DS-information DS/CWA 16744-5:2014 1. udgave 2014-04-29 Forbedring af gennemsigtigheden i finansiel og forretningsmæssig rapportering Harmoniseringsemner Del 5: Kortlægning mellem DPM og MDM Improving transparency in financial and business reporting Harmonisation topics Part 5: Mapping between DPM and MDM
DS/CWA 16744-5:2014 København DS projekt: M287068 ICS: 35.240.40; 35.240.60 Første del af denne publikations betegnelse er: DS/CWA, hvilket betyder, at det er en europæisk CEN Workshop Agreement (CWA). Denne publikations overensstemmelse er: IDT med: CWA 16744-5:2014. DS-publikationen er på engelsk. DS-publikationstyper Dansk Standard udgiver forskellige publikationstyper. Typen på denne publikation fremgår af forsiden. Der kan være tale om: Dansk standard standard, der er udarbejdet på nationalt niveau, eller som er baseret på et andet lands nationale standard, eller standard, der er udarbejdet på internationalt og/eller europæisk niveau, og som har fået status som dansk standard DS-information publikation, der er udarbejdet på nationalt niveau, og som ikke har opnået status som standard, eller publikation, der er udarbejdet på internationalt og/eller europæisk niveau, og som ikke har fået status som standard, fx en teknisk rapport, eller europæisk præstandard DS-håndbog samling af standarder, eventuelt suppleret med informativt materiale DS-hæfte publikation med informativt materiale Til disse publikationstyper kan endvidere udgives tillæg og rettelsesblade DS-publikationsform Publikationstyperne udgives i forskellig form som henholdsvis fuldtekstpublikation (publikationen er trykt i sin helhed) godkendelsesblad (publikationen leveres i kopi med et trykt DS-omslag) elektronisk (publikationen leveres på et elektronisk medie) DS-betegnelse Alle DS-publikationers betegnelse begynder med DS efterfulgt af et eller flere præfikser og et nr., fx DS 383, DS/EN 5414 osv. Hvis der efter nr. er angivet et A eller Cor, betyder det, enten at det er et tillæg eller et rettelsesblad til hovedstandarden, eller at det er indført i hovedstandarden. DS-betegnelse angives på forsiden. Overensstemmelse med anden publikation: Overensstemmelse kan enten være IDT, EQV, NEQ eller MOD IDT: Når publikationen er identisk med en given publikation. EQV: Når publikationen teknisk er i overensstemmelse med en given publikation, men præsentationen er ændret. NEQ: Når publikationen teknisk eller præsentationsmæssigt ikke er i overensstemmelse med en given standard, men udarbejdet på baggrund af denne. MOD: Når publikationen er modificeret i forhold til en given publikation.
CEN WORKSHOP CWA 16744-5 April 2014 AGREEMENT ICS 35.240.40; 35.240.60 English version Improving transparency in financial and business reporting - Harmonisation topics - Part 5: Mapping between DPM and MDM This CEN Workshop Agreement has been drafted and approved by a Workshop of representatives of interested parties, the constitution of which is indicated in the foreword of this Workshop Agreement. The formal process followed by the Workshop in the development of this Workshop Agreement has been endorsed by the National Members of CEN but neither the National Members of CEN nor the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre can be held accountable for the technical content of this CEN Workshop Agreement or possible conflicts with standards or legislation. This CEN Workshop Agreement can in no way be held as being an official standard developed by CEN and its Members. This CEN Workshop Agreement is publicly available as a reference document from the CEN Members National Standard Bodies. CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and United Kingdom. EUROPEAN COMMITTEE FOR STANDARDIZATION COMITÉ EUROPÉEN DE NORMALISATION EUROPÄISCHES KOMITEE FÜR NORMUNG CEN-CENELEC Management Centre: Avenue Marnix 17, B-1000 Brussels 2014 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved worldwide for CEN national Members. Ref. No.:CWA 16744-5:2014 E
Contents Foreword...3 0 Introduction...5 0.1 General...5 0.2 Objective...5 0.3 Target Audience...5 0.4 Relationship to Other Work...5 1 Scope...6 2 Terms and definitions...6 3 Introduction to the Multidimensional Data Model...6 4 Preconditions on mapping...6 4.1 Types of Database Management Sytems (DBMSs)...6 4.2 Fundamental choices...7 4.3 Fact definitions: presentation vs DPM... 10 4.4 Storing native XBRL facts... 11 4.5 Dimension/defaultMember... 13 4.6 Options... 13 4.7 Versioning... 13 4.8 Changes on fact values... 13 5 Definitions... 14 6 Mapping from Data Point Model to Multidimensional Data Model... 15 6.1 General... 15 6.2 Introduction... 15 6.3 Framework... 16 6.4 Taxonomy... 18 6.5 Dimensions... 20 6.6 Context... 25 6.7 Primary Items... 27 6.8 Fact table or Data Points... 29 6.9 Summary... 30 7 Metamodel defined by the EBA (FINREP and COREP) mapped to MDM... 33 7.1 Introduction... 33 7.2 Creation of the structure and load of the DPM from the EBA in a RDBMS... 33 7.3 Loading DPM_ROLAP from DPM_EBA... 34 8 Implementation of the DPM in the MDM using the design ROLAP... 41 8.1 Introduction... 41 8.2 Structure ROLAP... 41 8.3 Creation of the infrastructure through MS SQL Server... 42 9 DPM of FINREP 2012 in the MDM using the design ROLAP... 46 9.1 Introduction... 46 9.2 DPM of FINREP 2012... 46 10 DPM of the first prototype of Solvency II in the MDM using the design ROLAP... 56 10.1 Introduction... 56 10.2 DPM of the prototype... 56 Bibliography... 60 Page 2
