IFRS 10 · Retail

Intercompany Eliminations
for Retail

Retail groups operate through central purchasing entities, distribution hubs, and store networks that generate high volumes of intercompany transactions. This tool matches those balances, calculates unrealised profit on transferred inventory, and produces elimination journals.

IFRS 10 · LIVEv2026.040/8 sections

Consolidation eliminations,
journal-ready.

Session
0x522A
Group
FY 2026
Ownership
100%
eliminations.conf
ifrs10.ref
README.md
01// group— IFRS 10.B86
02group_name=
03parent_entity=
04subsidiary=
05ownership_pct=%
06reporting_period=
07// section_a.trading— IFRS 10.B86(b)
08enabled=
09// section_b.upii— IFRS 10.B86(c)
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11// section_c.ic_loan— IFRS 9 / IAS 24
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13// section_d.dividend— IFRS 10.B86(a) · B94
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15// section_e.ar_ap_balance— IFRS 10.B86(c)
16enabled=
17// section_f.mgmt_fee— IAS 24.18
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19// consolidation_scope— IFRS 10.7 · B18-B85
Control assessment (IFRS 10.7 — all three elements required):
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Consolidation scope · control rationale (IFRS 10.7 · B18-B85)
20// journal_entries— IFRS 10.B86 · auto-derived
Enable one or more elimination sections above to generate journal entries.
Journal entries · auto-derived (IFRS 10.B86)
21// transfer_pricing— IAS 24.18 · OECD BEPS Action 13
Transfer pricing documentation (tick each confirmed):
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68tp.rationale=
Transfer pricing · IAS 24.18 + OECD BEPS Action 13
22// deferred_tax_on_upii— IAS 12.39
70buyer_tax_rate=%
Enable Section B (UPII) to see the deferred-tax asset.
72dta.rationale=
Deferred tax on UPII · IAS 12.39
23// completeness_assessment— IFRS 10.B86
IC elimination category coverage (✓ = addressed via sections A-F above, toggle G/H if applicable):
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Completeness · IFRS 10.B86 category coverage
24// risk_warnings— ISA 600.A141 · rule engine
Enable sections above to run risk analysis.
Risk warnings · rule engine (ISA 600.A141)
25// disclosure_and_conclusion— IFRS 12.9-13 · IAS 24.18
Tick disclosure items addressed in FS notes:
90IFRS 12.10
91IFRS 12.12
92IFRS 12.B10-11
93IFRS 12.13
94IAS 24.18(a)-(b)
95IAS 24.18(b)
96IAS 24.17
97IFRS 10.B86
98prepared_by=
99reviewed_by=
**conclusion.narrative=
Disclosure + conclusion · IFRS 12.9-13 + IAS 24.18
awaiting input·0 JEs · 0/8 sectionsEUR·100%
previewwp-ic-elim-2026.pdf
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Gross P&L Eliminations
revenue + interest + dividends + fees
PRIMARY
Journal Entries
sections enabled above
Net P&L Impact (UPII)
unrealised profit in inventory
Completeness
0/8
categories addressed
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IFRS 10 intercompany eliminations for Retail

Retail groups create intercompany complexity through volume rather than structural difficulty. A typical mid-market retail group runs a central buying entity that purchases stock from external suppliers, a distribution or logistics subsidiary that warehouses and dispatches goods, and multiple store-operating entities (sometimes one per country or region). The central buyer sells to the distribution entity at a markup, and the distribution entity sells to store entities at a further markup. Every SKU that moves through this chain generates intercompany revenue, cost of sales, and margin that IFRS 10.B86 requires you to strip out at consolidation.

The defining characteristic of retail intercompany work is the transaction volume. A manufacturing group might process hundreds of intercompany invoices per month. A retail group with centralised purchasing can generate thousands, particularly during seasonal peaks. Each invoice is small relative to the total, but collectively the intercompany trading balance is material. The common intercompany transaction types in retail are inventory purchases and sales through the central buying model, franchise or licence fees charged by the brand-owning entity to operating entities, management service charges from the parent to subsidiaries covering IT, HR, and finance functions, and intercompany lease arrangements where a property-holding entity leases stores to the operating entity. Since IFRS 16 took effect, those intercompany leases add another elimination layer because the operating entity recognises a right-of-use asset and lease liability that must be reversed in the consolidated accounts (the group can't lease property to itself).

Retail auditors frequently encounter two problems with intercompany eliminations. First, the high transaction volume means mismatches between entities accumulate quickly, and clients often carry forward unreconciled "intercompany suspense" balances rather than clearing them monthly. The AFM in its 2022 public report highlighted that auditors sometimes accept these suspense balances as immaterial without aggregating them across all entity pairs. When you add up suspense balances across fifteen entity pairs, the total can exceed performance materiality. Second, seasonal inventory patterns mean that the unrealised profit adjustment at a December year end (post-Christmas clearance, low stock levels) looks very different from the adjustment at an interim date. Auditors who calculate unrealised profit at interim and roll it forward to year end without updating for changed inventory levels and changed margins will get the number wrong.

For retail groups, request the intercompany trading report segmented by entity pair and by month. Reconcile balances at the entity-pair level, not in aggregate (a net zero position across the group doesn't mean every pair agrees). Calculate unrealised profit using the weighted average intercompany margin applied to closing inventory sourced from group entities. Where the retail group operates franchise arrangements with partly owned entities, split the unrealised profit adjustment between parent equity and NCI. For intercompany leases, reverse the IFRS 16 entries at consolidation: remove the right-of-use asset, remove the lease liability, and reinstate the underlying property in the lessor entity's fixed assets at its carrying amount to the group.

Frequently asked questions: Retail

- Q: How do I handle intercompany franchise fees in a retail group consolidation?
Eliminate the franchise fee income in the franchisor entity against the franchise fee expense in the franchisee entity. If the franchise agreement includes variable fees based on revenue, verify that both entities recorded the same amount. For partly owned franchisee entities, the elimination still occurs in full under IFRS 10.B86, with the NCI impact allocated per IFRS 10.B94.
Do intercompany leases between retail group entities need to be eliminated?
Yes. Under IFRS 16, the lessee entity will have recognised a right-of-use asset and lease liability for the intercompany lease. At consolidation, reverse these entries entirely. The group owns the property, so the consolidated balance sheet should show the underlying property asset (held by the lessor entity) and no internal lease obligation. Eliminate the corresponding lease interest expense and rental income from the consolidated income statement.
What's the best approach for high-volume intercompany matching in retail?
Don't match invoice by invoice. Request a monthly summary of intercompany transactions by entity pair from the client's ERP system. Reconcile at the monthly total level, then investigate material variances. Set a threshold for investigation (for example, any monthly variance exceeding 2% of the monthly intercompany trading volume for that pair). This keeps the work proportionate to the risk without ignoring genuine mismatches.
How do I deal with intercompany suspense accounts in retail groups?
Obtain a breakdown of the suspense balance by entity pair and by age. Items older than 60 days are unlikely to be genuine timing differences. Require the client to investigate and clear aged suspense items before you process eliminations. Aggregate all intercompany suspense balances across all entity pairs and compare the total to performance materiality. If it exceeds your threshold, it's not immaterial just because each individual pair's balance looks small.

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