Filing
requirements for Foreign Private Issuers to file using the IFRS XBRL Taxonomy
are effective for fiscal year ends after December 15, 2017. The deadline for
most of the filers is March 15, 2018.
Along with
the information to be filed with the SEC, companies are required under the SEC
rules to include the XBRL information on their websites. So we should see XBRL
information appearing on the websites of some 300 Canadian companies by March.
This information
will appear in the Investor Relations Section of the websites, thus raising the
question - what are the users of these sites going to do with that information?
It depends
on the user. XBRL data cannot be read by most human beings. It was never
intended for that. It’s purpose is to automate the analytical process by being
platform independent and easily transportable to various data analytical tools,
thus reducing the need for human intervention. The hitch is that only the more
sophisticated investors have access to such tools; the rest use Excel – if they
do any serious analysis at all.
Many
companies already have been disclosing Excel information on their websites for
several years. This has taken two general forms. Some companies have been presenting
their core financial statements in excel format, which can be downloaded into
Excel spreadsheets. A lot of users are sufficiently proficient with Excel that
they can do a lot of analysis with that information. Some companies have also been
including in the IR sections of their websites a data tool. Usually these tools
include a range of data from the financial disclosures along with common
analytical ratios and benchmarks. This information can also be imported into spreadsheets
and used for analysis. It has the advantage that it reduces the time required
for the users to go through the statements and select the data elements they
want to use in their analysis.
With the
availability of Excel data, the XBRL data would seem to add little for
investors who do not have access to the more sophisticated analytical tools.
This, despite the fact that XBRL data include a lot of metadata that could be
of use. Without the appropriate tools, this information is hard to get at.
The obvious
solution is to use Inline XBRL which combines HTML and XBRL into a presentation
that is both human readable and machine readable. The SEC and other regulators
are moving towards inline XBRL and this is a good thing. Investors will be able
to read the information and with a click or two gain access to the metadata for
those items. This will give them context for those items – accounting principles
used, relationship to other items, etc.
Inline XBRL
could also be used as a tool for those website data tools on the websites, thus
enhancing the usefulness of that information.
In time, as
websites evolve, all the IR information on corporate websites could be
available in iXBRL form. Now there’s a thought for another day.
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