Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 2, To Modify Certain Pricing Limitations for Companies Listing in Connection With a Direct Listing With a Capital Raise, 57951-57960 [2022-20503]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 183 / Thursday, September 22, 2022 / Notices
modify their own fees and credits in
response, and because market
participants may readily adjust their
order routing practices, the Exchange
does not believe its proposed fee change
can impose any burden on intermarket
competition.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were solicited
or received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change is effective
upon filing pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A) 22 of the Act and
subparagraph (f)(2) of Rule 19b–4 23
thereunder, because it establishes a due,
fee, or other charge imposed by the
Exchange.
At any time within 60 days of the
filing of such proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act. If the
Commission takes such action, the
Commission shall institute proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) 24 of the Act to
determine whether the proposed rule
change should be approved or
disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NYSEAMER–2022–40 on the subject
line.
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Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
22 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
23 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
24 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
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17:32 Sep 21, 2022
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSEAMER–2022–40. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
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
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. 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–NYSEAMER–2022–40, and
should be submitted on or before
October 13, 2022.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.25
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2022–20504 Filed 9–21–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–95811; File No. SR–
NASDAQ–2022–027]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; Notice of
Filing of Proposed Rule Change, as
Modified by Amendment No. 2, To
Modify Certain Pricing Limitations for
Companies Listing in Connection With
a Direct Listing With a Capital Raise
September 16, 2022.
On March 21, 2022, The Nasdaq Stock
Market LLC (‘‘Nasdaq’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’)
25
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17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
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57951
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’), pursuant
to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder,2 a proposed rule
change to allow companies to modify
certain pricing limitations for
companies listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise in
which the company will sell shares
itself in the opening auction on the first
day of trading on Nasdaq. The proposed
rule change was published for comment
in the Federal Register on April 8,
2022.3 On May 19, 2022, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,4 the
Commission designated a longer period
within which to either approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change, or
institute proceedings to determine
whether to disapprove the proposed
rule change.5
On May 23, 2022, the Exchange filed
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change, which superseded the proposed
rule change as originally filed.
Amendment No. 1 was published for
comment in the Federal Register on
June 2, 2022.6 On July 7, 2022, the
Commission instituted proceedings
under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act 7 to
determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change.8
On May 23, 2022, the Exchange filed
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change, which superseded the proposed
rule change as originally filed.
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change is described in Items I and II
below, which Items have been prepared
by the Exchange. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change,
as modified by Amendment No. 1, from
interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to modify
certain pricing limitations for
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94592
(April 4, 2022), 87 FR 20905 (April 8, 2022).
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94947
(May 19, 2022), 87 FR 31915 (May 25, 2022). The
Commission designated July 7, 2022, as the date by
which it should approve, disapprove, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change.
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94989
(May 26, 2022), 87 FR 33558 (June 2, 2022).
7 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 95220
(July 7, 2022), 87 FR 41780 (July 13, 2022).
Comments received on the proposal are available on
the Commission’s website at: https://www.sec.gov/
comments/sr-nasdaq-2022-027/
srnasdaq2022027.htm.
2 17
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 183 / Thursday, September 22, 2022 / Notices
companies listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise on
the Nasdaq Global Select Market in
which the company will sell shares
itself in the opening auction on the first
day of trading on Nasdaq. This
Amendment No. 2 supersedes the
original filing, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, in its entirety.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on the Exchange’s website at
https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/
rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at the principal
office of the Exchange, and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange 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 these
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 aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
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Nasdaq is filing this amendment to
SR–NASDAQ–2022–027 9 to address the
issues the Commission raised in the OIP
and make other modifications to clarify
the proposed rule language. This
Amendment No. 2 supersedes and
replaces Amendment No. 1 in its
entirety.
In this Amendment No. 2 (the
‘‘Amendment’’) Nasdaq proposes to
modify the Initial Proposal, as modified
by Amendment No. 1,10 to require that
9 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94592
(April 4, 2022), 87 FR 20905 (April 8, 2022) (the
‘‘Initial Proposal’’). On May 23, 2022, the Exchange
filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change, which superseded the proposed rule
change as originally filed. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 94989 (May 26, 2022), 87 FR 33558
(June 2, 2022). The Commission issued an Order
Instituting Proceedings to Determine Whether To
Approve or Disapprove the Initial Proposal, as
modified by Amendment No. 1. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 95220 (July 7, 2022), 87
FR 41780 (July 13, 2022) (the ‘‘OIP’’).
10 Nasdaq submitted Amendment No. 1 in order
to: (i) clarify Nasdaq’s view of the applicability of
Securities Act Rule 430A and mechanics of
complying with the disclosures required under
federal securities laws by a company listing in
connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise in circumstances where the actual price
calculated by the Cross is outside of the price range
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a company offering securities for sale in
connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise must retain an underwriter
with respect to the primary sales of
shares by the company and identify the
underwriter in its effective registration
statement.11
Also in this Amendment, Nasdaq
proposes to modify the Pricing Range
Limitation, as defined below, such that,
provided other requirements are
satisfied, a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise can be executed in the Cross at a
price that is above the highest price of
the price range established by the issuer
in its effective registration statement
only if the execution price is at or below
the price that is 80% above the highest
price of the price range.12
Description of Proposed Rule, as
Amended
In 2021, Nasdaq adopted Listing Rule
IM–5315–2 to permit a company to list
on the Nasdaq Global Select Market 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 (a
‘‘Direct Listing with a Capital Raise’’); 13
created a new order type (the ‘‘CDL
Order’’), which is used during the
Nasdaq Halt Cross (the ‘‘Cross’’) for the
shares offered by the company in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise; and
established requirements for
disseminating information, establishing
the opening price and initiating trading
through the Cross in a Direct Listing
established by the issuer in its effective registration
statement; (ii) specify that if the company’s
certification to Nasdaq (that the company does not
expect that an offering price above the price range
would materially change the company’s previous
disclosure in its effective registration statement)
includes an upside limit, Nasdaq will not execute
the cross if it results in an offering price above such
limit; and (iii) make minor technical changes to
improve the structure, clarity and readability of the
proposed rules.
11 Nasdaq believes that this proposal addresses
the issues raised by the Commission in the OIP
related to the potential lack of a named underwriter
in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, as explained
below. Nasdaq also believes that this proposal
addresses concerns raised in the comment letter
submitted by the Council of Institutional Investors
(CII), dated August 8, 2022. Nasdaq believes that the
CII letter raises concerns that are substantively the
same as the concerns raised by the Commission in
the OIP.
12 Nasdaq believes that this proposal addresses
the issues raised by the Commission in the OIP
related to the usefulness and reliability of price
range disclosure provided to investors, as explained
below.
13 A Direct Listing with a Capital Raise includes
situations 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.
PO 00000
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with a Capital Raise.14 For a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq
rules currently require that the actual
price calculated by the Cross 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 (the ‘‘Pricing
Range Limitation’’).
Nasdaq now proposes to modify the
Pricing Range Limitation 15 such that,
provided other requirements are
satisfied, a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise can also be executed in the Cross
at a price that is at or above the price
that is as low as 20% below the lowest
price in the price range established by
the issuer in its effective registration
statement; 16 or at a price above the
highest price of such price range but
only if the execution price is at or below
the price that is 80% above the highest
price of the price range. Specifically, to
execute at a price outside of the price
range, the company’s registration
statement must contain a sensitivity
analysis explaining how the company’s
plans would change if the actual
proceeds from the offering were less
than or exceeded the amount assumed
in such price range and the company
has publicly disclosed and certified to
Nasdaq that the company does not
expect that such price would materially
change the company’s previous
disclosure in its effective registration
statement. Nasdaq also proposes to
make related conforming changes.
Current Direct Listing With a Capital
Raise Requirements
Currently, a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise must begin trading on
Nasdaq following the initial pricing
through the Cross, which is described in
Rules 4120(c)(9) and 4753.17
Currently, in addition to pricing
within the Pricing Range Limitation,18
Rule 4120(c)(9) requires that in the case
14 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91947
(May 19, 2021), 86 FR 28169 (May 25, 2021) (the
‘‘Approval Order’’).
15 On February 24, 2022, the Commission issued
an order disapproving a similar proposal by
Nasdaq. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94311
(February 24, 2022), 87 FR 11780 (March 2, 2022)
(the ‘‘Disapproval Order’’). Nasdaq believes that this
proposal addresses the issues raised by the
Commission in the Disapproval Order.
16 References in this proposal to the price range
established by the issuer in its effective registration
statement are to the price range disclosed in the
prospectus in such registration statement.
Separately, as explained in more details below,
Nasdaq proposes to prescribe that the 20%
threshold below the lowest price in the price range
will be calculated based on the maximum offering
price set forth in the registration fee table,
consistent with the Instruction to paragraph (a) of
Securities Act Rule 430A.
17 See Listing Rule IM–5315–2.
18 See Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
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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, will
make the determination of whether the
security is ready to trade. In addition,
under Rule 4120(c)(9)(B) Nasdaq will
release the security for trading only if all
market orders will be executed in the
Cross. If there is insufficient buy interest
to satisfy the CDL Order and all other
market orders, or if the Pricing Range
Limitation is not satisfied, the Cross
would not proceed and such security
would not begin trading. In such event,
because the Cross cannot be conducted,
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 would be cancelled back to
the entering firms.19
Proposed Change to Rule 4120(c)(9)
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While many companies are interested
in alternatives to traditional IPOs, based
on conversations with companies and
their advisors Nasdaq believes that there
may be a reluctance to use the existing
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise rules
because of concerns about the Pricing
Range Limitation.
One potential benefit of a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise as an
alternative to a traditional IPO is that it
could maximize the chances of more
efficient price discovery of the initial
public sale of securities for issuers and
investors. Unlike an IPO where 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, in a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise the initial
sale price is determined based on
market interest and the matching of buy
and sell orders in an auction open to all
market participants. In that regard, in
the Approval Order the Commission
stated that:
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
19 Nasdaq will postpone and reschedule the
offering only if either or both such conditions are
not met.
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providing companies more options for
becoming publicly traded.20
A successful initial public offering of
shares requires sufficient investor
interest. If an offering cannot be
completed due to lack of investor
interest, there is likely to be a
substantial amount of negative publicity
for the company and the offering may be
delayed or cancelled. The Pricing Range
Limitation imposed on a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise (but not on a
traditional IPO) increases the
probability of such a failed offering
because the offering cannot proceed
without some delay not only for the lack
of investor interest, but also if investor
interest is greater than the company, its
underwriter, and other advisors
anticipated. In the Approval Order, the
Commission noted a frequent academic
observation of traditional firm
commitment underwritten offerings 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.21 Nasdaq believes that the price
range in a company’s effective
registration statement for a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise would
similarly be determined by the
company, its underwriter, and other
advisors and, therefore, there may be
instances of offerings where the price
determined by the Nasdaq opening
auction will exceed the highest price of
the price range in the company’s
effective registration statement.
As explained above, under the
existing rule a security subject to a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
cannot be released for trading by Nasdaq
if the actual price calculated by the
Cross is above the highest price of the
price range established by the issuer in
its effective registration statement. In
this case, Nasdaq would have to cancel
or postpone the offering until the
company amends its effective
registration statement. At a minimum,
such a delay exposes the company to
market risk of changing investor
sentiment in the event of an adverse
market event. In addition, as explained
above, the determination of the public
offering price of a traditional IPO is not
subject to limitations similar to the
Pricing Range Limitation for a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, which, in
Nasdaq’s view, could make companies
reluctant to use this alternative method
of going public despite its expected
20 See
21 See
PO 00000
Approval Order, 86 FR 28177.
Approval Order, footnote 91.
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57953
potential benefits. This reluctance could
result in denying investors and
companies the benefits of this different
price discovery method.
