An accounting method that pairs a hedging instrument (like a derivative) with the item being hedged to reduce reported earnings volatility.
Hedge Accounting is a special accounting treatment under Ind AS 109/IFRS 9 that allows companies to match the timing of gains/losses on hedging instruments with the hedged item. Without hedge accounting, derivatives are marked-to-market through P&L, creating artificial volatility even when the underlying exposure is stable. Three types: Fair Value Hedge (hedging changes in asset/liability value), Cash Flow Hedge (hedging variability of future cash flows), and Net Investment Hedge (hedging foreign operation investments). Strict documentation and effectiveness testing requirements must be met.
An Indian exporter expects to receive $1,000,000 in 6 months. They buy a forward contract to sell USD at ₹84. Without hedge accounting: forward contract gains/losses hit P&L each quarter (volatile). With hedge accounting: gains/losses are parked in OCI (Other Comprehensive Income) and recognized only when the export revenue is booked — matching the timing and eliminating artificial P&L volatility.
Ensures accurate financial reporting and record-keeping
Helps maintain regulatory and tax compliance
Enables better-informed business decisions
Improves operational efficiency and cash flow management
Without it, economic hedges create P&L volatility: the hedged item and hedging instrument are recognized at different times or in different line items. Hedge accounting aligns them, showing the true economic picture. Example: forex forward protects export revenue, but without hedge accounting, forward MTM gains/losses appear in one quarter while export revenue appears in another.
Under Ind AS 109: 1) Formal designation and documentation at inception, 2) Hedge must be expected to be highly effective (80–125% range), 3) Effectiveness must be reliably measurable, 4) Ongoing assessment that the hedge remains effective. If any requirement fails, hedge accounting must be discontinued prospectively.
Formal records of a business's financial activities, comprising the Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss Statement, Cash Flow Statement, and Notes to Accounts.
The accounting principle that determines when and how revenue is recorded in the financial statements, based on when it is earned rather than when cash is received.
The use of borrowed funds (debt) to finance business operations, amplifying both potential returns and risks for equity shareholders.
The transfer of money from one party to another, particularly the sending of funds by foreign workers to their home countries or cross-border business payments.
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