Subsequent Events After Year-End: What Must Be Disclosed in Singapore Accounts
Many directors assume that once the financial year ends, the numbers are “locked in.” In practice, events that occur after year-end but before the financial statements are approved can still affect how those accounts are presented and disclosed.
These are known as subsequent events, and they are a frequent source of audit questions, late adjustments, and last-minute disclosure debates. Understanding what qualifies as a subsequent event — and what must be disclosed — helps Singapore companies avoid audit delays and compliance risk.
This article explains what subsequent events are, how auditors assess them, and what directors should ensure is properly addressed before accounts are signed.
1. What Are Subsequent Events? (Plain English)
Subsequent events are events or transactions that occur after the financial year-end but before the financial statements are authorised for issue.
They matter because they may:
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Provide additional evidence about conditions that existed at year-end, or
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Indicate new conditions that arose after year-end but are still important for users of the accounts to know
Auditors are required to evaluate subsequent events in every audit, regardless of company size.
2. The Key Time Window Directors Must Understand
The subsequent events period runs from:
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The end of the financial year, to
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The date the directors approve the financial statements
This means:
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Events occurring weeks or even months after year-end may still be relevant
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Approval date matters more than filing date
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Directors remain responsible for events right up to approval
If accounts are approved late, the subsequent events window becomes longer — increasing scrutiny.
3. Two Types of Subsequent Events (Critical Distinction)
Accounting standards distinguish between two types of subsequent events, and this distinction determines whether numbers must be adjusted or merely disclosed.
3.1 Adjusting Subsequent Events
These are events that:
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Provide evidence of conditions that already existed at year-end
For adjusting events:
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Financial statement numbers must be adjusted
Examples include:
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Customer bankruptcy confirming a receivable was impaired at year-end
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Settlement of a legal case confirming an obligation existed at year-end
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Discovery of inventory obsolescence that existed before year-end
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Errors identified in year-end figures
These events change the measurement, not just the narrative.
3.2 Non-Adjusting Subsequent Events
These are events that:
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Indicate conditions that arose after year-end
For non-adjusting events:
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No change to numbers
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Disclosure is required if the event is material
Examples include:
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Major fire or flood after year-end
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New bank loans obtained after year-end
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Acquisition or disposal of a business
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Significant restructuring decided after year-end
These events affect users’ understanding, even though they did not exist at year-end.
4. Why Auditors Focus So Much on Subsequent Events
Auditors focus on subsequent events because:
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Management may prefer to “draw a line” at year-end
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Significant issues often crystallise after year-end
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Late developments can contradict year-end assumptions
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Stakeholders rely on accounts to reflect reality, not timing convenience
Subsequent events testing protects the integrity of the financial statements.
5. Common Subsequent Events Seen in Singapore Audits
5.1 Receivables That Become Uncollectible
If a major customer:
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Enters liquidation
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Stops trading
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Disputes balances aggressively
…shortly after year-end, auditors assess whether this:
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Confirms impairment at year-end (adjusting), or
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Represents a new condition (non-adjusting)
Timing and evidence matter.
5.2 Legal Claims and Settlements
Subsequent events often include:
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Settlement of lawsuits
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New legal actions
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Regulatory penalties
Auditors assess:
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Whether the underlying obligation existed at year-end
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Whether provisions were adequate
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Whether disclosures are sufficient
5.3 Financing and Liquidity Events
Examples:
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New bank facilities obtained
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Loans called or withdrawn
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Covenant breaches identified
These events often link directly to going concern assessment and may require disclosure even if numbers do not change.
5.4 Inventory Write-Offs or Damage
If inventory:
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Is written off shortly after year-end
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Is found to be obsolete
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Is damaged in storage
Auditors assess whether:
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The condition existed at year-end (adjusting), or
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The event arose after year-end (non-adjusting)
5.5 Business Combinations or Disposals
Major acquisitions or disposals after year-end:
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Do not change year-end numbers
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But usually require disclosure due to their significance
5.6 Significant Management Decisions
Examples:
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Restructuring plans
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Closure of business units
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Large layoffs
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Major strategy shifts
If decided after year-end, these are typically non-adjusting but often material.
