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September 13, 2008

SEC embraces social media

Author: derek - Categories: investor relations, xbrl

The US SEC (our JSE equivalent) announced on Tuesday late August that the format for financial statements to the regulator, Edgar, will be superseded by a format that has more in common with the social media tools today’s users have come to enjoy.

You had to see the webcast (and followed the liveblog): The president-appointed chairman who oversees America’s $26-trillion investment management industry was talking mash-ups, RSS and the T-word, Twitter!

Twitter, corporate websites and corporate blogs will be used to disseminate financial information. Corporates will use those channels to communicate to the market and to shareholders. Using PR wire services is going to be phased out, heavily affecting that lucrative business. That’s the reading between the lines here, and it’s brewing into an ugly storm.

David Blaszkowsky, director of the SEC’s Office of Interactive Disclosure, said: “After 75 years of document-based static financial reporting, whether in paper documents or in electronic equivalents, it is exciting to see the SEC poised to cross the ‘data threshold’ and help investors receive financial information that is dynamic, usable and ready to go as they make their investment decisions. And when the investor wins, so does the public company, fund, or other filer who simultaneously benefits from greater transparency and trust in our markets. By tapping the power of interactive data to tear down barriers to quick and meaningful investment information, markets can become fairer and more efficient while investors can possess far better quality data than was ever possible before.”

IDEA allows for slicing and dicing of financial information and comparisons much like XBRL, which I mentioned here. It will be used to enhance Edgar filing for the next three years, and then replace it entirely.

post first published on TechLeader

September 5, 2008

The US move away from GAAP to IFRS

Author: derek - Categories: governance, investor relations, xbrl

The SEC announced last week that it would make a decision in 2011 on whether adoption of IFRS is in the public interest and would benefit investors.

SEC Chairman Christopher Cox, as part of his drive to make global sampling of financial statements easier, pointed out that there are many business languages in the world, and in most of these countries they report in IFRS.

There’s some analysis by Charles Hoffman highlighting different reporting standards for public and private companies, and the webcast of the SEC announcement. Calls for comment on the proposal are open. It would make XBRL taxonomy easier, n’cest pas?

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