BLOG: Digital Financial Reporting
This is a blog for information relating to digital financial reporting. This blog is basically my "lab notebook" for experimenting and learning about XBRL-based digital financial reporting. This is my brain storming platform. This is where I think out loud (i.e. publicly) about digital financial reporting. This information is for innovators and early adopters who are ushering in a new era of accounting, reporting, auditing, and analysis in a digital environment.
Much of the information contained in this blog is synthasized, summarized, condensed, better organized and articulated in my book XBRL for Dummies and in the chapters of Intelligent XBRL-based Digital Financial Reporting. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me.
Entries from August 1, 2008 - August 31, 2008
IASC Foundation Publishes IFRS Taxonomy Guide
The IASC Foundation has published a document called the "IFRS Taxonomy Guide". The document can be found here.
Per the IASC Foundation:
"The document offers assistance in the implementation, application and further development of the IFRS Taxonomy 2008. The IFRS Taxonomy Guide 1.00 is targeted at people with a basic understanding of XBRL and familiarity with International Financial Reporting Standards and its interpretations, inclusive of : (a) preparers and issuers of financial statements who create instance documents; (b) supervisors, regulators and other receivers who create specific (national and/or business) taxonomy extensions; (c) XBRL-compliant software developers."
(A link to this document can also be found on this site here.)
SEC Proposes Roadmap Toward IFRS
The SEC issued a press release indicating that they will issue a proposed roadmap for the SEC to adopt IFRS. The press release can be found here. A Wall Street Journal article about the announcement can be found here.
Under the roadmap, in 2010 about 110 large companies would begin reporting using IFRS. All other companies would use IFRS by 2014. The proposed roadmap will be open for public comment for 60 days.
IDEA (Interactive Data Electronic Applications)
The SEC announced its successor for the old EDGAR system: IDEA, Interactive Data Electronic Applications). See the SEC web site.
The press release for the announcement can be found here. A web cast of the announcement can currently be found here. (It may be moved here eventually)
IDEA is a new technology/architecture framework. It is being built along side EDGAR. The two systems will operate alongside each other for a period of time, then IDEA will be the system used moving forward. EDGAR information will likely always exist as an archive of company information.
The SEC says IDEA will be global (40 languages as an example), cheaper for smaller companies, the platform for 21st century disclosure, flexible, and easy as possible for investors to use.
The SEC also says that they are not going into the software business, but "e-applications" can be built on top of the interactive data within IDEA. The SEC gave examples of three applications which would make use of IDEA: HUB (enforcement tracking), RADAR (analysis of risk), PHOENIX (helps get money back to investors).
No intermediate step of a data provider will be necessary. Investors will be able to compare companies in a manner similar to how they can compare hotels or airline ticket prices. Investors may even be able to provide "reviews" of companies.
XBRL Implementation Options for Preparers: Outsource, Bolt-on, Integrated
Neal Hannon and Mike Willis explain three different strategies preparers can use to meet the SEC mandate on the Hitachi Blog.
These three ways are:
- Outsource the XBRL to a financial printer or other EDGAR filing agent
- Use a bolt-on XBRL software package to create XBRL exhibits internally
- Integrate the XBRL mapping inside your normal financial reporting process
The advantages and disadvantages of each option is discussed.
IFRS Modules Manager provides good insights to business users
The IFRS Taxonomy Modules Manager (ITMM) which is available here. I would encourage business users to take a look at this as it provides some insights for business users.
What the ITMM is trying to do is pull the pieces of a taxonomy together which a preparer would use to construct a business report, likely a financial statement. The user makes use of the application to select the pieces and then the application builds the underlying XBRL "stuff" (it is called a discoverable taxonomy set or DTS, but business users should not have to understand this level of terminology) which will be used to create an XBRL instance document (an XBRL based business report).
What is good about this is that it shows something very important to realize, particularly if you are a business user. This important point is that software can be built to do things like this. All a software application has to do is spit out the required XBRL. How it gets there is up to the software application. Don't like how the software application works in terms of features? Just give the feedback to the software developers, they can make it better.
Some features I would like to see related to this are:
- Business users don't need stand alone systems like this, they need this functionallity within the tool being used to create the XBRL based business report.
- Smart wizards which know what sorts of things might go together, nor never go together, would certainly help the user out. For example, the user is generally going to want ONE cash flow statement, not even be able to select both for one report.
- Generate "templates" of the common stuff which is used, but the business user can then "turn on" or "turn off" pieces of the taxonomy, rather than have to wade through the entire taxonomy.
These are just a few obvious features. This list is not knocking what the folks at the IASCF are doing, but rather trying to help business users understand the types of things they could, and should, be asking for from software.



