XBRL
Posted by
Edward Hand
August 25, 2006
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Companies large and small are frequently called on to present financial reports to regulatory agencies, investors and others. Although it's been standard practice to mandate the content of these reports, the formats vary widely. You'll find Excel spreadsheets, Word documents, PDF files, comma-delimited files and even hard copy. XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language) was developed to create a common format. By adopting a single language, businesses can compose reports that are more accurate, easier to produce and clearly understood by all recipients.
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Agency Support
Introduced in 2000, XBRL is gaining momentum: The SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) has put its weight behind XBRL, launching a pilot program for companies to submit financial reports in the format. Some big U.S. companies--including Bristol-Meyers Squibb, Dow Chemical, Ford Motor, General Electric, Microsoft, PepsiCo, Pfizer, 3M and Xerox--have signed on to the program. Another U.S. agency pushing XBRL toward critical mass is the FFIEC (Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council), which recently mandated the use of XBRL-formatted call reports submitted through its data repository system.
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