IAS 36 - DIPIFR Exam tips and guide
IAS 36 – Impairment of Assets: Complete Exam Mastery Guide
DipIFR Strategic Study Resource for Eduyush Students
Quick Reference: Exam Success Formula
THE GOLDEN RULE: Recoverable Amount = HIGHER of VIU and FVLCOD
THE ALLOCATION RULE: Goodwill → Intangibles → PPE (in that order)
THE REVERSAL RULE: All assets EXCEPT goodwill can be reversed
THE DISCLOSURE RULE: Always include 3-4 standard disclosure points for easy marks
Examiner's Mind Map - What They're Really Testing
Core Testing Objectives:
- Can you identify the higher value? (Most common mistake: using lower)
- Do you understand CGU mechanics? (Allocation sequence matters)
- Can you apply reversal rules correctly? (Goodwill trap)
- Do you integrate with other standards? (IAS 16, IAS 12, IFRS 3)
Examiner's Favorite Tricks:
- Give you both VIU and FVLCOD calculations, then students pick the lower ❌
- Show goodwill in a CGU, students forget to impair goodwill first ❌
- Present a reversal scenario with goodwill included ❌
- Complex cash flow projections but wrong discount rate used ❌
Examiner-Impressing Keywords & Phrases
Master These Exact Terms - They Unlock Marks!
🔹 Identifying Impairment
- "External and internal indicators of impairment"
- "Significant decline in market value"
- "Obsolescence or physical damage"
- "Adverse changes in economic, legal or technological environment"
- "Carrying amount exceeds recoverable amount"
🔹 Recoverable Amount
- "Recoverable amount is the higher of fair value less costs of disposal and value in use"
- "Value in use = present value of future cash flows"
- "Fair value less costs of disposal (FVLCD)"
- "Best evidence is a binding sales agreement in an arm's length transaction"
- "Pre-tax discount rate that reflects current market assessments"
🔹 Impairment Loss
- "Impairment loss is recognized when carrying amount exceeds recoverable amount"
- "Recognized in profit or loss, unless asset carried at revalued amount (IAS 16)"
- "First allocated to goodwill, then pro-rata to CGU assets"
- "Cannot reduce an asset below its fair value less costs of disposal or value in use"
🔹 Reversal of Impairment
- "Reversal permitted if estimates change, except for goodwill"
- "Reversal limited to the carrying amount had no impairment been recognized"
- "Reversal recognized in profit or loss (unless revalued asset)"
- "Goodwill impairment shall not be reversed in a subsequent period"
🔹 CGUs (Cash-Generating Units)
- "Smallest identifiable group of assets generating largely independent cash inflows"
- "Goodwill tested for impairment at CGU level"
- "Impairment allocated first to goodwill, then pro-rata to other assets"
- "Corporate assets allocated on reasonable and consistent basis"
Power Phrases for Maximum Impact:
Opening Lines:
- "In accordance with IAS 36, Impairment of Assets..."
- "The recoverable amount is defined as the higher of..."
- "An impairment loss shall be recognized when..."
For Calculations:
- "The value in use calculation requires discounting expected future cash flows..."
- "Fair value less costs of disposal represents the amount obtainable from sale..."
- "The impairment loss of $X is allocated as follows..."
For Theoretical Parts:
- "IAS 36 requires annual impairment testing for goodwill..."
- "External indicators include significant decline in market value..."
- "The standard prohibits reversal of goodwill impairment losses..."
Pro Tips for Using These Keywords:
- Frame Every Answer: Always start with "In accordance with IAS 36..." or "IAS 36 requires..."
- Use Exact Definitions: Don't paraphrase - use the standard's exact terminology
-
Sound Professional: Replace casual language:
- ❌ "The company should check for impairment"
- ✅ "The entity shall assess whether there are indicators of impairment"
- Quote the Rule: Even in computational questions, state the underlying principle
- Use Technical Terms: "Carrying amount", not "book value"; "Recognized", not "recorded"
Examiner Psychology: Using standard IFRS terminology signals that you understand the conceptual framework, not just the mechanics. This can be the difference between a pass and a strong pass!
