The objective of the Guidance Note issued by ICAI is
to provide guidance to the practitioners in certification of XBRL formatted
statements in terms of the requirements of the Ministry’s General Circular No.
57/ 2011 dated July 28, 2011 read with MCA’s General Circular No. 43/2011 dated
July 07, 2011. These Circulars require that besides signing by signatories as
specified under section 215 of the Companies Act, 1956, the financial
statements prepared in XBRL mode for filing on MCA-21 portal would also need to
be certified by, inter alia, a Chartered Accountant. The financial
statements referred here would mean the balance sheet, the profit and loss
account, the cash flow statements and the related notes to account.
The following is the summary of the Guidance Note:
1.
XBRL
or the eXtensible Business Reporting Language, is a
language for the electronic communication of business and financial data. It is
an open, royalty free, international information format (software
specification) developed through a process of collaboration between accountants
and technologists from all over the world who came together to form the XBRL
International.
2.
XBRL
makes the data readable with the help of two documents – the taxonomy and
the instance document.
3.
Taxonomies
are dictionaries
that contain the terms used in the financial statements and their corresponding
XBRL tags (i.e., electronically readable codes for each item of financial
statements).
4.
Instance
document is a
file that contains business reporting information and represents a collection
of financial facts and report – specific information using tags from one or
more XBRL taxonomies. The instance document is a computer file that contains
entity’s data and other entity specific information and is generally not
intended to be read by the human eye. Thus, an XBRL instance document is a
business report in an electronic format created according to the rules of the
XBRL.
5.
In
India, the taxonomy has been developed by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs
(MCA), based on the requirements of Schedule VI of Companies Act, the
Accounting Standards; and SEBI Listing requirements.
6.
The
Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Government of India, vide its General
Circular No. 37/2011, dated June 07, 2011 has required the following class of
companies (except banking companies, insurance companies, power companies and
the Non Banking Financial Companies) to file the financial statements in XBRL
form only from the year 2010–2011:
(i)
All companies listed in India and their Indian
subsidiaries;
(ii)
All
companies having a paid up capital of Rs 5 crore and above; and
(iii)
All
companies having a turnover of Rs 100 crore and above.
It has now been decided (General
Circular No. 16/2012, dated 6-7-2012) by the Ministry to mandate the
following select class of companies to file their Balance Sheet and Profit
& Loss Account in XBRL mode for the financial year commencing on or after
1-4-2011:
(i) all companies listed with any Stock
Exchange(s) in India and their Indian subsidiaries; or
(ii) all companies having paid up capital of Rupees
five crore and above; or
(iii) all companies having turnover of Rupees one
hundred crore and above; or
(iv) all companies who were required to file their
financial statements for FY 2010-11, using XBRL mode.
However, banking companies, insurance companies, power companies
and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) are exempted from XBRL filing till
further orders.
The applicable taxonomy as per Schedule VI of the Companies Act,
1956 has already been placed on the Ministry's website www.mca.gov.in. The
Business Rules, validation tools, etc. required for preparing the financial
statements in XBRL format, as per the revised Schedule-VI and Accounting
Standards, are under preparation and would soon be made available by the
Ministry. The actual date for enabling XBRL filing will be intimated
separately.
7.
Objective of this Guidance Note:
The objective of the Guidance Note is to provide
guidance to the practitioners in certification of XBRL formatted statements in
terms of the requirements of the Ministry’s General Circular July 07, 2011.
These Circulars require that besides signing by signatories as specified under
section 215 of the Companies Act, 1956, the financial statements prepared in
XBRL mode for filing on MCA-21 portal would also need to be certified by, inter
alia, a Chartered Accountant. The financial statements referred here would
mean the balance sheet, the profit and loss account, the cash flow statements
and the related notes to account.
8. Management Responsibility:
The responsibility for ensuring that the financial
statements generated in the XBRL format are in accordance with the prescribed
taxonomy is that of the management of the Company. Accordingly, the management
needs to exercise appropriate controls over the following three areas to manage
risks associated with generation of XBRL financial statements:
a) Selecting, maintaining, and testing the taxonomy;
b) Accurately mapping and tagging data elements to
XBRL reports; and
c) Enforcing change management procedures for XBRL
processes.
9.
Procedures for Certification:
The practitioner’s procedures in respect of XBRL
financial statements would, ordinarily, be as follows:
- Examination of Source Document with the XBRL rendered document using relevant document reader in human readable form.
- Validation for errors using the MCA tool.
- Examination of Error Logs at Mapping and Tagging Stage, and also the Error logs. generated while carrying out validating using the MCA Tool.
- In case the XBRL financial statements have been generated a third party service provider, the practitioner can rely on the report given by the former and may specifically request for following areas such as completeness, mapping, accuracy and structure.
- Running the formatted XBRL information using relevant reader to satisfy that no changes have been made after validation before filing.
- Notifying the management of any exceptions observed during the certification. have to be brought to the notice of the company.
- Using the relevant reader, satisfying that no changes have been made after validation but before filing.
- Any exceptions observed during this process have to be brought to the notice of the management. If the exceptions are significant, they should be communicated to the management immediately for necessary rectification before filing. In case, it is not possible to rectify these exceptions or the management refuses to take necessary corrective action, these exceptions should be reported by practitioner in his certificate giving reasons and whether it would affect the XBRL filing as a whole.
Completeness means that all required
information is formatted at the required levels as defined by the entity’s
reporting environment. Only permitted information selected by the entity is included
in the eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) files.
Mapping means that the elements
selected are consistent with the meaning of the associated concepts in the
source information in accordance with the requirements of the entity’s
reporting environment.
Accuracy means that the amounts, dates,
other attributes (for example, Monetary units), and relationships (order and
calculations) in the instance document and related files are consistent with
the source information in accordance with the requirements of the entity’s
reporting environment.
Structure means that XBRL files are
structured in accordance with the requirements of the entity’s reporting
environment.
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10.
Essentials of a good XBRL
Certificate: In
respect of the format of the certificate, the certain factors need to be taken
care of, including:
- The certificate should, generally, be addressed to the engaging party.
- Specific items covered by the certificate should be clearly identified and indicated.
- The certificate should clearly lay down the responsibilities of the management vis-à-vis the practitioner with respect to the XBRL financial statements.
- The certificate should indicate the manner in which the certification was conducted, e.g., any specific tests performed.
- If the certificate is subject to any limitations in scope, such limitations should be clearly mentioned.
- Assumptions on which the XBRL financial statements are based should be clearly indicated if they are fundamental to the understanding of these financial statements.
- Reference to the information and explanations obtained should be included in the certificate. In certain cases apart from a general reference to information and explanations obtained, the practitioner may also find it necessary to refer in his certificate to specific information or explanations on which he has relied.
- Since the XBRL financial statements are based on the general purpose financial statements, the certificate should contain a reference to such general purpose financial statements. It should be clearly mentioned that the statutory audit of the aforesaid general purpose financial statements has been completed. Further, the Certificate should also clearly mention whether such audit has been conducted by the practitioner issuing the certificate or by some other Chartered Accountant. In case the general purpose financial statements have been audited by a practitioner other than the one issuing the certificate, he should specify the extent to which he has relied upon them. He may communicate with the statutory auditor for securing his cooperation and in appropriate circumstances, discuss relevant matters with him, if possible.
- The certificate should ordinarily be a self-contained document. It should not confine itself to a mere reference to another report or certificate issued by the practitioner or another auditor but should include all relevant information contained in such report or certificate.
- The practitioner should clearly indicate in his certificate, the extent of responsibility which he assumes.
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