SEC Web site gives new view of company data
Agency launches new tool investors can use to dig into companies' financial information. By Reuters
Published: February 15, 2008, 10:50 AM PST
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled a Web site on Friday that enables investors to launch charts and graphs to probe the financial data of a select group of companies that have signed on to the agency's interactive data push.
The SEC's new Financial Explorer site is a tool that enables users to manipulate raw data derived from XBRL, or extensible business reporting language.
The agency is pushing companies to start filing their financial data in XBRL, which means that electronic tags much like bar codes would be attached to each piece of financial data.
More than 70 companies have signed on to the SEC's XBRL pilot program, and the agency is expected to propose as soon as April that companies be required to file financial results in XBRL.
The Financial Explorer site uses interactive charts and diagrams, including "atomic models," to represent data such as current assets, long-term investments, and goodwill.
Users can also compare earnings, expenses, cash flows, assets, and liabilities for companies in the same industry.
"XBRL is fast becoming the universal language for the exchange of business information and it is the future of financial reporting," said SEC Chairman Christopher Cox in a statement. "With Financial Explorer or another XBRL viewer, investors will be able to quickly make sense of financial statements."
The site is currently limited to the 74 companies involved in the agency's pilot program, which include General Electric, Microsoft, and United Technologies.
An SEC advisory committee created to improve financial reporting voiced concerns recently about the financial cost for companies to implement XBRL and the liability that could be attached to faulty implementation.
The agency has already launched other online viewers that let investors manipulate data instead of having to copy and paste into a spreadsheet.
The Executive Compensation viewer lets users compare pay data from 500 of the largest U.S. companies and the Interactive Financial Report viewer allows for the comparison of key disclosures from the companies in the XBRL pilot program.
The Financial Explorer site is open-source, meaning technology and financial experts can update and improve the viewer tool.
The SEC said it sees the potential for investors and analysts to develop hundreds of Web-based applications that would further push along the development of XBRL.
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