
WHAT WE DO
Insurance Services
Employee Benefits
Financial Advisory
Banking & Financial
ESG & Sustainability
Financial Reporting
Capital, Solvency & Risk
Investment & Asset Management
Corporate Advisory
Data & Technology
Phone:
+971 4 876 8530Email:
[email protected]
IFRS 17, IFRS 9, IFRS 2, and IAS 19 actuarial implementations, ongoing compliance, and managed reporting services.
Discuss your requirementsInternational Financial Reporting Standards require actuarial expertise for measurement, disclosure, and audit-readiness. We deliver the actuarial modelling and reporting that underpin IFRS 17 insurance contract valuations, IFRS 9 expected credit loss models, IFRS 2 share-based payment valuations, and IAS 19 employee benefit measurements.
Our outputs are designed for auditor scrutiny. We work directly with external audit teams throughout the reporting cycle to explain methodology, defend assumptions, and resolve queries — reducing friction between your finance function and your auditors.
IFRS 17 replaced IFRS 4 in January 2023, requiring insurers to measure liabilities at current fulfilment value. We provide end-to-end IFRS 17 services from gap analysis through to ongoing managed reserving and reporting.
IFRS 9 requires forward-looking expected credit loss provisioning on financial instruments. We develop PD/LGD/EAD models for banks and provision matrices for corporate trade receivables.
IFRS 2 requires companies to recognise the cost of share-based payment transactions in their financial statements. We value employee stock options, LTIPs, ESPPs, and performance shares using Black-Scholes, binomial, and Monte Carlo methods.
IAS 19 valuations measure an organisation's obligations for gratuity, pensions, and post-employment medical using the Projected Unit Credit method. We produce audit-ready disclosure schedules for inclusion in IFRS financial statements.
While IFRS 17 has superseded IFRS 4 for most jurisdictions, some markets still require IFRS 4 reporting during transition. We continue to support IFRS 4 reporting for insurers in these jurisdictions.
IFRS 17 (insurance contracts), IFRS 9 (expected credit losses), IFRS 2 (share-based payments), and IAS 19 (employee benefits) all require qualified actuarial expertise for measurement and disclosure.
IFRS 4 was a transitional standard that largely allowed insurers to continue using local accounting practices. IFRS 17, effective from January 2023, requires measurement at current fulfilment value using prescribed models (GMM, PAA, VFA). It is a fundamental change in how insurance liabilities appear on the balance sheet.
Reserving, pricing, product design, reinsurance, and appointed actuary services for life, general, health, and Takaful insurers across the Middle East & Africa.
Actuarial valuations, scheme design, and advisory for end-of-service benefits, pensions, post-employment medical, and alternative savings plans.
IFRS 9 ECL modelling, credit risk analytics, and actuarial valuations for banks, fintech lenders, and non-bank financial institutions.
Our team handles the actuarial complexity of IFRS 17, IFRS 9, IFRS 2, and IAS 19 so your finance function can focus on the numbers.
Request a Proposal