Amendments to Rules Requiring Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, 53954-53964 [E9-25232]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 21, 2009 / Proposed Rules
SMALL BUSINESS SIZE STANDARDS BY NAICS INDUSTRY—Continued
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Funeral Homes and Funeral Services ..........................................................................................
Cemeteries and Crematories ........................................................................................................
Coin-Operated Laundries and Drycleaners ..................................................................................
Drycleaning and Laundry Services (except Coin-Operated) ........................................................
Linen Supply ..................................................................................................................................
Industrial Launderers .....................................................................................................................
Pet Care (except Veterinary) Services .........................................................................................
Photo Finishing Laboratories (except One-Hour) .........................................................................
One-Hour Photo Finishing .............................................................................................................
Parking Lots and Garages ............................................................................................................
All Other Personal Services ..........................................................................................................
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Voluntary Health Organizations ....................................................................................................
Other Grantmaking and Giving Services ......................................................................................
Human Rights Organizations ........................................................................................................
Environment, Conservation and Wildlife Organizations ................................................................
Other Social Advocacy Organizations ..........................................................................................
Civic and Social Organizations .....................................................................................................
Business Associations ...................................................................................................................
Professional Organizations ...........................................................................................................
Labor Unions and Similar Labor Organizations ............................................................................
Political Organizations ...................................................................................................................
Other Similar Organizations (except Business, Professional, Labor, and Political Organizations).
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy
Materials that is sent to shareholders.
We are also providing guidance about
the current requirement for the Notice to
identify the matters intended to be acted
on at the shareholders’ meeting. In
addition to the proposed changes and
guidance regarding the format of the
Notice, we are proposing a new rule that
will permit issuers and soliciting
shareholders to include explanatory
materials regarding the process of
receiving and reviewing proxy materials
and voting. Finally, we are proposing
revisions to the timeframe for delivering
a Notice to shareholders when a
soliciting person other than the issuer
relies on the notice-only option.
DATES: Comments should be received on
or before November 20, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
SUMMARY: We are proposing changes to
the proxy rules under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 to improve the
notice and access model for furnishing
proxy materials to shareholders.
Specifically, we are proposing revisions
to our rules to provide additional
flexibility regarding the format of the
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/proposed.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number S7–22–09 on the subject line;
or
*
*
*
*
*
Dated October 9, 2009.
Karen G. Mills,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. E9–25199 Filed 10–20–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 230 and 240
[Release Nos. 33–9073; 34–60825; IC–
28946; File No. S7–22–09]
RIN 3235–AK25
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Amendments to Rules Requiring
Internet Availability of Proxy Materials
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• Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal
(https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number S7–22–09. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if e-mail is used. To help us process and
review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The
Commission will post all comments on
the Commission’s Web site (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml).
Comments are also available for public
inspection and copying in the
Commission’s Public Reference Room,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549, on official business days
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
All comments received will be posted
without change; we do not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly.
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 21, 2009 / Proposed Rules
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steven G. Hearne, Special Counsel in
the Office of Rulemaking, Division of
Corporation Finance, at (202) 551–3430,
or with respect to registered investment
companies, Sanjay Lamba, Senior
Counsel, in the Office of Disclosure
Regulation, Division of Investment
Management, at (202) 551–6784, 100 F
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission is proposing amendments
to Rule 14a–16 1 under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 2 and Rule 498 3
under the Securities Act of 1933.4
I. Background
As part of a continuing review of the
proxy disclosure and solicitation
process, we have been exploring ways to
improve the disclosures shareholders
receive when they are asked to make a
voting decision and the process
followed when those votes are solicited.
In May 2009, we voted to propose
changes to our proxy rules to require
issuers to include shareholder
nominated directors in issuer proxy
statements if certain conditions are
met.5 We also recently proposed
amendments to our proxy rules to
enhance the compensation and
corporate governance disclosures that
issuers are required to make and to
address certain proxy solicitation
matters.6 We also approved changes
proposed by the New York Stock
Exchange (‘‘NYSE’’) to its Rule 452 that
eliminated broker discretionary voting
for uncontested elections of directors at
shareholder meetings.7
One of the other ways we identified
to improve the proxy solicitation
process is to revise our notice and
access proxy rules to further facilitate
informed shareholder participation in
the proxy voting process. In 2007 we
amended the proxy rules by adopting a
notice and access model that required
1 17
CFR 240.14a–16.
U.S.C. 78a et seq.
3 17 CFR 230.498.
4 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
5 See Facilitating Shareholder Director
Nominations, Release No. 33–9046 (June 10, 2009)
[74 FR 29024].
6 See Proxy Disclosure and Solicitation
Enhancements, Release No. 33–9052 (July 10, 2009)
[74 FR 35076].
7 See Order Approving Proposed Rule Change, as
modified by Amendment No. 4, to Amend NYSE
Rule 452 and Corresponding Listed Company
Manual Section 402.08 to Eliminate Broker
Discretionary Voting for the Election of Directors,
Except for Companies Registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, and to Codify
Two Previously Published Interpretations that Do
Not Permit Broker Discretionary Voting for Material
Amendments to Investment Advisory Contracts
with an Investment Company, Release No. 34–
60215 (July 1, 2009) [74 FR 33293].
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all issuers and other soliciting persons
to post their proxy materials on an
Internet Web site and furnish notice of
the materials’ availability to
shareholders.8 The notice and access
model was intended to establish
procedures that would promote use of
the Internet as a reliable and costefficient means of making proxy
materials available to shareholders.
Even though we recently adopted these
requirements, we believe based on our
experience that it is important to
propose these limited modifications in
order to advance the regulatory goals of
the notice and access model.
Under the notice and access model,
an issuer or other soliciting person may
choose to provide proxy materials to
shareholders under either of two
options, the ‘‘notice-only option’’ and
the ‘‘full set delivery option.’’ 9 An
issuer or other soliciting person is
permitted to provide proxy materials to
some shareholders via the notice-only
option and to other shareholders via the
full set delivery option. Under both
options, the issuer or other soliciting
person must make its proxy materials
available on an Internet Web site.
The notice-only option permits the
issuer or other soliciting person to send
only a Notice of Internet Availability of
Proxy Materials (‘‘Notice’’) to
shareholders. The Notice must include,
8 See Internet Availability of Proxy Material,
Release No. 34–55146 (Jan. 22, 2007) [72 FR 4148]
(‘‘Internet Availability of Proxy Material Adopting
Release’’) and Shareholder Choice Regarding Proxy
Materials, Release No. 34–56135 (July 26, 2007) [72
FR 42221]. The rules were phased-in over a two
year period. Large accelerated filers, not including
registered investment companies, were required to
use the model with respect to proxy solicitations
commencing on or after January 1, 2008. All other
companies (including registered investment
companies), and soliciting persons, were required
to use the model for proxy solicitations
commencing on or after January 1, 2009.
9 The process of distributing proxy materials to
beneficial owners differs from the process for direct
delivery of the materials by an issuer to its record
holders. Beneficial owners are owners whose names
do not appear directly in issuers’ stock registers
because they hold their securities through a broker,
bank, trustee, or similar intermediary. The proxy
rules, specifically Exchange Act Rule 14a–13, Rule
14b–1 and Rule 14b–2 [17 CFR 240.14a–13,
240.14b–1 and 240.14b–2], impose obligations on
issuers and intermediaries to ensure that beneficial
owners receive proxy materials and are given the
opportunity to participate in the shareholder voting
process. Under the proxy rules, intermediaries are
required to forward the proxy materials, other than
the proxy card, along with a request for voting
instructions. The request for voting instructions is
prepared by the intermediary and the beneficial
owner returns the voting instructions to the
intermediary. The intermediary is required to vote
the beneficial owners’ shares in accordance with
each owner’s voting instructions when formally
executing the proxy card. In the absence of voting
instructions from the beneficial owner, the
intermediary may vote the beneficial owner’s shares
in its own discretion under certain circumstances.
See NYSE Rule 452.
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among other things, the Internet Web
site address where shareholders can
access the proxy materials and a
description of the means by which a
shareholder can request paper or
electronic copies of the materials.10
Under this option, an issuer must send
the Notice to shareholders at least 40
days prior to the shareholder meeting to
which the proxy materials relate.11 A
soliciting person other than the issuer
must send the Notice to shareholders by
the later of 40 days prior to the meeting
or 10 days after the issuer first sends its
Notice or proxy materials to
shareholders.12 An issuer or other
soliciting person must then provide
copies of the proxy materials upon the
request of shareholders receiving the
Notice.13 The full set delivery option
permits an issuer or other soliciting
person to send the traditional full set of
proxy materials in paper to shareholders
accompanied by the Notice, or to
include the information required in the
Notice in the proxy materials.14
According to Broadridge Financial
Solutions, Inc. (‘‘Broadridge’’), 1,312
corporate issuers used the notice-only
option for distribution to some portion
of their beneficial owners under the
notice and access model in the 2009
proxy season.15 While issuers may enjoy
significant cost savings using the noticeonly option under the notice and access
model, we are concerned by statistics
indicating lower shareholder response
rates to proxy solicitations when the
notice-only option is used.16 According
10 See Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(b) and (d) [17
CFR 240.14a–16(b) and (d)].
11 See Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(a) [17 CFR
240.14a–16(a)].
12 See Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(l) [17 CFR
240.14a–16(l)].
13 See Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(j) [17 CFR
240.14a–16(j)].
14 See Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(n) [17 CFR
240.14a–16(n)].
15 See Broadridge Notice & Access, Statistical
Overview of Use with Beneficial Shareholders (as
of May 31, 2009) at https://www.broadridge.com/
notice-and-access/NAStatsStory.pdf (‘‘Broadridge
Statistical Overview’’). Broadridge is the largest
provider of brokerage processing services with
respect to beneficial owners holding through a
broker or similar intermediary and has provided
detailed statistical information on the use of the
notice and access model. The Broadridge Statistical
Overview is generally limited to comparisons
between issuers that have used the notice-only
option for distribution to some portion of their
beneficial owners and issuers that exclusively used
the full set delivery option and comparisons
between the first and second years of use of the
notice-only option. The data that is currently
publicly available and directly comparable to the
data in the May 31, 2009 Broadridge Statistical
Overview does not provide a comparison to an
issuer’s experience in the year prior to using the
notice-only option for distribution.
16 The Commission has long had an interest in
facilitating shareholder participation in corporate
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to Broadridge, the percentage of ‘‘retail’’
shares 17 voted by shareholders in
issuers using the notice-only option for
distribution to some portion of their
beneficial owners is lower than the
percentage in issuers that exclusively
use the full-set delivery option to
provide proxy materials to their
shareholders.18 In addition, when
comparing between shareholders in
issuers that used both the notice-only
and full set delivery options, the
response rates of retail shares voted by
shareholders that received notice-only
was half that of shareholders that
received full set delivery.19 With regard
to the effect on voting by retail account
holders, rather than retail shares voted,
statistics provided by Broadridge
indicate even lower voting response
rates for retail accounts that received
notice-only instead of full-set
delivery.20 The available data do not
governance and in fair corporate suffrage. See, for
example, the testimony of Chairman Ganson Purcell
in 1943, Securit[ies] and Exchange Commission
Proxy Rules: Hearings on H.R. 1493, H.R. 1821, and
H.R. 2019 Before the House Comm. on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce, 78th Cong., 1st Sess., at 17–
19 (1943) and more recently Security Holder
Director Nominations, Release No. 34–48626 (Oct.
14, 2003) [68 FR 60784], Shareholder Proposals
Relating to the Election of Directors, Release No.
34–56161 (July 27, 2007) [72 FR 43488], and
Release No. 33–9046 in note 5 above.
17 The term ‘‘retail,’’ as used in the Broadridge
Statistical Overview, does not refer to shares or
accounts that are managed by an advisor and that
have previously consented to the electronic
delivery of their proxy materials. See Broadridge
Statistical Overview at 1. When not referring
specifically to the Broadridge statistics, this release
uses the term individual shareholders to more
broadly refer to non-institutional shareholders
generally.
18 According to the Broadridge Statistical
Overview, when comparing the 11-month period
from July 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009, response rates
were 4.11% less for retail shares voted in issuers
that used the notice-only option for distribution to
some portion of their beneficial owners (27.69%)
compared to issuers that exclusively used the full
set delivery option (31.8%).
19 According to the Broadridge Statistical
Overview, for companies that used a mixed
approach—using the notice-only option for some
retail shareholders and the full set delivery option
for the remaining shareholders—the percentage of
retail shares voted by shareholders that received
notice-only was 13.48% during the 11-month
period from July 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009. In
comparison, the percentage of retail shares voted by
shareholders of the same set of issuers that received
full set delivery during the same period was
28.63%.
20 The percentage of retail accounts that
responded when receiving notice-only under the
mixed approach during the 11-month period from
July 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009 was only 4.10%. In
comparison, for companies that used a mixed
approach, the percentage of retail accounts that
responded after receiving full-set delivery during
the same period was 21.44%. To the extent that
retail account data represent individual
shareholders, the data indicates a large difference
in voting by individual shareholders that receive
full-set delivery as opposed to those that receive
notice only. It is important to note, however, that
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necessarily exclude the possibility that
factors other than requirements of our
notice and access rules may contribute
to the different voting response rates,
although the available data do not
identify them.