Accordingly, Nasdaq proposes to
modify the Pricing Range Limitation
such that in the case of the Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, a security
could be released for trading by Nasdaq
if the actual price at which the Cross
would occur is as much as 20% below
the lowest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement. In addition, a
security could be released for trading by
Nasdaq if the actual price at which the
Cross would occur was above the
highest price in the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement but only if the
execution price is at or below the price
that is 80% above the highest price of
the price range.22 In such cases (whether
lower or higher than the price range) the
company will be required to specify the
quantity of shares registered in its
registration statement, as permitted by
Securities Act Rule 457,23 and that
registration statement will be required
to contain a sensitivity analysis (the
company must also certify to Nasdaq in
that regard) explaining how the
company’s plans would change if the
actual proceeds from the offering are
less than or exceed the amount assumed
in the price range established by the
issuer in its effective registration
statement.24 In addition, the company
will be required to publicly disclose and
certify to Nasdaq prior to beginning of
the Display Only Period that the
company does not expect that such
offering price would materially change
the company’s previous disclosure in its
effective registration statement. If the
company’s certification submitted to
Nasdaq in that regard includes a price
limit that is below the price that is 80%
above the highest price of the price
22 In the prior proposal, Nasdaq proposed
different requirements based on whether the Cross
would occur at a price that was within 20% of the
price range. See Disapproval Order. Nasdaq is
eliminating this proposed distinction and is
proposing herein to treat all prices outside of the
price range the same.
23 Securities Act Rule 457 permits issuers to
register securities either by specifying the quantity
of shares registered, pursuant to Rule 457(a), or the
proposed maximum aggregate offering amount.
Nasdaq proposes to require that companies selling
shares through a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
will register securities by specifying the quantity of
shares registered and not a maximum offering
amount. See also Compliance & Disclosure
Interpretation of Securities Act Rules #227.03 at
https://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/guidance/
securitiesactrules-interps.htm.
24 The price range in the preliminary prospectus
included in the effective registration statement must
be a bona fide price range in accordance with Item
501(b)(3) of Regulation S–K.
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jspears on DSK121TN23PROD with NOTICES
range (the ‘‘Upside Limit’’), Nasdaq will
not execute the Cross if it results in the
offering price above such limit. The goal
of these requirements is to have
disclosure that allows investors to see
how changes in share price ripple
through critical elements of the
disclosure.25
Nasdaq believes that this approach is
consistent with SEC Rule 430A and
question 227.03 of the SEC Staff’s
Compliance and Disclosure
Interpretations, which generally allow a
company to price a public offering 20%
outside of the disclosed price range
without regard to the materiality of the
changes to the disclosure contained in
the company’s registration statement.
Nasdaq believes such guidance also
allows deviation above the price range
beyond the 20% threshold if such
change or deviation does not materially
change the previous disclosure.
Accordingly, Nasdaq believes that a
company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise can
specify the quantity of shares registered,
as permitted by Securities Act Rule 457,
and, when an auction prices outside of
the disclosed price range, use a Rule
424(b) prospectus, rather than a posteffective amendment, when either (i) the
20% threshold noted in the instructions
to Rule 430A is not exceeded, regardless
of the materiality or non-materiality of
resulting changes to the registration
statement disclosure that would be
contained in the Rule 424(b) prospectus,
or (ii) when there is a deviation above
the price range beyond the 20%
threshold noted in the instructions to
Rule 430A if such deviation would not
materially change the previous
disclosure, in each case assuming the
number of shares issued is not increased
from the number of shares disclosed in
the prospectus. For purposes of this
rule, the 20% threshold will be
calculated based on the maximum
offering price set forth in the registration
fee table, consistent with the Instruction
to paragraph (a) of Securities Act Rule
430A.26
25 Sensitivity analysis disclosure may include but
is not limited to: use of proceeds; balance sheet and
capitalization; and the company’s liquidity position
after the offering. An example of this disclosure
could be: We will apply the net proceeds from this
offering first to repay all borrowings under our
credit facility and then, to the extent of any
proceeds remaining, to general corporate purposes.
26 Nasdaq believes that applying additional
protections related to the disclosure requirements
in the registration statement and the certifications
to Nasdaq, as described above, to all instances
where the Cross is executed outside the disclosed
price range addresses an issue the Commission
raised in the Disapproval Order. See footnote 15
above. For brevity, proposed rules define the ‘‘Price
Range’’ as the price range established by the issuer
in its preliminary prospectus included in the
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Nasdaq notes that the Commission
previously stated that while Securities
Act Rule 430A permits companies to
omit specified price-related information
from the prospectus included in the
registration statement at the time of
effectiveness, and later file the omitted
information with the Commission as
specified in the rule, it neither prohibits
a company from conducting a registered
offering at prices beyond those that
would permit a company to provide
pricing information through a Securities
Act Rule 424(b) prospectus supplement
nor absolves any company relying on
the rule from any liability for potentially
misleading disclosure under the federal
securities laws.27 Accordingly, the
burden of complying with the
disclosures required under federal
securities laws, including providing any
disclosure necessary to avoid any
material misstatements or omissions,
remains with the issuer. In that regard,
Nasdaq believes that the Post-Pricing
Period, applicable in circumstances
where the actual price calculated by the
Cross is outside of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement, as described
below, provides the company an
opportunity, prior to the completion of
the offering, to provide any necessary
additional disclosures that are
dependent on the price of the offering,
if any; and/or determine and confirm to
Nasdaq that no additional disclosures
are required under federal securities
laws based on the actual price
calculated by the Cross.
Nasdaq believes that an underwriter
plays an important role in a traditional
IPO and, therefore, proposes to require
that a company listing securities on
Nasdaq in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise must retain
an underwriter with respect to the
primary sales of shares by the company
and identify the underwriter in its
effective registration statement.
Describing the role and responsibilities
of an underwriter, the Commission
recently explained that:
[a]s intermediaries between an issuer and the
investing public, underwriters play a critical
role as ‘‘gatekeepers’’ to the public markets.
effective registration statement, including the
maximum and the minimum prices of such range;
and ‘‘DLCR Price Range’’ as the price range that
includes any price that is below the Price Range
and at or above the price that is 20% below the
lowest price of the Price Range, or is above the
highest price of the Price Range. If the company’s
certification includes an upside limit, the DLCR
Price Range is as defined in the preceding sentence,
but subject to the upper limit provided by the
company in its certification.
27 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 93119
(September 24, 2021), 86 FR 54262 (September 30,
2021).
PO 00000
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Historically, in initial public offerings, where
the investing public might be unfamiliar with
a particular issuer, financial firms that act as
underwriters would lend their well-known
name to support that issuer’s offering. Where
public investors may not have been inclined
to invest with the company seeking to
conduct a public offering, they could take
comfort in the fact that a large, well-known
financial institution, acting as underwriter,
was including its name on the first page of
the issuer’s prospectus . . .
An underwriter’s participation in an
issuer’s offering also exposes the underwriter
to potential liability under the Securities Act.
The civil liability provisions of the Securities
Act reflect the unique position underwriters
occupy in the chain of distribution of
securities and provide strong incentives for
underwriters to take steps to help ensure the
accuracy of disclosure in a registration
statement. Section 11 of the Securities Act
imposes on underwriters, among other
parties identified in Section 11(a), civil
liability for any part of the registration
statement, at effectiveness, which contained
an untrue statement of a material fact or
omitted to state a material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary to make the
statements therein not misleading, to any
person acquiring such security. Similarly,
Section 12(a)(2) imposes liability upon
anyone, including underwriters, who offers
or sells a security, by means of a prospectus
or oral communication, which includes an
untrue statement of a material fact or omits
to state a material fact necessary in order to
make the statements, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading, to any person purchasing
such security from them. These provisions
provide significant investor protections to
those who acquire securities sold pursuant to
a registration statement by providing tools to
hold companies, underwriters, and other
parties accountable for misstatements and
omissions in connection with public
offerings of securities. As a result, anyone
who might be named as a potential defendant
in these suits has strong incentives to take
the necessary steps to avoid such liability.
One defense available to an underwriter in
a distribution is the ‘‘due diligence’’ defense,
which shields an underwriter from liability
if it can establish that, after reasonable
investigation, the underwriter had reasonable
ground to believe and did believe, at the time
the registration statement became effective,
that the statements therein were true and that
there was no omission to state a material fact
required to be stated therein or necessary to
make the statements therein not
misleading.28
Nasdaq believes that these significant
investor protections provisions are
necessary in a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise if an offering can price
outside the price range established in
the issuer’s effective registration
statement, subject to proposed
limitations, because such provisions
28 Special Purpose Acquisition Companies, Shell
Companies, and Projections, 87 FR 29,458 (May 13,
2022).
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allow investors to make reasonable
pricing decisions with clarity that the
company’s underwriter would face
statutory liability, as described above.
Accordingly, Nasdaq proposes to
require that a company listing securities
on Nasdaq in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise must retain
an underwriter with respect to the
primary sales of shares by the company
and identify the underwriter in its
effective registration statement.
Nasdaq also believes that the
requirement to retain a named
underwriter, as described above, may
mitigate concerns, raised by the
Commission in the OIP, regarding
challenges to bringing claims under
Section 11 of the Securities Act due to
the potential assertion of tracing
defenses because an underwriter may
choose to impose lock-up arrangements,
as described below.
As a preliminary matter, Nasdaq notes
that in the Approval Order the
Commission explained that the issue of
traceability:
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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.’’ 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. Tracing is
not set forth in Section 11 and is a judiciallydeveloped 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.29
The Commission then reaffirmed its
position that ‘‘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 Capital Raise.’’
The Commission further stated that it
‘‘is not aware of any precedent to date
in the direct listing context which
29 The
Approval order, 86 FR 28176
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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.’’ 30 Nasdaq
believes that no such precedent exists as
of the date of this Amendment and that
the modifications to the Pricing Range
Limitation in this proposal do not, in
any way, exacerbate the tracing issues.
However, as stated above, Nasdaq
believes that the requirement to retain a
named underwriter may mitigate
traceability concerns that may arise in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. As
in a traditional firm commitment
underwritten IPO, in which lock-up
arrangements are often imposed, an
underwriter retained in connection with
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, as
required by the Amendment, will be
able to impose lock-up arrangements for
the same reasons that make lock up
agreements common in an IPO.
Nasdaq also believes that the
requirement to retain a named
underwriter, as described above,
mitigates concerns, raised by the
Commission in the OIP, regarding the
usefulness of price range disclosure
provided to investors in a Securities Act
registration statement filed in
connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise. Nasdaq believes that an
underwriter retained in connection with
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will
perform substantially similar functions,
including those related to establishing
and adjusting the price range, to those
performed by an underwriter in a
typical IPO because the underwriter will
be subject to similar liability and
reputational risk.
To further mitigate concerns regarding
the usefulness of price range disclosure
provided to investors, Nasdaq proposes
to require that the securities of a
company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
cannot price above the Upside Limit.
The Upside Limit will incentivize the
company and its underwriter to set the
disclosed price range to avoid a failed
offering consequences described above.
The Upside Limit would also help
assure that an issuer would adjust the
price range disclosed in their
registration statements prior to
effectiveness in light of pricing feedback
received from market analysts and
potential investors.
To determine an appropriate Upside
Limit, Nasdaq analyzed operating
companies IPOs on the Nasdaq Global
Select Market and the NYSE for the past
five years where an IPO opened on an
exchange at a price that is above the
30 The
PO 00000
Approval order, 86 FR 28177
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57955
highest price of the price range in the
issuer’s effective registration
statement.31 This analysis indicated that
some IPOs opened on an exchange at a
price that was more than 100% above
the highest price of the price range.
Based on the same data, more than half
of these IPOs opened at a price that was
30% or more above the highest price of
the price range. However, about 90% of
these IPOs opened at a price that was no
more than the Upside Limit. Based on
this data Nasdaq believes that, on
balance, capital formation and investor
protection goals would be best served by
a pricing limitation equal to the Upside
Limit.
Nasdaq also proposes to adopt a new
Price Volatility Constraint and
disseminate information about whether
the Price Volatility Constraint has been
satisfied, which will indicate whether
the security may be ready to trade. Prior
to releasing a security for trading,
Nasdaq allows a ‘‘Pre-Launch Period’’ of
indeterminate length, during which
price discovery takes place. The Price
Volatility Constraint requires that the
Current Reference Price has not
deviated by 10% or more from any
Current Reference Price during the PreLaunch Period within the previous 10
minutes. The Pre-Launch Period will
continue until at least five minutes after
the Price Volatility Constraint has been
satisfied. Nasdaq will also introduce the
Near Execution Price which is the
Current Reference Price at the time the
Price Volatility Constraint has been
satisfied; and set the Near Execution
Time as such time. This change will
provide investors with notice that the
Cross nears execution and allows a
period of at least five minutes for
investors to modify their orders, if
needed, based on the Near Execution
Price, prior to the execution of the Cross
and the pricing of the offering. Further,
to assure that the Near Execution Price
is a meaningful benchmark for
investors, and that the offering price
does not deviate substantially from the
Near Execution Price, Nasdaq proposes
to require, in addition to other the
existing conditions stated in proposed
Rule 4120(c)(9)(B)(vii), that the Cross
may execute only if the actual price
calculated by the Cross is no more than
10% below or above the Near Execution
Price (the ‘‘10% Price Collar’’).
