Exemption From Registration Under Section 12(G) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for Foreign Private Issuers, 52752-52769 [E8-20995]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 176 / Wednesday, September 10, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
17 CFR Parts 239, 240 and 249
[Release No. 34–58465; International Series
Release No. 1309; File No. S7–04–08]
RIN 3235–AK04
Exemption From Registration Under
Section 12(G) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 for Foreign
Private Issuers
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We are adopting amendments
to the rule that exempts a foreign private
issuer from having to register a class of
equity securities under Section 12(g) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’) based on the
submission to the Commission of
certain information published by the
issuer outside the United States. The
exemption allows a foreign private
issuer to have its equity securities
traded in the U.S. over-the-counter
market without registration under
Section 12(g). The adopted rule
amendments will eliminate the current
written application and paper
submission requirements under Rule
12g3–2(b) by automatically exempting
from Exchange Act Section 12(g) a
foreign private issuer that meets
specified conditions. Those conditions
will require an issuer to maintain a
listing of its equity securities in its
primary trading market located outside
the United States, and require it to
publish electronically in English
specified non-United States disclosure
documents. As a result, the adopted
amendments should make it easier for
U.S. investors to gain access to a foreign
private issuer’s material non-United
States disclosure documents and
thereby to make better informed
decisions regarding whether to invest in
that issuer’s equity securities through
the over-the-counter market in the
United States or otherwise. As is
currently the case, issuers must
continue to register their securities
under the Exchange Act to have them
listed on a national securities exchange
or traded on the OTC Bulletin Board.
DATES: Effective Date: October 10, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elliot Staffin, Special Counsel, at (202)
551–3450, in the Office of International
Corporate Finance, Division of
Corporation Finance, U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549–
3628.
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We are
adopting amendments to Commission
Rules 12g3–2 1 and 15c2–11 2 under the
Exchange Act,3 Forms 15F,4 40–F,5 and
6–K 6 under the Exchange Act, and
Form F–6 7 under the Securities Act of
1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’).8
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Introduction
1. Current Rule 12g3–2(b) Requirements
2. Proposed Rule 12g3–2 Amendments
B. Principal Comments Regarding the
Proposed Rule Amendments
C. Summary of the Adopted Rule
Amendments
II. Discussion
A. Foreign Listing Condition
1. The Primary Trading Market Definition
2. Elimination of the Proposed 20 Percent
Trading Volume Condition
3. Treatment of Compensatory Stock
Options
B. Non-Exchange Act Reporting Condition
1. Non-Reporting Issuers
2. Deregistered Issuers
C. Electronic Publishing of Non-U.S.
Disclosure Documents
1. Electronic Publishing Requirement To
Claim Exemption
2. Electronic Publishing Requirement To
Maintain Exemption
3. English Translation Requirement
D. Elimination of the Written Application
Requirement
E. Duration of the Amended Rule
12g3–2(b) Exemption
F. Elimination of the Successor Issuer
Prohibition
G. Elimination of the Rule 12g3–2(b)
Exception for MJDS Filers
H. Elimination of the ‘‘Automated InterDealer Quotation System’’ Prohibition
and Related Grandfathering Provision
I. Revisions to Form F–6
J. Amendment of Exchange Act Rule
15c2–11
K. Transition Periods
1. Regarding Section 12 Registration
2. Regarding Processing of Paper
Submissions
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Rule 12g3–2(b) Submissions or
Publications
B. Form F–6
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
A. Expected Benefits
B. Expected Costs
V. Consideration of Impact on the Economy,
Burden on Competition and Promotion
of Efficiency, Competition and Capital
Formation
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
VII. Statutory Basis and Text of Rule
Amendments
1 17
CFR 240.12g3–2.
CFR 240.15c2–11.
3 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
4 17 CFR 249.324.
5 17 CFR 249.240f
6 17 CFR 249.306.
7 17 CFR 239.36.
8 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
2 17
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I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Introduction
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b) 9
exempts a foreign private issuer 10 from
Section 12(g) registration 11 if, among
other requirements, the issuer furnishes
to the Commission on an ongoing basis
information it has made public or is
required to make public under the laws
of its jurisdiction of incorporation,
organization or domicile, pursuant to its
non-U.S. stock exchange filing
requirements, or that it has distributed
or is required to distribute to its security
holders (collectively, its ‘‘non-U.S.
disclosure documents’’).12 The
Commission adopted Rule 12g3–2(b)
more than 40 years ago in order to
exempt from Section 12(g) registration
foreign companies that have not
obtained a listing on a national
securities exchange or otherwise sought
a public market for their equity
securities in the United States.13
Acquiring the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption enables a foreign private
issuer to have its equity securities
traded on a limited basis in the over-thecounter market in the United States
while avoiding registration under
Exchange Act Section 12(g). Typically a
foreign private issuer obtains the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption in order to have
established an unlisted, sponsored or
unsponsored depositary facility for its
American Depositary Receipts
(‘‘ADRs’’).14 Establishing the Rule 12g3–
9 17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b).
the definition of foreign private issuer at
Exchange Act Rule 3b–4(c) (17 CFR 240.3b–4(c)).
11 When read in conjunction with Exchange Act
Rules 12g–1 (17 CFR 240.12g–1) and 12g3–2(a) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(a)), Exchange Act Section 12(g)
requires an issuer to file an Exchange Act
registration statement regarding a class of equity
securities within 120 days of the last day of its fiscal
year if, on that date, the number of its record
holders is 500 or greater, the number of its U.S.
resident holders is 300 or more, and the issuer’s
total assets exceed $10 million.
12 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(iii) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(1)(iii)).
13 Release No. 34–8066 (April 28, 1967). For
additional background on the initial adoption of
Rule 12g3–2(b), see Part I.A of Release No. 34–
57350 (February 19, 2008), 73 FR 10102 (February
25, 2008) (‘‘Proposing Release’’).
14 An ADR is a negotiable instrument that
represents an ownership interest in a specified
number of securities, which the securities holder
has deposited with a designated bank depositary.
The filing of Securities Act Form F–6 (17 CFR
239.36) is required in order to establish an ADR
facility. The eligibility criteria for the use of Form
F–6 include the requirement that the issuer of the
deposited securities have a reporting obligation
under Exchange Act Section 13(a) or have
established the exemption under Rule 12g3–2(b).
See General Instruction I.A.3 of Form F–6. While
required to be registered on Form F–6 under the
Securities Act, ADRs are exempt from registration
under Exchange Act Section 12(g) pursuant to
current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(c) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(c)).
10 See
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2(b) exemption also permits registered
broker-dealers to fulfill their current
information obligations concerning
foreign private issuers’ securities for
which they seek to publish quotations.15
It further facilitates resales of an issuer’s
securities to qualified institutional
buyers (‘‘QIBs’’) under Rule 144A.16
1. Current Rule 12g3–2(b) Requirements
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Currently, in order to establish the
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption, a foreign private issuer must
initially submit to the Commission a list
of its non-U.S. disclosure requirements
as well as copies of its non-U.S.
disclosure documents published since
the beginning of its last fiscal year.17 An
issuer must further submit its non-U.S.
disclosure documents on an ongoing
basis in order to maintain the
exemption. The current Rule provides
that an issuer need only submit copies
of information that is material to an
investment decision for the purpose of
obtaining or maintaining the
exemption.18 At the time of the initial
submission, an issuer must also provide
the Commission with the number of
U.S. holders of its equity securities and
the percentage held by them, as well as
a brief description of how its U.S.
holders acquired those shares.19
Rule 12g3–2(b) currently requires that
an applicant submit all of the necessary
non-U.S. disclosure documents and
other information before the date that a
registration statement would otherwise
15 Brokers currently can comply with their
obligations under Exchange Act Rule 15c2–11 (17
CFR 240.15c2–11) when a foreign company has
established and maintains the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption by, in part, reviewing the information
furnished to the Commission under the exemption.
See Rule 15c2–11(a)(4) (17 CFR 240.15c2–11(a)(4)).
16 See Securities Act Rule 144A(d)(4) (17 CFR
230.144A(d)(4)).
17 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(i) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(1)(i)). Historically, an issuer has
submitted its home jurisdiction materials as part of
a letter application to the Commission, which has
been processed through the Office of International
Corporate Finance in the Division of Corporation
Finance. The written application process does not
apply to an issuer that receives the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption upon the effectiveness of its Exchange
Act deregistration pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
12h–6 (17 CFR 240.12h–6).
18 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(3) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(3)). As examples of material
information, the Rule lists an issuer’s financial
condition or results of operations, changes in its
business, the acquisition or disposition of assets,
the issuance, redemption or acquisition of
securities, changes in management or control, the
granting of options or other payment to directors or
officers, and transactions with directors, officers or
principal security holders.
19 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(v) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(1)(v)). An issuer must also
disclose the dates and circumstances of the most
recent public distribution of securities by the issuer
or an affiliate.
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become due under Section 12(g).20 Once
an issuer has timely submitted its
application and obtained the exemption,
the issuer may surpass any of the record
holder, U.S. resident holder, or asset
thresholds that would otherwise trigger
an obligation to register a class of
securities under Section 12(g) or the
rules thereunder, as long as it maintains
the exemption by submitting the
required non-U.S. disclosure
documents.
For most of its 40-year history, the
Rule 12g3–2(b) disclosure regime has
mandated paper submissions. Even after
the adoption of EDGAR filing rules for
foreign private issuers, the Commission
has required a foreign private issuer to
submit its initial Rule 12g3–2(b)
supporting materials in paper.21 The
Commission has based this treatment of
Rule 12g3–2(b) materials on the
analogous treatment of applications for
an exemption from Exchange Act
reporting obligations filed pursuant to
Exchange Act Section 12(h).22
In March 2007, the Commission voted
to adopt amendments to Rule 12g3–2,
which enable a foreign private issuer to
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
immediately upon the effectiveness of
its termination of Exchange Act
registration and reporting pursuant to
contemporaneously adopted Exchange
Act Rule 12h–6.23 The March 2007
amendments require an issuer that has
obtained the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption,
upon the effectiveness of its termination
of registration and reporting pursuant to
Rule 12h–6, to publish specified nonU.S. disclosure documents in English on
an ongoing basis on its Internet Web site
or through an electronic information
delivery system generally available to
the public in its primary trading market,
rather than submit that information in
paper to the Commission.24 The
amendments further permit, but do not
require, a foreign private issuer that has
obtained or will obtain the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption, upon application to the
Commission and not pursuant to Rule
12h–6, to publish electronically in the
same manner its non-U.S. disclosure
documents required to maintain the
exemption.25
20 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(2) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(2)).
21 See Release No. 33–8099 (May 14, 2002), 67 FR
36678 (May 24, 2002).
22 15 U.S.C. 78l(h). We require the filing of
Section 12(h) exemptive applications in paper
pursuant to Regulation S–T Rule 101(c)(16) (17 CFR
232.101(c)(16)).
23 See Release No. 34–55540 (March 27, 2007), 72
FR 16934 (April 5, 2007).
24 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(e) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(e)).
25 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(f) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(f)).
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The March 2007 amendments further
clarified the English translation
requirements under Rule 12g3–2(b).26
The amendments provide that, when
electronically publishing its non-U.S.
disclosure documents required to
maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption,
at a minimum, a foreign private issuer
must electronically publish English
translations of the following documents
if in a foreign language:
• Its annual report, including or
accompanied by annual financial
statements;
• Interim reports that include
financial statements;
• Press releases; and
• All other communications and
documents distributed directly to
security holders of each class of
securities to which the exemption
relates.27
2. Proposed Rule 12g3–2 Amendments
In February 2008, we proposed
amendments to Rule 12g3–2(b) in order
to adapt that exemptive regime to the
several significant developments
occurring since its initial adoption four
decades ago.28 Those developments
include the increased globalization of
securities markets, advances in
information technology, and the
increased use of ADR facilities by
foreign companies to trade their
securities in the United States, which
have multiplied the number of foreign
companies engaged in cross-border
activities, as well as increased the
amount of U.S. investor interest in the
securities of foreign companies. Just as
those developments led us to reevaluate and revise the Commission
rules governing when a foreign private
issuer may terminate its Exchange Act
registration and reporting obligations, so
those same factors have led us to
reconsider as well the Commission rules
that determine when a foreign private
issuer must enter the Section 12(g)
registration regime.
We proposed to amend Exchange Act
Rule 12g3–2 to permit a foreign private
issuer to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption, without having to submit an
application to, or otherwise notify, the
Commission, as long as:
26 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(4) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(4)) provides that copies
furnished to the Commission of press releases and
any materials distributed directly to security
holders must be in English, and states that English
summaries and versions may be used instead of
English translations. However, the rule does not
specify what other documents must be translated
fully into English, and when summaries or versions
may be used.
27 Note 1 to Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(e).
28 Release No. 34–57350.
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• The issuer is not required to file or
furnish reports under Exchange Act
Section 13(a) 29 or 15(d);
• The issuer currently maintains a
listing of the subject class of securities
on one or more exchanges in a foreign
jurisdiction that, either singly or
together with the trading of the same
class of the issuer’s securities in another
foreign jurisdiction, constitutes the
primary trading market for those
securities;
• Either:
Æ The average daily trading volume
(‘‘ADTV’’) of the subject class of
securities in the United States for the
issuer’s most recently completed fiscal
year has been no greater than 20 percent
of the average daily trading volume of
that class of securities on a worldwide
basis for the same period; or
Æ The issuer has terminated its
registration of a class of securities under
Exchange Act Section 12(g), or
terminated its obligation to file or
furnish reports under Exchange Act
Section 15(d), pursuant to Exchange Act
Rule 12h–6; and
• Unless claiming the exemption in
connection with or following its recent
Exchange Act deregistration, the issuer
has published specified non-U.S.
disclosure documents, required to be
made public from the first day of its
most recently completed fiscal year, in
English on its Internet Web site or
through an electronic information
delivery system generally available to
the public in its primary trading market.
As proposed, a foreign private issuer
that met the above requirements would
be immediately exempt from Exchange
Act registration under Rule 12g3–2(b)
even if, on the last day of its most
recently completed fiscal year, it
exceeded the asset and shareholder
thresholds for Section 12(g) registration,
and although the 120-day window for
filing a registration statement under
Section 12(g) had elapsed. Further, as
proposed, an issuer could immediately
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
upon the effectiveness of, or following
its recent Exchange Act deregistration,
whether pursuant to the older exit rules
of Rule 12g–4 or 12h–3,30 or Rule 12h–
6, or the suspension of its reporting
obligations under Section 15(d),31 if it
29 15
U.S.C. 78m(a).
CFR 240.12g–4 or 240.12h–3. Both Rules
12g–4 and 12h–3 permit an issuer to exit the
Exchange Act reporting regime following the filing
of a Form 15 (17 CFR 249.323), which certifies that
the issuer has fewer than 300 record holders or less
than 500 record holders and total assets not
exceeding $10 million on the last day of each of its
most recent 3 fiscal years.
31 An issuer may suspend its Section 15(d)
reporting obligations under Rule 12h–3 or Section
15(d) itself. The statutory section provides that
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30 17
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met the above requirements other than
the electronic publication condition for
its most recently completed fiscal year.
The proposed rules would require any
issuer, whether a prior registrant or not,
to maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption by publishing its specified
non-U.S. disclosure documents on an
ongoing basis and for each subsequent
fiscal year, in English, on its Internet
Web site or through an electronic
information delivery system generally
available to the public in its primary
trading market. The proposed rules
would require the electronic publication
in English of the same types of
information required under the March
2007 amendments.
As proposed, the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption would remain in effect until:
• The issuer no longer satisfies the
electronic publication condition;
• The issuer no longer maintains a
listing for the subject class of securities
on one or more exchanges in its primary
trading market;
• The ADTV of the subject class of
securities in the United States exceeds
20 percent of the average daily trading
volume of that class of securities on a
worldwide basis for the issuer’s most
recently completed fiscal year, other
than the year in which the issuer first
claims the exemption; or
• The issuer registers a class of
securities under Exchange Act Section
12 or incurs reporting obligations under
Exchange Act Section 15(d).
commenters urged us either to eliminate
the trading volume condition in its
entirety or else increase the U.S. ADTV
threshold to a higher percentage, such
as 35%, 40% or 50% of worldwide
ADTV. Some commenters also
requested that we impose a trading
volume condition only as an initial
requirement for claiming the exemption,
and not as a condition for continued use
in subsequent years.
Other areas receiving comment
included whether:
• To adopt the foreign listing
condition as a requirement for either
initially claiming the exemption or
maintaining it in subsequent years;
• To permit an issuer to publish
English summaries, brief English
descriptions, or English versions instead
of English translations of its non-U.S.
disclosure documents;
• To provide a period of time for an
issuer to cure a deficiency in its
compliance with one or more conditions
before it would be required to register
under the Exchange Act;
• To require an issuer to provide
some form of public notice that it was
claiming and intended to rely on the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption;
• To modify Form F–6 in light of the
rule amendments, including whether to
adopt provisions regarding unsponsored
ADR facilities; and
• To grandfather any issuer having
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption before the
effective date of the rule amendments.
B. Principal Comments Regarding the
Proposed Rule Amendments
C. Summary of the Adopted Rule
Amendments
We received letters from 32
commenters, including law firms,
business, industry and legal trade
associations, depositary banks, financial
advisory firms, and an OTC market
participant. Most commenters strongly
supported the Commission’s proposals
to eliminate the written application
process for the Exchange Act Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption and replace the paper
submission process for an issuer’s nonU.S. disclosure documents with
mandated electronic publication as a
condition to claiming and maintaining
the exemption.
However, most commenters were
critical of the proposal that, as a
condition to claiming and maintaining
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, a foreign
private issuer’s U.S. ADTV must be no
greater than 20% of its worldwide
ADTV for the issuer’s most recently
completed fiscal year. Those
We have carefully considered
commenters’ concerns regarding the
proposed amendments to Rule 12g3–
2(b), and have addressed many of them
in the rule amendments that we are
adopting today. Most notably, we have
determined to adopt a trading volume
measure solely as part of the foreign
listing/primary trading market
condition, and not as a separate
condition. As adopted, the rule
amendments will enable a foreign
private issuer to claim the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption,32 without having to
submit a written application to the
Commission, as long as the issuer:
• Currently maintains a listing of the
subject class of securities on one or
more exchanges in its primary trading
market, which is defined to mean, as
proposed, that:
suspension occurs if, on the first day of the fiscal
year, other than the year in which the issuer’s
registration statement went effective, the issuer’s
record holders number less than 300.
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32 By the use of the term ‘‘claim’’ in his release,
we do not mean to imply that a foreign private
issuer must apply for or provide notice of the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption in order to qualify for that
exemption. Rather, as amended, the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemptive regime is meant to be self-executing.
