By Dominic Jones | Published: November 9, 2007 |
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An XBRL heads-up from Chairman Cox
I’M sure there are other ways to interpret a news release issued last night from Tokyo by U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox, but my reading is that it’s telegraphing that mandatory XBRL is coming next year.
And one of the arguments the SEC chairman intends to make to all of the doubting Thomases is that XBRL is vital to the international competitiveness of America’s capital markets and its public companies.
Headlined Chairman Cox, Overseas Counterparts Meet to Discuss Interactive Data Timetable, the release provides an update on progress towards mandatory XBRL filings in countries such as Japan, China, South Korea, Australia, Israel and Canada. The message is that some of these countries are far ahead of the U.S.
Oddly, the statement doesn’t actually mention anything about the timetable for U.S. companies except to include the following comment from the chairman in the last paragraph:
“Without question, 2008 will be a watershed year for interactive data.”
You’ve been put on notice.
Related posts:
- SEC mandates XBRL for financial statements
- SEC calls meeting for final XBRL rule
- Hundreds of non-US companies targeted for unsponsored ADRs
- As XBRL mandate looms, SEC seeks urgent help with software
- SEC unveils IDEA — and that’s all it is for now
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November 16th, 2007 at 12:57 am
[...] addition, Dominic Jones of the IR Web Report noted this SEC press release last weekend from Japan where Chairman Cox was meeting with security [...]