Nasdaq notes that imbalance between
the buy and sell orders could sometimes
cause the Current Reference Price to fall
outside the 10% Price Collar after the
Price Volatility Constraint has been
satisfied. Such price fluctuations could
31 This data set included over 400 records and
covers a period from January 2017 to July 2022.
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be temporary, and the Current Reference
Price may return to and remain within
the 10% Price Collar. The price
fluctuation could also be lasting such
that the Current Reference Price remains
outside the 10% Price Collar. Given
this, Nasdaq proposes to assess the
Current Reference Price vis-a`-vis the
10% Price Collar 30 minutes after the
Near Execution Time. If at that time the
Current Reference Price is outside the
10% Price Collar, all requirements of
the Pre-Launch Period shall reset and
must be satisfied again.32 Once the Price
Volatility Constraint has been satisfied
anew, the Current Reference Price at
such time will become the updated Near
Execution Price and such time will
become the updated Near Execution
Time. This process will continue
iteratively, if new resets are triggered,
until the Cross is executed, or the
offering is postponed.
If the Current Reference Price 30
minutes after the Near Execution Time
is within the 10% Price Collar, price
formation may continue without
limitations until Nasdaq, in consultation
with the financial advisor to the issuer,
makes the determination that the
security is ready to trade (and certain
existing conditions restated in proposed
Rule 4120(c)(9)(B)(vii) are met).
However, if at any time 30 minutes after
the Near Execution Time the Current
Reference Price is outside the 10% Price
Collar, all requirements of the PreLaunch Period shall reset and must be
satisfied again, in the same manner as
described in the immediately preceding
paragraph.
Given that, as proposed, there may be
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise that
could price outside the price range of
the company’s effective registration
statement, subject to the Upside Limit
above which the Cross could not
proceed,33 Nasdaq proposes to enhance
price discovery transparency by
providing readily available, real time
pricing information to investors. To that
end Nasdaq will disseminate, free of
charge, the Current Reference Price on
32 For the avoidance of doubt, while the Price
Volatility Constraint cannot initially be satisfied
sooner than ten minutes after the beginning of the
Pre-Launch Period, if it is subsequently reset, the
Price Volatility Constraint can be satisfied again in
less than ten minutes because it would look back
at prior pricing during the Pre-Launch Period
(including pricing prior to the reset) to determine
if the Current Reference Price has deviated by 10%
or more from any Current Reference Price within
the previous 10 minutes.
33 In addition to the Upside Limit, if the
company’s certification submitted to Nasdaq
pursuant to proposed Listing Rule
4120(c)(9)(B)(vii)d.2. includes a price limit that is
lower than the Upside Limit and the actual price
calculated by the Cross exceeds such lower limit,
Nasdaq will postpone and reschedule the offering.
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a public website, such as Nasdaq.com,
during the Pre-Launch Period and
indicate whether the Current Reference
Price is within the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement. Once the Price
Volatility Constraint has been satisfied,
Nasdaq will also disseminate the Near
Execution Price, the Near Execution
Time and the 30-minute countdown
from such time. The disclosure will
indicate that the Near Execution Price
and the Near Execution Time may be
reset, as described above, if the security
is not released for trading within 30
minutes of the Near Execution Time and
the Current Reference Price at such time
(or at any time thereafter) is more than
10% below or more than 10% above the
Near Execution Price.
In this way, investors interested in
participating in the opening auction will
be informed when volatility has settled
to a range that will allow the open to
take place and they will be informed of
the price range at which the auction
would take place. If the price moves
outside, and remains outside this range,
30 minutes after the original range was
set they will be informed of the new
range and will have at least five minutes
to reevaluate their investment
decision.34
Nasdaq also proposes to prohibit
market orders (other than by the
Company through its CDL Order) from
the opening of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise. This will protect investors
by assuring that investors only purchase
shares at a price at or better than the
price they affirmatively set, after having
the opportunity to review the
company’s effective registration
statement including the sensitivity
analysis describing how the company
will use any additional proceeds raised.
Accordingly, an investor participating
in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
will make their initial investment
decision prior to the launch of the
offering by setting the price in their
34 Nasdaq believes that the introduction, as
described above, of the 10% Price Collar, the Near
Execution Price, the Near Execution Time, the 30minute reset and the five minute prohibition on
executing the Cross after the Price Volatility
Constraint has been satisfied addresses concerns the
Commission raised in the Disapproval Order. See
footnote 15 above. Specifically, in the Disapproval
Order, the Commission stated that, as previously
proposed, ‘‘investors could be misled that the
opening cross ‘nears execution’ and that the
disseminated Current Reference Price will likely be
close to the opening auction price when, in fact, the
auction may not occur for a considerable time and
the opening auction price may differ substantially.’’
As revised, the opening auction price must remain
within 10% of the price publicly announced as the
Near Execution Price for the auction to occur and
investors will have enhanced disclosure about the
possibility that the Price Volatility Constraint could
be reset.
PO 00000
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limit order above which they will not
buy shares in the offering, but will also
have an opportunity to reevaluate their
initial investment decision during the
price formation process of the PreLaunch Period based on the Near
Execution Price. Under the proposed
rule, such investor will have at least five
minutes once the Near Execution Price
has been set and before the offering may
be priced by Nasdaq to modify their
order, if needed. As described above, all
relevant price formation information
will be disseminated by Nasdaq on a
public website in real time.
In addition, to protect investors and
assure that they are informed about the
attributes of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, Nasdaq proposes to
impose specific requirements on Nasdaq
members with respect to a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise. These rules will
require members to provide to a
customer, before that customer places
an order to be executed in the Cross, a
notice describing the mechanics of
pricing a security subject to a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise in the Cross,
including information regarding the
location of the public website where
Nasdaq will disseminate the Current
Reference Price.
To assure that members have the
necessary information to be provided to
their customers, Nasdaq proposes to
distribute, at least one business day
prior to the commencement of trading of
a security listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, an
information circular to its members that
describes any special characteristics of
the offering, and Nasdaq’s rules that
apply to the initial pricing through the
mechanism outlined in Nasdaq Rule
4120(c)(9)(B) and Nasdaq Rule 4753 for
the opening auction, including
information about the notice they must
provide customers and other Nasdaq
requirements that:
• members use reasonable diligence
in regard to the opening and
maintenance of every account, to know
(and retain) the essential facts
concerning every customer and
concerning the authority of each person
acting on behalf of such customer; and
• members in recommending
transactions for a security subject to a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise have
a reasonable basis to believe that: (i) the
recommendation is suitable for a
customer given reasonable inquiry
concerning the customer’s investment
objectives, financial situation, needs,
and any other information known by
such members, and (ii) the customer can
evaluate the special characteristics, and
is able to bear the financial risks, of an
investment in such security.
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These member requirements are
intended to remind members of their
obligations to ‘‘know their customers,’’
increase transparency of the pricing
mechanisms of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, and help assure that
investors have sufficient price discovery
information.
In each instance of a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq’s
information circular 35 will inform the
market participants that the auction
could price up to 20% below the lowest
price of the price range in the
company’s effective registration
statement and specify what that price is.
Nasdaq will also indicate in such
circular a statement that the Cross
cannot proceed at a price in excess of
the Upside Limit and whether or not
there is a lower price limit above which
the Cross could not proceed, based on
the company’s certification, as
described above. Nasdaq will also
remind the market participants that
Nasdaq prohibits market orders (other
than by the company) from the opening
of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise.
To assure that the issuer has the
ability, prior to the completion of the
offering, to provide any necessary
additional disclosures that are
dependent on the price of the offering,
Nasdaq proposes to introduce to the
operation of the Cross a brief PostPricing Period, in circumstances where
the actual price calculated by the Cross
is outside of the price range established
by the issuer in its effective registration
statement. Specifically, in such
circumstances, Nasdaq will initiate a
Post-Pricing Period following the
calculation of the actual price. During
the Post-Pricing Period the issuer must
confirm to Nasdaq that no additional
disclosures are required under federal
securities laws based on the actual price
calculated by the Cross. During the PostPricing Period no additional orders for
the security may be entered in the Cross
and no existing orders in the Cross may
be modified. The security shall be
released for trading immediately
following the Post-Pricing Period. If the
company cannot provide the required
confirmation, then Nasdaq will
postpone and reschedule the offering.
Proposed Conforming Changes to
Listing Rule IM–5315–2
Listing Rule IM–5315–2 allows a
company that has not previously had its
common equity securities registered
under the Act to list its common equity
securities on the Nasdaq Global Select
Market at the time of effectiveness of a
35 The information circular is an industry wide
free service provided by Nasdaq.
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registration statement pursuant to which
the company itself will sell shares in the
opening auction on the first day of
trading on the Exchange.
Listing Rule IM–5315–2 provides that
in determining whether a company
listing in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise satisfies the
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares 36 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).
Listing Rule IM–5315–2 further
provides that, for this purpose, the
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly
Held Shares will be calculated using a
price per share equal to the lowest price
of the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration
statement.
Because Nasdaq proposes to allow the
opening auction to price up to 20%
below the lowest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement, Nasdaq proposes
to make a conforming change to Listing
Rule IM–5315–2 to provide that the
price used to determine such company’s
compliance with the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares is the
price per share equal to the price that is
20% below the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement. Nasdaq
proposes to clarify in Listing Rule IM–
5315–2 that the 20% threshold below
the price range will be calculated based
on the maximum offering price set forth
in the registration fee table. Nasdaq will
determine that the company has met the
applicable bid price and market
capitalization requirements based on the
same per share price. This price is the
minimum price at which the company
could sell its shares in the Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise transaction and so
assures that the company will satisfy
these requirements at any price at which
the auction successfully executes.
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,
including the requirements to have the
applicable number of shareholders and
36 See
PO 00000
Listing Rules 5005(a)(23) and 5005(a)(45).
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57957
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.37
Proposed Conforming Changes to Rules
4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2)
Nasdaq proposes to amend Rules
4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2) to conform
the requirements for disseminating
information and establishing the
opening price through the Cross in a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise to the
proposed amendment to allow the
opening auction to price as much as
20% below the lowest price of the price
range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.
Specifically, Nasdaq proposes
changes to Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and
4753(b)(2) to make adjustments to the
calculation of the Current Reference
Price, which is disseminated in the
Nasdaq Order Imbalance Indicator, in
the case of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise and for how the price at
which the Cross will execute. These
rules currently provide that where there
are multiple prices that would satisfy
the conditions for determining a price,
the fourth tie-breaker for a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise is the price that is
closest to the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.38
To conform these rules to the
modification of the Pricing Range
Limitation change, as described above,
Nasdaq proposes to modify the fourth
tie-breaker for a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, to use the price closest to
the price that is 20% below (calculated
as provided for in Listing Rule IM–
5315–2) the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement.39
Lastly, Nasdaq proposes to clarify
several provisions of the existing rules
37 See Listing Rules 5315(f)(1), (e)(1) and (2),
respectively. Rule 5315(f)(1) requires a security to
have: (A) at least 550 total holders and an average
monthly trading volume over the prior 12 months
of at least 1,100,000 shares per month; or (B) at least
2,200 total holders; or (C) a minimum of 450 round
lot holders and at least 50% of such round lot
holders must each hold unrestricted securities with
a market value of at least $2,500.
38 To illustrate: The bottom of the range is $10.
More than one price exists within the range under
the previous set of tie-breakers such that both
$10.15 and $10.25, satisfy all other requirements.
The operation of the fourth tie-breaker will result
in the auction price of $10.15 because it is the price
that is closest to $10.
39 Note that using the price that is 20% below the
lowest price of the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration statement as a tiebreaker (rather than the price representing the
bottom of the range) does not change the outcome
in the example in footnote 38 above because $10.15
is the price that is closest to either.