We are exploring the reasons for the
difference in retail share and account
voting response rates and whether our
rules are creating difficulties or affecting
voting rates. We note that there appears
to have been some confusion among
shareholders regarding the operation of
the notice and access model.21 The
legend required to be put on the Notice
does not appear to have provided clear
guidance for some shareholders as to
how those shareholders could access the
proxy materials online or request a
paper copy of the proxy materials and
vote their shares. For example, the
Commission’s staff has received reports
of some shareholders attempting to
indicate their voting instructions by
returning a marked copy of the Notice.22
Disclosing the matters to be acted on in
the Notice in the same format as the
matters listed in the proxy may have
resulted in some shareholders
misunderstanding the purpose of the
Notice. There may be other reasons why
shareholder participation under the
notice and access model, especially by
individual shareholders, is lower, and
we are soliciting comment on why the
participation rates are lower and how
best to advance the Commission’s
regulatory interest in informed
shareholder participation.
We are proposing revisions to remove
regulatory impediments that may be
reducing shareholder response rates to
proxy solicitations. The revisions are
intended to permit issuers and other
soliciting persons to more effectively
use the notice and access model. The
proposed amendments are described
issuers (absent specific instructions from a
shareholder) have the flexibility under the notice
and access model to determine which shareholders
will receive notice-only or full set delivery of proxy
materials. As a result, when making such
determinations, it is possible that consideration is
given to the historical response rates of particular
shareholders or certain similarly situated
shareholders. Consequently, the subset of retail
investors that only receive the Notice may be
stratified to include those shareholders that are
least likely to respond to the materials. Among the
other potential reasons for the difference in these
response rates may be an issuer’s consideration of
the number of shares held in an account (e.g., all
accounts holding 500 shares or more will receive
a full set of proxy materials) when deciding
whether to furnish notice-only or full set delivery
of proxy materials.
21 Our Office of Investor Education and Advocacy
has received complaints about the notice and access
model and members of our staff have heard about
the experience of some issuers with the notice and
access model from informal meetings with
Broadridge and issuer representatives.
22 Id.
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below. We are also soliciting comment
on ways to improve the mechanics of
the notice and access model and other
ways to increase informed shareholder
participation in the proxy solicitation
process.23 We intend to continue
monitoring implementation of the
notice and access rules and may
propose additional revisions in order to
achieve greater shareholder
participation.
II. Proposed Amendments
A. Improving Clarity of the Notice
Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(d) 24
currently imposes strict requirements
regarding the content of the Notice, and
requires the Notice to be presented in a
prescribed format.25 The rule requires
the Notice to contain a prominent
legend indicating that the document is
an important notice regarding the
Internet availability of proxy materials
for a specified shareholder meeting.
Among other things, the Notice also
must indicate that it presents only an
overview of the more complete proxy
materials available to the shareholders
on the Internet and must include a
statement encouraging shareholders to
access and review the proxy materials at
a specified Web site address. In
addition, the Notice must explain how
a shareholder may request a paper or email copy of the proxy materials. Rule
14a–16(d)(3) further requires the Notice
to contain ‘‘[a] clear and impartial
identification of each separate matter
intended to be acted on and the
soliciting person’s recommendations
regarding those matters, but no
supporting statements.’’ 26 The intent
behind the specific Notice requirements
was to inform shareholders of the
availability of proxy materials and to
notify them of the matters to be
considered and voted on at the meeting.
The specific limitations on the type of
information that can be included in the
Notice were included because we do not
intend the Notice to become a means of
persuading shareholders how to vote or
to deliver marketing or other materials
23 For example, when the amendments to NYSE
Rule 452 were approved, we noted our support for
the establishment of an Investor Education SubCommittee of the NYSE Proxy Working Group to
develop and encourage the NYSE and its member
firms to implement an investor education effort to
inform investors about the amendments to NYSE
Rule 452, the proxy voting process, and the
importance of voting. See Release No. 34–60215 in
Note 7 above. Our Office of Investor Education and
Advocacy is also considering ways to educate
investors about these matters.
24 17 CFR 240.14a–16(d).
25 17 CFR 240.14a–16(d)(1).
26 17 CFR 240.14a–16(d)(3).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 21, 2009 / Proposed Rules
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that may distract shareholders from the
Notice.
Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(f) imposes
a strict prohibition on the types of
materials that may accompany the
Notice when an issuer or other soliciting
person elects to follow the notice-only
option. Specifically, for companies
other than registered investment
companies, the Notice under this option
must be sent separately from other types
of shareholder communications and
may not accompany any other
document or materials, except for a preaddressed, postage-paid reply card for
requesting a copy of the proxy materials
and a copy of a notice of shareholder
meeting required by state law.27
Therefore, a soliciting person may not
include additional materials to explain
why the shareholder is receiving only a
Notice instead of the proxy materials.
In light of our serious concerns
regarding shareholder confusion and the
potential that our rules may be causing
a reduction in shareholder voting, we
propose to revise our rules to provide
issuers and other soliciting persons with
additional flexibility in formatting and
selecting the language to be used in the
Notice. Rather than requiring the
soliciting person to include a detailed
legend that may seem like boilerplate
language to shareholders, we are
proposing to require that the
information appearing on the Notice
address certain topics, without
specifying the exact language to be
used.28 We hope the flexibility will
allow issuers and other soliciting
persons to develop a more effective
explanation of the importance and effect
of the Notice, including to provide
clearer guidance for shareholders as to
how to access the proxy materials
online, request a paper copy of the
proxy materials, and vote their shares.
In addition, we have been informed
that certain issuers are interpreting Rule
14a–16(d)(3) to require them to comply
with the specific Exchange Act Rule
14a–4 29 formatting and content
requirements for disclosure of matters
on the proxy card when identifying in
the Notice each separate matter to be
27 Registered investment companies may also
include a prospectus or a report that is required to
be transmitted to shareholders by Section 30(e) of
the Investment Company Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–29(e))
and the rules thereunder. See Exchange Act Rule
14a–16(f)(2)(iii) [17 CFR 240.14a–16(f)(2)(iii)].
28 See proposed Exchange Act Rule 14a–16(d),
which would limit the required legend to the line
‘‘Important Notice Regarding the Availability of
Proxy Materials for the Shareholder Meeting To Be
Held on [insert meeting date]’’ and would require
the other information currently required in the
legend to be included in the Notice, but not as part
of a specified legend.
29 17 CFR 240.14a–4.
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acted on at the meeting.30 Rule 14a–
16(d)(3) provides for more flexibility
regarding the design of the Notice. It is
not necessary that the Notice directly
mirror the proxy card. Rather, the rule
simply requires that the Notice identify
each matter that will be considered at
the meeting (e.g., election of directors;
ratification of auditors; approval of a
stock option plan, etc.).
Further, in order to mitigate confusion
about the Notice and to allow issuers
and other soliciting persons to better
engage shareholders, we propose to
revise our rules to permit issuers and
other soliciting persons to accompany
the Notice with an explanation of the
notice and access model.31 The
exception provided would be limited to
the process of receiving or reviewing the
proxy materials and voting. Materials
designed to persuade shareholders to
vote in a particular manner, change the
method of delivery, or explain the basis
for sending only a Notice to
shareholders would not be permitted
under the exception.32 With this
increased flexibility, issuers could better
educate shareholders about the notice
and access model. While issuers would
be permitted to provide their own
explanation of the process of receiving
and reviewing the proxy materials and
the process of voting, we expect that
many issuers will use standardized
materials prepared for this purpose.33
In addition to proposing to amend our
rules to reduce possible confusion about
the Notice, the Office of Investor
Education and Advocacy, in
consultation with the Division of
Corporation Finance, has been directed
to develop a program designed to
educate and inform shareholders,
especially individual shareholders,
about the notice and access model;
explain how shareholders may
participate through this model; and
explain shareholders’ rights under this
model. Although the proposed
amendments to our rules would permit,
rather than require, issuers and other
soliciting persons to include
explanatory information about the
Notice, the Commission strongly
30 See
note 21 above.
proposed Exchange Act Rule 14a–
16(f)(2)(iv).
32 As we explained in the Internet Availability of
Proxy Material Adopting Release, ‘‘The Notice is
intended merely to make shareholders aware that
these proxy materials are available on an Internet
Web site; it is not intended to serve as a stand-alone
basis for making a voting decision.’’ See note 8
above.
33 Through informal meetings with the staff,
issuer representatives, intermediaries and proxy
distribution service providers have expressed
interest in developing standardized educational
materials to be included with the Notice.
31 See
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53957
encourages issuers and other soliciting
persons who use the notice-only option
to better inform shareholders about the
notice and access model. Issuers who
have experienced significant cost
savings, but may also have experienced
a significant decrease in participation
rates, may wish to consider using those
cost savings in educational efforts
designed to increase informed
participation by shareholders.
We are also proposing technical
amendments to our rules for registered
investment companies. Rule 14a–
16(f)(2)(iii) currently permits a
registered investment company to
accompany the Notice with a prospectus
or report to shareholders.34 The
Commission recently adopted rule
amendments that permit mutual
funds 35 to satisfy their prospectus
delivery obligations by sending or
giving investors key information in the
form of a summary prospectus.36
Consistent with permitting mutual
funds to use a summary prospectus to
satisfy their delivery obligations, we
propose to revise our rules to permit
mutual funds to accompany the Notice
with a summary prospectus.37
Request for Comment
• Has use of the notice and access
model made proxy materials more or
less accessible to shareholders? The
Commission is concerned by reports
that indicate there has been a drop in
shareholder response rates to proxy
solicitations by individual shareholders
under the notice and access model,
especially when the notice-only option
has been used. We are proposing
34 17 CFR 240.14a–16(f)(2)(iii). Unless otherwise
specified or the context otherwise requires, the term
‘‘prospectus’’ means a prospectus meeting the
requirements of Section 10(a) of the Securities Act
[15 U.S.C. 77j(a)]. See 17 CFR 240.0–1(d).
35 We use the term ‘‘mutual fund’’ to mean a
registered investment company that is an open-end
management company as defined in Section 5(a)(1)
of the Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C.
80a–5(a)].
36 See Enhanced Disclosure and New Prospectus
Delivery Option for Registered Open-End
Management Investment Companies, Release No.
33–8998 (Jan. 13, 2009) [74 FR 4546]. Although the
summary prospectus is not a Section 10(a)
prospectus, it may be used to satisfy any prospectus
delivery obligations under Section 5(b)(2) of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77e(b)(2)]. 17 CFR
230.498(c).
37 See proposed amendment to Exchange Act
Rule 14a–16(f)(2)(iii). We are also proposing a
conforming amendment to Rule 498 under the
Securities Act [17 CFR 230.498], which permits
mutual funds to use a summary prospectus to
satisfy their prospectus delivery obligations. Rule
498(f)(2) provides that a fund’s summary prospectus
shall be given greater prominence than any
accompanying materials. We are proposing to
amend Rule 498 to provide that a summary
prospectus need not be given greater prominence
than an accompanying Notice. See proposed
amendment to Rule 498(f)(2).
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changes to the Notice requirements
intended to make the Notice clearer and
encourage efforts to better inform
shareholders about participation under
the notice and access model. Do the
proposed changes help in enabling
issuers and other soliciting persons to
make the Notice clearer? Will these
changes help address concerns about
confusion and other factors that may be
reducing shareholder participation?
What other changes to the notice and
access model should we consider to
address these concerns?
• What factors have caused the lower
shareholder response rates by
individual shareholders to proxy
solicitations when the notice-only
option is used under the notice and
access model? If the lower shareholder
response rates result primarily from the
notice and access model itself, would
requiring issuers to deliver paper copies
of proxy materials to some subset of
individual shareholders, such as
shareholders that own over a certain
threshold of shares or that have received
paper copies of proxy materials and
voted in the past, affect voting rates?
Does permitting issuers to choose to
which shareholders to provide noticeonly and full set delivery affect voting
rates? If so, how are issuers exercising
their discretion over full set delivery
and are they doing so appropriately?
Would additional requirements affect an
issuer’s ability to implement the notice
and access model? Are there other
alternatives that would increase the
voting rates under the notice and access
model?
• Should we consider adding
requirements that would limit an
issuer’s ability to use the notice-only
option where the issuer has experienced
a decrease in shareholder participation
as a result of using the notice-only
option for distribution to some portion
of its shareholders? For example, should
we only allow an issuer to continue to
use the notice-only option if the shares
voted or the voting response rate has not
decreased from the most recent issuer’s
meeting when they provided all of their
shareholders with full set delivery?
Would some decrease, such as 10% or
20% be acceptable? Should we instead
consider requiring shareholder
participation to increase from prior
years in order for an issuer to continue
to use the notice-only option? Are there
other participation-level conditions that
we should consider?
• Will shareholders find the Notice
more confusing if we do not prescribe
how to describe the matters to be acted
on at the meeting? Should we prescribe
minimum standards for formatting?
Should we instead require a legend to
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the effect that the Notice should not be
used for voting on matters, and that a
separate proxy card or Vote Instruction
Form should be used for voting?
• Should we permit the Notice to be
accompanied by materials to explain the
process of receiving and reviewing the
proxy materials and voting as proposed?