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Æ At least 55 percent of the trading in
the subject class of securities on a
worldwide basis took place in, on or
through the facilities of a securities
market or markets in a single foreign
jurisdiction or in no more than two
foreign jurisdictions during the issuer’s
most recently completed fiscal year; and
Æ If a foreign private issuer aggregates
the trading of its subject class of
securities in two foreign jurisdictions,
the trading for the issuer’s securities in
at least one of the two foreign
jurisdictions is greater than the trading
in the United States for the same class
of the issuer’s securities;
• The issuer is not required to file or
furnish reports under Exchange Act
Section 13(a) or 15(d), as proposed; and
• Unless claiming the exemption
upon or following its recent Exchange
Act deregistration, the issuer has
published in English specified non-U.S.
disclosure documents, from the first day
of its most recently completed fiscal
year, on its Internet Web site or through
an electronic information delivery
system generally available to the public
in its primary trading market.33
The adopted rule amendments will
require an issuer to maintain the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption by electronically
publishing the specified non-U.S.
disclosure documents for subsequent
years. An issuer will lose the exemption
if it:
• Fails to publish electronically the
required non-U.S. disclosure
documents;
• No longer meets the foreign listing/
primary trading market condition; or
• Incurs Exchange Act reporting
obligations.
We are adopting the rule amendments
regarding English translation
requirements, as proposed. While we
decline to permit the use of ‘‘brief
English descriptions’’ or ‘‘English
versions,’’ we have clarified that,
generally, an issuer may provide an
English summary for a non-U.S.
disclosure document if such a summary
would be permitted for a document
submitted under cover of Form 6–K 34 or
Exchange Act Rule 12b–12(d)(3).35
We are adopting conforming
amendments to Form F–6 and Rule
15c2–11. Other adopted rule
amendments include eliminating, as
proposed:
• The current provision that generally
prohibits the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
tosuccessor issuers;
33 These rule amendments relate solely to the
application of Exchange Act Section 12(g) and not
to antifraud or other provisions of the U.S. federal
securities laws.
34 17 CFR 249.306.
35 17 CFR 240.12b–12(d)(3).
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• The rarely used ability of a
Canadian issuer filing under the
Multijurisdictional Disclosure System
(‘‘MJDS’’) to obtain the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption for a class of equity
securities while having Exchange Act
reporting obligations regarding a class of
debt securities;
• The current provision that prohibits
an issuer from relying on the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption if its securities are
traded through an automated interdealer quotation system; and
• The related provision
grandfathering Nasdaq-traded
companies meeting specified conditions
from Rule 12g3–2(b)’s automated interdealer quotation system prohibition.
While the adopted rule amendments
do not include a grandfathering
provision, we are establishing, as
proposed, a three-year transition period
to provide sufficient time for any
current Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt issuer,
which will no longer qualify for the
exemption under the rule amendments,
either to comply with all of the
conditions of amended Rule 12g3–2(b)
or register under the Exchange Act. We
also are establishing, as proposed, a
three-month transition period following
the effectiveness of the rule
amendments during which the
Commission will accept and process
any non-U.S. disclosure documents
submitted in paper by Rule 12g3–2(b)exempt issuers. Thereafter, the
Commission will no longer process
paper Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions.
By enabling a qualified foreign private
issuer to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption automatically, and without
regard to the number of its U.S.
shareholders, the adopted rule
amendments should encourage more
foreign private issuers to claim the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption. That would
enable the establishment of additional
ADR facilities, make it easier for brokerdealers to fulfill their obligations under
Exchange Act Rule 15c2–11 with
respect to the equity securities of a nonreporting foreign private issuer, and
facilitate the resale of a foreign
company’s securities to QIBs in the
United States under Securities Act Rule
144A. Consequently, the adopted rule
amendments should foster the increased
trading of a foreign private issuer’s
securities in the U.S. over-the-counter
market.
By requiring the electronic
publication in English of specified nonU.S. disclosure documents for an issuer
claiming the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption,
the adopted amendments should make
it easier for U.S. investors to gain access
to a foreign private issuer’s material
non-U.S. disclosure documents, and
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make better informed decisions
regarding whether to invest in that
issuer’s equity securities through the
over-the-counter market in the United
States or otherwise. Thus, the adopted
amendments should foster increased
efficiency in the trading of the issuer’s
securities for U.S. investors.
II. Discussion
A. Foreign Listing Condition
We are adopting, as proposed, the
condition that, in order to be eligible to
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, an
issuer must currently maintain a listing
of the subject class of securities on one
or more exchanges in a foreign
jurisdiction that, either singly or
together with the trading of the same
class of the issuer’s securities in another
foreign jurisdiction, constitutes the
primary trading market for those
securities.36 This condition is
substantially similar to the foreign
listing condition adopted as part of the
March 2007 amendments.37
The purpose of the foreign listing
condition is to help assure that there is
a non-U.S. jurisdiction that principally
regulates and oversees the trading of the
issuer’s securities and the issuer’s
disclosure obligations to investors. This
foreign listing condition increases the
likelihood that the principal pricing
determinants for a foreign private
issuer’s securities are located outside
the United States, and makes more
likely the availability of a set of nonU.S. securities disclosure documents to
which a U.S. investor may turn for
material information when making
investment decisions about the issuer’s
securities in the U.S. over-the-counter
market.
Several commenters supported the
proposed foreign listing condition
substantially as proposed or at least in
principle.38 Some commenters
supported a condition that would
require an issuer to be subject to a
recognized foreign regulatory authority
and a set of public disclosure
obligations, but would not require a
foreign listing.39 We decline to adopt
such a provision because, among other
factors, we believe it could be difficult
for market participants to determine
whether an issuer is in fact subject to a
36 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(ii) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(1)(ii)).
37 Exchange Act Rule 12h–6(a)(3) (17 CFR
240.12h–6(a)(3)).
38 See, for example, the letter of the Bank of New
York (‘‘BNY’’), dated April 25, 2008. This letter,
along with other comment letters, is available at
https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-04-08/
s70408.shtml.
39 See, for example, the letter of Sullivan &
Cromwell, dated April 25, 2008.
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complying foreign regulatory regime. In
addition, a listing on a securities market
generally involves the affirmative action
of an issuer to be traded on that market
and to be subject to the listing
requirements of that market, including
applicable ongoing disclosure
requirements. The foreign listing
requirement therefore supports one of
the underlying purposes of the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption—to make material
information available to investors.
A few commenters opposed the
foreign listing condition on the grounds
that it would impose costs on those
issuers that have not yet obtained a
foreign listing, and which are likely to
be smaller companies.40 As we noted
when proposing the rule amendments,
the foreign listing condition is
consistent with the Commission staff’s
past and current practice of
administering the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption. Any issuer, regardless of
size, has had to obtain a foreign listing
before it could receive the exemption.
Accordingly, the adopted rule should
impose no new burdens in this regard.41
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1. The Primary Trading Market
Definition
The adopted rule amendments define
primary trading market, as proposed, to
mean that at least 55 percent of the
worldwide trading in the issuer’s
subject class of securities took place in,
on or through the facilities of a
securities market or markets in a single
foreign jurisdiction or in no more than
two foreign jurisdictions during the
issuer’s most recently completed fiscal
year. The rule amendments further
instruct that, if a foreign private issuer
aggregates the trading of its subject class
of securities in two foreign jurisdictions
for that purpose, the trading for the
issuer’s securities in at least one of the
two foreign jurisdictions must be larger
than the trading in the United States for
40 See, for example, the letter of the American Bar
Association, Business Law Section (‘‘ABA’’), dated
April 30, 2008.
41 As is currently the case, an issuer that, on the
last day of its most recently completed fiscal year,
has not exceeded the 500 worldwide holder
threshold under Exchange Act Section 12(g), the
300 U.S. holder threshold under Rule 12g3–2(a), or
the $10 million annual aset threshold under Rule
12g–1, could claim an exemption from Section 12(g)
registration for a class of equity securities based
upon one or more of those provisions, and would
not have to comply with Rule 12g3–2(b)’s foreign
listing or other conditions, if it chose not to rely on
that rule for its exemption from Section 12(g)
registration. However, such an issuer would have to
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, and satisfy all
of its conditions, if it sought to have established an
ADR facility for its equity securities. ADRs must be
registered on a Form F–6, which requires an issuer
of the deposited securities to be either an Exchange
Act reporting company or have the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption.
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the same class of the issuer’s
securities.42
As proposed, we have based the
adopted definition on the definition of
primary trading market under the March
2007 amendments. Like the earlier
amendments, the amendments we are
adopting today will permit an issuer to
aggregate its securities over multiple
markets in one or two foreign
jurisdictions in recognition that many
foreign private issuers have listings on
more than one exchange in one or more
non-U.S. markets.43
Some commenters urged the
Commission to adopt a primary trading
market definition that would permit an
issuer to aggregate its trading over an
unlimited number of foreign
jurisdictions or permit an issuer’s
trading in its primary foreign markets to
comprise less than 55 percent of its
worldwide trading.44 We decline to
adopt these suggestions because, by
defining an issuer’s primary trading
market to comprise no more than two
foreign jursidictions, it becomes more
likely that an eligible issuer will be
subject to an overseas regulator with
principal authority for regulating the
issuance and trading of the issuer’s
securities and the issuer’s disclosure to
investors. Similarly, requiring an
issuer’s primary non-U.S. trading to
constitute no less than 55 percent of its
worldwide trading helps assure that a
clear majority of an issuer’s securities
trading occurs outside the United States.
If the United States was the sole or
principal market for a foreign private
issuer’s securities, then the Commission
would have a greater regulatory interest
in subjecting the foreign company to the
Exchange Act reporting regime.
The adopted rule amendments will
not require an issuer establishing the
exemption, but not deregistering, to
42 Note 1 to Rule 12g3–2(b)(1) (17 CFR 240.12g3–
2(b)(1)).
43 As under the earlier amendments,
measurement for the primary trading market
determination will be by reference to ADTV as
reported by the relevant market. An issuer would
measure the ADTV of on-exchange transactions in
its securities aggregated over one or two foreign
jurisdictions against its worldwide trading volume.
The issuer could include in this measure offexchange transactions in those jurisdictions
comprising the numerator only if it includes those
off-exchange transactions when calculating
worldwide trading volume in the denominator. This
denominator would consist of U.S. ADTV, which
must include both on-exchange and off-exchange
transactions, and non-U.S. ADTV, which must
include on-exchange transactions, but could also
include off-exchange transactions. See Note 1 to
Rule 12g3–2(b)(1) and Release No. 34–55540 at 72
FR 16934, 16939.
44 See, for example, the letters of JPMorgan Chase
Bank (‘‘JPMorganChase’’), dated April 18, 2008, and
the Organization for International Investment
(‘‘OFII’’), dated April 23, 2008.
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have maintained a foreign listing for the
previous twelve months, or for some
other specified period of time, as was
required under the March 2007
amendments. As noted in the Proposing
Release, we see no reason to exclude
newly listed foreign companies from
eligibility. Many foreign exchanges
require substantial initial disclosure
before a listing is accepted. Moreover,
there is currently no similar
requirement for a non-reporting
company applying for the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption.
Under Rule 12h–6, an issuer must
certify that, at the time it files its Form
15F,45 it meets that rule’s foreign listing
requirement. That issuer will also have
to meet Rule 12g3–2(b)’s foreign listing
requirement upon the effectiveness of
its Exchange Act termination of
registration and reporting under Rule
12h–6 in order to be able to claim the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption. Since
typically that effectiveness occurs 90
days from the date of filing of the Form
15F, we expect most Form 15F filers
will satisfy the adopted foreign listing
requirement under Rule 12g3–2(b).46
2. Elimination of the Proposed 20
Percent Trading Volume Condition
In addition to the trading volume
standard under the primary trading
market definition, we proposed that an
issuer’s U.S. ADTV must be no greater
than 20 percent of its worldwide ADTV
for its most recently completed fiscal
year. We have determined not to adopt
this separate trading volume condition.
Most commenters opposed the 20
percent trading volume condition.
Several commenters maintained that a
foreign private issuer cannot control the
level of U.S. trading of its equity
securities because U.S. investors are
able to purchase a foreign private
issuer’s securities in the issuer’s home
market and subsequently trade them in
the United States, or purchase the
issuer’s securities through unsponsored
ADR facilities in the United States.
According to these commenters, those
factors could cause an issuer’s U.S.
trading volume to exceed the proposed
trading volume threshold and thereby
require the issuer to register its
securities in the United States although
45 17 CFR 249.324. Similar to a Form 15, Form
15F is the form that a foreign private issuer must
file to certify that it meets the conditions for
terminating its Exchange Act registration and
reporting obligations under Rule 12h–6.
46 Unless the Commission objects, termination of
an issuer’s reporting and registration under Rule
12h–6 is effective 90 days after the filing of its Form
15F. Exchange Act Rule 12h–6(g)(1) (17 CFR
240.12h–6(g)(1)).
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it has not voluntarily sought a public
market there.47
Some commenters further stated that
the proposed trading volume condition
would likely discourage foreign private
issuers from establishing or maintaining
sponsored ADR facilities or engaging in
exempted offerings in the U.S., such as
private placements and Rule 144A
resales, to the detriment of U.S.
investors.48 In addition, commenters
noted that the proposed trading volume
condition would be unnecessary should
the Commission adopt the proposed
foreign listing condition and
accompanying definition of primary
trading market.49
After consideration of the comments,
we have determined that adopting these
amendments without the 20 percent
trading volume condition is consistent
with the protection of U.S. investors.
Most of the foreign private issuers that
currently claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption have U.S. trading volumes
that fall below the proposed 20 percent
threshold although there is no
mandatory trading volume condition.50
We expect that the primary trading
market provision will serve to protect
U.S. investors by making it more likely
that foreign companies claiming the
exemption will be subject to disclosure
requirements where they are listed.
3. Treatment of Compensatory Stock
Options
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Currently, the scope of the exemption
afforded to a class of equity securities
under Rule 12g3–2(b) may include
compensatory stock options that relate
to that class of equity securities.51 Some
commenters expressed their concern
that, as proposed, the scope of the
amended rule would not include
compensatory stock options since the
exemption extends to a class of equity
securities, the compensatory stock
options would likely be deemed a
separate class, and the compensatory
stock options would typically not be
47 See, for example, the letters of Cleary Gottlieb
Steen & Hamilton LLP (‘‘Cleary Gottlieb’’), dated
April 25, 2008, and EuropeanIssuers, dated April
25, 2008.
48 See, for example, the letters of the International
Bar Association, dated April 25, 2008, and
Linklaters, dated April 24, 2008.
49 See, for example, the letters of BNY and
O’Melveny & Myers LLP, dated April 25, 2008.
50 See the Memo by Jennifer Marietta-Westberg,
Office of Economic Analysis, dated March 10, 2008,
which is available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/
s7-04-08/s70408-2.pdf.
51 See current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1),
which states that ‘‘securities’’ of a foreign private
issuer shall be exempt from Section 12(g) if the
rule’s conditions are met.
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listed in the issuer’s primary trading
market.52
It is not our intention to change the
scope of Rule 12g3–2(b) in this regard.
Accordingly, we have added a note to
the amended rule to clarify that
compensatory stock options for which
the underlying securities are in a class
exempt under Rule 12g3–2(b) are also
exempt under that rule.53
B. Non-Exchange Act Reporting
Condition
We are adopting the condition, as
proposed, that in order to be eligible for
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, an issuer
must not have any reporting obligations
under Exchange Act Section 13(a) or
15(d).54 Like the current non-Exchange
Act reporting condition of Rule 12g3–
2(b),55 the purpose of this provision is
to prevent an issuer from claiming the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption when it
already has incurred active Exchange
Act reporting obligations.
1. Non-Reporting Issuers
A foreign private issuer will satisfy
the proposed non-reporting condition if
it does not already have reporting
obligations under either Exchange Act
Section 13(a) or 15(d). Since Section
13(a) imposes reporting obligations on
an issuer that has registered a class of
securities under Section 12, a foreign
private issuer that has an effective
registration statement filed with the
Commission under Section 12(b),56 for
example, covering a class of debt
securities, or Section 12(g), covering a
particular class of equity securities,
would be ineligible to claim the
exemption. This treatment is consistent
with the current Exchange Act reporting
prohibition under Rule 12g3–2(b).57
We received relatively few comments
on the proposed non-reporting
condition. While some commenters
supported the proposed condition,58
others requested that, in the interest of
increasing the flexibility of capital
raising in the United States for foreign
private issuers, we permit an issuer to
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
with respect to a particular class of
equity securities although it has
Exchange Act reporting obligations
regarding a class of debt securities or a
52 See the letter of Gloria W. Nusbacher and 24
other attorneys.
53 Note 3 to Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1).
54 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(i) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(1)(i)).
55 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(d)(1) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(d)(1)).
56 15 U.S.C. 78l(b).
57 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(d)(1).
58 See, for example, the letter of Sullivan &
Cromwell.
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52757
different class of equity securities.59 We
decline to adopt this suggested
modification because we believe that it
could cause confusion for investors and
other market participants regarding the
scope of an issuer’s Exchange Act
reporting obligations and the
protections available under the
Exchange Act.
Currently an issuer may apply for the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, although it
may have exceeded the Section 12(g)
shareholder thresholds on the last day
of its most recently completed fiscal
year, as long as the statutory 120-day
period for filing a Section 12(g)
registration statement has not lapsed.60
We proposed to eliminate this 120-day
submission requirement because, under
the revised Rule 12g3–2(b) exemptive
scheme, we did not believe that this
requirement would be necessary to
protect investors.
The revised exemption does not
depend on an issuer’s determination of
the number of its worldwide or U.S.
shareholders, and does not require that
it submit a written application
disclosing that information. Instead, it
affirmatively requires a foreign private
issuer to meet a foreign listing
requirement and electronically publish
specified material non-U.S. disclosure
documents in English. If we also
required an issuer to claim the
exemption within the 120-day period,
we believe some issuers, particularly
smaller ones, would be unable to meet
that deadline.61 Those issuers would
have to wait until the end of their
current fiscal year and the start of a new
120-day period before they could claim
the exemption. We see little benefit in
requiring issuers to wait several months
before being able to claim the
exemption. On the other hand,
providing the exemption and
encouraging these issuers to publish
their material non-U.S. disclosure
documents in English should benefit
U.S. investors. Commenters uniformly
agreed with our assessment on this
issue. Therefore, we are eliminating the
120-day requirement for issuers under
Rule 12g3–2(b), as proposed.
2. Deregistered Issuers
Under the adopted, revised exemptive
scheme, a foreign private issuer that has
suspended its Exchange Act reporting
obligations upon the filing of Form 15,
pursuant to Rule 12g–4 or 12h–3, or
Form 15F, pursuant to Rule 12h–6, will
59 See,
for example, the letter of OFII.
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(2) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(2)).
61 Under current Rule 12g3–2(b), several issuers
have applied for the exemption although the 120day period has lapsed.
60 Current
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satisfy the non-reporting requirement
upon the effectiveness of its
deregistration, assuming that it has not
otherwise incurred additional Exchange
Act reporting obligations. Similarly, a
foreign private issuer that has
suspended its reporting obligations
pursuant to the statutory terms of
Section 15(d) will satisfy the nonreporting condition immediately upon
its determination that it had less than
300 shareholders as of the beginning of
its most recent fiscal year.
Thus, unlike the current rule, the
adopted rule amendments will not
require an issuer to look back over the
previous eighteen months and
determine whether it had Exchange Act
reporting obligations during that
period.62 We eliminated the eighteen
month requirement when adopting the
March 2007 rule amendments that
granted the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
automatically to a foreign private issuer
upon the effectiveness of its termination
of Exchange Act registration and
reporting pursuant to Rule 12h–6. We
see no reason to treat differently foreign
private issuers that have terminated
their Section 12(g) registration under the
older Rule 12g–4 or suspended their
Section 15(d) reporting obligations
pursuant to that statutory section or
under Rule 12h–3 and following the
filing of Form 15. Elimination of a
lengthy waiting period will hasten the
electronic publication of a foreign
private issuer’s non-U.S. disclosure
documents required under the
exemption and, thus, help improve the
ability of U.S. investors to make
informed decisions regarding that
issuer’s securities. Commenters
uniformly supported this revision,
which we are adopting as proposed.
