Archive for the ‘SEC Compliance’ Category

XBRL Quality Assurance – A Potentially Too Honest Take

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2015

“XBRL is an unfunded mandate, and I don’t like paying for it in the first place.  Furthermore, nobody is even using this data, so why would I approve additional expense to have our XBRL reviewed by an independent and expert third party?”

While this is a direct quote from a CFO I spoke with recently, I thought it pretty well sums up the sentiment I hear from a lot of people I speak with about XBRL in general and about our Quality Assurance Services in particular.

I’m in sales, so of course when I get this type of objection, I look to re-direct the focus of the conversation and find a new way to present the value of the service I’m offering.  Often times, this kind of sales-spin is not too difficult because the facts of the case point to a clear conclusion, and it’s just a matter of illuminating the facts and presenting them in such a way as to make it easier for the prospective client to arrive at the same conclusion.

However, as is the case with the quote above, sometimes the “facts of the matter” are not inherently helpful to your case.  Sometimes, one or more of the facts actually align to make it more difficult for your prospective client to see the value.  In my years of selling, I’ve witnessed myriad sales people try to “dance” around undesirable facts.  The steps to this dance are graceless, and the music is discordant.

I refuse to do that dance, which brings me (at long last) to the point of this post:  The CFO quoted above is correct in some very important respects.  My job is not to avoid these ‘difficult facts,’ but rather to shine a light on them and make my case nonetheless.

My argument:

  • Hiring an independent, 3rd party to expertly review your XBRL is a sound investment.

The difficult facts that must be admitted:

  • Very few people outside of the SEC are currently looking at your XBRL files.
  • A review of the quality of your XBRL is, quite simply, not something you need to do at this point.

It is true that that outside of the SEC, very few people of immediate consequence to your company are looking at or utilizing XBRL data.  However, all the analysts I’ve spoken to or heard at conferences admit they would love to use this data, because XBRL would hugely improve and hasten their access to important information that drives investment decisions.  The only reason they don’t currently use it, they say, is because there is not enough data out there of reliable quality.  Much of the XBRL data being created by firms that outsource the work overseas—or that is created in-house by companies using some of the leading document control software—is not of consistent quality and does not provide a sufficiently accurate depiction of the filer’s financials to be trusted.

To this point, I say that there is both a present and future benefit to ensuring your XBRL is quality and useable for analysts.  Presently, the major analyst and investment houses are not currently using your XBRL code, but many people both in the investment community and the academic community are, and it is of significant importance that your XBRL present an accurate depiction of your financial disclosures.  And in the future, when the major analysts do start using this data (and they most certainly will), having a history of accurate and useable XBRL filings for them to call upon will put your company’s disclosures in a position of strength compared to the rest of the market.

Finally, it is also true that the SEC is not yet enforcing XBRL data quality to any significant degree, and there is scant motivation in terms of strict compliance.  However, the SEC has invested years of resources to the establishment of this new reporting requirement, and they will be increasing their enforcement of quality and expanding on steps they’ve already taken.  They already use XBRL as the main tool of their RoboCop fraud detection tool and to expand their enforcement reach.  The SEC has only increased its commitment to the XBRL reporting requirement, and they have also massively increased its use of the data.  So being out ahead of the SEC current requirements is valuable in its own right.

I liken a thorough review of your XBRL by 3rd party experts to buying auto insurance that also improves the performance of your car.  Ensuring your XBRL is of the highest quality will keep the SEC out of your hair now and in the future, and it will also make your data more available to and useable for analysts who will be using this data to drive important investment decisions.

Please feel free to contact me anytime.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

(415) 643-6017

An Interview with XBRL Experts — Why Outsourcing XBRL May Be a Safer Bet

Monday, August 24th, 2015

Recently I sat down with a couple of our resident XBRL Account Managers to see what their thoughts were on the clients’ knowledge of XBRL and whether going in-house would make sense.  Here’s what I found out:

Question: What would you say are the most challenging aspects of XBRL for clients to understand?

XBRL Account Manager: Bleed-through and negations would be top of the list.  Explaining the context of specific tagging can also be difficult.  Someone can look at the definition, and it could look appropriate on its face. However, the definition can sometimes be misleading, and you have to look at the structure of the taxonomy to see where the definition was pulled from to be certain it is appropriate.   It can also be hard to explain what actually happens within the code. For example, a client who transitions over to us from tagging on their own with a software will negate an item, but it will not reflect in the code. The presentation link base and the calculation link base will not match. It is difficult to explain why it’s not rendering in the code.