Should we require that explanatory
materials be included? Should we allow
these explanatory materials to include
any additional information? For
example, should an issuer or other
soliciting person be permitted to explain
what the benefits of using the notice and
access model would be? Should we
specify by rule the topics that cannot be
included? Should we include the level
of detail in the explanation in this
section in the text of the rule? For
example, should the rule specifically
provide that the explanation in the
Notice may not contain materials
designed to persuade shareholders to
vote in a particular manner, change the
methods of delivery or explain the basis
for sending the Notice? Should a
soliciting person be permitted to explain
why it has decided to use the noticeonly option?
• The Commission is aware that there
has been some confusion relating to the
Notice and that some shareholders have
attempted to indicate their voting
instructions by returning a marked copy
of the Notice. What changes can we
make to help shareholders better
understand the Notice? Should the
Commission amend its rules to prohibit
issuers and other soliciting persons from
including voting recommendations in
the Notice as permitted under Rule 14a–
16(d)(3)? Would removing
recommendations increase the
likelihood that a shareholder will access
the proxy materials through the
Internet? Does the Notice currently look
too similar to a proxy card or Vote
Instruction Form? Would possible
confusion in the Notice be reduced if
the Commission amended its rules to
require identification of matters to be
voted on by topic rather than identifying
the specific matters as they appear on
the proxy card, so that the Notice looks
less like a proxy card or Vote Instruction
Form?
• Has the notice and access model
lowered costs for issuers and other
soliciting persons resulting from the
proxy solicitation process? Have any
costs increased? In your response,
please quantify the costs and savings of
using the notice and access model, and
provide supporting data where possible.
• It is our understanding from
informal conversations our staff has had
with issuers and proxy distribution
service providers that a number of
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issuers were discouraged from using the
notice and access model due to the
difficulty of meeting the 40-day Notice
mailing requirement. Would a 30-day
deadline for delivery of the Notice still
allow sufficient time for shareholders
who prefer paper proxy materials to
request and receive them through the
mail? Would changing to a 30-day
deadline encourage use and improve
implementation of the notice and access
model? If the Notice mailing
requirement for the issuer were
shortened, would any changes be
necessary to the filing and mailing
requirements for soliciting persons other
than the issuer?
• Some issuers have expressed
concern regarding the fees charged by
proxy distribution service providers.
Have the fees charged by proxy
distribution service providers affected
use rates of the notice and access
model? Should the Commission address
fees charged by service providers
relating to the implementation of the
notice and access model? If so, how?
• Should the Commission consider
proposing suspension of the notice and
access rules until a later date to provide
more time for shareholders to
understand and be better prepared for
the notice and access model? If so, how
much time would be appropriate?
Would additional educational efforts be
sufficient to inform shareholders about
the notice and access model, or would
other efforts, such as development of an
on-line disclosure and voting
infrastructure, be needed? If so, why?
B. Proposed Amendment to Notice
Deadlines for Soliciting Persons Other
Than the Issuer
Under Rule 14a–16, if a soliciting
person other than the issuer chooses to
use the notice-only option, the soliciting
person must send its Notice to
shareholders by a date that is the later
of:
• 40 calendar days before the
shareholder meeting to which the proxy
materials relate, or
• 10 calendar days after the issuer
first sends its Notice or proxy statement
to shareholders. 38
We created this 10-day period to
provide soliciting persons other than the
issuer desiring to rely on the notice-only
option sufficient time to respond to an
issuer’s mailing of proxy materials and
still allow shareholders receiving a
Notice from the soliciting person
enough time to request paper copies of
38 17
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the soliciting person’s proxy
materials.39
The current 10-calendar-day
requirement for soliciting persons to
send the Notice to shareholders can
create potential compliance issues for
soliciting persons. Under current
practice, the staff of the Division of
Corporation Finance reviews and
provides comments on preliminary
proxy materials filed by soliciting
shareholders in a contested solicitation.
While the staff makes great effort to
review filings and address comments as
quickly as possible, there may continue
to be outstanding comments on a
soliciting person’s preliminary proxy
statement more than 10 calendar days
after the soliciting person has initially
filed. Consequently, a soliciting person
may not be in a position to send its
Notice within 10 calendar days after the
issuer first sends its Notice or proxy
statement to shareholders.
Thus, because a soliciting person is
required to send its Notice within 10
days after the issuer first sends its
Notice or proxy statement, the practical
effect of Rule 14a–16, as currently
written, is to limit that person’s ability
to use the notice-only option. This is
because Rule 14a–16(b)(4) requires the
soliciting person to make a means to
execute a proxy available to
shareholders at the time the Notice is
first sent to shareholders. Rule 14a–4(f),
however, prohibits a person from
providing a form of proxy unless it is
accompanied, or preceded, by a
definitive proxy statement. Because the
soliciting person may not have finished
revising its proxy statement and may
not have filed its definitive proxy
statement with the Commission by that
time, the notice and access rules,
combined with current staff review
practice, may, in many circumstances,
prevent a soliciting person other than
the issuer from using the notice-only
option for a proxy contest if that
soliciting person’s initial proxy
statement filing is made in response to
the issuer’s definitive proxy statement
filing.
To improve implementation of the
notice and access model, we propose to
amend Rule 14a–16(l)(2)(ii) to require
the soliciting shareholder relying on this
alternative to file a preliminary proxy
statement within 10 days after the issuer
files its definitive proxy statement and
to send its Notice to shareholders no
later than the date on which it files its
definitive proxy statement with the
39 See Internet Availability of Proxy Materials,
Release No. 34–52926 (Dec. 8, 2005) [70 FR 74597]
(‘‘Internet Availability of Proxy Materials Proposing
Release’’).
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Commission. We believe that this
proposed time period would provide
sufficient time for a soliciting person to
prepare its proxy statement and respond
to any staff comments, while still
permitting the soliciting person to use
the notice and access model. While the
proposed rule does not provide for a
specific period of time before the
meeting by which a soliciting person
would need to mail the Notice, the
soliciting person should make the
Notice and proxy materials available to
shareholders with sufficient time for
shareholders to review the materials and
make an informed voting decision.
Request for Comment
• We are proposing to revise one of
the two alternative Notice deadlines
applicable to soliciting persons other
than the issuer to reconcile Rule 14a–
16(b)(4) with Rule 14a–4(f) and better
coordinate the timing requirements with
the Commission staff’s review process.
Is there a preferable way to revise the
rule to address this issue? If so, how
should we revise the rule?
• The proposed rule would require a
soliciting person to send its Notice to
shareholders no later than the date on
which it files its definitive proxy
statement with the Commission. The
soliciting person, however, has control
over the date that it files a definitive
proxy statement. Is it necessary to
impose a specific time period by which
a soliciting person other than the issuer
must send its Notice? If so, should we
impose a specific time period after the
filing of the preliminary proxy by which
a soliciting shareholder must send its
Notice?
III. General Request for Comment
We request and encourage any
interested person to submit comments
regarding:
• The proposed amendments that are
the subject of this release;
• Other ways to reduce regulatory
impediments to shareholder
participation and thereby improve
shareholder response rates to proxy
solicitations using the notice and access
model or otherwise improve the notice
and access model;
• Additional or different changes; or
• Other matters that may have an
effect on the proposals contained in this
release.
We request comment from the point
of view of issuers, investors, and other
market participants. With regard to any
comments, we note that such comments
are of great assistance to our rulemaking
initiative if accompanied by supporting
data and analysis of the issues
addressed in those comments.
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IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Background
Certain provisions of the proposed
rule amendments contain a ‘‘collection
of information’’ within the meaning of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.40
The Commission is submitting this
proposed amendment to the Office of
Management and Budget for review in
accordance with the PRA. An agency
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to comply with,
a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid control
number. Compliance with the rules as
they are proposed to be amended would
be mandatory, however certain
information collections under these
rules are required and some are
voluntary. Responses to the information
collections would not be kept
confidential and there would be no
mandatory retention period for the
information disclosed.
The proposed revision to Rule 14a–16
would permit issuers and other
soliciting persons to include
explanatory materials about the notice
and access model along with the Notice.
The proposed revision would still
require a legend in the Notice, but
would allow more flexibility in how
prescribed topics are described in the
legend.41 The proposed explanatory
materials would be a relatively short
and straight-forward explanation of the
notice and access model that could
accompany the Notice. Finally, the
proposed change to the filing deadline
for soliciting persons other than the
issuer is not expected to affect the
burden estimates.
B. Regulation 14A and 14C
The titles for the collections of
information for operating companies
are: 42
• Regulation 14A (OMB Control No.
3235–0059); and
• Regulation 14C (OMB Control No.
3235–0057).
We previously revised these
collections of information in the release
that proposed the notice and access
model as a voluntary model for
40 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.; 5 CFR 1320.11.
anticipate no change in the burden
estimates for the change in the legend requirement.
The proposed rule would require essentially the
same information as is currently required in the
legend to continue to be conveyed creating no
additional burden.
42 The paperwork burden from Regulation S–K is
imposed through the forms that are subject to the
requirements in those regulations and is reflected
in the analysis of those forms. To avoid a
Paperwork Reduction Act inventory reflecting
duplicative burdens and for administrative
convenience, we assign a one-hour burden to
Regulation S–K.
41 We
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permitted, but not required, to include
explanatory materials with the Notice.
We expect that this information will
generally consist of approximately one
or two paragraphs of text. For purposes
of the PRA, we estimate the annual
burden if a soliciting person chooses to
prepare the explanatory materials would
be approximately 0.5 reporting hours
per issuer or other soliciting person.45
We estimate that 75% of the burden
would be borne by the soliciting person
disseminating proxy materials 43 and the
release in which we adopted
amendments requiring issuers and other
soliciting persons to follow the model.44
We submitted the revisions in both
releases to the OMB for review in
accordance with the PRA. We received
approval for the revised information
collections and now propose a further
revision which we will submit to OMB.
Under the proposed amendments, an
issuer or other soliciting person will be
and that 25% of the burden would be
borne by outside counsel retained by the
soliciting person at an average cost of
approximately $400 per hour. The
portion of the burden carried by outside
professionals is reflected as a cost, while
the portion of the burden carried by the
issuer internally is reflected in hours.
The following table summarizes the
proposed PRA burden estimates for
Schedules 14A and 14C:
TABLE 1—CALCULATION OF INCREMENTAL PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT BURDEN ESTIMATES FOR PROXY AND
INFORMATION STATEMENTS
Form
Annual
responses
Incremental
hours/form
Incremental
burden
(A)
(B)
(C)=(A)*(B)
Schedule 14A ......................................
Schedule 14C ......................................
Total ..............................................
7,300
680
7,980
25% Professional
$400 Professional cost
(D)=(C)*0.75
0.5
0.5
75% Issuer
(E)=(C)*0.25
(F)=(E)*$400
3,650
340
3,990
2,737.5
255
2,992.5
912.5
85
997.5
$365,000
$34,000
$399,000
Certain provisions of the current
notice and access model contain
‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
PRA, including preparation of Notices,
maintaining Web sites, maintaining
records of shareholder preferences, and
responding to requests for copies. Those
provisions increase the current burden
for the existing collection of information
entitled ‘‘Rule 20a–1 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940,46
Solicitation of Proxies, Consents and
Authorizations’’ (OMB Control No.
3235–0158). Rule 20a–1 under the
Investment Company Act 47 requires
that the solicitation of a proxy, consent,
or authorization with respect to a
security issued by an investment
company be in compliance with
Regulation 14A,48 Schedule 14A,49 and
all other rules and regulations adopted
under Section 14(a) of the Exchange
Act.50 It also requires a fund’s
investment adviser, or a prospective
adviser, to transmit to the person
making a proxy solicitation the
information necessary to enable that
person to comply with the rules and
regulations applicable to the
solicitation.
The notice and access model requires
all registered investment companies to
post their proxy materials on an Internet
Web site and furnish Notice of the
materials’ availability to shareholders.51
The Notices, the proxy materials posted
on the Web site, and copies of the proxy
materials sent in response to
shareholder requests are not kept
confidential.
For purposes of the PRA, we estimate
that the annual burden required to
prepare and transmit a Notice to be
approximately 1.5 reporting hours. This
estimate is based on the PRA burden for
issuers other than investment
companies to prepare and transmit a
Notice. We estimate that 75% of the
burden is prepared by the investment
company and that 25% of the burden is
prepared by outside counsel retained by
the investment company at an average
cost of approximately $400 per hour.
Based on the number of proxy filings
from registered investment companies
received by the Commission during
2008, we would expect approximately
1,225 Notices to be filed annually. We
estimate that the total annual reporting
burden for rule 20a-1 should be
increased by approximately 1,378
hours 52 and that the annual cost would
be increased by approximately
$735,000 53 for the services of outside
professionals to comply with the
disclosure provisions of the existing
notice and access model.
In addition, registered investment
companies must permit shareholders to
make permanent elections to receive
proxy materials in paper or by e-mail.
An investment company issuer must
maintain records as to which of its
shareholders have made such an
election. We believe that many
investment company issuers already
maintain similar records to keep track of
their shareholders who have
affirmatively consented to electronic
delivery consistent with past
Commission guidance,54 as well as their
shareholders who have consented to
householding of proxy materials
pursuant to Rule 14a–3(e).55 For
purposes of the PRA, we estimate that
a typical investment company issuer
will spend an additional five hours per
year, or a total of 6,125 hours, to
43 See Internet Availability of Proxy Materials
Proposing Release in note 39 above.
