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The Future of Corporate Reporting

 

The Institute of Public Auditors in Germany (Institut der Wirtschaftsprüfer in Deutschland) has released a position paper on the future on corporate reporting, (only available in German). IDW’s Matthias Schmidt shares some insights into their thoughts on the future of reporting. 

Financial statements alone do not sufficiently display companies’ market value:

Corporate reporting should evolve to better display differences between market and book value.

As part of the Sustainable Finance Action Plan, the EU Commission is evaluating whether the external reporting framework is (still) fit for purpose in the 21st century, especially with regards to their contribution to sustainable development. Without question, greater consideration of environmental, social and governance issues in financial reporting makes sense: these issues are “non-financial”, but by no means “un-necessary for an understanding of the undertaking’s development, performance or position”. Integrating ESG issues into management reports makes sense to the extent that these issues pose risks to the business.

Better reporting can lead to better capital allocation, and there are also promising, market-driven approaches, such as appropriate emissions trading schemes or green taxes. If such mechanisms lead to internalization of externalities, they would go directly into P&L accounts and would be considered immediately by all active Investors.

However, the future of reporting will be more than “Annual Report + Sustainability”. It would also be worth considering the following:

Both evaluations should be displayed as tables, with further explanations in the notes.

In addition, in an increasingly digital world, accounting for internally generated intangible assets should be reconsidered as these values often make up three-quarters or more of the company’s market value. Is it appropriate, if balance sheets only display the debt coverage potential of the individual assets (without synergies) rather than their value creation potential?

By Matthias Schmidt, IDW

 

 

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