Question: Are you ever surprised by the coding errors that need to be corrected from previous vendors? What are some of the most common errors that you find yourself having to fix?

XBRL Account Managers: We are never surprised per se because, unfortunately, errors are frequent. That said the most common errors we find are inappropriate tagging. For instance, inconsistent parent and child relationships.

Question: How much time do you devote to keeping abreast all new SEC regulations?

XBRL Account Managers: Anytime there is a taxonomy update or new FASB guidance, we make sure we are familiar with it, and we spend quite a bit of time going through the guidance.  Additionally, we get updates from major accounting firms, AICPA, FASB, and XBRL-US about changes that are coming down the pipeline but that have not yet been adopted.  XBRL-US does not just update its members on new regulations, but also about any changes to their best practices.  We train our team at least once a week on various topics including accounting guidance and taxonomy updates.  And as founding members of the XBRL-US Center for Data Quality, we are deeply involved in the establishment of best practices as well.

Question: If you were the CFO of a public company, would you hire someone internally to take care of the creation of XBRL exhibits for you? Why or why not? No.

XBRL Account Managers: Absolutely not. That hired person is only going to have a fraction of the experience of a dedicated XBRL expert. You would be depending on someone who does four filings per year as opposed to an RDG manager for example that averages about 80 filings per year.  Now, to be honest, if I was a CFO of a large company with unlimited funds, and I wanted to hire someone internally who I could send to XBRL workshops and have them focus exclusively on XBRL — I would go that route.  But it sure seems inefficient to have a full time employee to do only four filings a year.  Unless they are exclusively committed to the company’s XBRL reporting, they simply won’t have time to keep abreast of all the guidance.  It just makes more sense to outsource.

Question: Why shouldn’t a company just outsource this process overseas?

XBRL Account Managers: Security first and foremost. This is time sensitive and pre-public information that we are dealing with, and sending it overseas prior to filing seems an unnecessary risk.   However, a lack of US GAAP knowledge would also be a significant concern. It is doubtful that any foreign 3rd party provider is going to be as familiar as necessary with the same accounting standards as your financial statements.

Question: What do you say to a company that says: “My financials don’t change much from quarter to quarter and I already have my XBRL files built, so why can’t I just carry this forward and tag future filings myself? Seems simple enough.”

XBRL Account Managers: If your financials are in one consistent form, it does make it a bit easier. However, while your financial statements may not change, accounting standards are always changing. The taxonomy is also constantly changing. If your tagging does not change to keep pace with changes to the accounting standards and taxonomy, you will be left behind. Even the FASB guidance changes every month and we are constantly adopting these changes.  If you have the same tagging for even a two year period– I guarantee that your tagging will be obsolete because everything around it has changed.

Question: Do you think that the SEC will ask for XBRL to be audited in the future?

XBRL Account Managers: Perhaps. However, before this happens, the SEC will have to push for increased consistency and quality on the XBRL reports, and they will have to increase their enforcement mechanisms to achieve this. The SEC is certainly going in that direction as they have already started to invest in-line XBRL, which would make auditing the XBRL more plausible.

So now the question goes to you- would you feel most comfortable hiring someone internally or outsourcing?

 

Written by : Divya Patel- VP Business Development

If you have any questions or would like any further detail, please feel free to contact Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

(415) 643-6017

The SEC’s Updated XBRL Viewer – Improvements are Accompanied by Some Bugs

Tuesday, August 11th, 2015

The SEC has updated their XBRL viewer, and in many ways the changes are improvements.  The new XBRL viewer (3.2.0.727) was deployed this summer, replacing the previous version (2.4.1.9).  Additionally, the update was a necessary step with regard to future enhancements the SEC will be making to the viewer.  However, in the short term, this update includes some bugs that we wanted to alert you to. This post will describe the changes the SEC made to their viewer and explain some of the bugs that have come from this update.  We invite you to contact us if you have any questions or if you’d like more specific information.

To put the viewer update in context, it’s important to know that the previous SEC viewer originally was created using the .NET framework over 6 years ago.  However, the SEC’s validation engine (Arelle) was built using a coding framework called Python.  The different programming languages made integrating the two platforms difficult.  Additionally, the .NET framework caused some problems running the renderer on non-Windows machines.