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by restating the provisions of Rules
4120(c)(8)(A) and (c)(9)(A) in a clear and
direct manner without substantively
changing them. Specifically, Nasdaq
proposes to clarify the mechanics of the
Cross by specifying that Nasdaq will
initiate a 10-minute Display Only Period
only after the CDL Order had been
entered. This clarification simply states
what is already implied by the rule
because the Cross and the offering may
not proceed without the company’s
order to sell the securities in a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise. Similarly,
Nasdaq proposes to clarify without
changing the existing rule that Nasdaq
shall select price bands for purposes of
applying the price validation test in the
Cross in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise. Under the
price validation test, the System
compares the Expected Price with the
actual price calculated by the Cross to
ascertain that the difference, if any, is
within the price bands. Nasdaq shall
select an upper price band and a lower
price band. The default for an upper and
a lower price band is set at zero. If a
security does not pass the price
validation test, Nasdaq may, but is not
required to, select different price bands
before recommencing the process to
release the security for trading.40
Nasdaq also proposes to clarify that the
‘‘actual price,’’ as the term is used in the
rule, is the Current Reference Price at
the time the system applies the price
bands test.
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2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its
proposal is consistent with Section 6(b)
of the Act,41 in general, and furthers the
objectives of Section 6(b)(5) of the Act,42
in particular, in that it is designed 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.
Nasdaq believes that the proposed
amendment to modify the Pricing Range
Limitation is consistent with the
protection of investors because this
approach is similar to the pricing of an
IPO where an issuer is permitted to
price outside of the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement in accordance
with the SEC’s Staff guidance, as
40 This function is provided by the underwriter in
an IPO and by a Financial Advisor in a Direct
Listing when the company is not selling shares in
a primary offering. The Commission previously
approved Nasdaq performing this function. See
Approval Order.
41 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
42 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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described above.43 Specifically, Nasdaq
believes that a company listing in
connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise can specify the quantity of
shares registered, as permitted by
Securities Act Rule 457, and, when an
auction prices outside of the disclosed
price range, use a Rule 424(b)
prospectus, rather than a post-effective
amendment, when either (i) the 20%
threshold noted in the instructions to
Rule 430A is not exceeded, regardless of
the materiality or non-materiality of
resulting changes to the registration
statement disclosure that would be
contained in the Rule 424(b) prospectus,
or (ii) when there is a deviation above
the price range beyond the 20%
threshold noted in the instructions to
Rule 430A if such deviation would not
materially change the previous
disclosure, in each case assuming the
number of shares issued is not increased
from the number of shares disclosed in
the prospectus. As a result, Nasdaq will
allow the Cross to take place as low as
20% below the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement, but no
lower, and so this is the minimum price
at which the company could be listed.
In addition, to better inform investors
and market participants, Nasdaq will
issue an industry wide circular to
inform the participants that the auction
could price up to 20% below the lowest
price of the price range in the
company’s effective registration
statement and specify what that price is.
Nasdaq will also indicate in such
circular that the Cross cannot proceed at
a price in excess of the Upside Limit
and whether or not there is a lower
price limit above which the Cross could
not proceed, based on the company’s
certification, as described above. Nasdaq
will also remind the market participants
that Nasdaq prohibits market orders
(other than by the company) from the
opening of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise.
To assure that the issuer has the
ability, prior to the completion of the
offering, to provide any necessary
additional disclosures that are
dependent on the price of the offering,
Nasdaq proposes to introduce to the
operation of the Cross a brief PostPricing Period, in circumstances where
the actual price calculated by the Cross
is at or above the price that is 20%
below the lowest price and below the
lowest price of the price range
43 In a recent speech, SEC Chair Gary Gensler
emphasized that an overarching principle of
regulation is that like activities ought to be treated
alike. See https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/
gensler-healthy-markets-association-conference120921.
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established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement; or is above the
highest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement but below the
Upside Limit (and below the high end
price limit, if any, set in the company’s
certification submitted to Nasdaq
pursuant to proposed Listing Rule
4120(c)(9)(B)(vii)d.2., if any).
Specifically, in such circumstances,
Nasdaq will initiate a Post-Pricing
Period following the calculation of the
actual price. During the Post-Pricing
Period the issuer must confirm to
Nasdaq that no additional disclosures
are required under federal securities
laws based on the actual price
calculated by the Cross, with such
confirmation ending the Post-Pricing
Period. During the Post-Pricing Period
no additional orders for the security
may be entered in the Cross and no
existing orders in the Cross may be
modified. The security shall be released
for trading immediately following the
Post-Pricing Period. If the company
cannot provide the required
confirmation, then Nasdaq will
postpone and reschedule the offering.
Nasdaq believes that this modification is
designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
because it will help assure that a
company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
complies with the disclosure
requirements under federal securities
laws and that investors receive all
required information.
Nasdaq believes that the proposal to
allow a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise to price above the price range of
the company’s effective registration
statement but below the Upside Limit is
designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
investors because this approach is
similar to, but more stringent than, that
of pricing a traditional IPO. In addition,
to protect investors Nasdaq proposes to
enhance price discovery transparency
by providing readily available, real time
pricing information to investors. To that
end Nasdaq will disseminate, free of
charge, the Current Reference Price on
a public website (such as Nasdaq.com)
during the Pre-Launch Period and
indicate whether the Current Reference
Price is within the price range
established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.
Nasdaq believes that a proposed
requirement that a company offering
securities for sale in connection with a
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Direct Listing with a Capital Raise must
retain an underwriter with respect to the
primary sales of shares by the company
and identify the underwriter in its
effective registration statement is
designed to protect investors and the
public interest because these provisions
provide significant investor protections
to those who acquire securities sold
pursuant to a registration statement by
providing tools to hold underwriters
accountable for misstatements and
omissions in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise.
Nasdaq believes that the requirement
that the securities of a company listing
in connection with a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise cannot price above the
Upside Limit is designed to protect
investors and the public interest
because it would incentivize the
company and its underwriter to avoid a
failed offering by taking steps to help
ensure the accuracy of price range
disclosure in a registration statement. In
addition, as described above, an
underwriter has strong incentives to
take the necessary steps to avoid
statutory liability.
Nasdaq believes that the provision
prohibiting market orders (other than by
the company) from the opening of a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise is
designed to protect investors because
this provision will assure that investors
only purchase shares at a price that is
at, or better than, the price they
affirmatively set, after having the
opportunity to review the company’s
effective registration statement
including the sensitivity analysis
describing how the company will use
any additional proceeds raised.
Nasdaq also proposes to adopt a new
Price Volatility Constraint and
disseminate information about whether
the Price Volatility Constraint has been
satisfied, which will indicate whether
the security may be ready to trade. The
Price Volatility Constraint requires that
the Current Reference Price has not
deviated by 10% or more from any
Current Reference Price within the
previous 10 minutes. The Pre-Launch
Period will continue until at least five
minutes after the Price Volatility
Constraint has been satisfied. Nasdaq
will also introduce the Near Execution
Price which is the Current Reference
Price at the time the Price Volatility
Constraint has been satisfied; and set
the Near Execution Time at such time.
This change will provide investors with
notice that the Cross nears execution
and a period of at least five minutes to
modify their orders, if needed, based on
the Near Execution Price, prior to the
execution of the Cross and the pricing
of the offering. Further, to help assure
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that the offering price does not deviate
substantially from the Near Execution
Price, Nasdaq proposes to require, in
addition to other conditions described
above, that the Cross may execute only
if the actual price calculated by the
Cross is within the 10% Price Collar.
Nasdaq believes that these changes are
designed to protect investors and the
public interest because an investor
participating in a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise will make their initial
investment decision prior to the launch
of the offering by setting the price in
their limit order above which they will
not buy shares in the offering, but will
also have an opportunity to reevaluate
their initial investment decision during
the price formation process of the PreLaunch Period based on the Near
Execution Price. Under the proposed
rule, such investor will have at least five
minutes once the Near Execution Price
has been set and before the offering may
be priced by Nasdaq to modify their
order, if needed. While the auction may
take longer than this five minute period
to complete, investors are protected
during this time because the Price
Volatility Constraint will reset if the
actual price calculated by the Cross is
more than 10% below or above the Near
Execution Price. Once the Price
Volatility Constraint has been satisfied,
Nasdaq proposes to disseminate the
Near Execution Price and the Near
Execution Time on a public website,
such as Nasdaq.com.
Nasdaq believes that the proposal to
reset the Price Volatility Constraint, the
Near Execution Price and the Near
Execution Time in the circumstances
described above is designed to promote
just and equitable principles of trade, to
remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
investors because in certain
circumstances an imbalance between
the buy and sell orders could sometimes
cause the Current Reference Price to fall
outside the 10% Price Collar after the
Price Volatility Constraint has been
satisfied. These provisions will protect
investors by increasing the information
available to them in connection with the
price formation process during the
opening auction.
To protect investors and increase
transparency, Nasdaq also proposes to
disseminate on a public website, such as
Nasdaq.com, the 30-minute countdown
from the Near Execution Time and
indicate that the Near Execution Price
and the Near Execution Time may be
reset, as described above, if the security
is not released for trading within 30
minutes of the Near Execution Time and
the Current Reference Price at such time
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57959
(or at any time thereafter) is outside the
10% Price Collar.
In addition, to protect investors and
assure that they are informed about the
attributes of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise, Nasdaq proposes to
impose specific requirements on Nasdaq
members with respect to a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise. These rules will
require members to provide to a
customer, before that customer places
an order to be executed in the Cross, a
notice describing the mechanics of
pricing a security subject to a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise in the Cross,
including information regarding the
dissemination of the Current Reference
Price on a public website such as
Nasdaq.com.
To assure that members have the
necessary information to be provided to
their customers, Nasdaq proposes to
distribute, at least one business day
prior to the commencement of trading of
a security listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, an
information circular to its members that
describes any special characteristics of
the offering, and Nasdaq’s rules that
apply to the initial pricing through the
mechanism outlined in Nasdaq Rule
4120(c)(9)(B) and Nasdaq Rule 4753 for
the opening auction, including
information about the notice they must
provide customers and other Nasdaq
requirements that:
• members use reasonable diligence
in regard to the opening and
maintenance of every account, to know
(and retain) the essential facts
concerning every customer and
concerning the authority of each person
acting on behalf of such customer; and
• members in recommending
transactions for a security subject to a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise have
a reasonable basis to believe that: (i) the
recommendation is suitable for a
customer given reasonable inquiry
concerning the customer’s investment
objectives, financial situation, needs,
and any other information known by
such members, and (ii) the customer can
evaluate the special characteristics, and
is able to bear the financial risks, of an
investment in such security.
These member requirements are
consistent with the protection of
investors because they are designed to
remind members of its obligations to
‘‘know their customers,’’ increase
transparency of the pricing mechanisms
of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise,
and help assure that investors have
sufficient price discovery information.
Nasdaq believes that the Commission
Staff has already concluded that pricing
up to 20% below the lowest price and
at a price above the highest price of the
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price range in the company’s effective
registration statement is appropriate for
a company conducting an initial public
offering notwithstanding it being
outside of the range stated in an
effective registration statement, and
investors have become familiar with this
approach at least since the Commission
Staff last revised Compliance and
Disclosure Interpretation 227.03 in
January 2009.44 Allowing Direct Listings
with a Capital Raise to similarly price
up to 20% below the lowest price and
at a price above the highest price of the
price range in the company’s effective
registration statement but below the
Upside Limit would be consistent with
Chair Gensler’s recent call to treat ‘‘like
cases alike.’’ 45
Nasdaq believes that the proposed
amendments to Listing Rule IM–5315–2
and Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2)
to conform these rules to the
modification of the Pricing Range
Limitation is consistent with the
protection of investors. These
amendments would simply substitute
Nasdaq’s reliance on the price equal to
the lowest price of the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement to the price that is
20% below such lowest price, making it
more difficult to meet the requirements.
In the case of Listing Rule IM–5315–2,
a company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise
would still need to meet all applicable
initial listing requirements based on the
price that is 20% below the lowest price
of the price range disclosed by the
issuer in its effective registration
statement. In the case of the Rules
4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2) such price,
which is the minimum price at which
the Cross will occur, will serve as the
fourth tie-breaker where there are
multiple prices that would satisfy the
conditions for determining the auction
price, as described above. Nasdaq
believes that this proposal to resolve a
potential tie among the prices that
satisfy all other requirements in the
Cross, by choosing the price that is
closest to the price that is 20% below
the range, is consistent with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act because it is designed
to protect investors by providing them
with the most advantageous offering
price among possible alternative prices.
Nasdaq also believes that the
proposal, by eliminating an impediment
to companies using a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise, will help removing
potential impediments to free and open
44 https://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/
guidance/securitiesactrules-interps.htm.
