted by the AASB]\n\nC1C AASB 2015-5 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Investment Entities: Applying the Consolidation Exception, issued in January 2015, amended paragraph 6 in the previous version of the Standard. An entity shall apply that amendment for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2016.  Earlier application is permitted.  If an entity applies that amendment for an earlier period it shall disclose that fact.\n\nC1D AASB 2017-2 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Further Annual Improvements 2014–2016 Cycle, issued in February 2017, added paragraph 5A and amended paragraph B17. An entity shall apply those amendments retrospectively in accordance with AASB 108 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2017.\n\nC2 [Deleted by the AASB]\n\nC2A The disclosure requirements of this Standard need not be applied for any period presented that begins before the annual period immediately preceding the first annual period for which AASB 12 is applied.\n\nC2B The disclosure requirements of paragraphs 24–31 and the corresponding guidance in paragraphs B21–B26 of this Standard need not be applied for any period presented that begins before the first annual period for which AASB 12 is applied.\n\nReferences to AASB 9\n\nC3 If an entity applies this Standard but does not yet apply AASB 9, any reference to AASB 9 shall be read as a reference to AASB 139 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement.\n\n \n\nAppendix E  Australian implementation guidance for not-for-profit entities\n\nThis appendix is an integral part of the Standard and has the same authority as the other parts of the Standard.  The appendix applies only to not-for-profit entities.  The appendix does not apply to for-profit entities or affect their application of AASB 12.\n\nIG1 AASB 12 incorporates International Financial Reporting Standard IFRS 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities, issued by the International Accounting Standards Board.  Consequently, some of the text of this Standard particularly reflects the perspective of for-profit entities.  The AASB has prepared this appendix to explain and illustrate the definition of ‘structured entity’ in the Standard for not-for-profit entities in the private and public sectors, to address circumstances where the for-profit perspective does not readily translate to a not-for-profit perspective.\n\nIG2 AASB 12 includes specific disclosure requirements regarding both consolidated and unconsolidated structured entities.  Entities preparing general purpose financial statements that apply AASB 1060 General Purpose Financial Statements – Simplified Disclosures for For-Profit and Not-for-Profit Tier 2 Entities are not required to comply with AASB 12.\n\nStructured entities\n\nIG3 A structured entity is defined in Appendix A of AASB 12 as follows:\n\n“An entity that has been designed so that voting or similar rights are not the dominant factor in deciding who controls the entity, such as when any voting rights relate to administrative tasks only and the relevant activities are directed by means of contractual arrangements.”\n\nRelevant activities are defined in AASB 10 as the activities of an entity that significantly affect the entity’s returns.  The current ability to direct the relevant activities is necessary in order for one entity to control another.\n\nIG4 Paragraph B22 of AASB 12 states that structured entities often have some or all of the following features or attributes: restricted activities, a narrow and well-defined objective, insufficient equity to finance its activities without subordinated financial support, and financing tranches in the form of multiple contractually linked instruments.  Paragraph B23 gives examples of structured entities: securitisation vehicles, asset-backed financings and some investment funds.\n\nIG5 The definition of a structured entity depends on voting or similar rights not being the dominant factor in deciding who controls an entity.  Voting rights are a common feature in many for-profit entities, having a dominant role in determining who controls an entity.  Accordingly, the principle underlying the definition limits the scope of structured entities to entities that are controlled through less conventional means.  The features listed in paragraph B22 and the examples in paragraph B23 also suggest that structured entities constitute a limited class of entity.\n\nIG6 It is common for not-for-profit entities to be established by administrative arrangements or legislation, especially in the public sector.  Therefore, if the administrative arrangements or legislation are dominant factors in determining control of such an entity, the entity is not a structured entity.  The AASB 12 disclosures regarding structured entities, such as the provision of financial support without a contractual obligation, are not particularly relevant to such entities, given the expectation of ongoing government funding through appropriations to supplement any other revenue sources.\n\nIG7 Applying the principle underlying the definition of a structured entity means that structured entities have been designed so that less conventional means – in the context of not-for-profit entities – are the dominant factor in determining who controls the entity.  