Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 2, To Allow Companies To List in Connection With a Direct Listing With a Primary Offering in Which the Company Will Sell Shares Itself in the Opening Auction on the First Day of Trading on Nasdaq and To Explain How the Opening Transaction for Such a Listing Will Be Effected, 28169-28178 [2021-10968]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 99 / Tuesday, May 25, 2021 / Notices
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing 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. Copies of such filing
also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of
FINRA. All comments received will be
posted without change. Persons
submitting comments are cautioned that
we do not redact or edit personal
identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–FINRA–
2021–010 and should be submitted on
or before June 15, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.54
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–10959 Filed 5–24–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–91947; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2020–057]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change,
as Modified by Amendment No. 2, To
Allow Companies To List in
Connection With a Direct Listing With
a Primary Offering in Which the
Company Will Sell Shares Itself in the
Opening Auction on the First Day of
Trading on Nasdaq and To Explain
How the Opening Transaction for Such
a Listing Will Be Effected
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May 19, 2021.
I. Introduction
On September 4, 2020, The Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC (‘‘Nasdaq’’ or the
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
54 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder,2 a proposed rule
change to allow companies to list in
connection with a primary offering in
which the company will sell shares
itself in the opening auction on the first
day of trading on the Exchange and to
explain how the opening transaction for
such a listing will be effected. The
proposed rule change was published for
comment in the Federal Register on
September 21, 2020.3 On November 4,
2020, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Exchange Act,4 the Commission
designated a longer period within which
to either approve the proposed rule
change, disapprove the proposed rule
change, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change.5 On December
17, 2020, the Commission instituted
proceedings under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of
the Exchange Act 6 to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the
proposed rule change.7 On February 22,
2021, the Exchange filed Amendment
No. 1 to the proposed rule change,
which superseded the proposed rule
change as originally filed.8 The
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89878
(September 15, 2020), 85 FR 59349 (September 21,
2020). Comments received on the proposal are
available on the Commission’s website at: https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2020-057/
srnasdaq2020057.htm.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90331
(November 4, 2020), 85 FR 71708 (November 10,
2020).
6 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90717
(December 17, 2020), 85 FR 84025 (December 23,
2020) (‘‘Order Instituting Proceedings’’ or ‘‘OIP’’).
8 Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change
revised the proposal to (1) add to the requirements
that must be satisfied before a security can be
released for trading in the cross that the actual price
calculated by the cross must be at or above the
lowest price and at or below the highest price of
the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement; (2) revise the fourth
tie-breaker used in calculating the Current
Reference Price (as defined below) to provide that
this tie-breaker will be the price that is closest to
the lowest price of the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration statement; (3)
revise the price to be used by Nasdaq for purposes
of qualifying a security for listing to provide that
Nasdaq will use a price per share equal to the
lowest price in the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration statement to
determine whether the company has met the
applicable Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares (as defined below), bid price, and
market capitalization requirements; (4) add that,
notwithstanding the provisions of Rule
4120(c)(8)(A), Nasdaq, in consultation with the
financial advisor to the issuer, will make the
determination of whether the security is ready to
trade as described in Rule 4120(c)(8)(A), and
Nasdaq will make the determination of whether to
postpone or reschedule the offering, but will do so
2 17
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28169
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, was published for
comment in the Federal Register on
March 2, 2021.9 On March 17, 2021, the
Commission extended the time period
for approving or disapproving the
proposal to May 19, 2021.10 On April
30, 2021, the Exchange filed
Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule
change, which superseded the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
No. 1.11 The Commission is approving
the proposed rule change, as modified
by Amendment No. 2.
II. Description of the Proposal, as
Modified by Amendment No. 2
Listing Rule IM–5315–1 provides
additional listing requirements for
listing a company that has not
previously had its common equity
securities registered under the Exchange
Act on the Nasdaq Global Select Market
at the time of effectiveness of a
registration statement 12 filed solely for
the purpose of allowing existing
shareholders to sell their shares (a
‘‘Selling Shareholder Direct Listing’’).
To allow a company to also sell shares
on its own behalf in connection with its
initial listing upon effectiveness of a
registration statement, without a
traditional underwritten public offering,
the Exchange has proposed to adopt
Listing Rule IM–5315–2. This proposed
only if there is insufficient buy interest to satisfy
the CDL Order and all other market orders, or if the
actual price calculated by the cross is outside the
price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement; and (5) make minor technical
changes to improve the clarity of the proposal.
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change is
available on the Commission’s website at https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2020-057/
srnasdaq2020057-8400450-229459.pdf.
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91205
(February 24, 2021), 86 FR 12245 (March 2, 2021)
(‘‘Notice’’).
10 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91345
(March 17, 2021), 86 FR 15530 (March 23, 2021).
11 Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule change
revised the proposal to (1) clarify Nasdaq’s intent
in Amendment No. 1 that in a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise, Nasdaq alone would make a
determination of whether to postpone and
reschedule the offering, and would not postpone
and reschedule if (i) all market orders will be
executed in the cross, and (ii) the actual price
calculated by the cross is at or above the lowest
price and at or below the highest price of the price
range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement; and (2) make minor technical
and conforming changes to improve the clarity of
the proposal. Because the changes in Amendment
No. 2 to the proposed rule change do not materially
alter the substance of the proposed rule change or
make conforming or technical amendments,
Amendment No. 2. is not subject to notice and
comment. Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule
change is available on the Commission’s website at
https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2020057/srnasdaq2020057-8746216-237241.pdf.
12 The reference to a registration statement refers
to a registration statement effective under the
Securities Act of 1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’).
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rule would allow a company that has
not previously had its common equity
securities registered under the Exchange
Act to list its common equity securities
on the Nasdaq Global Select Market at
the time of effectiveness of a registration
statement pursuant to which the
company itself will sell shares in the
opening auction on the first day of
trading on the Exchange (a ‘‘Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise’’).13
In considering a Selling Shareholder
Direct Listing, Listing Rule IM–5315–1
currently provides that the Exchange
will determine that such company has
met the applicable Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares 14
requirement based on the lesser of: (i)
An independent third-party valuation of
the company (a ‘‘Valuation’’); 15 and (ii)
the most recent trading price for the
company’s common stock in a Private
Placement Market 16 where there has
been sustained recent trading. For a
security that has not had sustained
recent trading in a Private Placement
Market prior to listing, the Exchange
will determine that such company has
met the Market Value of Unrestricted
Publicly Held Shares requirement if the
company satisfies the applicable Market
Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
13 See proposed Listing Rule IM–5315–2. A Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise would include listings
where either: (i) Only the company itself is selling
shares in the opening auction on the first day of
trading; or (ii) the company is selling shares and
selling shareholders may also sell shares in such
opening auction. See id. The Commission notes that
while the Exchange’s current rules also permit
Selling Shareholder Direct Listings on the Nasdaq
Global Market and Nasdaq Capital Market (see
Listing Rules IM–5405–1 and IM–5505–1), the
current proposal would only provide for a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise on the Nasdaq Global
Select Market.
14 ‘‘Restricted Securities’’ means securities that
are subject to resale restrictions for any reason,
including, but not limited to, securities: (1)
Acquired directly or indirectly from the issuer or
an affiliate of the issuer in unregistered offerings
such as private placements or Regulation D
offerings; (2) acquired through an employee stock
benefit plan or as compensation for professional
services; (3) acquired in reliance on Regulation S,
which cannot be resold within the United States; (4)
subject to a lockup agreement or a similar
contractual restriction; or (5) considered ‘‘restricted
securities’’ under Rule 144. See Listing Rule
5005(a)(37). ‘‘Unrestricted Securities’’ means
securities that are not Restricted Securities. See
Listing Rule 5005(a)(46). ‘‘Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares’’ means the Publicly Held Shares that
are Unrestricted Securities. See Listing Rule
5005(a)(45). See also Listing Rule 5005(a)(23) and
(35) for definitions of ‘‘Market Value’’ and ‘‘Publicly
Held Shares.’’
15 Listing Rule IM–5315–1 describes the
requirement for a Valuation, including the
experience and independence of the entity
providing the Valuation.
16 The Exchange defines ‘‘Private Placement
Market’’ in Listing Rule 5005(a)(34) as a trading
system for unregistered securities operated by a
national securities exchange or a registered brokerdealer.
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Shares requirement and provides a
Valuation evidencing a Market Value of
Publicly Held Shares of at least
$250,000,000.
With respect to a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise, the Exchange has
proposed that, in determining whether a
company satisfies the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
requirement for initial listing on the
Nasdaq Global Select Market, the
Exchange will deem such company to
have met the applicable requirement if
the amount of the company’s
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
before the offering, along with the
market value of the shares to be sold by
the company in the Exchange’s opening
auction in the Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise is at least $110 million (or
$100 million, if the company has
stockholders’ equity of at least $110
million).17 The Exchange has proposed
to calculate the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares, for
this purpose, using a price per share
equal to the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.18 The
Exchange also proposes to determine
whether the company has met the
applicable bid price and market
capitalization requirements based on the
same share price.19
The Exchange states that, except as
proposed for a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, its listing rules generally
do not include shares held by officers,
directors, or owners of more than 10%
of the company’s common stock in
calculations of Publicly Held Shares.20
17 See proposed Listing Rule IM–5315–2. See also
Listing Rule 5315(f)(2)(A) and (B) (requiring a
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
for initial listing on the Nasdaq Global Select
Market, not in connection with an IPO, of at least
$110 million; or at least $100 million, if the
company has stockholders’ equity of at least $110
million).
18 See proposed Listing Rule IM–5315–2. The
Exchange states that, for example, if the company
is selling five million shares in the opening auction
and there are 45 million shares issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the listing that are
eligible for inclusion as Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares based on disclosure in the company’s
registration statement, then the Exchange would
calculate the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares based on a combined total of 50
million shares. If the lowest price of the price range
disclosed in the company’s registration statement is
$10 per share, the Exchange will attribute to the
company a Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares of $500 million, based on a $10 price
per share. See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246
n.15. The Exchange also states that, as described
below, the opening auction would not execute at a
price that is below the bottom of the disclosed
range, so this is the minimum price at which the
company could list in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise. See id. at 12246 n.14.
19 See proposed Listing Rule IM–5315–2.
20 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246. The
Exchange states that these types of inside investors
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Sfmt 4703
In qualifying companies for listing in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise,
however, all shares sold by the company
in the offering and all shares held by
public holders prior to the offering will
be included in the calculation of
Publicly Held Shares. According to the
Exchange, such investors may acquire in
secondary market trades shares sold by
the issuer in a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise that were included when
calculating whether the issuer met the
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares requirement for initial
listing.21 The Exchange states, however,
that a company listing in conjunction
with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise will be required to have a Market
Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares that is much higher than the
Exchange’s $45 million Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
requirement that applies to a traditional
underwritten initial public offering
(‘‘IPO’’).22 The Exchange further states
that this heightened requirement, along
with the ability of all investors to
purchase shares in the opening process
on the Exchange, should result in
companies using a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise having adequate public
float and a liquid trading market after
the completion of the opening auction.23
The Exchange also states that it
believes that it is consistent with the
protection of investors to calculate the
security’s bid price and values derived
from the security’s price using a price
per share equal to the lowest price of the
price range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.24 The
Exchange states that it will allow the
may purchase shares sold by the company in the
opening auction, and purchase shares sold by other
shareholders or sell their own shares in the opening
auction and in trading after the opening auction, to
the extent not inconsistent with general antimanipulation provisions, Regulation M, and other
applicable securities laws. See id.
21 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246. The
Exchange states that it expects that a company
expecting to sell a significant portion of its shares
to officers, directors, and existing significant
shareholders would not undertake a public listing
through a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, but
rather would raise capital in a private placement or
a similar transaction instead. See id. at 12248.
22 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246. See also
Listing Rule 5315(f)(2)(C) (requiring a Market Value
of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares for initial
listing on the Nasdaq Global Select Market, in
connection with an IPO, of at least $45 million).
The Exchange also states that, unlike a company
listing in connection with a Selling Shareholder
Direct Listing that could qualify for the price-based
initial listing requirements based on a Valuation, a
company listing in connection with a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise, like an IPO, must qualify for
such requirements based on the minimum price at
which it could sell shares in the offering. See id.
at 12248.
23 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246.
24 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
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opening auction, otherwise known as
the Nasdaq Halt Cross,25 to take place at
a price as low as this price, but no
lower, and so this is the minimum price
at which a company could be listed.26
The Exchange states that any
company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
would continue to be subject to, and
required to meet, all other applicable
initial listing requirements. According
to the Exchange, this would include the
requirements to have the applicable
number of shareholders and at least
1,250,000 Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares outstanding at the time of initial
listing, and the requirement to have a
price per share of at least $4.00 at the
time of initial listing.27
In addition, the Exchange has
proposed to amend Rule 4702 to add a
new order type, the ‘‘Company Direct
Listing Order’’ or ‘‘CDL Order,’’ which
would be used by the issuer in a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise. This would
be a market order entered for the
quantity of shares offered by the issuer,
as disclosed in an effective registration
statement for the offering, that will
execute at the price determined in the
Nasdaq Halt Cross.28 A CDL Order may
be entered only on behalf of the issuer
and the CDL Order may not be cancelled
or modified. Only one Nasdaq member,
representing the issuer, may enter a CDL
Order during a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise. The price of the CDL
Order would be set in accordance with
Rule 4120(c)(9)(B) that requires, among
other things, that the CDL Order is
executed at or above the lowest price
and at or below the highest price of the
price range established by the issuer in
its effective registration statement. The
CDL Order must be executed in full at
the price determined in the Nasdaq Halt
Cross, and all orders priced better than
the price determined in the Nasdaq Halt
Cross also would need to be satisfied.29
25 ‘‘Nasdaq Halt Cross’’ means the process for
determining the price at which Eligible Interest
shall be executed at the open of trading for a halted
security and for executing that Eligible Interest. See
Rule 4753(a)(4). ‘‘Eligible Interest’’ means any
quotation or any order that has been entered into
the system and designated with a time-in-force that
would allow the order to be in force at the time of
the Halt Cross. See Rule 4753(a)(5). Pursuant to
Rule 4120, the Exchange will halt trading in a
security that is the subject of an IPO (or direct
listing), and terminate that halt when the Exchange
releases the security for trading upon certain
conditions being met, as discussed further below.
See Rule 4120(a)(7) and (c)(8).
26 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
27 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246 (citing
Listing Rules 5315(e)(1) and (2) and 5315(f)(1)).
28 See proposed Rule 4702(b)(16)(A) and (B).
29 See proposed Rule 4702(b)(16)(A); Notice,
supra note 9, 86 FR 12247. The Exchange states that
the proposed CDL Order is similar in some respects
to a limit order because it cannot execute at a price
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The Exchange has proposed that
securities listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise must
begin trading on the Exchange following
the initial pricing through the Nasdaq
Halt Cross, which is described in Rules
4120(c)(9) and 4753.30 As described in
detail below, the Exchange has
proposed to modify Rule 4120(c)(9) with
respect to certain functions that are
performed by an underwriter in an IPO
or a financial advisor in a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing, to require
that in the case of a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise, Nasdaq, in consultation
with the financial advisor to the issuer,
would make the determination of
whether the security is ready to trade
and Nasdaq would determine whether
to postpone and reschedule the offering
as described in Rule 4120(c)(8)(A).31
The Exchange states that the
requirement that the company begin
trading of the company’s securities
following the initial pricing through the
Nasdaq Halt Cross will promote fair and
orderly markets by protecting against
volatility in the pricing and initial
trading of securities covered by the
proposal, because a substantial number
of orders are expected to be executed in
the Nasdaq Halt Cross at a single price
rather than in the secondary trading at
fluctuating prices.32 In addition, the
Exchange has proposed to amend Rule
4120(c)(9) to specify that any services
provided by such financial advisor to
the issuer of a security under Rules
4120(c)(8) and 4120(c)(9)(A) and (B),
including a company listing in
connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, must be provided in a
manner that is consistent with all
less than the lowest price in the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration
statement. The Exchange also states that, as a
market order, the CDL Order is guaranteed to
execute in the Nasdaq Halt Cross. See Notice, supra
note 9, 86 FR 12247 n.20.