45 See https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/genslerhealthy-markets-association-conference-120921.
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markets consistent with Section 6(b)(5)
of the Exchange Act while also
supporting capital formation.
Finally, Nasdaq believes that the
proposal to clarify several provisions of
the existing rules without changing
them is designed to remove
impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market
because such changes make the rules
easier to understand and apply without
changing their substance.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that
the proposed rule change will impose
any burden on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act. The
proposed amendments would not
impose any burden on competition, but
would rather increase competition.
Nasdaq believes that allowing listing
venues to improve their rules enhances
competition among exchanges. Nasdaq
also believes that this proposed change
will give issuers interested in this
pathway to access the capital markets
additional flexibility in becoming a
public company, and in that way
promote competition among service
providers, such as underwriters and
other advisors, to such companies.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either
solicited or received.
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
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
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. 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–NASDAQ–2022–027, and
should be submitted on or before
October 13, 2022.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.46
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
III. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
[FR Doc. 2022–20503 Filed 9–21–22; 8:45 am]
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
NASDAQ–2022–027 on the subject line.
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed
Income Clearing Corporation; Notice of
Filing of Proposed Rule Change To
Increase the Minimum Required Fund
Deposit for GSD Netting Members and
Sponsoring Members, and Make Other
Changes
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASDAQ–2022–027. This
file number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
September 16, 2022.
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BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–95806; File No. SR–FICC–
2022–006]
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on
September 9, 2022, Fixed Income
Clearing Corporation (‘‘FICC’’) filed
46 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 183 (Thursday, September 22, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57951-57960]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-20503]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-95811; File No. SR-NASDAQ-2022-027]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC;
Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No.
2, To Modify Certain Pricing Limitations for Companies Listing in
Connection With a Direct Listing With a Capital Raise
September 16, 2022.
On March 21, 2022, The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC (``Nasdaq'' or
``Exchange'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ a
proposed rule change to allow companies to modify certain pricing
limitations for companies listing in connection with a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise in which the company will sell shares itself in
the opening auction on the first day of trading on Nasdaq. The proposed
rule change was published for comment in the Federal Register on April
8, 2022.\3\ On May 19, 2022, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\4\ the Commission designated a longer period within which to
either approve or disapprove the proposed rule change, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule
change.\5\
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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. 94592 (April 4,
2022), 87 FR 20905 (April 8, 2022).
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\5\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94947 (May 19,
2022), 87 FR 31915 (May 25, 2022). The Commission designated July 7,
2022, as the date by which it should approve, disapprove, or
institute proceedings to determine whether to disapprove the
proposed rule change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 23, 2022, the Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change, which superseded the proposed rule change as originally
filed. Amendment No. 1 was published for comment in the Federal
Register on June 2, 2022.\6\ On July 7, 2022, the Commission instituted
proceedings under Section 19(b)(2)(B) of the Act \7\ to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94989 (May 26,
2022), 87 FR 33558 (June 2, 2022).
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(B).
\8\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 95220 (July 7,
2022), 87 FR 41780 (July 13, 2022). Comments received on the
proposal are available on the Commission's website at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-nasdaq-2022-027/srnasdaq2022027.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 23, 2022, the Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change, which superseded the proposed rule change as originally
filed. Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change is described in
Items I and II below, which Items have been prepared by the Exchange.
The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1, from interested
persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to modify certain pricing limitations for
[[Page 57952]]
companies listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise on the Nasdaq Global Select Market in which the company will sell
shares itself in the opening auction on the first day of trading on
Nasdaq. This Amendment No. 2 supersedes the original filing, as
modified by Amendment No. 1, in its entirety.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on the Exchange's
website at https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules, at
the principal office of the Exchange, and at the Commission's Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, the Exchange 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 these 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 aspects of such
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
Nasdaq is filing this amendment to SR-NASDAQ-2022-027 \9\ to
address the issues the Commission raised in the OIP and make other
modifications to clarify the proposed rule language. This Amendment No.
2 supersedes and replaces Amendment No. 1 in its entirety.
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\9\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94592 (April 4, 2022),
87 FR 20905 (April 8, 2022) (the ``Initial Proposal''). On May 23,
2022, the Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change, which superseded the proposed rule change as originally
filed. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 94989 (May 26, 2022), 87
FR 33558 (June 2, 2022). The Commission issued an Order Instituting
Proceedings to Determine Whether To Approve or Disapprove the
Initial Proposal, as modified by Amendment No. 1. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 95220 (July 7, 2022), 87 FR 41780 (July 13,
2022) (the ``OIP'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this Amendment No. 2 (the ``Amendment'') Nasdaq proposes to
modify the Initial Proposal, as modified by Amendment No. 1,\10\ to
require that a company offering securities for sale in connection with
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise must retain an underwriter with
respect to the primary sales of shares by the company and identify the
underwriter in its effective registration statement.\11\
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\10\ Nasdaq submitted Amendment No. 1 in order to: (i) clarify
Nasdaq's view of the applicability of Securities Act Rule 430A and
mechanics of complying with the disclosures required under federal
securities laws by a company listing in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise in circumstances where the actual price
calculated by the Cross is outside of the price range established by
the issuer in its effective registration statement; (ii) specify
that if the company's certification to Nasdaq (that the company does
not expect that an offering price above the price range would
materially change the company's previous disclosure in its effective
registration statement) includes an upside limit, Nasdaq will not
execute the cross if it results in an offering price above such
limit; and (iii) make minor technical changes to improve the
structure, clarity and readability of the proposed rules.
\11\ Nasdaq believes that this proposal addresses the issues
raised by the Commission in the OIP related to the potential lack of
a named underwriter in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, as
explained below. Nasdaq also believes that this proposal addresses
concerns raised in the comment letter submitted by the Council of
Institutional Investors (CII), dated August 8, 2022. Nasdaq believes
that the CII letter raises concerns that are substantively the same
as the concerns raised by the Commission in the OIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also in this Amendment, Nasdaq proposes to modify the Pricing Range
Limitation, as defined below, such that, provided other requirements
are satisfied, a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise can be executed in
the Cross at a price that is above the highest price of the price range
established by the issuer in its effective registration statement only
if the execution price is at or below the price that is 80% above the
highest price of the price range.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Nasdaq believes that this proposal addresses the issues
raised by the Commission in the OIP related to the usefulness and
reliability of price range disclosure provided to investors, as
explained below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description of Proposed Rule, as Amended
In 2021, Nasdaq adopted Listing Rule IM-5315-2 to permit a company
to list on the Nasdaq Global Select Market 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 (a ``Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise''); \13\ created a new order type (the ``CDL
Order''), which is used during the Nasdaq Halt Cross (the ``Cross'')
for the shares offered by the company in a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise; and established requirements for disseminating
information, establishing the opening price and initiating trading
through the Cross in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise.\14\ For a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq rules currently require
that the actual price calculated by the Cross 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 (the ``Pricing
Range Limitation'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ A Direct Listing with a Capital Raise includes situations
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.
\14\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 91947 (May 19,
2021), 86 FR 28169 (May 25, 2021) (the ``Approval Order'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nasdaq now proposes to modify the Pricing Range Limitation \15\
such that, provided other requirements are satisfied, a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise can also be executed in the Cross at a price that
is at or above the price that is as low as 20% below the lowest price
in the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement; \16\ or at a price above the highest price of
such price range but only if the execution price is at or below the
price that is 80% above the highest price of the price range.
Specifically, to execute at a price outside of the price range, the
company's registration statement must contain a sensitivity analysis
explaining how the company's plans would change if the actual proceeds
from the offering were less than or exceeded the amount assumed in such
price range and the company has publicly disclosed and certified to
Nasdaq that the company does not expect that such price would
materially change the company's previous disclosure in its effective
registration statement. Nasdaq also proposes to make related conforming
changes.
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\15\ On February 24, 2022, the Commission issued an order
disapproving a similar proposal by Nasdaq. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 94311 (February 24, 2022), 87 FR 11780 (March 2, 2022)
(the ``Disapproval Order''). Nasdaq believes that this proposal
addresses the issues raised by the Commission in the Disapproval
Order.
\16\ References in this proposal to the price range established
by the issuer in its effective registration statement are to the
price range disclosed in the prospectus in such registration
statement. Separately, as explained in more details below, Nasdaq
proposes to prescribe that the 20% threshold below the lowest price
in the price range will be calculated based on the maximum offering
price set forth in the registration fee table, consistent with the
Instruction to paragraph (a) of Securities Act Rule 430A.
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Current Direct Listing With a Capital Raise Requirements
Currently, a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise must begin trading
on Nasdaq following the initial pricing through the Cross, which is
described in Rules 4120(c)(9) and 4753.\17\
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\17\ See Listing Rule IM-5315-2.
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Currently, in addition to pricing within the Pricing Range
Limitation,\18\ Rule 4120(c)(9) requires that in the case
[[Page 57953]]
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, will make the
determination of whether the security is ready to trade. In addition,
under Rule 4120(c)(9)(B) Nasdaq will release the security for trading
only if all market orders will be executed in the Cross. If there is
insufficient buy interest to satisfy the CDL Order and all other market
orders, or if the Pricing Range Limitation is not satisfied, the Cross
would not proceed and such security would not begin trading. In such
event, because the Cross cannot be conducted, 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 would be cancelled back to the
entering firms.\19\
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\18\ See Rule 4120(c)(9)(B).
\19\ Nasdaq will postpone and reschedule the offering only if
either or both such conditions are not met.
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Proposed Change to Rule 4120(c)(9)
While many companies are interested in alternatives to traditional
IPOs, based on conversations with companies and their advisors Nasdaq
believes that there may be a reluctance to use the existing Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise rules because of concerns about the
Pricing Range Limitation.
One potential benefit of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise as
an alternative to a traditional IPO is that it could maximize the
chances of more efficient price discovery of the initial public sale of
securities for issuers and investors. Unlike an IPO where 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,
in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise the initial sale price is
determined based on market interest and the matching of buy and sell
orders in an auction open to all market participants. In that regard,
in the Approval Order the Commission stated that:
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.\20\
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\20\ See Approval Order, 86 FR 28177.
A successful initial public offering of shares requires sufficient
investor interest. If an offering cannot be completed due to lack of
investor interest, there is likely to be a substantial amount of
negative publicity for the company and the offering may be delayed or
cancelled. The Pricing Range Limitation imposed on a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise (but not on a traditional IPO) increases the
probability of such a failed offering because the offering cannot
proceed without some delay not only for the lack of investor interest,
but also if investor interest is greater than the company, its
underwriter, and other advisors anticipated. In the Approval Order, the
Commission noted a frequent academic observation of traditional firm
commitment underwritten offerings 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.\21\ Nasdaq believes that the price range
in a company's effective registration statement for a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise would similarly be determined by the company, its
underwriter, and other advisors and, therefore, there may be instances
of offerings where the price determined by the Nasdaq opening auction
will exceed the highest price of the price range in the company's
effective registration statement.
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\21\ See Approval Order, footnote 91.
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As explained above, under the existing rule a security subject to a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise cannot be released for trading by
Nasdaq if the actual price calculated by the Cross is above the highest
price of the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement. In this case, Nasdaq would have to cancel or
postpone the offering until the company amends its effective
registration statement. At a minimum, such a delay exposes the company
to market risk of changing investor sentiment in the event of an
adverse market event. In addition, as explained above, the
determination of the public offering price of a traditional IPO is not
subject to limitations similar to the Pricing Range Limitation for a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, which, in Nasdaq's view, could
make companies reluctant to use this alternative method of going public
despite its expected potential benefits. This reluctance could result
in denying investors and companies the benefits of this different price
discovery method.
Accordingly, Nasdaq proposes to modify the Pricing Range Limitation
such that in the case of the Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, a
security could be released for trading by Nasdaq if the actual price at
which the Cross would occur is as much as 20% below the lowest price of
the price range established by the issuer in its effective registration
statement. In addition, a security could be released for trading by
Nasdaq if the actual price at which the Cross would occur was above the
highest price in the price range established by the issuer in its
effective registration statement but only if the execution price is at
or below the price that is 80% above the highest price of the price
range.\22\ In such cases (whether lower or higher than the price range)
the company will be required to specify the quantity of shares
registered in its registration statement, as permitted by Securities
Act Rule 457,\23\ and that registration statement will be required to
contain a sensitivity analysis (the company must also certify to Nasdaq
in that regard) explaining how the company's plans would change if the
actual proceeds from the offering are less than or exceed the amount
assumed in the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.\24\ In addition, the company will be required
to publicly disclose and certify to Nasdaq prior to beginning of the
Display Only Period that the company does not expect that such offering
price would materially change the company's previous disclosure in its
effective registration statement. If the company's certification
submitted to Nasdaq in that regard includes a price limit that is below
the price that is 80% above the highest price of the price
[[Page 57954]]
range (the ``Upside Limit''), Nasdaq will not execute the Cross if it
results in the offering price above such limit. The goal of these
requirements is to have disclosure that allows investors to see how
changes in share price ripple through critical elements of the
disclosure.\25\
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\22\ In the prior proposal, Nasdaq proposed different
requirements based on whether the Cross would occur at a price that
was within 20% of the price range. See Disapproval Order. Nasdaq is
eliminating this proposed distinction and is proposing herein to
treat all prices outside of the price range the same.