To address these issues, the SEC has built the new viewer using the Python platform so that integration with the Arelle validator is now seamless.  While this does not impact the end user to any significant degree, it helps developers and the SEC a great deal.

Now we will address the bugs that have popped up as a result of this viewer update.

Uncategorized Items

“Uncategorized Facts” are typically only presented as such if the facts are not assigned a specific presentation. The updated viewer is erroneously identifying certain facts as “uncategorized” even when they have been assigned a presentation.  This issue is most commonly tied to US-GAAP concepts that appear on both the Income and Cash Flows Statements.  Apparently, the viewer will place shared facts from the Cash Flows in the “uncategorized” section and ‘forgets’ that those facts were already used on the Income Statement.  This means the viewer did not need to display those facts as uncategorized because they were indeed displayed on the Income Statement.  The new viewer also fails to distinguish between actual uncategorized facts and facts the viewer is choosing not to display.

The SEC is aware of this bug, and we believe it will be addressed with their next Viewer update, but they have not yet provided a timeframe for the correction.

Total Columns

Where the previous viewer displayed a “Total” column only when the presentation was an equity table, the update has caused the viewer to display a “Total” column whenever there are multiple contexts that end on the same date in the same presentation.  This change does allows for tables other than the equity table to render with a “Total” column, but it leads to certain other issues when viewing reports (e.g.: The Document and Entity Information can now render with a “Total” column, or Operations tables may render with two “Total” columns).

We do not yet know if the SEC considers this a bug, or if they will address it with their next Viewer update.

 

If you have any questions or would like any further detail, please feel free to contact us anytime.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

(415) 643-6017

RDG Filings is Honored to be a Founding Member of the XBRL US Center for Data Quality

Friday, June 26th, 2015

Since the inception of the XBRL mandate, RDG has strived to set the standard for XBRL data quality, and we are proud to be among the leaders in the XBRL community.  That is why—along with Merrill, RR Donnelley, Vintage-a division of PR Newswire, and Workiva—RDG Filings is delighted to be a Founding Member of the XBRL US Center for Data Quality.

The formation of the Center for Data Quality—announced yesterday—is the culmination of months of work by the XBRL US, the Founding Members, and many more people to whom we are grateful.

The Founding Members provide XBRL tagging services and software to a majority of public companies, and they have come together in shared commitment to the importance of improving the quality of the XBRL data that is filed with the SEC.

The advent of the XBRL mandate has been a tremendous improvement to the existing HTML/EDGAR format, and XBRL has become the worldwide standard for the reporting and analysis of financial information.  However, the full benefits and potential of XBRL have not yet been realized because much of the XBRL currently filed with the SEC contains errors and inconsistencies.  As a direct result of valid concerns about its accuracy and reliability, investors and analysts have been reluctant to utilize the available XBRL data.

The XBRL US Center for Data Quality believes that the errors and inconsistencies currently restraining XBRL’s true potential are primarily the result of:

  • Absence of unambiguous guidance for using the US GAAP taxonomy
  • Lack of corporate awareness of errors in their filings

Investors, analysts, the SEC, and the market in general will benefit greatly from the utilization of XBRL data, and RDG Filings is happy to join forces with other leaders in the XBRL community to ensure that the quality and utility of the data improves dramatically.  The Data Quality Committee will develop:

  • Guidance to provide for uniform, consistent tagging of financial data and to clarify those specific circumstances where custom tags are appropriate
  • Automated validation rules to detect input errors and verify compliance with the Committee’s guidance

RDG Filings agrees with Barry Melancon, CEO of the American Institute of CPAs, and Chair of the XBRL US Board of Directors, when he says that in order to “realize the full economic benefit of XBRL, investors and other consumers must have access to accurate and reliable XBRL data.”  Melancon applauded the formation of the Center for Data Quality as an “industry-funded initiative” that will “make it substantially easier for companies to create consistent, good quality financial statements in XBRL format.”

RDG Filings—along with the other Founding Members of the XBRL US Center for Data Quality—has always made a commitment to creating quality code that is of the greatest value and utility for analysts and investors.  There is a “clear demand for timely, structured, machine-readable data,” and we are excited about the work the Center will do to fulfill the potential that XBRL holds for public companies and the investment community.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

(415) 643-6017

Once Again, The SEC Bolsters XBRL

Monday, February 23rd, 2015

Even as the misguided efforts to minimize the reach of XBRL reporting continue in Congress, the SEC has increasingly endorsed and strengthened its commitment to this important advancement in financial disclosure and data availability.  Recently, the SEC has taken aggressive steps to promote and protect XBRL data.

