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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY |
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Guidance Note on Accounting for Employee
Share-based Payments |
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(The following is the Executive Summary* of the
Guidance Note on Accounting for Employee Share-based Payments. The
complete text of the Guidance Note, which is available for sale
separately, should be referred to for applying the recommendations of
the Guidance Note.) |
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1. |
Recognising the need for establishing uniform sound
accounting principles and practices for all types of share-based
payments, the Accounting Standards Board of the Institute is
developing an Accounting Standard covering various types of
share-based payments including employee share-based payments. However,
as the formulation of the Standard is likely to take some time, the
Institute has decided to bring out this Guidance Note. Once the
Accounting Standard dealing with Share-based Payments comes into
force, this Guidance Note will automatically stand withdrawn. |
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2. |
This Guidance Note establishes financial accounting
and reporting principles for employee share-based payment plans, viz.,
employee stock option plans, employee stock purchase plans and stock
appreciation rights. For the purposes of this Guidance Note, the term
'employee' includes a director of the enterprise, whether whole time
or not. |
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3. |
For accounting purposes, employee share-based
payment plans are classified into the following categories:
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Equity-settled: Under these plans, the employees
receive shares.
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Cash-settled: Under these plans, the employees
receive cash based on the price (or value) of the enterprise's
shares.
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Employee share-based payment plans with cash
alternatives: Under these plans, either the enterprise or the
employee has a choice of whether the enterprise settles the payment
in cash or by issue of shares.
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4. |
An employee share-based payment plan falling in the
above categories can be accounted for by adopting the fair value
method or the intrinsic value method. The accounting treatment
recommended hereinbelow is based on the fair value method. The
application of the intrinsic value method is explained thereafter in
paragraph 15. |
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EQUITY-SETTLED EMPLOYEE SHARE-BASED PAYMENT PLANS |
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Recognition |
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5. |
An enterprise should recognise as an expense
(except where service received qualifies to be included as a part of
the cost of an asset) the services received in an equity-settled
employee share-based payment plan when it receives the services, with
a corresponding credit to an appropriate equity account, say, 'Stock
Options Outstanding Account'. This account is transitional in nature
as it gets ultimately transferred to another equity account such as
share capital, securities premium account and/or general reserve as
recommended in this Guidance Note. |
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6. |
If the shares or stock options granted vest
immediately, the employee is not required to complete a specified
period of service before becoming unconditionally entitled to those
instruments. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the
enterprise should presume that services rendered by the employee as
consideration for the instruments have been received. In this case, on
the grant date, the enterprise should recognise services received in
full with a corresponding credit to the equity account. |
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7. |
If the shares or stock options granted do not vest
until the employee completes a specified period of service, the
enterprise should presume that the services to be rendered by the
employee as consideration for those instruments will be received in
the future, during the vesting period. The enterprise should account
for those services as they are rendered by the employee during the
vesting period, on a time proportion basis, with a corresponding
credit to the equity account. |
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Measurement |
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8. |
An enterprise should measure the fair value of
shares or stock options granted at the grant date, based on market
prices if available, taking into account the terms and conditions upon
which those shares or stock options were granted (subject to the
requirements of paragraphs 9 to 11). If market prices are not
available, the enterprise should estimate the fair value of the
instruments granted using a valuation technique to estimate what the
price of those instruments would have been on the grant date in an
arm's length transaction between knowledgeable, willing parties. The
valuation technique should be consistent with generally accepted
valuation methodologies for pricing financial instruments (e.g., use
of an option pricing model for valuing stock options) and should
incorporate all factors and assumptions that knowledgeable, willing
market participants would consider in setting the price (subject to
the requirements of paragraphs 9 to 11). |
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9. |
Vesting conditions, other than market conditions,
should not be taken into account when estimating the fair value of the