C. Electronic Publishing of Non-U.S.
Disclosure Documents
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1. Electronic Publishing Requirement To
Claim Exemption
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that, unless in connection
with or following a recent Exchange Act
deregistration, in order to claim the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption, an issuer must
have published in English, on its
Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system
generally available to the public in its
primary trading market, information
that, from the first day of its most
recently completed fiscal year, it:
62 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(d)(1)
provides that the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption is
generally not available to a foreign private issuer
that, during the preceding 18 months, has registered
a class of securities under Exchange Act Section 12
or had an active or suspended Section 15(d)
reporting obligation.
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• Has made public or been required
to make public pursuant to the laws of
the country of its incorporation,
organization or domicile;
• Has filed or been required to file
with the principal stock exchange in its
primary trading market on which its
securities are traded and which has
been made public by that exchange; and
• Has distributed or been required to
distribute to its security holders.63
These are the same categories of
information that the Commission has
historically required a non-reporting
company to submit in paper when
applying for the exemption under Rule
12g3–2(b).64 They also are the same
non-U.S. disclosure documents that,
more recently, the Commission has
required an issuer to publish
electronically in order to maintain its
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption claimed upon
the effectiveness of its deregistration
under Rule 12h–6.65 Commenters
strongly supported this electronic
publication requirement.66
The purpose of this non-U.S.
electronic publication condition is to
provide U.S. investors with ready access
to material information when trading in
the issuer’s equity securities in the overthe-counter market.67 This condition
also will assist U.S. investors who are
interested in trading the issuer’s
securities in its primary securities
market. Moreover, having a foreign
private issuer’s key non-U.S. disclosure
documents electronically published in
English will assist broker-dealers in
meeting their Rule 15c2–11 obligations
and facilitate resales of that issuer’s
securities to QIBs under Rule 144A.
As under the current rule, the adopted
amendments will require an issuer only
to publish electronically information
that is material to an investment
63 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(iii) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(1)(iii)) and Note 2 to Exchange Act
Rule 12g3–2(b)(1). As proposed, the adopted
amendments do not require a deregistered issuer to
satisfy the non-U.S. publication requirement in
order to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption since
that issuer will have filed Exchange Act reports for
the prior fiscal year upon which investors may rely.
64 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(i).
65 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(e)(2).
66 While commenters uniformly supported the
electronic publication condition, some questioned
the proposed requirement to provide English
translations of specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents. See Part II.C.3 of this release.
67 Any trading of a foreign private issuer’s Rule
12g3–2(b)-exempt securities in the United States
would have to occur through an over-the-counter
market such as that maintained by the Pink Sheets,
LLC since, as of April, 1998, the NASD has required
a foreign private issuer to register a class of
securities under Exchange Act Section 12 before its
securities could be traded through the electronic
over-the-counter bulletin board administered by
Nasdaq. See, for example, NASD Notice to Members
(January 1998).
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decision regarding the subject
securities,68 such as:
• Results of operations or financial
condition;
• Changes in business;
• Acquisitions or dispositions of
assets;
• The issuance, redemption or
acquisition of securities;
• Changes in management or control;
• The granting of options or the
payment of other remuneration to
directors or officers; and
• Transactions with directors, officers
or principal security holders.69
2. Electronic Publishing Requirement to
Maintain Exemption
In order to maintain the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption, the adopted
amendments will require an issuer to
publish the same information specified
in the prior fiscal year provision, on an
ongoing basis and for subsequent fiscal
years, on its Internet Web site or
through an electronic information
delivery system in its primary trading
market.70 This requirement will apply to
any issuer claiming the exemption,
whether or not a former Exchange Act
registrant. Like the prior fiscal year
publication condition, this ongoing
publication condition will help assure
that investors and other market
participants have access to an issuer’s
specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents, in English, which are
material to an investment decision.
Most commenters strongly supported
this ongoing non-U.S. electronic
publication condition.
Similar to the current rule,71 the
adopted rule amendments will require
an issuer to publish electronically its
non-U.S. disclosure documents
promptly after the information has been
made public, pursuant to its home
jurisdiction laws, non-U.S. stock
exchange rules, or shareholder meeting
rules and practices.72 As under current
Commission staff practice, what
constitutes ‘‘promptly’’ will depend on
the type of document and the amount of
time required to prepare an English
68 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(3)(i) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(3)(i)). Although the substantive
requirements are the same, we have made
conforming changes to General Instruction E and
Part II, Item 9 of Form 15F to reflect the
renumbering of the non-U.S. publication
requirements of Rule 12g3–2(b).
69 These are the same types of information
specified in current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(3)
(17 CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(3)).
70 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(2)(i) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(2)(i)).
71 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(1)(iii).
72 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(2)(ii) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(2)(ii)). Form 6–K imposes a similar
requirement.
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translation. Currently an issuer typically
must electronically publish or submit in
paper a copy of a material press release
on or around the same business day of
its original publication.
The adopted amendments will permit
an issuer to meet Rule 12g3–2(b)’s
electronic publication requirement
concurrently with the publishing in
English of a non-U.S. disclosure
document through an electronic
information delivery system generally
available to the public in its primary
trading market. Thus, if an issuer’s nonU.S. stock exchange or securities
regulatory authority permits the issuer
to publish electronically a required
report on its electronic delivery system,
and the public has ready access to the
report and other documents maintained
on the system,73 that electronic
publication solely will satisfy the
proposed Rule 12g3–2(b)’s electronic
publishing requirements.
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3. English Translation Requirement
We are adopting, as proposed, the
condition that, in order to claim or
maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption,
an issuer must publish electronically, at
a minimum, English translations of the
following documents if in a foreign
language:
• Its annual report, including or
accompanied by annual financial
statements;
• Interim reports that include
financial statements;
• Press releases; and
• All other communications and
documents distributed directly to
security holders of each class of
securities to which the exemption
relates.74
These are the same documents for
which an issuer that has deregistered
under Rule 12h–6 must currently
provide English translations.75
Some commenters requested that we
permit an issuer to provide brief English
descriptions or English versions of
specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents instead of English
translations.76 We decline to adopt this
suggestion because, as we stated in the
Proposing Release, the specified nonU.S. disclosure documents are the same
documents for which the Commission
staff has historically required English
73 An example of such a system is the System for
Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval
(‘‘SEDAR’’) maintained by the Canadian Securities
Administrators.
74 Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b)(3)(ii) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(3)(ii)).
75 Note 1 to Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(e)
(17 CFR 240.12g3–2(e)).
76 See, for example, the letters of Sullivan &
Cromwell and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
(‘‘Simpson Thacher’’), dated April 18, 2008.
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translations because of their importance
to investors.77
Some commenters also requested that
we provide guidance regarding when an
issuer may provide an English summary
instead of an English translation.78
Generally, if, as a registrant, an issuer
could submit an English summary for a
non-U.S. disclosure document under
cover of Form 6–K or pursuant to
Exchange Act Rule 12b–12(d)(3), it can
do so when claiming or maintaining the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption.
D. Elimination of the Written
Application Requirement
The adopted rule amendments
eliminate the current requirement that,
in order to obtain the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption, if not proceeding under Rule
12h-6, a foreign private issuer must
submit written materials, typically in
the form of a letter application, to the
Commission. These materials currently
include a list of the issuer’s non-U.S.
disclosure requirements, the number of
U.S. holders of its subject securities and
the percentage of outstanding shares
held by them, the circumstances in
which its U.S. holders acquired those
securities, and the date and
circumstances of the most recent public
distribution of the securities of the
issuer or its affiliate.79 As long as an
issuer satisfies the adopted rule’s
conditions, it no longer has to submit
these materials to the Commission.
Commenters strongly supported
eliminating the written application
process.
Elimination of Rule 12g3–2(b)’s
written application process for all
foreign private issuers is consistent with
our adoption of an automatic
application of the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption upon the effectiveness of an
issuer’s deregistration under Rule 12h-6.
Moreover, since the adopted rule
amendments permit an issuer to claim
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption based on
a foreign listing/primary trading market
condition, regardless of the number of
its U.S. shareholders, the current
shareholder information requirement
77 See Part II.D.1 of the Proposing Release. We
similarly eliminated the ability of foreign registrants
to provide English versions or brief English
descriptions of specified non-U.S. documents
submitted under cover of Form 6–K because of the
vagueness and lack of utility of such versions and
descriptions submitted to the Commission. See
Release No. 33–8099 (May 14, 2002), 67 FR 36678
(May 24, 2002).
78 See, for example, the letters of Shearman &
Sterling, dated April 25, 2008, and Sullivan &
Cromwell.
79 Current Exchange Act Rules 12g3–2(b)(1), (2)
and (5). As part of the written application process,
an issuer must also submit paper copies of its nonU.S. disclosure documents published since the first
day of its most recently completed fiscal year.
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would be of marginal use. Further,
since, as adopted, as a condition to
claiming and maintaining the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption, an issuer will
have to publish electronically its nonU.S. disclosure documents, investors
should be able to ascertain many of the
issuer’s non-U.S. disclosure
requirements from a review of those
publicly available documents.
From time to time, the Commission
has published a list of issuers claiming
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption that have
submitted relatively current information
pursuant to that rule.80 Commission
staff has compiled this list based on a
review of submitted paper documents.
As we stated in the Proposing Release,
as part of the streamlining of the Rule
12g3–2(b) process that the adopted rule
amendments are intended to effect, the
Commission anticipates it will no longer
publish these lists subsequent to the
effective date of the new rules.81
Some commenters suggested that, as a
substitute for these lists, we adopt a
requirement that an issuer must notify
the Commission and other market
participants that it is claiming and
intends to rely on the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption.82 We decline to adopt such
a notice requirement because we believe
that, as other commenters have noted, a
notice requirement could run contrary
to the goal of encouraging an issuer to
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption and
electronically disseminate its non-U.S.
disclosure documents in English.83
Nevertheless, an issuer that wants to
provide notice to investors, brokerdealers and other market participants
may do so by, for example, stating on its
Internet Web site that it has
electronically published specified nonU.S. disclosure documents in order to
claim or maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption.
E. Duration of the Amended Rule 12g3–
2(b) Exemption
As adopted, the amended Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption will remain in effect
until an issuer:
• No longer electronically publishes
the specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents required to maintain the
exemption;
• No longer maintains a listing for the
subject class of securities on one or
more exchanges in a primary trading
market, as defined by the rule; or
80 See, for example, Release No. 34–51893 (June
21, 2005), 70 FR 37128 (June 28, 2005).
81 See the Proposing Release at n. 86.
82 See, for example, the letters of Simpson
Thacher and Sullivan & Cromwell.
83 See the letters of Ziegler, Ziegler & Associates,
dated April 28, 2008, and BNY.
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• Registers a class of securities under
Section 12 of the Exchange Act or incurs
reporting obligations under Section
15(d) of the Exchange Act.84
The duration of the amended Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption is similar to the
duration of the current exemption. Both
depend on an issuer’s continued
compliance with the requirement to
publish its non-U.S. disclosure
documents. Under both provisions,
Section 12 registration or the incurrence
of Section 15(d) reporting obligations
terminates the exemption.85 Moreover,
currently, if an issuer can no longer
claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
because it has not complied with the
rule’s publication requirements, it must
determine on the last day of the fiscal
year whether, because of its record
holder count, it would be required to
register a class of securities under
Section 12(g). The same would hold true
under the rule amendments for a noncompliant issuer.
We are also adopting the provision, as
proposed, that an issuer will lose the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption if it no longer
meets the foreign listing condition. An
issuer will no longer satisfy the foreign
listing condition either because it is no
longer listed in its primary trading
market, or because the one or two
foreign jurisdictions in which it trades
no longer qualifies as its primary trading
market, as defined by the rule. Since the
definition of primary trading market
uses a trading volume standard for the
issuer’s most recently completed fiscal
year, an issuer will have to redetermine
its relative U.S. and foreign trading
volumes on an annual basis.
Some commenters opposed basing the
duration of the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption on whether an issuer
remains listed in its primary trading
market.86 We believe this provision is
necessary in order to help ensure the
continued availability of a set of nonU.S. disclosure documents to which
investors may turn when making
decisions regarding an issuer’s
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84 Exchange
Act Rule 12g3–2(c) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(c)).
85 See, for example, current Exchange Act Rule
12g3–2(e)(3). A Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt issuer that
acquires an Exchange Act reporting company
following an exchange of shares, and thereby
succeeds to the target company’s Exchange Act
reporting obligations under Exchange Act Rule 12g–
3 (17 CFR 240.12g–3) or Exchange Act Rule 15d–
5 (17 CFR 240.15d–5), would lose the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption upon succession. If such successor
issuer qualified for deregistration under Exchange
Act Rule 12h–6, it could claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption upon deregistration.
86 See the letters of the ABA and Sullivan &
Cromwell. The primary objection was that
adherence to the electronic publication condition
should be a sufficient basis for maintaining the
exemption as it is under the current rule.
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securities. It is also necessary to help
make sure that an issuer’s principal
trading market has not become the U.S.
market, which would require the issuer
to register and report under the
Exchange Act.
Some commenters requested that we
at least establish a ‘‘cure’’ period, such
as six or twelve months, during which
an issuer would either have to correct
any deficiency or else register under the
Exchange Act.87 We decline to adopt a
specific cure period. We believe that in
order to best protect investors, an issuer
that finds itself not in compliance with
any of the conditions required to
maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
must either re-establish compliance
with the rule in a reasonably prompt
manner or else register under the
Exchange Act.
There is no cure period for domestic
issuers that find they are subject to
registration under Section 12(g). Thus,
foreign private issuers are treated in a
similar manner as domestic issuers in
this respect. As noted, foreign private
issuers may be able to avoid registration
by re-establishing compliance with Rule
12g3–2(b), for example, by relisting its
securities in its primary trading market.
F. Elimination of the Successor Issuer
Prohibition
The adopted rule amendments will
eliminate the provision that precludes
an issuer from obtaining the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption if, following the
issuance of shares to acquire by merger,
consolidation, exchange of securities or
acquisition of assets, it has succeeded to
the Exchange Act reporting obligations
of another issuer.88 Until recently, the
sole exception to this successor issuer
prohibition was for Canadian companies
that registered the securities to be issued
in the transaction on specified MJDS
registration statements under the
Securities Act.89
As part of the March 2007 rule
amendments, we adopted a provision
that permits a successor issuer to
terminate its newly acquired Exchange
Act reporting obligations as long as it
meets Rule 12h–6’s substantive
requirements for equity or debt
securities issuers.90 We also amended
87 See,
for example, the letter of the OFII.
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(d)(2). An
issuer succeeds to the Exchange Act reporting
obligations of another either under Exchange Act
Rule 12g–3 (17 CFR 240.12g–3) or 15d–5 (17 CFR
240.15d–5).
89 The specified MJDS registration statements are
Forms F–8, F–9, F–10 and F–80 (17 CFR 239.38,
239.39, 239.40, and 239.41).
90 17 CFR 240.12h–6(d). Under that rule, a nonExchange Act reporting foreign private issuer that
has acquired a reporting foreign private issuer in a
transaction exempt under the Securities Act, for
88 Current
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Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2 to permit a
successor issuer to claim the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption upon the effectiveness of
its termination of Exchange Act
registration and reporting under Rule
12h–6. We see no reason to treat
differently a successor issuer that
qualifies for deregistration under one of
the older exit rules, Rule 12g–4 or 12h–
3, or under Section 15(d).
Elimination of the successor issuer
prohibition will help encourage a
successor issuer to claim the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption and electronically
publish its specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents in English. No commenter
opposed the proposed elimination of the
successor issuer prohibition.
Accordingly, we are removing the
successor issuer prohibition under Rule
12g3–2(b), as proposed.
G. Elimination of the Rule 12g3–2(b)
Exception for MJDS Filers
The adopted rule amendments will
eliminate the Rule 12g3–2 provisions
that make the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
available to Canadian issuers that have
only filed with the Commission
specified registration statements under
the MJDS,91 although they may have
filed those registration statements
within the previous 18 months or to
effect transactions in which they would
succeed to Exchange Act reporting
obligations.92 Because the adopted
amendments will eliminate the 18
month and successor issuer prohibitions
under Rule 12g3–2(b), they will remove
as unnecessary the MJDS filer
exceptions to those prohibitions.
The adopted rule amendments will
also eliminate the current ability of a
Canadian issuer that already has the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, but that
subsequently acquires Exchange Act
reporting obligations as a MJDS filer, for
example, with regard to a class of debt
securities, to retain the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption for its equity securities. Such
a MJDS filer currently may submit its
example, under Rule 802 (17 CFR 230.802), or
Securities Act Section 3(a)(10) (15 U.S.C.
77c(a)(10)), may qualify immediately for
termination of its Exchange Act reporting
obligations under Rule 12h–6, without having to
file an Exchange Act annual report, as long as the
acquired company’s reporting history fulfills Rule
12h–6’s prior reporting condition and the successor
issuer meets the rule’s other conditions.
91 The Commission adopted the Rule 12g3–2
provisions when adopting the MJDS in order to
encourage Canadian issuers to use the MJDS. See
Release No. 33–6879 (October 22, 1990), 55 FR
462881 (November 2, 1990), as adopted in Release
No. 33–6902 (June 21, 1991), 56 FR 30036 (July 1,
1991). The MJDS generally permits a qualified
Canadian issuer to file with the Commission its
Canadian registration statements and reports under
cover of the MJDS forms.
92 Current Exchange Act Rules 12g3–2(d)(1) and
(2).
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non-U.S. disclosure documents
simultaneously to fulfill its Exchange
Act reporting obligations under the
MJDS and its non-U.S. publication
obligations under Rule 12g3–2(b).93
We proposed to eliminate this ability
of a MJDS filer simultaneously to
maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
both because few issuers have ever used
that ability and because it no longer is
the case that a MJDS filer must file the
same documents to fulfill its obligations
under the Exchange Act and Rule 12g3–
2(b). Since the enactment of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act,94 and Commission
rules adopted under that Act, Canadian
issuers must respond to several U.S.
disclosure requirements when preparing
their Form 40–F annual reports.95
Only one commenter opposed
eliminating this rarely used ability to be
a MJDS filer while simultaneously
claiming the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption.96 The primary ground for
objection was that some issuers may
already be relying on the ability to use
MJDS reports for this dual purpose. We
continue to believe that this ability is
rarely used if at all. Moreover, as
explained below, we are adopting a
three-year transition period following
effectiveness of the adopted rule
amendments, that will provide ample
time for a MJDS registrant of debt
securities, which has simultaneously
claimed the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
for a class of equity securities, to register
that class of securities under the
Exchange Act.97
Accordingly, we are adopting the
elimination of this MJDS provision, as
proposed.98 Under the adopted rule
amendments, a MJDS registrant will be
eligible to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption on the same grounds as other
foreign registrants. If it has recently
exited the Exchange Act reporting
regime under Rule 12h–6, 12g–4 or12h–
3 or Section 15(d), it can claim the
exemption, assuming it satisfies the rule
93 Under the current rules, a Canadian issuer that
checks the appropriate box on the cover of each
filed Form 40–F and submitted Form 6–K is able
to use those Exchange Act reports to maintain its
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption as well.