On February 19th, 2015, SEC Commissioner Luis Aguilar endorsed the Investor Advisory Committee’s (IAC) 2013 recommendation to have issuers provide information in an interactive data format.  Speaking at the SEC Speaks conference, Commissioner Aguilar promoted the SEC’s adoption of machine-readable XBRL format and promoted the notion that it would be a great benefit to investors Proxy information were also presented in XBRL.  Commissioner Aguilar said: “For instance, it has been suggested that the better use of 21st century technology in the proxy process may facilitate how shareholders can more effectively receive and understand how their companies are performing, and to better put that performance into perspective.  Indeed, it’s only logical to expect that better informed investors would likely participate in greater numbers.”

Aguilar went on to endorse the IAC’s recommendation that the SEC “immediately prioritize tagging important information with respect to various corporate governance issues, including portions of the proxy statement that relate to executive compensation and matters voted upon by shareholders.”  His support is supported by the fact that “tagging the voting data and results contained in certain forms could result in more informed voting and investment decisions, and would facilitate comparisons among public companies.”

At the same SEC Speaks conference, the SEC’s Investor Advocate, Rick Fleming, criticized the regressive XBRL proposal put forward by Representative Robert Hurt.

Representative Hurt’s proposal would create an exemption from the XBRL filing requirements for certain small companies, which would exclude more than 60 percent of all public companies.  Mr. Fleming said that if this were signed into law, it “would seriously impede the ability of the SEC to bring disclosure into the 21st Century.”  He continued, “If Congressional action is needed, it should be used to press the SEC to move forward in its efforts to make disclosure more accessible and useful for investors.”

The SEC has only increased its commitment to the XBRL reporting requirement, and they have also massively increased its use of the data.  Investment decisions by analysts and enforcement decisions by the SEC will increasingly be driven by the information provided in the XBRL data, and for that reason RDG has, since its very inception, been committed to having the best people creating the highest quality code.

XBRL is the future of financial disclosure, and RDG can help public companies create excellent and usable data.  Please contact us to learn more about our Full Service Tagging Services and our XBRL Quality Assurance Services.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

415.643.6017

The SEC Expands Use of XBRL and Validates RDG’s Commitment to Excellence

Wednesday, January 21st, 2015

On December 30th, the SEC significantly expanded its use of the XBRL data provided by public companies with their 10-Q and 10-K filings.  It launched a new program that is designed to “facilitate investor analysis and comparisons of public company financial statement data” by consolidating the “data that companies provide in structured formats” into data sets that will be “posted for bulk downloads on the SEC’s website.”  The program will begin using only the information provided in the base financials, but it will soon include data from the footnotes as well.  The purpose of this program is to promote and expedite the use of XBRL data by investors and academics.

We are very happy that the SEC has begun using XBRL in this way.  This step begins to validate the commitment we have long made to creating top-quality code that exceeds the standard of SEC compliance and is entirely useable for analysts and investors.

We are gratified the SEC has taken these steps, because the XBRL code we submit on behalf of our clients is excellent, compliant, and useable.

In the data sets the SEC has released, there will be a lot of code that was built by providers who outsource the XBRL overseas, or who have otherwise made a lesser commitment to quality XBRL data.  Additionally, there will be a fair amount of code built by the reporting teams at individual companies who have taken the responsibility of properly structuring XBRL in-house.  When the XBRL is poorly built, or created by people who are not CPAs and experts, there is a risk that the information made available by the SEC in these data sets will be an inaccurate reflection of the companies’ financial information.

Investment decisions by analysts and enforcement decisions by the SEC will be driven by the code in the XBRL data, and for that reason RDG has–since its very inception–been committed to having the best people creating the highest quality code.

XBRL is the future of financial disclosure, and RDG can help public companies create excellent and usable data.  Please contact us to learn more about our Full Service Tagging Services and our XBRL Quality Assurance Services.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

415.643.6017

The SEC Massively Expands Its Use Of XBRL Data

Friday, January 9th, 2015

On December 30th, the SEC massively expanded its use of the XBRL data provided by public companies with their 10-Q and 10-K filings.  The SEC announced and launched a pilot program designed to “facilitate investor analysis and comparisons of public company financial statement data” by consolidating the “data that companies provide in structured formats” into data sets that will be “posted for bulk downloads on the SEC’s website.”  The program will begin using only the information provided in the base financials, but it will soon include data from the footnotes as well.  The purpose of this program is to promote and expedite the use of XBRL data by investors and academics.

