1.3 Overview: Regulatory Requirements
and SEC Filings
The public availability of company information began after the stock
market crash of 1929.
The crash led to efforts to make information about companies more
readily available to investors (and regulators). The United States
enacted two major pieces of legislation: The Securities Act of 1933
and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These acts reshaped the
U.S. financial market landscape because they imposed rules on
information that had to be disclosed whenever securities were being
offered to the public for sale. The first act:
• Required
that investors receive financial and other significant information
on the securities being offered for sale;
•
Prohibited deceit, misrepresentations, and other fraud.
The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 created the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) and made it the chief regulator of U.S.
financial markets, charged with enforcing the two acts.
It therefore regulates the information that must be disclosed
by companies; the initial acts required companies with more than $10
million in assets to file annual and other periodic reports with the
SEC.
In 2009, the SEC issued a final ruling requiring companies to file
this information in interactive data format.
In their words: “We are adopting rules requiring companies to
provide financial statement information in a form that is intended
to improve its usefulness to investors. In this format, financial
statement information could be downloaded directly into
spreadsheets, analyzed in a variety of ways using commercial
off-the-shelf software, and used within investment models in other
software formats….. Companies will provide their financial
statements to the Commission and on their corporate Web sites in
interactive data format using the eXtensible Business Reporting
Language (XBRL).”
---Source: http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2009/33-9002.pdf
The ruling required large companies to file in this way starting in
2009, and required all companies required to file reports to move to
this standard by June 2011.
The information that must be filed was spelled out in Section 13 of
the Securities Act of 1934 (scroll down to page 120).
For the point of view of financial analysis, the most
important reports are the (audited) 10-K report, filed annually, and
the (unaudited) 10-Q report, filed quarterly (except in the quarter
a 10-K is filed). These
reports provide an overview of the company's business and financial
condition and include its financial statements.
Today’s filings contain hundreds of pages because they reflect the
increasing complexity of a global economy which in turn generates an
ever-increasing volume and complexity of information.
These trends underlie the U.S.
Department of Labor’s current employment growth projections
(Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2010-2011) as follows:
“Employment of accountants and auditors is expected to grow by 22
percent between 2008 and 2018, which is much faster than the average
for all occupations.”
Similarly they predict 20% growth for financial analysts and 24% for
management analysts over the same time period.
They also observe that:
“…. the growing movement
towards International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which
uses a judgment-based system to determine the fair-market value of
assets and liabilities, which should increase demand for accountants
and auditors because of their specialized expertise.”
Source: http://www.bsl.gov/oco
These trends reflect the growing importance and complexity of
financial statement preparation, analysis and valuation in today’s
global economy. This
changing environment places increased demands upon everyone working
in this area to continually enhance their conceptual and practical
skills.
Valuation Tutor is designed to let you
meet these demands by exploiting the same technological advances
that have driven the changes in the regulatory environment.
This is achieved because Valuation Tutor consists of
an integrated system consisting of a text book, software, and
dataset. Each chapter of
the textbook provides step-by-step instruction on how to immediately
apply important concepts to the real world by exploiting technology
to process the rich set of disclosed information.
The system lets you not only analyze a specific company but
compare it to a large set of other companies.
The ability to compare is where you develop a sense of what
the numbers mean, and where you start to develop professional
judgment.