Belmont University

April 02, 2008

Try XBRL? What language is XBRL?

AreYouReadyForXBRL.JPG TryXBRL is a new information resource with XBRL-tagged financial statements for over 12,000 publicly traded corporations. The purpose is to educate financial statement preparers and users on new capabilities for analyzing financial data with reduced cost, time, and complexity. So what is XBRL or eXtensible Business Reporting Language and why should you care?

XBRL is revolutionizing business reporting through electronic communication of business and financial data. The old days of accountants issuing static reports which require laborious and costly processes of manual re-entry and comparison to work with the data are coming to an end. Computers can treat XBRL data "intelligently": they can recognize the information in a XBRL document, select it, analyze it, store it, exchange it with other computers and present it automatically in a variety of ways for users. XBRL greatly increases the speed of handling of financial data, reduces the chance of error and permits automatic checking of information. (ref: http://www.xbrl.org/Home/)

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December 09, 2007

Need a Loan? Try Your Neighbor

Prosper Logo.gif Next time you're in the market for a personal loan, you may find that the lender with the best financing terms isn't your friendly neighborhood bank. It may instead just be your friendly neighbor...period. That's right. More U.S. consumers are taking advantage of an old, but new again, concept of borrowing from other consumers through a personal loan clearinghouse such as Prosper (http://www.prosper.com). It's all part of a new trend in personal finance called "social lending.'

Picture Prosper as what would happen if Ebay went into banking. Would-be borrowers go on-line and enter information about how much money they need, what interest rate they are seeking, and how long they need to pay the money back. What allows this process to work are the investors out there, dissatisfied with their current rates of return, who now have the option to review these potential borrower profiles on-line and bid on the ones they like best. Lenders have the potential to earn significantly higher returns on their funds than they would through typical investment channels (an overall average of 9.28%). What does Prosper get out of all this? They charge a modest fee for both the borrowers and lenders in exchange for their services.

Social lending is growing in popularity at a very fast rate, rising from $27 million in 2006 to in excess of $100 million projected for 2007. With the Web as a catalyst, the practice is projected to hit $1 billion in loan volume by 2010. Many of us have lived next door to a neighbor who was a banker. Soon, our neighbor may be the bank itself.