This program is the most significant expansion of the availability public companies’ financial disclosures since the advent of the EDGAR system in the 1990’s.  For the first time, every public company’s base financials will be available in one data set, which means that investors and academics will no longer have to manually cobble together usable data from the information available in the archaic and individual EDGAR filings.

This announcement made on the penultimate day of 2014 capped off what was a big year for XBRL.  This announcement put an exclamation point on a year in which the SEC dramatically increased both its use of XBRL and the attention it pays to structured data.  Earlier in the year, the SEC conducted a staff assessment of the use of custom tags.  In 2014, the SEC also began sending ‘Dear CFO’ letters to companies regarding required calculations in their XBRL exhibits.

With this move, the SEC has positively affirmed that XBRL is the present and the future of financial reporting.  They have also sent an unmistakable message that public companies should take the necessary steps to ensure their XBRL data is well structured and properly usable.  These public data sets are based on the XBRL only and are not verified against the content of the EDGAR document, so poorly constructed XBRL data will not provide an accurate depiction of a company’s financial disclosures.  It takes an expert to create quality, compliant, and truly usable XBRL data.

XBRL is the future of financial disclosure, and RDG can help public companies create excellent and usable data.  Please contact us to learn more about our Full Service Tagging Services and our XBRL Quality Assurance Services.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

415.643.6017

The SEC Enhances its Commitment to XBRL Data

Monday, October 20th, 2014

In the Opening Remarks at the SEC’s Investor Advisory Committee on Oct. 9, 2014, SEC Chair Mary Jo White discussed recent developments in the “Commission’s rulemaking agenda.”  Chair White touched on reforms to enhance the transparency of money market funds, she described “two quite significant Dodd-Frank Act rulemakings,” and she touted a “very successful year in terms of both the breadth and quality” of SEC enforcement.  For more detail, you can read the full remarks here, but Chair White did something that really caught our attention.  Chair White made explicit mention of XBRL and other structure data initiatives, and described a deeper commitment by the SEC to the XBRL requirement.

Chair White described the use of structure data as an “important, ongoing priority,” and she said the SEC is continuing to find “ways to improve the quality and usefulness of structured data while reducing the burdens on companies as much as possible.”

Chair White also referenced a report by the Division of Economic and Risk Analysis (DERA) regarding its assessment “of the use of custom tags in XBRL exhibits.”  As Chair White explained, DERA also “performed an analysis of calculation errors in companies’ XBRL,” which led to the Division of Corporation Finance issuing ‘Dear CFO’ letters to “several companies that failed to include all required calculation relationships in their XBRL data.”

These explicit mentions of XBRL by the Chair of the SEC were significant in their own right, especially in light of the continued and misguided efforts within the halls congress to gut the XBRL requirement.  However, we were particularly happy to hear Chair White’s glowing introduction to Dr. Mark Flannery.  Dr. Flannery recently joined the Commission staff as the new Chief Economist and Director of the Division of Economic and Risk Analysis (DERA).  As Chair White explains it, DERA is one of the “primary Divisions that is leading the structured data initiatives.”  Chair White said that while Dr. Flannery is new to the SEC, he is “long conversant with the use and value of structured data.”  White also referred to Dr. Flannery’s inaugural speech as the Director for DERA and described the speech as being “dedicated entirely to the topic of structured data.”

Dr. Flannery’s speech to the Data Transparency Coalition’s Fall Policy Conference on Sept. 30, 2014 was indeed entirely about structured data.  He explained the “important role that high-quality financial information plays in the efficient operation of capital markets and their oversight by regulators,” and he made clear that the SEC is “committed to improving the availability of financial information through the presentation and analysis of structured data.”  He addressed the ongoing need to increase the quality of the available XBRL data, and he made clear that “making useable data available to the public is a key function of many of the Commission’s disclosure rules.”

Flannery’s speech enumerated many of the uses—and users—of structured data, stating that the SEC staff themselves are huge consumers of the data.  The division that Flannery now oversees, the Division of Economic and Risk Analysis (DERA) uses structured data in their “economic analysis of rules, risk assessment and market supervision initiatives” as well as to “support enforcement actions and compliance programs.”