94 Public Law 107–204, 116 Stat. 745 (2002).
95 See, for example, Form 40–F’s certifications
required concerning an issuer’s disclosure controls
and procedures and its internal controls over
financial reporting, and the disclosure required
concerning its audit committee financial expert, its
code of ethics, and its off-balance sheet
arrangements.
96 See the letter of Osler, Hoskins & Harcourt,
dated April 28, 2008.
97 See Part II.K.1 below.
98 The adopted rule amendments remove the
instruction on the cover page of Form 40–F and
Form 6–K requiring a registrant to indicate whether
it also is furnishing the materials pursuant to Rule
12g3–2(b).
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amendments’ other conditions.
Otherwise, the filing of a MJDS
registration statement under the
Securities Act or Exchange Act will
trigger Exchange Act reporting
obligations and preclude that issuer
from claiming the exemption.
H. Elimination of the ‘‘Automated InterDealer Quotation System’’ Prohibition
and Related Grandfathering Provision
The adopted amendments will also
eliminate the provision generally
prohibiting a foreign private issuer from
claiming the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
if it has securities or ADRs quoted in the
United States on an automated interdealer quotation system,99 which, until
recently, referred to the inter-dealer
quotation system administered by the
National Association of Securities
Dealers Inc., and known as Nasdaq. The
Commission initially adopted this
prohibition in 1983 because of its belief
that, since its establishment in 1971,
Nasdaq had so matured into a trading
system with substantial similarities to a
national securities exchange that
Nasdaq-traded foreign private issuers
should be required to meet the same
disclosure standards as exchange-traded
foreign private issuers.100 We are
eliminating this prohibition, as
proposed, because Nasdaq has since
become a national securities
exchange.101
When the Commission adopted the
automatic inter-dealer quotation system
prohibition, it recognized that the
general prohibition could cause some
Nasdaq-quoted foreign companies that
already had obtained the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption to withdraw from Nasdaq.
Therefore, the Commission excepted
from that prohibition securities that:
• Were quoted on Nasdaq on October
5, 1983 and have been continuously
traded since;
• Were exempt under Rule 12g3–2(b)
on October 5, 1983 and have remained
so since; and
• After January 2, 1986, were issued
by a non-Canadian company.102
The adopted rule amendments will
eliminate this grandfathering provision
because, as we stated in the Proposing
99 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(d)(3) (17
CFR 12g3–2(d)(3)).
100 Release No. 34–20264 (October 6, 1983), 48 FR
46736 (October 14, 1983).
101 Nasdaq ceased operations as an automated
inter-dealer quotation system and became a national
securities exchange effective August 1, 2006. See
Release No. 34–53128 (January 13, 2006), 71 FR
3550 (January 23, 2006).
102 Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(d)(3). The
Commission based the more limited grandfathering
of Canadian securities on the more active U.S.
market for those securities, which had led to abuses
under Rule 12g3–2(b). Release No. 34–20264.
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Release, due to developments occurring
since its adoption, we no longer believe
the grandfathering provision is
necessary. Only nine of the
grandfathered issuers remain listed on
Nasdaq.103 Pursuant to Commission
order, Nasdaq is now a national
securities exchange, and those issuers
must register their securities under
Exchange Act Section 12(b) by August 1,
2009 if they wish to remain listed on
Nasdaq.104 Pursuant to the terms of the
Commission order, as long as the nine
grandfathered issuers continue to
comply with the conditions of Rule
12g3–2(b), brokers and dealers may
trade their securities in reliance on the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption until the
above deadline for Exchange Act
registration. Those few commenters that
addressed the issue supported the
proposed elimination of the
grandfathering provision.105
Accordingly, we are adopting the
elimination, as proposed.
I. Revisions to Form F–6
Currently, a registrant of ADRs must
state on Form F–6, the registration
statement used to register ADRs under
the Securities Act, that the issuer of the
deposited securities against which the
ADRs will be issued is either an
Exchange Act reporting company or
furnishes public reports and other
documents to the Commission pursuant
to Rule 12g3–2(b).106 We proposed to
require a Form F–6 registrant to state
that, if the issuer of deposited securities
is not an Exchange Act reporting
company, such issuer publishes
information in English required to
maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
on its Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system
generally available to the public in its
primary trading market. The registrant
would also have to disclose the issuer’s
address of its Internet Web site or the
103 Letter from Edward S. Knight to Nancy M.
Morris (July 31, 2006), attached to Release No. 34–
54240 (July 31, 2006), 71 FR 45246 (August 8,
2006).
104 Release No. 34–54241 (July 31, 2006), 71 FR
45359 (August 8, 2006). The Commission granted
the grandfathered issuers an additional three years
to register their securities under Section 12(b) in
order to avoid disruptions in the trading of their
securities caused by their delisting from Nasdaq
and to provide them with time to meet U.S.
disclosure requirements.
105 See the ABA letter and the letter of the Pink
OTC Markets Inc. (‘‘Pink OTC’’), dated April 10,
2008.
106 Part I, Item 2 of Form F–6. Form F–6 states
that the registrant is the legal entity created by the
deposit agreement for the issuance of ADRs for the
deposited securities.
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electronic information delivery system
in its primary trading market.107
Some commenters stated that, if the
Commission elects not to publish an
annual list of Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt
issuers, it will be difficult for a
depositary of an unsponsored ADR
facility 108 to determine that the issuer
of the subject securities has complied
with the electronic publication
condition of Rule 12g3–2(b). Those
commenters requested that, for
unsponsored facilities, we either
eliminate the Form F–6 condition that
an issuer must be subject to Exchange
Act reporting or must furnish reports
required under Rule 12g3–2(b),109 or
revise the proposed Form F–6
amendment to permit the depositary to
base its representation concerning an
issuer’s Rule 12g3–2(b) electronic
publication upon the depositary’s
reasonable, good faith belief.110
We are not revising the requirement
under Form F–6 that the issuer of the
deposited securities be either an
Exchange Act reporting company or be
exempt from registration under Rule
12g3–2(b) because such revision would
eliminate any ongoing disclosure
obligations as a condition of Form F–6
registration, which would not be in the
best interest of investors. However, we
are amending Form F–6 to state that, in
the case of an unsponsored ADR facility,
a Form F–6 filer may base its
representation that the issuer publishes
information in English required to
maintain the exemption from
registration under Exchange Act Rule
12g3–2(b) upon the filer’s reasonable,
good faith belief after exercising
reasonable diligence.111 Except for this
one change, we are adopting the Form
F–6 amendment, as proposed.
Currently an issuer that does not seek
to have its securities traded in the
United States in the form of ADRs is
able, by not formally establishing the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption and
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107 A
registrant that has effected a Form F–6
registration statement before the effective date of
these final rules would not have to amend the Form
F–6 to provide the issuer’s Internet Web site
address until the registrant’s first substantive
amendment of the Form F–6. However, once a
registrant has disclosed the issuer’s Internet address
on the Form F–6, it should promptly amend the
Form F–6 to disclose a subsequent change in that
address.
108 Currently an ADR facility may be either
sponsored or unsponsored. With a sponsored
facility, the issuer of the deposited securities is a
party to the deposit agreement along with the
depositary and is able to exercise some control
regarding the terms and operations of the facility.
With an unsponsored facility, the depositary solely
controls the terms and operations of the facility.
109 See the letter of JPMorganChase.
110 See the letters of Ziegler, Ziegler & Associates
and BNY.
111 See the Note to Form F–6, Part I, Item 2.
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submitting documents to the
Commission, to restrict the ability of
ADR depositary banks to establish
unsponsored ADR facilities. Because the
adopted rule amendments will expand
the availability of the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption by making it available to all
otherwise eligible foreign private issuers
that post materials to their Web sites or
publish them through an electronic
information delivery system in their
primary trading market, ADR
depositaries will be able to establish
unsponsored ADRs on this expanded
group of foreign private issuers based
upon their reasonable, good faith belief,
after exercising reasonable diligence,
that those issuers comply with Rule
12g3–2(b).112
We solicited comment on whether,
because of the expanded availability of
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption under the
proposed rule amendments, we should
require, as a condition to the registration
of ADRs on Form F–6, that the issuer
give its consent to the depositary, or at
least that the depositary must have
notified the issuer of its intention to
register ADRs and must not have
received an affirmative statement of
objection from the issuer. Those few
commenters that addressed this matter
disagreed on whether imposing such
additional conditions on the creation of
unsponsored ADR facilities was
necessary or advisable.113 Given this
disagreement, and because we concur
with those commenters who stated that
imposing such additional conditions
could run counter to the goal of
streamlining the Rule 12g3–2(b) regime
for the benefit of investors and
issuers,114 we are not adopting at this
time any additional conditions
regarding the formation of unsponsored
ADR facilities.
112 ADR depositaries will also be able to establish
sponsored ADR facilities with foreign private
issuers that choose to have their shares represented
by ADRs in the United States.
113 See the letters of Cleary Gottlieb and
EuropeanIssuers, both of which favored requiring a
depositary to notify an issuer before establishing an
unsponsored ADR facility, and requiring it to
terminate an unsponsored facility created without
the consent of an issuer if the issuer decides to
create a sponsored facility. But see the letters of
BNY and Pink OTC, both of which opposed the
adoption of a condition requiring a depositary to
obtain the consent of an issuer before establishing
an unsponsored ADR facility, and the letter of
Deutsche Bank, dated April 21, 2008, which stated
that, because, in practice, depositary banks
typically obtain the issuer’s consent before
establishing an unsponsored ADR facility, a rule
requiring such consent was not necessary.
114 See the letters of BNY and Pink OTC.
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J. Amendment of Exchange Act Rule
15c2–11
Exchange Act Rule 15c2–11 115
contains requirements that are intended
to deter broker-dealers from initiating or
resuming quotations for covered overthe-counter securities that may facilitate
a fraudulent or manipulative scheme.
The Rule currently prohibits a brokerdealer from publishing (or submitting
for publication) a quotation for a
covered over-the-counter security in a
quotation medium unless it has
obtained and reviewed current
information about the issuer.116 One of
the specified types of information
satisfying this Rule 15c2–11 obligation
is information furnished to the
Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3–
2(b). A broker-dealer must make this
information reasonably available upon
request to any person expressing an
interest in a proposed transaction
involving the security with the brokerdealer.117
We proposed to amend Rule 15c2–11
to conform to the proposed rule
amendments so that a broker-dealer
must have available the information
that, since the beginning of its last fiscal
year, the issuer has published pursuant
to the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption. We
further proposed to permit a brokerdealer to fulfill its Rule 15c2–11
obligation to make reasonably available
upon request the information published
pursuant to Rule 12g3–2(b) by providing
the requesting person with appropriate
instructions regarding how to obtain the
information electronically. This reflects
our view that most investors will have
ready access to the electronically
published documents of Rule 12g3–2(b)exempt issuers.
The proposed amendment of Rule
15c2–11 received little comment.
Because this proposal will make it
easier for broker-dealers to fulfill their
Rule 15c2–11 obligations for the benefit
of investors, we are adopting it, as
proposed. Because some issuers
currently still make paper submissions
to maintain their Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption, we expect that, during the
first year of the amended rules’
effectiveness, a broker-dealer may have
to resort to both paper submissions and
electronically published materials in
order to fulfill its Rule 15c2–11
obligations regarding a particular issuer.
115 17
CFR 240.15c2–11.
15c2–11(a) (17 CFR 240.15c2–11(a)). The
broker-dealer must also have a reasonable basis for
believing that the issuer information, when
considered along with any supplemental
information, is accurate and is from a reliable
source.
117 Rule 15c2–11(a)(4) (17 CFR 240.15c2–
11(a)(4)).
116 Rule
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Eventually, however, a broker-dealer
will only have to look to an issuer’s
electronically published materials for
the purpose of Rule 15c2–11.
K. Transition Periods
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1. Regarding Section 12 Registration
While we believe most issuers that
currently have the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption will continue to be able to
claim the exemption upon the
effectiveness of the adopted rule
amendments, some may not be able to
do so because, for example, they no
longer maintain a foreign listing or their
principal foreign trading market
comprises less than 55 percent of their
worldwide trading and, therefore, does
not meet the definition of primary
trading market under the amended rule.
Those issuers will have to file a Section
12 registration statement if they are
unable to meet all of the amended rule’s
conditions or fail to qualify under
another exemption from Section 12(g).
In order to provide those issuers with
sufficient time to prepare for and
complete the Section 12 registration
process, including obtaining required
audited financial statements, we are
adopting a three-year transition period,
as proposed. Those issuers must become
Exchange Act registrants no later than
three years from the effective date of the
adopted rule amendments if they are
unable to comply fully with all of the
amended rule’s conditions.118
We believe this three-year transition
period is necessary for the benefit not
just of issuers, but of broker-dealers and
investors as well. If a currently exempt
issuer is unable to claim the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption upon the effectiveness of
the rule amendments because it no
longer has a foreign listing or cannot
meet the primary trading market
definition, but continues to comply with
the electronic publishing condition, a
broker-dealer will be able to rely on that
issuer’s electronic postings to meet its
Rule 15c2–11 obligations to investors
and to facilitate resales of that issuer’s
securities in Rule 144A transactions
during the transition period.
Several commenters urged the
Commission to grandfather indefinitely
current Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt
companies.119 Most of those issuers also
stated their support for a three-year
transition period as an alternative to a
118 We adopted a similar three-year transition
period to enable those grandfathered Nasdaq-traded
foreign companies that were Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt
to register under Section 12(b) after Nasdaq became
an exchange. See Release No. 34–54241 (July 31,
2006), 71 FR 45359 (August 8, 2006).
119 See the letters of the ABA, BNY,
JPMorganChase, Pink OTC, and Shearman &
Sterling.
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grandfathering provision.120 We decline
to adopt a grandfathering provision
because, in the interest of protecting
investors, we believe that any issuer that
claims the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
must comply fully with the foreign
listing condition and definition of
primary trading market. Adoption of a
three-year transition period will enable
issuers to achieve full compliance with
Rule 12g3–2(b) or Exchange Act
registration without unduly burdening
them.
2. Regarding Processing of Paper
Submissions
We expect that, following the
effectiveness of the adopted rule
amendments, some Rule 12g3–2(b)exempt companies will continue to
submit their non-U.S. disclosure
documents in paper to the Commission
either because they are unaware of the
amendments or lack electronic
publishing capabilities. In order to assist
those companies in complying with the
new amendments, and because there
may also be some investors who
currently do not have ready access to
the Internet, we are adopting a threemonth transition period, as proposed.
During this period, the Commission will
continue to process paper Rule 12g3–
2(b) submissions and make them
publicly available in the Public
Reference Room for three months
following the effectiveness of the rule
amendments. Thereafter, the
Commission will no longer process
paper Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions. An
issuer that continues to make Rule
12g3–2(b) submissions in paper after
this three-month period, and does not
publish the submitted documents
electronically as required, will no longer
be able to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption.
Those commenters that addressed the
matter supported such a transition
period,121 although one commenter
suggested a one-year period instead of a
three-month period.122 Because of
recent advances in information
technology, we continue to believe that
three months will be sufficient time for
all Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt issuers to
develop the capabilities to publish
electronically their non-U.S. disclosure
documents, and for investors and other
interested persons to determine how
and where to access those electronically
published documents.
120 The ABA suggested a five-year transition
period.
121 See the letters of the ABA, BNY and Pink
OTC.
122 See the BNY letter.
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III. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule amendments contain
‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).123 The title of the affected
collections of information are
submissions under Exchange Act Rule
12g3–2 (OMB Control No. 3235–0119)
and Securities Act Form F–6 (OMB
Control No. 3235–0292). An agency may
not conduct or sponsor, and a person is
not required to respond to, a collection
of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
Compliance with the amendments to
Rule 12g3–2 and Form F–6 is
mandatory.
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2 is an
exemptive rule that, under paragraph (b)
of that rule, provides an exemption from
Exchange Act Section 12(g) registration
for a foreign private issuer that, on an
ongoing basis, either submits copies of
its material non-U.S. disclosure
documents to the Commission in paper
or publishes those documents on its
Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system
in its primary trading market. We
adopted paragraph (b) of Rule 12g3–2 in
order to provide information for U.S.
investors concerning foreign private
issuers with limited securities trading in
U.S. capital markets.
Securities Act Form F–6 is the form
used to register ADRs, which are a
special type of security issued by a U.S.
bank, representing a specified amount of
securities issued by a foreign company
that are deposited with the bank. We
adopted Form F–6 in order to provide
investors with information concerning a
foreign company’s ADRs, as disclosed in
the deposit agreement, which must be
attached as an exhibit to the Form F–6.
The hours and costs associated with
making submissions under Exchange
Act Rule 12g3–2(b) and preparing and
filing Form F–6 constitute reporting and
cost burdens imposed by those
collections of information. We based our
estimates of the effects that the final rule
amendments will have on those
collections of information primarily on
our review of the most recently
completed PRA submissions for Rule
12g3–2(b) documents and Form F–6, on
the particular requirements for those
submissions and form, and on other
information, for example, concerning
relative U.S. and foreign trading volume
for foreign private issuers whose equity
securities trade in the U.S. over-thecounter market.
123 44
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The final rule amendments to
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2 will permit
a foreign private issuer to claim the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption, without having to
submit paper copies of written materials
to the Commission, if, among other
requirements, it maintains a listing of
the subject class of securities on one or
more exchanges in its primary trading
market. The final rule amendments
define primary trading market to mean
that at least 55 percent of the trading in
the issuer’s subject class of securities on
a worldwide basis took place in, on or
through the facilities of a securities
market or markets in a single foreign
jurisdiction or in no more than two
foreign jurisdictions during the issuer’s
most recently completed fiscal year. The
final rule amendments also provide that,
if a foreign private issuer aggregates the
trading of its subject class of securities
in two foreign jurisdictions for the
purpose of meeting the primary trading
market definition, the trading for the
issuer’s securities in at least one of the
two foreign jurisdictions must be larger
than the trading in the United States for
the same class of the issuer’s securities.
The final rule amendments further
require that, as a condition to claiming
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, a nonExchange Act reporting issuer must
publish in English specified non-U.S.
disclosure documents required by Rule
12g3–2(b) for its most recently
completed fiscal year on its Internet
Web site or through an electronic
information delivery system in its
primary trading market, instead of
requiring their submission in paper as
part of a written application to the
Commission. The final rule
amendments also require an issuer
similarly to publish electronically
specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents in English on an ongoing
basis for subsequent fiscal years as a
condition to maintaining the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption, rather than permitting
their submission in paper to the
Commission.
The final amendments to Form F–6
will require a registrant to state that the
issuer of the deposited securities, which
is not an Exchange Act reporting
company, publishes information in
English required to maintain the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption on the issuer’s
Internet Web site or through its primary
trading market’s electronic information
delivery system.124 The final
amendments will also require the
registrant to disclose the address of the
124 The final amendments provide that the
registrant of an unsponsored ADR facility may make
the required representation based upon its
reasonable good faith belief after exercising
reasonable diligence.