\23\ Securities Act Rule 457 permits issuers to register
securities either by specifying the quantity of shares registered,
pursuant to Rule 457(a), or the proposed maximum aggregate offering
amount. Nasdaq proposes to require that companies selling shares
through a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will register
securities by specifying the quantity of shares registered and not a
maximum offering amount. See also Compliance & Disclosure
Interpretation of Securities Act Rules #227.03 at https://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/guidance/securitiesactrules-interps.htm.
\24\ The price range in the preliminary prospectus included in
the effective registration statement must be a bona fide price range
in accordance with Item 501(b)(3) of Regulation S-K.
\25\ Sensitivity analysis disclosure may include but is not
limited to: use of proceeds; balance sheet and capitalization; and
the company's liquidity position after the offering. An example of
this disclosure could be: We will apply the net proceeds from this
offering first to repay all borrowings under our credit facility and
then, to the extent of any proceeds remaining, to general corporate
purposes.
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Nasdaq believes that this approach is consistent with SEC Rule 430A
and question 227.03 of the SEC Staff's Compliance and Disclosure
Interpretations, which generally allow a company to price a public
offering 20% outside of the disclosed price range without regard to the
materiality of the changes to the disclosure contained in the company's
registration statement. Nasdaq believes such guidance also allows
deviation above the price range beyond the 20% threshold if such change
or deviation does not materially change the previous disclosure.
Accordingly, Nasdaq believes that a company listing in connection with
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise can specify the quantity of
shares registered, as permitted by Securities Act Rule 457, and, when
an auction prices outside of the disclosed price range, use a Rule
424(b) prospectus, rather than a post-effective amendment, when either
(i) the 20% threshold noted in the instructions to Rule 430A is not
exceeded, regardless of the materiality or non-materiality of resulting
changes to the registration statement disclosure that would be
contained in the Rule 424(b) prospectus, or (ii) when there is a
deviation above the price range beyond the 20% threshold noted in the
instructions to Rule 430A if such deviation would not materially change
the previous disclosure, in each case assuming the number of shares
issued is not increased from the number of shares disclosed in the
prospectus. For purposes of this rule, the 20% threshold will be
calculated based on the maximum offering price set forth in the
registration fee table, consistent with the Instruction to paragraph
(a) of Securities Act Rule 430A.\26\
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\26\ Nasdaq believes that applying additional protections
related to the disclosure requirements in the registration statement
and the certifications to Nasdaq, as described above, to all
instances where the Cross is executed outside the disclosed price
range addresses an issue the Commission raised in the Disapproval
Order. See footnote 15 above. For brevity, proposed rules define the
``Price Range'' as the price range established by the issuer in its
preliminary prospectus included in the effective registration
statement, including the maximum and the minimum prices of such
range; and ``DLCR Price Range'' as the price range that includes any
price that is below the Price Range and at or above the price that
is 20% below the lowest price of the Price Range, or is above the
highest price of the Price Range. If the company's certification
includes an upside limit, the DLCR Price Range is as defined in the
preceding sentence, but subject to the upper limit provided by the
company in its certification.
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Nasdaq notes that the Commission previously stated that while
Securities Act Rule 430A permits companies to omit specified price-
related information from the prospectus included in the registration
statement at the time of effectiveness, and later file the omitted
information with the Commission as specified in the rule, it neither
prohibits a company from conducting a registered offering at prices
beyond those that would permit a company to provide pricing information
through a Securities Act Rule 424(b) prospectus supplement nor absolves
any company relying on the rule from any liability for potentially
misleading disclosure under the federal securities laws.\27\
Accordingly, the burden of complying with the disclosures required
under federal securities laws, including providing any disclosure
necessary to avoid any material misstatements or omissions, remains
with the issuer. In that regard, Nasdaq believes that the Post-Pricing
Period, applicable in circumstances where the actual price calculated
by the Cross is outside of the price range established by the issuer in
its effective registration statement, as described below, provides the
company an opportunity, prior to the completion of the offering, to
provide any necessary additional disclosures that are dependent on the
price of the offering, if any; and/or determine and confirm to Nasdaq
that no additional disclosures are required under federal securities
laws based on the actual price calculated by the Cross.
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\27\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 93119 (September 24,
2021), 86 FR 54262 (September 30, 2021).
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Nasdaq believes that an underwriter plays an important role in a
traditional IPO and, therefore, proposes to require that a company
listing securities on Nasdaq in connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise must retain an underwriter with respect to the primary
sales of shares by the company and identify the underwriter in its
effective registration statement. Describing the role and
responsibilities of an underwriter, the Commission recently explained
that:
[a]s intermediaries between an issuer and the investing public,
underwriters play a critical role as ``gatekeepers'' to the public
markets. Historically, in initial public offerings, where the
investing public might be unfamiliar with a particular issuer,
financial firms that act as underwriters would lend their well-known
name to support that issuer's offering. Where public investors may
not have been inclined to invest with the company seeking to conduct
a public offering, they could take comfort in the fact that a large,
well-known financial institution, acting as underwriter, was
including its name on the first page of the issuer's prospectus . .
.
An underwriter's participation in an issuer's offering also
exposes the underwriter to potential liability under the Securities
Act. The civil liability provisions of the Securities Act reflect
the unique position underwriters occupy in the chain of distribution
of securities and provide strong incentives for underwriters to take
steps to help ensure the accuracy of disclosure in a registration
statement. Section 11 of the Securities Act imposes on underwriters,
among other parties identified in Section 11(a), civil liability for
any part of the registration statement, at effectiveness, which
contained an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state
a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make
the statements therein not misleading, to any person acquiring such
security. Similarly, Section 12(a)(2) imposes liability upon anyone,
including underwriters, who offers or sells a security, by means of
a prospectus or oral communication, which includes an untrue
statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact
necessary in order to make the statements, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, to any
person purchasing such security from them. These provisions provide
significant investor protections to those who acquire securities
sold pursuant to a registration statement by providing tools to hold
companies, underwriters, and other parties accountable for
misstatements and omissions in connection with public offerings of
securities. As a result, anyone who might be named as a potential
defendant in these suits has strong incentives to take the necessary
steps to avoid such liability.
One defense available to an underwriter in a distribution is the
``due diligence'' defense, which shields an underwriter from
liability if it can establish that, after reasonable investigation,
the underwriter had reasonable ground to believe and did believe, at
the time the registration statement became effective, that the
statements therein were true and that there was no omission to state
a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make
the statements therein not misleading.\28\
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\28\ Special Purpose Acquisition Companies, Shell Companies, and
Projections, 87 FR 29,458 (May 13, 2022).
Nasdaq believes that these significant investor protections
provisions are necessary in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise if an
offering can price outside the price range established in the issuer's
effective registration statement, subject to proposed limitations,
because such provisions
[[Page 57955]]
allow investors to make reasonable pricing decisions with clarity that
the company's underwriter would face statutory liability, as described
above. Accordingly, Nasdaq proposes to require that a company listing
securities on Nasdaq in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise must retain an underwriter with respect to the primary sales of
shares by the company and identify the underwriter in its effective
registration statement.
Nasdaq also believes that the requirement to retain a named
underwriter, as described above, may mitigate concerns, raised by the
Commission in the OIP, regarding challenges to bringing claims under
Section 11 of the Securities Act due to the potential assertion of
tracing defenses because an underwriter may choose to impose lock-up
arrangements, as described below.
As a preliminary matter, Nasdaq notes that in the Approval Order
the Commission explained that the issue of traceability:
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.'' 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. 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.\29\
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\29\ The Approval order, 86 FR 28176
The Commission then reaffirmed its position that ``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 Capital
Raise.'' The Commission further stated that it ``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.'' \30\ Nasdaq believes that no such precedent exists
as of the date of this Amendment and that the modifications to the
Pricing Range Limitation in this proposal do not, in any way,
exacerbate the tracing issues.
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\30\ The Approval order, 86 FR 28177
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However, as stated above, Nasdaq believes that the requirement to
retain a named underwriter may mitigate traceability concerns that may
arise in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. As in a traditional
firm commitment underwritten IPO, in which lock-up arrangements are
often imposed, an underwriter retained in connection with a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise, as required by the Amendment, will be
able to impose lock-up arrangements for the same reasons that make lock
up agreements common in an IPO.
Nasdaq also believes that the requirement to retain a named
underwriter, as described above, mitigates concerns, raised by the
Commission in the OIP, regarding the usefulness of price range
disclosure provided to investors in a Securities Act registration
statement filed in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise. Nasdaq believes that an underwriter retained in connection with
a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will perform substantially
similar functions, including those related to establishing and
adjusting the price range, to those performed by an underwriter in a
typical IPO because the underwriter will be subject to similar
liability and reputational risk.
To further mitigate concerns regarding the usefulness of price
range disclosure provided to investors, Nasdaq proposes to require that
the securities of a company listing in connection with a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise cannot price above the Upside Limit. The Upside
Limit will incentivize the company and its underwriter to set the
disclosed price range to avoid a failed offering consequences described
above. The Upside Limit would also help assure that an issuer would
adjust the price range disclosed in their registration statements prior
to effectiveness in light of pricing feedback received from market
analysts and potential investors.
To determine an appropriate Upside Limit, Nasdaq analyzed operating
companies IPOs on the Nasdaq Global Select Market and the NYSE for the
past five years where an IPO opened on an exchange at a price that is
above the highest price of the price range in the issuer's effective
registration statement.\31\ This analysis indicated that some IPOs
opened on an exchange at a price that was more than 100% above the
highest price of the price range. Based on the same data, more than
half of these IPOs opened at a price that was 30% or more above the
highest price of the price range. However, about 90% of these IPOs
opened at a price that was no more than the Upside Limit. Based on this
data Nasdaq believes that, on balance, capital formation and investor
protection goals would be best served by a pricing limitation equal to
the Upside Limit.
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\31\ This data set included over 400 records and covers a period
from January 2017 to July 2022.
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Nasdaq also proposes to adopt a new Price Volatility Constraint and
disseminate information about whether the Price Volatility Constraint
has been satisfied, which will indicate whether the security may be
ready to trade. Prior to releasing a security for trading, Nasdaq
allows a ``Pre-Launch Period'' of indeterminate length, during which
price discovery takes place. The Price Volatility Constraint requires
that the Current Reference Price has not deviated by 10% or more from
any Current Reference Price during the Pre-Launch Period within the
previous 10 minutes. The Pre-Launch Period will continue until at least
five minutes after the Price Volatility Constraint has been satisfied.
Nasdaq will also introduce the Near Execution Price which is the
Current Reference Price at the time the Price Volatility Constraint has
been satisfied; and set the Near Execution Time as such time. This
change will provide investors with notice that the Cross nears
execution and allows a period of at least five minutes for investors to
modify their orders, if needed, based on the Near Execution Price,
prior to the execution of the Cross and the pricing of the offering.
Further, to assure that the Near Execution Price is a meaningful
benchmark for investors, and that the offering price does not deviate
substantially from the Near Execution Price, Nasdaq proposes to
require, in addition to other the existing conditions stated in
proposed Rule 4120(c)(9)(B)(vii), that the Cross may execute only if
the actual price calculated by the Cross is no more than 10% below or
above the Near Execution Price (the ``10% Price Collar'').
Nasdaq notes that imbalance between the buy and sell orders could
sometimes cause the Current Reference Price to fall outside the 10%
Price Collar after the Price Volatility Constraint has been satisfied.