Dr. Flannery expanded on the SEC’s continuing and increasing commitment to the XBRL and other structured data initiatives in the face of those who would “advocate an exemption of the requirements for smaller companies.”  He said that removing the XBRL requirement for smaller companies would, in fact, be a detriment to those companies because “their ability to disseminate machine-readable financial information critically enhances their ability to access capital in financial markets.”  If XBRL becomes the standard for financial reporting only for large companies, smaller companies will be overlooked by financial analysts and institutional investors.

Although he dismissed the notion of removing the XBRL mandate, Flannery was sensitive to the fact that any new regulatory requirement does impose additional burden on companies of all sizes. Flannery said that the SEC is “taking the most prudent course, continuing its efforts to monitor filing quality and educate filers,” and he explained that as is the case with “all new compliance experiences, time is required for sufficient learning to overcome the inevitable start-up problems and costs that companies incur.”

After saying that the SEC is exercising gradualism and patience as the XBRL mandate enters maturity, Flannery did make clear that the “DERA staff will continue to address the quality of XBRL submissions by periodically analyzing their content for accuracy and completeness,” and that “where appropriate, DERA staff will work closely with the Division of Corporation Finance to provide guidance to filers.”

In concluding his inaugural speech as Director of DERA, Dr. Flannery said that “ensuring that market participants have access to useable, high-quality” structured data was the primary purpose of the initial SEC XBRL mandate in 2009, and he said that he and his staff at “DERA are committed to helping fulfill that original aim.”

The SEC is committed to XBRL, and they are committed to high quality, useable XBRL data.

RDG Filings can provide your company with a Full Service Tagging Solution or with XBRL Quality Assurance Services, both of which will vastly improve the quality and usability of the XBRL data you are submitting to the SEC and create significant cost efficiencies for your company.

Contact us for more information.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

415.643.6017

New Data and Analytical Tools Increase the SEC’s Enforcement Reach

Sunday, September 21st, 2014

We’ll give the moral to this story first:  The SEC is using XBRL and other available data to increase its enforcement initiatives.  You cannot control the SEC, but you can control if your XBRL data is catching unwanted SEC attention.  RDG Filings can ensure that your XBRL filings are held to the highest standards available anywhere and will not raise flags at the SEC due to poorly structured data.

Recently the SEC conducted an unprecedented investigation into violations by individuals and companies of securities laws that require corporate officers, directors and major shareholders to disclose their transactions in company stock.*

As the law firm McGuire Woods described it, the scope of this investigation was beyond anything the SEC had conducted in the past.  And the firm Morgan Lewis said that this “sweep signals a new level of scrutiny by the SEC of a filing requirement that, to date, has been largely immune from aggressive enforcement actions.”

The SEC said that it had used “quantitative data sources and ranking algorithms” to detect these violations that would like have gone unnoticed prior to the availability of these new sources of data and the technology to analyze that data.  Morgan Lewis predicts that the “existence of these quantitative tools alone suggests that more of these types of actions may be forthcoming from the SEC.”

This aggressive investigation is evidence that since the establishment of its Center for Risk and Quantitative Analytics in July 2013, the SEC’s Enforcement Division has increased its use of data analytics to identify potential violations.

These types of increase enforcement mechanisms are not a surprise.  In October of 2013, Mary Jo White explained that the SEC would be adopting the “Broken Windows” theory to crime fighting and prevention.  While they will remain focused on the big crimes, they would use newly available data and technology to more strictly enforce the smaller violations.

Admitting that the SEC has limited resources, and cannot actually be everywhere at once, she said that the SEC would be leveraging “new data tools and other force multipliers” to enhance and expand its coverage.  She wants the SEC to “strive to be that kind of cop – to be the agency that covers the entire neighborhood and pursues every level of violation,” and she said that they would be “harnessing the power of our enhanced technological capabilities… to spot fraud early on.”

Chairperson White concluded that it is the SEC’s aim “to create an environment where you think we are everywhere – using collaborative efforts, whistleblowers and computer technology to expand our reach… and ensuring that even the small violations face consequences.”

Chairperson White’s head enforcement chief, Andrew Ceresney, echoed and expanded on those sentiments in May of 2014.  Ceresny said that the SEC had been “focused on using technology to improve our ability to detect and investigate fraud,” and that with “proliferation of big data, we need to better harness technology in order to keep up with wrongdoers.”