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issuer’s Internet Web site or electronic
information delivery system. A
registrant that already has an effective
Form F–6 will have to disclose the
address of where the issuer
electronically publishes its non-U.S.
disclosure documents under Rule 12g3–
2(b) when the registrant first amends its
Form F–6 following the effective date of
the final rule amendments.
We have prepared the annual burden
and cost estimates of the final rule
amendments on Rule 12g3–2(b)
submissions or publications and Form
F–6 based on the following current
estimates and assumptions:
• A foreign private issuer incurs 75%
of the burden required to produce each
Rule 12g3–2(b) submission or
publication, excluding the initial
application for the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption and English translation
work, and 25% of the burden required
to perform work for the initial
application and English translation for
the Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions or
publications;
• Outside firms, including legal
counsel, accountants and other advisors
incur 25% of the burden required to
produce each Rule 12g3–2(b)
submission or publication, not
including the initial application for the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption and English
translation work, at an average cost of
$400 per hour, and 75% of the burden
required to produce the initial
application at an average cost of $400
per hour, and 75% of the burden
resulting from English translation work
at an average cost of $125 per hour;
• English translation work constitutes
on average 25% of the total work
required for the Rule 12g3–2(b)
submissions;
• A registrant satisfies 25% of the
burden required to produce each Form
F–6; and
• Outside firms, including legal
counsel, accountants and other advisors,
satisfy 75% of the burden required to
produce each Form F–6 at an average
cost of $400 per hour.
We published a notice requesting
comment on the collection of
information requirements in the
Proposing Release and submitted these
requirements to the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for
review in accordance with the PRA.125
We received several comment letters
regarding the proposed rule
amendments, although none addressed
their estimated effects on the collection
of information requirements. We have
revised the proposed rule amendments
in response to those comments. As a
125 44
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result, we have revised the estimated
reporting and cost burdens of the rule
amendments, as discussed below.
A. Rule 12g3–2(b) Submissions or
Publications
We estimate that, currently under
Rule 12g3–2(b), on an annual basis:
• 1,036 foreign private issuers claim
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption;
• Each issuer makes on average 12
submissions or publications, for a total
of 12,432 submissions or publications
under Rule 12g3–2(b);
• Production of those Rule 12g3–2(b)
submissions or publications requires a
total of 49,728 burden hours, or an
average of 4 burden hours per
submission or publication (for all work
performed by foreign private issuers and
outside firms);
• Of those total burden hours, 13,700
hours result from work incurred by 685
issuers to produce their initial Rule
12g3–2(b) applications; 126
• Foreign private issuers incur a total
of 25,943 burden hours 127 to produce
the Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions or
publications, or an average of 2.1
burden hours per submission or
publication; 128 and
• Outside firms perform service at a
total cost of $7,656,375 129 to produce
126 We previously estimated that 685 issuers
obtained the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption before the
adoption of Rule 12h–6, which eliminated the
application process for issuers that deregister
pursuant to that new rule. See Release No. 34–
55540. All of the 685 issuers obtained the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption after having submitted a letter
application to the Commission. Based on a review
of several Rule 12g3–2(b) applications, and an
assessment of Rule 12g3–2(b)’s requirements and
current practice, we estimated then, and continue
to estimate, that it takes approximately 20 hours on
average to complete a Rule 12g3–2(b) letter
application. 685 × 20 hrs. = 13,700 hrs.
127 49,728 hrs. ¥ 13,700 hrs. = 36,028 hrs. for
work excluding application work. 36,028 hrs. × .25
= 9,007 hrs. for English translation work. 36,028
hrs. ¥ 9,007 hrs. = 27,021 hrs. × .75 = 20,266 hrs.
for non-English translation work. 9,007 hrs. × .25
= 2,252 hrs. for English translation work. 13,700
hrs. × .25 = 3,425 hrs. for application work. 20,266
hrs. + 2,252 hrs. + 3,425 hrs. = 25,943 hrs. for total
work performed by foreign private issuers. 25,943
hrs./12,432 = 2.1 hrs per submission or publication.
128 The last OMB-approved submission for Rule
12g3–2(b) reported 31,080 burden hours for foreign
private issuers. Our current estimate of 25,943
burden hours is due to our assessment of the
average annual burden hours required to produce
written applications under Rule 12g3–2(b), most of
which are incurred by outside firms. The decrease
in hours represents an adjustment to the previous
OMB-approved burden estimate for Rule 12g3–2(b),
which we noted when submitting the PRA estimate
for the Proposing Release.
129 27,021 hrs. × .25 = 6,755 hrs. × $400/hr. =
$2,702,000 for non-English translation work. 9,007
hrs. × .75 = 6,755 hrs. × $125/hr. = $844,375 for
English translation work. 13,700 hrs. × .75 = 10,275
hrs. × $400/hr. = $4,110,000 for application work.
$2,702,000 + $844,375 + $4,110,000 = $7,656,375
for total work performed by outside firms.
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the Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions or
publications.130
We estimate that, on an annual basis,
up to 350 additional foreign private
issuers could claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption as a result of the
amendments to Rule 12g3–2 we are
adopting today.131 This increase in the
number of Rule 12g3–2(b)-exempt
issuers would cause:
• The number of issuers claiming the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption to total 1,386;
• The number of Rule 12g3–2(b)
publications to total 16,632; 132
• The number of burden hours
required to produce these Rule 12g3–
2(b) publications to total 59,528 hours
(for all work performed by issuers and
outside firms); 133
• The number of burden hours
incurred by foreign private issuers to
produce the Rule 12g3–2(b) publications
to total 37,206 hours, or 2.2 burden
hours per publication; 134 and
130 The last OMB-approved submission for Rule
12g3–2(b) reported $4,895,100 in total costs for
outside firms. Our current estimate of $7,656,375 is
due to the previously noted assessment of the
average annual burden hours required to produce
written applications under Rule 12g3–2(b). This
increase in costs represents an adjustment to the
previous OMB-approved cost estimate for Rule
12g3–2(b), which we noted when submitting the
PRA estimate for the Proposing Release.
131 We previously estimated that the proposed
rule amendments would cause an additional 150
issuers to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption. We
have increased the estimated number of issuers
affected by the final rule amendments in part due
to the elimination of the proposed condition that
would have required an issuer to have its U.S.
trading volume no greater than 20 percent of its
worldwide trading volume for its last fiscal year.
Under the final rule amendments, an issuer must
still meet the foreign listing/primary trading market
condition, which effectively limits the issuer’s U.S.
trading volume to no greater than 45%. The
increase in the estimated number of issuers affected
by the final rule amendments is also due to a
reconsideration of the number of unsponsored ADR
facilities that could result from the amended rules.
132 1,386 × 12 = 16,632 publications.
133 16,632 × 4 hrs. = 66,528 hrs. 350 × 20 hrs. =
7,000 hrs. of work saved by the elimination of the
written application requirement. 66,528 hrs. ¥
7,000 hrs. = 59,528 hrs.
134 59,528 hrs. × .25 = 14,882 hrs. for English
translation work. 59,528 hrs. ¥ 14,882 hrs. = 44,646
hrs.; 44,646 hrs. × .75 = 33,485 hrs. for non-English
translation work; 14,882 hrs. × .25 = 3,721 hrs. for
English translation work; 33,485 hrs. + 3,721 hrs.
= 37,206 total hrs. incurred by foreign private
issuers. 37,206 hrs./16,632 = 2.2 hrs. per
publication. This represents an increase of 6,126
hrs. from the most recent OMB-approved burden
estimate for Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions or
publications. Using a rate of $175/hr. for in-house
work, the adopted amendments could result in
$6,511,050 of in-house costs incurred by foreign
private issuers compared to $5,439,000 of in-house
costs based on the previous OMB-approved burden
estimate for Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions or
publications. 37,206 hrs. × $175/hr. = $6,511,050.
31,080 hrs. × $175/hr. = $5,439,000.
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• Outside firms perform services at a
total cost of $5,860,050 135 to produce
the Rule 12g3–2(b) publications.136
B. Form F–6
We currently estimate that, on an
annual basis:
• 150 registrants file Form F–6;
• Each registrant files one Form F–6,
for a total of 150 Form F–6s;
• Production of these Form F–6s
requires 150 burden hours, or one
burden hour per Form F–6 (for all work
performed by registrants and outside
firms);
• Of those total hours, registrants
incur 38 hours to produce the Form F–
6s, or an average of .25 hours per Form
F–6; 137 and
• Outside firms perform services at a
total cost of $45,000 to produce the
Form F–6s.138
We estimate that, on an annual basis,
approximately 350 additional registrants
could file Form F–6 as a result of the
final rule amendments. We further
estimate that, as a result of the final rule
amendments, the burden required to
produce each Form F–6 would increase
by .5 hours. This increase in the number
of Form F–6s and burden hours would
cause:
• The number of Form F–6s filed to
increase by 350 for a total of 500;
• The total hours required to produce
the Form F–6s to increase by 525 hours
for a total of 675 hours, or 1.35 hours
per Form F–6; 139
• The number of burden hours
incurred by registrants to produce the
Form F–6s to increase by 131 hours to
169 hours, or.34 hours per Form F–6; 140
and
• Outside firms to perform services at
a total cost of $202,400 (an increase of
135 44,646 hrs. × .25 = 11,162 hrs. × $400/hr. =
$4,464,800 for non-English translation work; 14,882
hrs. × .75 = 11,162 hrs. × $125/hr. = $1,395,250 for
English translation work; $4,464,800 + $1,395,250
= $5,860,050 for total costs incurred by outside
firms. This represents an increase of $964,950 from
the most recent OMB-approved cost estimate for
Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions or publications.
136 Based on the above estimates, the amendments
could result in a $2,037,000 increase in Rule 12g3–
2(b) costs. $6,511,050 + $5,860,050 = $12,371,100
in total post-amendment Rule 12g3–2(b) costs.
$5,439,000 + $4,895,100 = $10,334,100 in total preamendment Rule 12g3–2(b) costs. $12,371,100 ¥
$10,334,100 = $2,037,000 increase in Rule 12g3–
2(b) costs.
137 150 hrs. × .25 = 38 hrs.
138 150 hrs. × .75 × $400/hr. = $45,000.
139 For the additional 350 filers: 350 × 1.5 hrs. =
525 hrs., 525 hrs. + 150 hrs. = 675 hrs., 675 hrs./
500 = 1.35 hrs. per Form F–6.
140 675 hrs. × .25 = 169 hrs., 169 hrs. ¥ 38 hrs.
= 131 hrs., 169 hrs./500 = .34 hr. per Form F–6.
Using a rate of $175/hr. for in-house work, the
adopted amendments could result in $29,575 of inhouse costs incurred by foreign private issuers
compared to $6,650 of pre-amendment in-house
costs. 169 hrs. × $175/hr. = $29,575. 38 hrs. × $175/
hr. = $6,650.
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$157,400) 141 to produce the Form F–
6s.142
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
A. Expected Benefits
The adopted rule amendments are
designed to encourage more foreign
companies, which have not listed or
otherwise publicly sold their securities
in the United States, to claim the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption, and thereby
require them to publish on the Internet
material disclosure documents in
English, enhancing the ability of U.S.
investors to trade equity securities of
such companies in the U.S. over-thecounter market. The Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption permits a foreign company to
have established an unlisted ADR
facility under which its equity securities
are traded as ADRs in the U.S. over-thecounter market for the convenience of
U.S. investors, even if its U.S. investors
exceed the Section 12(g) shareholder
thresholds.143 The Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption also permits a foreign
company to have its equity securities
traded in the form of ordinary shares
through the U.S. over-the-counter
market, makes it easier for brokerdealers to fulfill their obligations under
Exchange Act Rule 15c2–11, and
facilitates the resale of a foreign
company’s securities to qualified
institutional buyers in the United States
under Securities Act Rule 144A.
The adopted rule amendments should
result in new investment opportunities
in foreign securities for U.S. investors
by encouraging more foreign companies
to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
and thereby have their securities traded
in the United States over-the-counter
market. The new investment
opportunities in foreign securities may
also lead to improved diversification in
the portfolios of U.S. investors.
The adopted rule amendments will
encourage more foreign companies to
141 675 hrs. × .75 = 506 hrs. × $400/hr. =
$202,400. $202,400 ¥ $45,000 = $157,400.
142 Based on the above estimates, the amendments
could result in a $180,325 increase in Form F–6
costs. $29,575 + $202,400 = $231,975 in total postamendment Form F–6 costs. $6,650 + $45,000 =
$51,650 in total pre-amendment Form F–6 costs.
$231,975 ¥ $51,650 = $180,325 increase in Form
F–6 costs. Thus, considering the estimated effects
on both Rule 12g3–2(b) submissions and
publications and Form F–6, the amendments could
result in a $2,217,325 increase in total costs.
$2,037,000 + $180,325 = $2,217,325.
143 Use of an ADR facility makes it easier for a
U.S. investor to receive dividends in U.S. dollars.
Moreover, because the clearance and settlement
process for ADRs generally is the same for securities
of domestic companies that are traded in U.S.
markets, a U.S. holder of an ADR is able to hold
securities of a foreign company that trades, clears
and settles within automated U.S. systems and
within U.S. time periods.
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claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption by
reducing the costs of obtaining that
exemption for foreign private issuers in
two ways. First, the rule amendments
will enable an otherwise eligible issuer
to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption,
regardless of the number of its U.S.
security holders, as long as it maintains
a listing of the subject class of equity
securities on one or more exchanges in
no more than two foreign jurisdictions
constituting its primary trading market.
The rule amendments define ‘‘primary
trading market’’ to mean that at least 55
percent of the worldwide trading
volume of the issuer’s subject class of
securities occurs in no more than two
foreign jurisdictions, and the trading
volume in one of the foreign
jurisdictions must be larger than the
U.S. trading volume for the same class
of securities. Currently Rule 12g3–2(b)
requires an issuer to disclose the
number of its U.S. security holders and
the percentage of its outstanding
securities held by them when applying
for the Rule’s exemption from Exchange
Act registration.144 Since it is typically
more difficult for a foreign company to
calculate the number of its U.S. holders
than to determine its U.S. or foreign
trading volume, the adopted rule
amendments should make it easier for
more foreign companies to claim the
exemption and thereby have their
securities traded in the U.S. over-thecounter market for the benefit of U.S.
investors.
Second, the adopted rule amendments
will eliminate the current written
application process that requires an
issuer to submit in paper specified
information concerning, for example, its
non-U.S. disclosure requirements, along
with paper copies of its non-U.S.
disclosure documents published since
the beginning of its last fiscal year.
Since outside law firms typically
perform most of the work required for
the application, the rule amendments
should reduce Rule 12g3–2(b) costs for
foreign companies and encourage more
of them to have their securities traded
in the U.S. over-the-counter market
pursuant to the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption for the benefit of U.S.
investors.
The adopted rule amendments will
further benefit U.S. investors by
requiring any foreign company that
claims the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption to
publish in English specified non-U.S.
disclosure documents on its Internet
Web site or through an electronic
144 An issuer must also currently recalculate the
number of its U.S. security holders when applying
for reinstatement of the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
should it lose that exemption due to noncompliance with the Rule’s ongoing requirements.
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information delivery system that is
generally available to the public in its
primary trading market. Currently an
issuer that has obtained the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption upon application may
submit its non-U.S. documents on an
ongoing basis in paper to the
Commission. By requiring the electronic
publication in English of specified nonU.S. documents for any issuer claiming
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, the
adopted amendments should make it
easier for U.S. investors to gain access
to a foreign private issuer’s material
non-U.S. disclosure documents and
make better informed decisions
regarding whether to invest in that
issuer’s equity securities.
non-U.S. primary trading market. Those
U.S. investors could incur costs
associated with finding and contracting
with a broker-dealer who is able to trade
in the foreign reporting company’s
primary trading market. U.S. investors
could also face additional costs
resulting from currency conversion and
higher transaction costs trading the
securities in a foreign market. U.S.
investors would also incur costs from
lost investment opportunities and
possibly lost diversification benefits to
the extent that they choose not to trade
in a foreign company’s securities that
are not available in the U.S. over-thecounter market.
B. Expected Costs
Investors will incur costs from the
adopted rule amendments to the extent
that the amendments encourage more
foreign companies, which otherwise
would be required to register their
equity securities under the Exchange
Act, to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption, where the information,
enforcement remedies, and other effects
of registration are valuable to investors.
We estimate that, on an annual basis,
approximately 350 additional foreign
private issuers could claim the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption as a result of the
adopted amendments to Rule 12g3–2.
Some less technologically capable
investors may also incur costs resulting
from the search and retrieval of a foreign
company’s electronically published
documents. However, we expect those
costs to be less than the costs that
investors currently must incur to obtain
written copies of a foreign company’s
non-U.S. disclosure documents
submitted in paper to the Commission.
A foreign company will incur costs
resulting from the amended rule’s
requirement to publish electronically
specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents in English to the extent that
it is not already required to, or does not
already, do so pursuant to any
applicable law or rule. A foreign private
issuer will also incur costs resulting
from its required annual determination
regarding whether it is still in
compliance with the amended rule’s
primary trading market provision.
However, those costs will likely be less
than the costs that an issuer currently
must incur when calculating the
number of its U.S. holders pursuant to
Rule 12g3–2(b).
If, because of those costs, the foreign
company does not claim or maintain the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption, U.S.
investors interested in trading in the
securities of that company would have
to resort to trading in the company’s
When adopting rules under the
Exchange Act, Section 23(a)(2) of the
Exchange Act 145 requires us to consider
the impact that any new rule will have
on competition. Section 23(a)(2) also
prohibits us from adopting any rule that
will impose a burden on competition
not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act. Furthermore, when
engaging in rulemaking that requires us
to consider or determine whether an
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, Section 2(b) 146 of the
Securities Act and Section 3(f) of the
Exchange Act 147 require the
Commission to consider whether the
action will promote efficiency,
competition and capital formation.
In the Proposing Release, we
considered the proposed rule
amendments in light of the standards set
forth in the above statutory sections. We
solicited comment on whether, if
adopted, the proposed rule amendments
would result in any anti-competitive
effects or promote efficiency,
competition and capital formation. We
further encouraged commenters to
provide empirical data or other facts to
support their views on any anticompetitive effects or any burdens on
efficiency, competition or capital
formation that might result from
adoption of the proposed amendments.
We did not receive any comments or
any empirical data in this regard
concerning the proposed amendments.
Accordingly, since the adopted rule
amendments are similar to the proposed
rule amendments, we continue to
believe the amended rules will
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V. Consideration of Impact on the
Economy, Burden on Competition and
Promotion of Efficiency, Competition
and Capital Formation Analysis
145 15
U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
U.S.C. 77b(b).
147 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
146 15
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contribute to efficiency, competition
and capital formation.
The adopted amendments revise the
rules that determine when a foreign
private issuer may claim the exemption
from Exchange Act Section 12(g)
registration under Exchange Act Rule
12g3–2(b). That exemption permits
limited trading of an issuer’s exempted
equity securities in the over-the-counter
market in the United States as long as
the issuer submits its non-U.S.
disclosure documents to the
Commission, notwithstanding that the
issuer exceeds the Section 12(g)
registration thresholds. Many foreign
private issuers rely on the Rule 12g3–
2(b) exemption to have established ADR
facilities, which make it easier for U.S.
investors to trade in those issuers’
equity securities. The Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption also makes it easier for
broker-dealers to meet their Exchange
Act Rule 15c2–11 obligations, and effect
the resale of a foreign private issuer’s
securities to QIBs under Securities Act
Rule 144A.
