Three Large Banks to use XBRL in Granting of Credit
Wednesday, June 17, 2009 at 08:36AM
Charlie in XBRL General Information

In a story posted to the Netherlands SBR project web site, an announcement was made that three major banks in the Netherlands are going to use Standard Business Reporting for the granting of credit.  The implementations should be completed by the end of 2009, automating the delivery of credit reports via computerized information exchange processes.

Standard Business Reporting (I have also heard Standardized Business Reporting) is the term I believe the Australian Taxonomy Project coined which was then adopted by what was the Dutch Taxonomy Project which is not being referred to as the Dutch SBR project.

This is interesting to me for two reasons.  The first reason is that in the United States a bank was experimenting with accepting information from businesses either seeking credit or having credit and having to provide periodic reports to the financial institution using XBRL.  Not sure what happened to that project.  I would suspect that banks will be all over XBRL for receiving this periodic financial information in support of their credit.  It cannot be much fun for banks to key this information in each month in order to track their credit.

The second interesting thing is the term Standard Business Reporting.  That term was used, and not XBRL, in the link above.  Australia, the Netherlands, New Zealand and others have Standard Business Reporting.  The US Securities and Exchange Commission has their term for XBRL which is "interactive data".  Perhaps this is the beginning of the trend most people would like to see which is for XBRL to disappear into the background, never really to be seen...just doing its job enabling these sorts of information exchanges.

Article originally appeared on XBRL-based structured digital financial reporting (http://xbrl.squarespace.com/).
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