Foreword This CEN Workshop Agreement has been drafted and approved by a Workshop of representatives of interested parties on 2013-12-11, the constitution of which was supported by CEN following the public call for participation made on 2012-04-19. The individuals and organizations which supported the technical consensus represented by the CEN Workshop Agreement are: Name Aftab Ahmad Aitor Azcoaga Andreas Weller Anna-Maria Weber Anne Leslie-Bini Bartosz Ochocki Carlos Fernández Pazos Daniel Balsa Daniel Eidelman Derek De Brandt Eduardo Alejandro González Blanco Elina Koskentalo Emile Bartole ERIC JARRY Eugeniusz Tomaszewski Herm Fischer Hugh Wallis Ignacio Boixo Ignacio Santos Istvan Fabian Javi Mora Gonzálbez Jeff Smith John Dill Jürgen Diehl Katrin Schmehl Lourdes Martínez Sánchez-Redondo Maarten Peelen Maciej Piechocki Maria Mora Mark Creemers Martin DeVille Masatomo Goto Michal Piechocki Michał Skopowski Moira Lorenzo Varela Pablo Navarro Paul Snijders Paul van der Ark Pierre HAMON Pieter Maillard Piotr MADZIAR Piotr Malczak Roland Homes Slawomir Skrzypek Organization Finanstilsynet (The Financial Supervisory Authority Of Norway) European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) European Banking Authority Deutsche Bundesbank Invoke Business Reporting - Advisory Group Consulting Spain XBRL EUROPE Gonblan Consultores, S.L.P. TIEKE CSSF BANQUE DE FRANCE FQS Poland Sp. z o.o., Fujitsu Group Mark V Systems Limited IBM Canada Banco de España Banco de España Central bank of Hungary XBRL Spain HM Revenue & Customs The Bermuda Monetary Authority Deutsche Bundesbank Deutsche Bundesbank NEN BearingPoint CDP National Bank of Belgium UBPartner Fujitsu Business Reporting Advisory Group Business Reporting Advisory Group Semansys Technologies BV ECB Etxetera, XBRL France Aguilonius European Commission GPM SYSTEMY sp. Rhocon Fujitsu 3
Thierry Declerck Thomas VERDIN Tom Staneke Vasilis Dimopoulos Venkatasubramani Sambandan Victoria Morante de Dios Wouter Braem DFKI GmbH THEIA Partners De Nederlandsche Bank Central Bank of Cyprus Deloitte Netherlands National Bank of Belgium This CWA is one of a series of related deliverables. The following deliverables have been produced in this series: CWA 16744 consists of the following parts, under the general title Improving transparency in financial and business reporting Harmonisation topics: Part 1: European Data Point Methodology for supervisory reporting. Part 2: Guidelines for Data Point Modelling Part 3: European XBRL Taxonomy Architecture Part 4: European Filing Rules Part 5: Mapping between DPM and MDM CWA 16745, Improving transparency in financial and business reporting Metadata container CWA 16746-1, Improving transparency in financial and business reporting Standard regulatory roll-out package for better adoption Part 1: XBRL Supervisory Roll-out Guide CWA 16747-2, Improving transparency in financial and business reporting Standard regulatory roll-out package for better adoption Part 2: XBRL Handbook for Declarers The formal process followed by the Workshop in the development of the CEN Workshop Agreement has been endorsed by the National Members of CEN but neither the National Members of CEN nor the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre can be held accountable for the technical content of the CEN Workshop Agreement or possible conflict with standards or legislation. This CEN Workshop Agreement can in no way be held as being an official standard developed by CEN and its members. The final review/endorsement for this CWA was started on 2013-07-05 and was successfully closed on 2013-10-05. The final text of this CWA was submitted to CEN for publication on 2013-03-05. Comments or suggestions from the users of the CEN Workshop Agreement are welcome and should be addressed to the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre. 4
