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XigniteFundamentals v2 FAQ

Company Financial FAQs

ETNs (exchange-traded notes) are supported in XigniteFundFundamentals, which provides fundamentals data such as fund profile information and fund performance for U.S. exchange-traded products and mutual funds. 

Tip: 
Use XigniteFundFundamentals.SearchFundsByName to search by keyword or name (e.g. ETN, iPath, etc.).



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There are multiple reasons why our financial numbers may not always match those you see on popular financial websites such as Yahoo!Finance or Google Finance:
  • Xignite, Yahoo! Finance, and Google use different sources. Xignite licenses  its US and Canadian information from Morningstar--one of the leading financial data vendors in the industry. Yahoo! Finance and Google use different sources. Different data sources use different methodologies for accounting data classification, and they collect and cleanse data at different times. All those can introduce differences--which doesn't imply that one or another data source is inaccurate.
  • Xignite and Morningstar may structure and organize financial accounts differently from other sources and websites. For instance, another source may name a line item differently. Or one line item on another source may be allocated across two line items in our APIs--or vice versa. It can therefore be difficult to match line items on Yahoo! Finance or Google Finance. For instance, what Yahoo!Finance calls Earnings Before Interest And Taxes, Xignite calls Income Before Income Taxes.
  • Xignite and Morningstar may calculate certain values differently. If you have limited experience with how financial data is structured and reported, this fact may seem surprising. However, it is quite common. Not every company reports financial information in the same fashion. Although standards such as XBRL exist, a lot of the financial filings made by companies are subject to interpretation by financial analysts at each data vendors. Vendors make decisions whether one line item from a financial statement should be incorporated into a given line item in their data set. The net result is that the numbers may not match for categories that seem to be named similarly. This of course does not apply to things like top items in Financial Statements as those statements should still be correct. For instance, items like Total Assets or Total Liabilities should typically match from one provider to the next.
In summary, be very careful when comparing our data to that of another site unless you want to spend a lot of time reconciling subtleties in the way financial data is reported--unless of course that other site is Morningstar. A data set can only be proved as inaccurate if it is incorrect compared to the initial filings made by the firm (10-K and 10-Q SEC filings in the US for instance).

We often get questions about the differences above. Please understand that at no time do we make representation that the financial numbers delivered by our services should exactly match the organization and values of those on popular financial websites. We consider such comparisons unfair and misplaced unless a discrepancy can be traced back to the source filing.

If you want to report an item that you have the conviction is inaccurate, please provide:
  • The security symbol this applies to (e.g. GOOG)
  • The period and period type this applies to (e.g. Annual Statement for Fiscal Year 2012)
  • The FinancialType this applies to (e.f. OperatingIncome)
  • An explanation as to why you believe it is inaccurate including reference to the original SEC filings available on EDGARthe company annual report from the company's Investor Relations Web Site or the Morningstar web site.
With this information, we can verify the validity of the information and escalate it to Morningstar if necessary. Any inquiry as to why our information is different from that of another financial website will be responded to by pointing to this FAQ unless the 4 points of information above are provided.