High Proability US SEC Will Move to Inline XBRL?
Tuesday, January 11, 2011 at 07:47AM
Charlie in Creating Investor Friendly SEC XBRL Filings, General Information, Modeling Business Information Using XBRL, inline XBRL

I posted a comment to the XBRL-Public mailing list relating to the UK's Financial Reporting Council calling for financial reporting to move from paper to the Web (which I also posted to my blog). My post led to a number of comments from others and a very good discussion relating to using the Web for distribution of financial reports. (If you are not on the XBRL-Public mailing list I would encourage you to join the list.)

During that discussion someone made the statement:

I actually think that iXBRL will eventually "take over the world" of XBRL reporting, simply because it supports what humans do - consume information through their eyes.

While I have not always been that hot on Inline XBRL (some people refer to it as iXBRL) because I have been convinced that it is a red herring trying to solve a problem that did not exist and because of the potential abuses of Inline XBRL to work around bad data modeling within an XBRL taxonomy. However, I am changing my mind and realizing that Inline XBRL, if properly used, could be of substantial benefit in ways which had not occurred to me before.

Here is why I am changing my mind and going as far as predicting that the US SEC may follow the lead of the UK and move to Inline XBRL and encouraging others to both be aware of this possibility and consider the Inline XBRL option when and if they implement XBRL:

So those are the positive aspects of Inline XBRL.  What about the downside? One thing which could be considered a downside is the fact that the software vendors who are building software to support creation of SEC XBRL filings are already going down a certain path.  Will they want to change that path, moving from supporting plain ole XBRL to also support Inline XBRL?  Well, the UK is already using Inline XBRL so software already exists for that.  This could provide an advantage for software vendors who are supporting Inline XBRL for the UK and a disadvantage for current software vendors supporting the SEC. Not sure how this dynamic will come into play.

Another dynamic which I am even less clear about is the actual creating the HTML and XBRL.  It is hard enough to put in the XBRL information.  How is creating both the HTML and the XBRL at the same time going to work out?  Again, I think the UK will provide some clues.  They are already doing this.

Finally, Inline XBRL is specific to supported rendering formats.  Currently Inline XBRL only works with HTML 4.  HTML 5 is really picking up steam.  The SEC uses an older version of HTML.  Not sure how the version of HTML plays into this or if there is a better rendering format than HTML, maybe PDF via XSL-FO.

Who knows how all this will turn out, but it seems to me that the advantages of Inline XBRL are significant enough that those working with SEC XBRL filings need to be aware of this and keep this possibility on their radar screens.

What do you think about the probability that the SEC might move to Inline XBRL? I cannot imagine that the SEC would do this any time soon.

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