30 See proposed Listing Rule IM–5315–2. Rule
4120(c)(9) states that the process for halting and
initial pricing of a security that is subject to an IPO
is also available for the initial pricing of any other
security that has not been listed on a national
securities exchange immediately prior to the initial
pricing, if a broker-dealer serving in the role of
financial advisor to the issuer is willing to perform
the functions under Rule 4120(c)(8) that are
performed by an underwriter with respect to an
IPO, and if more than one broker-dealer is serving
in the role of financial advisor, the issuer must
designate one to perform these functions. The
Exchange proposes to renumber this provision as
Rule 4120(c)(9)(A). See proposed Rule
4120(c)(9)(A).
31 See Amendment No. 2, supra note 11, at 14
n.19. As discussed further below, Nasdaq will
postpone the offering only if there is insufficient
buy interest to satisfy the CDL Order and all other
market orders, or if the actual price calculated by
the cross is outside the price range established by
the issuer in its effective registration statement.
32 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
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28171
federal securities laws, including
Regulation M and other antimanipulation requirements.33
With respect to the Nasdaq Halt Cross,
the Exchange has proposed that, in the
case of a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise, a security shall not be released for
trading by Nasdaq unless the actual
price calculated by the cross is at or
above the lowest price and at or below
the highest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.34 This
requirement would be in addition to the
existing process described in Rule
4120(c)(8)(A)(i), (ii), and (iii), as
modified by the proposed changes to
Rule 4120(c)(9).35
Current Rules 4120(c)(8) and (9)
provide that the underwriter of the IPO,
or the financial advisor in a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing, respectively,
provide notice to Nasdaq that the
security subject to the Nasdaq Halt
Cross is ‘‘ready to trade.’’ 36 These rules
also provide that the underwriter of the
IPO, or the financial advisor in a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing, with
concurrence of Nasdaq, may determine
at any point during the Nasdaq Halt
Cross process up through the conclusion
of the pre-launch period to postpone
and reschedule the pricing of the
security subject to the Nasdaq Halt
Cross. The Exchange has proposed to
require that in the case of a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, for
purposes of releasing securities for
trading on the first day of listing,
Nasdaq, in consultation with the
financial advisor to the issuer, would
make the determination of whether the
33 See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(A). The Exchange
states that this change will also apply to Selling
Shareholder Direct Listings under Listing Rules IM–
5315–1, IM–5405–1, and IM–5505–1. See Notice,
supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
34 See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
35 Rule 4120(c)(8)(A) provides that a security will
not be released for trading until (i) Nasdaq receives
notice from the underwriter of the IPO or financial
advisor in the case of a Selling Shareholder Direct
Listing that the security is ready to trade; (ii) the
system verifies that all market orders will be
executed in the cross; and (iii) the price determined
in the cross satisfies a price validation test, in
which the actual price of the cross may not deviate
from the expected price of the cross that was last
displayed to the underwriter or financial advisor by
an amount greater than the selected price band of
between $0 and $0.50.
36 Rule 4120(c)(8)(A)(i) provides that Nasdaq
receives notice from the underwriter of the IPO that
the security is ready to trade. The Exchanges states
that the Nasdaq system will calculate the Current
Reference Price at that time and display it to the
underwriter. If the underwriter then approves
proceeding, the Nasdaq system will conduct certain
validation checks. According to the Exchange,
under the proposal, Nasdaq would take over these
functions of the underwriter. See Notice, supra note
9, 86 FR 12247 n.23. See also Rule 4853(a)(3) for
a description of the ‘‘Current Reference Price.’’
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security is ready to trade.37 Once
Nasdaq has determined that the security
is ready to trade, Nasdaq shall release
the security for trading if (i) all market
orders will be executed in the Nasdaq
Halt Cross; and (ii) the actual price
calculated by the Nasdaq Halt Cross is
at or above the lowest price and at or
below the highest price of the price
range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement. Nasdaq
shall postpone and reschedule the
offering only if either or both such
conditions are not met.38
According to the Exchange, if there is
insufficient buy interest to satisfy the
CDL Order, and all other market orders,
as required by the proposal, or if the
actual price calculated by the Nasdaq
Halt Cross is outside the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement, the Nasdaq Halt
Cross would not be allowed to proceed
and such security would not begin
trading.39 The Exchange represents that,
if the Nasdaq Halt Cross cannot be
conducted because these conditions are
not met, the Exchange would postpone
and reschedule the offering and notify
market participants via a Trader Update
that the Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise scheduled for that date has been
cancelled and any orders for that
security that have been entered on the
Exchange, including the CDL Order,
would be cancelled back to the entering
firms.40 The Exchange further states that
because the CDL Order will be a market
order, if the Nasdaq Halt Cross
proceeds, that order will execute in full
in the Nasdaq Halt Cross, along with
orders priced at or better than the price
determined in the Nasdaq Halt Cross.
The Exchange states that, unlike in an
IPO, a company listing through a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise would not
have an underwriter to guarantee that a
specified number of shares would be
sold by the company at a price
consistent with disclosure in the
company’s effective registration
statement. However, the Exchange states
37 See
proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
39 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12247. The
Exchange states that Nasdaq alone would make any
determination to postpone and reschedule the
offering and would do so only in the narrowly
defined circumstances described in proposed Rule
4120(c)(9)(B). See Amendment No. 2, supra note 11,
at 15 n.19. The Exchange also states that the price
bands established by Rule 4120(c)(8) cannot act to
cause the Nasdaq Halt Cross to occur outside of the
price range disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement, because the actual price
calculated by the Nasdaq Halt Cross is required to
be at or above the lowest price and at or below the
highest price of the price range established by the
issuer in its effective registration statement. See
Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
40 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12247–48.
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that this would be achieved through the
proposed requirements that (1) the
Nasdaq Halt Cross occur only if the CDL
Order, which must be equal to the total
number of shares disclosed as being
offered by the company in the effective
registration statement, is executed in
full; and (2) the Nasdaq Halt Cross occur
at a price per share that is within the
price range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.41 The
Exchange states that it believes that the
CDL Order and related provisions
would clearly define the method by
which the issuer participates in the
opening auction, to prevent the issuer
from being in a position to improperly
influence the price discovery process,
and assures an auction that is consistent
with the disclosures in the registration
statement.42
Finally, the Exchange has proposed to
make adjustments to how it would
calculate the Current Reference Price,
which is disseminated in the Nasdaq
Order Imbalance Indicator,43 and the
price at which the Nasdaq Halt Cross
would execute, for a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise. In each case, where
there are multiple prices that would
satisfy the conditions for determining
the price, the Exchange would modify
the fourth tie-breaker for a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise to use the lowest
price of the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration
statement.44
III. Discussion and Commission
Findings
The Commission finds that the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 2, is consistent with
the requirements of the Exchange Act
and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to a national
41 See
Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249.
Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249. The
Exchange states that, specifically, the CDL Order
entered on the company’s behalf could not be
executed at a price below the low end or above the
high end of the price range in the company’s
effective registration statement, and, as a market
order, the full quantity of shares in the CDL Order
would have to be executed in the opening auction.
The Exchange states that, in addition, the CDL
Order would not be able to be modified and the
financial advisor to the company would be unable
to reschedule the offering once it began. See id.
43 See Rule 4853(a)(3) for a description of the
‘‘Order Imbalance Indicator.’’
44 See proposed Rule 4753(a)(3)(A)(iv)(c) and
(b)(2)(D)(iii). The Exchange states that the fourth tiebreaker used to calculate the Current Reference
Price for an IPO is the price that is closest to the
issuer’s IPO price, and that a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise is similar to an IPO in that the
company sells securities in the offering. See Notice,
supra note 9, 86 FR 12249. The Exchange also
proposes non-substantive changes to renumber the
other alternatives for the fourth tie-breaker. See
proposed Rule 4753(a)(3)(A)(iv) and (b)(2)(D).
42 See
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securities exchange.45 In particular, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
No. 2, is consistent with Section 6(b)(5)
of the Exchange Act,46 which requires,
among other things, that the rules of a
national securities exchange be
designed to prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest; and
are not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The Commission has consistently
recognized the importance and
significance of national securities
exchange listing standards. Among
other things, such listing standards help
ensure that exchange-listed companies
will have sufficient public float,
investor base, and trading interest to
provide the depth and liquidity
necessary to promote fair and orderly
markets.47 The standards, collectively,
also provide investors and market
participants with some level of
assurance that the listed company has
the resources, policies, and procedures
45 15 U.S.C. 78f(b). In approving this proposed
rule change, the Commission has considered the
proposed rule change’s impact on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C.
78c(f).
46 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
47 The Commission has stated in approving
national securities exchange listing requirements
that the development and enforcement of adequate
standards governing the listing of securities on an
exchange is an activity of critical importance to the
financial markets and the investing public. In
addition, once a security has been approved for
initial listing, maintenance criteria allow an
exchange to monitor the status and trading
characteristics of that issue to ensure that it
continues to meet the exchange’s standards for
market depth and liquidity so that fair and orderly
markets can be maintained. See, e.g., Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 90768 (December 22,
2020), 85 FR 85807, 85811 n.55 (December 29,
2020) (SR–NYSE–2019–67) (‘‘NYSE 2020 Order’’);
82627 (February 2, 2018), 83 FR 5650, 5653 n.53
(February 8, 2018) (SR–NYSE–2017–30) (‘‘NYSE
2018 Order’’); 81856 (October 11, 2017), 82 FR
48296, 48298 (October 17, 2017) (SR–NYSE–2017–
31); 81079 (July 5, 2017), 82 FR 32022, 32023 (July
11, 2017) (SR–NYSE–2017–11). The Commission
has stated that adequate listing standards, by
promoting fair and orderly markets, are consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act, in that
they are, among other things, designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices,
promote just and equitable principles of trade, and
protect investors and the public interest. See, e.g.,
NYSE 2020 Order, 85 FR 85811 n.55; NYSE 2018
Order, 83 FR 5653 n.53; Securities Exchange Act
Release Nos. 87648 (December 3, 2019), 84 FR
67308, 67314 n.42 (December 9, 2019) (SR–
NASDAQ–2019–059); 88716 (April 21, 2020), 85 FR
23393, 23395 n.22 (April 27, 2020) (SR–NASDAQ–
2020–001).
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to comply with the requirements of the
Exchange Act and Exchange rules.48
The Exchange’s listing standards
currently provide the Exchange with
discretion to list a company whose stock
has not been previously registered
under the Exchange Act, where such
company is listing in connection with a
Selling Shareholder Direct Listing.49
The Exchange has proposed to allow
companies to list in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise,
which would provide a company the
option, without a firm commitment
underwritten offering, of selling shares
to raise capital in the opening auction
upon initial listing on the Exchange.50
The Commission notes that recently it
approved a proposal by the New York
Stock Exchange to allow a direct listing
with a primary offering.51
As explained further below, the
following aspects of the proposal, as
modified by Amendment No. 2,
demonstrate that it is reasonably
designed to be consistent with the
protection of investors and the
48 ‘‘Meaningful listing standards are also
important given investor expectations regarding the
nature of securities that have achieved a national
securities exchange listing, and the role of a
national securities exchange in overseeing its
market and assuring compliance with its listing
standards.’’ Securities Exchange Act Release No.
65708 (November 8, 2011), 76 FR 70799, 70802
(November 15, 2011) (SR–NASDAQ–2011–073). See
also NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85811
n.56; Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 65709
(November 8, 2011), 76 FR 70795 (November 15,
2011) (SR–NYSE–2011–38); 88389 (March 16,
2020), 85 FR 16163 (March 20, 2020) (SR–
NASDAQ–2019–089). The Exchange, in addition to
requiring companies seeking to list to meet the
quantitative initial listing standards and once listed
the quantitative continued listing standards, also
requires listed companies to meet other qualitative
requirements. See, e.g., Listing Rules 5600 Series,
Corporate Governance Requirements.
49 See Nasdaq Listing Rules IM–5315–1, IM–
5405–1, and IM–5505–1. See also Securities
Exchange Act Release Nos. 85156 (February 15,
2019), 84 FR 5787 (February 22, 2019) (SR–
NASDAQ–2019–001) (notice of filing and
immediate effectiveness of proposal to adopt listing
standards for direct listings on Nasdaq Global Select
Market); 87648 (December 3, 2019), 84 FR 67308
(December 9, 2019) (SR–NASDAQ–2019–059)
(order granting approval of proposal to adopt
requirements for the Nasdaq Capital and Global
Markets applicable to direct listings).
50 See proposed Listing Rule IM–5315–2. In
contrast, Listing Rule IM–5315–1 states that it
permits companies ‘‘to list on the Nasdaq Global
Select Market, provided the Company meets all
applicable initial listing requirements and lists at
the time of effectiveness of a registration statement
filed solely for the purpose of allowing existing
shareholders to sell their shares. This Interpretive
Material describes when a Company whose stock is
not previously registered under the Exchange Act
may list on the Nasdaq Global Select Market, where
such Company is listing without a related
underwritten offering upon effectiveness of a
registration statement registering only the resale of
shares sold by the company in earlier private
placements.’’ Listing Rule IM–5315–1.
51 See NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47.
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maintenance of fair and orderly markets,
as well as the facilitation of capital
formation: (i) Addition of the CDL Order
type and other requirements that
address how the issuer will participate
in the opening auction; (ii) addition of
the requirement that the opening price
must occur at or above the lowest price
and at or below the highest price of the
price range established by the issuer in
its effective registration statement; (iii)
discussion of the role of financial
advisors and addition of requirements
providing that only Nasdaq, in
consultation with the financial advisor,
may determine that the security is ready
to trade and limiting the circumstances
pursuant to which Nasdaq could
postpone or reschedule the offering; (iv)
addition of language reminding
financial advisors that specified
activities are to be conducted in a
manner that is consistent with the
federal securities laws, including
Regulation M and other antimanipulation requirements; and (v)
clarification of how market value will be
determined for qualifying the
company’s securities for listing.
The Commission discusses below the
Exchange’s proposal to allow a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise. First, the
Commission addresses the Exchange’s
proposed market value of unrestricted
publicly-held shares requirement for a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise.
Second, the Commission addresses
concerns it raised in the Order
Instituting Proceedings about the initial
listing opening auction process for
Direct Listings with a Capital Raise and
the role of financial advisors in the
Exchange’s proposed rule change, prior
to the changes made by Amendment
Nos. 1 and 2. As discussed below, in the
amended proposal the Exchange made
several modifications to its proposal
that were designed to address these
concerns.52 Finally, the Commission
addresses a commenter’s concerns about
whether the proposal is consistent with
investor protection and the public
interest given the lack of traditional
underwriter involvement in a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise and
52 See supra notes 8 and 11. In the amended
filing, the Exchange states that, following approval
of this proposed rule change, the Exchange intends
to file a separate proposal with the Commission that
will seek to modify the process for a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise so that it would operate in a
manner similar to the initial proposal, and the
Exchange will seek to address the remaining issues
raised in the Order Instituting Proceedings. See
Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12245 n.9. This
approval order pertains only to Nasdaq’s current
proposal before the Commission, and any new rules
or changes to the rules being approved would
require the Exchange to file a new proposed rule
change pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Exchange
Act.