The adopted rule amendments will
permit a foreign private issuer to claim
the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption without
having to submit a paper application to
the Commission, as is currently
required, if, among other conditions, the
issuer maintains a listing on one or
more exchanges in no more than two
foreign jurisdictions that constitute its
primary trading market. The adopted
rule amendments will also require an
issuer to publish in English specified
non-U.S. disclosure documents on its
Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system
that is generally available to the public
in its primary trading market. Currently
an issuer that has obtained the Rule
12g3–2(b) exemption by application
may submit its non-U.S. disclosure
documents in paper to the Commission.
By enabling a qualified foreign private
issuer to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption automatically, and without
regard to the number of its U.S.
shareholders, as is currently the case,
the adopted rule amendments should
encourage more foreign private issuers
to claim the Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption
by lowering the costs of obtaining that
exemption. Consequently, the adopted
rule amendments should increase the
efficiency of foreign private issuers’
claiming the exemption and foster the
trading of foreign companies’ equity
securities in the U.S. over-the-counter
market, for example, by enabling the
establishment of additional ADR
facilities and making it easier for brokerdealers to meet their Rule 15c2–11
obligations with respect to foreign
securities. The enhanced ability of
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investors to trade foreign securities in
the United States should help encourage
competition between domestic and
foreign firms for investors in the U.S.
over-the-counter market.
Moreover, by requiring the electronic
publication in English of specified nonU.S. disclosure documents for any
issuer claiming the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption, the adopted amendments
should make it easier for U.S. investors
to gain access to a foreign private
issuer’s material non-U.S. disclosure
documents and make better informed
decisions regarding whether to invest in
that issuer’s equity securities. Thus, the
proposed amendments should foster
increased efficiency in the trading of the
issuer’s securities.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification
24, 80a–26, 80a–29, 80a–30, and 80a–37,
unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Amend Form F–6 (referenced in
§ 239.36) by revising Item 2 of Part I to
read as follows:
I
Note: The text of Form F–6 does not and
this amendment will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
FORM F–6
Registration Statement Under the
Securities Act of 1933 for Depositary
Shares Evidenced by American
Depositary Receipts
*
VII. Statutory Basis and Text of Rule
Amendments
We are adopting the amendments to
Securities Act Form F–6, Exchange Act
Rules 12g3–2 and 15c2–11, and
Exchange Act Forms 40–F, 6–K, and 15F
under the authority in Sections 6, 7, 10
and 19 of the Securities Act 149 and
Sections 3(b), 12, 13, 23 and 36 of the
Exchange Act.150
Text of Rule Amendments
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 239,
240 and 249
*
*
*
*
Part I—Information Required In
Prospectus
*
Under Section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act,148 we
certified that, when adopted, the
proposed rule amendments would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
We included this certification in Part VI
of the Proposing Release. While we
encouraged written comments regarding
this certification, no commenters
responded to this request.
52767
*
*
*
*
Item 2. Available Information
Provide the information in either (a)
or (b) below, whichever is applicable.
(a) State that the foreign issuer
publishes information in English
required to maintain the exemption
from registration under Rule 12g3–2(b)
under the Securities Exchange of 1934
on its Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system
generally available to the public in its
primary trading market. Then disclose
the address of the foreign issuer’s
Internet Web site or the electronic
information delivery system in its
primary trading market.
(b) State that the foreign issuer is
subject to the periodic reporting
requirements of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 and accordingly files reports
with the Commission. Then disclose
that these reports are available for
inspection and copying through the
Commission’s EDGAR system or at
public reference facilities maintained by
the Commission in Washington, DC.
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
I For the reasons set out in the
preamble, we are amending Title 17,
Chapter II of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows.
Note to Item 2: In the case of an
unsponsored ADR facility, you may base
your representation that the issuer publishes
information in English required to maintain
the exemption from registration under
Exchange Act Rule 12g3–2(b) upon your
reasonable, good faith belief after exercising
reasonable diligence.
PART 239—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
*
1. The authority citation for part 239
continues to read in part as follows:
PART 240—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s,
77z–2, 77z–3, 77sss, 78c, 78l, 78m, 78n,
78o(d), 78u–5, 78w(a), 78ll, 78mm, 80a–2(a),
80a–3, 80a–8, 80a–9, 80a–10, 80a–13, 80a–
148 5
U.S.C. 605(b).
U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, and 77s.
150 15 U.S.C. 78c, 78l, 78m, 78w, and 78mm.
149 15
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*
*
*
*
3. The authority citation for part 240
continues to read in part as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j,
77s, 77z–2, 77z–3, 77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn,
77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i, 78j,
78j–1, 78k, 78k–1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78p,
78q, 78s, 78u–5, 78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 80a–
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 176 / Wednesday, September 10, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
20, 80a–23, 80a–29, 80a–37, 80b–3, 80b–4,
80b–11, and 7201 et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350,
unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
*
4. Amend § 240.12g3–2 by revising
paragraphs (b), (c), and (d), and
removing paragraphs (e) and (f), to read
as follows:
I
§ 240.12g3–2 Exemptions for American
depositary receipts and certain foreign
securities.
*
*
*
*
(b)(1) A foreign private issuer shall be
exempt from the requirement to register
a class of equity securities under section
12(g) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78l(g)) if:
(i) The issuer is not required to file or
furnish reports under section 13(a) of
the Act (15 U.S.C. 78m(a)) or section
15(d) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78o(d));
(ii) The issuer currently maintains a
listing of the subject class of securities
on one or more exchanges in a foreign
jurisdiction that, either singly or
together with the trading of the same
class of the issuer’s securities in another
foreign jurisdiction, constitutes the
primary trading market for those
securities; and
(iii) The issuer has published in
English, on its Internet Web site or
through an electronic information
delivery system generally available to
the public in its primary trading market,
information that, since the first day of
its most recently completed fiscal year,
it:
(A) Has made public or been required
to make public pursuant to the laws of
the country of its incorporation,
organization or domicile;
(B) Has filed or been required to file
with the principal stock exchange in its
primary trading market on which its
securities are traded and which has
been made public by that exchange; and
(C) Has distributed or been required to
distribute to its security holders.
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*
Note 1 to Paragraph (b)(1): For the purpose
of paragraph (b) of this section, primary
trading market means that at least 55 percent
of the trading in the subject class of securities
on a worldwide basis took place in, on or
through the facilities of a securities market or
markets in a single foreign jurisdiction or in
no more than two foreign jurisdictions during
the issuer’s most recently completed fiscal
year. If a foreign private issuer aggregates the
trading of its subject class of securities in two
foreign jurisdictions for the purpose of this
paragraph, the trading for the issuer’s
securities in at least one of the two foreign
jurisdictions must be larger than the trading
in the United States for the same class of the
issuer’s securities. When determining an
issuer’s primary trading market under this
paragraph, calculate average daily trading
volume in the United States and on a
worldwide basis as under Rule 12h–6 under
the Act (§ 240.12h–6).
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Note 2 to Paragraph (b)(1): Paragraph
(b)(1)(iii) of this section does not apply to an
issuer when claiming the exemption under
paragraph (b) of this section upon the
effectiveness of the termination of its
registration of a class of securities under
section 12(g) of the Act, or the termination
of its obligation to file or furnish reports
under section 15(d) of the Act.
Note 3 to Paragraph (b)(1): Compensatory
stock options for which the underlying
securities are in a class exempt under
paragraph (b) of this section are also exempt
under that paragraph.
(2)(i) In order to maintain the
exemption under paragraph (b) of this
section, a foreign private issuer shall
publish, on an ongoing basis and for
each subsequent fiscal year, in English,
on its Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system
generally available to the public in its
primary trading market, the information
specified in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this
section.
(ii) An issuer must electronically
publish the information required by
paragraph (b)(2) of this section promptly
after the information has been made
public.
(3)(i) The information required to be
published electronically under
paragraph (b) of this section is
information that is material to an
investment decision regarding the
subject securities, such as information
concerning:
(A) Results of operations or financial
condition;
(B) Changes in business;
(C) Acquisitions or dispositions of
assets;
(D) The issuance, redemption or
acquisition of securities;
(E) Changes in management or
control;
(F) The granting of options or the
payment of other remuneration to
directors or officers; and
(G) Transactions with directors,
officers or principal security holders.
(ii) At a minimum, a foreign private
issuer shall electronically publish
English translations of the following
documents required to be published
under paragraph (b) of this section if in
a foreign language:
(A) Its annual report, including or
accompanied by annual financial
statements;
(B) Interim reports that include
financial statements;
(C) Press releases; and
(D) All other communications and
documents distributed directly to
security holders of each class of
securities to which the exemption
relates.
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Fmt 4701
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(c) The exemption under paragraph
(b) of this section shall remain in effect
until:
(1) The issuer no longer satisfies the
electronic publication condition of
paragraph (b)(2) of this section;
(2) The issuer no longer maintains a
listing of the subject class of securities
on one or more exchanges in a primary
trading market, as defined under
paragraph (b)(1) of this section; or
(3) The issuer registers a class of
securities under section 12 of the Act or
incurs reporting obligations under
section 15(d) of the Act.
(d) Depositary shares registered on
Form F–6 (§ 239.36 of this chapter), but
not the underlying deposited securities,
are exempt from section 12(g) of the Act
under this paragraph.
I 5. Amend § 240.15c2–11 by revising
paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
§ 240.15c2–11 Initiation or resumption of
quotations without specific information.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(4) The information that, since the
beginning of its last fiscal year, the
issuer has published pursuant to
§ 240.12g3–2(b), and which the broker
or dealer shall make reasonably
available upon the request of a person
expressing an interest in a proposed
transaction in the issuer’s security with
the broker or dealer, such as by
providing the requesting person with
appropriate instructions regarding how
to obtain the information electronically;
or
*
*
*
*
*
PART 249—FORMS, SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
6. The authority citation for part 249
continues to read in part as follows:
I
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq. and 7201
et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise
noted.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Amend Form 40–F (referenced in
§ 249.240f), the cover page, by removing
the second to last paragraph, which
pertains to information furnished
pursuant to Rule 12g3–2(b), including
the check boxes.
I
Note: The text of Form 40–F does not and
this amendment will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
I 8. Amend Form 6–K (referenced in
§ 249.306), the cover page, by removing
the two paragraphs, which pertain to
information furnished pursuant to Rule
12g3–2(b), following the second Note,
including the check boxes.
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Note: The text of Form 6–K does not and
this amendment will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
Note: The text of Form 15F does not and
this amendment will not appear in the Code
of Federal Regulations.
FORM 15F
Certification of a Foreign Private
Issuer’s Termination of Registration of
a Class of Securities Under Section
12(G) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 or Its Termination of the Duty To
File Reports Under Section 13(A) or
Section 15(D) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
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*
*
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*
*
18:04 Sep 09, 2008
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*
*
*
*
Item 9. Rule 12g3–2(b) Exemption
E. Rule 12g3–2(b) Exemption
9. Amend Form 15F (referenced in
§ 249.324) by revising General
Instruction E and Item 9 of Part II to
read as follows:
I
*
Part II
General Instructions
*
Regardless of the particular Rule 12h–
6 provision under which it is
proceeding, a foreign private issuer that
has filed a Form 15F regarding a class
of equity securities shall receive the
exemption under Rule 12g3–2(b) (17
CFR 240.12g3–2(b)) for the subject class
of equity securities immediately upon
the effective date of its termination of
registration and reporting under Rule
12h–6. Refer to Rules 12g3–2(b)(2) and
(b)(3) (17 CFR 240.12g3–2(b)(2) and
(b)(3)) and Rule 12g3–2(c) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(c)) for the conditions that a
foreign private issuer must meet in
order to maintain the Rule 12g3–2(b)
exemption following its termination of
Exchange Act registration and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
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52769
Sfmt 4700
Disclose the address of your Internet
Web site or of the electronic information
delivery system in your primary trading
market on which you will publish the
information required to maintain the
exemption under Rule 12g3–2(b).
Instruction to Item 9
Refer to Rule 12g3–2(b)(3)(ii) (17 CFR
240.12g3–2(b)(3)(ii)) for instructions
regarding providing English translations
of documents required to maintain the
Rule 12g3–2(b) exemption.
*
*
*
*
*
By the Commission.
Dated: September 5, 2008.
Florence E. Harmon,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8–20995 Filed 9–9–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 176 (Wednesday, September 10, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 52752-52769]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-20995]
[[Page 52751]]
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Part III
Securities and Exchange Commission
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17 CFR Parts 239, 240, and 249
Exemption From Registration Under Section 12(G) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 for Foreign Private Issuers; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 176 / Wednesday, September 10, 2008 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 52752]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 239, 240 and 249
[Release No. 34-58465; International Series Release No. 1309; File No.
S7-04-08]
RIN 3235-AK04
Exemption From Registration Under Section 12(G) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 for Foreign Private Issuers
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are adopting amendments to the rule that exempts a foreign
private issuer from having to register a class of equity securities
under Section 12(g) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange
Act'') based on the submission to the Commission of certain information
published by the issuer outside the United States. The exemption allows
a foreign private issuer to have its equity securities traded in the
U.S. over-the-counter market without registration under Section 12(g).
The adopted rule amendments will eliminate the current written
application and paper submission requirements under Rule 12g3-2(b) by
automatically exempting from Exchange Act Section 12(g) a foreign
private issuer that meets specified conditions. Those conditions will
require an issuer to maintain a listing of its equity securities in its
primary trading market located outside the United States, and require
it to publish electronically in English specified non-United States
disclosure documents. As a result, the adopted amendments should make
it easier for U.S. investors to gain access to a foreign private
issuer's material non-United States disclosure documents and thereby to
make better informed decisions regarding whether to invest in that
issuer's equity securities through the over-the-counter market in the
United States or otherwise. As is currently the case, issuers must
continue to register their securities under the Exchange Act to have
them listed on a national securities exchange or traded on the OTC
Bulletin Board.
DATES: Effective Date: October 10, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elliot Staffin, Special Counsel, at
(202) 551-3450, in the Office of International Corporate Finance,
Division of Corporation Finance, U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-3628.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: We are adopting amendments to Commission
Rules 12g3-2 \1\ and 15c2-11 \2\ under the Exchange Act,\3\ Forms
15F,\4\ 40-F,\5\ and 6-K \6\ under the Exchange Act, and Form F-6 \7\
under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act'').\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 17 CFR 240.12g3-2.
\2\ 17 CFR 240.15c2-11.
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
\4\ 17 CFR 249.324.
\5\ 17 CFR 249.240f
\6\ 17 CFR 249.306.
\7\ 17 CFR 239.36.
\8\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
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Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Introduction
1. Current Rule 12g3-2(b) Requirements
2. Proposed Rule 12g3-2 Amendments
B. Principal Comments Regarding the Proposed Rule Amendments
C. Summary of the Adopted Rule Amendments
II. Discussion
A. Foreign Listing Condition
1. The Primary Trading Market Definition
2. Elimination of the Proposed 20 Percent Trading Volume
Condition
3. Treatment of Compensatory Stock Options
B. Non-Exchange Act Reporting Condition
1. Non-Reporting Issuers
2. Deregistered Issuers
C. Electronic Publishing of Non-U.S. Disclosure Documents
1. Electronic Publishing Requirement To Claim Exemption
2. Electronic Publishing Requirement To Maintain Exemption
3. English Translation Requirement
D. Elimination of the Written Application Requirement
E. Duration of the Amended Rule 12g3-2(b) Exemption
F. Elimination of the Successor Issuer Prohibition
G. Elimination of the Rule 12g3-2(b) Exception for MJDS Filers
H. Elimination of the ``Automated Inter-Dealer Quotation
System'' Prohibition and Related Grandfathering Provision
I. Revisions to Form F-6
J. Amendment of Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11
K. Transition Periods
1. Regarding Section 12 Registration
2. Regarding Processing of Paper Submissions
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Rule 12g3-2(b) Submissions or Publications
B. Form F-6
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
A. Expected Benefits
B. Expected Costs
V. Consideration of Impact on the Economy, Burden on Competition and
Promotion of Efficiency, Competition and Capital Formation
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
VII. Statutory Basis and Text of Rule Amendments
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Introduction
Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b) \9\ exempts a foreign private issuer
\10\ from Section 12(g) registration \11\ if, among other requirements,
the issuer furnishes to the Commission on an ongoing basis information
it has made public or is required to make public under the laws of its
jurisdiction of incorporation, organization or domicile, pursuant to
its non-U.S. stock exchange filing requirements, or that it has
distributed or is required to distribute to its security holders
(collectively, its ``non-U.S. disclosure documents'').\12\ The
Commission adopted Rule 12g3-2(b) more than 40 years ago in order to
exempt from Section 12(g) registration foreign companies that have not
obtained a listing on a national securities exchange or otherwise
sought a public market for their equity securities in the United
States.\13\
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\9\ 17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b).
\10\ See the definition of foreign private issuer at Exchange
Act Rule 3b-4(c) (17 CFR 240.3b-4(c)).
\11\ When read in conjunction with Exchange Act Rules 12g-1 (17
CFR 240.12g-1) and 12g3-2(a) (17 CFR 240.12g3-2(a)), Exchange Act
Section 12(g) requires an issuer to file an Exchange Act
registration statement regarding a class of equity securities within
120 days of the last day of its fiscal year if, on that date, the
number of its record holders is 500 or greater, the number of its
U.S. resident holders is 300 or more, and the issuer's total assets
exceed $10 million.
\12\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(iii) (17 CFR
240.12g3-2(b)(1)(iii)).
\13\ Release No. 34-8066 (April 28, 1967). For additional
background on the initial adoption of Rule 12g3-2(b), see Part I.A
of Release No. 34-57350 (February 19, 2008), 73 FR 10102 (February
25, 2008) (``Proposing Release'').
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Acquiring the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption enables a foreign private
issuer to have its equity securities traded on a limited basis in the
over-the-counter market in the United States while avoiding
registration under Exchange Act Section 12(g). Typically a foreign
private issuer obtains the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption in order to have
established an unlisted, sponsored or unsponsored depositary facility
for its American Depositary Receipts (``ADRs'').\14\ Establishing the
Rule 12g3-
[[Page 52753]]
2(b) exemption also permits registered broker-dealers to fulfill their
current information obligations concerning foreign private issuers'
securities for which they seek to publish quotations.\15\ It further
facilitates resales of an issuer's securities to qualified
institutional buyers (``QIBs'') under Rule 144A.\16\
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\14\ An ADR is a negotiable instrument that represents an
ownership interest in a specified number of securities, which the
securities holder has deposited with a designated bank depositary.
The filing of Securities Act Form F-6 (17 CFR 239.36) is required in
order to establish an ADR facility. The eligibility criteria for the
use of Form F-6 include the requirement that the issuer of the
deposited securities have a reporting obligation under Exchange Act
Section 13(a) or have established the exemption under Rule 12g3-
2(b). See General Instruction I.A.3 of Form F-6. While required to
be registered on Form F-6 under the Securities Act, ADRs are exempt
from registration under Exchange Act Section 12(g) pursuant to
current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(c) (17 CFR 240.12g3-2(c)).