0 Introduction 0.1 General This CWA aims to provide an introduction to the topic of creating a conceptual model for storing multidimensional data which is received as XBRL instances that follow the rules defined by European taxonomies published by the European Banking Authority (EBA) or by the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA). Disclaimer: The Multidimensional Data Model (MDM) presented in this document is intended to be a starting point for a subsequent modelling process to be adjusted and extended to specific analytical or transactional needs. It solely refers to the concepts of Data Point Model (DPM) and European XBRL Taxonomy Architecture (EXTA), which build the basis of European supervisory reporting. The structure of the data model is based on meta classes, introduced in CWA 16744-1 and CWA 16744-4 [26]. The data model represents a relational model using Relational Online Analytical Processing (ROLAP). In this document UML data structures of a DPM are used because its comprehension will be easier. With the UML class model representing the description of the European filing rules, the present document visualises the mapping between UML meta classes and their correspondence in the form of database tables in the MDM. This document consists of eight sections, save the bibliography. Section one explains working with a Multidimensional Data Model as a step towards working with the Relational Data Model. Section two makes a study of the architecture of XBRL, the databases and their aims, requirements and preconditions in catering for XBRL. Section three defines the conditions used for mapping from DPM to MDM. Section four is detailing point by point the mapping. Section five shows the metamodel defined by the European Banking Authority (EBA) through the FINREP (Financial Report) and COREP (Common Solvency Report) taxonomies and its mapping into MDM. Section six displays the MDM implemented in a relational database. Sections seven and eight show two implementation examples. 0.2 Objective The objective of this sample MDM is to provide a starting point into the topic of mapping DPM and XBRL instance structures into a multidimensional database. Based on an easily comprehensible example, more complex issues are addressed that would need to be taken into account by defining an MDM for production use. 0.3 Target Audience This document is aimed at users of European supervisory taxonomies that have the need to store reporting data based on these data definitions and to retrieve them for analytical or transactional purposes. Database experts should get detailed information about the specifics to be taken into account when modelling multidimensional database structures for storing supervisory data based on XBRL. Therefore, the audience of this document might be financial or economic institutions, agencies or universities with the intention to provide micro or macro prudential analysis on supervisory data. 0.4 Relationship to Other Work The reader of this document is expected to be familiar with the principles of data modelling, having a thorough understanding of the concept of DPM as well as basic knowledge of XBRL. The reader is also expected to have knowledge in creating conceptual models for relational and multidimensional databases. 5
1 Scope This CWA aims to provide an introduction to the topic of creating a conceptual model for storing multidimensional data which is received as XBRL instances that follow the rules defined by European taxonomies published by the European Banking Authority (EBA) or by the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA). 2 Terms and definitions The terms and definitions used in the mapping with Data Point Model (CWA 16744-5) are inspired by vocabulary already known from their use for describing multidimensional databases and Data Warehouses. 3 Introduction to the Multidimensional Data Model The multidimensional database is primarily used to create OLAP (Online Analytical Process) applications and their databases using a fact table and set of dimensions. A multidimensional structure stores multidimensional data, that is to say, cubes. A cell or fact is an intersection consisting of elements that form the dimension(s) which in turn form a cube. A cell can have zero or more measures, but in this document only one measure is taken into account. The Multidimensional Data Model (MDM) is used instead of the Relational Model, because the European architecture of economic-financial reports is relying on dimensions heavily, which makes implementation in MDM the logical choice. Moreover, the performance of queries is better in this type of database. The goal of this document is to store the Data Point Model in a database, in an efficient, easy way. 4 Preconditions on mapping 4.1 Types of Database Management Sytems (DBMSs) In this section some types of DBMS's are analysed that appear suitable for storing DPM and XBRL documents. Only those databases are considered where, in a previous study, it seemed possible to store the DPM and to extend XML or XBRL documents. Figure 1 Different types of DBMS's 6