Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

21 June 2007

Reuters: SEC to ease accounting rules for foreign companies





The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday took a step toward allowing foreign public companies to choose international accounting standards or U.S. rules when filing data with the agency. The SEC proposal sets the stage for foreign companies listed in the United States to issue their financial reports using the English version of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) instead of U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, or GAAP.

The change is part of the SEC's roadmap to eliminate by 2009 the requirement that foreign companies reconcile their financial statements to U.S. GAAP. It also brings the United States closer to other major financial centers that have embraced international reporting standards.

'Global accounting standards would allow investors to draw better and more accurate comparisons among issuers around the world,' SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said at an agency meeting.

The proposal, approved unanimously by the commission, needs public comment before the SEC finalizes the rule. However it drew quick applause from one of the 'Big Four' accounting firms Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu. 'There's no question that foreign private issuers view today's step very positively,' said James Quigley, the firm's chief executive.

By filing their financial statements in IFRS, which is required by European regulators, companies may avoid the need to keep separate sets of accounting books and retain experts in both local and U.S. accounting on staff.

The commission specified that foreign issuers had to use the English version of the international financial accounting standards -- a move they said was practical and designed to mitigate risk. Commission staff said they want to have discussions with issuers and that most SEC lawyers and accountants are fluent only in English.

In supporting the proposal, Republican Commissioner Paul Atkins said it may make U.S. markets more attractive for foreign companies.

The commission staff said it expects to issue a paper this summer looking at whether U.S. companies may also be able to file their own financial data under IFRS.

Cox said he did not think the same 2009 timetable could apply to U.S. companies. 'That would seem to be getting way ahead of ourselves,' he told reporters after the meeting.

Meanwhile, the EU and United States are already working on 'converging' their accounting rules so cross-border firms can file the same set of accounts on either side of the Atlantic. The vision is to have one set of accounting standards.

Democratic Commissioner Annette Nazareth questioned whether the proposed rule would hinder this effort, while fellow Democratic Commissioner Roel Campos said while he recognized this as a concern, he did not subscribe to this view.

'It is in no one's interest to ease up on throttle for convergence,' he said

© Reuters


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment