Saturday, November 17, 2007

SEC Takes Action to Improve Consistency of Disclosure to U.S. Investors in Foreign Companies


The Securities and Exchange Commission today voted unanimously to help American investors better analyze and get more readily comparable financial information from the U.S.-registered foreign companies in which they invest. The Commission's action responds to the record number of U.S. investors who own the securities of foreign companies, and the growing need for high-quality accounting standards that transcend borders.

Having considered extensive and informative public comment on its June 2007 proposal, the Commission today approved rule amendments under which financial statements from foreign private issuers in the U.S. will be accepted without reconciliation to U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles only if they are prepared using International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board. The purpose of the requirement to use the IASB-approved version is to encourage the development of IFRS as a uniform global standard, not a divergent set of standards applied differently in every nation. Consistency of application of IFRS will help U.S. investors who own foreign securities to have better comparability.

The number of Americans who own foreign securities has risen significantly in recent years. Today, two-thirds of American investors own securities of foreign companies. That is a 30 percent increase in the past five years. The vast majority of U.S. investors own securities of companies that report their financial information using IFRS. IFRS is mandatory in Europe and in several other countries, and its use is mandated or permitted in over 100 nations around the world.

See full Press Release.