| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
IN THE
NOT-TOO-DISTANT FUTURE, you may
be able, with just a few mouse clicks, to
access any public companys
financial reports in extraordinary detail
and for any period. In addition, you may
be able to perform an array of instant
analyses of those data. THE UNDERLYING
TECHNOLOGY is available
nowXBRL (Extensible Business
Reporting Language). All thats
missing is a standardized protocol to
implement itand the first steps for
creating such a system have just been
taken by Nasdaq, Microsoft and
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
THESE ORGANIZATION
HAVE JUST LAUNCHED a test
project designed to explore whether the
concept is feasible, practical and sought
by financial professionals, investors and
regulators.
THE OBVIOUS WINNERS
from such a system will be financial
planners and individual investors, who
will have at their fingertips a huge
amount of verifiable and easy-to-analyze
financial information.
COMPANIES ALSO WILL
GAIN: They will appear more
forthright in providing financial
information to stakeholders and have an
easier time conducting internal data
analyses.
XBRL-FORMATTED DATA
WILL ENHANCE lender relations
with companies seeking credit; banks no
longer will be inundated with reams of
paper financial reports.
ACCOUNTANTS MAY BE
ABLE TO MOVE XBRL forward by
prodding their accounting software
vendors to include it in their
applications.
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| STANLEY ZAROWIN is a senior
editor on the JofA. Mr. Zarowin
is an employee of the AICPA, and his
views, as expressed in this article, do
not necessarily reflect the views of the
Institute. Official positions are
determined through certain specific
committee procedures, due process and
deliberation. |
magine this: At any time of the day or night, and
with just a few clicks of the mouse, a financial
planner or an individual investor can access a
companys present and past financial reports
in extraordinary detail. In addition, an array of
instant analyses of those data can be performed,
which displays them either
graphically or as conventional financial
statements. Within seconds a user can compare a
companys balance sheets with those of
several competitors, examine an enterprises
debt-to-equity ratio in any fiscal period, chart
its stock price history and download an audit
clients major nonfinancial news. As if
thats not enough, the same range of
analyses can be performed for any public company
worldwide and the information even can be
converted into any currency.
Key to
Instructions
To help
readers follow the instructions in this
article, we use two different typefaces.
Boldface type is
used to identify the names of icons,
agendas, and URLs.
Sans serif
type indicates
instructions and commands that users
should type into the computer and the
names of files.
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No
way, youre probably thinking.
At least not in my lifetime.
| Think again. All the underlying
technologyXBRL (Extensible Business
Reporting Language)for it is
available right now. All thats
missing is a standardized protocol to
implement itand the first steps for
creating such a protocol to perform those
feats have been taken. A team comprising
the Nasdaq Stock Market, Microsoft and
PricewaterhouseCoopers just launched a
pilot project designed to demonstrate
that the concept of making both the data
and the analysis tools available on the
Internet is not only feasible but both
practical and sought by financial
professionals, investors and regulators.
If you want to see what
the future looks like, just point your
Web browser to
www.nasdaq.com/xbrl (see exhibit 1, at right) and download a free
demonstration file called the Excel
Investors Assistant. Youll
need Excel 2000 or later to run the demo.
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| Exhibit
1 |
 |
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Once youre at the
site, follow the instructions to install the
pilot. When done, click on the file, Excel Investors
Assistant.xls. You will be
asked whether you want Excel to enable macros;
you do, so click on the Enable Macros
box (see exhibit 2,below
left).
That will bring up the opening
screen of Investors Assistant (see exhibit 3, below right).
| Exhibit
2 |
 |
|
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| Exhibit
3 |
 |
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The Investors
Assistant file contains two components: an Excel
spreadsheet with built-in data analysis macros
and formulas and a linked database that contains
five years of financial information on 21
companies. The financial information, however, is
not just raw datathat is, its not
just a compilation of financial numbers. Instead,
each item in the database has been labeled with
an XBRL tag that identifies the item as, for
example, revenue, profit or short-range debt. The
XBRL tags are based on standardized accounting
definitions customized for various industries.
(For more on XBRL, see Finally,
Business Talks the Same Language, JofA, Aug.00, page 24.)
A growing number of accounting
software developers are incorporating XBRL into
their products so a tag automatically gets
attached to each item of financial information as
it is entered and subsequently calculated by the
accounting software. The tags eventually will be
useful for anyone compiling both internal and
external financial reports and tax returns.