44 See the Internet Availability of Proxy Material
Adopting Release in note 8 above.
45 As we have previously indicated, according to
Broadridge, it processes more than 95% of proxy
materials that are sent to beneficial owners on
behalf of intermediaries. See the Internet
Availability of Proxy Materials Adopting Release in
note 8 above. We believe that issuers likely will rely
on proxy distribution service providers to provide
the explanatory materials and that issuers and
intermediaries would provide explanatory materials
that are substantially the same to the beneficial
owners that hold through intermediaries, creating
no additional annual burden to prepare an
intermediary’s Notice.
46 15 U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq.
47 17 CFR 270.20a–1.
48 17 CFR 240.14a–1 et seq.
49 17 CFR 240.14a–101.
50 15 U.S.C. 78n(a).
51 See the Internet Availability of Proxy Material
Adopting Release in note 8 above.
52 1,225 Notices × 1.5 hours per Notice × .75 =
1,378 hours.
53 1,225 Notices × $400 per hour × 1.5 hours per
Notice × .25 = $735,000.
54 Use of Electronic Media for Delivery Purposes,
Release No. 33–7233 (Oct. 6, 1995) [60 FR 53458]
provided guidance on electronic delivery of
prospectuses, annual reports to security holders and
proxy solicitation materials under the Securities
Act, the Exchange Act, and the Investment
Company Act.
55 17 CFR 240.14a–3(e).
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maintain these records.56 Because this is
an internal recordkeeping requirement,
we do not expect a cost for hiring
outside counsel.
Further, the notice and access model
also requires an intermediary to prepare
its own Notice and provide it to
beneficial owners. We expect that all of
the factual information required to
appear in the Notice will become
available as part of the ordinary
preparations for a shareholder meeting.
This Notice would be substantially the
same as a registered investment
company’s Notice, but will be modified
by the intermediaries to provide
information that is relevant to beneficial
owners rather than registered holders.
According to Broadridge, it processes
more than 95% of proxy materials that
are sent to beneficial owners on behalf
of intermediaries, reducing the need to
create multiple intermediary Notices. In
addition, the investment company
issuer or other soliciting person will
provide the majority of information
required in the intermediary’s Notice.
Therefore, we estimate that the
additional burden to prepare an
intermediary’s Notice will be
approximately one hour, or a total
annual burden of 1,225 hours for all
investment company proxy
solicitations.57
Finally, intermediaries must also
maintain records to keep track of which
beneficial owners have made a
permanent election to receive proxy
materials in paper or by e-mail. Like
registered investment companies,
intermediaries already maintain records
of shareholders’ affirmative consents to
electronic delivery and householding of
proxy materials. In addition,
intermediaries maintain records as to
whether their beneficial owner
customers have objected, or not
objected, to disclosure of their identities
to the investment company issuer. Like
investment company issuers, we believe
this will result in an additional annual
burden of five hours, or a total of 6,125
hours, for intermediaries.58
56 1,225 filings with an estimated one filing per
issuer or soliciting person × 5 hours = 6,125 hours.
This estimate is based on the PRA burden for
issuers other than investment companies to
maintain these records.
57 1,225 notices × 1 hour per Notice = 1,225
hours. We do not include a cost to intermediaries
for hiring outside counsel because we expect that
the substantive contents of an intermediary’s Notice
would be provided by the issuer or other soliciting
person. The estimates assume that Broadridge will
continue to process over 95% of the proxy
solicitations on behalf of intermediaries, thereby
eliminating the need for each intermediary to
prepare a separate Notice.
58 This estimate is based on the PRA burden for
intermediaries for issuers other than investment
companies to maintain records.
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We estimate that the total annual PRA
reporting burden for Rule 20a–1 should
be increased by 14,853 hours and
$735,000 in professional costs to reflect
compliance with the existing notice and
access model. We request comment and
supporting empirical data on the burden
and cost of sending copies of proxy
materials under the notice and access
model for registered investment
companies.
Under the proposed amendments to
the notice and access model, a
registered investment company or other
soliciting person will be permitted, but
not required, to include explanatory
materials with the Notice. We expect
that this information will generally
consist of approximately one or two
paragraphs of text. For purposes of the
PRA, we estimate the annual burden if
a soliciting person chooses to prepare
the explanatory materials would be
approximately 0.5 reporting hours per
investment company. We estimate that
75% of the burden would be borne by
the investment company and that 25%
of the burden would be borne by outside
counsel retained by the investment
company at an average cost of
approximately $400 per hour. The
portion of the burden carried by outside
professionals is reflected as a cost, while
the portion of the burden carried by the
issuer internally is reflected in hours.
We estimate that the proposed
amendments will increase the PRA
burden estimates under Rule 20a–1 by
approximately 459 hours and $61,250 in
professional costs.
D. Solicitation of Comments
We request comments in order to
evaluate: (1) Whether the proposed
revision to the collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information would have
practical utility; (2) the accuracy of our
estimate of the burden of the proposed
revisions to the collection of
information; (3) whether there are ways
to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) whether there are
ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology.59
Any member of the public may direct
to us any comments concerning the
accuracy of these burden estimates and
any suggestions for reducing these
burdens. Persons submitting comments
on the collection of information
59 44
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requirements should direct the
comments to the Office of Management
and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for
the Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC
20503, and should send a copy to
Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090, with
reference to File No. S7–22–09.
Requests for materials submitted to
OMB by the Commission with regard to
these collections of information should
be in writing, refer to File No. S7–22–
09, and be submitted to the Securities
and Exchange Commission, Office of
Investor Education and Advocacy, 100 F
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549–
0213. OMB is required to make a
decision concerning the collection of
information between 30 and 60 days
after publication of this release.
Consequently, a comment to OMB is
best assured of having its full effect if
OMB receives it within 30 days of
publication.
V. Cost-Benefit Analysis
A. Proposed Amendments
The proposed amendments are
designed to improve implementation of
the notice and access model. The
proposed amendments to Exchange Act
Rule 14a–16 would revise the legend
requirements in the rule to make them
more flexible, revise the deadline
applicable to soliciting persons other
than the issuer to reconcile the rules
and better coordinate them with the
Commission staff’s review process, and
permit issuers and other soliciting
persons to accompany the Notice with
explanatory materials regarding the
process of receiving and reviewing the
proxy materials and voting.60
We expect that the economic effect of
the proposed amendments, if adopted,
would be to:
• Facilitate participation by
shareholders who may be confused by
the operation of the notice and access
model;
• Provide flexibility to soliciting
persons in describing the notice and
access model; and
• Facilitate participation by some
soliciting persons who may currently be
effectively precluded from using the
notice-only option.
60 We do not expect our proposed conforming
amendment, which would permit mutual funds to
accompany the Notice with a summary prospectus,
to have a substantive impact on a mutual fund’s
decision otherwise permitted under Rule 498 of the
Securities Act to provide a summary prospectus
instead of a statutory prospectus to its shareholders.
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B. Benefits
As discussed above, by permitting
some additional flexibility in designing
the Notice and permitting explanatory
materials regarding the process of
receiving and reviewing the proxy
materials and voting to accompany the
Notice, we expect that the proposal
would improve understanding of the
notice and access model for
participating shareholders. Improved
understanding of the model would
reduce confusion and may thereby
improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of the proxy voting system. However, to
the extent that issuers send notices to
shareholders that are less likely to
respond, these benefits may be limited.
Revising one of the two alternative
Notice deadlines applicable to soliciting
persons other than issuers to reconcile
the rules’ timing requirements with the
Commission staff’s review process
would facilitate use of the notice-only
option by soliciting persons who may
otherwise be precluded from using the
notice-only option because of their
inability to meet the deadline for
sending the Notice. This would help
lower costs for those persons by
reducing impediments for certain
soliciting persons to participate in the
proxy process.
C. Costs
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Eliminating the specific limitations of
the legend requirement may result in
some soliciting persons providing a
more confusing notice or seeking to
include soliciting, marketing or other
materials that may distract shareholders
from the Notice. These activities would
increase the cost of shareholder
participation in the proxy process, and
could distort votes and outcomes.61 In
addition, an issuer or other soliciting
person that chooses to include
explanatory materials in the same
mailing with the Notice would incur the
cost of preparing that information. We
expect that this information generally
would be no more than a few
paragraphs long. For purposes of the
PRA, we estimate that the proposal
would cause an annual increase in the
compliance burden for issuers and other
soliciting persons preparing explanatory
materials of approximately 3,450 hours
61 Since
intermediaries and their agents already
have systems to prepare and deliver proxy materials
and the nature of the proposed changes are
relatively small, we do not expect the
intermediaries’ role in sending explanatory material
to beneficial owners to affect their costs associated
with the rule. In any event, since soliciting persons
reimburse intermediaries for their reasonable
expenses forwarding proxy materials, we do not
expect intermediaries to incur costs associated with
the rule.
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of in-house personnel time and
approximately $460,000 for the services
of outside professionals.
D. Request for Comments
We request comment on all aspects of
the cost-benefit analysis, including
identification of any additional costs or
benefits of, or suggested alternatives to,
the proposed amendments. We also
request that those submitting comments
provide, to the extent possible,
empirical data and other factual support
for their views.
VI. Consideration of Burden on
Competition and Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
Section 23(a) of the Exchange Act 62
requires the Commission, when making
rules and regulations under the
Exchange Act, to consider the impact a
new rule would have on competition.
Section 23(a)(2) prohibits the
Commission from adopting any rule that
would impose a burden on competition
not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the
Exchange Act. Section 2(b) of the
Securities Act,63 Section 3(f) of the
Exchange Act 64 and Section 2(c) of the
Investment Company Act 65 require the
Commission, when engaging in
rulemaking that requires it to consider
whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, to
also consider whether the action would
promote efficiency, competition, and
capital formation.
The amendments would permit some
additional flexibility in designing the
Notice, permit issuers and other
soliciting persons to accompany the
Notice with explanatory materials
regarding the process of receiving and
reviewing the proxy materials and
voting, and revise one of the two
deadlines applicable to soliciting
persons other than the issuer to
reconcile our rules and better coordinate
the timing requirements with the
Commission staff’s review process. The
proposed amendments are designed to
reduce regulatory impediments and
thereby increase shareholder
participation, improve implementation
of the notice and access model, and
enhance investor understanding of the
operation of the notice and access
model. These changes are intended to
improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of the proxy process.
62 15
U.S.C. 78w(a).
U.S.C. 77b(b).
64 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
65 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(c).
63 15
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We do not anticipate any effect on
competition or capital formation as a
result of these proposed revisions.
The Commission solicits comment on
whether the proposed amendment, if
adopted, would affect efficiency,
competition, and capital formation.
VII. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
This Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis has been prepared in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 603. It relates
to proposed revisions to Exchange Act
Rule 14a–16 that would permit some
additional flexibility in designing the
Notice, permit issuers and other
soliciting persons to accompany the
Notice with explanatory materials
regarding the process of receiving and
reviewing the proxy materials and
voting, and revise one of the timing
requirements applicable to soliciting
persons other than the issuer to
reconcile our rules and better coordinate
the requirement with the Commission
staff’s review process.
A. Reasons for, and Objectives of, the
Proposed Action
The proposed amendments are
designed to improve implementation of
the notice and access model. Based on
our monitoring of the effects of the
notice and access model on the proxy
solicitation process and the experiences
that issuers and shareholders have had
with the notice and access model to
date, we believe that several revisions to
the existing rules would improve the
operation of the model without
adversely affecting soliciting persons or
shareholders’ abilities to effectively
participate in the proxy process.
Improved notice design and
shareholder education should help to
mitigate the difference in shareholder
participation in the proxy voting
process observed in the use of the notice
and access model to the extent the
difference was caused by our
regulations. The proposed amendment
to the timing requirements for soliciting
persons other than the issuer to file their
preliminary proxy statements is
designed to better enable soliciting
shareholders other than the issuer to use
the notice-only option.
B. Legal Basis
We are proposing amendments to the
forms and rules under the authority set
forth in Sections 6, 7, 10, and 19 of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
Sections 3(b), 13, 14, 15, and 23(a) of the
Exchange Act, as amended, and
Sections 8, 20(a), 24(a), 24(g), 30, and 38
of the Investment Company Act, as
amended.
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C. Small Entities Subject to the
Proposed Rules
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The proposals would affect issuers
that are small entities. Exchange Act
Rule 0–10(a) 66 defines an issuer to be a
‘‘small business’’ or ‘‘small
organization’’ for purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act if it had total
assets of $5 million or less on the last
day of its most recent fiscal year. We
estimate that there are approximately
1,100 public companies, other than
investment companies, that may be
considered small entities.
For purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, an investment company
is a small entity if it, together with other
investment companies in the same
group of related investment companies,
has net assets of $50 million or less as
of the end of its most recent fiscal
year.67 Approximately 178 registered
investment companies meet this
definition. Moreover, approximately 34
business development companies may
be considered small entities.
