SEC Chairman lays out 2008 agenda

In a February 8th speech to the Practising Law Institute, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox announced his initiatives for 2008.  During the course of his remarks, Chairman Cox noted the increasingly global nature of regulation and emphasized that his agency would work to release a new roadmap that would facilitate the convergence of US GAAP and International Financial Reporting Standards.  This is not a question of "if" but "when".  The other point that the Chairman made was his belief that interactive reporting, his term for the XBRL technology, will become increasingly important.  Interestingly, the surveys I've seen for the CFO agenda puts the implementation of XBRL far down the list of priorities.  If Chairman Cox has his way, CFOs may need to rethink their priorities. 

Below is an excerpt from Chairman Cox's speech:

The same imperatives of ever-faster communications, ever-more-closely linked markets, and truly global competition for capital that underlie our conceptualization of mutual recognition have for several years been driving the project to converge the world's two great accounting systems — U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles and International Financial Reporting Standards. Because of the significant progress that has been made in developing IFRS as a high-quality accounting standard — and in light of its rapid and growing acceptance around the world — the Commission last year voted unanimously to take the next step on the SEC's "roadmap" announced three years ago. As a result, foreign issuers can now file their financial statements with the SEC using IFRS, without need of keeping a second set of books under U.S. GAAP.

Then, last August, the Commission issued a Concept Release seeking advice on whether U.S. issuers should be allowed to choose to prepare financial statements using IFRS. And in December 2007 we held roundtables on this subject and heard from more than two dozen experts. The many comments the Commission has received make one thing exceptionally clear: the rapidly growing acceptance in the rest of the world of IFRS as a high-quality accounting standard will make the U.S. GAAP-IFRS convergence project increasingly important for U.S. investors and issuers. In 2008, the Division of Corporation Finance and the Office of the Chief Accountant, led by Wayne Carnall and Julie Erhardt, will formally propose to the Commission an updated "roadmap" that lays out a schedule, and appropriate milestones on which the schedule will be conditioned, for continuing the progress that the United States is making in moving to accept IFRS in this country.

The third pillar of this international strategy — the adoption of a global computer language for the exchange of financial information — goes hand in glove with the concepts of a common accounting language and mutual recognition of high-quality securities regulation. A standard data format for sharing financial statements and other information that is important to investors will facilitate the kind of comparisons among global investment options that investors need. The international movement to employ eXtensible Business Reporting Language for this purpose will let investors easily find and compare business and financial data with the same ease of doing a Google or Yahoo! search today. And it promises to let companies prepare their financial information more quickly, more accurately, and for less cost. In 2008, following years of evaluation and experience through the SEC's voluntary XBRL pilot program, the Commission will consider a rule for the use of interactive data by U.S. reporting companies that will parallel efforts already underway in other countries. David Blaszkowsky, who heads the SEC's Office of Interactive Disclosure, has been an important leader in this initiative.