AI-powered consolidation does everything our award-winning consolidation software did — but faster and more accurately. Support for complex global requirements, including M&A activity and FX? Check. A workflow that underpins group and subgroup consolidation? Check. Powerful data processing engine? Check. SAP HANA native? Check. Integration into any IT infrastructure? Check.
Here's where it stands apart: This software injects AI automation into data centric processes like intercompany elimination, data anomaly detection, driver-based analysis, and trial balance mapping for IFRS/GAAP reporting. By augmenting repetitive consolidation tasks with AI, our consolation solution produces more accurate outputs at a greater speed than any human could.
3 reasons why CCH Tagetik Financial Consolidation
lets you focus on your business
See CCH® Tagetik Financial Consolidation in action
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Sumitomo Rubber NA
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CitizenM
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Breitling
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Manitou
Innovative finance strategies at citizenM with CCH® Tagetik
Learn how Breitling successfully Automated their Closing Process with CCH® Tagetik
Manitou optimizes their consolidation and reporting processes
Financial consolidation software built for complex companies
Manage multiple entities – automatically – in a single system. Using our consolidation intelligence, group finance teams can easily roll data up for normalization, transformation, and reporting and local teams can close the books according to regional requirements while retaining a common accounting language.
- Ensure accuracy with a smart consolidation cockpit
- Save time with automated intercompany transactions
- Comply with IFRS, GAAP and other regulatory bodies
- Intuitive process-driven consolidation workflow
- Get data governance and complete transparency
Augment the close from data collection-to-disclosure
Our end-to-end CPM software addresses the multi-entity challenges of global organizations. Manage the entire financial consolidation process by automating intercompany eliminations, equity adjustments, currency conversions, multi-statutory requirements, and more.
- Quickly manage & consolidate complex organization structures
- Easily calculate minority interest and equity adjustments
- Handle multi-entity consolidations with unlimited hierarchies
- Perform on-the-fly multi-currency conversions
- Address multi-accounting standards and regulations
Explore related solutions
About the Financial Consolidation
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The financial close is a complex but foundational financial process for global enterprises
The financial close marks the end of the accounting period when accountants close the books in order to prepare financial documents for reporting purposes. At this time, the finance team ensures all transactions have been accounted for and posted. Financials are then collected so that the gross and net balances are captured within financial records. And so begins the financial consolidation process. -
All enterprises must prepare consolidated financial statements
Consolidated financials are the statements where all assets, liabilities, income, expenses, cash flows and equity of a company and its subsidiaries are combined. They’re composed of the consolidated income statement, balance sheet and note disclosures and are meant to gauge how the parent company is doing as a whole. Consolidating the financial statements of child companies is often a complex undertaking, as subsidiaries can operate in different geographical regions, under different reporting languages and different currencies. This means that the consolidated financial statement must be prepared in a way that enables an apples-to-apples comparison between subsidiaries.
The goal of consolidated financial statements is to present an enterprise as a single entity, which means that intra-group transactions and intra-group balances need to be eliminated. Only then can an enterprise in its entirety be fairly evaluated and understood.
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Using consolidated management statements to understand corporate performance
Consolidated management statements lay out the financial situation and performance of a group of companies viewed as a single enterprise. The consolidated management statements, unlike the statutory consolidated financial statements, have two main purposes:
- Responding to regulatory demands, analyzing not only financial statements but also management reports. Therefore, it’s necessary for report creators to provide of extra-accounting information (such as quantitative information on sales, production, purchases or KPI’s) and financial information along with management report in order to develop a cash flow of the business dimensions (ex. products, sales channels, operating divisions or other).
- Frequently analyze the data (monthly or quarterly) in advance of financial statement closing. For this reason, it’s necessary to consolidate the financial statements quickly and integrate data with manual adjustments.
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Statutory management consolidation for disclosure
Statutory and management consolidation is the process of closing the books, collecting data and consolidating all financials so that reports can be created for both managerial and regulatory disclosure purposes in accordance with IFRS and US GAAP.
In a mergers and acquisition context, statutory consolidation can also refer to the scenario where two businesses merge to create a new company but neither of the previous companies continue to exist.
In a close-to-disclosure context, financial consolidation is defined by IAS 27 as when the “Financial statements of a group [including] the assets, liabilities, equity, income, expenses and cash flows of the parent (company) and its subsidiaries are presented as those of a single economic entity."
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Reconciliation management: A necessary component of financial consolidation
An essential part of monthly closing, reconciliations management is the process of comparing two sets of records with the purpose of ensuring that both sets are matched and accurate. Reconciliation management is important because it determines whether the funds that leave an account match the amount spent. Thus, reconciling accounts ensures no money is missing or fraudulently withdrawn.
Until recently, reconciliations management was a laborious, bottlenecked process, and yet necessary for understanding the account balance and to meet regulatory and auditing requirements. The reason it was so burdensome, especially for companies operating in different regions or with multiple account levels, was because of the disparity between data versions and data types. For this reason, many members of the Office-of-Finance are choosing to go with a consolidation and close solution that eliminates manual spreadsheet or paper based reconciliations. They now recognise the need for capabilities like automated matching and exceptions that can handle entities of all sizes, with multiple processes, and multiple lines of business.