Paragraph (c)(1) of Rule 0–10 under
the Exchange Act 68 states that the term
‘‘small business’’ or ‘‘small
organization,’’ when referring to a
broker-dealer, means a broker or dealer
that had total capital (net worth plus
subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the date in the prior fiscal
year as of which its audited financial
statements were prepared pursuant to
§ 240.17a–5(d); and is not affiliated with
any person (other than a natural person)
that is not a small business or small
organization. The Commission has
estimated that there were approximately
910 broker-dealers that qualified as
small entities as defined above.69 Small
Business Administration regulations
define ‘‘small entities’’ to include banks
and savings associations with total
assets of $165 million or less.70 The
Commission estimates that the rules
might apply to approximately 9,475
banks, approximately 5,816 of which
could be considered small banks with
assets of $165 million or less. The
proposals may affect these entities
because they are intermediaries that are
required under the Commission’s proxy
rules to forward proxy materials,
including the Notice or any explanatory
materials, on to shareholders who
66 17
CFR 240.0–10(a).
CFR 270.0–10.
68 17 CFR 240.0–10(c)(1).
69 These numbers are based on a review by the
Commission’s Office of Economic Analysis of 2005
FOCUS Report filings reflecting registered brokerdealers. This number does not include brokerdealers that are delinquent on FOCUS Report
filings.
70 13 CFR 121.201.
67 17
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17:49 Oct 20, 2009
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beneficially own their shares through
the intermediaries.71
We request comment on the number
of small entities that would be impacted
by our proposals, including any
available empirical data.
D. Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other
Compliance Requirements
The proposed amendments would
allow soliciting persons more time to
use the notice-only model before a
shareholder meeting and permit, but do
not require, issuers to include
additional, explanatory material in their
Notice.
E. Duplicative, Overlapping or
Conflicting Federal Rules
We believe that there are no rules that
conflict with or duplicate the proposed
rules.
F. Significant Alternatives
The Regulatory Flexibility Act directs
us to consider significant alternatives
that would accomplish the stated
objective, while minimizing any
significant adverse impact on small
entities. In connection with the
proposed amendments, we considered
the following alternatives:
• The establishment of differing
compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the
resources available to small entities;
• The clarification, consolidation or
simplification of disclosure for small
entities;
• The use of performance standards
rather than design standards; and
• An exemption for small entities
from coverage under the proposals.
The Commission has considered a
variety of reforms to achieve its
regulatory objectives.
The proposed amendments, if
adopted, would apply to all issuers and
other soliciting persons, including small
entities, that choose to rely on the
notice-only option. The amendments are
intended to improve the operation of the
notice and access model by providing
additional flexibility in designing the
Notice, permitting issuers and other
soliciting persons to accompany the
Notice with explanatory materials
regarding the notice and access model,
and revising one of the timing
requirements applicable to soliciting
persons other than the issuer to
71 An intermediary is not required to forward
proxy materials to beneficial owners unless the
issuer or other soliciting person provides assurance
of reimbursement of the intermediary’s reasonable
expenses incurred in connection with forwarding
those materials. 17 CFR 240.14b–2(c)(2)(i).
Therefore, any costs imposed on intermediaries by
the rules will be borne by the issuer or other
soliciting person.
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Fmt 4702
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53963
reconcile our rules and better coordinate
the requirement with the Commission
staff’s review process.
We considered the use of performance
standards rather than design standards
in the proposed rules. The proposal
contains both performance standards
and design standards. We are proposing
revising existing design standards, such
as the deadline applicable to soliciting
persons other than the issuer, to the
extent that we believe necessary.
However, to the extent possible, we are
proposing rules that impose
performance standards to provide
issuers, other soliciting persons and
intermediaries with the flexibility to
devise the means through which they
can comply with such standards. For
example, the proposed amendments
regarding explanatory materials do not
specify the content of such information.
We are requesting comment on
whether separate requirements for small
entities would be appropriate. The
purpose of the amendments is to
improve the implementation of the
notice and access model based on our
experience with the model to date.
Exempting small entities would not be
consistent with this goal. The
establishment of any differing
compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables or any exemptions for small
business issuers may not be in keeping
with the objectives of the proposed
rules.
G. Solicitation of Comment
We encourage comments with respect
to any aspect of this Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis. In particular, we
request comments regarding:
• The number of small entities that
may be affected by the proposed
amendments;
• The existence or nature of the
potential impact of the proposed
amendments on small entities discussed
in the analysis; and
• How to quantify the impact of the
proposed amendments.
Commenters are asked to describe the
nature of any impact and provide
empirical data supporting the extent of
the impact. Such comments will be
considered in the preparation of the
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, if
the proposals are adopted, and will be
placed in the same public file as
comments on the proposed amendments
themselves.
VIII. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
For purposes of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
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1996,72 a rule is ‘‘major’’ if it has
resulted, or is likely to result in:
• An annual effect on the U.S.
economy of $100 million or more;
• A major increase in costs or prices
for consumers or individual industries;
or
• Significant adverse effects on
competition, investment, or innovation.
We request comment on whether the
proposed amendments to Exchange Act
Rule 14a–16 would be a ‘‘major rule’’ for
purposes of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act.
We solicit comment and empirical data
on:
• The potential effect on the U.S.
economy on an annual basis;
• Any potential increase in costs or
prices for consumers or individual
industries; and
• Any potential effect on competition,
investment, or innovation.
IX. Statutory Authority and Text of
Rule and Form Amendments
We are proposing the amendments
pursuant to Sections 6, 7, 10, and 19 of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
Sections 3(b), 13, 14, 15, and 23(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended, and Sections 8, 20(a), 24(a),
24(g), 30, and 38 of the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended.
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 230 and
240
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, Title 17, Chapter II of the
Code of Federal Regulation is proposed
to be amended as follows.
PART 230—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF
1933
1. The authority citation for Part 230
continues to read in part as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77c, 77d, 77f,
77g, 77h, 77j, 77r, 77s, 77z–3, 77sss, 78c, 78d,
78j, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78t, 78w, 78ll(d),
78mm, 80a–8, 80a–24, 80a–28, 80a–29, 80a–
30, and 80a–37, unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
2. Amend § 230.498 by revising
paragraph (f)(2) to read as follows:
pwalker on DSK8KYBLC1PROD with PROPOSALS
*
§ 230.498 Summary Prospectuses for
open-end management investment
companies.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) Greater prominence. If paragraph
(c) or (d) of this section is relied on with
respect to a Fund, the Fund’s Summary
72 Public Law 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857
(1996).
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17:49 Oct 20, 2009
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Prospectus shall be given greater
prominence than any materials that
accompany the Fund’s Summary
Prospectus, with the exception of other
Summary Prospectuses, Statutory
Prospectuses, or a Notice of Internet
Availability of Proxy Materials under
§ 240.14a–16 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 240—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
3. The authority citation for Part 240
continues to read in part as follows:
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–
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.
*
(2) * * *
(iii) In the case of an investment
company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the
company’s prospectus, a summary
prospectus that satisfies the
requirements of § 230.498(b) of this
chapter, or a report that is required to
be transmitted to stockholders by
section 30(e) of the Investment
Company Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–29(e)) and
the rules thereunder; and
(iv) An explanation of the process of
receiving and reviewing the proxy
materials and voting as detailed in this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) The date on which it files its
definitive proxy statement with the
Commission, provided its preliminary
proxy statement is filed no later than 10
calendar days after the date that the
registrant files its definitive proxy
statement.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
4. Amend § 240.14a–16 by:
a. Revising paragraph (d)(1).
b. Redesignating paragraphs (d)(2)
through (d)(8) as paragraphs (d)(5)
through (d)(11);
c. Adding new paragraphs (d)(2)
through (d)(4);
d. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (f)(2)(ii);
e. Revising paragraph (f)(2)(iii);
f. Adding paragraph (f)(2)(iv); and
g. Revising paragraph (l)(2)(ii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
Dated: October 14, 2009.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–25232 Filed 10–20–09; 8:45 am]
§ 240.14a-16
materials.
Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection
Internet availability of proxy
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) A prominent legend in bold-face
type that states ‘‘Important Notice
Regarding the Availability of Proxy
Materials for the Shareholder Meeting
To Be Held on [insert meeting date]’’;
(2) An indication that the
communication presents only an
overview of the more complete proxy
materials, which contain important
information and are available on the
Internet or by mail and encouraging a
security holder to access and review the
proxy materials before voting;
(3) The Internet Web site address
where the proxy materials are available;
(4) Instructions regarding how a
security holder may request a paper or
e-mail copy of the proxy materials at no
charge, including the date by which
they should make the request to
facilitate timely delivery, and an
indication that they will not otherwise
receive a paper or e-mail copy;
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
*
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
19 CFR PARTS 162 and 163
[USCBP–2009–0029]
RIN 1505–AC00
Use of Sampling Methods and
Offsetting of Overpayments and OverDeclarations in CBP Audit Procedures;
Sampling Under Prior Disclosure
AGENCY: Customs and Border Protection,
Department of Homeland Security;
Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
SUMMARY: This document proposes to
amend the Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) regulations to provide
further guidance for the use of sampling
methods in CBP audits and prior
disclosure cases. It also provides
guidance for the offsetting of
overpayments and over-declarations
when an audit involves a calculation of
lost revenue or monetary penalties
E:\FR\FM\21OCP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 202 (Wednesday, October 21, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53954-53964]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-25232]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 230 and 240
[Release Nos. 33-9073; 34-60825; IC-28946; File No. S7-22-09]
RIN 3235-AK25
Amendments to Rules Requiring Internet Availability of Proxy
Materials
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are proposing changes to the proxy rules under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to improve the notice and access model
for furnishing proxy materials to shareholders. Specifically, we are
proposing revisions to our rules to provide additional flexibility
regarding the format of the Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy
Materials that is sent to shareholders. We are also providing guidance
about the current requirement for the Notice to identify the matters
intended to be acted on at the shareholders' meeting. In addition to
the proposed changes and guidance regarding the format of the Notice,
we are proposing a new rule that will permit issuers and soliciting
shareholders to include explanatory materials regarding the process of
receiving and reviewing proxy materials and voting. Finally, we are
proposing revisions to the timeframe for delivering a Notice to
shareholders when a soliciting person other than the issuer relies on
the notice-only option.
DATES: Comments should be received on or before November 20, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml); or
Send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number S7-22-09 on the subject line; or
Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal (https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number S7-22-09. This file number
should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help us
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's Web
site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments are also
available for public inspection and copying in the Commission's Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. All comments
received will be posted without change; we do not edit personal
identifying information from submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly.
[[Page 53955]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven G. Hearne, Special Counsel in
the Office of Rulemaking, Division of Corporation Finance, at (202)
551-3430, or with respect to registered investment companies, Sanjay
Lamba, Senior Counsel, in the Office of Disclosure Regulation, Division
of Investment Management, at (202) 551-6784, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is proposing amendments to
Rule 14a-16 \1\ under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 \2\ and Rule
498 \3\ under the Securities Act of 1933.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 17 CFR 240.14a-16.
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
\3\ 17 CFR 230.498.
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Background
As part of a continuing review of the proxy disclosure and
solicitation process, we have been exploring ways to improve the
disclosures shareholders receive when they are asked to make a voting
decision and the process followed when those votes are solicited. In
May 2009, we voted to propose changes to our proxy rules to require
issuers to include shareholder nominated directors in issuer proxy
statements if certain conditions are met.\5\ We also recently proposed
amendments to our proxy rules to enhance the compensation and corporate
governance disclosures that issuers are required to make and to address
certain proxy solicitation matters.\6\ We also approved changes
proposed by the New York Stock Exchange (``NYSE'') to its Rule 452 that
eliminated broker discretionary voting for uncontested elections of
directors at shareholder meetings.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Facilitating Shareholder Director Nominations, Release
No. 33-9046 (June 10, 2009) [74 FR 29024].
\6\ See Proxy Disclosure and Solicitation Enhancements, Release
No. 33-9052 (July 10, 2009) [74 FR 35076].
\7\ See Order Approving Proposed Rule Change, as modified by
Amendment No. 4, to Amend NYSE Rule 452 and Corresponding Listed
Company Manual Section 402.08 to Eliminate Broker Discretionary
Voting for the Election of Directors, Except for Companies
Registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, and to Codify
Two Previously Published Interpretations that Do Not Permit Broker
Discretionary Voting for Material Amendments to Investment Advisory
Contracts with an Investment Company, Release No. 34-60215 (July 1,
2009) [74 FR 33293].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the other ways we identified to improve the proxy
solicitation process is to revise our notice and access proxy rules to
further facilitate informed shareholder participation in the proxy
voting process. In 2007 we amended the proxy rules by adopting a notice
and access model that required all issuers and other soliciting persons
to post their proxy materials on an Internet Web site and furnish
notice of the materials' availability to shareholders.\8\ The notice
and access model was intended to establish procedures that would
promote use of the Internet as a reliable and cost-efficient means of
making proxy materials available to shareholders. Even though we
recently adopted these requirements, we believe based on our experience
that it is important to propose these limited modifications in order to
advance the regulatory goals of the notice and access model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See Internet Availability of Proxy Material, Release No. 34-
55146 (Jan. 22, 2007) [72 FR 4148] (``Internet Availability of Proxy
Material Adopting Release'') and Shareholder Choice Regarding Proxy
Materials, Release No. 34-56135 (July 26, 2007) [72 FR 42221]. The
rules were phased-in over a two year period. Large accelerated
filers, not including registered investment companies, were required
to use the model with respect to proxy solicitations commencing on
or after January 1, 2008. All other companies (including registered
investment companies), and soliciting persons, were required to use
the model for proxy solicitations commencing on or after January 1,
2009.