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concerns about Securities Act Section
11 liability.53 As discussed throughout
this order, the Commission concludes
that the Exchange has met its burden to
demonstrate that its proposal is
consistent with the Exchange Act, and
therefore finds the proposed rule change
to be consistent with the Exchange Act.
A. Aggregated Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
Requirement
The Exchange has proposed that it
will deem a company to have met the
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares requirement if the amount
of the company’s Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares before the offering along
with the market value of the shares to
be sold by the company in the
Exchange’s opening auction in the
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise is at
least $110 million (or $100 million, if
the company has stockholders’ equity of
at least $110 million). The Exchange
would calculate the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares using
a price per share equal to the lowest
price of the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration
statement.54 According to the Exchange,
a company may list in connection with
a traditional underwritten IPO with a
minimum $45 million Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares. The
Exchange states that the ‘‘heightened
requirement’’ for a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, ‘‘along with the ability of
all investors to purchase shares in the
opening process on the Exchange,
should result in companies using a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
having adequate public float and a
liquid trading market after completion
of the opening auction.’’ 55
The Exchange has shown that the
proposed aggregate Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
requirement provides the Exchange with
a reasonable level of assurance that the
53 In addition to the comments discussed below,
one commenter stated general support for Nasdaq’s
proposed method of opening the transaction. See
Letter from Rahul Chaudhary (October 13, 2020).
54 See supra notes 17–18 and accompanying text.
55 Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248. As
described above, in determining that a company has
met the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares requirement, the Exchange will consider the
market value of all shares sold by the company in
the opening auction, rather than excluding shares
that may be purchased by officers, directors, or
owners of more than 10% of the company’s
common stock, notwithstanding that generally the
Exchange’s listing standards exclude shares held by
such insiders from its calculations of publicly-held
shares. The Exchange states that it expects that a
company expecting to sell a significant portion of
its shares to these insiders would not undertake a
public listing through a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise, but would raise capital in a private
placement or similar transaction instead. See id.
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company’s market value supports listing
on the Exchange and the maintenance of
fair and orderly markets.56 The
Commission reaches this conclusion
because the proposed market value
standard for listing a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise is more than two times
greater than the market value standard
that currently exists under Exchange
rules for an Exchange listing of an IPO.
The proposed requirement is also
comparable to the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
requirement used by the Exchange for
initial listing in other contexts.57
Specifically, the Exchange’s proposed
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares requirement of at least $110
million (or $100 million, if the company
has stockholders’ equity of at least $110
million) is the same Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
requirement applied to companies that
list their primary equity securities on
the Exchange, other than in the case of
an IPO or spin-off,58 in addition to being
56 A significant number of exchange-listed IPOs in
the recent years had proceeds that fell below the
$110 million threshold. Using information from
Thomson Reuters SDC Platinum New Issues
database, the Commission staff concluded that,
among 146 exchange-listed IPOs conducted during
the 2019 calendar year, the median offer size was
$106.7 million. Among 196 exchange-listed IPOs
conducted during the 2020 calendar year, the
median offer size was $175.4 million. Further, staff
concluded that approximately 51.4 percent of the
companies that went public via the IPO in 2019 and
33.7 percent of the companies that went public via
the IPO in 2020 (63.6 percent in 2019 and 34.6
percent in 2020 among NASDAQ IPOs only) had an
offer size that fell below $110 million. Similarly,
academic research finds that the median proceeds
raised in exchange-listed IPOs in the United States
were approximately $121 million during the 2019
calendar year and $188 million during the 2020
calendar year. See Jay R. Ritter, Initial Public
Offerings: Updated Statistics tbl.4f (March 10,
2021), available at https://site.warrington.ufl.edu/
ritter/files/IPO-Statistics.pdf.
57 See supra notes 17 and 22 and accompanying
text.
58 The existing market value requirement of at
least $110 million (or $100 million, if the company
has a stockholders’ equity of at least $110 million)
in Listing Rule 5315(f)(2)(A) and (B) is a
longstanding requirement that has supported the
listing of companies on the Exchange since 2009.
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53799
(May 12, 2006), 71 FR 29195 (May 19, 2006) (SR–
NASDAQ–2006–007) (creating the Nasdaq Global
Select Market and implementing initial listing
requirements for that market). In 2019, when
approving a proposal by Nasdaq to require that the
calculation of market value of publicly-held shares
be limited to unrestricted securities, the
Commission stated that it believed that the
revisions ‘‘should help to ensure that the Exchange
lists only securities with a sufficient market, with
adequate depth and liquidity, and with sufficient
investor interest to support an exchange listing.’’
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 86314 (July 5,
2019), 84 FR 33102, 33111 (July 11, 2019) (SR–
NASDAQ–2019–009). The Exchange also applies
this same market value requirement to Selling
Shareholder Direct Listings if the company’s
security has had sustained recent trading in a
Private Placement Market. See Listing Rule IM–
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higher than the $45 million Market
Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares requirement applied to IPOs and
spin-offs.59
Further, as described below, using the
lowest price in the price range
established by the issuer in its
registration statement to determine the
minimum market value is a reasonable
and conservative approach because the
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will
not proceed at a lower price.
B. Opening Auction Process for Direct
Listing With a Capital Raise and Role of
Financial Advisors
As discussed above, the Exchange has
proposed to add the CDL Order as a new
order type to be used in a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise. An issuer would be
required to submit a CDL Order in the
opening auction for the full quantity of
offered shares, as reflected in the
effective registration statement, and the
CDL Order must be executed in full.
Although the CDL Order would be
entered as a market order, it would only
execute at a price at or above the lowest
price and at or below the highest price
of the price range established by the
issuer in its effective registration
statement. The CDL Order cannot be
modified or cancelled by the issuer once
entered.60
In the Order Instituting Proceedings,
the Commission raised concerns about
provisions in the original proposal
regarding the price at which the Nasdaq
Halt Cross could proceed on the first
day of trading, and whether that price
would be consistent with the
disclosures in the issuer’s Securities Act
registration statement.61 Specifically,
5315–1(a); Securities Exchange Act Release No.
85156 (February 15, 2019), 84 FR 5787 (February
22, 2019) (SR–NASDAQ–2019–001).
59 The existing $45 million market value
requirement in Listing Rule 5315(f)(2)(C) is a
longstanding requirement that has supported the
listing of companies on the Exchange that are
suitable for listing and has existed since 2010. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61904 (April
14, 2010), 75 FR 20651 (April 20, 2010) (SR–
NASDAQ–2010–047) (lowering the market value of
publicly-held shares requirement for the listing of
IPOs, affiliates, or spin-offs from $70 million to $45
million).
60 See supra notes 28–29 and accompanying text.
In addition, as discussed above, the Exchange
proposes that it would modify the fourth tie-breaker
used for the Current Reference Price disseminated
in its Order Imbalance Indicator and for the price
at which the Nasdaq Halt Cross will execute to
equal the lowest price of the price range reflected
in the effective registration statement. See supra
notes 43–44 and accompanying text. The
Commission believes that this is a reasonable price
to use because the auction cannot occur at a lower
price.
61 If that price were not consistent with the
disclosures in the issuer’s Securities Act
registration statement, in addition to any issues
under the Securities Act, there would be concerns
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the Commission expressed concern
about the lack of a proposed maximum
price, above which the cross could not
proceed, and that, without an upside
limit, it was not clear how the issuer
could ensure that the issuer’s Securities
Act registration statement would cover
the full amount of securities to be sold
in the offering.62 The Commission also
expressed concern about a provision in
the original proposal that would have
allowed the opening cross to occur at a
price up to 20% below the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement, and that the
Exchange had not explained how
investors would know the minimum
price at which the company could sell
shares in the offering. Further, the
Commission raised a concern that it was
unclear from the proposed rules that the
cross would not occur at a price that is
below the price 20% below the
disclosed price range due to the
application of an existing provision that
permits an underwriter or financial
advisor to select price bands of up to
$0.50 outside of the expected cross price
and still have the cross proceed if the
actual price is within the price band.
In the amended proposal, the
Exchange modified the permissible
price range for the opening cross and
provided that Nasdaq would release a
security for trading only if the actual
price calculated by the cross is at or
above the lowest price and at or below
the highest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.63 The
about whether the proposal was consistent with
Section (6)(b)(5) under the Exchange Act, including
whether the proposal was designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, and
to protect investors and the public interest.
62 One commenter stated that it shared this
concern. See Letter from Jeffrey P. Mahoney,
General Counsel, Council of Institutional Investors
(January 13, 2021) (‘‘CII Letter II’’). In the Order
Instituting Proceedings, the Commission stated,
among other things, that although issuers may file
additional Securities Act registration statements to
register additional securities needed to complete an
offering, Section 5 of the Securities Act requires all
of the related registration statements to be effective
prior to the time of sale. To the extent Nasdaq’s
original proposal may have resulted in issuers
needing to register additional securities beyond
those included in an initial Securities Act
registration statement, it was not apparent how an
issuer could ensure that any additional required
registration statement would be effective prior to
the time of opening.
63 With respect to the potential use of price bands
allowed by Rule 4120(c)(8), the Exchange states that
Nasdaq would set the price bands and that it
intends to set these price bands at zero. The
Exchange further states that the price bands cannot
act to allow the cross to occur outside of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement because, under the proposal
as amended, the actual price calculated by the cross
is required to be at or above the lowest price and
at or below the highest price of the price range
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Commission believes that the changes to
the proposed pricing provisions that the
Exchange made in the amended
proposal ensure that the actual price of
the cross and the number of shares
offered will be consistent with the
issuer’s disclosures in its effective
registration statement. The Commission
further believes that these changes
adequately address the Commission’s
concerns arising from the price at which
the cross would proceed.
The CDL Order and related opening
auction procedures proposed by the
Exchange set forth the method by which
the issuer participates in the opening
auction, help to prevent the issuer from
being in a position to improperly
influence the price discovery process,64
and will help result in the Exchange
conducting an auction that is otherwise
consistent with the disclosures in the
registration statement. Specifically, the
issuer would be required to submit a
CDL Order in the opening auction for
the full quantity of offered shares, and
the security would only be released for
trading in the opening auction at a price
that is within the disclosed price range,
as reflected in the effective registration
statement. Further, the CDL Order
cannot be modified or cancelled by the
issuer once entered. The Commission
notes that it recently approved the use
of a similar order for the opening
process for a direct listing with primary
offering on another national securities
exchange, stating that an opening
process using such order type provided
reasonable assurance that the opening
auction and subsequent trading promote
fair and orderly markets, and that the
proposed rules are designed to prevent
fraud and manipulation and protect
investors and the public interest,
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) under
the Exchange Act.65
In the Order Instituting Proceedings,
the Commission also expressed concern
that the proposed rules appeared to
permit the issuer’s financial advisor
broad discretion to postpone the
offering, which would effectively cancel
the CDL Order. In its original proposal,
the Exchange contemplated that the
financial advisor in a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise would determine when
the security is ready to trade, similar to
established by the issuer in its effective registration
statement. See supra note 39 and accompanying
text.
64 See supra note 60 and accompanying text. See
also proposed Rule 4702(b)(16), which sets forth the
requirements the issuer must follow in entering the
CDL Order, and proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B), which
sets forth the requirements for Nasdaq to release the
security for trading in the opening auction for a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise.
65 See NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR
85813.
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the role played by an underwriter in an
IPO or a financial advisor in a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing, and could
also postpone the offering at anytime
prior to the opening.66 In the amended
proposal, the Exchange proposed to
modify its rules for the opening cross to
provide that, for a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, Nasdaq, in consultation
with the financial advisor to the issuer,
would make the determination of
whether the security is ready to trade,
and Nasdaq alone would make the
determination of whether to postpone
and reschedule the offering, rather than
allowing the financial advisor to make
these determinations. Nasdaq would
postpone and reschedule the offering
only if there is insufficient buy interest
to satisfy the CDL Order and all other
market orders, or if the actual price
calculated by the cross is outside the
price range established by the issuer in
its effective registration statement.
The Commission believes that
providing Nasdaq exclusive discretion
to determine whether to postpone or
reschedule the offering, and limiting
that discretion to cases where the CDL
Order could not otherwise be executed,
adequately addresses the concerns
expressed in the Order Instituting
Proceedings that the CDL Order, which
by its terms may not be cancelled or
modified, could indirectly be cancelled
by virtue of the financial advisor’s broad
discretion to postpone or reschedule the
offering.67 This will help ensure that the
offering will proceed consistent with the
disclosures in the issuer’s Securities Act
registration statement and, for the
reasons noted above, consistent with
Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act.
In addition, the proposed rules
contain a reminder to the financial
advisor that any activities performed
under Rules 4120(c)(8) and
4120(c)(9)(A) and (B) must be conducted
66 Under current Rule 4120(c)(8) and (9), a
security will be released for trading by the
Exchange in its opening cross when the Exchange
receives notice from the underwriter in an IPO (or
the financial advisor in a Selling Shareholder Direct
Listing) that the security is ready to trade and the
security passes certain validation checks.
Specifically, in the case of an IPO, the underwriter
will notify the Exchange that the security is ready
to trade. Then the Nasdaq system will calculate the
Current Reference Price at the time and display it
to the underwriter. If the underwriter approves
proceeding, the Nasdaq system will conduct
validation checks to determine that all market
orders will be executed in the cross and that the
actual price calculated by the cross does not differ
from the price displayed to the underwriter by an
amount in excess of the price band selected by the
underwriter. In addition, the underwriter may
determine at any point during the cross process to
postpone and reschedule the offering. In a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing, a financial advisor
performs these functions.
67 See supra notes 38–39 and accompanying text.
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in a manner that is consistent with the
federal securities laws, including
Regulation M and other antimanipulation requirements.68 This
provision will help to ensure
compliance by participants in the direct
listing process with these important
provisions of the federal securities laws
and that the proposed changes are
consistent with preventing manipulative
acts and practices, and protecting
investors and the public interest in
accordance with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Exchange Act.
C. Lack of Traditional Underwriter
Involvement in a Direct Listing With a
Capital Raise and Securities Act Section
11 Standing
One commenter recommended that
the Commission disapprove the
proposal because it believes that the
proposed expansion of direct listings
would compound problems that
shareholders face in tracing their share
purchases to a registration statement for
purposes of claims under Section 11 of
the Securities Act and may lead to a
decline in effective corporate
governance at U.S. public companies.69
This commenter stated that traceability
concerns often arise when there have
been successive offerings, as
shareholders seek to establish their
standing to litigate claims for material
misstatements or omissions under
Section 11 of the Securities Act.70 The
commenter also stated that investor
concerns about the traceability of shares
in a direct listing were drawn into sharp
focus in current litigation involving a
68 See
proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(A).
Letter from Jeffrey P. Mahoney, General
Counsel, Council of Institutional Investors, at 2, 4
(October 8, 2020) (‘‘CII Letter I’’); CII Letter II, supra
note 62. The commenter stated that on September
25, 2020, the Commission issued an order granting
the Council of Institutional Investors’ petition for
review of an order, issued by delegated authority,
granting approval of a proposed rule change by the
New York Stock Exchange LLC relating to a
proposed direct listing with a primary offering
(‘‘NYSE Proposal’’). See CII Letter I, at 1–2. This
commenter stated that the Exchange’s current
proposal is similar to the NYSE Proposal and cites
its petition for review of the NYSE Proposal as
further support for its recommendation that the
Commission disapprove Nasdaq’s proposal. See id.
at 1–2 (citing Petition of Council of Institutional
Investors for Review of an Order, Issued by
Delegated Authority, Granting Approval of a
Proposed Rule (September 8, 2020), available at
https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/nyse/2020/34-89684petition.pdf). See also NYSE 2020 Order, supra note
47 (setting aside previous approval by delegated
authority and approving proposed rule change).
