| New technology could speed the pace of financial reporting for Canadian companies |
|
|
| Friday, 14 December 2007 by Curt Cherewayko for Business in Vancouver |
|
Securities regulators, accountants, analysts, investors, bankers, tech workers and even the guy who wrote Wikinomics were in Vancouver last week to promote the extensible business reporting language (XBRL).
Although only one Canadian company has filed financial statements with the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) in XBRL since the CSA began a voluntary filing program in May, it’s widely accepted that the technology will succeed the PDF as the standard filing medium for financial reporting. “The big opportunity here is to make the transfer of business information much easier,” said Alastair Nimmons, a director with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, and a member of the XBRL Canada Steering Committee. “[XBRL] has the potential to make business reporting more transparent and even things out between large corporate users of information as well as smaller retailer investors.” While a PDF document is static, its XBRL equivalent is fluid. At its most interactive, it has the characteristics of a web page rather than a flat document. On a XBRL document, users can “tag” revenue, sales and other information with metadata. The metadata can include RSS feeds, web links and detailed explanations and instructions. With the right program, an analyst or investor could quickly extract information from multiple financial statements onto a spreadsheet or chart to, for example, compare and contrast companies in a single sector.
In September, Newstrike Resources Ltd. became the only Canadian company to file its financials with the CSA in XBRL. Canadian companies are still required to file in PDF format even if they voluntarily file in XBRL. About 60 companies, including industry leaders such as Microsoft, Business Objects and Lockheed Martin, have submitted XBRL filings to the SEC since the securities regulator began its voluntary filing program in 2005.
During last week’s conference, SEC chairman Christopher Cox announced a new U.S. GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) taxonomy that standardizes XBRL financial reporting for all listed companies. The new taxonomy, as well as the presence of Cox – who has been a vocal XBRL proponent – at the XBRL conference in Vancouver, should be a wake-up call for the roughly 200 Canadian companies that file in Canada and the U.S., said Diane Mueller, chair of the 16th XBRL International conference held here in Vancouver and vice-president of XBRL development at JustSystems Canada in Vancouver. “We believe very strongly that within the next year it’s going to be mandated that when they report in the U.S., they are going to have to use XBRL,” she said.
Around the world, many government agencies and securities regulators are adopting the international financial reporting standards (IFRS), which is being promoted as a single accounting standard for all countries to use and is compatible with XBRL. Canada has committed to replace its accounting principles with IFRS by 2011.
In November, the SEC began allowing foreign companies to file using the IFRS taxonomy without having to file a second set of financials using the U.S. GAAP. Canadian companies that file in both Canada and the U.S. may consequently no longer have to reformat Canadian GAAP to U.S. GAAP. But Canada and the U.S. lag behind many countries in embracing XBRL as the standard format for financial filings. Stock exchanges in China and Japan have implemented XBRL. More than 125,000 companies in the United Kingdom are voluntarily reporting to regulators in XBRL. Governments in New Zealand, Australia and the Netherlands have all committed to moving towards a single XBRL filing standard for all government entities. “That’s the model that we’re really encouraging the Canadian government to follow,” said Mueller. “They don’t share a common metadata language – a common way to talk about information. “XBRL is just the technology underlying a general movement and convergence that’s going on between accounting and technology.” •
cgc@biv.com This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
|
December 16, 2007 - 9:44am
Mandate to CESR (THE COMMITTEE OF EUROPEAN SECURITIES REGULATORS) regarding technical advice on possible implementing measures concerning the Transparency Directive on Storage of regulated information and filing of regulated information - CALL FOR EVIDENCE
Please read the following paper for further information:
Ref: CESR/05-493 @
http://www.cesr-eu.org/data/document/05_493.pdf
March 3, 2006 - 1:15am
There are a number of articles supported by various economic theories and empirical research on demand and supply of XBRL reporting and assurances, you may find such articles in a research monograph: Trust and Data Assurances in Capital Markets: The Role of Technology Solutions. You can download it free at
http://web.bryant.edu/~xbrl/_Book.pdf
March 17, 2005 - 10:52am
id=linkdescription>
One of the main methods of communication and
collaboration among XBRL members is through the
use of Yahoo Groups. Joining an XBRL Yahoo Group
will allow you to learn more about XBRL, get
March 4, 2005 - 4:16pm
A New Era for Financial Analysis Has Arrived
The SEC's newly announced pilot project will have significant implications for the CPA profession.
by Liv Watson
The Internet and electronic communication has ensured that information is more freely available than ever before and that the time it takes to deliver that information has sharply decreased. The key question however is: How accessible is that information? Even when you know exactly what you are looking for and roughly where to find it, extracting information from financial and business reporting today data generally involves a frustrating experience and a time-consuming wait.