Such price fluctuations could
[[Page 57956]]
be temporary, and the Current Reference Price may return to and remain
within the 10% Price Collar. The price fluctuation could also be
lasting such that the Current Reference Price remains outside the 10%
Price Collar. Given this, Nasdaq proposes to assess the Current
Reference Price vis-[agrave]-vis the 10% Price Collar 30 minutes after
the Near Execution Time. If at that time the Current Reference Price is
outside the 10% Price Collar, all requirements of the Pre-Launch Period
shall reset and must be satisfied again.\32\ Once the Price Volatility
Constraint has been satisfied anew, the Current Reference Price at such
time will become the updated Near Execution Price and such time will
become the updated Near Execution Time. This process will continue
iteratively, if new resets are triggered, until the Cross is executed,
or the offering is postponed.
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\32\ For the avoidance of doubt, while the Price Volatility
Constraint cannot initially be satisfied sooner than ten minutes
after the beginning of the Pre-Launch Period, if it is subsequently
reset, the Price Volatility Constraint can be satisfied again in
less than ten minutes because it would look back at prior pricing
during the Pre-Launch Period (including pricing prior to the reset)
to determine if the Current Reference Price has deviated by 10% or
more from any Current Reference Price within the previous 10
minutes.
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If the Current Reference Price 30 minutes after the Near Execution
Time is within the 10% Price Collar, price formation may continue
without limitations until Nasdaq, in consultation with the financial
advisor to the issuer, makes the determination that the security is
ready to trade (and certain existing conditions restated in proposed
Rule 4120(c)(9)(B)(vii) are met). However, if at any time 30 minutes
after the Near Execution Time the Current Reference Price is outside
the 10% Price Collar, all requirements of the Pre-Launch Period shall
reset and must be satisfied again, in the same manner as described in
the immediately preceding paragraph.
Given that, as proposed, there may be a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise that could price outside the price range of the company's
effective registration statement, subject to the Upside Limit above
which the Cross could not proceed,\33\ Nasdaq proposes to enhance price
discovery transparency by providing readily available, real time
pricing information to investors. To that end Nasdaq will disseminate,
free of charge, the Current Reference Price on a public website, such
as Nasdaq.com, during the Pre-Launch Period and indicate whether the
Current Reference Price is within the price range established by the
issuer in its effective registration statement. Once the Price
Volatility Constraint has been satisfied, Nasdaq will also disseminate
the Near Execution Price, the Near Execution Time and the 30-minute
countdown from such time. The disclosure will indicate that the Near
Execution Price and the Near Execution Time may be reset, as described
above, if the security is not released for trading within 30 minutes of
the Near Execution Time and the Current Reference Price at such time
(or at any time thereafter) is more than 10% below or more than 10%
above the Near Execution Price.
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\33\ In addition to the Upside Limit, if the company's
certification submitted to Nasdaq pursuant to proposed Listing Rule
4120(c)(9)(B)(vii)d.2. includes a price limit that is lower than the
Upside Limit and the actual price calculated by the Cross exceeds
such lower limit, Nasdaq will postpone and reschedule the offering.
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In this way, investors interested in participating in the opening
auction will be informed when volatility has settled to a range that
will allow the open to take place and they will be informed of the
price range at which the auction would take place. If the price moves
outside, and remains outside this range, 30 minutes after the original
range was set they will be informed of the new range and will have at
least five minutes to reevaluate their investment decision.\34\
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\34\ Nasdaq believes that the introduction, as described above,
of the 10% Price Collar, the Near Execution Price, the Near
Execution Time, the 30-minute reset and the five minute prohibition
on executing the Cross after the Price Volatility Constraint has
been satisfied addresses concerns the Commission raised in the
Disapproval Order. See footnote 15 above. Specifically, in the
Disapproval Order, the Commission stated that, as previously
proposed, ``investors could be misled that the opening cross `nears
execution' and that the disseminated Current Reference Price will
likely be close to the opening auction price when, in fact, the
auction may not occur for a considerable time and the opening
auction price may differ substantially.'' As revised, the opening
auction price must remain within 10% of the price publicly announced
as the Near Execution Price for the auction to occur and investors
will have enhanced disclosure about the possibility that the Price
Volatility Constraint could be reset.
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Nasdaq also proposes to prohibit market orders (other than by the
Company through its CDL Order) from the opening of a Direct Listing
with a Capital Raise. This will protect investors by assuring that
investors only purchase shares at a price at or better than the price
they affirmatively set, after having the opportunity to review the
company's effective registration statement including the sensitivity
analysis describing how the company will use any additional proceeds
raised. Accordingly, an investor participating in a Direct Listing with
a Capital Raise will make their initial investment decision prior to
the launch of the offering by setting the price in their limit order
above which they will not buy shares in the offering, but will also
have an opportunity to reevaluate their initial investment decision
during the price formation process of the Pre-Launch Period based on
the Near Execution Price. Under the proposed rule, such investor will
have at least five minutes once the Near Execution Price has been set
and before the offering may be priced by Nasdaq to modify their order,
if needed. As described above, all relevant price formation information
will be disseminated by Nasdaq on a public website in real time.
In addition, to protect investors and assure that they are informed
about the attributes of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq
proposes to impose specific requirements on Nasdaq members with respect
to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. These rules will require
members to provide to a customer, before that customer places an order
to be executed in the Cross, a notice describing the mechanics of
pricing a security subject to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise in
the Cross, including information regarding the location of the public
website where Nasdaq will disseminate the Current Reference Price.
To assure that members have the necessary information to be
provided to their customers, Nasdaq proposes to distribute, at least
one business day prior to the commencement of trading of a security
listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, an
information circular to its members that describes any special
characteristics of the offering, and Nasdaq's rules that apply to the
initial pricing through the mechanism outlined in Nasdaq Rule
4120(c)(9)(B) and Nasdaq Rule 4753 for the opening auction, including
information about the notice they must provide customers and other
Nasdaq requirements that:
members use reasonable diligence in regard to the opening
and maintenance of every account, to know (and retain) the essential
facts concerning every customer and concerning the authority of each
person acting on behalf of such customer; and
members in recommending transactions for a security
subject to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise have a reasonable
basis to believe that: (i) the recommendation is suitable for a
customer given reasonable inquiry concerning the customer's investment
objectives, financial situation, needs, and any other information known
by such members, and (ii) the customer can evaluate the special
characteristics, and is able to bear the financial risks, of an
investment in such security.
[[Page 57957]]
These member requirements are intended to remind members of their
obligations to ``know their customers,'' increase transparency of the
pricing mechanisms of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, and help
assure that investors have sufficient price discovery information.
In each instance of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq's
information circular \35\ will inform the market participants that the
auction could price up to 20% below the lowest price of the price range
in the company's effective registration statement and specify what that
price is. Nasdaq will also indicate in such circular a statement that
the Cross cannot proceed at a price in excess of the Upside Limit and
whether or not there is a lower price limit above which the Cross could
not proceed, based on the company's certification, as described above.
Nasdaq will also remind the market participants that Nasdaq prohibits
market orders (other than by the company) from the opening of a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise.
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\35\ The information circular is an industry wide free service
provided by Nasdaq.
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To assure that the issuer has the ability, prior to the completion
of the offering, to provide any necessary additional disclosures that
are dependent on the price of the offering, Nasdaq proposes to
introduce to the operation of the Cross a brief Post-Pricing Period, in
circumstances where the actual price calculated by the Cross is outside
of the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement. Specifically, in such circumstances, Nasdaq
will initiate a Post-Pricing Period following the calculation of the
actual price. During the Post-Pricing Period the issuer must confirm to
Nasdaq that no additional disclosures are required under federal
securities laws based on the actual price calculated by the Cross.
During the Post-Pricing Period no additional orders for the security
may be entered in the Cross and no existing orders in the Cross may be
modified. The security shall be released for trading immediately
following the Post-Pricing Period. If the company cannot provide the
required confirmation, then Nasdaq will postpone and reschedule the
offering.
Proposed Conforming Changes to Listing Rule IM-5315-2
Listing Rule IM-5315-2 allows a company that has not previously had
its common equity securities registered under the 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.
Listing Rule IM-5315-2 provides that in determining whether a
company listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise satisfies the Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares
\36\ 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).
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\36\ See Listing Rules 5005(a)(23) and 5005(a)(45).
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Listing Rule IM-5315-2 further provides that, for this purpose, the
Market Value of Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares will be calculated
using a price per share equal to the lowest price of the price range
disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration statement.
Because Nasdaq proposes to allow the opening auction to price up to
20% below the lowest price of the price range established by the issuer
in its effective registration statement, Nasdaq proposes to make a
conforming change to Listing Rule IM-5315-2 to provide that the price
used to determine such company's compliance with the Market Value of
Unrestricted Publicly Held Shares is the price per share equal to the
price that is 20% below the lowest price of the price range disclosed
by the issuer in its effective registration statement. Nasdaq proposes
to clarify in Listing Rule IM-5315-2 that the 20% threshold below the
price range will be calculated based on the maximum offering price set
forth in the registration fee table. Nasdaq will determine that the
company has met the applicable bid price and market capitalization
requirements based on the same per share price. This price is the
minimum price at which the company could sell its shares in the Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise transaction and so assures that the
company will satisfy these requirements at any price at which the
auction successfully executes.
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, including 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.\37\
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\37\ See Listing Rules 5315(f)(1), (e)(1) and (2), respectively.
Rule 5315(f)(1) requires a security to have: (A) at least 550 total
holders and an average monthly trading volume over the prior 12
months of at least 1,100,000 shares per month; or (B) at least 2,200
total holders; or (C) a minimum of 450 round lot holders and at
least 50% of such round lot holders must each hold unrestricted
securities with a market value of at least $2,500.
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Proposed Conforming Changes to Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2)
Nasdaq proposes to amend Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2) to
conform the requirements for disseminating information and establishing
the opening price through the Cross in a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise to the proposed amendment to allow the opening auction to price
as much as 20% below the lowest price of the price range established by
the issuer in its effective registration statement.
Specifically, Nasdaq proposes changes to Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and
4753(b)(2) to make adjustments to the calculation of the Current
Reference Price, which is disseminated in the Nasdaq Order Imbalance
Indicator, in the case of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise and for
how the price at which the Cross will execute. These rules currently
provide that where there are multiple prices that would satisfy the
conditions for determining a price, the fourth tie-breaker for a Direct
Listing with a Capital Raise is the price that is closest to the lowest
price of the price range disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement.\38\
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\38\ To illustrate: The bottom of the range is $10. More than
one price exists within the range under the previous set of tie-
breakers such that both $10.15 and $10.25, satisfy all other
requirements. The operation of the fourth tie-breaker will result in
the auction price of $10.15 because it is the price that is closest
to $10.
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To conform these rules to the modification of the Pricing Range
Limitation change, as described above, Nasdaq proposes to modify the
fourth tie-breaker for a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, to use
the price closest to the price that is 20% below (calculated as
provided for in Listing Rule IM-5315-2) the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration
statement.\39\
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\39\ Note that using the price that is 20% below the lowest
price of the price range disclosed by the issuer in its effective
registration statement as a tie-breaker (rather than the price
representing the bottom of the range) does not change the outcome in
the example in footnote 38 above because $10.15 is the price that is
closest to either.
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Lastly, Nasdaq proposes to clarify several provisions of the
existing rules
[[Page 57958]]
by restating the provisions of Rules 4120(c)(8)(A) and (c)(9)(A) in a
clear and direct manner without substantively changing them.
Specifically, Nasdaq proposes to clarify the mechanics of the Cross by
specifying that Nasdaq will initiate a 10-minute Display Only Period
only after the CDL Order had been entered. This clarification simply
states what is already implied by the rule because the Cross and the
offering may not proceed without the company's order to sell the
securities in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. Similarly, Nasdaq
proposes to clarify without changing the existing rule that Nasdaq
shall select price bands for purposes of applying the price validation
test in the Cross in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise. Under the price validation test, the System compares the
Expected Price with the actual price calculated by the Cross to
ascertain that the difference, if any, is within the price bands.
Nasdaq shall select an upper price band and a lower price band. The
default for an upper and a lower price band is set at zero. If a
security does not pass the price validation test, Nasdaq may, but is
not required to, select different price bands before recommencing the
process to release the security for trading.\40\ Nasdaq also proposes
to clarify that the ``actual price,'' as the term is used in the rule,
is the Current Reference Price at the time the system applies the price
bands test.
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\40\ This function is provided by the underwriter in an IPO and
by a Financial Advisor in a Direct Listing when the company is not
selling shares in a primary offering. The Commission previously
approved Nasdaq performing this function. See Approval Order.
