Tf-180-Related Party-Disclosures1121 PDF
Tf-180-Related Party-Disclosures1121 PDF
Contents
1. Introduction 1
2. Legislative requirements 1
3. Accounting standards and definitions 7
4. Disclosure requirements 8
5. Examples 10
6. Checklist 12
7. More information 13
1. INTRODUCTION
This factsheet provides guidance on the collection and disclosure of related party transactions
within statutory financial statements. It will consider the provisions within the Companies Act 2006,
and the accounting and disclosure requirements within the related accounting regulations and
FRS 102, The Financial Reporting Standard Applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland.
2. LEGISLATIVE REQUIREMENTS
The provisions are contained within three pieces of legislation:
A. Companies Act 2006
Part 10 A: Company’s directors
This part of the Companies Act sets out, among other things, the specific rights and duties of the
company directors and shadow directors. Many of the disclosure requirements flow from the
provisions within these sections. Familiarity with the contents of the sections is therefore
desirable.
Chapter 2, Sections 170-181 sets out the general duties of directors under the act. This provides
a framework under which the directors need to ensure that there is a full disclosure of the
interest that they may have in transactions.
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Chapter 3, Sections 182-187 sets out the duties of directors and shadow directors to declare any
interest that they may have in an existing contract.
Chapter 4, Sections 188-226 sets out the details of transactions that require the approval of members.
3. Without prejudice to the generality of subsection 1, regulations under this section may make
any such provision as was made immediately before the commencement of this part by Part 1
of Schedule 6 to the Companies Act 1985.
4. For the purposes of this section, and regulations made under it, amounts paid to or receivable
by:
a) a person connected with a director or
b) a body corporate controlled by a director
are treated as paid to or receivable by the director.
The expressions ‘connected with’ and ‘controlled by’ in this subsection have the same meaning as
in Part 10 (company directors).
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5. It is the duty of:
a) any director of a company and
b) any person who is or has at any time in the preceding five years been a director of the
company
to give notice to the company of such matters relating to themself as may be necessary for the
purposes of regulations under this section.
6. A person who makes default in complying with subsection 5 commits an offence and is liable
on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
Section 413: Information about directors’ benefits: advances, credit and guarantees
1. In the case of a company that does not prepare group accounts, details of:
a) advances and credits granted by the company to its directors and
b) guarantees of any kind entered into by the company on behalf of its directors
must be shown in the notes to its individual accounts.
2. In the case of a parent company that prepares group accounts, details of:
a) advances and credits granted to the directors of the parent company, by that company or by
any of its subsidiary undertakings, and
b) guarantees of any kind entered into on behalf of the directors of the parent company, by that
company or by any of its subsidiary undertakings,
must be shown in the notes to the group accounts.
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c) any amount paid and any liability incurred by the company (or its subsidiary) for the purpose
of fulfilling the guarantee (including any loss incurred by reason of enforcement of the
guarantee).
5. There must also be stated in the notes to the accounts the totals:
a) of amounts stated under subsection 3a
b) of amounts stated under subsection 3d
ba) of amounts stated under subsection 3e
bb) of amounts stated under subsection 3f
c) of amounts stated under subsection 4b
d) of amounts stated under subsection 4c.
6. References in this section to the directors of a company are to the persons who
were directors at any time in the financial year to which the accounts relate.
7. The requirements of this section apply in relation to every advance, credit or guarantee
subsisting at any time in the financial year to which the accounts relate:
a) whenever it was entered into
b) whether or not the person concerned was a director of the company in question at the time it
was entered into
c) in the case of an advance, credit or guarantee involving a subsidiary undertaking of that
company, whether or not that undertaking was such a subsidiary undertaking at the time it
was entered into.
8. Banking companies and the holding companies of credit institutions need only state the details
required by subsection 5a and c.
B. The Companies, Partnerships and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2015
(SI2015/980)
SI 2015/980 has repealed the following previous disclosure requirements of The Small Companies and
Groups (Accounts and Directors’ Report) Regulations (SI 2008/409):
• information about related undertakings where company is not preparing group accounts
• information about directors’ benefits remuneration.
A new regulation has been introduced for the small companies’ disclosure:
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Related party transactions
66.–1. Particulars may be given of transactions which the company has entered into with related
parties, and must be given if such transactions are material and have not been concluded
under normal market conditions with:
a) owners holding a participating interest in the company
b) companies in which the company itself has a participating interest
c) the company’s directors.
