SEC Overhauls its Registration Exemption for Foreign Companies

August 27, 2008

At its open meeting on August 27, 2008, the SEC voted to adopt amendments to Rule 12g3-2(b), which exempts certain foreign private issuers (FPIs) from registration with the SEC. Based on the SEC staff’s comments at the open meeting, the SEC has accepted the most widely made comment on its original proposal, by eliminating the proposed 20% cap on U.S. trading volume. The final rule will otherwise be adopted substantially in the form proposed in the SEC’s February 2008 release. These amendments are summarized below. The full text of the release is not yet available.

At the same meeting, the SEC acted on two other major proposals affecting FPIs: it adopted amendments to the disclosure requirements applicable to reporting FPIs, and it adopted amendments to its rules on cross-border M&A transactions. The SEC also decided to issue for comment a proposed “roadmap” for moving toward the use of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) by domestic U.S. issuers. We will be sending separate emails addressing these developments.

Under Section 12(g) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and related rules, a foreign private issuer (as defined under the Exchange Act) that has 300 or more U.S. resident holders of a class of equity securities at the end of its most recently completed fiscal year, and 500 or more worldwide holders of record (plus US$10 million or more in total assets), must register that class under the Exchange Act unless an exemption is available. Exchange Act registration requires a company to comply with SEC reporting requirements, and with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

Registration under Section 12(g) is theoretically required even if a company does not list or publicly offer its securities in the United States. However, an exemption is available under Rule 12g3-2(b). Rule 12g3-2(b) currently allows an FPI that has not listed or publicly offered securities in the United States to avoid registration by making an application under the Rule and furnishing the SEC with English-language versions of certain material information that the issuer makes public or is required to file in its home country. For most companies, the information must be submitted to the SEC in paper form.

The amendments will make the exemption automatically available to eligible FPIs, which will no longer have to make an application to the SEC. Under the amendments, in order to maintain the exemption, a company must publish electronically (either on its website or on a publicly available electronic system) English translations of certain key documents, such as annual and interim reports and financial statements, material press releases and certain other significant documents. Paper submission will no longer be required.

The amendments will include two eligibility requirements that an FPI must meet to benefit from the exemption:

  • The issuer has no active Exchange Act reporting obligations under Section 13(a) or 15(d) (this means essentially that the issuer has not listed or publicly offered securities in the United States).
  • The issuer maintains a listing of the subject securities on one or more non-U.S. exchanges that are its primary trading market (meaning one or two markets that represent at least 55% of its worldwide trading volume, at least one of which must have greater trading volume than the United States).

The amendments do not include the most controversial eligibility requirement from the SEC’s February proposal, which would have made companies ineligible if trading in the United States represented more than 20% of the issuer’s worldwide trading volume in the most recently completed year. In the open meeting, the SEC’s staff indicated that most commenters had opposed the 20% trading volume test, in particular due to the dampening effect it could have had on sponsored ADR facilities and the inclusion of U.S. investors in exempt offerings such as private placements. As the issuer must still meet the primary trading market requirement described above in order to benefit from the exemption, U.S. trading must in any case represent no more than 45% of an issuer’s worldwide trading volume.

The result of these amendments is that vast numbers of non-U.S. companies that regularly publish English-language documents will automatically become exempt, without any action (or even any knowledge of the exemption). As a result, their shares will become eligible for unsponsored ADR facilities and Rule 144A resales to qualified institutional buyers. At the same time, some companies, such as unlisted funds or acquisition targets that have delisted but have remaining U.S. shareholders, may be ineligible for the exemption.

It is also uncertain whether the amended Rule will require that issuers publish full English translations of documents or whether English versions that cover all material information will be sufficient. We had noted in our comment letter that many companies include information in their home country reports (due either to local regulations or to local practices) that is not of interest for U.S. investors, and that some of these companies omit this information from the English versions of these reports.

The amendments will provide for a three-year transition period for FPIs that lose their Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption because they are unable to meet the Rule’s new substantive requirements. In addition, the Rule will include a three-month transition period following effectiveness to enable issuers to comply with the Rule’s substantive requirements, in particular the electronic publication of English-language documents.

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