This approach limits, for not-for-profit entities, the scope of structured entities to entities that have been designed so that voting or similar rights, including administrative arrangements or statutory provisions, are not the dominant factor in determining control of the entity.\n\nIG8 To illustrate the definition of a structured entity, an entity for which contractual arrangements are significant to determining control of the entity is a structured entity.  This would include entities for which most of the activities are predetermined, with the relevant activities limited in scope but directed through contractual arrangements.  Examples of such entities are included in paragraph B23.  Another example would be a partnership between a government and a private sector entity, being a partnership established and directed by contractual arrangements.  On that basis, the partnership is a structured entity, regardless of the rights (if any) that the government and the entity have in relation to the partnership.  If the government guarantees a certain level of revenue for its private sector partner, for example, the AASB 12 disclosures concerning the provision of financial support would be particularly relevant, whether the partnership is a consolidated or an unconsolidated structured entity for the government.  However, the mere fact that a government provides funding to another entity does not make that entity a structured entity.\n\nIG9 Not-for-profit private sector entities will also need to identify any structured entities with which they are associated.  For example, a not-for-profit private sector entity may have established or sponsored a community service organisation whose relevant activities are directed by means of contractual arrangements.  Those arrangements might require the not-for-profit private sector entity to provide financial support in specified circumstances to the community service organisation, or alternatively the entity might choose to provide financial or other support to the organisation without the contractual obligation to do so (eg due to the economic dependency of the organisation upon the entity).  The AASB 12 disclosure requirements would be relevant in both circumstances as the community service organisation is a structured entity.  Paragraph 31, for example, would require the not-for-profit private sector entity to disclose any current intentions to provide support to an unconsolidated structured entity.\n\n \n\nAppendix F  Australian simplified disclosures for Tier 2 entities\n\nThis appendix is an integral part of the Standard.\n\nAusF1 This Standard does not apply to entities preparing general purpose financial statements that apply AASB 1060 General Purpose Financial Statements – Simplified Disclosures for For-Profit and Not-for-Profit Tier 2 Entities.\n\n \n\nCompilation details  Accounting Standard AASB 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities (as amended)\n\nCompilation details are not part of AASB 12.\n\nThis compiled Standard applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 July 2021. It takes into account amendments up to and including 6 March 2020 and was prepared on 21 July 2021 by the staff of the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB).\n\nThis compilation is not a separate Accounting Standard made by the AASB. Instead, it is a representation of AASB 12 (August 2015) as amended by other Accounting Standards, which are listed in the table below.\n\nTable of Standards\n\n| Standard | Date made | FRL identifier | Commence-ment date | Effective date  (annual periods   … on or after …) | Application, saving or transitional provisions |\n| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |\n| AASB 12 | 7 Aug 2015 | F2015L01536 | 31 Dec 2015 | (beginning) 1 Jan 2016 | see (a) below |\n| AASB 2017-2 | 13 Feb 2017 | F2017L00194 | 13 Feb 2017 | (beginning) 1 Jan 2017 | see (b) below |\n| AASB 2019-1 | 21 May 2019 | F2019L00966 | 31 Dec 2019 | (beginning) 1 Jan 2020 | see (c) below |\n| AASB 1060 | 6 Mar 2020 | F2020L00288 | 30 Jun 2021 | (beginning) 1 Jul 2021 | see (d) below |\n\n\n(a) Entities may elect to apply this Standard to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2014 but before 1 January 2016.\n\n(b) Entities are not permitted to apply this Standard early.\n\n(c) Entities may elect to apply this Standard to annual periods beginning before 1 January 2020.\n\n(d) Entities may elect to apply this Standard to annual periods beginning before 1 July 2021.\n\nTable of amendments\n\n| Paragraph affected | How affected | By … [paragraph/page] |\n| --- | --- | --- |\n| AusCF1 | added | AASB 2019-1 [page 12] |\n| 5A | added | AASB 2017-2 [page 5] |\n| Aus31.1 | repealed | Legislation Act 2003, s. 48D |\n| B17 | amended | AASB 2017-2 [page 6] |\n| C1D | added | AASB 2017-2 [page 6] |\n| IG2 | amended | AASB 1060 [page 59] |\n| Appendix F | replaced | AASB 1060 [page 59] |\n\n\n \n\nDeleted IFRS 12 text\n\nDeleted IFRS 12 text is not part of AASB 12.\n\nC1A Consolidated Financial Statements, Joint Arrangements and Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities: Transition Guidance (Amendments to IFRS 10, IFRS 11 and IFRS 12), issued in June 2012, added paragraphs C2A–C2B. An entity shall apply those amendments for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2013. If an entity applies IFRS 12 for an earlier period, it shall apply those amendments for that earlier period.