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02 February 2011

Financial Reporting Review Panel about reporting of principal risks and uncertainties


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The Financial Reporting Review Panel of the FRC shows how companies report the principal risks and uncertainties facing their business.


The Companies Act 2006 requires directors’ reports to contain a business review which must itself contain a description of the principal risks and uncertainties facing the company. The Act states that the purpose of the business review is to inform members of the company and help them assess how the directors have performed their statutory duty to promote the success of the company.
 
The business review falls within the remit of the Panel, which has commented on a number of occasions on the issues it has encountered in assessing whether directors’ reports comply with this requirement of the Act. In particular, the Panel has challenged a number of companies where:
  • the directors’ report does not clearly identify which risks and uncertainties the directors believe to be the principal ones facing the business;
  • a long list of principal risks and uncertainties is given and the list raises a question as to whether all the risks and uncertainties on the list are actually principal ones;
  • the description given of a risk or uncertainty is in generic terms and it is not clear how that risk or uncertainty applies to the company’s circumstances;
  • the disclosure is of a risk framework rather than of the risks or uncertainties themselves;
  • the principal risks and uncertainties disclosed are not consistent with other information given in the report and accounts; and
  • the directors’ report does not state how the company manages its principal risks and uncertainties. As the purpose of the business review is to inform members of the company and to help them assess how the directors have performed their duty to promote the success of the company, the Panel believes that a Board should state how the company manages its principal risks and uncertainties.
 
The Panel encourages boards of directors to consider their disclosure of the principal risks and uncertainties facing their businesses by considering the following questions:
1.      Do the disclosures state clearly which are the principal risks and uncertainties facing the business?
2.      Are those risks and uncertainties described as principal risks and uncertainties that currently face the business? For example, have the risks and uncertainties listed as principal been the subject of recent discussions at board or audit committee meetings? Are there risks which have been the subject of such discussions which should be considered as principal?
3.      Is the description of each principal risk and uncertainty sufficient for shareholders to understand the nature of that risk or uncertainty and how it might affect the company?
4.      Are the principal risks and uncertainties described in a manner consistent with the way in which they are discussed within the company?
5.      Are the principal risks and uncertainties shown consistent with the rest of the report and accounts? Are there risks and uncertainties on the list which are not referred to elsewhere or are there significant risks and uncertainties discussed elsewhere which do not appear on the list?
6.      Is there a description, in the directors’ report, or elsewhere in the report and accounts and explicitly cross-referenced from the directors’ report, of how the company manages each of the principal risks and uncertainties?

Press release


© FRC


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