Because many industries have
unique categories of financial data, an
international consortium of more than 170
companies is preparing customized XBRL
dictionaries, called taxonomies, that optimize
the XBRL definitions so the tags can handle any
special reporting structure. The goal is to make
XBRL a fully universal financial information
language that is both automatically attached to
the data and transparent to the viewer.
The XBRL International
consortium was founded by the AICPA in 1999 and
currently has active chapters in Australia,
Canada, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom,
United States and Singapore. Chapters are being
developed in Belgium, Hong Kong, India, Ireland,
the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Africa,
Spain, Sweden and Taiwan.
XBRL tagging eliminates
subjectivity when users compare financial results
from different businesses, thus making it easier
to extract and analyze comparable information.
However, XBRL doesnt require companies to
change what they disclose and the way they report
financial results under current accounting
standards.
This is not the first time XBRL
has been used to publicly display financial data:
Earlier in 2002 Reuters and Microsoft became the
first to publish their corporate financial
statements using XBRL.
PLAYING
WITH NUMBERS
If you want to put
the pilot to the test, open the Investors
Assistant and select one of the 21 companies.
Once youve made your selection, you have
many options. For example, you can compare a
companys operating margin with its net
margin. To do that click on the Financial
Measures tag and then, under Ratios,
check the boxes Operating Margin
and Net Margin, and the
following graphic analysis will appear (see exhibit 4, below).
| Exhibit
4 |
 |
As you can see, the pilot
project demonstrates that the fantasy outlined in
the opening paragraph of this article is feasible
using an off-the-shelf electronic spreadsheet;
there is no need for a specially designed
application. This demo uses Excel because
Microsoft was one of the projects sponsors,
but it could just as well have been Lotus 1-2-3,
the free Linux OpenOffice or any other
spreadsheet application. The only requirement is
that the system be linked to a Web service with
access to comprehensive and up-to-the-minute
financial data. Under the best of circumstances,
a government regulatory source, such as the SEC,
would provide the core information to ensure
accuracy and authenticity. But media data, and
even information input from the companies
themselves, would broaden the database and make
it far more valuable. In this pilot, Nasdaq
provided the Internet-accessible data on the 21
companies from the SECs EDGAR (Electronic
Data Gathering Analysis and Retrieval) filing
system; they include Forms 10K and 10Q.
If all you want is a
companys financial statement, click on the Financial
Statements tab and pick the time period
you want to display (see exhibit 5, below).
| Exhibit
5 |
 |
If you want to examine
various ratio analyses, click on the Ratio
Analysis tab and adjust the variables
(period, variance materiality), and you can even
compare a business with its competitor (see exhibit 6, below).
| Exhibit
6 |
 |
The pilot also gives you
access to nonstatistical information. For
example, if you click on the Notes
tab, it will bring up the revenue recognition
policy for the company selected (see exhibit 7, below).
| Exhibit
7 |
 |
If youd like to see
what a page of typical XBRL code looks like,
click on the last tab, XBRL Instance
Documents, and then on any of the blue
names (see exhibit, 8,
below).
| Exhibit
8 |
 |
NEXT STEPS
Who will benefit
from such a data-distribution systemin
effect, a Napster of financial services? The
obvious winners will be investors, who will have
at their fingertips a huge amount of information
that is both verifiable and easy to analyze.
Companies also will gain mightily. Not only will
they appear more forthright in getting financial
data to stakeholders but they will also appear
more transparentthus addressing a
high-priority public relations problem in this
era of Enron. In addition, with all their
financial information laced with XBRL tags, they
will have an easier time conducting internal data
analyses.
Consider, too, how
XBRL-formatted data will enhance relations with
lenders. Banks examining the books of
credit-seeking clients will be able to click
their way to a decision rather than be inundated
with reams of paper reports to analyze manually,
so to speak.
What will it take to transform
the language of the financial world to XBRL?
Accountants may help speed along that transition
by prodding their accounting software vendors to
include XBRL in their applications. CPAs also can
encourage clients to incorporate XBRL in their
financial statements so banks will become
accustomed to using it.
So, if youre not yet on
the XBRL bandwagon, you had best get aboard
quickly. The software tagging system will enhance
your professional stance and, in the long run,
boost your productivity. 
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