\n\nC1B Investment Entities (Amendments to IFRS 10, IFRS 12 and IAS 27), issued in October 2012, amended paragraph 2 and Appendix A, and added paragraphs 9A–9B, 19A–19G, 21A and 25A. An entity shall apply those amendments for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2014. Early adoption is permitted. If an entity applies those amendments earlier, it shall disclose that fact and apply all amendments included in Investment Entities at the same time.\n\nC2 An entity is encouraged to provide information required by this IFRS earlier than annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2013. Providing some of the disclosures required by this IFRS does not compel the entity to comply with all the requirements of this IFRS or to apply IFRS 10, IFRS 11, IAS 27 (as amended in 2011) and IAS 28 (as amended in 2011) early.\n","sortOrder":0}],"analysis":{"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The legislation maintains its original scope as a disclosure standard for interests in other entities. While it has been amended several times (notably for investment entities in 2015, annual improvements in 2017, and Tier 2 simplification in 2020), these amendments have refined and clarified the application rather than expanding beyond the original purpose of requiring transparency about an entity's involvement with subsidiaries, joint arrangements, associates, and structured entities."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross-referencing to other standards (AASB 10, AASB 11, AASB 128, AASB 9, AASB 5, AASB 119, AASB 127, AASB 137, AASB 108, AASB 124, AASB 1060)","Multiple defined terms in Appendix A (3 defined in this standard, 16 imported from other standards)","Nested conditional logic with numerous exceptions (e.g., paragraphs 6, 19A-19G, 21A, 25A provide specific carve-outs for investment entities)","Tiered application requirements distinguishing between Tier 1 and Tier 2 entities, and between for-profit and not-for-profit entities","Australian-specific paragraphs (AusCF1, Aus31.2, Appendix E, Appendix F) creating parallel but slightly different requirements","Detailed application guidance in Appendix B with 26 paragraphs of interpretive material","Multiple effective dates and transition provisions in Appendix C with retrospective application requirements for some amendments","Complex aggregation and disaggregation requirements (paragraphs B2-B6) requiring judgement about materiality and similarity","Specific disclosure requirements for structured entities requiring assessment of whether voting rights are the 'dominant factor' in control"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this legislation does:**\n\nAASB 12 is an accounting standard that requires companies and organisations to disclose detailed information about their relationships with other entities they have stakes in—such as subsidiaries, joint ventures, associates, and structured entities (special-purpose vehicles set up for specific financial arrangements).\n\n**Who it affects:**\n\n- **For-profit companies** listed on the ASX or required to prepare financial reports under the Corporations Act\n- **Not-for-profit organisations** preparing general purpose financial statements\n- **Investment entities** (like managed funds) that hold investments rather than operating businesses directly\n- **Tier 1 entities** (full reporting requirements); Tier 2 entities have simplified disclosure requirements under AASB 1060 and don't need to comply with this standard\n\n**What must be disclosed:**\n\n- **Significant judgements**: How the entity decided whether it controls, jointly controls, or significantly influences another entity\n- **Subsidiaries**: Names, locations, ownership percentages, financial summaries, restrictions on moving money within the group, and risks from structured entities within the group\n- **Joint ventures and associates**: Nature of relationships, financial effects, commitments, and contingent liabilities (potential future obligations)\n- **Structured entities**: Special disclosure requirements for entities controlled through contracts rather than voting rights—common in securitisations, asset-backed financing, and certain investment vehicles\n- **Investment entities**: Special rules for entities that measure subsidiaries at fair value rather than consolidating them\n\n**Why it matters:**\n\nThis standard helps investors, creditors, and regulators understand the full picture of an organisation's financial web—where the risks lie, how much control it has over other entities, and how those relationships affect its financial health. It's particularly important for revealing \"off-balance sheet\" exposures and complex financial arrangements that might otherwise hide risks.\n\n**Key Australian additions:**\n\nThe standard includes Australian-specific guidance (marked with \"Aus\") explaining how the rules apply to not-for-profit entities, particularly regarding what counts as a \"structured entity\" in the public sector where control is often determined by legislation rather than voting rights."