4. Particulars need not be given of transactions entered into between two or more members
of a group, provided that any subsidiary undertaking which is a party to the transaction is
wholly-owned by such a member.
5. In this paragraph, ‘related party’ has the same meaning as in international accounting
standards.
20B. Above paragraph 66 of Schedule 1 to the Regulations applies to transactions which the
parent company, or other undertakings included in the consolidation, have entered into
with related parties, unless they are intra-group transactions.
C. The Large and Medium-sized Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations
2008 (SI 2008/410)
These regulations apply to all companies that do not qualify as small or are not preparing accounts
under these provisions.
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Schedule 4 provides details of the requirements for companies to disclose specific details in respect of
holdings in subsidiary and associated undertakings.
Disclosure in respect of the above is included in the checklist below in line with the requirements in the
legislation. These are requirements from the legislation and are not covered in the standards.
One area that requires disclosure, dependent on the company size, is the situation where the total of
the following exceeds £200,000:
• the aggregate amount of remuneration paid to or receivable by directors in respect of qualifying
services
• the aggregate of the amount of gains made by directors on the exercise of share options
• the aggregate of the amount of money paid to or receivable by directors, and the net value of assets
(other than money and share options) received or receivable by directors, under long-term incentive
schemes in respect of qualifying services
In this case, the details of the amounts paid to the highest paid director in respect of the above need
to be separately disclosed. In addition, details of the pension contributions attributable to that director
should be shown. If the pension scheme is a defined benefit scheme then you also need to disclose
the value of the accrued pension and any accrued lump sum for that individual.
Finally, details should be disclosed of any share options exercised by this director and whether any
shares were received or receivable by that director in respect of qualifying services under a long term
incentive scheme.
• Details of transactions with individuals should not usually be aggregated together – hence where
you have more than one related party with similar transactions, these should be shown
separately.
• Where you have a range of different transactions going through the account, you should only
aggregate those that are similar. So, for example where the company pays bills on behalf of a
director, the total of these amounts would be shown separately from cash drawn.
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• Where the account has gone overdrawn at any time during the year (even where it is not
overdrawn at the end of the year), then the details above, along with the maximum balance
outstanding during the year, should be disclosed.
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In considering each possible related party relationship, an entity shall assess the substance of the
relationship and not merely the legal form.
Key management is defined in the standard as: Those persons having authority and
responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the entity, directly or indirectly,
including any director (whether executive or otherwise) of that entity.
An entity (not small) following full standard FRS 102 shall disclose key management personnel
compensation in total, unless key management personnel and directors are the same people.
Significant influence is the power to participate in the operating and financial policy decisions
of an entity; it is not control over those policies. Significant influence would be assumed where
a shareholder holds 20% or more of the voting rights of the entity.
4. DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS
Small companies
Small companies do not have many disclosure requirements for related party transactions as
highlighted in regulation 66 of SI 2015/980 and appendix C to section 1A of FRS 102.
Disclosures are mandatory only when the related party transactions are material and have not
been concluded on normal market conditions. Nevertheless, the directors may decide to disclose
the related party transactions if they believe that it will support the true and fair view of the
financial statements. Once the directors choose or have disclosure requirements otherwise, then
the following information shall be included in the financial statements:
• the names of the parties
• the nature of relationship with the parties
• details of the transactions
• the amounts of the transactions
• additional information required for any understanding
• the amounts of outstanding balances and
(i) their terms and conditions, including whether they are secured, and the nature
of the consideration to be provided in settlement
(ii) details of any guarantees given or received
• any amounts written off in respect of such debts
• provisions for uncollectible receivables related to the amount of outstanding balances
• the expense recognised during the period in respect of bad or doubtful debts due from
related parties.
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Under FRS 102, an entity may disclose items of a similar nature in the aggregate except when
separate disclosure is necessary for an understanding of the effects of related party transactions on
the financial statements of the entity.
b) Directors’ overdrawn loan accounts must be disclosed in the financial statements as highlighted
in section 413 of the Companies Act 2006, irrespective of the amount involved. There is no
specific exemption for small entities for this disclosure.
c) Ultimate controlling party: paragraph 1AC.34 of FRS 102 states that if the small entity is a
subsidiary, certain information is required to be disclosed in respect of the parent of the smallest
group for which consolidated financial statements are drawn up of which the small entity is a
member. Where the group does prepare consolidated financial statements, the following should
be disclosed in subsidiary company accounts:
1. the name of the parent that draws up the consolidated financial statements
2. the address of the parent’s registered office (whether in or outside the UK)
3. if it is unincorporated, the address of its principal place of business.