70 See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 2–3. The
commenter cited to a statement by Commissioners
Lee and Crenshaw, issued contemporaneously with
the Commission’s approval of the NYSE Proposal,
that raised a concern about the potential inability
of shareholders to recover losses for inaccurate
disclosures due to traceability problems. See CII
Letter II, supra note 62, at 3.
69 See
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direct listing by Slack Technologies, Inc.
(‘‘Slack’’), which is still under judicial
review.71 The commenter further stated
that, independent of the Slack case,
direct listings raise important investor
issues that the Commission should
consider before opening U.S. capital
markets up to the potential for a vastly
increased number of direct listings.72
The commenter urged the Commission
to explore updating its ‘‘proxy
plumbing’’ regulations before approving
an expanded direct listings regime.73 In
response, the Exchange stated that the
Commission has previously considered
these concerns and stated that the
Commission determined that investor
protection concerns relating to tracing
challenges are not unique to direct
listings.74
In addition, this commenter stated
that it is concerned that the Exchange’s
proposal would result in a significant
increase in the use of direct listings, and
that more direct listings may lead to a
decline in the effective corporate
governance of U.S. public companies to
the detriment of long-term investors and
the capital markets generally.75 The
commenter stated that a recent direct
listing of Palantir Technologies Inc. had
a multi-class structure that is viewed by
many market participants as
inconsistent with effective
governance.76 In response, the Exchange
stated that it believes that the concern
about a decline in effective corporate
governance is unsubstantiated and
challenges in this context are not of
such magnitude as to render the
proposal inconsistent with the Exchange
Act. The Exchange also pointed to the
Commission’s prior conclusion that it
did not view a firm commitment
underwriting as necessary to provide
adequate investor protection in the
context of a registered offering.77
71 See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 3. In that case,
as noted by the commenter, the defendants sought
dismissal of the Section 11 claims on the grounds
that the plaintiffs could not trace their purchases to
Slack’s registration statement. The commenter
stated with respect to this case that while the
district court denied the motion to dismiss the
Section 11 claims, it is uncertain whether the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals, which has agreed to
consider the Section 11 standing issue on an
interlocutory basis, will uphold the district court’s
reasoning. See id. See also Pirani v. Slack
Technologies, Inc., No. 20–16419 (9th Cir. July 23,
2020), Docket No. 1.
72 See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 3.
73 See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 4.
74 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249 (citing
NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85816).
75 See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 4.
76 See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 5. See also
CII Letter II, supra note 62, at 3 (raising a concern
about the lack of a firm commitment underwriter).
77 See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12250 (citing
NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85815).
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As the Commission stated previously,
the Securities Act does not require the
involvement of an underwriter in
registered offerings.78 Moreover, given
the broad definition of ‘‘underwriter’’ 79
in the Securities Act, a financial advisor
to an issuer engaged in a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise may, depending on
the facts and circumstances including
the nature and extent of the financial
advisor’s activities, be deemed a
statutory ‘‘underwriter’’ with respect to
the securities offering, with attendant
underwriter liabilities.80 Thus, the
financial advisors to issuers in Direct
Listings with a Capital Raise have
incentives to engage in robust due
diligence, given their reputational
interests and potential liability,
including as statutory underwriters
under the broad definition of that
term.81 Moreover, even absent the
involvement of a statutory underwriter,
investors would not be precluded from
pursuing any claims they may have
under the Securities Act for false or
misleading offering documents, nor
would the absence of a statutory
underwriter affect the amount of
damages investors may be entitled to
recover.
In addition, issuers, officers, directors,
and accountants, with their attendant
liability, play important roles in
assuring that disclosures provided to
78 See, e.g., Item 508(c) of Regulation S–K
(‘‘Outline briefly the plan of distribution of any
securities to be registered that are to be offered
otherwise than through underwriters.’’). See also
NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85815.
79 Section 2(a)(11) of the Securities Act defines
‘‘underwriter’’ to include ‘‘any person who has
purchased from an issuer with a view to, or offers
or sells for an issuer in connection with, the
distribution of any security, or participates, or has
a direct or indirect participation in any such
undertaking, or participates or has a participation
in the direct or indirect underwriting of any such
undertaking.’’ For purposes of this definition,
‘‘issuer’’ includes, in addition to an issuer, any
person directly or indirectly controlling or
controlled by the issuer, or any person under direct
or indirect common control with the issuer.
80 Whether a person would be considered a
statutory underwriter would be evaluated based on
the particular facts and circumstances, in light of
the definition of underwriter contained in Section
2(a)(11). See, e.g., SEC v. Platforms Wireless Int’l
Corp., 617 F.3d 1072 (9th Cir. 2010); Harden v.
Raffensperger, Hughes & Co., 65 F.3d 1392 (7th Cir.
1995); SEC v. Int’l Chem. Dev. Corp., 469 F.2d 20
(10th Cir. 1972); SEC v. Chinese Consol. Benevolent
Ass’n, 120 F.2d 738 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 314 U.S.
618 (1941).
81 Depending on the facts and circumstances, an
analysis of activities engaged in by financial
advisors in the context of selling shareholder direct
listings could lead to a conclusion that such
advisors are statutory underwriters. The
Commission understands that practices
surrounding direct listings continue to evolve. The
Commission will continue to monitor such
activities and any developments, and will evaluate
whether further action in this area would be
appropriate.
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investors are materially accurate and
complete. The Commission therefore
does not view a firm commitment
underwriting as necessary to provide
adequate investor protection in the
context of a registered offering. Indeed,
exchange-listed companies often engage
in offerings that do not involve a firm
commitment underwriting.
Moreover, as the Commission stated
previously, the commenter’s concerns
regarding shareholders’ ability to pursue
claims pursuant to Section 11 of the
Securities Act due to traceability issues
are not exclusive to nor necessarily
inherent in a direct listing with a
primary offering, including the
proposed Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise.82 Rather, this issue is potentially
implicated anytime securities that are
not the subject of a recently effective
registration statement trade in the same
market as those that are so subject.
Where a registration statement, at the
time of effectiveness, contains an untrue
statement of a material fact or omits to
state a material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary to make the
statements therein not misleading,
Section 11(a) of the Securities Act
provides a cause of action to ‘‘any
person acquiring such security,’’ unless
it is proved that at the time of the
acquisition the person ‘‘knew of such
untruth or omission.’’ 83 In the context
of conventional public offerings, courts
have interpreted this statutory provision
to permit aftermarket purchasers (i.e.,
those who acquire their securities in
secondary market transactions rather
than in the initial distribution from the
issuer or underwriter) to recover
damages under Section 11, but only if
they can trace the acquired shares back
to the offering covered by the false or
misleading registration statement.84
Tracing is not set forth in Section 11
and is a judicially-developed doctrine.
The application of this doctrine and, in
particular, the pleading standards and
factual proof that potential claimants
must satisfy vary depending on the
particular facts of the distribution and
judicial district, and may be affected by
pending litigation.85
82 See NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR
85815.
83 Section 11(a) of the Securities Act.
84 See, e.g., In re Century Aluminum Co. Sec.
Litig., 729 F.3d 1104 (9th Cir. 2013).
85 See, e.g., Pirani v. Slack Techs., Inc., 2020 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 70177 (N.D. Cal., April 21, 2020)
(addressing Securities Act Section 11 standing and
stating that ‘‘[i]f the text is ambiguous, the Court
‘may [also] use canons of construction, legislative
history, and the statute’s overall purpose to
illuminate Congress’s intent.’ ’’ (quoting Pac. Coast
Fed’n of Fishermen’s Ass’ns v. Glaser, 945 F.3d
1076 (9th Cir. 2019)).
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Although it is possible that
aftermarket purchases following a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise may present
tracing challenges, it is not yet known
whether a court would find that this
investor protection concern is
applicable to a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise. We expect judicial
precedent on traceability in the direct
listing context to continue to evolve,86
but the Commission is not aware of any
precedent to date in the direct listing
context which prohibits plaintiffs from
pursuing Section 11 claims. The
Commission is actively monitoring this
issue and will be able to respond to
such concerns when and if they arise.
With respect to the commenter’s
concern that Nasdaq’s proposal could
lead to a significantly increased use of
direct listings, we acknowledge that the
ability to raise capital in connection
with a direct listing may lead more
issuers to pursue this alternative
method of becoming publicly traded.
With respect to the commenter’s
concern that Nasdaq’s proposal could
lead to a decline in effective corporate
governance,87 the commenter suggests
that the involvement of banks and
underwriters in conventional IPOs may
help investors encourage issuers to
revise corporate governance
arrangements, such as dual-class
structures, that are not favored by such
investors. The commenter cited as an
example a recent secondary direct
listing in which founders of the listed
company, as a result of the company’s
multi-class structure, would retain
effective voting control over the
company as long as they collectively
owned a specified minimum amount of
the company’s shares. Under existing
listing rules, nothing precludes
companies with multi-class structures
that give their founders disproportionate
voting rights from listing on an
exchange in connection with a
traditional firm commitment IPO;
indeed, such listings are not
uncommon. Moreover, the Commission
does not believe that investors will be
precluded from raising concerns about
governance structures in the context of
direct listings; to the extent a company’s
corporate governance structures are of
sufficient concern to investors, they may
be able to influence companies’
governance practices, notwithstanding
the lack of a firm commitment
86 For example, the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals has agreed to consider the issue of Section
11 standing at issue in Pirani v. Slack Techs., Inc.,
2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70177 (N.D. Cal., April 21,
2020) on an interlocutory basis. See Pirani v. Slack
Technologies, Inc., No. 20–16419 (9th Cir., July 23,
2020), Docket No. 1.
87 See supra notes 75–77 and accompanying text.
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18:09 May 24, 2021
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underwriting, through signaling their
unwillingness to purchase a company’s
shares through a direct listing. In this
way, investors may be able to persuade
companies to adopt preferred
governance provisions, whether the
company becomes listed through a
direct listing or a firm commitment IPO.
The Commission finds that the
proposed rule change is consistent with
the protection of investors. The
proposed rule change will require all
Direct Listings with a Capital Raise to be
registered under the Securities Act, and
thus subject to the existing liability and
disclosure framework under the
Securities Act for registered offerings.
Among other disclosures, these
registration statements will require both
bona fide price ranges 88 and audited
financial statements prepared in
accordance with either U.S. GAAP or
International Financial Reporting
Standards as issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board.89
The Commission further believes that
Direct Listings with a Capital Raise will
provide benefits to existing and
potential investors relative to firm
commitment underwritten offerings.90
First, because the securities to be issued
by the company in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
would be allocated based on matching
buy and sell orders, in accordance with
the proposed rules, some investors may
be able to purchase securities in a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise who might
not otherwise receive an initial
allocation in a firm commitment
underwritten offering. The proposed
rule change therefore has the potential
to broaden the scope of investors that
are able to purchase securities in an
initial public offering, at the initial
public offering price, rather than in
aftermarket trading.
Second, because the price of
securities issued by the company in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will
be determined based on market interest
and the matching of buy and sell orders,
Direct Listings with a Capital Raise will
provide an alternative way to price
securities offerings that may allow for
efficiencies in IPO pricing and
allocation.91 In a firm commitment
88 See, e.g., Instruction 1 to Item 501(b)(3) of
Regulation S–K.
89 See Rule 4–01(a) of Regulation S–X.
90 See also NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85
FR 85816.
91 A frequent academic observation of traditional
firm commitment underwritten offerings is that the
IPO price, established through negotiation between
the underwriters and the issuer, is often lower than
the price that the issuer could have obtained for the
securities, based on a comparison of the IPO price
to the closing price on the first day of trading. See,
e.g., Patrick M. Corrigan, Article: The Seller’s Curse
PO 00000
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28177
underwritten offering, the offering price
is informed by underwriter engagement
with potential investors to gauge
interest in the offering, but ultimately
decided through negotiations between
the issuer and the underwriters for the
offering. The underwriters then sell the
securities to the initial purchasers at the
public offering price. When the
securities begin trading on the listing
exchange, however, the price often
varies from the IPO price. The opening
auction in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise provides for a different price
discovery method for IPOs which may
reduce the spread between the IPO price
and subsequent market trades, a
potential benefit to existing and
potential investors. In this way, the
proposed rule change may result in
additional investment opportunities
while providing companies more
options for becoming publicly traded.92
The Commission finds that the
Exchange’s proposal will facilitate the
orderly distribution and trading of
shares, which promotes fair and orderly
markets, and helps the Exchange ensure
that its rules prevent fraudulent and
manipulative acts and practices,
promote just and equitable principles of
trade and protect investors and the
public interest.93 The proposal also will
foster competition by providing an
alternative method for companies of
sufficient size that decide they would
rather not conduct a firm commitment
underwritten offering to list on the
Exchange, thereby removing potential
impediments to free and open markets
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Exchange Act while also supporting
capital formation. For the reasons
discussed above, the Commission finds
that, on balance, the proposed rule
change to permit Direct Listings with a
and the Underwriter’s Pricing Pivot: A Behavioral
Theory of IPO Pricing, 13 Va. L. & Bus. Rev. 335;
Jay R. Ritter, Initial Public Offerings: Underpricing
tbl.1 (December 29, 2020), available at https://
site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/files/IPOsUnderpricing.pdf.
92 While the Commission acknowledges the
possibility that some companies may pursue a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise instead of a
traditional IPO, these two listing methods may not
be substitutable in a wide variety of instances. For
example, some issuers may require the assistance of
underwriters to develop a broad investor base
sufficient to support a liquid trading market; others
may believe a traditional firm commitment IPO is
preferable given the benefits to brand recognition
that can result from roadshows and other marketing
efforts that often accompany such offerings. Thus,
we do not anticipate that all companies that are
eligible to go public through a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise will choose to do so; the method
chosen will depend on each issuer’s unique
characteristics.
93 See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5). See also 15 U.S.C. 78k–
1(a)(1)(C)(i).
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Capital Raise is consistent with the
Exchange Act.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
No. 2, is consistent with the Exchange
Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act,94
that the proposed rule change (SR–
NASDAQ–2020–057), as modified by
Amendment No. 2 thereto, be, and it
hereby is, approved.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.95
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–10968 Filed 5–24–21; 8:45 am]
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
Arca, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Modify the NYSE Arca
Options Fee Schedule
May 19, 2021.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that, on May 12,
2021, NYSE Arca, Inc. (‘‘NYSE Arca’’ or
the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(the ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been
prepared by the self-regulatory
organization. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
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In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of,
and basis for, the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
1. Purpose
[Release No. 34–91936; No. SR–NYSEArca–
2021–41]
The Exchange proposes to modify the
NYSE Arca Options Fee Schedule (‘‘Fee
Schedule’’) to adopt a new incentive
program for Floor Brokers. The
Exchange proposes to implement the fee
The purpose of this filing is to modify
the Fee Schedule to introduce the Floor
Broker Professional Customer Manual
Program (the ‘‘Program’’), a new
incentive program intended to
encourage Floor Brokers to increase
their Professional Customer billable
volume on the Exchange.5
Specifically, the Exchange proposes
that the Program would offer Floor
Brokers a credit of $0.13 on each
billable Professional Customer contract
that exceeds a baseline average daily
volume (‘‘ADV’’) for the month, as
specified below.
The Exchange proposes to implement
the rule change on May 12, 2021. The
Exchange further proposes that the
Program expire at the close of business
on June 30, 2021.