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Under the notice and access model, an issuer or other soliciting
person may choose to provide proxy materials to shareholders under
either of two options, the ``notice-only option'' and the ``full set
delivery option.'' \9\ An issuer or other soliciting person is
permitted to provide proxy materials to some shareholders via the
notice-only option and to other shareholders via the full set delivery
option. Under both options, the issuer or other soliciting person must
make its proxy materials available on an Internet Web site.
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\9\ The process of distributing proxy materials to beneficial
owners differs from the process for direct delivery of the materials
by an issuer to its record holders. Beneficial owners are owners
whose names do not appear directly in issuers' stock registers
because they hold their securities through a broker, bank, trustee,
or similar intermediary. The proxy rules, specifically Exchange Act
Rule 14a-13, Rule 14b-1 and Rule 14b-2 [17 CFR 240.14a-13, 240.14b-1
and 240.14b-2], impose obligations on issuers and intermediaries to
ensure that beneficial owners receive proxy materials and are given
the opportunity to participate in the shareholder voting process.
Under the proxy rules, intermediaries are required to forward the
proxy materials, other than the proxy card, along with a request for
voting instructions. The request for voting instructions is prepared
by the intermediary and the beneficial owner returns the voting
instructions to the intermediary. The intermediary is required to
vote the beneficial owners' shares in accordance with each owner's
voting instructions when formally executing the proxy card. In the
absence of voting instructions from the beneficial owner, the
intermediary may vote the beneficial owner's shares in its own
discretion under certain circumstances. See NYSE Rule 452.
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The notice-only option permits the issuer or other soliciting
person to send only a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy
Materials (``Notice'') to shareholders. The Notice must include, among
other things, the Internet Web site address where shareholders can
access the proxy materials and a description of the means by which a
shareholder can request paper or electronic copies of the
materials.\10\ Under this option, an issuer must send the Notice to
shareholders at least 40 days prior to the shareholder meeting to which
the proxy materials relate.\11\ A soliciting person other than the
issuer must send the Notice to shareholders by the later of 40 days
prior to the meeting or 10 days after the issuer first sends its Notice
or proxy materials to shareholders.\12\ An issuer or other soliciting
person must then provide copies of the proxy materials upon the request
of shareholders receiving the Notice.\13\ The full set delivery option
permits an issuer or other soliciting person to send the traditional
full set of proxy materials in paper to shareholders accompanied by the
Notice, or to include the information required in the Notice in the
proxy materials.\14\
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\10\ See Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(b) and (d) [17 CFR 240.14a-
16(b) and (d)].
\11\ See Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(a) [17 CFR 240.14a-16(a)].
\12\ See Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(l) [17 CFR 240.14a-16(l)].
\13\ See Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(j) [17 CFR 240.14a-16(j)].
\14\ See Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(n) [17 CFR 240.14a-16(n)].
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According to Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (``Broadridge''),
1,312 corporate issuers used the notice-only option for distribution to
some portion of their beneficial owners under the notice and access
model in the 2009 proxy season.\15\ While issuers may enjoy significant
cost savings using the notice-only option under the notice and access
model, we are concerned by statistics indicating lower shareholder
response rates to proxy solicitations when the notice-only option is
used.\16\ According
[[Page 53956]]
to Broadridge, the percentage of ``retail'' shares \17\ voted by
shareholders in issuers using the notice-only option for distribution
to some portion of their beneficial owners is lower than the percentage
in issuers that exclusively use the full-set delivery option to provide
proxy materials to their shareholders.\18\ In addition, when comparing
between shareholders in issuers that used both the notice-only and full
set delivery options, the response rates of retail shares voted by
shareholders that received notice-only was half that of shareholders
that received full set delivery.\19\ With regard to the effect on
voting by retail account holders, rather than retail shares voted,
statistics provided by Broadridge indicate even lower voting response
rates for retail accounts that received notice-only instead of full-set
delivery.\20\ The available data do not necessarily exclude the
possibility that factors other than requirements of our notice and
access rules may contribute to the different voting response rates,
although the available data do not identify them.
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\15\ See Broadridge Notice & Access, Statistical Overview of Use
with Beneficial Shareholders (as of May 31, 2009) at https://www.broadridge.com/notice-and-access/NAStatsStory.pdf (``Broadridge
Statistical Overview''). Broadridge is the largest provider of
brokerage processing services with respect to beneficial owners
holding through a broker or similar intermediary and has provided
detailed statistical information on the use of the notice and access
model. The Broadridge Statistical Overview is generally limited to
comparisons between issuers that have used the notice-only option
for distribution to some portion of their beneficial owners and
issuers that exclusively used the full set delivery option and
comparisons between the first and second years of use of the notice-
only option. The data that is currently publicly available and
directly comparable to the data in the May 31, 2009 Broadridge
Statistical Overview does not provide a comparison to an issuer's
experience in the year prior to using the notice-only option for
distribution.
\16\ The Commission has long had an interest in facilitating
shareholder participation in corporate governance and in fair
corporate suffrage. See, for example, the testimony of Chairman
Ganson Purcell in 1943, Securit[ies] and Exchange Commission Proxy
Rules: Hearings on H.R. 1493, H.R. 1821, and H.R. 2019 Before the
House Comm. on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 78th Cong., 1st
Sess., at 17-19 (1943) and more recently Security Holder Director
Nominations, Release No. 34-48626 (Oct. 14, 2003) [68 FR 60784],
Shareholder Proposals Relating to the Election of Directors, Release
No. 34-56161 (July 27, 2007) [72 FR 43488], and Release No. 33-9046
in note 5 above.
\17\ The term ``retail,'' as used in the Broadridge Statistical
Overview, does not refer to shares or accounts that are managed by
an advisor and that have previously consented to the electronic
delivery of their proxy materials. See Broadridge Statistical
Overview at 1. When not referring specifically to the Broadridge
statistics, this release uses the term individual shareholders to
more broadly refer to non-institutional shareholders generally.
\18\ According to the Broadridge Statistical Overview, when
comparing the 11-month period from July 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009,
response rates were 4.11% less for retail shares voted in issuers
that used the notice-only option for distribution to some portion of
their beneficial owners (27.69%) compared to issuers that
exclusively used the full set delivery option (31.8%).
\19\ According to the Broadridge Statistical Overview, for
companies that used a mixed approach--using the notice-only option
for some retail shareholders and the full set delivery option for
the remaining shareholders--the percentage of retail shares voted by
shareholders that received notice-only was 13.48% during the 11-
month period from July 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009. In comparison, the
percentage of retail shares voted by shareholders of the same set of
issuers that received full set delivery during the same period was
28.63%.
\20\ The percentage of retail accounts that responded when
receiving notice-only under the mixed approach during the 11-month
period from July 1, 2008 to May 31, 2009 was only 4.10%. In
comparison, for companies that used a mixed approach, the percentage
of retail accounts that responded after receiving full-set delivery
during the same period was 21.44%. To the extent that retail account
data represent individual shareholders, the data indicates a large
difference in voting by individual shareholders that receive full-
set delivery as opposed to those that receive notice only. It is
important to note, however, that issuers (absent specific
instructions from a shareholder) have the flexibility under the
notice and access model to determine which shareholders will receive
notice-only or full set delivery of proxy materials. As a result,
when making such determinations, it is possible that consideration
is given to the historical response rates of particular shareholders
or certain similarly situated shareholders. Consequently, the subset
of retail investors that only receive the Notice may be stratified
to include those shareholders that are least likely to respond to
the materials. Among the other potential reasons for the difference
in these response rates may be an issuer's consideration of the
number of shares held in an account (e.g., all accounts holding 500
shares or more will receive a full set of proxy materials) when
deciding whether to furnish notice-only or full set delivery of
proxy materials.
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We are exploring the reasons for the difference in retail share and
account voting response rates and whether our rules are creating
difficulties or affecting voting rates. We note that there appears to
have been some confusion among shareholders regarding the operation of
the notice and access model.\21\ The legend required to be put on the
Notice does not appear to have provided clear guidance for some
shareholders as to how those shareholders could access the proxy
materials online or request a paper copy of the proxy materials and
vote their shares. For example, the Commission's staff has received
reports of some shareholders attempting to indicate their voting
instructions by returning a marked copy of the Notice.\22\ Disclosing
the matters to be acted on in the Notice in the same format as the
matters listed in the proxy may have resulted in some shareholders
misunderstanding the purpose of the Notice. There may be other reasons
why shareholder participation under the notice and access model,
especially by individual shareholders, is lower, and we are soliciting
comment on why the participation rates are lower and how best to
advance the Commission's regulatory interest in informed shareholder
participation.
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\21\ Our Office of Investor Education and Advocacy has received
complaints about the notice and access model and members of our
staff have heard about the experience of some issuers with the
notice and access model from informal meetings with Broadridge and
issuer representatives.
\22\ Id.
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We are proposing revisions to remove regulatory impediments that
may be reducing shareholder response rates to proxy solicitations. The
revisions are intended to permit issuers and other soliciting persons
to more effectively use the notice and access model. The proposed
amendments are described below. We are also soliciting comment on ways
to improve the mechanics of the notice and access model and other ways
to increase informed shareholder participation in the proxy
solicitation process.\23\ We intend to continue monitoring
implementation of the notice and access rules and may propose
additional revisions in order to achieve greater shareholder
participation.
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\23\ For example, when the amendments to NYSE Rule 452 were
approved, we noted our support for the establishment of an Investor
Education Sub-Committee of the NYSE Proxy Working Group to develop
and encourage the NYSE and its member firms to implement an investor
education effort to inform investors about the amendments to NYSE
Rule 452, the proxy voting process, and the importance of voting.
See Release No. 34-60215 in Note 7 above. Our Office of Investor
Education and Advocacy is also considering ways to educate investors
about these matters.
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II. Proposed Amendments
A. Improving Clarity of the Notice
Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(d) \24\ currently imposes strict
requirements regarding the content of the Notice, and requires the
Notice to be presented in a prescribed format.\25\ The rule requires
the Notice to contain a prominent legend indicating that the document
is an important notice regarding the Internet availability of proxy
materials for a specified shareholder meeting. Among other things, the
Notice also must indicate that it presents only an overview of the more
complete proxy materials available to the shareholders on the Internet
and must include a statement encouraging shareholders to access and
review the proxy materials at a specified Web site address. In
addition, the Notice must explain how a shareholder may request a paper
or e-mail copy of the proxy materials. Rule 14a-16(d)(3) further
requires the Notice to contain ``[a] clear and impartial identification
of each separate matter intended to be acted on and the soliciting
person's recommendations regarding those matters, but no supporting
statements.'' \26\ The intent behind the specific Notice requirements
was to inform shareholders of the availability of proxy materials and
to notify them of the matters to be considered and voted on at the
meeting. The specific limitations on the type of information that can
be included in the Notice were included because we do not intend the
Notice to become a means of persuading shareholders how to vote or to
deliver marketing or other materials
[[Page 53957]]
that may distract shareholders from the Notice.
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\24\ 17 CFR 240.14a-16(d).
\25\ 17 CFR 240.14a-16(d)(1).
\26\ 17 CFR 240.14a-16(d)(3).
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Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(f) imposes a strict prohibition on the
types of materials that may accompany the Notice when an issuer or
other soliciting person elects to follow the notice-only option.
Specifically, for companies other than registered investment companies,
the Notice under this option must be sent separately from other types
of shareholder communications and may not accompany any other document
or materials, except for a pre-addressed, postage-paid reply card for
requesting a copy of the proxy materials and a copy of a notice of
shareholder meeting required by state law.\27\ Therefore, a soliciting
person may not include additional materials to explain why the
shareholder is receiving only a Notice instead of the proxy materials.
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\27\ Registered investment companies may also include a
prospectus or a report that is required to be transmitted to
shareholders by Section 30(e) of the Investment Company Act (15
U.S.C. 80a-29(e)) and the rules thereunder. See Exchange Act Rule
14a-16(f)(2)(iii) [17 CFR 240.14a-16(f)(2)(iii)].
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In light of our serious concerns regarding shareholder confusion
and the potential that our rules may be causing a reduction in
shareholder voting, we propose to revise our rules to provide issuers
and other soliciting persons with additional flexibility in formatting
and selecting the language to be used in the Notice. Rather than
requiring the soliciting person to include a detailed legend that may
seem like boilerplate language to shareholders, we are proposing to
require that the information appearing on the Notice address certain
topics, without specifying the exact language to be used.\28\ We hope
the flexibility will allow issuers and other soliciting persons to
develop a more effective explanation of the importance and effect of
the Notice, including to provide clearer guidance for shareholders as
to how to access the proxy materials online, request a paper copy of
the proxy materials, and vote their shares.
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\28\ See proposed Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(d), which would limit
the required legend to the line ``Important Notice Regarding the
Availability of Proxy Materials for the Shareholder Meeting To Be
Held on [insert meeting date]'' and would require the other
information currently required in the legend to be included in the
Notice, but not as part of a specified legend.
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In addition, we have been informed that certain issuers are
interpreting Rule 14a-16(d)(3) to require them to comply with the
specific Exchange Act Rule 14a-4 \29\ formatting and content
requirements for disclosure of matters on the proxy card when
identifying in the Notice each separate matter to be acted on at the
meeting.\30\ Rule 14a-16(d)(3) provides for more flexibility regarding
the design of the Notice. It is not necessary that the Notice directly
mirror the proxy card. Rather, the rule simply requires that the Notice
identify each matter that will be considered at the meeting (e.g.,
election of directors; ratification of auditors; approval of a stock
option plan, etc.).
