On 15 August 2016, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) reissued the following Legislative Instruments (instruments) (previously referred to as Class Orders) that impact financial reporting. The new instruments are all effective from 26 August 2016.
Old Class Order | New Instrument |
---|---|
CO 98/96 Synchronisation of financial year with foreign parent company |
ASIC Corporations (Synchronisation of Financial Years) Instrument 2016/189 |
CO 98/101 Members of companies, registered schemes and disclosing entities who are uncontactable |
ASIC Corporations (Uncontactable Members) Instrument 2016/187 |
CO 98/2395 Transfer of information from the directors’ report |
ASIC Corporations (Directors’ Report Relief) Instrument 2016/188 |
CO 98/2016 Disclosing entities – half-year financial reporting relief |
ASIC Corporations (Disclosing Entities) Instrument 2016/190 |
CO 08/15 Disclosing entities – half-year financial reporting relief |
The relief provided by the respective Legislative Instruments is essentially the same as the superseded Class Orders. These are summarised briefly below.
Legislative Instrument 2016/189 permits Australian companies, registered schemes and disclosing entities to have a financial year that is not 12 months long (s323D(2)) where they synchronise their year end with their foreign parent (not being longer than 18 months in the year of change). The relief is available if the entity or a director reasonably believes that:
Some of the conditions for relief include:
Legislative Instrument 2016/187 relieves entities from sending hard copy annual financial reports to members that have elected to receive these if the entity has:
For the first six years after the above applies, the entity must send to the address shown in the register of members, a notice stating that dispatch of financial reports, directors’ reports and auditor’s reports has been suspended but will resume on receipt of a current address.
This instrument allows certain directors’ report information to be disclosed elsewhere in the annual report document (accompanying document) that includes the directors’ report and financial report if:
The specific information required by s300 can be disclosed/included elsewhere in the accompanying document, including in the financial report itself (permitted by s300(2)).
However, the items listed below can be disclosed elsewhere in the accompanying document, but not within the financial report itself:
It should be noted that details of non-audit services provided by the auditor of a listed company must be disclosed in the directors’ report itself, under a separate heading called ‘Non-audit services’ as required by s300(11B). It appears that the general permission by s300(2) to disclose s300 specific information in the financial report itself does not apply to non-audit services disclosure. |
The directors’ report information for a half-year required by s306 can also be disclosed elsewhere in the half-year report, but not in the half-year financial report.
Legislative Instrument 2019/190 provides relief in two areas which are summarised below:
Entities that are disclosing entities at the end of the financial year, but which are no longer disclosing entities when they lodge with ASIC and report to members (i.e. they stop being a disclosing entity before the earlier of three months after year end, and 21 days before the next AGM after year end) are relieved by Legislative Instrument 2016/190 from having to comply with the Chapter 2M reporting requirements for disclosing entities.
This means that they will lodge within time frames for entities that are not disclosing entities, and the financial report will not include any specific disclosures for disclosing entities, e.g. remuneration report for listed companies, s299A detailed review of operations for listed entities and s300(12) information for listed registered schemes.
The directors of the entity must resolve before the earlier of the time frames mentioned above that there are no reasons to believe that the entity may become a disclosing entity before the end of the next financial year.
Where a disclosing entity’s first financial year is for a period of eight months or less, no half-year financial report and directors’ report need to be lodged with ASIC.
However, to obtain the relief, the first directors’ report for the annual period (less than eight months) must explain the relief available in Legislative Instrument 2016/190 and state that the entity has relied on this relief. In addition:
Also remember that for years ending on or after 30 June 2016, the rounding Class Order, 98/100 has been replaced by ASIC Corporations (Rounding in Financial/Directors’ Reports) Instrument 2016/191. This means that references to Class Order 98/100 in the directors’ report and financial statements need to be updated to refer to the new instrument.