January 11, 2005 - 11:25am
SEC Program Allows Companies to File Financial Info Using XBRL
by Glen L. Gray, CPA
Like a debutante, XBRL is being introduced to society. Although former SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt first mentioned XBRL in 2000, it was not until 2004 that the SEC embraced XBRL with the release of two documents—Concept Release: Enhancing Commission Filings Through the Use of Tagged Data, and Proposed Rule: XBRL
Voluntary Financial Reporting Program on the EDGAR System...
December 21, 2004 - 10:43am
The SEC's newly announced pilot project will have significant implications for the CPA profession.
by Liv Watson
(cpa2biz)
The Internet and electronic communication has ensured that information is more freely available than ever before and that the time it takes to deliver that information has sharply decreased. The key question however is: How accessible is that information? Even when you know exactly what you are looking for and roughly where to find it, extracting information from financial and business reporting today data generally involves a frustrating experience and a time-consuming wait.
December 20, 2004 - 11:26am
Bryant College PDF Bibliography referencing to XBRL Articles from 01/01/00 to 04/30/2004
There are four Categories of articles
1: XBRL and Data Assurance
2: XBRL and Data Security
3: XML and Data Assurance
4: XML and Data Security
XBRL & XML Articles - Year 2000 to 1/31/2005
There are 675 XBRL-related articles extracted from Lexis Nexis and ProQuest. As far as I know, this is the most comprehensive list as of Feb 1, 2005.
October 24, 2004 - 10:57am
October 2004 XBRL International Progress Report released to day with updates on news and activities within XBRL International, XBRL jurisdictions, and member products and services.
read the report
October 6, 2004 - 9:54am
The XBRL composer is a set of java classes that define and create objects that correspond to the discoverable taxonomy set as defined in the XBRL 2.1 specification. These objects can be serialized as XML documents and saved to files. Such files can also be loaded into DTS objects.
September 27, 2004 - 3:15pm
Data tagging provides a method for searching, retrieving, and analyzing information through automated means. As part of our initiative to improve the filing, information collection and disclosure process, we are seeking to determine the impact and usefulness of tagged data generally, and more specifically the adequacy and efficacy of eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) as a format for reporting financial information. This concept release seeks comment on the use of tagged data in certain Securities Exchange Act and Investment Company Act filings.
September 27, 2004 - 3:05pm
SEC is proposing rule amendments to enable registrants to submit voluntarily supplemental tagged financial information using the eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) format as exhibits to specified EDGAR filings under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940. Registrants choosing to participate in the voluntary program, expected to begin in early 2005, also would continue to file their financial information in HTML or ASCII format, as currently required. The voluntary program is intended to help us evaluate the usefulness of data tagging in general, and XBRL in particular, to registrants, investors, the Commission and the marketplace generally.
September 27, 2004 - 3:01pm
This document describes the architecture of financial reporting taxonomies using the eXtensible Business Reporting Language [XBRL]. The recommended architecture establishes rules and conventions that assist in comprehension, usage and performance among different financial reporting taxonomies. “Financial reporting” encompasses disclosures derived from authoritative financial reporting standards and/or applicable generally accepted accounting practice/principles, regulatory reports whose subject matter is primarily financial position and performance including related explanatory disclosures, and data sets used in the collection of financial statistics; it excludes transaction- or journal-level reporting, reports that primarily consist of narrative (for example, internal controls assessments) and non-financial quantitative reports (for example, air pollution measurements). This document assumes use of the XBRL 2.1 Specification.
September 18, 2004 - 1:26pm
Reuters 2002 Interim Results using Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) Version 2.0.