\15\ Brokers currently can comply with their obligations under
Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11 (17 CFR 240.15c2-11) when a foreign
company has established and maintains the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption
by, in part, reviewing the information furnished to the Commission
under the exemption. See Rule 15c2-11(a)(4) (17 CFR 240.15c2-
11(a)(4)).
\16\ See Securities Act Rule 144A(d)(4) (17 CFR 230.144A(d)(4)).
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1. Current Rule 12g3-2(b) Requirements
Currently, in order to establish the Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption, a foreign private issuer must initially submit to the
Commission a list of its non-U.S. disclosure requirements as well as
copies of its non-U.S. disclosure documents published since the
beginning of its last fiscal year.\17\ An issuer must further submit
its non-U.S. disclosure documents on an ongoing basis in order to
maintain the exemption. The current Rule provides that an issuer need
only submit copies of information that is material to an investment
decision for the purpose of obtaining or maintaining the exemption.\18\
At the time of the initial submission, an issuer must also provide the
Commission with the number of U.S. holders of its equity securities and
the percentage held by them, as well as a brief description of how its
U.S. holders acquired those shares.\19\
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\17\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(i) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(1)(i)). Historically, an issuer has submitted its home
jurisdiction materials as part of a letter application to the
Commission, which has been processed through the Office of
International Corporate Finance in the Division of Corporation
Finance. The written application process does not apply to an issuer
that receives the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption upon the effectiveness of
its Exchange Act deregistration pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 12h-6
(17 CFR 240.12h-6).
\18\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(3) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(3)). As examples of material information, the Rule lists an
issuer's financial condition or results of operations, changes in
its business, the acquisition or disposition of assets, the
issuance, redemption or acquisition of securities, changes in
management or control, the granting of options or other payment to
directors or officers, and transactions with directors, officers or
principal security holders.
\19\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(v) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(1)(v)). An issuer must also disclose the dates and
circumstances of the most recent public distribution of securities
by the issuer or an affiliate.
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Rule 12g3-2(b) currently requires that an applicant submit all of
the necessary non-U.S. disclosure documents and other information
before the date that a registration statement would otherwise become
due under Section 12(g).\20\ Once an issuer has timely submitted its
application and obtained the exemption, the issuer may surpass any of
the record holder, U.S. resident holder, or asset thresholds that would
otherwise trigger an obligation to register a class of securities under
Section 12(g) or the rules thereunder, as long as it maintains the
exemption by submitting the required non-U.S. disclosure documents.
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\20\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(2) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(2)).
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For most of its 40-year history, the Rule 12g3-2(b) disclosure
regime has mandated paper submissions. Even after the adoption of EDGAR
filing rules for foreign private issuers, the Commission has required a
foreign private issuer to submit its initial Rule 12g3-2(b) supporting
materials in paper.\21\ The Commission has based this treatment of Rule
12g3-2(b) materials on the analogous treatment of applications for an
exemption from Exchange Act reporting obligations filed pursuant to
Exchange Act Section 12(h).\22\
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\21\ See Release No. 33-8099 (May 14, 2002), 67 FR 36678 (May
24, 2002).
\22\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(h). We require the filing of Section 12(h)
exemptive applications in paper pursuant to Regulation S-T Rule
101(c)(16) (17 CFR 232.101(c)(16)).
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In March 2007, the Commission voted to adopt amendments to Rule
12g3-2, which enable a foreign private issuer to claim the Rule 12g3-
2(b) exemption immediately upon the effectiveness of its termination of
Exchange Act registration and reporting pursuant to contemporaneously
adopted Exchange Act Rule 12h-6.\23\ The March 2007 amendments require
an issuer that has obtained the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, upon the
effectiveness of its termination of registration and reporting pursuant
to Rule 12h-6, to publish specified non-U.S. disclosure documents in
English on an ongoing basis on its Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system generally available to the
public in its primary trading market, rather than submit that
information in paper to the Commission.\24\ The amendments further
permit, but do not require, a foreign private issuer that has obtained
or will obtain the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, upon application to the
Commission and not pursuant to Rule 12h-6, to publish electronically in
the same manner its non-U.S. disclosure documents required to maintain
the exemption.\25\
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\23\ See Release No. 34-55540 (March 27, 2007), 72 FR 16934
(April 5, 2007).
\24\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(e) (17 CFR 240.12g3-2(e)).
\25\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(f) (17 CFR 240.12g3-2(f)).
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The March 2007 amendments further clarified the English translation
requirements under Rule 12g3-2(b).\26\ The amendments provide that,
when electronically publishing its non-U.S. disclosure documents
required to maintain the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, at a minimum, a
foreign private issuer must electronically publish English translations
of the following documents if in a foreign language:
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\26\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(4) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(4)) provides that copies furnished to the Commission of press
releases and any materials distributed directly to security holders
must be in English, and states that English summaries and versions
may be used instead of English translations. However, the rule does
not specify what other documents must be translated fully into
English, and when summaries or versions may be used.
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Its annual report, including or accompanied by annual
financial statements;
Interim reports that include financial statements;
Press releases; and
All other communications and documents distributed
directly to security holders of each class of securities to which the
exemption relates.\27\
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\27\ Note 1 to Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(e).
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2. Proposed Rule 12g3-2 Amendments
In February 2008, we proposed amendments to Rule 12g3-2(b) in order
to adapt that exemptive regime to the several significant developments
occurring since its initial adoption four decades ago.\28\ Those
developments include the increased globalization of securities markets,
advances in information technology, and the increased use of ADR
facilities by foreign companies to trade their securities in the United
States, which have multiplied the number of foreign companies engaged
in cross-border activities, as well as increased the amount of U.S.
investor interest in the securities of foreign companies. Just as those
developments led us to re-evaluate and revise the Commission rules
governing when a foreign private issuer may terminate its Exchange Act
registration and reporting obligations, so those same factors have led
us to reconsider as well the Commission rules that determine when a
foreign private issuer must enter the Section 12(g) registration
regime.
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\28\ Release No. 34-57350.
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We proposed to amend Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2 to permit a foreign
private issuer to claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, without having to
submit an application to, or otherwise notify, the Commission, as long
as:
[[Page 52754]]
The issuer is not required to file or furnish reports
under Exchange Act Section 13(a) \29\ or 15(d);
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\29\ 15 U.S.C. 78m(a).
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The issuer currently maintains a listing of the subject
class of securities on one or more exchanges in a foreign jurisdiction
that, either singly or together with the trading of the same class of
the issuer's securities in another foreign jurisdiction, constitutes
the primary trading market for those securities;
Either:
[cir] The average daily trading volume (``ADTV'') of the subject
class of securities in the United States for the issuer's most recently
completed fiscal year has been no greater than 20 percent of the
average daily trading volume of that class of securities on a worldwide
basis for the same period; or
[cir] The issuer has terminated its registration of a class of
securities under Exchange Act Section 12(g), or terminated its
obligation to file or furnish reports under Exchange Act Section 15(d),
pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 12h-6; and
Unless claiming the exemption in connection with or
following its recent Exchange Act deregistration, the issuer has
published specified non-U.S. disclosure documents, required to be made
public from the first day of its most recently completed fiscal year,
in English on its Internet Web site or through an electronic
information delivery system generally available to the public in its
primary trading market.
As proposed, a foreign private issuer that met the above
requirements would be immediately exempt from Exchange Act registration
under Rule 12g3-2(b) even if, on the last day of its most recently
completed fiscal year, it exceeded the asset and shareholder thresholds
for Section 12(g) registration, and although the 120-day window for
filing a registration statement under Section 12(g) had elapsed.
Further, as proposed, an issuer could immediately claim the Rule 12g3-
2(b) exemption upon the effectiveness of, or following its recent
Exchange Act deregistration, whether pursuant to the older exit rules
of Rule 12g-4 or 12h-3,\30\ or Rule 12h-6, or the suspension of its
reporting obligations under Section 15(d),\31\ if it met the above
requirements other than the electronic publication condition for its
most recently completed fiscal year.
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\30\ 17 CFR 240.12g-4 or 240.12h-3. Both Rules 12g-4 and 12h-3
permit an issuer to exit the Exchange Act reporting regime following
the filing of a Form 15 (17 CFR 249.323), which certifies that the
issuer has fewer than 300 record holders or less than 500 record
holders and total assets not exceeding $10 million on the last day
of each of its most recent 3 fiscal years.
\31\ An issuer may suspend its Section 15(d) reporting
obligations under Rule 12h-3 or Section 15(d) itself. The statutory
section provides that suspension occurs if, on the first day of the
fiscal year, other than the year in which the issuer's registration
statement went effective, the issuer's record holders number less
than 300.
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The proposed rules would require any issuer, whether a prior
registrant or not, to maintain the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption by
publishing its specified non-U.S. disclosure documents on an ongoing
basis and for each subsequent fiscal year, in English, on its Internet
Web site or through an electronic information delivery system generally
available to the public in its primary trading market. The proposed
rules would require the electronic publication in English of the same
types of information required under the March 2007 amendments.
As proposed, the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption would remain in effect
until:
The issuer no longer satisfies the electronic publication
condition;
The issuer no longer maintains a listing for the subject
class of securities on one or more exchanges in its primary trading
market;
The ADTV of the subject class of securities in the United
States exceeds 20 percent of the average daily trading volume of that
class of securities on a worldwide basis for the issuer's most recently
completed fiscal year, other than the year in which the issuer first
claims the exemption; or
The issuer registers a class of securities under Exchange
Act Section 12 or incurs reporting obligations under Exchange Act
Section 15(d).
B. Principal Comments Regarding the Proposed Rule Amendments
We received letters from 32 commenters, including law firms,
business, industry and legal trade associations, depositary banks,
financial advisory firms, and an OTC market participant. Most
commenters strongly supported the Commission's proposals to eliminate
the written application process for the Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption and replace the paper submission process for an issuer's non-
U.S. disclosure documents with mandated electronic publication as a
condition to claiming and maintaining the exemption.
However, most commenters were critical of the proposal that, as a
condition to claiming and maintaining the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, a
foreign private issuer's U.S. ADTV must be no greater than 20% of its
worldwide ADTV for the issuer's most recently completed fiscal year.
Those commenters urged us either to eliminate the trading volume
condition in its entirety or else increase the U.S. ADTV threshold to a
higher percentage, such as 35%, 40% or 50% of worldwide ADTV. Some
commenters also requested that we impose a trading volume condition
only as an initial requirement for claiming the exemption, and not as a
condition for continued use in subsequent years.
Other areas receiving comment included whether:
To adopt the foreign listing condition as a requirement
for either initially claiming the exemption or maintaining it in
subsequent years;
To permit an issuer to publish English summaries, brief
English descriptions, or English versions instead of English
translations of its non-U.S. disclosure documents;
To provide a period of time for an issuer to cure a
deficiency in its compliance with one or more conditions before it
would be required to register under the Exchange Act;
To require an issuer to provide some form of public notice
that it was claiming and intended to rely on the Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption;
To modify Form F-6 in light of the rule amendments,
including whether to adopt provisions regarding unsponsored ADR
facilities; and
To grandfather any issuer having the Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption before the effective date of the rule amendments.
C. Summary of the Adopted Rule Amendments
We have carefully considered commenters' concerns regarding the
proposed amendments to Rule 12g3-2(b), and have addressed many of them
in the rule amendments that we are adopting today. Most notably, we
have determined to adopt a trading volume measure solely as part of the
foreign listing/primary trading market condition, and not as a separate
condition. As adopted, the rule amendments will enable a foreign
private issuer to claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption,\32\ without
having to submit a written application to the Commission, as long as
the issuer:
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\32\ By the use of the term ``claim'' in his release, we do not
mean to imply that a foreign private issuer must apply for or
provide notice of the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption in order to qualify
for that exemption. Rather, as amended, the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemptive
regime is meant to be self-executing.
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Currently maintains a listing of the subject class of
securities on one or more exchanges in its primary trading market,
which is defined to mean, as proposed, that:
[[Page 52755]]
[cir] At least 55 percent of the trading in the subject class of
securities on a worldwide basis took place in, on or through the
facilities of a securities market or markets in a single foreign
jurisdiction or in no more than two foreign jurisdictions during the
issuer's most recently completed fiscal year; and
[cir] If a foreign private issuer aggregates the trading of its
subject class of securities in two foreign jurisdictions, the trading
for the issuer's securities in at least one of the two foreign
jurisdictions is greater than the trading in the United States for the
same class of the issuer's securities;
The issuer is not required to file or furnish reports
under Exchange Act Section 13(a) or 15(d), as proposed; and
Unless claiming the exemption upon or following its recent
Exchange Act deregistration, the issuer has published in English
specified non-U.S. disclosure documents, from the first day of its most
recently completed fiscal year, on its Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system generally available to the
public in its primary trading market.\33\
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\33\ These rule amendments relate solely to the application of
Exchange Act Section 12(g) and not to antifraud or other provisions
of the U.S. federal securities laws.
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The adopted rule amendments will require an issuer to maintain the
Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption by electronically publishing the specified
non-U.S. disclosure documents for subsequent years. An issuer will lose
the exemption if it:
Fails to publish electronically the required non-U.S.
disclosure documents;
No longer meets the foreign listing/primary trading market
condition; or
Incurs Exchange Act reporting obligations.
We are adopting the rule amendments regarding English translation
requirements, as proposed. While we decline to permit the use of
``brief English descriptions'' or ``English versions,'' we have
clarified that, generally, an issuer may provide an English summary for
a non-U.S. disclosure document if such a summary would be permitted for
a document submitted under cover of Form 6-K \34\ or Exchange Act Rule
12b-12(d)(3).\35\
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\34\ 17 CFR 249.306.
\35\ 17 CFR 240.12b-12(d)(3).
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We are adopting conforming amendments to Form F-6 and Rule 15c2-11.
Other adopted rule amendments include eliminating, as proposed:
The current provision that generally prohibits the Rule
12g3-2(b) exemption tosuccessor issuers;
The rarely used ability of a Canadian issuer filing under
the Multijurisdictional Disclosure System (``MJDS'') to obtain the Rule
12g3-2(b) exemption for a class of equity securities while having
Exchange Act reporting obligations regarding a class of debt
securities;
The current provision that prohibits an issuer from
relying on the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption if its securities are traded
through an automated inter-dealer quotation system; and
The related provision grandfathering Nasdaq-traded
companies meeting specified conditions from Rule 12g3-2(b)'s automated
inter-dealer quotation system prohibition.
While the adopted rule amendments do not include a grandfathering
provision, we are establishing, as proposed, a three-year transition
period to provide sufficient time for any current Rule 12g3-2(b)-exempt
issuer, which will no longer qualify for the exemption under the rule
amendments, either to comply with all of the conditions of amended Rule
12g3-2(b) or register under the Exchange Act. We also are establishing,
as proposed, a three-month transition period following the
effectiveness of the rule amendments during which the Commission will
accept and process any non-U.S. disclosure documents submitted in paper
by Rule 12g3-2(b)-exempt issuers. Thereafter, the Commission will no
longer process paper Rule 12g3-2(b) submissions.
By enabling a qualified foreign private issuer to claim the Rule
12g3-2(b) exemption automatically, and without regard to the number of
its U.S. shareholders, the adopted rule amendments should encourage
more foreign private issuers to claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption.
That would enable the establishment of additional ADR facilities, make
it easier for broker-dealers to fulfill their obligations under
Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11 with respect to the equity securities of a
non-reporting foreign private issuer, and facilitate the resale of a
foreign company's securities to QIBs in the United States under
Securities Act Rule 144A. Consequently, the adopted rule amendments
should foster the increased trading of a foreign private issuer's
securities in the U.S. over-the-counter market.
By requiring the electronic publication in English of specified
non-U.S. disclosure documents for an issuer claiming the Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption, the adopted amendments should make it easier for U.S.
investors to gain access to a foreign private issuer's material non-
U.S. disclosure documents, and make better informed decisions regarding
whether to invest in that issuer's equity securities through the over-
the-counter market in the United States or otherwise. Thus, the adopted
amendments should foster increased efficiency in the trading of the
issuer's securities for U.S. investors.
II. Discussion
A. Foreign Listing Condition
We are adopting, as proposed, the condition that, in order to be
eligible to claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, an issuer must
currently maintain a listing of the subject class of securities on one
or more exchanges in a foreign jurisdiction that, either singly or
together with the trading of the same class of the issuer's securities
in another foreign jurisdiction, constitutes the primary trading market
for those securities.\36\ This condition is substantially similar to
the foreign listing condition adopted as part of the March 2007
amendments.\37\
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\36\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(ii) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(1)(ii)).
\37\ Exchange Act Rule 12h-6(a)(3) (17 CFR 240.12h-6(a)(3)).
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The purpose of the foreign listing condition is to help assure that
there is a non-U.S. jurisdiction that principally regulates and
oversees the trading of the issuer's securities and the issuer's
disclosure obligations to investors. This foreign listing condition
increases the likelihood that the principal pricing determinants for a
foreign private issuer's securities are located outside the United
States, and makes more likely the availability of a set of non-U.S.
securities disclosure documents to which a U.S. investor may turn for
material information when making investment decisions about the
issuer's securities in the U.S. over-the-counter market.
Several commenters supported the proposed foreign listing condition
substantially as proposed or at least in principle.\38\ Some commenters
supported a condition that would require an issuer to be subject to a
recognized foreign regulatory authority and a set of public disclosure
obligations, but would not require a foreign listing.\39\ We decline to
adopt such a provision because, among other factors, we believe it
could be difficult for market participants to determine whether an
issuer is in fact subject to a
[[Page 52756]]
complying foreign regulatory regime. In addition, a listing on a
securities market generally involves the affirmative action of an
issuer to be traded on that market and to be subject to the listing
requirements of that market, including applicable ongoing disclosure
requirements. The foreign listing requirement therefore supports one of
the underlying purposes of the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption--to make
material information available to investors.
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\38\ See, for example, the letter of the Bank of New York
(``BNY''), dated April 25, 2008. This letter, along with other
comment letters, is available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-04-
08/s70408.shtml.
\39\ See, for example, the letter of Sullivan & Cromwell, dated
April 25, 2008.
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A few commenters opposed the foreign listing condition on the
grounds that it would impose costs on those issuers that have not yet
obtained a foreign listing, and which are likely to be smaller
companies.\40\ As we noted when proposing the rule amendments, the
foreign listing condition is consistent with the Commission staff's
past and current practice of administering the Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption. Any issuer, regardless of size, has had to obtain a foreign
listing before it could receive the exemption. Accordingly, the adopted
rule should impose no new burdens in this regard.\41\
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\40\ See, for example, the letter of the American Bar
Association, Business Law Section (``ABA''), dated April 30, 2008.
\41\ As is currently the case, an issuer that, on the last day
of its most recently completed fiscal year, has not exceeded the 500
worldwide holder threshold under Exchange Act Section 12(g), the 300
U.S. holder threshold under Rule 12g3-2(a), or the $10 million
annual aset threshold under Rule 12g-1, could claim an exemption
from Section 12(g) registration for a class of equity securities
based upon one or more of those provisions, and would not have to
comply with Rule 12g3-2(b)'s foreign listing or other conditions, if
it chose not to rely on that rule for its exemption from Section
12(g) registration. However, such an issuer would have to claim the
Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, and satisfy all of its conditions, if it
sought to have established an ADR facility for its equity
securities. ADRs must be registered on a Form F-6, which requires an
issuer of the deposited securities to be either an Exchange Act
reporting company or have the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption.