shares or stock options at the grant date. Instead, vesting conditions
should be taken into account by adjusting the number of shares or
stock options included in the measurement of the transaction amount so
that, ultimately, the amount recognised for employee services received
as consideration for the shares or stock options granted is based on
the number of shares or stock options that eventually vest. Hence, on
a cumulative basis, no amount is recognised for employee services
received if the shares or stock options granted do not vest because of
failure to satisfy a vesting condition (i.e., these are forfeited),
e.g., the employee fails to complete a specified service period, or a
performance condition is not satisfied. |
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10. |
To apply the requirements of paragraph 9, the
enterprise should recognise an amount for the employee services
received during the vesting period based on the best available
estimate of the number of shares or stock options expected to vest and
should revise that estimate, if necessary, if subsequent information
indicates that the number of shares or stock options expected to vest
differs from previous estimates. On vesting date, the enterprise
should revise the estimate to equal the number of shares or stock
options that ultimately vest. |
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11. |
Market conditions, such as a target share price
upon which vesting (or exercisability) is conditioned, should be taken
into account when estimating the fair value of the shares or stock
options granted. |
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After vesting date |
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12. |
On exercise of the right to obtain shares or stock
options, the enterprise issues shares on receipt of the exercise
price. The shares so issued should be considered to have been issued
at the consideration comprising the exercise price and the
corresponding amount standing to the credit of the relevant equity
account (e.g., Stock Options Outstanding Account). In a situation
where the right to obtain shares or stock option expires unexercised,
the balance standing to the credit of the relevant equity account
should be transferred to general reserve. |
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CASH-SETTLED EMPLOYEE SHARE-BASED PAYMENT PLANS |
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13. |
For cash-settled employee share-based payment
plans, the enterprise should measure the services received and the
liability incurred at the fair value of the liability. Until the
liability is settled, the enterprise is required to remeasure the fair
value of the liability at each reporting date and at the date of
settlement, with any changes in value recognised in profit or loss for
the period. |
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EMPLOYEE SHARE-BASED PAYMENT PLANS WITH CASH ALTERNATIVES |
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14. |
For employee share-based payment plans in which the
terms of the arrangement provide either the enterprise or the employee
with a choice of whether the enterprise settles the transaction in
cash or by issuing shares, the enterprise is required to account for
that transaction, or the components of that transaction, as a
cash-settled share-based payment plan if, and to the extent that, the
enterprise has incurred a liability to settle in cash (or other
assets), or as an equity-settled share-based payment plan if, and to
the extent that, no such liability has been incurred. |
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INTRINSIC VALUE METHOD |
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15. |
Accounting for employee share-based payment plans
dealt with heretobefore is based on the fair value method. There is
another method known as the 'Intrinsic Value Method' for valuation of
employee share-based payment plans. Intrinsic value, in the case of a
listed company, is the amount by which the quoted market price of the
underlying share exceeds the exercise price of an option. In the case
of a non-listed company, since the shares are not quoted on a stock
exchange, value of its shares is determined on the basis of a
valuation report from an independent valuer. For accounting for
employee share-based payment plans, the intrinsic value may be used,
mutatis mutandis, in place of the fair value as described in
paragraphs 5 to 14. |
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RECOMMENDATION |
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16. |
It is recommended that accounting for employee
share-based payment plans should be based on the fair value approach
as described in paragraphs 5 to 14. However, intrinsic value method as
described in paragraph 15 is also permitted. An enterprise using
intrinsic value method is required to make fair value disclosures. |
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OTHER ASPECTS DEALT WITH IN THE GUIDANCE NOTE |
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17. |
Apart from the above, the Guidance Note also deals
with various other significant aspects of the employee share-based
payment plans including those related to performance conditions,
modifications to the terms and conditions of the grant of shares or
stock options, reload feature, graded vesting, earnings-per-share
implications, accounting for employee share-based payments
administered through a trust, etc. The Guidance Note also recommends
detailed disclosure requirements. The appendices to the Guidance Note
provide detailed guidance on measurement of fair value of shares and
stock options, including determination of various inputs to the
option-pricing models and examples to illustrate application of
various principles recommended in the Guidance Note. |