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"Compared with the base IFRS 12 text, the Australian compilation adds Australia‑specific paragraphs and guidance (labelled “Aus”) and separate implementation guidance for not-for-profit entities and Tier 2 simplified disclosures. The compilation and amendment history show specific additions and edits (for example AusCF1, AusF1, paragraph 5A and investment-entity additions 9A–9B, 19A–19G) that adjust application and scope for particular Australian entity types and reporting frameworks (see 'Comparison with IFRS 12'; Compilation details; Table of amendments). These Australian-specific paragraphs and appendices narrow or modify the set of entities required to provide particular disclosures (for example, not-for-profit guidance in Appendix E and the Tier 2 exemption in Appendix F) and add disclosure requirements or clarifications applicable in the Australian context (see Appendix E; AusF1; para 5A)."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple entity types and situations to which different disclosure rules apply (subsidiaries, joint arrangements, associates, unconsolidated structured entities, investment-entity exceptions) (paras 5, 19A–19G, 20–24).","Extensive use of significant judgements (control, joint control, significant influence, investment entity status, structured-entity identification) that affect accounting and disclosure (paras 7–9, 9A; Appendix B guidance).","Many cross-references to other Australian Accounting Standards (AASB 10, AASB 127, AASB 128, AASB 11, AASB 9) increasing dependence on external materials for correct application (standard text and Appendix A).","Mixed qualitative and quantitative disclosure requirements, including mandated tabular formats for some disclosures and summarised financial information for material interests (paras 12, 21, 24–31; B10–B16, B29).","Exceptions, carve-outs and Australian-specific paragraphs (the presence of 'Aus' paragraphs, not-for-profit guidance in Appendix E, and Tier 2 simplifications in Appendix F) that change scope and application depending on entity type (Comparison with IFRS 12; AusCF1; AusF1; IG2).","Transitional and effective-date provisions with amendments over time, requiring attention to which version applies in a given reporting period (Appendix C; Compilation details).","Disclosures about contingent or non-contractual support and maximum exposure to loss require entity-specific measurement and narrative explanations, which can be complex to determine (paras 14–17, 29–31).","Aggregation and materiality judgements that affect presentation and comparability across entities (para 4; B2–B6)."],"plain_english_summary":"### What this Standard does, in practical terms\n\n- This Accounting Standard requires organisations that have interests in other entities (for example, subsidiaries, joint arrangements, associates and unconsolidated structured entities) to disclose specific information in their financial statements so that users can understand the nature, risks and financial effects of those interests (see Objective, para 1; Scope, para 5).\n\n- The Standard sets out the particular disclosures required (for example: significant judgements, composition of groups, restrictions on transferring funds, summarised financial information, contractual terms that could require financial support, and maximum exposure to loss) and how to present some of that information (paras 2, 7–9, 10–31; Appendices A–C).\n\n- The Standard applies to most entities with the listed interests, with some explicit exclusions and tailoring for specific cases (see para 6, AusF1). It also includes Australian-specific paragraphs (labelled “Aus”) and guidance for not-for-profit entities (Appendix E).\n\n### Who is affected\n\n- Preparers of general purpose financial statements that have any interest in subsidiaries, joint arrangements, associates or unconsolidated structured entities must apply the disclosure requirements (para 5). Tier 2 entities preparing simplified disclosures are excluded from AASB 12 (AusF1; IG2).\n\n- Users of financial statements (investors, creditors, regulators and other stakeholders) are the intended beneficiaries of the required disclosures (Objective, para 1; para 2).\n\n### How it works, mechanically\n\n- Entities must disclose the significant judgements and assumptions used to determine control, joint control or significant influence, and the type of joint arrangement when a separate vehicle is involved (paras 7–9, 9A).\n\n- For subsidiaries, entities must disclose the group composition, the interests of non-controlling owners, significant restrictions on use of assets or settlement of liabilities, and risks and events that could require the parent to provide support (paras 10–19).\n\n- For investment entities that do not consolidate certain subsidiaries, there are specific disclosure requirements about unconsolidated subsidiaries, restrictions, support and related contractual terms (paras 19A–19G).\n\n- For joint arrangements and associates, entities must disclose the nature, extent and financial effects of those interests, including summarised financial information for material joint ventures and associates, measurement basis, and commitments or contingent liabilities (paras 20–23; B12–B16).\n\n- For unconsolidated structured entities, entities must disclose qualitative and quantitative information about the nature, purpose, financing and maximum exposure to loss, including tabular summaries where appropriate (paras 24–31; B21–B26, B29).\n\n- The Standard allows entities to choose aggregation levels and the appropriate level of detail, but requires disclosure of how aggregation is done and a balancing of usefulness against burden (para 4; B2–B6).\n\n### Why the Standard says it matters (official rationale) and how that maps to costs and incentives\n\n- Officially, the Standard exists to enable users to evaluate the nature, risks and effects of an entity’s interests in other entities (Objective, para 1). Put simply, the disclosures are intended to improve transparency about relationships and potential exposures.\n\n- Who pays: preparers (the reporting entities) bear the compliance cost of collecting, preparing and presenting the disclosures (para 4; B2). Those costs include staff time, systems and possibly external advice when significant judgements are required (paras 7–9).\n\n- Who decides: preparers exercise judgement about control, joint control, significant influence and the level of aggregation (paras 7–9; para 4; B2–B6). The Standard also gives the AASB room to add Australian-specific guidance (comparison notes and Aus paragraphs), and preparers must follow the Australian appendices where applicable (Comparison with IFRS 12; Aus paragraphs; Appendices E, F).\n\n- Incentives and behavioural effects: requiring disclosure of support provided without contractual obligation (paras 15–16, 19E, 30) and of maximum exposure to loss (para 29) creates an incentive for entities to document and disclose contingent actions and exposures. That transparency may affect decisions about providing support, structuring investments, or the terms of contractual arrangements because such actions will be visible in the financial statements.\n\n- Trade-offs and opportunity costs: entities must balance the benefit of providing useful information to users against the cost and effort of producing detailed disclosures. The Standard explicitly requires entities to consider aggregation and the level of detail to avoid excessive burden or obscuring useful information (para 4; B2–B6).\n\n- Implementation risk and discretion: several provisions rely on significant judgement (control, investment entity status, classification of structured entities) (paras 7–9, 9A; Appendix B guidance). That creates a risk that different entities will make different reasonable decisions, which affects comparability and places a burden on preparers to disclose the judgements they made (para 2(a)).\n\n- Compliance burden and reporting mechanics: the Standard requires both qualitative narratives and quantitative schedules or tabular disclosures in specified areas (for example paras 12, 18, 24–31; B10–B16, B29). Some disclosures (eg maximum exposure to loss, carrying amounts related to structured entities) can require additional measurement and presentation effort (para 29).\n\n### Concentrated benefits, diffuse costs and other distributional points\n\n- Primary beneficiaries of the disclosures are users of financial statements seeking information about risks and group structure (Objective, para 1). Preparers (entities) bear most of the cost of producing and supporting the disclosures (para 4; B2).\n\n- The Standard recognises that one size does not fit all: it allows simplified application for smaller Tier 2 entities (AusF1) and permits entities to aggregate similar interests when appropriate (B3–B6), which reduces burden for some preparers.\n\n### Implementation points to watch (source-referenced)\n\n- Significant judgement areas: control and significant influence (paras 7–9), investment entity status and changes in that status (paras 9A–9B), and identification of structured entities (Appendix A definition and B21–B24).\n\n- Disclosures that may create operational work: tabular summaries of exposures for unconsolidated structured entities (para 29), summarised financial information for material subsidiaries/joint ventures/associates (paras 12, 21; B10–B16), and schedules showing equity effects of changes in ownership that do not change control (para 18).\n\n- Aggregation and presentation: entities must decide appropriate aggregation and state how they aggregated (para 4; B2–B6). The Standard explicitly asks entities to avoid excessive detail that obscures useful information (para 4; B2).\n\n### Where to look in the Standard\n\n- Overall aim and scope: Objective (para 1) and Scope (para 5).\n- Core disclosure requirements: paras 2 and 10–31.\n- Guidance on judgement and aggregation: paras 4 and 7–9; Appendix B (B1–B26).\n- Definitions and special cases (investment entity, structured entity, not-for-profit guidance, Tier 2 simplifications): Appendix A, Appendix E, Appendix F and Aus paragraphs (eg AusCF1, AusF1)."},"flash_summary_failed":{"failed":true,"reason":"Unauthenticated. Configure AI_GATEWAY_API_KEY or use a provider module. Learn more: https://ai-sdk.dev/unauthenticated-ai-gateway","source":"analysis-cron"}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015","history":"/api/acts/aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015/history","analysis":"/api/acts/aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/aasb-12-disclosure-of-interests-in-other-entities-august-2015/documents"}}