6. How Auditors Identify Subsequent Events
Auditors do not rely solely on what management volunteers.
They typically:
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Review post-year-end management accounts
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Examine bank statements after year-end
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Review correspondence with lawyers
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Ask management and directors specific questions
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Check board minutes up to approval date
If an event exists, auditors will usually find it.
7. Director Responsibility for Subsequent Events
Directors are responsible for ensuring that:
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All relevant subsequent events are identified
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Management informs auditors promptly
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Adjustments or disclosures are made correctly
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Financial statements remain not misleading at approval date
This responsibility exists even if:
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The event is uncomfortable
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The impact reduces profit
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The issue arose after a “good year”
Transparency matters more than optics.
8. Common Director Misunderstandings (and Why They Cause Problems)
Misunderstanding 1: “It Happened After Year-End, So It Doesn’t Matter”
Some events absolutely matter — especially if they confirm year-end conditions.
Misunderstanding 2: “We’ll Mention It Next Year”
Users of the current accounts may be misled if material events are omitted.
Misunderstanding 3: “The Auditor Will Decide”
Auditors assess — management and directors decide and disclose.
9. When Subsequent Events Affect Going Concern
Subsequent events often feed directly into going concern assessment, such as:
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Loss of a major customer
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Withdrawal of bank support
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Unexpected cash outflows
Even if the event occurs after year-end, it may:
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Require expanded disclosure
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Trigger a material uncertainty note
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Change the narrative in the accounts
Ignoring these links creates audit friction.
10. Disclosure: The Area Most Companies Get Wrong
The most common audit issue is insufficient disclosure, not incorrect numbers.
Good disclosure explains:
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What happened
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When it happened
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Why it matters
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The financial impact (if known or estimable)
Vague statements raise more questions than clear explanations.
11. Practical Steps to Manage Subsequent Events Properly
11.1 Create a Subsequent Events Checklist
Before accounts are approved, review:
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Post-year-end bank activity
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Legal correspondence
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Major customer developments
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Financing changes
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Board decisions
This avoids last-minute surprises.
11.2 Assign Clear Responsibility
One person should be responsible for:
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Monitoring post-year-end events
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Informing auditors promptly
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Coordinating disclosures
Unclear ownership leads to omissions.
11.3 Involve the Board Early
Significant subsequent events should be:
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Discussed at board level
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Reflected in board minutes
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Considered in the approval decision
This demonstrates proper oversight.
12. Regulatory and Filing Considerations
Financial statements filed with Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority must reflect:
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All relevant subsequent events up to approval date
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Proper disclosures where required
Failure to do so can be viewed as:
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Misleading reporting
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Governance weakness
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A compliance breach
13. How Auditors View Transparency vs Delay
Auditors generally prefer:
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Timely, transparent disclosure
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Honest explanations
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Early communication
They are far more concerned by:
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Omitted events
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Late “discoveries”
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Reluctance to disclose
Transparency builds credibility, even in difficult circumstances.
14. When Subsequent Events Require Re-Approval
If a major subsequent event arises after accounts are approved but before filing, directors may need to:
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Reconsider approval
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Amend financial statements
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Re-approve accounts
This is rare — but it underscores why careful review before approval is critical.
15. Final Thoughts: Subsequent Events Are About Fairness, Not Perfection
Subsequent events do not exist to punish businesses for bad luck or late developments. They exist to ensure that:
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Financial statements are not misleading
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Users have relevant information
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Directors exercise proper judgement and care
Singapore companies that manage subsequent events properly experience:
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Smoother audits
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Fewer last-minute adjustments
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Stronger credibility with banks and stakeholders
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Lower director risk
The guiding principle is simple:
If an event would change how a reasonable reader views the company’s position, it probably needs to be disclosed.
Handled thoughtfully, subsequent events strengthen — rather than undermine — trust in your financial reporting.