XBRL gets US seal of approval

Real-time reporting standard is given go-ahead by US Securities and Exchange Commission

Written by Penny Sukhraj

The acronym that has become synonymous with real-time reporting – XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) – has just been given the nod by the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

It must only be a matter of time before the practice of instant and interactive access to stocks, bonds, mutual funds and company filings, hits European shores.

The last time there was talk of real-time issuing of data was in November, when the then newly-announced ‘Big Six’ made the argument for it at a Paris conference.

At the time PricewaterhouseCoopers partner Peter Wyman, said the move came as a result of complaints about the state of financial reporting.

‘Put up or shut-up… It’s incumbent for everyone to enter this debate,’ Wyman said, and none too soon.

Now just six months later, XBRL is becoming a reality, in the US.

SEC chairman Christopher Cox said the formalising of the rule was part of the SEC’s ‘war on complexity’ and said the new format would ‘enable investors to find what they need quickly and reliable, without having to pore through pages and pages of documents.’

Will UK investors agree?

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