Proposed Rule Change
As proposed, the Program would
provide that a Floor Broker would earn
a credit of $0.13 per contract (the
‘‘Credit’’) for Professional Customer
volume in each month that the Floor
Broker achieves certain Professional
Customer ADV in billable ADV. The
Exchanges proposes that the calculation
of Professional Customer ADV for
purposes of the Program will include
Manual executions by a Floor Broker on
4 The Exchange originally filed to amend the Fee
Schedule on May 3, 2021 (SR–NYSEArca–2021–35)
and withdrew such filing on May 12, 2021.
5 See proposed Fee Schedule, FB
PROFESSIONAL CUSTOMER MANUAL
PROGRAM.
94 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 15 U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
95 17
18:09 May 24, 2021
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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change effective May 12, 2021.4 The
proposed rule change is available on the
Exchange’s website at www.nyse.com, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and
at the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
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behalf of a Professional Customer, but
exclude any Professional Customer QCC
volume, Firm Facilitation trades, and
any volume calculated to achieve the
Strategy Execution Fee Cap (regardless
of whether the cap is achieved).6 That
is, any volume (or contract side) for
which a Floor Broker is (potentially) not
billed, including because of monthly fee
caps, would not count towards
qualifying for the Program because Floor
Brokers are already eligible for
incentives to execute such transactions.
To qualify for the proposed Program,
a Floor Broker must execute 60% over
the greater of:
(i) 20,000 ADV in contract sides, or
(ii) the Floor Broker’s Professional
Customer Manual Transaction ADV in
contract sides during the second half of
2020 (i.e., July–December 2020).7
The Exchange believes that a
qualifying threshold of 60% over 20,000
contract sides in Professional Customer
Manual Transaction ADV is reasonable
for a Floor Broker, including one that
may be new to the Exchange, to achieve
based on the volume executed by Floor
Brokers in 2020. Similarly, the
Exchange believes that the alternative
threshold of a 60% increase over a Floor
Broker’s Professional Customer Manual
Transaction ADV in contract sides
during the second half of 2020 is
reasonable for those Floor Brokers that
achieve more than 20,000 ADV billable
contract sides, given the increased
options volume executed by Floor
Brokers in the past year.
The Exchange believes the proposed
Credit would encourage Floor Brokers to
seek out, and increase, Professional
Customer order flow for execution on
the Exchange. The Exchange’s fees are
constrained by intermarket competition,
as OTP Holders and OTP Firms
(collectively, ‘‘OTP Holders’’) may
direct their order flow to any of the 16
options exchanges, including those that
may offer similar incentives. Thus, OTP
Holders have a choice of where they
direct their order flow. Fees and credits
for Floor Broker activity are designed to
encourage Floor Brokers to execute a
variety of transaction types on the
Exchange, and the Program is intended
to augment those fees and credits by
offering an incentive to encourage the
execution of Professional Customer
billable volume. The Exchange notes
that all market participants stand to
benefit from any increase in billable
volume by Floor Brokers, which
promotes market depth, facilitates
tighter spreads, and enhances price
discovery, and may lead to a
6 See
7 See
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id.
id.
25MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 99 (Tuesday, May 25, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28169-28178]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-10968]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-91947; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2020-057]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 2, To
Allow Companies To List in Connection With a Direct Listing With a
Primary Offering in Which the Company Will Sell Shares Itself in the
Opening Auction on the First Day of Trading on Nasdaq and To Explain
How the Opening Transaction for Such a Listing Will Be Effected
May 19, 2021.
I. Introduction
On September 4, 2020, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'' or
the ``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4
thereunder,\2\ a proposed rule change to allow companies to list in
connection with a primary offering in which the company will sell
shares itself in the opening auction on the first day of trading on the
Exchange and to explain how the opening transaction for such a listing
will be effected. The proposed rule change was published for comment in
the Federal Register on September 21, 2020.\3\ On November 4, 2020,
pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the Exchange Act,\4\ the Commission
designated a longer period within which to either approve the proposed
rule change, disapprove the proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule
change.\5\ On December 17, 2020, the Commission instituted proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Exchange Act \6\ to determine whether
to approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\7\ On February 22,
2021, the Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change,
which superseded the proposed rule change as originally filed.\8\ The
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1, was published for
comment in the Federal Register on March 2, 2021.\9\ On March 17, 2021,
the Commission extended the time period for approving or disapproving
the proposal to May 19, 2021.\10\ On April 30, 2021, the Exchange filed
Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule change, which superseded the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1.\11\ The
Commission is approving the proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 2.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89878 (September 15,
2020), 85 FR 59349 (September 21, 2020). Comments received on the
proposal are available on the Commission's website at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2020-057/srnasdaq2020057.htm.
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90331 (November 4,
2020), 85 FR 71708 (November 10, 2020).
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 90717 (December 17,
2020), 85 FR 84025 (December 23, 2020) (``Order Instituting
Proceedings'' or ``OIP'').
\8\ Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change revised the
proposal to (1) add to the requirements that must be satisfied
before a security can be released for trading in the cross that the
actual price calculated by the cross must be at or above the lowest
price and at or below the highest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective registration statement;
(2) revise the fourth tie-breaker used in calculating the Current
Reference Price (as defined below) to provide that this tie-breaker
will be the price that is closest to the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration
statement; (3) revise the price to be used by Nasdaq for purposes of
qualifying a security for listing to provide that Nasdaq will use a
price per share equal to the lowest price in the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration statement to
determine whether the company has met the applicable Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares (as defined below), bid price, and
market capitalization requirements; (4) add that, notwithstanding
the provisions of Rule 4120(c)(8)(A), Nasdaq, in consultation with
the financial advisor to the issuer, will make the determination of
whether the security is ready to trade as described in Rule
4120(c)(8)(A), and Nasdaq will make the determination of whether to
postpone or reschedule the offering, but will do so only if there is
insufficient buy interest to satisfy the CDL Order and all other
market orders, or if the actual price calculated by the cross is
outside the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement; and (5) make minor technical changes to
improve the clarity of the proposal. Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change is available on the Commission's website at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2020-057/srnasdaq2020057-8400450-229459.pdf.
\9\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91205 (February 24,
2021), 86 FR 12245 (March 2, 2021) (``Notice'').
\10\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91345 (March 17,
2021), 86 FR 15530 (March 23, 2021).
\11\ Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule change revised the
proposal to (1) clarify Nasdaq's intent in Amendment No. 1 that in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq alone would make a
determination of whether to postpone and reschedule the offering,
and would not postpone and reschedule if (i) all market orders will
be executed in the cross, and (ii) the actual price calculated by
the cross is at or above the lowest price and at or below the
highest price of the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement; and (2) make minor technical and
conforming changes to improve the clarity of the proposal. Because
the changes in Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule change do not
materially alter the substance of the proposed rule change or make
conforming or technical amendments, Amendment No. 2. is not subject
to notice and comment. Amendment No. 2 to the proposed rule change
is available on the Commission's website at https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2020-057/srnasdaq2020057-8746216-237241.pdf.
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II. Description of the Proposal, as Modified by Amendment No. 2
Listing Rule IM-5315-1 provides additional listing requirements for
listing a company that has not previously had its common equity
securities registered under the Exchange Act on the Nasdaq Global
Select Market at the time of effectiveness of a registration statement
\12\ filed solely for the purpose of allowing existing shareholders to
sell their shares (a ``Selling Shareholder Direct Listing''). To allow
a company to also sell shares on its own behalf in connection with its
initial listing upon effectiveness of a registration statement, without
a traditional underwritten public offering, the Exchange has proposed
to adopt Listing Rule IM-5315-2. This proposed
[[Page 28170]]
rule would allow a company that has not previously had its common
equity securities registered under the Exchange Act to list its common
equity securities on the Nasdaq Global Select Market at the time of
effectiveness of a registration statement pursuant to which the company
itself will sell shares in the opening auction on the first day of
trading on the Exchange (a ``Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise'').\13\
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\12\ The reference to a registration statement refers to a
registration statement effective under the Securities Act of 1933
(``Securities Act'').
\13\ See proposed Listing Rule IM-5315-2. A Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise would include listings where either: (i) Only the
company itself is selling shares in the opening auction on the first
day of trading; or (ii) the company is selling shares and selling
shareholders may also sell shares in such opening auction. See id.
The Commission notes that while the Exchange's current rules also
permit Selling Shareholder Direct Listings on the Nasdaq Global
Market and Nasdaq Capital Market (see Listing Rules IM-5405-1 and
IM-5505-1), the current proposal would only provide for a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise on the Nasdaq Global Select Market.
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In considering a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing, Listing Rule
IM-5315-1 currently provides that the Exchange will determine that such
company has met the applicable Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares \14\ requirement based on the lesser of: (i) An independent
third-party valuation of the company (a ``Valuation''); \15\ and (ii)
the most recent trading price for the company's common stock in a
Private Placement Market \16\ where there has been sustained recent
trading. For a security that has not had sustained recent trading in a
Private Placement Market prior to listing, the Exchange will determine
that such company has met the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares requirement if the company satisfies the applicable Market
Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement and provides a
Valuation evidencing a Market Value of Publicly Held Shares of at least
$250,000,000.
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\14\ ``Restricted Securities'' means securities that are subject
to resale restrictions for any reason, including, but not limited
to, securities: (1) Acquired directly or indirectly from the issuer
or an affiliate of the issuer in unregistered offerings such as
private placements or Regulation D offerings; (2) acquired through
an employee stock benefit plan or as compensation for professional
services; (3) acquired in reliance on Regulation S, which cannot be
resold within the United States; (4) subject to a lockup agreement
or a similar contractual restriction; or (5) considered ``restricted
securities'' under Rule 144. See Listing Rule 5005(a)(37).
``Unrestricted Securities'' means securities that are not Restricted
Securities. See Listing Rule 5005(a)(46). ``Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares'' means the Publicly Held Shares that are Unrestricted
Securities. See Listing Rule 5005(a)(45). See also Listing Rule
5005(a)(23) and (35) for definitions of ``Market Value'' and
``Publicly Held Shares.''
\15\ Listing Rule IM-5315-1 describes the requirement for a
Valuation, including the experience and independence of the entity
providing the Valuation.
\16\ The Exchange defines ``Private Placement Market'' in
Listing Rule 5005(a)(34) as a trading system for unregistered
securities operated by a national securities exchange or a
registered broker-dealer.
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With respect to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, the Exchange
has proposed that, in determining whether a company satisfies the
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement for
initial listing on the Nasdaq Global Select Market, the Exchange will
deem such company to have met the applicable requirement if the amount
of the company's Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares before the offering,
along with the market value of the shares to be sold by the company in
the Exchange's opening auction in the Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise is at least $110 million (or $100 million, if the company has
stockholders' equity of at least $110 million).\17\ The Exchange has
proposed to calculate the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares, for this purpose, using a price per share equal to the lowest
price of the price range disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.\18\ The Exchange also proposes to determine
whether the company has met the applicable bid price and market
capitalization requirements based on the same share price.\19\
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\17\ See proposed Listing Rule IM-5315-2. See also Listing Rule
5315(f)(2)(A) and (B) (requiring a Market Value of Unrestricted
Publicly Held Shares for initial listing on the Nasdaq Global Select
Market, not in connection with an IPO, of at least $110 million; or
at least $100 million, if the company has stockholders' equity of at
least $110 million).
\18\ See proposed Listing Rule IM-5315-2. The Exchange states
that, for example, if the company is selling five million shares in
the opening auction and there are 45 million shares issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the listing that are eligible for
inclusion as Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares based on disclosure
in the company's registration statement, then the Exchange would
calculate the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
based on a combined total of 50 million shares. If the lowest price
of the price range disclosed in the company's registration statement
is $10 per share, the Exchange will attribute to the company a
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares of $500 million,
based on a $10 price per share. See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR
12246 n.15. The Exchange also states that, as described below, the
opening auction would not execute at a price that is below the
bottom of the disclosed range, so this is the minimum price at which
the company could list in connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise. See id. at 12246 n.14.
\19\ See proposed Listing Rule IM-5315-2.
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The Exchange states that, except as proposed for a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise, its listing rules generally do not include shares
held by officers, directors, or owners of more than 10% of the
company's common stock in calculations of Publicly Held Shares.\20\ In
qualifying companies for listing in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise, however, all shares sold by the company in the offering and all
shares held by public holders prior to the offering will be included in
the calculation of Publicly Held Shares. According to the Exchange,
such investors may acquire in secondary market trades shares sold by
the issuer in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise that were included
when calculating whether the issuer met the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement for initial listing.\21\
The Exchange states, however, that a company listing in conjunction
with a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will be required to have a
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares that is much higher
than the Exchange's $45 million Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares requirement that applies to a traditional underwritten
initial public offering (``IPO'').\22\ The Exchange further states that
this heightened requirement, along with the ability of all investors to
purchase shares in the opening process on the Exchange, should result
in companies using a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise having
adequate public float and a liquid trading market after the completion
of the opening auction.\23\
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\20\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246. The Exchange states
that these types of inside investors may purchase shares sold by the
company in the opening auction, and purchase shares sold by other
shareholders or sell their own shares in the opening auction and in
trading after the opening auction, to the extent not inconsistent
with general anti-manipulation provisions, Regulation M, and other
applicable securities laws. See id.
\21\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246. The Exchange states
that it expects that a company expecting to sell a significant
portion of its shares to officers, directors, and existing
significant shareholders would not undertake a public listing
through a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, but rather would
raise capital in a private placement or a similar transaction
instead. See id. at 12248.
\22\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246. See also Listing
Rule 5315(f)(2)(C) (requiring a Market Value of Unrestricted
Publicly Held Shares for initial listing on the Nasdaq Global Select
Market, in connection with an IPO, of at least $45 million). The
Exchange also states that, unlike a company listing in connection
with a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing that could qualify for the
price-based initial listing requirements based on a Valuation, a
company listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise, like an IPO, must qualify for such requirements based on the
minimum price at which it could sell shares in the offering. See id.
at 12248.
\23\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246.
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The Exchange also states that it believes that it is consistent
with the protection of investors to calculate the security's bid price
and values derived from the security's price using a price per share
equal to the lowest price of the price range disclosed by the issuer in
its effective registration statement.\24\ The Exchange states that it
will allow the
[[Page 28171]]
opening auction, otherwise known as the Nasdaq Halt Cross,\25\ to take
place at a price as low as this price, but no lower, and so this is the
minimum price at which a company could be listed.\26\
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\24\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
\25\ ``Nasdaq Halt Cross'' means the process for determining the
price at which Eligible Interest shall be executed at the open of
trading for a halted security and for executing that Eligible
Interest. See Rule 4753(a)(4). ``Eligible Interest'' means any
quotation or any order that has been entered into the system and
designated with a time-in-force that would allow the order to be in
force at the time of the Halt Cross. See Rule 4753(a)(5). Pursuant
to Rule 4120, the Exchange will halt trading in a security that is
the subject of an IPO (or direct listing), and terminate that halt
when the Exchange releases the security for trading upon certain
conditions being met, as discussed further below. See Rule
4120(a)(7) and (c)(8).
\26\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
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The Exchange states that any company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise would continue to be subject to,
and required to meet, all other applicable initial listing
requirements. According to the Exchange, this would include the
requirements to have the applicable number of shareholders and at least
1,250,000 Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares outstanding at the time of
initial listing, and the requirement to have a price per share of at
least $4.00 at the time of initial listing.\27\
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\27\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12246 (citing Listing Rules
5315(e)(1) and (2) and 5315(f)(1)).
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In addition, the Exchange has proposed to amend Rule 4702 to add a
new order type, the ``Company Direct Listing Order'' or ``CDL Order,''
which would be used by the issuer in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise. This would be a market order entered for the quantity of shares
offered by the issuer, as disclosed in an effective registration
statement for the offering, that will execute at the price determined
in the Nasdaq Halt Cross.\28\ A CDL Order may be entered only on behalf
of the issuer and the CDL Order may not be cancelled or modified. Only
one Nasdaq member, representing the issuer, may enter a CDL Order
during a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. The price of the CDL
Order would be set in accordance with Rule 4120(c)(9)(B) that requires,
among other things, that the CDL Order is executed at or above the
lowest price and at or below the highest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective registration statement. The
CDL Order must be executed in full at the price determined in the
Nasdaq Halt Cross, and all orders priced better than the price
determined in the Nasdaq Halt Cross also would need to be
satisfied.\29\
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\28\ See proposed Rule 4702(b)(16)(A) and (B).
\29\ See proposed Rule 4702(b)(16)(A); Notice, supra note 9, 86
FR 12247. The Exchange states that the proposed CDL Order is similar
in some respects to a limit order because it cannot execute at a
price less than the lowest price in the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration statement. The Exchange also
states that, as a market order, the CDL Order is guaranteed to
execute in the Nasdaq Halt Cross. See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR
12247 n.20.
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The Exchange has proposed that securities listing in connection
with a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise must begin trading on the
Exchange following the initial pricing through the Nasdaq Halt Cross,
which is described in Rules 4120(c)(9) and 4753.\30\ As described in
detail below, the Exchange has proposed to modify Rule 4120(c)(9) with
respect to certain functions that are performed by an underwriter in an
IPO or a financial advisor in a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing, to
require that in the case of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise,
Nasdaq, in consultation with the financial advisor to the issuer, would
make the determination of whether the security is ready to trade and
Nasdaq would determine whether to postpone and reschedule the offering
as described in Rule 4120(c)(8)(A).\31\ The Exchange states that the
requirement that the company begin trading of the company's securities
following the initial pricing through the Nasdaq Halt Cross will
promote fair and orderly markets by protecting against volatility in
the pricing and initial trading of securities covered by the proposal,
because a substantial number of orders are expected to be executed in
the Nasdaq Halt Cross at a single price rather than in the secondary
trading at fluctuating prices.\32\ In addition, the Exchange has
proposed to amend Rule 4120(c)(9) to specify that any services provided
by such financial advisor to the issuer of a security under Rules
4120(c)(8) and 4120(c)(9)(A) and (B), including a company listing in
connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, must be provided
in a manner that is consistent with all federal securities laws,
including Regulation M and other anti-manipulation requirements.\33\
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\30\ See proposed Listing Rule IM-5315-2. Rule 4120(c)(9) states
that the process for halting and initial pricing of a security that
is subject to an IPO is also available for the initial pricing of
any other security that has not been listed on a national securities
exchange immediately prior to the initial pricing, if a broker-
dealer serving in the role of financial advisor to the issuer is
willing to perform the functions under Rule 4120(c)(8) that are
performed by an underwriter with respect to an IPO, and if more than
one broker-dealer is serving in the role of financial advisor, the
issuer must designate one to perform these functions. The Exchange
proposes to renumber this provision as Rule 4120(c)(9)(A). See
proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(A).
\31\ See Amendment No. 2, supra note 11, at 14 n.19. As
discussed further below, Nasdaq will postpone the offering only if
there is insufficient buy interest to satisfy the CDL Order and all
other market orders, or if the actual price calculated by the cross
is outside the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.
\32\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
\33\ See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(A). The Exchange states that
this change will also apply to Selling Shareholder Direct Listings
under Listing Rules IM-5315-1, IM-5405-1, and IM-5505-1. See Notice,
supra note 9, 86 FR 12248.
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With respect to the Nasdaq Halt Cross, the Exchange has proposed
that, in the case of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, a security
shall not be released for trading by Nasdaq unless the actual price
calculated by the cross is at or above the lowest price and at or below
the highest price of the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.\34\ This requirement would be in
addition to the existing process described in Rule 4120(c)(8)(A)(i),
(ii), and (iii), as modified by the proposed changes to Rule
4120(c)(9).\35\
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\34\ See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
\35\ Rule 4120(c)(8)(A) provides that a security will not be
released for trading until (i) Nasdaq receives notice from the
underwriter of the IPO or financial advisor in the case of a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing that the security is ready to trade; (ii)
the system verifies that all market orders will be executed in the
cross; and (iii) the price determined in the cross satisfies a price
validation test, in which the actual price of the cross may not
deviate from the expected price of the cross that was last displayed
to the underwriter or financial advisor by an amount greater than
the selected price band of between $0 and $0.50.
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Current Rules 4120(c)(8) and (9) provide that the underwriter of
the IPO, or the financial advisor in a Selling Shareholder Direct
Listing, respectively, provide notice to Nasdaq that the security
subject to the Nasdaq Halt Cross is ``ready to trade.'' \36\ These
rules also provide that the underwriter of the IPO, or the financial
advisor in a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing, with concurrence of
Nasdaq, may determine at any point during the Nasdaq Halt Cross process
up through the conclusion of the pre-launch period to postpone and
reschedule the pricing of the security subject to the Nasdaq Halt
Cross. The Exchange has proposed to require that in the case of a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, for purposes of releasing
securities for trading on the first day of listing, Nasdaq, in
consultation with the financial advisor to the issuer, would make the
determination of whether the
[[Page 28172]]
security is ready to trade.\37\ Once Nasdaq has determined that the
security is ready to trade, Nasdaq shall release the security for
trading if (i) all market orders will be executed in the Nasdaq Halt
Cross; and (ii) the actual price calculated by the Nasdaq Halt Cross is
at or above the lowest price and at or below the highest price of the
price range established by the issuer in its effective registration
statement. Nasdaq shall postpone and reschedule the offering only if
either or both such conditions are not met.\38\
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\36\ Rule 4120(c)(8)(A)(i) provides that Nasdaq receives notice
from the underwriter of the IPO that the security is ready to trade.
The Exchanges states that the Nasdaq system will calculate the
Current Reference Price at that time and display it to the
underwriter. If the underwriter then approves proceeding, the Nasdaq
system will conduct certain validation checks. According to the
Exchange, under the proposal, Nasdaq would take over these functions
of the underwriter. See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12247 n.23. See
also Rule 4853(a)(3) for a description of the ``Current Reference
Price.''
\37\ See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
\38\ See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
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According to the Exchange, if there is insufficient buy interest to
satisfy the CDL Order, and all other market orders, as required by the
proposal, or if the actual price calculated by the Nasdaq Halt Cross is
outside the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement, the Nasdaq Halt Cross would not be allowed to
proceed and such security would not begin trading.\39\ The Exchange
represents that, if the Nasdaq Halt Cross cannot be conducted because
these conditions are not met, the Exchange would postpone and
reschedule the offering and notify market participants via a Trader
Update that the Direct Listing with a Capital Raise scheduled for that
date has been cancelled and any orders for that security that have been
entered on the Exchange, including the CDL Order, would be cancelled
back to the entering firms.\40\ The Exchange further states that
because the CDL Order will be a market order, if the Nasdaq Halt Cross
proceeds, that order will execute in full in the Nasdaq Halt Cross,
along with orders priced at or better than the price determined in the
Nasdaq Halt Cross.
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\39\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12247. The Exchange states
that Nasdaq alone would make any determination to postpone and
reschedule the offering and would do so only in the narrowly defined
circumstances described in proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B). See
Amendment No. 2, supra note 11, at 15 n.19. The Exchange also states
that the price bands established by Rule 4120(c)(8) cannot act to
cause the Nasdaq Halt Cross to occur outside of the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration statement,
because the actual price calculated by the Nasdaq Halt Cross is
required to be at or above the lowest price and at or below the
highest price of the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement. See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR
12248.
\40\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12247-48.
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The Exchange states that, unlike in an IPO, a company listing
through a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise would not have an
underwriter to guarantee that a specified number of shares would be
sold by the company at a price consistent with disclosure in the
company's effective registration statement. However, the Exchange
states that this would be achieved through the proposed requirements
that (1) the Nasdaq Halt Cross occur only if the CDL Order, which must
be equal to the total number of shares disclosed as being offered by
the company in the effective registration statement, is executed in
full; and (2) the Nasdaq Halt Cross occur at a price per share that is
within the price range disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.\41\ The Exchange states that it believes that
the CDL Order and related provisions would clearly define the method by
which the issuer participates in the opening auction, to prevent the
issuer from being in a position to improperly influence the price
discovery process, and assures an auction that is consistent with the
disclosures in the registration statement.\42\
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\41\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249.
\42\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249. The Exchange states
that, specifically, the CDL Order entered on the company's behalf
could not be executed at a price below the low end or above the high
end of the price range in the company's effective registration
statement, and, as a market order, the full quantity of shares in
the CDL Order would have to be executed in the opening auction. The
Exchange states that, in addition, the CDL Order would not be able
to be modified and the financial advisor to the company would be
unable to reschedule the offering once it began. See id.
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Finally, the Exchange has proposed to make adjustments to how it
would calculate the Current Reference Price, which is disseminated in
the Nasdaq Order Imbalance Indicator,\43\ and the price at which the
Nasdaq Halt Cross would execute, for a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise. In each case, where there are multiple prices that would satisfy
the conditions for determining the price, the Exchange would modify the
fourth tie-breaker for a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise to use the
lowest price of the price range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.\44\
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\43\ See Rule 4853(a)(3) for a description of the ``Order
Imbalance Indicator.''
\44\ See proposed Rule 4753(a)(3)(A)(iv)(c) and (b)(2)(D)(iii).
The Exchange states that the fourth tie-breaker used to calculate
the Current Reference Price for an IPO is the price that is closest
to the issuer's IPO price, and that a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise is similar to an IPO in that the company sells securities in
the offering. See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249. The Exchange
also proposes non-substantive changes to renumber the other
alternatives for the fourth tie-breaker. See proposed Rule
4753(a)(3)(A)(iv) and (b)(2)(D).
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III. Discussion and Commission Findings
The Commission finds that the proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 2, is consistent with the requirements of the Exchange
Act and the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a national
securities exchange.\45\ In particular, the Commission finds that the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 2, is consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act,\46\ which requires, among
other things, that the rules of a national securities exchange be
designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national
market system, and, in general, to protect investors and the public
interest; and are not designed to permit unfair discrimination between
customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers.
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\45\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b). In approving this proposed rule change,
the Commission has considered the proposed rule change's impact on
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C.
78c(f).
\46\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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The Commission has consistently recognized the importance and
significance of national securities exchange listing standards. Among
other things, such listing standards help ensure that exchange-listed
companies will have sufficient public float, investor base, and trading
interest to provide the depth and liquidity necessary to promote fair
and orderly markets.\47\ The standards, collectively, also provide
investors and market participants with some level of assurance that the
listed company has the resources, policies, and procedures
[[Page 28173]]
to comply with the requirements of the Exchange Act and Exchange
rules.\48\
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\47\ The Commission has stated in approving national securities
exchange listing requirements that the development and enforcement
of adequate standards governing the listing of securities on an
exchange is an activity of critical importance to the financial
markets and the investing public. In addition, once a security has
been approved for initial listing, maintenance criteria allow an
exchange to monitor the status and trading characteristics of that
issue to ensure that it continues to meet the exchange's standards
for market depth and liquidity so that fair and orderly markets can
be maintained. See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 90768
(December 22, 2020), 85 FR 85807, 85811 n.55 (December 29, 2020)
(SR-NYSE-2019-67) (``NYSE 2020 Order''); 82627 (February 2, 2018),
83 FR 5650, 5653 n.53 (February 8, 2018) (SR-NYSE-2017-30) (``NYSE
2018 Order''); 81856 (October 11, 2017), 82 FR 48296, 48298 (October
17, 2017) (SR-NYSE-2017-31); 81079 (July 5, 2017), 82 FR 32022,
32023 (July 11, 2017) (SR-NYSE-2017-11). The Commission has stated
that adequate listing standards, by promoting fair and orderly
markets, are consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act, in
that they are, among other things, designed to prevent fraudulent
and manipulative acts and practices, promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and protect investors and the public interest.
See, e.g., NYSE 2020 Order, 85 FR 85811 n.55; NYSE 2018 Order, 83 FR
5653 n.53; Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 87648 (December 3,
2019), 84 FR 67308, 67314 n.42 (December 9, 2019) (SR-NASDAQ-2019-
059); 88716 (April 21, 2020), 85 FR 23393, 23395 n.22 (April 27,
2020) (SR-NASDAQ-2020-001).
\48\ ``Meaningful listing standards are also important given
investor expectations regarding the nature of securities that have
achieved a national securities exchange listing, and the role of a
national securities exchange in overseeing its market and assuring
compliance with its listing standards.'' Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 65708 (November 8, 2011), 76 FR 70799, 70802 (November
15, 2011) (SR-NASDAQ-2011-073). See also NYSE 2020 Order, supra note
47, 85 FR 85811 n.56; Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 65709
(November 8, 2011), 76 FR 70795 (November 15, 2011) (SR-NYSE-2011-
38); 88389 (March 16, 2020), 85 FR 16163 (March 20, 2020) (SR-
NASDAQ-2019-089). The Exchange, in addition to requiring companies
seeking to list to meet the quantitative initial listing standards
and once listed the quantitative continued listing standards, also
requires listed companies to meet other qualitative requirements.
See, e.g., Listing Rules 5600 Series, Corporate Governance
Requirements.
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The Exchange's listing standards currently provide the Exchange
with discretion to list a company whose stock has not been previously
registered under the Exchange Act, where such company is listing in
connection with a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing.\49\ The Exchange
has proposed to allow companies to list in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, which would provide a company the option,
without a firm commitment underwritten offering, of selling shares to
raise capital in the opening auction upon initial listing on the
Exchange.\50\ The Commission notes that recently it approved a proposal
by the New York Stock Exchange to allow a direct listing with a primary
offering.\51\
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\49\ See Nasdaq Listing Rules IM-5315-1, IM-5405-1, and IM-5505-
1. See also Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 85156 (February 15,
2019), 84 FR 5787 (February 22, 2019) (SR-NASDAQ-2019-001) (notice
of filing and immediate effectiveness of proposal to adopt listing
standards for direct listings on Nasdaq Global Select Market); 87648
(December 3, 2019), 84 FR 67308 (December 9, 2019) (SR-NASDAQ-2019-
059) (order granting approval of proposal to adopt requirements for
the Nasdaq Capital and Global Markets applicable to direct
listings).
\50\ See proposed Listing Rule IM-5315-2. In contrast, Listing
Rule IM-5315-1 states that it permits companies ``to list on the
Nasdaq Global Select Market, provided the Company meets all
applicable initial listing requirements and lists at the time of
effectiveness of a registration statement filed solely for the
purpose of allowing existing shareholders to sell their shares. This
Interpretive Material describes when a Company whose stock is not
previously registered under the Exchange Act may list on the Nasdaq
Global Select Market, where such Company is listing without a
related underwritten offering upon effectiveness of a registration
statement registering only the resale of shares sold by the company
in earlier private placements.'' Listing Rule IM-5315-1.
\51\ See NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47.
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As explained further below, the following aspects of the proposal,
as modified by Amendment No. 2, demonstrate that it is reasonably
designed to be consistent with the protection of investors and the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets, as well as the facilitation of
capital formation: (i) Addition of the CDL Order type and other
requirements that address how the issuer will participate in the
opening auction; (ii) addition of the requirement that the opening
price must occur at or above the lowest price and at or below the
highest price of the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement; (iii) discussion of the role of
financial advisors and addition of requirements providing that only
Nasdaq, in consultation with the financial advisor, may determine that
the security is ready to trade and limiting the circumstances pursuant
to which Nasdaq could postpone or reschedule the offering; (iv)
addition of language reminding financial advisors that specified
activities are to be conducted in a manner that is consistent with the
federal securities laws, including Regulation M and other anti-
manipulation requirements; and (v) clarification of how market value
will be determined for qualifying the company's securities for listing.
The Commission discusses below the Exchange's proposal to allow a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. First, the Commission addresses
the Exchange's proposed market value of unrestricted publicly-held
shares requirement for a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. Second,
the Commission addresses concerns it raised in the Order Instituting
Proceedings about the initial listing opening auction process for
Direct Listings with a Capital Raise and the role of financial advisors
in the Exchange's proposed rule change, prior to the changes made by
Amendment Nos. 1 and 2. As discussed below, in the amended proposal the
Exchange made several modifications to its proposal that were designed
to address these concerns.\52\ Finally, the Commission addresses a
commenter's concerns about whether the proposal is consistent with
investor protection and the public interest given the lack of
traditional underwriter involvement in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise and concerns about Securities Act Section 11 liability.\53\ As
discussed throughout this order, the Commission concludes that the
Exchange has met its burden to demonstrate that its proposal is
consistent with the Exchange Act, and therefore finds the proposed rule
change to be consistent with the Exchange Act.
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\52\ See supra notes 8 and 11. In the amended filing, the
Exchange states that, following approval of this proposed rule
change, the Exchange intends to file a separate proposal with the
Commission that will seek to modify the process for a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise so that it would operate in a manner similar to
the initial proposal, and the Exchange will seek to address the
remaining issues raised in the Order Instituting Proceedings. See
Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12245 n.9. This approval order pertains
only to Nasdaq's current proposal before the Commission, and any new
rules or changes to the rules being approved would require the
Exchange to file a new proposed rule change pursuant to Section
19(b) of the Exchange Act.
\53\ In addition to the comments discussed below, one commenter
stated general support for Nasdaq's proposed method of opening the
transaction. See Letter from Rahul Chaudhary (October 13, 2020).
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A. Aggregated Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
Requirement
The Exchange has proposed that it will deem a company to have met
the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement if
the amount of the company's Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares before
the offering along with the market value of the shares to be sold by
the company in the Exchange's opening auction in the Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise is at least $110 million (or $100 million, if the
company has stockholders' equity of at least $110 million). The
Exchange would calculate the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares using a price per share equal to the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration
statement.\54\ According to the Exchange, a company may list in
connection with a traditional underwritten IPO with a minimum $45
million Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares. The Exchange
states that the ``heightened requirement'' for a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, ``along with the ability of all investors to purchase
shares in the opening process on the Exchange, should result in
companies using a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise having adequate
public float and a liquid trading market after completion of the
opening auction.'' \55\
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\54\ See supra notes 17-18 and accompanying text.
\55\ Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12248. As described above, in
determining that a company has met the Market Value of Unrestricted
Publicly Held Shares requirement, the Exchange will consider the
market value of all shares sold by the company in the opening
auction, rather than excluding shares that may be purchased by
officers, directors, or owners of more than 10% of the company's
common stock, notwithstanding that generally the Exchange's listing
standards exclude shares held by such insiders from its calculations
of publicly-held shares. The Exchange states that it expects that a
company expecting to sell a significant portion of its shares to
these insiders would not undertake a public listing through a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, but would raise capital in a private
placement or similar transaction instead. See id.
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The Exchange has shown that the proposed aggregate Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement provides the Exchange
with a reasonable level of assurance that the
[[Page 28174]]
company's market value supports listing on the Exchange and the
maintenance of fair and orderly markets.\56\ The Commission reaches
this conclusion because the proposed market value standard for listing
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise is more than two times greater
than the market value standard that currently exists under Exchange
rules for an Exchange listing of an IPO. The proposed requirement is
also comparable to the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares requirement used by the Exchange for initial listing in other
contexts.\57\ Specifically, the Exchange's proposed Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement of at least $110 million
(or $100 million, if the company has stockholders' equity of at least
$110 million) is the same Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held
Shares requirement applied to companies that list their primary equity
securities on the Exchange, other than in the case of an IPO or spin-
off,\58\ in addition to being higher than the $45 million Market Value
of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares requirement applied to IPOs and
spin-offs.\59\
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\56\ A significant number of exchange-listed IPOs in the recent
years had proceeds that fell below the $110 million threshold. Using
information from Thomson Reuters SDC Platinum New Issues database,
the Commission staff concluded that, among 146 exchange-listed IPOs
conducted during the 2019 calendar year, the median offer size was
$106.7 million. Among 196 exchange-listed IPOs conducted during the
2020 calendar year, the median offer size was $175.4 million.
Further, staff concluded that approximately 51.4 percent of the
companies that went public via the IPO in 2019 and 33.7 percent of
the companies that went public via the IPO in 2020 (63.6 percent in
2019 and 34.6 percent in 2020 among NASDAQ IPOs only) had an offer
size that fell below $110 million. Similarly, academic research
finds that the median proceeds raised in exchange-listed IPOs in the
United States were approximately $121 million during the 2019
calendar year and $188 million during the 2020 calendar year. See
Jay R. Ritter, Initial Public Offerings: Updated Statistics tbl.4f
(March 10, 2021), available at https://site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/files/IPO-Statistics.pdf.
\57\ See supra notes 17 and 22 and accompanying text.
\58\ The existing market value requirement of at least $110
million (or $100 million, if the company has a stockholders' equity
of at least $110 million) in Listing Rule 5315(f)(2)(A) and (B) is a
longstanding requirement that has supported the listing of companies
on the Exchange since 2009. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
53799 (May 12, 2006), 71 FR 29195 (May 19, 2006) (SR-NASDAQ-2006-
007) (creating the Nasdaq Global Select Market and implementing
initial listing requirements for that market). In 2019, when
approving a proposal by Nasdaq to require that the calculation of
market value of publicly-held shares be limited to unrestricted
securities, the Commission stated that it believed that the
revisions ``should help to ensure that the Exchange lists only
securities with a sufficient market, with adequate depth and
liquidity, and with sufficient investor interest to support an
exchange listing.'' Securities Exchange Act Release No. 86314 (July
5, 2019), 84 FR 33102, 33111 (July 11, 2019) (SR-NASDAQ-2019-009).
The Exchange also applies this same market value requirement to
Selling Shareholder Direct Listings if the company's security has
had sustained recent trading in a Private Placement Market. See
Listing Rule IM-5315-1(a); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85156
(February 15, 2019), 84 FR 5787 (February 22, 2019) (SR-NASDAQ-2019-
001).
\59\ The existing $45 million market value requirement in
Listing Rule 5315(f)(2)(C) is a longstanding requirement that has
supported the listing of companies on the Exchange that are suitable
for listing and has existed since 2010. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 61904 (April 14, 2010), 75 FR 20651 (April 20, 2010)
(SR-NASDAQ-2010-047) (lowering the market value of publicly-held
shares requirement for the listing of IPOs, affiliates, or spin-offs
from $70 million to $45 million).
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Further, as described below, using the lowest price in the price
range established by the issuer in its registration statement to
determine the minimum market value is a reasonable and conservative
approach because the Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will not
proceed at a lower price.
B. Opening Auction Process for Direct Listing With a Capital Raise and
Role of Financial Advisors
As discussed above, the Exchange has proposed to add the CDL Order
as a new order type to be used in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise. An issuer would be required to submit a CDL Order in the opening
auction for the full quantity of offered shares, as reflected in the
effective registration statement, and the CDL Order must be executed in
full. Although the CDL Order would be entered as a market order, it
would only execute at a price at or above the lowest price and at or
below the highest price of the price range established by the issuer in
its effective registration statement. The CDL Order cannot be modified
or cancelled by the issuer once entered.\60\
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\60\ See supra notes 28-29 and accompanying text. In addition,
as discussed above, the Exchange proposes that it would modify the
fourth tie-breaker used for the Current Reference Price disseminated
in its Order Imbalance Indicator and for the price at which the
Nasdaq Halt Cross will execute to equal the lowest price of the
price range reflected in the effective registration statement. See
supra notes 43-44 and accompanying text. The Commission believes
that this is a reasonable price to use because the auction cannot
occur at a lower price.
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In the Order Instituting Proceedings, the Commission raised
concerns about provisions in the original proposal regarding the price
at which the Nasdaq Halt Cross could proceed on the first day of
trading, and whether that price would be consistent with the
disclosures in the issuer's Securities Act registration statement.\61\
Specifically, the Commission expressed concern about the lack of a
proposed maximum price, above which the cross could not proceed, and
that, without an upside limit, it was not clear how the issuer could
ensure that the issuer's Securities Act registration statement would
cover the full amount of securities to be sold in the offering.\62\ The
Commission also expressed concern about a provision in the original
proposal that would have allowed the opening cross to occur at a price
up to 20% below the price range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement, and that the Exchange had not
explained how investors would know the minimum price at which the
company could sell shares in the offering. Further, the Commission
raised a concern that it was unclear from the proposed rules that the
cross would not occur at a price that is below the price 20% below the
disclosed price range due to the application of an existing provision
that permits an underwriter or financial advisor to select price bands
of up to $0.50 outside of the expected cross price and still have the
cross proceed if the actual price is within the price band.
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\61\ If that price were not consistent with the disclosures in
the issuer's Securities Act registration statement, in addition to
any issues under the Securities Act, there would be concerns about
whether the proposal was consistent with Section (6)(b)(5) under the
Exchange Act, including whether the proposal was designed to prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, and to protect
investors and the public interest.
\62\ One commenter stated that it shared this concern. See
Letter from Jeffrey P. Mahoney, General Counsel, Council of
Institutional Investors (January 13, 2021) (``CII Letter II''). In
the Order Instituting Proceedings, the Commission stated, among
other things, that although issuers may file additional Securities
Act registration statements to register additional securities needed
to complete an offering, Section 5 of the Securities Act requires
all of the related registration statements to be effective prior to
the time of sale. To the extent Nasdaq's original proposal may have
resulted in issuers needing to register additional securities beyond
those included in an initial Securities Act registration statement,
it was not apparent how an issuer could ensure that any additional
required registration statement would be effective prior to the time
of opening.
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In the amended proposal, the Exchange modified the permissible
price range for the opening cross and provided that Nasdaq would
release a security for trading only if the actual price calculated by
the cross is at or above the lowest price and at or below the highest
price of the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.\63\ The
[[Page 28175]]
Commission believes that the changes to the proposed pricing provisions
that the Exchange made in the amended proposal ensure that the actual
price of the cross and the number of shares offered will be consistent
with the issuer's disclosures in its effective registration statement.
The Commission further believes that these changes adequately address
the Commission's concerns arising from the price at which the cross
would proceed.
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\63\ With respect to the potential use of price bands allowed by
Rule 4120(c)(8), the Exchange states that Nasdaq would set the price
bands and that it intends to set these price bands at zero. The
Exchange further states that the price bands cannot act to allow the
cross to occur outside of the price range disclosed by the issuer in
its effective registration statement because, under the proposal as
amended, the actual price calculated by the cross is required to be
at or above the lowest price and at or below the highest price of
the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement. See supra note 39 and accompanying text.
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The CDL Order and related opening auction procedures proposed by
the Exchange set forth the method by which the issuer participates in
the opening auction, help to prevent the issuer from being in a
position to improperly influence the price discovery process,\64\ and
will help result in the Exchange conducting an auction that is
otherwise consistent with the disclosures in the registration
statement. Specifically, the issuer would be required to submit a CDL
Order in the opening auction for the full quantity of offered shares,
and the security would only be released for trading in the opening
auction at a price that is within the disclosed price range, as
reflected in the effective registration statement. Further, the CDL
Order cannot be modified or cancelled by the issuer once entered. The
Commission notes that it recently approved the use of a similar order
for the opening process for a direct listing with primary offering on
another national securities exchange, stating that an opening process
using such order type provided reasonable assurance that the opening
auction and subsequent trading promote fair and orderly markets, and
that the proposed rules are designed to prevent fraud and manipulation
and protect investors and the public interest, consistent with Section
6(b)(5) under the Exchange Act.\65\
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\64\ See supra note 60 and accompanying text. See also proposed
Rule 4702(b)(16), which sets forth the requirements the issuer must
follow in entering the CDL Order, and proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B),
which sets forth the requirements for Nasdaq to release the security
for trading in the opening auction for a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise.
\65\ See NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85813.
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In the Order Instituting Proceedings, the Commission also expressed
concern that the proposed rules appeared to permit the issuer's
financial advisor broad discretion to postpone the offering, which
would effectively cancel the CDL Order. In its original proposal, the
Exchange contemplated that the financial advisor in a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise would determine when the security is ready to
trade, similar to the role played by an underwriter in an IPO or a
financial advisor in a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing, and could
also postpone the offering at anytime prior to the opening.\66\ In the
amended proposal, the Exchange proposed to modify its rules for the
opening cross to provide that, for a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise, Nasdaq, in consultation with the financial advisor to the
issuer, would make the determination of whether the security is ready
to trade, and Nasdaq alone would make the determination of whether to
postpone and reschedule the offering, rather than allowing the
financial advisor to make these determinations. Nasdaq would postpone
and reschedule the offering only if there is insufficient buy interest
to satisfy the CDL Order and all other market orders, or if the actual
price calculated by the cross is outside the price range established by
the issuer in its effective registration statement.
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\66\ Under current Rule 4120(c)(8) and (9), a security will be
released for trading by the Exchange in its opening cross when the
Exchange receives notice from the underwriter in an IPO (or the
financial advisor in a Selling Shareholder Direct Listing) that the
security is ready to trade and the security passes certain
validation checks. Specifically, in the case of an IPO, the
underwriter will notify the Exchange that the security is ready to
trade. Then the Nasdaq system will calculate the Current Reference
Price at the time and display it to the underwriter. If the
underwriter approves proceeding, the Nasdaq system will conduct
validation checks to determine that all market orders will be
executed in the cross and that the actual price calculated by the
cross does not differ from the price displayed to the underwriter by
an amount in excess of the price band selected by the underwriter.
In addition, the underwriter may determine at any point during the
cross process to postpone and reschedule the offering. In a Selling
Shareholder Direct Listing, a financial advisor performs these
functions.
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The Commission believes that providing Nasdaq exclusive discretion
to determine whether to postpone or reschedule the offering, and
limiting that discretion to cases where the CDL Order could not
otherwise be executed, adequately addresses the concerns expressed in
the Order Instituting Proceedings that the CDL Order, which by its
terms may not be cancelled or modified, could indirectly be cancelled
by virtue of the financial advisor's broad discretion to postpone or
reschedule the offering.\67\ This will help ensure that the offering
will proceed consistent with the disclosures in the issuer's Securities
Act registration statement and, for the reasons noted above, consistent
with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act.
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\67\ See supra notes 38-39 and accompanying text.
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In addition, the proposed rules contain a reminder to the financial
advisor that any activities performed under Rules 4120(c)(8) and
4120(c)(9)(A) and (B) must be conducted in a manner that is consistent
with the federal securities laws, including Regulation M and other
anti-manipulation requirements.\68\ This provision will help to ensure
compliance by participants in the direct listing process with these
important provisions of the federal securities laws and that the
proposed changes are consistent with preventing manipulative acts and
practices, and protecting investors and the public interest in
accordance with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act.
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\68\ See proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(A).