September 12, 2004 - 8:32am
The International Journal of Digital Accounting Research
by Janet J. Prichard and Saeed Roohani
Within the past few years, companies have begun publishing financial reports in an XML-based open-standard file format called XBRL. Providing easy public access to XBRL formatted data of company disclosures would provide investors, analysts, and accounting researchers the data in a highly flexible and usable format. EDGAR currently provides public access to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's required filings for publicly traded companies. Currently, EDGAR filings must be in either ASCII, HTML, and in some select cases, XML format. Though EDGAR has recently started to provide XBRL formatted data to the public for a limited number of companies, their primary distribution method remains in traditional file formats including plain text files, PDF, and GIF. Regardless of difficulties with XBRL specification versioning and customized taxonomies, XBRL data aggregators have yet to address any simple mechanism to retrieve XBRL documents. The purpose of this paper is to discuss a prototype public file repository for XBRL documents and present challenges and opportunities of having this public file repository. Also, in response to an anticipated demand for XBRL documents for the purpose of more frequent reporting and auditing of financial information, we compare two approaches of public access to XBRL documents on the web: file repository and file registry...
August 28, 2004 - 2:07pm
(PWC) - an XBRL Primer, with a full title of 'XBRL: An emerging electronic financial reporting language that empowers users' which consists of an article 'introducing and explaining the XBRL revolution in a simple but comprehensive way'. The primer was written by Mike Willis, Chairman of the XBRL Steeeing Committee for PWC, and was published in November 2000 (10 pages, PDF format).
Read More
August 18, 2004 - 8:19pm
by Srinivas Pandrangi of Ipedo, Inc
This article provides a technical overview of the XBRL standard, with emphasis on the architecture of the standard and the potential applications surrounding the business reporting functionality it supports...
Read More
August 18, 2004 - 8:06am
by Kurt Ramin, Commercial Director, IASCF and David Prather, Manager of Electronic Projects
The IASCF was one of the early supporters of XBRL, a new digital business language. XBRL has allowed the IASCF to further develop IAS/IFRS standards into electronic formats. IASCF leadership is allowing other jurisdictions to use the IASCF taxonomy as a basis for their own local reporting requirements....
Read More
August 17, 2004 - 8:58pm
by Jim Richards Murdoch Business School Murdoch University Western Australia - Co-Chair, Education Working Group XBRL-AU
The extensible Business Reporting Language (commonly referred to as XBRL) is a standard-based reporting system being built to accommodate electronic preparation of financial reports around the world. Currently the work to date has been based on external financial reporting, but the long-term goals include moving further back in the information supply chain. XBRL International recently released the core components for XBRL for General Ledger (XBRL GL) that use XML tags when data is captured within an organisation’s general ledger accounting system...
August 17, 2004 - 8:52pm
by Donald D. Rudie, Ph.D.
Focus on the traditional credit risk assessment function and the development of global standards for the credit risk assessment function performed by credit insurers to establish premiums for credit insurance. Specifically on the project to develop XML taxonomies based on XBRL rules using United Nations approved business semantics to support the credit risk assessment work flow between credit insurers and information providers...
Read More
August 17, 2004 - 8:45pm
by Kurt Ramin, Commercial Director, IASB - current Chair, XBRL-Int
XBRL, is a solution to improve the costly, labor-intensive model of handling ... of information formats – from print to e-mail, Web sites, and pdf files...
August 17, 2004 - 8:43pm
by Walter Hamscher, past Chair, XBRL-Int
This year's debacles in financial disclosures have demonstrated the urgent need for better ways for companies to report results to investors and other stakeholders. Using XML data tags to
describe financial information for public and private companies and other organizations, XBRL transforms corporate reporting from a paper-oriented publishing model into an Internet broadcasting model, providing significant benefits to all participants. This talk will describe for an XML-savvy audience a significant pilot project by NASDAQ, Microsoft and Pricewat
August 17, 2004 - 8:34pm
(PWC) In the wake of the Enron bankruptcy, there has been plenty of teeth-gnashing about what went wrong, but far too little analysis of what we can do to make things better. Samuel A. DiPiazza, Jr., CEO of PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Robert G. Eccles, a PwC fellow and former Harvard Business School Professor, address the fundamental shortfalls in the process through which companies report their performance....
Read Book AbstractRead Chapter 1
August 17, 2004 - 8:30pm
(KPMG) A Technical Guide to Working with XBRL 2.0 and XLink
Read More
August 17, 2004 - 8:29pm
(KPMG)This white paper discusses methods of collecting and analyzing data and reporting data as part of an approach for improving regulatory reporting, via XBRL.
Read More
August 17, 2004 - 8:25pm
