
The
SEC has announced that it will shortly publish for consultation a proposed roadmap for the adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) by US issuers beginning in 2014. The SEC notes in its
press release:
Currently, U.S. issuers use U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (U.S. GAAP). The Commission would make a decision in 2011 on whether adoption of IFRS is in the public interest and would benefit investors. The proposed multi-year plan sets out several milestones that, if achieved, could lead to the use of IFRS by U.S. issuers in their filings with the Commission. The increasing integration of the world's capital markets, which has resulted in two-thirds of U.S. investors owning securities issued by foreign companies that report their financial information using IFRS, has made the establishment of a single set of high quality accounting standards a matter of growing importance. A common accounting language around the world could give investors greater comparability and greater confidence in the transparency of financial reporting worldwide".
To watch a statement by
SEC Chairman Cox, outlining the above, click
here (for QuickTime) or
here (for Windows Media Player). The roadmap has not yet been published on the SEC website but further information is available in this
report in the
Wall Street Journal.
Note:
[a] A useful map, indicating those countries where IFRSs have been adopted, is available on the
IASB website
here.
No comments:
Post a Comment