Publication
Essential Corporate News: Week ending 24 May 2024
On 21 May 2024 the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published Primary Market Bulletin 49 (PMB 49) covering a range of topics covering a range of areas including those summarised below.
Global | Publication | September 2022
On September 8, 2022 the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) published the results of a Thematic Review it has conducted into the reporting of earnings per share (EPS) in companies’ financial statements. The report highlights some of the more common errors and, using case studies and examples, it aims to explain the issues involved and show how companies can improve the reliability of their EPS by complying with the detailed requirements of IAS 33, and providing more helpful disclosures.
International Accounting Standard (IAS) 33 ‘Earnings per Share’ sets out the calculation, presentation and disclosure requirements for EPS under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs). All listed companies, reporting under IFRSs or UK GAAP, are required to report EPS in accordance with IAS 33 in both their annual and interim financial statements, and to include comparatives for all periods presented. Reviews undertaken by the FRC’s Corporate Reporting Review (CRR) team show that some of the main principles of IAS 33 are not always well understood, or applied correctly, even in relatively straightforward circumstances. On several occasions, queries raised by CRR on a company’s annual report have resulted in a restatement of the company’s reported EPS in the following year.
The FRC’s findings highlight a number of areas where there is scope for companies to improve their reporting of EPS:
The FRC remind companies that:
(FRC, Thematic Review – Earnings per Share (IAS 33), 08.09.2022)
Publication
On 21 May 2024 the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published Primary Market Bulletin 49 (PMB 49) covering a range of topics covering a range of areas including those summarised below.
Publication
As the world enters the age of artificial intelligence, the use of technology in the legal sector continues to create interpretative difficulties and misunderstandings, sometimes with serious consequences, over seemingly trivial matters.
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