Where the group does not prepare consolidated financial statements (for example, because the
group is a small group under the Companies Act 2006), this information does not need to be
disclosed.
d) Transactions with wholly owned subsidiary: particulars need not be given of transactions
entered into between two or more members of a group, provided that any subsidiary that is
a party to the transaction is wholly owned by such a member. (Schedule 1, paragraph 66).
e) Companies based in the Republic of Ireland following Companies Act 2014 have more
detailed disclosure requirements than UK companies following Companies Act 2006. These
are explained in Appendix D of FRS 102 and are not covered within this factsheet.
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5. EXAMPLES
The following are examples of the related party disclosure required in a set of statutory accounts.
The disclosure under transactions with directors is as a result of the Companies Act requirements
and the related party disclosure is as a requirement of the accounting standard. NB: A small entity
does not require to make these disclosures in the financial statements if all the transactions are at
normal market conditions but may choose to do so if the directors wish so.
Example 1
Directors’ remuneration
The directors’ aggregate remuneration in respect of qualifying services was:
20XX 20YY
As restated
£ £
Aggregate remuneration 25,000 25,000
Pension contributions 2,000 2,000
Four directors (20YY – 4) were accruing benefits under the company’s defined contribution pension
scheme.
During the year, the following dividends were paid to the directors of the company:
• Mr A Arthur: £300 in respect of 6% redeemable preference shares (20YY – £300) and
£2,450 in respect of ordinary shares (20YY – £1,750)
• Mr B Benedict, Mrs C Clements and Ms D Duncan: £350 each in respect of ordinary shares
(20YY – £250)
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Ultimate controlling party
The ultimate controlling party was Mr A Arthur, a director and shareholder of the company.
Example 2
Related party disclosures
During the year under review, the company has paid rent of £21,000 to Mr A and Mr B, directors and
shareholders of the company, for use of freehold property by the company, which is jointly owned by
them.
The lease is under formal contract terms and has an independently verified rent review period every
three years.
The directors have jointly given a loan to the company of £278,000, which they are not going to
withdraw until the company has sufficient funds to repay without affecting the cashflow of the
company.
Dividends of £50,000 paid in the year have been paid equally to all the shareholders who are
also directors of the company.
Example 3
Transaction with directors
The company had an outstanding directors loan in the name of Mr XXXXX of £11,000 (prior year
£26,000) at the year end. This is included in other creditors in note 13. This loan is interest free
and repayable on demand. The highest amount during the year was £26,000, with £15,000 being
paid to the company by Mr XXXX.
Related parties
The company owns 51% of the shares in BB Ltd, which is online sale arm of this company.
The company was owed £30,000 (20YY – £Nil) by its subsidiary undertaking, which is repayable on
demand. The company had sold £430,000 (20YY- £28,000) worth of goods to its subsidiary during
the year.
The company was owed £151,000 (20YY – 213,000) by CC Ltd, which is a company under
common control of the directors.
During the year, the company sold goods to the value of £531,000 (20YY – £270,000) to CC Ltd.
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6. CHECKLIST
Related party disclosure checklist Reference Comments
1 Identify all related parties looking at the definition and establish whether
the disclosure is required. Document your conclusion
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7 Ascertain details of the individual or group of individuals who control the
entity
7. MORE INFORMATION
• Companies Act 2006 (CA2006)
• The Small Companies and Groups (Accounts and Directors’ Report) Regulations 2008
(SI 2008/409)
• The Companies, Partnerships and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2015
(SI 2015/980)
• The Large and Medium-sized Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008
(SI 2008/410)
• ACCA Technical factsheet FRS 102, Small company reporting
• FRS 102, The Financial Reporting Standard Applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland
November 2021
ACCA LEGAL NOTICE
This technical factsheet is for guidance purposes only. It is not a substitute for obtaining specific legal
advice. While every care has been taken with the preparation of the technical factsheet, neither ACCA
nor its employees accept any responsibility for any loss occasioned by reliance on the contents.
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