The IAS 36 Exam Decoder
Question Type Recognition:
🔹 Type A: Pure Impairment Test (8-10 marks) Triggers: "Calculate impairment loss", "Recoverable amount", "Carrying amount exceeds" Strategy: Follow 6-step template religiously
🔹 Type B: Goodwill CGU Scenario (10-15 marks) Triggers: "Cash generating unit", "Goodwill allocated", "Business combination" Strategy: Allocate impairment to goodwill first, then pro-rata
🔹 Type C: Reversal Testing (6-8 marks) Triggers: "Conditions improved", "Indicators no longer present", "Reverse impairment" Strategy: Apply ceiling rule, exclude goodwill
🔹 Type D: Integration Question (12-20 marks) Triggers: Multiple standards referenced, "effect on tax", "revaluation then impairment" Strategy: Break into components, tackle IAS 36 portion methodically
The Foolproof Calculation Template
The 6-Step IAS 36 Method (Use this structure in every question)
Step 1: IDENTIFY INDICATORS
- List internal/external indicators present
- Conclude: "Impairment test required" [1 mark]
Step 2: DETERMINE RECOVERABLE AMOUNT
Fair Value less Costs of Disposal (FVLCOD): $X
Value in Use (VIU): $X
Recoverable Amount = HIGHER of above: $X [2-3 marks]
Step 3: COMPARE WITH CARRYING AMOUNT
Carrying Amount: $X
Recoverable Amount: $X
Impairment Loss = CA - RA: $X [2 marks]
Step 4: ALLOCATION (if CGU involved)
Goodwill (allocated first): $X
Remaining balance allocated pro-rata:
- Intangibles ($X/$Y × $Z): $X
- PPE ($X/$Y × $Z): $X [3-4 marks]
Step 5: JOURNAL ENTRIES
Dr Impairment Loss (P&L) $X
Cr Accumulated Impairment - Goodwill $X
Cr Accumulated Impairment - PPE $X [2 marks]
Step 6: DISCLOSURES
[List 3-4 standard disclosure points] [2-3 marks]
Value in Use Calculation Sub-Template:
Year 1 Cash Flow: $X
Year 2 Cash Flow: $X
Year 3 Cash Flow: $X
Terminal Value (Year 3 × growth ÷ (r-g)): $X
PV of Year 1 ($X ÷ 1.12¹): $X
PV of Year 2 ($X ÷ 1.12²): $X
PV of Year 3 + Terminal ($X ÷ 1.12³): $X
Value in Use: $X
Pitfall Avoidance System
The Big 5 Mistakes (Fix These = Instant Mark Improvement)
| Mistake | Student Error % | Correct Approach | Memory Trick |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lower vs Higher Rule | 40% | Always use HIGHER of VIU/FVLCOD | "HIGHER for Help" |
| Goodwill Reversal | 35% | NEVER reverse goodwill impairment | "Goodwill Gone forever" |
| Allocation Sequence | 45% | Goodwill first, then pro-rata others | "Goodwill Goes first" |
| Wrong Discount Rate | 30% | Use pre-tax rate for VIU | "Pre-tax for PV" |
| Missing Disclosures | 25% | Always include 3-4 points | "Disclosure Dump" |
Examiner's Exact Words to Memorize:
"The recoverable amount is the higher of fair value less costs of disposal and value in use"
"Impairment losses on goodwill cannot be reversed in future periods"
"Within a CGU, impairment is allocated first to goodwill, then pro-rata"
"The discount rate used in VIU calculations must be pre-tax"
Integration Mastery
IAS 36 + IAS 16 (PPE Revaluation then Impairment)
Sequence: Revalue → Test for impairment → Apply impairment to revalued amount
Key Point: Impairment reduces revaluation reserve first, then P&L
IAS 36 + IAS 12 (Deferred Tax Effects)
Impairment creates temporary difference:
- Carrying amount (after impairment): Lower
- Tax base (unchanged): Higher
- Creates Deferred Tax Asset (if deductible)
IAS 36 + IFRS 3 (Goodwill in Business Combinations)
Goodwill allocation: Must be allocated to CGUs
Testing frequency: At least annually + when indicators present
NCI impact: Consider full goodwill vs partial goodwill methods
Question-Specific Attack Strategies
For Numerical Questions (60% of marks):
- Set up your template first - don't start calculating immediately
- Show every step - method marks are generous
- Use clear headings - "Recoverable Amount Calculation", "Impairment Allocation"
- Double-check the higher/lower rule - circle your final recoverable amount
For Theoretical Questions (40% of marks):
- Structure your answer - Introduction, main points, conclusion
- Use examiner's language - quote the key phrases exactly
- Give practical examples - "For instance, if market value drops significantly..."
- Cover disclosure requirements - easy marks often ignored
Pre-Exam Quick Check
✅ 24 Hours Before Exam - Tick Off Each Item:
Core Concepts:
- [ ] Can define recoverable amount in examiner's exact words
- [ ] Know the allocation sequence for CGU impairment
- [ ] Understand reversal rules (and goodwill exception)
- [ ] Can calculate VIU using pre-tax discount rate
Integration Areas:
- [ ] IAS 16 + IAS 36 interaction (revaluation then impairment)
- [ ] IAS 12 + IAS 36 (deferred tax on impairment)
- [ ] IFRS 3 + IAS 36 (goodwill allocation to CGUs)
Exam Technique:
- [ ] Memorized the 6-step template
- [ ] Know 4-5 standard disclosure points to "dump"
- [ ] Can spot question types within 30 seconds
- [ ] Practiced allocation calculations until automatic
Last-Minute Power Tips
The 3-Minute Question Scan Method:
- Identify question type (Pure impairment/CGU/Reversal/Integration)
- Spot the integration (Which other standards are involved?)
- Plan your attack (Which template parts apply?)
Time Allocation Strategy:
- Step 1-2 (Indicators/Recoverable): 30% of time
- Step 3-4 (Compare/Allocate): 40% of time
- Step 5-6 (Entries/Disclosures): 30% of time
Mark Maximization Hacks:
- Method marks: Show workings even if numbers are wrong
- Theory marks: State rules even in computational questions
- Easy marks: Never skip disclosure requirements
- Safety net: If stuck, write the definition of recoverable amount for 2 marks
Suggested Focus Areas:
- Master goodwill CGU scenarios - appears every sitting
- Practice reversal calculations - due for comeback
- Rehearse integration questions - highest mark questions
- Memorize disclosure points - guaranteed easy marks
🎯 Remember: IAS 36 is Your Friend!
Unlike some standards, IAS 36 has predictable patterns. Master the template, avoid the big 5 mistakes, and you'll consistently score 70%+ on these questions. The examiners want to see logical, structured thinking more than perfect numbers.
Your mantra: "Higher, Goodwill first, Never reverse goodwill, Always disclose"
Good luck! With this systematic approach, IAS 36 will become one of your strongest areas. 🚀