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2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes that its proposal is consistent with Section
6(b) of the Act,\41\ in general, and furthers the objectives of Section
6(b)(5) of the Act,\42\ in particular, in that it is designed 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.
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\41\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b).
\42\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
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Nasdaq believes that the proposed amendment to modify the Pricing
Range Limitation is consistent with the protection of investors because
this approach is similar to the pricing of an IPO where an issuer is
permitted to price outside of the price range disclosed by the issuer
in its effective registration statement in accordance with the SEC's
Staff guidance, as described above.\43\ Specifically, Nasdaq believes
that a company listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise can specify the quantity of shares registered, as
permitted by Securities Act Rule 457, and, when an auction prices
outside of the disclosed price range, use a Rule 424(b) prospectus,
rather than a post-effective amendment, when either (i) the 20%
threshold noted in the instructions to Rule 430A is not exceeded,
regardless of the materiality or non-materiality of resulting changes
to the registration statement disclosure that would be contained in the
Rule 424(b) prospectus, or (ii) when there is a deviation above the
price range beyond the 20% threshold noted in the instructions to Rule
430A if such deviation would not materially change the previous
disclosure, in each case assuming the number of shares issued is not
increased from the number of shares disclosed in the prospectus. As a
result, Nasdaq will allow the Cross to take place as low as 20% below
the lowest price of the price range disclosed by the issuer in its
effective registration statement, but no lower, and so this is the
minimum price at which the company could be listed. In addition, to
better inform investors and market participants, Nasdaq will issue an
industry wide circular to inform the participants that the auction
could price up to 20% below the lowest price of the price range in the
company's effective registration statement and specify what that price
is. Nasdaq will also indicate in such circular that the Cross cannot
proceed at a price in excess of the Upside Limit and whether or not
there is a lower price limit above which the Cross could not proceed,
based on the company's certification, as described above. Nasdaq will
also remind the market participants that Nasdaq prohibits market orders
(other than by the company) from the opening of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise.
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\43\ In a recent speech, SEC Chair Gary Gensler emphasized that
an overarching principle of regulation is that like activities ought
to be treated alike. See https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/gensler-healthy-markets-association-conference-120921.
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To assure that the issuer has the ability, prior to the completion
of the offering, to provide any necessary additional disclosures that
are dependent on the price of the offering, Nasdaq proposes to
introduce to the operation of the Cross a brief Post-Pricing Period, in
circumstances where the actual price calculated by the Cross is at or
above the price that is 20% below the lowest price and below the lowest
price of the price range established by the issuer in its effective
registration statement; or is above the highest price of the price
range established by the issuer in its effective registration statement
but below the Upside Limit (and below the high end price limit, if any,
set in the company's certification submitted to Nasdaq pursuant to
proposed Listing Rule 4120(c)(9)(B)(vii)d.2., if any). Specifically, in
such circumstances, Nasdaq will initiate a Post-Pricing Period
following the calculation of the actual price. During the Post-Pricing
Period the issuer must confirm to Nasdaq that no additional disclosures
are required under federal securities laws based on the actual price
calculated by the Cross, with such confirmation ending the Post-Pricing
Period. During the Post-Pricing Period no additional orders for the
security may be entered in the Cross and no existing orders in the
Cross may be modified. The security shall be released for trading
immediately following the Post-Pricing Period. If the company cannot
provide the required confirmation, then Nasdaq will postpone and
reschedule the offering. Nasdaq believes that this modification is
designed to promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove
impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market
because it will help assure that a company listing in connection with a
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise complies with the disclosure
requirements under federal securities laws and that investors receive
all required information.
Nasdaq believes that the proposal to allow a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise to price above the price range of the company's effective
registration statement but below the Upside Limit is designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market investors
because this approach is similar to, but more stringent than, that of
pricing a traditional IPO. In addition, to protect investors Nasdaq
proposes to enhance price discovery transparency by providing readily
available, real time pricing information to investors. To that end
Nasdaq will disseminate, free of charge, the Current Reference Price on
a public website (such as Nasdaq.com) during the Pre-Launch Period and
indicate whether the Current Reference Price is within the price range
established by the issuer in its effective registration statement.
Nasdaq believes that a proposed requirement that a company offering
securities for sale in connection with a
[[Page 57959]]
Direct Listing with a Capital Raise must retain an underwriter with
respect to the primary sales of shares by the company and identify the
underwriter in its effective registration statement is designed to
protect investors and the public interest because these provisions
provide significant investor protections to those who acquire
securities sold pursuant to a registration statement by providing tools
to hold underwriters accountable for misstatements and omissions in
connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise.
Nasdaq believes that the requirement that the securities of a
company listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital
Raise cannot price above the Upside Limit is designed to protect
investors and the public interest because it would incentivize the
company and its underwriter to avoid a failed offering by taking steps
to help ensure the accuracy of price range disclosure in a registration
statement. In addition, as described above, an underwriter has strong
incentives to take the necessary steps to avoid statutory liability.
Nasdaq believes that the provision prohibiting market orders (other
than by the company) from the opening of a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise is designed to protect investors because this provision
will assure that investors only purchase shares at a price that is at,
or better than, the price they affirmatively set, after having the
opportunity to review the company's effective registration statement
including the sensitivity analysis describing how the company will use
any additional proceeds raised.
Nasdaq also proposes to adopt a new Price Volatility Constraint and
disseminate information about whether the Price Volatility Constraint
has been satisfied, which will indicate whether the security may be
ready to trade. The Price Volatility Constraint requires that the
Current Reference Price has not deviated by 10% or more from any
Current Reference Price within the previous 10 minutes. The Pre-Launch
Period will continue until at least five minutes after the Price
Volatility Constraint has been satisfied. Nasdaq will also introduce
the Near Execution Price which is the Current Reference Price at the
time the Price Volatility Constraint has been satisfied; and set the
Near Execution Time at such time. This change will provide investors
with notice that the Cross nears execution and a period of at least
five minutes to modify their orders, if needed, based on the Near
Execution Price, prior to the execution of the Cross and the pricing of
the offering. Further, to help assure that the offering price does not
deviate substantially from the Near Execution Price, Nasdaq proposes to
require, in addition to other conditions described above, that the
Cross may execute only if the actual price calculated by the Cross is
within the 10% Price Collar. Nasdaq believes that these changes are
designed to protect investors and the public interest because an
investor participating in a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise will
make their initial investment decision prior to the launch of the
offering by setting the price in their limit order above which they
will not buy shares in the offering, but will also have an opportunity
to reevaluate their initial investment decision during the price
formation process of the Pre-Launch Period based on the Near Execution
Price. Under the proposed rule, such investor will have at least five
minutes once the Near Execution Price has been set and before the
offering may be priced by Nasdaq to modify their order, if needed.
While the auction may take longer than this five minute period to
complete, investors are protected during this time because the Price
Volatility Constraint will reset if the actual price calculated by the
Cross is more than 10% below or above the Near Execution Price. Once
the Price Volatility Constraint has been satisfied, Nasdaq proposes to
disseminate the Near Execution Price and the Near Execution Time on a
public website, such as Nasdaq.com.
Nasdaq believes that the proposal to reset the Price Volatility
Constraint, the Near Execution Price and the Near Execution Time in the
circumstances described above is designed to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, to remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism
of a free and open market investors because in certain circumstances an
imbalance between the buy and sell orders could sometimes cause the
Current Reference Price to fall outside the 10% Price Collar after the
Price Volatility Constraint has been satisfied. These provisions will
protect investors by increasing the information available to them in
connection with the price formation process during the opening auction.
To protect investors and increase transparency, Nasdaq also
proposes to disseminate on a public website, such as Nasdaq.com, the
30-minute countdown from the Near Execution Time and indicate that the
Near Execution Price and the Near Execution Time may be reset, as
described above, if the security is not released for trading within 30
minutes of the Near Execution Time and the Current Reference Price at
such time (or at any time thereafter) is outside the 10% Price Collar.
In addition, to protect investors and assure that they are informed
about the attributes of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, Nasdaq
proposes to impose specific requirements on Nasdaq members with respect
to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise. These rules will require
members to provide to a customer, before that customer places an order
to be executed in the Cross, a notice describing the mechanics of
pricing a security subject to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise in
the Cross, including information regarding the dissemination of the
Current Reference Price on a public website such as Nasdaq.com.
To assure that members have the necessary information to be
provided to their customers, Nasdaq proposes to distribute, at least
one business day prior to the commencement of trading of a security
listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, an
information circular to its members that describes any special
characteristics of the offering, and Nasdaq's rules that apply to the
initial pricing through the mechanism outlined in Nasdaq Rule
4120(c)(9)(B) and Nasdaq Rule 4753 for the opening auction, including
information about the notice they must provide customers and other
Nasdaq requirements that:
members use reasonable diligence in regard to the opening
and maintenance of every account, to know (and retain) the essential
facts concerning every customer and concerning the authority of each
person acting on behalf of such customer; and
members in recommending transactions for a security
subject to a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise have a reasonable
basis to believe that: (i) the recommendation is suitable for a
customer given reasonable inquiry concerning the customer's investment
objectives, financial situation, needs, and any other information known
by such members, and (ii) the customer can evaluate the special
characteristics, and is able to bear the financial risks, of an
investment in such security.
These member requirements are consistent with the protection of
investors because they are designed to remind members of its
obligations to ``know their customers,'' increase transparency of the
pricing mechanisms of a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise, and help
assure that investors have sufficient price discovery information.
Nasdaq believes that the Commission Staff has already concluded
that pricing up to 20% below the lowest price and at a price above the
highest price of the
[[Page 57960]]
price range in the company's effective registration statement is
appropriate for a company conducting an initial public offering
notwithstanding it being outside of the range stated in an effective
registration statement, and investors have become familiar with this
approach at least since the Commission Staff last revised Compliance
and Disclosure Interpretation 227.03 in January 2009.\44\ Allowing
Direct Listings with a Capital Raise to similarly price up to 20% below
the lowest price and at a price above the highest price of the price
range in the company's effective registration statement but below the
Upside Limit would be consistent with Chair Gensler's recent call to
treat ``like cases alike.'' \45\
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\44\ https://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/guidance/securitiesactrules-interps.htm.
\45\ See https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/gensler-healthy-markets-association-conference-120921.
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Nasdaq believes that the proposed amendments to Listing Rule IM-
5315-2 and Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2) to conform these rules to
the modification of the Pricing Range Limitation is consistent with the
protection of investors. These amendments would simply substitute
Nasdaq's reliance on the price equal to the lowest price of the price
range disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration statement
to the price that is 20% below such lowest price, making it more
difficult to meet the requirements. In the case of Listing Rule IM-
5315-2, a company listing in connection with a Direct Listing with a
Capital Raise would still need to meet all applicable initial listing
requirements based on the price that is 20% below the lowest price of
the price range disclosed by the issuer in its effective registration
statement. In the case of the Rules 4753(a)(3)(A) and 4753(b)(2) such
price, which is the minimum price at which the Cross will occur, will
serve as the fourth tie-breaker where there are multiple prices that
would satisfy the conditions for determining the auction price, as
described above. Nasdaq believes that this proposal to resolve a
potential tie among the prices that satisfy all other requirements in
the Cross, by choosing the price that is closest to the price that is
20% below the range, is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Act
because it is designed to protect investors by providing them with the
most advantageous offering price among possible alternative prices.
Nasdaq also believes that the proposal, by eliminating an
impediment to companies using a Direct Listing with a Capital Raise,
will help removing potential impediments to free and open markets
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the Exchange Act while also
supporting capital formation.
Finally, Nasdaq believes that the proposal to clarify several
provisions of the existing rules without changing them is designed to
remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open
market because such changes make the rules easier to understand and
apply without changing their substance.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
The Exchange does not believe that the proposed rule change will
impose any burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The proposed amendments would
not impose any burden on competition, but would rather increase
competition. Nasdaq believes that allowing listing venues to improve
their rules enhances competition among exchanges. Nasdaq also believes
that this proposed change will give issuers interested in this pathway
to access the capital markets additional flexibility in becoming a
public company, and in that way promote competition among service
providers, such as underwriters and other advisors, to such companies.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
No written comments were either solicited or received.
III. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-NASDAQ-2022-027 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NASDAQ-2022-027. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will 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 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the Exchange. 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-NASDAQ-2022-027, and should be submitted
on or before October 13, 2022.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\46\
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\46\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2022-20503 Filed 9-21-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P