More specifically, Ceresny said that the Center for Quantitative and Risk Analytics is helping “develop technologies to analyze trading and other types of data available to us from a wide variety of venues.”  He added that it is “critical that we continue to develop tools that mine these massive data sources for possible violations.  This data is a rich source of information for us and we need to take advantage of it.”

To repeat the moral to this story:  The SEC is using XBRL and other available data to increase its enforcement initiatives.  RDG Filings XBRL Quality Assurance Services will ensure that your XBRL data will not raise unwarranted flags at the SEC.  RDG will provide you with an independent, 3rd party review of your XBRL code, and our QA team of expert CPAs will ensure that your XBRL is not simply SEC Compliant, but that it satisfies the most up-to-date and strictest recommendations from the FASB, the AICPA, and the XBRL.US.  Contact us for more information.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

415.643.6017

*RDG Filings offers an excellent, cost effective, and user-friendly, web-based tool for the creation and submission of Section 16 Ownership Forms 3, 4, & 5.  Please contact us for more information.

The SEC is Moving (slowly) in the Right Direction

Thursday, July 24th, 2014

In a recent article on the Compliance Week website, Tammy Whitehouse makes clear that while the SEC has recently issued new guidance for–and begun stricter enforcement of–XBRL quality, there remain legitimate concerns about the ultimate usefulness of the data.  It is certainly true that the XBRL being filed by many providers that use automated software and by many companies creating their own XBRL using in-house software is flawed and riddled with simple errors.  As a result, the lion’s share of the XBRL data currently available is of limited value to the investors and analysts for whom the data is primarily intended.  Although the SEC has recently begun issuing comment letters in a first attempt to remedy the issues that diminish the value of XBRL data, Whitehouse says that some people “worry it won’t go far enough to fix the problems that prevent better use of open source financial statement data.”

RDG agrees.  This was a good first step, but more needs to be done to enhance XBRL quality.

However, the primary takeaway from Whitehouse’s article is not that “XBRL has been a failure since the beginning.”  Perhaps it has, but only if you insist on only looking backward.  RDG agrees with Campbell Pryde, president and CEO of the XBRL U.S., which advances the goal of a high quality dataset of public companies’ financial information.  In the article, Pryde acknowledges that there has “been very little communication from the SEC,” and as a result, there has been little “incentive for folks to get it correct.”  However, he provides valuable perspective when he says: “It’s a cycle, and hopefully the SEC attention to this should start to break the cycle.”

Since the inception of the XBRL mandate, the SEC has been very deliberate (all too deliberate) in the gradual implementation of the requirement, and they continue to move slowly toward stricter enforcement of the necessary standards of XBRL quality.  They are, however, moving in the right direction.

There will always be companies that wait for the SEC to take discernible enforcement actions before complying with certain regulations.  But for those companies that want to remain in compliance and ahead of the SEC’s future enforcement—and that want to supply XBRL data that is useful to analysts and investors—there are some simple and cost effective solutions.

If you’re using an outsource provider for XBRL tagging that outsources the tagging or uses automated software to create quick-and-dirty XBRL, your code is sure to have a large number of errors and may not fly under the radar of the SEC’s XBRL RoboCop.  RDG Filings is among the top five most active filing agents in the country, we are proud to have set the standards for both customer service and XBRL data quality, and we are thrilled to be able to offer this quality at significant savings over the other reputable providers.  High quality XBRL data is not cost prohibitive.  Contact us for a quote.

If you are using in-house software to create your own XBRL, and if you want a higher degree of confidence that your code is properly built, RDG’s XBRL Quality Assurance Department provides you with an independent, 3rd party review of your XBRL code, and our QA team of expert CPAs will ensure that your XBRL is not simply SEC Compliant, but that it satisfies the most up-to-date and strictest recommendations from the FASB, the AICPA, and the XBRL.US.  Contact us for more information.

At this point, it is undeniable that the XBRL mandate is far from perfect.  However, it is important to maintain perspective and to understand the SEC for what it is.  It’s a large government bureaucracy that moves slowly but steadily.  It may be plodding along, but the SEC is moving toward increased enforcement of XBRL quality.  It is up to companies to be sure they are out in front of the SEC.  RDG Filings can help.

Feel free to contact me any time.

Stewart Walker – SVP, Director of Sales

415.643.6017