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\29\ 17 CFR 240.14a-4.
\30\ See note 21 above.
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Further, in order to mitigate confusion about the Notice and to
allow issuers and other soliciting persons to better engage
shareholders, we propose to revise our rules to permit issuers and
other soliciting persons to accompany the Notice with an explanation of
the notice and access model.\31\ The exception provided would be
limited to the process of receiving or reviewing the proxy materials
and voting. Materials designed to persuade shareholders to vote in a
particular manner, change the method of delivery, or explain the basis
for sending only a Notice to shareholders would not be permitted under
the exception.\32\ With this increased flexibility, issuers could
better educate shareholders about the notice and access model. While
issuers would be permitted to provide their own explanation of the
process of receiving and reviewing the proxy materials and the process
of voting, we expect that many issuers will use standardized materials
prepared for this purpose.\33\
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\31\ See proposed Exchange Act Rule 14a-16(f)(2)(iv).
\32\ As we explained in the Internet Availability of Proxy
Material Adopting Release, ``The Notice is intended merely to make
shareholders aware that these proxy materials are available on an
Internet Web site; it is not intended to serve as a stand-alone
basis for making a voting decision.'' See note 8 above.
\33\ Through informal meetings with the staff, issuer
representatives, intermediaries and proxy distribution service
providers have expressed interest in developing standardized
educational materials to be included with the Notice.
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In addition to proposing to amend our rules to reduce possible
confusion about the Notice, the Office of Investor Education and
Advocacy, in consultation with the Division of Corporation Finance, has
been directed to develop a program designed to educate and inform
shareholders, especially individual shareholders, about the notice and
access model; explain how shareholders may participate through this
model; and explain shareholders' rights under this model. Although the
proposed amendments to our rules would permit, rather than require,
issuers and other soliciting persons to include explanatory information
about the Notice, the Commission strongly encourages issuers and other
soliciting persons who use the notice-only option to better inform
shareholders about the notice and access model. Issuers who have
experienced significant cost savings, but may also have experienced a
significant decrease in participation rates, may wish to consider using
those cost savings in educational efforts designed to increase informed
participation by shareholders.
We are also proposing technical amendments to our rules for
registered investment companies. Rule 14a-16(f)(2)(iii) currently
permits a registered investment company to accompany the Notice with a
prospectus or report to shareholders.\34\ The Commission recently
adopted rule amendments that permit mutual funds \35\ to satisfy their
prospectus delivery obligations by sending or giving investors key
information in the form of a summary prospectus.\36\ Consistent with
permitting mutual funds to use a summary prospectus to satisfy their
delivery obligations, we propose to revise our rules to permit mutual
funds to accompany the Notice with a summary prospectus.\37\
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\34\ 17 CFR 240.14a-16(f)(2)(iii). Unless otherwise specified or
the context otherwise requires, the term ``prospectus'' means a
prospectus meeting the requirements of Section 10(a) of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77j(a)]. See 17 CFR 240.0-1(d).
\35\ We use the term ``mutual fund'' to mean a registered
investment company that is an open-end management company as defined
in Section 5(a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C.
80a-5(a)].
\36\ See Enhanced Disclosure and New Prospectus Delivery Option
for Registered Open-End Management Investment Companies, Release No.
33-8998 (Jan. 13, 2009) [74 FR 4546]. Although the summary
prospectus is not a Section 10(a) prospectus, it may be used to
satisfy any prospectus delivery obligations under Section 5(b)(2) of
the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77e(b)(2)]. 17 CFR 230.498(c).
\37\ See proposed amendment to Exchange Act Rule 14a-
16(f)(2)(iii). We are also proposing a conforming amendment to Rule
498 under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.498], which permits mutual
funds to use a summary prospectus to satisfy their prospectus
delivery obligations. Rule 498(f)(2) provides that a fund's summary
prospectus shall be given greater prominence than any accompanying
materials. We are proposing to amend Rule 498 to provide that a
summary prospectus need not be given greater prominence than an
accompanying Notice. See proposed amendment to Rule 498(f)(2).
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Request for Comment
Has use of the notice and access model made proxy
materials more or less accessible to shareholders? The Commission is
concerned by reports that indicate there has been a drop in shareholder
response rates to proxy solicitations by individual shareholders under
the notice and access model, especially when the notice-only option has
been used. We are proposing
[[Page 53958]]
changes to the Notice requirements intended to make the Notice clearer
and encourage efforts to better inform shareholders about participation
under the notice and access model. Do the proposed changes help in
enabling issuers and other soliciting persons to make the Notice
clearer? Will these changes help address concerns about confusion and
other factors that may be reducing shareholder participation? What
other changes to the notice and access model should we consider to
address these concerns?
What factors have caused the lower shareholder response
rates by individual shareholders to proxy solicitations when the
notice-only option is used under the notice and access model? If the
lower shareholder response rates result primarily from the notice and
access model itself, would requiring issuers to deliver paper copies of
proxy materials to some subset of individual shareholders, such as
shareholders that own over a certain threshold of shares or that have
received paper copies of proxy materials and voted in the past, affect
voting rates? Does permitting issuers to choose to which shareholders
to provide notice-only and full set delivery affect voting rates? If
so, how are issuers exercising their discretion over full set delivery
and are they doing so appropriately? Would additional requirements
affect an issuer's ability to implement the notice and access model?
Are there other alternatives that would increase the voting rates under
the notice and access model?
Should we consider adding requirements that would limit an
issuer's ability to use the notice-only option where the issuer has
experienced a decrease in shareholder participation as a result of
using the notice-only option for distribution to some portion of its
shareholders? For example, should we only allow an issuer to continue
to use the notice-only option if the shares voted or the voting
response rate has not decreased from the most recent issuer's meeting
when they provided all of their shareholders with full set delivery?
Would some decrease, such as 10% or 20% be acceptable? Should we
instead consider requiring shareholder participation to increase from
prior years in order for an issuer to continue to use the notice-only
option? Are there other participation-level conditions that we should
consider?
Will shareholders find the Notice more confusing if we do
not prescribe how to describe the matters to be acted on at the
meeting? Should we prescribe minimum standards for formatting? Should
we instead require a legend to the effect that the Notice should not be
used for voting on matters, and that a separate proxy card or Vote
Instruction Form should be used for voting?
Should we permit the Notice to be accompanied by materials
to explain the process of receiving and reviewing the proxy materials
and voting as proposed? Should we require that explanatory materials be
included? Should we allow these explanatory materials to include any
additional information? For example, should an issuer or other
soliciting person be permitted to explain what the benefits of using
the notice and access model would be? Should we specify by rule the
topics that cannot be included? Should we include the level of detail
in the explanation in this section in the text of the rule? For
example, should the rule specifically provide that the explanation in
the Notice may not contain materials designed to persuade shareholders
to vote in a particular manner, change the methods of delivery or
explain the basis for sending the Notice? Should a soliciting person be
permitted to explain why it has decided to use the notice-only option?
The Commission is aware that there has been some confusion
relating to the Notice and that some shareholders have attempted to
indicate their voting instructions by returning a marked copy of the
Notice. What changes can we make to help shareholders better understand
the Notice? Should the Commission amend its rules to prohibit issuers
and other soliciting persons from including voting recommendations in
the Notice as permitted under Rule 14a-16(d)(3)? Would removing
recommendations increase the likelihood that a shareholder will access
the proxy materials through the Internet? Does the Notice currently
look too similar to a proxy card or Vote Instruction Form? Would
possible confusion in the Notice be reduced if the Commission amended
its rules to require identification of matters to be voted on by topic
rather than identifying the specific matters as they appear on the
proxy card, so that the Notice looks less like a proxy card or Vote
Instruction Form?
Has the notice and access model lowered costs for issuers
and other soliciting persons resulting from the proxy solicitation
process? Have any costs increased? In your response, please quantify
the costs and savings of using the notice and access model, and provide
supporting data where possible.
It is our understanding from informal conversations our
staff has had with issuers and proxy distribution service providers
that a number of issuers were discouraged from using the notice and
access model due to the difficulty of meeting the 40-day Notice mailing
requirement. Would a 30-day deadline for delivery of the Notice still
allow sufficient time for shareholders who prefer paper proxy materials
to request and receive them through the mail? Would changing to a 30-
day deadline encourage use and improve implementation of the notice and
access model? If the Notice mailing requirement for the issuer were
shortened, would any changes be necessary to the filing and mailing
requirements for soliciting persons other than the issuer?
Some issuers have expressed concern regarding the fees
charged by proxy distribution service providers. Have the fees charged
by proxy distribution service providers affected use rates of the
notice and access model? Should the Commission address fees charged by
service providers relating to the implementation of the notice and
access model? If so, how?
Should the Commission consider proposing suspension of the
notice and access rules until a later date to provide more time for
shareholders to understand and be better prepared for the notice and
access model? If so, how much time would be appropriate? Would
additional educational efforts be sufficient to inform shareholders
about the notice and access model, or would other efforts, such as
development of an on-line disclosure and voting infrastructure, be
needed? If so, why?
B. Proposed Amendment to Notice Deadlines for Soliciting Persons Other
Than the Issuer
Under Rule 14a-16, if a soliciting person other than the issuer
chooses to use the notice-only option, the soliciting person must send
its Notice to shareholders by a date that is the later of:
40 calendar days before the shareholder meeting to which
the proxy materials relate, or
10 calendar days after the issuer first sends its Notice
or proxy statement to shareholders. \38\
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\38\ 17 CFR 240.14a-16(l)(2)(i) and (ii).
We created this 10-day period to provide soliciting persons other than
the issuer desiring to rely on the notice-only option sufficient time
to respond to an issuer's mailing of proxy materials and still allow
shareholders receiving a Notice from the soliciting person enough time
to request paper copies of
[[Page 53959]]
the soliciting person's proxy materials.\39\
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\39\ See Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, Release No.
34-52926 (Dec. 8, 2005) [70 FR 74597] (``Internet Availability of
Proxy Materials Proposing Release'').
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The current 10-calendar-day requirement for soliciting persons to
send the Notice to shareholders can create potential compliance issues
for soliciting persons. Under current practice, the staff of the
Division of Corporation Finance reviews and provides comments on
preliminary proxy materials filed by soliciting shareholders in a
contested solicitation. While the staff makes great effort to review
filings and address comments as quickly as possible, there may continue
to be outstanding comments on a soliciting person's preliminary proxy
statement more than 10 calendar days after the soliciting person has
initially filed. Consequently, a soliciting person may not be in a
position to send its Notice within 10 calendar days after the issuer
first sends its Notice or proxy statement to shareholders.
Thus, because a soliciting person is required to send its Notice
within 10 days after the issuer first sends its Notice or proxy
statement, the practical effect of Rule 14a-16, as currently written,
is to limit that person's ability to use the notice-only option. This
is because Rule 14a-16(b)(4) requires the soliciting person to make a
means to execute a proxy available to shareholders at the time the
Notice is first sent to shareholders. Rule 14a-4(f), however, prohibits
a person from providing a form of proxy unless it is accompanied, or
preceded, by a definitive proxy statement. Because the soliciting
person may not have finished revising its proxy statement and may not
have filed its definitive proxy statement with the Commission by that
time, the notice and access rules, combined with current staff review
practice, may, in many circumstances, prevent a soliciting person other
than the issuer from using the notice-only option for a proxy contest
if that soliciting person's initial proxy statement filing is made in
response to the issuer's definitive proxy statement filing.
To improve implementation of the notice and access model, we
propose to amend Rule 14a-16(l)(2)(ii) to require the soliciting
shareholder relying on this alternative to file a preliminary proxy
statement within 10 days after the issuer files its definitive proxy
statement and to send its Notice to shareholders no later than the date
on which it files its definitive proxy statement with the Commission.
We believe that this proposed time period would provide sufficient time
for a soliciting person to prepare its proxy statement and respond to
any staff comments, while still permitting the soliciting person to use
the notice and access model. While the proposed rule does not provide
for a specific period of time before the meeting by which a soliciting
person would need to mail the Notice, the soliciting person should make
the Notice and proxy materials available to shareholders with
sufficient time for shareholders to review the materials and make an
informed voting decision.
Request for Comment
We are proposing to revise one of the two alternative
Notice deadlines applicable to soliciting persons other than the issuer
to reconcile Rule 14a-16(b)(4) with Rule 14a-4(f) and better coordinate
the timing requirements with the Commission staff's review process. Is
there a preferable way to revise the rule to address this issue? If so,
how should we revise the rule?
The proposed rule would require a soliciting person to
send its Notice to shareholders no later than the date on which it
files its definitive proxy statement with the Commission. The
soliciting person, however, has control over the date that it files a
definitive proxy statement. Is it necessary to impose a specific time
period by which a soliciting person other than the issuer must send its
Notice? If so, should we impose a specific time period after the filing
of the preliminary proxy by which a soliciting shareholder must send
its Notice?