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C. Lack of Traditional Underwriter Involvement in a Direct Listing With
a Capital Raise and Securities Act Section 11 Standing
One commenter recommended that the Commission disapprove the
proposal because it believes that the proposed expansion of direct
listings would compound problems that shareholders face in tracing
their share purchases to a registration statement for purposes of
claims under Section 11 of the Securities Act and may lead to a decline
in effective corporate governance at U.S. public companies.\69\ This
commenter stated that traceability concerns often arise when there have
been successive offerings, as shareholders seek to establish their
standing to litigate claims for material misstatements or omissions
under Section 11 of the Securities Act.\70\ The commenter also stated
that investor concerns about the traceability of shares in a direct
listing were drawn into sharp focus in current litigation involving a
[[Page 28176]]
direct listing by Slack Technologies, Inc. (``Slack''), which is still
under judicial review.\71\ The commenter further stated that,
independent of the Slack case, direct listings raise important investor
issues that the Commission should consider before opening U.S. capital
markets up to the potential for a vastly increased number of direct
listings.\72\ The commenter urged the Commission to explore updating
its ``proxy plumbing'' regulations before approving an expanded direct
listings regime.\73\ In response, the Exchange stated that the
Commission has previously considered these concerns and stated that the
Commission determined that investor protection concerns relating to
tracing challenges are not unique to direct listings.\74\
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\69\ See Letter from Jeffrey P. Mahoney, General Counsel,
Council of Institutional Investors, at 2, 4 (October 8, 2020) (``CII
Letter I''); CII Letter II, supra note 62. The commenter stated that
on September 25, 2020, the Commission issued an order granting the
Council of Institutional Investors' petition for review of an order,
issued by delegated authority, granting approval of a proposed rule
change by the New York Stock Exchange LLC relating to a proposed
direct listing with a primary offering (``NYSE Proposal''). See CII
Letter I, at 1-2. This commenter stated that the Exchange's current
proposal is similar to the NYSE Proposal and cites its petition for
review of the NYSE Proposal as further support for its
recommendation that the Commission disapprove Nasdaq's proposal. See
id. at 1-2 (citing Petition of Council of Institutional Investors
for Review of an Order, Issued by Delegated Authority, Granting
Approval of a Proposed Rule (September 8, 2020), available at
https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/nyse/2020/34-89684-petition.pdf). See
also NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47 (setting aside previous approval
by delegated authority and approving proposed rule change).
\70\ See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 2-3. The commenter
cited to a statement by Commissioners Lee and Crenshaw, issued
contemporaneously with the Commission's approval of the NYSE
Proposal, that raised a concern about the potential inability of
shareholders to recover losses for inaccurate disclosures due to
traceability problems. See CII Letter II, supra note 62, at 3.
\71\ See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 3. In that case, as
noted by the commenter, the defendants sought dismissal of the
Section 11 claims on the grounds that the plaintiffs could not trace
their purchases to Slack's registration statement. The commenter
stated with respect to this case that while the district court
denied the motion to dismiss the Section 11 claims, it is uncertain
whether the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which has agreed to
consider the Section 11 standing issue on an interlocutory basis,
will uphold the district court's reasoning. See id. See also Pirani
v. Slack Technologies, Inc., No. 20-16419 (9th Cir. July 23, 2020),
Docket No. 1.
\72\ See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 3.
\73\ See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 4.
\74\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12249 (citing NYSE 2020
Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85816).
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In addition, this commenter stated that it is concerned that the
Exchange's proposal would result in a significant increase in the use
of direct listings, and that more direct listings may lead to a decline
in the effective corporate governance of U.S. public companies to the
detriment of long-term investors and the capital markets generally.\75\
The commenter stated that a recent direct listing of Palantir
Technologies Inc. had a multi-class structure that is viewed by many
market participants as inconsistent with effective governance.\76\ In
response, the Exchange stated that it believes that the concern about a
decline in effective corporate governance is unsubstantiated and
challenges in this context are not of such magnitude as to render the
proposal inconsistent with the Exchange Act. The Exchange also pointed
to the Commission's prior conclusion that it did not view a firm
commitment underwriting as necessary to provide adequate investor
protection in the context of a registered offering.\77\
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\75\ See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 4.
\76\ See CII Letter I, supra note 69, at 5. See also CII Letter
II, supra note 62, at 3 (raising a concern about the lack of a firm
commitment underwriter).
\77\ See Notice, supra note 9, 86 FR 12250 (citing NYSE 2020
Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85815).
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As the Commission stated previously, the Securities Act does not
require the involvement of an underwriter in registered offerings.\78\
Moreover, given the broad definition of ``underwriter'' \79\ in the
Securities Act, a financial advisor to an issuer engaged in a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise may, depending on the facts and
circumstances including the nature and extent of the financial
advisor's activities, be deemed a statutory ``underwriter'' with
respect to the securities offering, with attendant underwriter
liabilities.\80\ Thus, the financial advisors to issuers in Direct
Listings with a Capital Raise have incentives to engage in robust due
diligence, given their reputational interests and potential liability,
including as statutory underwriters under the broad definition of that
term.\81\ Moreover, even absent the involvement of a statutory
underwriter, investors would not be precluded from pursuing any claims
they may have under the Securities Act for false or misleading offering
documents, nor would the absence of a statutory underwriter affect the
amount of damages investors may be entitled to recover.
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\78\ See, e.g., Item 508(c) of Regulation S-K (``Outline briefly
the plan of distribution of any securities to be registered that are
to be offered otherwise than through underwriters.''). See also NYSE
2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85815.
\79\ Section 2(a)(11) of the Securities Act defines
``underwriter'' to include ``any person who has purchased from an
issuer with a view to, or offers or sells for an issuer in
connection with, the distribution of any security, or participates,
or has a direct or indirect participation in any such undertaking,
or participates or has a participation in the direct or indirect
underwriting of any such undertaking.'' For purposes of this
definition, ``issuer'' includes, in addition to an issuer, any
person directly or indirectly controlling or controlled by the
issuer, or any person under direct or indirect common control with
the issuer.
\80\ Whether a person would be considered a statutory
underwriter would be evaluated based on the particular facts and
circumstances, in light of the definition of underwriter contained
in Section 2(a)(11). See, e.g., SEC v. Platforms Wireless Int'l
Corp., 617 F.3d 1072 (9th Cir. 2010); Harden v. Raffensperger,
Hughes & Co., 65 F.3d 1392 (7th Cir. 1995); SEC v. Int'l Chem. Dev.
Corp., 469 F.2d 20 (10th Cir. 1972); SEC v. Chinese Consol.
Benevolent Ass'n, 120 F.2d 738 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 314 U.S. 618
(1941).
\81\ Depending on the facts and circumstances, an analysis of
activities engaged in by financial advisors in the context of
selling shareholder direct listings could lead to a conclusion that
such advisors are statutory underwriters. The Commission understands
that practices surrounding direct listings continue to evolve. The
Commission will continue to monitor such activities and any
developments, and will evaluate whether further action in this area
would be appropriate.
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In addition, issuers, officers, directors, and accountants, with
their attendant liability, play important roles in assuring that
disclosures provided to investors are materially accurate and complete.
The Commission therefore does not view a firm commitment underwriting
as necessary to provide adequate investor protection in the context of
a registered offering. Indeed, exchange-listed companies often engage
in offerings that do not involve a firm commitment underwriting.
Moreover, as the Commission stated previously, the commenter's
concerns regarding shareholders' ability to pursue claims pursuant to
Section 11 of the Securities Act due to traceability issues are not
exclusive to nor necessarily inherent in a direct listing with a
primary offering, including the proposed Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise.\82\ Rather, this issue is potentially implicated anytime
securities that are not the subject of a recently effective
registration statement trade in the same market as those that are so
subject. Where a registration statement, at the time of effectiveness,
contains an untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a
material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
statements therein not misleading, Section 11(a) of the Securities Act
provides a cause of action to ``any person acquiring such security,''
unless it is proved that at the time of the acquisition the person
``knew of such untruth or omission.'' \83\ In the context of
conventional public offerings, courts have interpreted this statutory
provision to permit aftermarket purchasers (i.e., those who acquire
their securities in secondary market transactions rather than in the
initial distribution from the issuer or underwriter) to recover damages
under Section 11, but only if they can trace the acquired shares back
to the offering covered by the false or misleading registration
statement.\84\ Tracing is not set forth in Section 11 and is a
judicially-developed doctrine. The application of this doctrine and, in
particular, the pleading standards and factual proof that potential
claimants must satisfy vary depending on the particular facts of the
distribution and judicial district, and may be affected by pending
litigation.\85\
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\82\ See NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85815.
\83\ Section 11(a) of the Securities Act.
\84\ See, e.g., In re Century Aluminum Co. Sec. Litig., 729 F.3d
1104 (9th Cir. 2013).
\85\ See, e.g., Pirani v. Slack Techs., Inc., 2020 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 70177 (N.D. Cal., April 21, 2020) (addressing Securities Act
Section 11 standing and stating that ``[i]f the text is ambiguous,
the Court `may [also] use canons of construction, legislative
history, and the statute's overall purpose to illuminate Congress's
intent.' '' (quoting Pac. Coast Fed'n of Fishermen's Ass'ns v.
Glaser, 945 F.3d 1076 (9th Cir. 2019)).
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[[Page 28177]]
Although it is possible that aftermarket purchases following a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise may present tracing challenges, it
is not yet known whether a court would find that this investor
protection concern is applicable to a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise. We expect judicial precedent on traceability in the direct
listing context to continue to evolve,\86\ but the Commission is not
aware of any precedent to date in the direct listing context which
prohibits plaintiffs from pursuing Section 11 claims. The Commission is
actively monitoring this issue and will be able to respond to such
concerns when and if they arise.
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\86\ For example, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has agreed
to consider the issue of Section 11 standing at issue in Pirani v.
Slack Techs., Inc., 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70177 (N.D. Cal., April
21, 2020) on an interlocutory basis. See Pirani v. Slack
Technologies, Inc., No. 20-16419 (9th Cir., July 23, 2020), Docket
No. 1.
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With respect to the commenter's concern that Nasdaq's proposal
could lead to a significantly increased use of direct listings, we
acknowledge that the ability to raise capital in connection with a
direct listing may lead more issuers to pursue this alternative method
of becoming publicly traded.
With respect to the commenter's concern that Nasdaq's proposal
could lead to a decline in effective corporate governance,\87\ the
commenter suggests that the involvement of banks and underwriters in
conventional IPOs may help investors encourage issuers to revise
corporate governance arrangements, such as dual-class structures, that
are not favored by such investors. The commenter cited as an example a
recent secondary direct listing in which founders of the listed
company, as a result of the company's multi-class structure, would
retain effective voting control over the company as long as they
collectively owned a specified minimum amount of the company's shares.
Under existing listing rules, nothing precludes companies with multi-
class structures that give their founders disproportionate voting
rights from listing on an exchange in connection with a traditional
firm commitment IPO; indeed, such listings are not uncommon. Moreover,
the Commission does not believe that investors will be precluded from
raising concerns about governance structures in the context of direct
listings; to the extent a company's corporate governance structures are
of sufficient concern to investors, they may be able to influence
companies' governance practices, notwithstanding the lack of a firm
commitment underwriting, through signaling their unwillingness to
purchase a company's shares through a direct listing. In this way,
investors may be able to persuade companies to adopt preferred
governance provisions, whether the company becomes listed through a
direct listing or a firm commitment IPO.
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\87\ See supra notes 75-77 and accompanying text.
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The Commission finds that the proposed rule change is consistent
with the protection of investors. The proposed rule change will require
all Direct Listings with a Capital Raise to be registered under the
Securities Act, and thus subject to the existing liability and
disclosure framework under the Securities Act for registered offerings.
Among other disclosures, these registration statements will require
both bona fide price ranges \88\ and audited financial statements
prepared in accordance with either U.S. GAAP or International Financial
Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards
Board.\89\
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\88\ See, e.g., Instruction 1 to Item 501(b)(3) of Regulation S-
K.
\89\ See Rule 4-01(a) of Regulation S-X.
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The Commission further believes that Direct Listings with a Capital
Raise will provide benefits to existing and potential investors
relative to firm commitment underwritten offerings.\90\ First, because
the securities to be issued by the company in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise would be allocated based on matching buy
and sell orders, in accordance with the proposed rules, some investors
may be able to purchase securities in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise who might not otherwise receive an initial allocation in a firm
commitment underwritten offering. The proposed rule change therefore
has the potential to broaden the scope of investors that are able to
purchase securities in an initial public offering, at the initial
public offering price, rather than in aftermarket trading.
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\90\ See also NYSE 2020 Order, supra note 47, 85 FR 85816.
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Second, because the price of securities issued by the company in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will be determined based on market
interest and the matching of buy and sell orders, Direct Listings with
a Capital Raise will provide an alternative way to price securities
offerings that may allow for efficiencies in IPO pricing and
allocation.\91\ In a firm commitment underwritten offering, the
offering price is informed by underwriter engagement with potential
investors to gauge interest in the offering, but ultimately decided
through negotiations between the issuer and the underwriters for the
offering. The underwriters then sell the securities to the initial
purchasers at the public offering price. When the securities begin
trading on the listing exchange, however, the price often varies from
the IPO price. The opening auction in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise provides for a different price discovery method for IPOs which
may reduce the spread between the IPO price and subsequent market
trades, a potential benefit to existing and potential investors. In
this way, the proposed rule change may result in additional investment
opportunities while providing companies more options for becoming
publicly traded.\92\
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\91\ A frequent academic observation of traditional firm
commitment underwritten offerings is that the IPO price, established
through negotiation between the underwriters and the issuer, is
often lower than the price that the issuer could have obtained for
the securities, based on a comparison of the IPO price to the
closing price on the first day of trading. See, e.g., Patrick M.
Corrigan, Article: The Seller's Curse and the Underwriter's Pricing
Pivot: A Behavioral Theory of IPO Pricing, 13 Va. L. & Bus. Rev.
335; Jay R. Ritter, Initial Public Offerings: Underpricing tbl.1
(December 29, 2020), available at https://site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/files/IPOs-Underpricing.pdf.
\92\ While the Commission acknowledges the possibility that some
companies may pursue a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise instead
of a traditional IPO, these two listing methods may not be
substitutable in a wide variety of instances. For example, some
issuers may require the assistance of underwriters to develop a
broad investor base sufficient to support a liquid trading market;
others may believe a traditional firm commitment IPO is preferable
given the benefits to brand recognition that can result from
roadshows and other marketing efforts that often accompany such
offerings. Thus, we do not anticipate that all companies that are
eligible to go public through a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
will choose to do so; the method chosen will depend on each issuer's
unique characteristics.
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The Commission finds that the Exchange's proposal will facilitate
the orderly distribution and trading of shares, which promotes fair and
orderly markets, and helps the Exchange ensure that its rules prevent
fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, promote just and
equitable principles of trade and protect investors and the public
interest.\93\ The proposal also will foster competition by providing an
alternative method for companies of sufficient size that decide they
would rather not conduct a firm commitment underwritten offering to
list on the Exchange, thereby removing potential impediments to free
and open markets consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act
while also supporting capital formation. For the reasons discussed
above, the Commission finds that, on balance, the proposed rule change
to permit Direct Listings with a
[[Page 28178]]
Capital Raise is consistent with the Exchange Act.
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\93\ See 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5). See also 15 U.S.C. 78k-
1(a)(1)(C)(i).
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IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 2, is consistent with the
Exchange Act and the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to a
national securities exchange.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Exchange Act,\94\ that the proposed rule change (SR-NASDAQ-2020-057),
as modified by Amendment No. 2 thereto, be, and it hereby is, approved.
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\94\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\95\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\95\
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021-10968 Filed 5-24-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P