Tax, Audit, Firm and Regulatory News

Today’s Accounting and Audit Topic (May 15, 2018)

What’s all the buzz about XBRL?

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires public companies to provide their financial statements in the eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) format as an exhibit to their regulatory filings. But XBRL isn’t just for reporting to the SEC. There are many compelling reasons for public companies to expand their use of XBRL data — and for private companies and financial statement users to jump on the XBRL bandwagon, too.

Many uses

Introduced in 1999, XBRL is based on a complex technical infrastructure. It provides a universal standards-based method to prepare, publish, exchange and analyze financial data across disparate accounting and operating systems.

Using a tagging system, computers filter XBRL data “intelligently,” automating many aspects of report preparation, data collection and due diligence. Companies can apply XBRL to various types of business data, such as internal and external financial reports, tax returns and loan applications.

Potential upsides

This machine-readable reporting format makes financial statements more useful to researchers, regulators and investors. It has the potential to increase the speed, accuracy and usability of financial disclosure — and eventually reduce costs.

Companies that report financial data using XBRL can share it directly with their auditors and lenders. This significantly reduces the need to manually re-enter data into spreadsheets and other analytic software programs and repackage it into new formats. Automation, in turn, cuts data processing costs and minimizes human error.

Another upside is that XBRL permits automatic validation of financial data by highlighting inconsistencies, deviations from industry norms and even transaction patterns characteristic of fraudulent behavior. And it provides a global framework for exchanging financial information that transcends current language and reporting standards barriers. XBRL doesn’t replace current operating or accounting systems but, instead, piggybacks onto existing systems.

Further, XBRL speeds up the financial reporting process, facilitating real-time disclosures and continuous auditing, and eases the burden of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance for public companies. For companies making acquisitions, XBRL can link formerly incongruent systems, eliminating costly conversions to a common operating system.

Put XBRL to work for you

Companies that choose to adopt XBRL can convert data to this format in two ways. They can either 1) purchase off-the-shelf software and categorize line items themselves, or 2) outsource their XBRL projects. Once the company incurs initial setup costs, ongoing costs generally are minimal.

XBRL may ultimately reduce compliance costs through greater efficiency. Contact us for more information on switching over to this user-friendly reporting format.

 

© 2018

About Topel Forman

What makes our firm special

Contact Us

Reach out to Topel Forman

Services

Learn what we have to offer

Related News Posts

Qualified Opportunity Funds Beginning in 2027

Qualified Opportunity Funds Beginning in 2027

The OBBBA has effectively made the QOF and QOZ regime a permanent feature of the Code. This article explains the federal income tax framework applicable to an individual taxpayer considering an investment in a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF) beginning in 2027.

read more
The USPS postmark change you need to know about

The USPS postmark change you need to know about

A USPS rule change means that the postmark on your tax-related mail may no longer reflect the day you actually dropped it off, and the IRS still uses that postmark to determine whether you filed on time. For taxpayers in rural areas especially, this gap could be the difference between a timely filing and a costly late penalty. Read on to understand exactly what changed, why it matters, and the simple steps you can take to protect yourself.

read more