III. General Request for Comment
We request and encourage any interested person to submit comments
regarding:
The proposed amendments that are the subject of this
release;
Other ways to reduce regulatory impediments to shareholder
participation and thereby improve shareholder response rates to proxy
solicitations using the notice and access model or otherwise improve
the notice and access model;
Additional or different changes; or
Other matters that may have an effect on the proposals
contained in this release.
We request comment from the point of view of issuers, investors,
and other market participants. With regard to any comments, we note
that such comments are of great assistance to our rulemaking initiative
if accompanied by supporting data and analysis of the issues addressed
in those comments.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Background
Certain provisions of the proposed rule amendments contain a
``collection of information'' within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.\40\ The Commission is submitting this proposed
amendment to the Office of Management and Budget for review in
accordance with the PRA. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to comply with, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid control number. Compliance with
the rules as they are proposed to be amended would be mandatory,
however certain information collections under these rules are required
and some are voluntary. Responses to the information collections would
not be kept confidential and there would be no mandatory retention
period for the information disclosed.
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\40\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.; 5 CFR 1320.11.
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The proposed revision to Rule 14a-16 would permit issuers and other
soliciting persons to include explanatory materials about the notice
and access model along with the Notice. The proposed revision would
still require a legend in the Notice, but would allow more flexibility
in how prescribed topics are described in the legend.\41\ The proposed
explanatory materials would be a relatively short and straight-forward
explanation of the notice and access model that could accompany the
Notice. Finally, the proposed change to the filing deadline for
soliciting persons other than the issuer is not expected to affect the
burden estimates.
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\41\ We anticipate no change in the burden estimates for the
change in the legend requirement. The proposed rule would require
essentially the same information as is currently required in the
legend to continue to be conveyed creating no additional burden.
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B. Regulation 14A and 14C
The titles for the collections of information for operating
companies are: \42\
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\42\ The paperwork burden from Regulation S-K is imposed through
the forms that are subject to the requirements in those regulations
and is reflected in the analysis of those forms. To avoid a
Paperwork Reduction Act inventory reflecting duplicative burdens and
for administrative convenience, we assign a one-hour burden to
Regulation S-K.
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Regulation 14A (OMB Control No. 3235-0059); and
Regulation 14C (OMB Control No. 3235-0057).
We previously revised these collections of information in the
release that proposed the notice and access model as a voluntary model
for
[[Page 53960]]
disseminating proxy materials \43\ and the release in which we adopted
amendments requiring issuers and other soliciting persons to follow the
model.\44\ We submitted the revisions in both releases to the OMB for
review in accordance with the PRA. We received approval for the revised
information collections and now propose a further revision which we
will submit to OMB.
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\43\ See Internet Availability of Proxy Materials Proposing
Release in note 39 above.
\44\ See the Internet Availability of Proxy Material Adopting
Release in note 8 above.
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Under the proposed amendments, an issuer or other soliciting person
will be permitted, but not required, to include explanatory materials
with the Notice. We expect that this information will generally consist
of approximately one or two paragraphs of text. For purposes of the
PRA, we estimate the annual burden if a soliciting person chooses to
prepare the explanatory materials would be approximately 0.5 reporting
hours per issuer or other soliciting person.\45\ We estimate that 75%
of the burden would be borne by the soliciting person and that 25% of
the burden would be borne by outside counsel retained by the soliciting
person at an average cost of approximately $400 per hour. The portion
of the burden carried by outside professionals is reflected as a cost,
while the portion of the burden carried by the issuer internally is
reflected in hours.
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\45\ As we have previously indicated, according to Broadridge,
it processes more than 95% of proxy materials that are sent to
beneficial owners on behalf of intermediaries. See the Internet
Availability of Proxy Materials Adopting Release in note 8 above. We
believe that issuers likely will rely on proxy distribution service
providers to provide the explanatory materials and that issuers and
intermediaries would provide explanatory materials that are
substantially the same to the beneficial owners that hold through
intermediaries, creating no additional annual burden to prepare an
intermediary's Notice.
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The following table summarizes the proposed PRA burden estimates
for Schedules 14A and 14C:
Table 1--Calculation of Incremental Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Estimates for Proxy and Information Statements
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form Annual Incremental Incremental 75% Issuer 25% $400
------------------------------------------------------- responses hours/form burden -------------------------- Professional Professional
------------------------------------------ -------------- cost
(D)=(C)*0.75 ---------------
(A) (B) (C)=(A)*(B) (E)=(C)*0.25 (F)=(E)*$400
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Schedule 14A.......................................... 7,300 0.5 3,650 2,737.5 912.5 $365,000
Schedule 14C.......................................... 680 0.5 340 255 85 $34,000
Total............................................. 7,980 .............. 3,990 2,992.5 997.5 $399,000
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C. Rule 20a-1
Certain provisions of the current notice and access model contain
``collection of information'' requirements within the meaning of the
PRA, including preparation of Notices, maintaining Web sites,
maintaining records of shareholder preferences, and responding to
requests for copies. Those provisions increase the current burden for
the existing collection of information entitled ``Rule 20a-1 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940,\46\ Solicitation of Proxies, Consents
and Authorizations'' (OMB Control No. 3235-0158). Rule 20a-1 under the
Investment Company Act \47\ requires that the solicitation of a proxy,
consent, or authorization with respect to a security issued by an
investment company be in compliance with Regulation 14A,\48\ Schedule
14A,\49\ and all other rules and regulations adopted under Section
14(a) of the Exchange Act.\50\ It also requires a fund's investment
adviser, or a prospective adviser, to transmit to the person making a
proxy solicitation the information necessary to enable that person to
comply with the rules and regulations applicable to the solicitation.
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\46\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq.
\47\ 17 CFR 270.20a-1.
\48\ 17 CFR 240.14a-1 et seq.
\49\ 17 CFR 240.14a-101.
\50\ 15 U.S.C. 78n(a).
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The notice and access model requires all registered investment
companies to post their proxy materials on an Internet Web site and
furnish Notice of the materials' availability to shareholders.\51\ The
Notices, the proxy materials posted on the Web site, and copies of the
proxy materials sent in response to shareholder requests are not kept
confidential.
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\51\ See the Internet Availability of Proxy Material Adopting
Release in note 8 above.
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For purposes of the PRA, we estimate that the annual burden
required to prepare and transmit a Notice to be approximately 1.5
reporting hours. This estimate is based on the PRA burden for issuers
other than investment companies to prepare and transmit a Notice. We
estimate that 75% of the burden is prepared by the investment company
and that 25% of the burden is prepared by outside counsel retained by
the investment company at an average cost of approximately $400 per
hour. Based on the number of proxy filings from registered investment
companies received by the Commission during 2008, we would expect
approximately 1,225 Notices to be filed annually. We estimate that the
total annual reporting burden for rule 20a-1 should be increased by
approximately 1,378 hours \52\ and that the annual cost would be
increased by approximately $735,000 \53\ for the services of outside
professionals to comply with the disclosure provisions of the existing
notice and access model.
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\52\ 1,225 Notices x 1.5 hours per Notice x .75 = 1,378 hours.
\53\ 1,225 Notices x $400 per hour x 1.5 hours per Notice x .25
= $735,000.
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In addition, registered investment companies must permit
shareholders to make permanent elections to receive proxy materials in
paper or by e-mail. An investment company issuer must maintain records
as to which of its shareholders have made such an election. We believe
that many investment company issuers already maintain similar records
to keep track of their shareholders who have affirmatively consented to
electronic delivery consistent with past Commission guidance,\54\ as
well as their shareholders who have consented to householding of proxy
materials pursuant to Rule 14a-3(e).\55\ For purposes of the PRA, we
estimate that a typical investment company issuer will spend an
additional five hours per year, or a total of 6,125 hours, to
[[Page 53961]]
maintain these records.\56\ Because this is an internal recordkeeping
requirement, we do not expect a cost for hiring outside counsel.
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\54\ Use of Electronic Media for Delivery Purposes, Release No.
33-7233 (Oct. 6, 1995) [60 FR 53458] provided guidance on electronic
delivery of prospectuses, annual reports to security holders and
proxy solicitation materials under the Securities Act, the Exchange
Act, and the Investment Company Act.
\55\ 17 CFR 240.14a-3(e).
\56\ 1,225 filings with an estimated one filing per issuer or
soliciting person x 5 hours = 6,125 hours. This estimate is based on
the PRA burden for issuers other than investment companies to
maintain these records.
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Further, the notice and access model also requires an intermediary
to prepare its own Notice and provide it to beneficial owners. We
expect that all of the factual information required to appear in the
Notice will become available as part of the ordinary preparations for a
shareholder meeting. This Notice would be substantially the same as a
registered investment company's Notice, but will be modified by the
intermediaries to provide information that is relevant to beneficial
owners rather than registered holders. According to Broadridge, it
processes more than 95% of proxy materials that are sent to beneficial
owners on behalf of intermediaries, reducing the need to create
multiple intermediary Notices. In addition, the investment company
issuer or other soliciting person will provide the majority of
information required in the intermediary's Notice. Therefore, we
estimate that the additional burden to prepare an intermediary's Notice
will be approximately one hour, or a total annual burden of 1,225 hours
for all investment company proxy solicitations.\57\
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\57\ 1,225 notices x 1 hour per Notice = 1,225 hours. We do not
include a cost to intermediaries for hiring outside counsel because
we expect that the substantive contents of an intermediary's Notice
would be provided by the issuer or other soliciting person. The
estimates assume that Broadridge will continue to process over 95%
of the proxy solicitations on behalf of intermediaries, thereby
eliminating the need for each intermediary to prepare a separate
Notice.
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Finally, intermediaries must also maintain records to keep track of
which beneficial owners have made a permanent election to receive proxy
materials in paper or by e-mail. Like registered investment companies,
intermediaries already maintain records of shareholders' affirmative
consents to electronic delivery and householding of proxy materials. In
addition, intermediaries maintain records as to whether their
beneficial owner customers have objected, or not objected, to
disclosure of their identities to the investment company issuer. Like
investment company issuers, we believe this will result in an
additional annual burden of five hours, or a total of 6,125 hours, for
intermediaries.\58\
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\58\ This estimate is based on the PRA burden for intermediaries
for issuers other than investment companies to maintain records.
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We estimate that the total annual PRA reporting burden for Rule
20a-1 should be increased by 14,853 hours and $735,000 in professional
costs to reflect compliance with the existing notice and access model.
We request comment and supporting empirical data on the burden and cost
of sending copies of proxy materials under the notice and access model
for registered investment companies.
Under the proposed amendments to the notice and access model, a
registered investment company or other soliciting person will be
permitted, but not required, to include explanatory materials with the
Notice. We expect that this information will generally consist of
approximately one or two paragraphs of text. For purposes of the PRA,
we estimate the annual burden if a soliciting person chooses to prepare
the explanatory materials would be approximately 0.5 reporting hours
per investment company. We estimate that 75% of the burden would be
borne by the investment company and that 25% of the burden would be
borne by outside counsel retained by the investment company at an
average cost of approximately $400 per hour. The portion of the burden
carried by outside professionals is reflected as a cost, while the
portion of the burden carried by the issuer internally is reflected in
hours. We estimate that the proposed amendments will increase the PRA
burden estimates under Rule 20a-1 by approximately 459 hours and
$61,250 in professional costs.
D. Solicitation of Comments
We request comments in order to evaluate: (1) Whether the proposed
revision to the collection of information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the agency, including whether the
information would have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of our
estimate of the burden of the proposed revisions to the collection of
information; (3) whether there are ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and (4)
whether there are ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information on those who are to respond, including through the use of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology.\59\
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\59\ 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B).
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Any member of the public may direct to us any comments concerning
the accuracy of these burden estimates and any suggestions for reducing
these burdens. Persons submitting comments on the collection of
information requirements should direct the comments to the Office of
Management and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the Securities and
Exchange Commission, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503, and should send a copy to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090,
with reference to File No. S7-22-09. Requests for materials submitted
to OMB by the Commission with regard to these collections of
information should be in writing, refer to File No. S7-22-09, and be
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Office of Investor
Education and Advocacy, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-0213.
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collection of
information between 30 and 60 days after publication of this release.
Consequently, a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication.
V. Cost-Benefit Analysis
A. Proposed Amendments
The proposed amendments are designed to improve implementation of
the notice and access model. The proposed amendments to Exchange Act
Rule 14a-16 would revise the legend requirements in the rule to make
them more flexible, revise the deadline applicable to soliciting
persons other than the issuer to reconcile the rules and better
coordinate them with the Commission staff's review process, and permit
issuers and other soliciting persons to accompany the Notice with
explanatory materials regarding the process of receiving and reviewing
the proxy materials and voting.\60\
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\60\ We do not expect our proposed conforming amendment, which
would permit mutual funds to accompany the Notice with a summary
prospectus, to have a substantive impact on a mutual fund's decision
otherwise permitted under Rule 498 of the Securities Act to provide
a summary prospectus instead of a statutory prospectus to its
shareholders.
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We expect that the economic effect of the proposed amendments, if
adopted, would be to:
Facilitate participation by shareholders who may be
confused by the operation of the notice and access model;
Provide flexibility to soliciting persons in describing
the notice and access model; and
Facilitate participation by some soliciting persons who
may currently be effectively precluded from using the notice-only
option.
[[Page 53962]]
B. Benefits
As discussed above, by permitting some additional flexibility in
designing the Notice and permitting explanatory materials regarding the
process of receiving and reviewing t