Accounting for Derivatives: An Evaluation of Reporting Practice by UK Banks

Posted: 3 Jun 2004

See all articles by Margaret Woods

Margaret Woods

Aston Business School

David E.W. Marginson

Loughborough University - Business School

Abstract

In 1998 the Accounting Standards Board (ASB) published FRS 13, "Derivatives and other Financial Instruments: Disclosures." This laid down the requirements for disclosures of an entity's policies, objectives and strategies in using financial instruments, their impact on its risk, performance and financial condition, and details of how risks are managed. FRS 13 became effective in March 1999, and this paper uses the 1999 annual reports of UK banks to evaluate the usefulness of disclosures from a user's perspective. Usefulness is measured in terms of the criteria of materiality, relevance, reliability, comparability and understandability as defined in the ASB's Statement of Principles (ASB, 1999). Our findings suggest that the narrative disclosures are generic in nature, the numerical data incomplete and not always comparable, and that it is difficult for the user to combine both narrative and numerical information in order to assess the banks' risk profile. Our overall conclusion is therefore that current UK financial reporting practices are of limited help to users wishing to assess the scale of an institution's financial risk exposure.

Keywords: Financial reporting, derivatives, FRS 13, disclosures, risk

JEL Classification: M41, M45, G12

Suggested Citation

Woods, Margaret and Marginson, David E.W., Accounting for Derivatives: An Evaluation of Reporting Practice by UK Banks. European Accounting Review, Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 373-390, 2004, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=554507

Margaret Woods (Contact Author)

Aston Business School ( email )

Aston Business School
Aston Triangle
Birmingham, B4 7ET
United Kingdom

David E.W. Marginson

Loughborough University - Business School ( email )

Ashby Road
Loughborough
Nottingham NG1 4BU, LE11 3TU
Great Britain
+44 1509-223138 (Phone)
+44 1509-223931 (Fax)

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