Certificate in Treasury Hedge Accounting
The Treasury Hedge Accounting course covers the intricacies of hedge accounting as per IFRS 9/Ind AS 109. This course uses a practical approach, through a discussion of various use cases and challenges faced in application of the hedge accounting and potential solutions.
The team
About the Course
CAFTA’s Certificate in Treasury Hedge Accounting (CTHA) is a course for participants who want to understand detailed concepts of IFRS 9/Ind AS 109, widely used hedge accounting strategies and its real-world application in treasury domain.
This hedge accounting course uses a practical approach through a discussion of various use cases, challenges faced in application of the hedge accounting and potential solutions.
After attending the program:
- You will be able to apply hedge accounting to your derivative transactions and explain the principles to senior stakeholders
- In a client facing role, you will be able to explain your clients the benefits / impacts of hedge accounting and the derivative transactions
Program highlights
Overview of derivatives
- Need and use of derivatives
- Various types of derivative instruments available for hedging
- Understand how derivatives affect financial statements
- Classification and accounting of derivatives instruments and its impact on financial statements
Objective and need for hedge accounting
- Hedge accounting’s application by companies to
- Align risk management activities to reflect in accounting
- Reduce volatility in P&L statement
- Mitigate accounting mismatch in measurement of financial Instruments
Application of hedge accounting in practice
- Types of permitted hedge relationship such as Cashflow hedge, Fair Value hedge and Net investment hedge
- Accounting implications of each hedge relationship
- Pre-requisites of application of hedge accounting
- Hedged item, hedging instruments, risk components, Layering etc
- Eligibility criteria for designation in hedge relationship
- Key aspects of hedge documentation
- Hedge effectiveness testing requirements
- Apply hedge accounting to different components of hedging instruments (forwards and options)
- Criteria for highly probable forecast transactions
Hedge effectiveness methodologies
- Concepts of economic relationship, hypothetical derivatives, rebalancing and hedge ratio
- Different methods of assessing hedge effectiveness: Critical terms method, Dollar offset method, regression method
- Key aspects while performing effectiveness testing
- Role of credit risk in assessment of hedge effectiveness testing
- Hedge accounting for rollover hedging strategy
- Rebalancing of hedged item and hedged instrument
Discontinuation of hedge accounting
- Scenarios which result in discontinuation of hedge accounting
- Impact of discontinuation of hedge relationship
Practical scenarios in hedge accounting
- Common challenges in application of hedge accounting such as mismatch in critical terms, hedge designation post trade date, etc.
Case studies
- Currency risk: Designation of forward contract for hedge against highly probable sales
- Currency and interest rate risk: Designation of cross currency interest rate swap (CCIRS) against external commercial borrowing
- Commodity price risk: Designation of commodity futures contract against inventory
- Currency risk: Designation of currency option contract against foreign currency term loan
- Currency risk at subsidiary entity: Designation of Non-derivative financial instrument against net assets of a subsidiary
Program schedule
- 8+ hours of recorded videos
- 3 hours of live classroom interaction
- Templates and case studies
- 4 hours of CAFTA's FRM module recorded on-demand
Who should attend?
- Treasury manager/Treasury front-office
- Treasury back office/accounting professionals
- Finance manager/Finance controller
- Internal/External auditor
- Treasury/Derivative sales professional
- Finance professionals interested derivatives and hedge accounting
Benefits on attending the program
- Understand accounting impact of derivative / risk management strategies
- Appropriately reflect risk management strategy in financial reporting
- Use hedge accounting principals on derivatives to protect P&L volatility
- Advice clients on appropriate derivatives in line with hedge accounting principles
- Identify how derivatives are reflected in company's financial statements
- Recognize links between risk management practices and financial reporting
Registration fee
Fee (all prices are exclusive of 18% GST) |
CAFTA members |
Non CAFTA members |
Normal fee |
INR 5,000 |
INR 8,000 |
Get FRM* module of CAFTA worth INR 5,000 Free with CTHA course
*Financial Risk Management (FRM) module, part of CAFTA Module, is a 4 hour pre-recorded on-demand video access of which will be shared with the participant.
For more details about CAFTA, click here.
Contact us for upcoming sessions
Please email us to get updates on the latest batches.
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