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1. The Primary Trading Market Definition
The adopted rule amendments define primary trading market, as
proposed, to mean that at least 55 percent of the worldwide trading in
the issuer's subject class of securities took place in, on or through
the facilities of a securities market or markets in a single foreign
jurisdiction or in no more than two foreign jurisdictions during the
issuer's most recently completed fiscal year. The rule amendments
further instruct that, if a foreign private issuer aggregates the
trading of its subject class of securities in two foreign jurisdictions
for that purpose, the trading for the issuer's securities in at least
one of the two foreign jurisdictions must be larger than the trading in
the United States for the same class of the issuer's securities.\42\
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\42\ Note 1 to Rule 12g3-2(b)(1) (17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b)(1)).
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As proposed, we have based the adopted definition on the definition
of primary trading market under the March 2007 amendments. Like the
earlier amendments, the amendments we are adopting today will permit an
issuer to aggregate its securities over multiple markets in one or two
foreign jurisdictions in recognition that many foreign private issuers
have listings on more than one exchange in one or more non-U.S.
markets.\43\
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\43\ As under the earlier amendments, measurement for the
primary trading market determination will be by reference to ADTV as
reported by the relevant market. An issuer would measure the ADTV of
on-exchange transactions in its securities aggregated over one or
two foreign jurisdictions against its worldwide trading volume. The
issuer could include in this measure off-exchange transactions in
those jurisdictions comprising the numerator only if it includes
those off-exchange transactions when calculating worldwide trading
volume in the denominator. This denominator would consist of U.S.
ADTV, which must include both on-exchange and off-exchange
transactions, and non-U.S. ADTV, which must include on-exchange
transactions, but could also include off-exchange transactions. See
Note 1 to Rule 12g3-2(b)(1) and Release No. 34-55540 at 72 FR 16934,
16939.
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Some commenters urged the Commission to adopt a primary trading
market definition that would permit an issuer to aggregate its trading
over an unlimited number of foreign jurisdictions or permit an issuer's
trading in its primary foreign markets to comprise less than 55 percent
of its worldwide trading.\44\ We decline to adopt these suggestions
because, by defining an issuer's primary trading market to comprise no
more than two foreign jursidictions, it becomes more likely that an
eligible issuer will be subject to an overseas regulator with principal
authority for regulating the issuance and trading of the issuer's
securities and the issuer's disclosure to investors. Similarly,
requiring an issuer's primary non-U.S. trading to constitute no less
than 55 percent of its worldwide trading helps assure that a clear
majority of an issuer's securities trading occurs outside the United
States. If the United States was the sole or principal market for a
foreign private issuer's securities, then the Commission would have a
greater regulatory interest in subjecting the foreign company to the
Exchange Act reporting regime.
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\44\ See, for example, the letters of JPMorgan Chase Bank
(``JPMorganChase''), dated April 18, 2008, and the Organization for
International Investment (``OFII''), dated April 23, 2008.
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The adopted rule amendments will not require an issuer establishing
the exemption, but not deregistering, to have maintained a foreign
listing for the previous twelve months, or for some other specified
period of time, as was required under the March 2007 amendments. As
noted in the Proposing Release, we see no reason to exclude newly
listed foreign companies from eligibility. Many foreign exchanges
require substantial initial disclosure before a listing is accepted.
Moreover, there is currently no similar requirement for a non-reporting
company applying for the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption.
Under Rule 12h-6, an issuer must certify that, at the time it files
its Form 15F,\45\ it meets that rule's foreign listing requirement.
That issuer will also have to meet Rule 12g3-2(b)'s foreign listing
requirement upon the effectiveness of its Exchange Act termination of
registration and reporting under Rule 12h-6 in order to be able to
claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption. Since typically that effectiveness
occurs 90 days from the date of filing of the Form 15F, we expect most
Form 15F filers will satisfy the adopted foreign listing requirement
under Rule 12g3-2(b).\46\
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\45\ 17 CFR 249.324. Similar to a Form 15, Form 15F is the form
that a foreign private issuer must file to certify that it meets the
conditions for terminating its Exchange Act registration and
reporting obligations under Rule 12h-6.
\46\ Unless the Commission objects, termination of an issuer's
reporting and registration under Rule 12h-6 is effective 90 days
after the filing of its Form 15F. Exchange Act Rule 12h-6(g)(1) (17
CFR 240.12h-6(g)(1)).
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2. Elimination of the Proposed 20 Percent Trading Volume Condition
In addition to the trading volume standard under the primary
trading market definition, we proposed that an issuer's U.S. ADTV must
be no greater than 20 percent of its worldwide ADTV for its most
recently completed fiscal year. We have determined not to adopt this
separate trading volume condition.
Most commenters opposed the 20 percent trading volume condition.
Several commenters maintained that a foreign private issuer cannot
control the level of U.S. trading of its equity securities because U.S.
investors are able to purchase a foreign private issuer's securities in
the issuer's home market and subsequently trade them in the United
States, or purchase the issuer's securities through unsponsored ADR
facilities in the United States. According to these commenters, those
factors could cause an issuer's U.S. trading volume to exceed the
proposed trading volume threshold and thereby require the issuer to
register its securities in the United States although
[[Page 52757]]
it has not voluntarily sought a public market there.\47\
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\47\ See, for example, the letters of Cleary Gottlieb Steen &
Hamilton LLP (``Cleary Gottlieb''), dated April 25, 2008, and
EuropeanIssuers, dated April 25, 2008.
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Some commenters further stated that the proposed trading volume
condition would likely discourage foreign private issuers from
establishing or maintaining sponsored ADR facilities or engaging in
exempted offerings in the U.S., such as private placements and Rule
144A resales, to the detriment of U.S. investors.\48\ In addition,
commenters noted that the proposed trading volume condition would be
unnecessary should the Commission adopt the proposed foreign listing
condition and accompanying definition of primary trading market.\49\
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\48\ See, for example, the letters of the International Bar
Association, dated April 25, 2008, and Linklaters, dated April 24,
2008.
\49\ See, for example, the letters of BNY and O'Melveny & Myers
LLP, dated April 25, 2008.
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After consideration of the comments, we have determined that
adopting these amendments without the 20 percent trading volume
condition is consistent with the protection of U.S. investors. Most of
the foreign private issuers that currently claim the Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption have U.S. trading volumes that fall below the proposed 20
percent threshold although there is no mandatory trading volume
condition.\50\ We expect that the primary trading market provision will
serve to protect U.S. investors by making it more likely that foreign
companies claiming the exemption will be subject to disclosure
requirements where they are listed.
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\50\ See the Memo by Jennifer Marietta-Westberg, Office of
Economic Analysis, dated March 10, 2008, which is available at
https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-04-08/s70408-2.pdf.
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3. Treatment of Compensatory Stock Options
Currently, the scope of the exemption afforded to a class of equity
securities under Rule 12g3-2(b) may include compensatory stock options
that relate to that class of equity securities.\51\ Some commenters
expressed their concern that, as proposed, the scope of the amended
rule would not include compensatory stock options since the exemption
extends to a class of equity securities, the compensatory stock options
would likely be deemed a separate class, and the compensatory stock
options would typically not be listed in the issuer's primary trading
market.\52\
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\51\ See current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1), which states
that ``securities'' of a foreign private issuer shall be exempt from
Section 12(g) if the rule's conditions are met.
\52\ See the letter of Gloria W. Nusbacher and 24 other
attorneys.
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It is not our intention to change the scope of Rule 12g3-2(b) in
this regard. Accordingly, we have added a note to the amended rule to
clarify that compensatory stock options for which the underlying
securities are in a class exempt under Rule 12g3-2(b) are also exempt
under that rule.\53\
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\53\ Note 3 to Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1).
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B. Non-Exchange Act Reporting Condition
We are adopting the condition, as proposed, that in order to be
eligible for the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, an issuer must not have any
reporting obligations under Exchange Act Section 13(a) or 15(d).\54\
Like the current non-Exchange Act reporting condition of Rule 12g3-
2(b),\55\ the purpose of this provision is to prevent an issuer from
claiming the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption when it already has incurred
active Exchange Act reporting obligations.
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\54\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(i) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(1)(i)).
\55\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(d)(1) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(d)(1)).
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1. Non-Reporting Issuers
A foreign private issuer will satisfy the proposed non-reporting
condition if it does not already have reporting obligations under
either Exchange Act Section 13(a) or 15(d). Since Section 13(a) imposes
reporting obligations on an issuer that has registered a class of
securities under Section 12, a foreign private issuer that has an
effective registration statement filed with the Commission under
Section 12(b),\56\ for example, covering a class of debt securities, or
Section 12(g), covering a particular class of equity securities, would
be ineligible to claim the exemption. This treatment is consistent with
the current Exchange Act reporting prohibition under Rule 12g3-
2(b).\57\
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\56\ 15 U.S.C. 78l(b).
\57\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(d)(1).
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We received relatively few comments on the proposed non-reporting
condition. While some commenters supported the proposed condition,\58\
others requested that, in the interest of increasing the flexibility of
capital raising in the United States for foreign private issuers, we
permit an issuer to claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption with respect to
a particular class of equity securities although it has Exchange Act
reporting obligations regarding a class of debt securities or a
different class of equity securities.\59\ We decline to adopt this
suggested modification because we believe that it could cause confusion
for investors and other market participants regarding the scope of an
issuer's Exchange Act reporting obligations and the protections
available under the Exchange Act.
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\58\ See, for example, the letter of Sullivan & Cromwell.
\59\ See, for example, the letter of OFII.
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Currently an issuer may apply for the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption,
although it may have exceeded the Section 12(g) shareholder thresholds
on the last day of its most recently completed fiscal year, as long as
the statutory 120-day period for filing a Section 12(g) registration
statement has not lapsed.\60\ We proposed to eliminate this 120-day
submission requirement because, under the revised Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemptive scheme, we did not believe that this requirement would be
necessary to protect investors.
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\60\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(2) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(2)).
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The revised exemption does not depend on an issuer's determination
of the number of its worldwide or U.S. shareholders, and does not
require that it submit a written application disclosing that
information. Instead, it affirmatively requires a foreign private
issuer to meet a foreign listing requirement and electronically publish
specified material non-U.S. disclosure documents in English. If we also
required an issuer to claim the exemption within the 120-day period, we
believe some issuers, particularly smaller ones, would be unable to
meet that deadline.\61\ Those issuers would have to wait until the end
of their current fiscal year and the start of a new 120-day period
before they could claim the exemption. We see little benefit in
requiring issuers to wait several months before being able to claim the
exemption. On the other hand, providing the exemption and encouraging
these issuers to publish their material non-U.S. disclosure documents
in English should benefit U.S. investors. Commenters uniformly agreed
with our assessment on this issue. Therefore, we are eliminating the
120-day requirement for issuers under Rule 12g3-2(b), as proposed.
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\61\ Under current Rule 12g3-2(b), several issuers have applied
for the exemption although the 120-day period has lapsed.
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2. Deregistered Issuers
Under the adopted, revised exemptive scheme, a foreign private
issuer that has suspended its Exchange Act reporting obligations upon
the filing of Form 15, pursuant to Rule 12g-4 or 12h-3, or Form 15F,
pursuant to Rule 12h-6, will
[[Page 52758]]
satisfy the non-reporting requirement upon the effectiveness of its
deregistration, assuming that it has not otherwise incurred additional
Exchange Act reporting obligations. Similarly, a foreign private issuer
that has suspended its reporting obligations pursuant to the statutory
terms of Section 15(d) will satisfy the non-reporting condition
immediately upon its determination that it had less than 300
shareholders as of the beginning of its most recent fiscal year.
Thus, unlike the current rule, the adopted rule amendments will not
require an issuer to look back over the previous eighteen months and
determine whether it had Exchange Act reporting obligations during that
period.\62\ We eliminated the eighteen month requirement when adopting
the March 2007 rule amendments that granted the Rule 12g3-2(b)
exemption automatically to a foreign private issuer upon the
effectiveness of its termination of Exchange Act registration and
reporting pursuant to Rule 12h-6. We see no reason to treat differently
foreign private issuers that have terminated their Section 12(g)
registration under the older Rule 12g-4 or suspended their Section
15(d) reporting obligations pursuant to that statutory section or under
Rule 12h-3 and following the filing of Form 15. Elimination of a
lengthy waiting period will hasten the electronic publication of a
foreign private issuer's non-U.S. disclosure documents required under
the exemption and, thus, help improve the ability of U.S. investors to
make informed decisions regarding that issuer's securities. Commenters
uniformly supported this revision, which we are adopting as proposed.
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\62\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(d)(1) provides that the
Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption is generally not available to a foreign
private issuer that, during the preceding 18 months, has registered
a class of securities under Exchange Act Section 12 or had an active
or suspended Section 15(d) reporting obligation.
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C. Electronic Publishing of Non-U.S. Disclosure Documents
1. Electronic Publishing Requirement To Claim Exemption
We are adopting, as proposed, the requirement that, unless in
connection with or following a recent Exchange Act deregistration, in
order to claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, an issuer must have
published in English, on its Internet Web site or through an electronic
information delivery system generally available to the public in its
primary trading market, information that, from the first day of its
most recently completed fiscal year, it:
Has made public or been required to make public pursuant
to the laws of the country of its incorporation, organization or
domicile;
Has filed or been required to file with the principal
stock exchange in its primary trading market on which its securities
are traded and which has been made public by that exchange; and
Has distributed or been required to distribute to its
security holders.\63\
These are the same categories of information that the Commission
has historically required a non-reporting company to submit in paper
when applying for the exemption under Rule 12g3-2(b).\64\ They also are
the same non-U.S. disclosure documents that, more recently, the
Commission has required an issuer to publish electronically in order to
maintain its Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption claimed upon the effectiveness of
its deregistration under Rule 12h-6.\65\ Commenters strongly supported
this electronic publication requirement.\66\
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\63\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(iii) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(1)(iii)) and Note 2 to Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1). As
proposed, the adopted amendments do not require a deregistered
issuer to satisfy the non-U.S. publication requirement in order to
claim the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption since that issuer will have filed
Exchange Act reports for the prior fiscal year upon which investors
may rely.
\64\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(i).
\65\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(e)(2).
\66\ While commenters uniformly supported the electronic
publication condition, some questioned the proposed requirement to
provide English translations of specified non-U.S. disclosure
documents. See Part II.C.3 of this release.
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The purpose of this non-U.S. electronic publication condition is to
provide U.S. investors with ready access to material information when
trading in the issuer's equity securities in the over-the-counter
market.\67\ This condition also will assist U.S. investors who are
interested in trading the issuer's securities in its primary securities
market. Moreover, having a foreign private issuer's key non-U.S.
disclosure documents electronically published in English will assist
broker-dealers in meeting their Rule 15c2-11 obligations and facilitate
resales of that issuer's securities to QIBs under Rule 144A.
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\67\ Any trading of a foreign private issuer's Rule 12g3-2(b)-
exempt securities in the United States would have to occur through
an over-the-counter market such as that maintained by the Pink
Sheets, LLC since, as of April, 1998, the NASD has required a
foreign private issuer to register a class of securities under
Exchange Act Section 12 before its securities could be traded
through the electronic over-the-counter bulletin board administered
by Nasdaq. See, for example, NASD Notice to Members (January 1998).
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As under the current rule, the adopted amendments will require an
issuer only to publish electronically information that is material to
an investment decision regarding the subject securities,\68\ such as:
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\68\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(3)(i) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(3)(i)). Although the substantive requirements are the same, we
have made conforming changes to General Instruction E and Part II,
Item 9 of Form 15F to reflect the renumbering of the non-U.S.
publication requirements of Rule 12g3-2(b).
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Results of operations or financial condition;
Changes in business;
Acquisitions or dispositions of assets;
The issuance, redemption or acquisition of securities;
Changes in management or control;
The granting of options or the payment of other
remuneration to directors or officers; and
Transactions with directors, officers or principal
security holders.\69\
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\69\ These are the same types of information specified in
current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(3) (17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b)(3)).
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2. Electronic Publishing Requirement to Maintain Exemption
In order to maintain the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, the adopted
amendments will require an issuer to publish the same information
specified in the prior fiscal year provision, on an ongoing basis and
for subsequent fiscal years, on its Internet Web site or through an
electronic information delivery system in its primary trading
market.\70\ This requirement will apply to any issuer claiming the
exemption, whether or not a former Exchange Act registrant. Like the
prior fiscal year publication condition, this ongoing publication
condition will help assure that investors and other market participants
have access to an issuer's specified non-U.S. disclosure documents, in
English, which are material to an investment decision. Most commenters
strongly supported this ongoing non-U.S. electronic publication
condition.
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\70\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(2)(i) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(2)(i)).
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Similar to the current rule,\71\ the adopted rule amendments will
require an issuer to publish electronically its non-U.S. disclosure
documents promptly after the information has been made public, pursuant
to its home jurisdiction laws, non-U.S. stock exchange rules, or
shareholder meeting rules and practices.\72\ As under current
Commission staff practice, what constitutes ``promptly'' will depend on
the type of document and the amount of time required to prepare an
English
[[Page 52759]]
translation. Currently an issuer typically must electronically publish
or submit in paper a copy of a material press release on or around the
same business day of its original publication.
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\71\ Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(1)(iii).
\72\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(2)(ii) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(2)(ii)). Form 6-K imposes a similar requirement.
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The adopted amendments will permit an issuer to meet Rule 12g3-
2(b)'s electronic publication requirement concurrently with the
publishing in English of a non-U.S. disclosure document through an
electronic information delivery system generally available to the
public in its primary trading market. Thus, if an issuer's non-U.S.
stock exchange or securities regulatory authority permits the issuer to
publish electronically a required report on its electronic delivery
system, and the public has ready access to the report and other
documents maintained on the system,\73\ that electronic publication
solely will satisfy the proposed Rule 12g3-2(b)'s electronic publishing
requirements.
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\73\ An example of such a system is the System for Electronic
Document Analysis and Retrieval (``SEDAR'') maintained by the
Canadian Securities Administrators.
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3. English Translation Requirement
We are adopting, as proposed, the condition that, in order to claim
or maintain the Rule 12g3-2(b) exemption, an issuer must publish
electronically, at a minimum, English translations of the following
documents if in a foreign language:
Its annual report, including or accompanied by annual
financial statements;
Interim reports that include financial statements;
Press releases; and
All other communications and documents distributed
directly to security holders of each class of securities to which the
exemption relates.\74\
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\74\ Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(b)(3)(ii) (17 CFR 240.12g3-
2(b)(3)(ii)).
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These are the same documents for which an issuer that has
deregistered under Rule 12h-6 must currently provide English
translations.\75\
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\75\ Note 1 to Current Exchange Act Rule 12g3-2(e) (17 CFR
240.12g3-2(e)).
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Some commenters requested that we permit an issuer to provide brief
English descriptions or English versions of specified non-U.S.
disclosure documents instead of English translations.\76\ We decline to
adopt this suggestion because, as we stated in the Proposing Release,
the specified non-U.S. disclosure documents are the same documents for
which the Commission staff has histori