SEC Regulation S-K - YouTube

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I’m attorney Laura Anthony founding partner of Legal & Compliance, a full service corporate
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securities and business transactions law firm.
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Today is the first LawCast in a series discussing SEC disclosure requirements.
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The topic of disclosure requirements under the federal Securities laws, in particular,
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the requirements under Regulation S-K has come to the forefront over the past couple
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of years and has been a regular topic of industry discussion, recommendations and review.
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On April 15 2016 the SEC issued a 341 page concept release and request for public comment
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on sweeping changes to certain business and financial disclosure requirements in Regulation
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S-K.
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Prior to that in September 2015 the SEC Advisory Committee on Small and Emerging Companies
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met and finalized its recommendation to the SEC regarding changes to the disclosure requirements
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for smaller publicly traded companies.
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In March 2015 the American Bar Association submitted its second comment letter to the
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SEC making recommendations for changes to Regulation S-K.
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In early December 2014, the House passed the Disclosure Modernization and Simplification
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Act of 2014, following which it was bundled into the FAST Act and passed into law on December
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4 2015.
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The Disclosure Modernization and Simplification Act of 2014 became Sections 72001-72003 of
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the FAST Act.
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The Disclosure Modernization and Simplification Act of 2014 requires the SEC to adopt or amend
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rules to: (i) allow issuers to include a summary page to Form 10-K; and (ii) scale or eliminate
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duplicative, antiquated or unnecessary requirements for Emerging growth companies, accelerated
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filers, smaller reporting companies and other smaller issuers in Regulation S-K.
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In addition, the SEC is required to conduct a study within one year on all Regulation
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S-K disclosure requirements to determine how best to amend and modernize the rules to reduce
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costs and burdens while still providing all material information.
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The FAST Act gave the SEC a 180 day deadline to issue rules and regulations implementing
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the changes.
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The FAST Act requests that the SEC emphasize a “company by company approach that allows
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relevant and material information to be disseminated to investors without boilerplate language
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or static requirements while preserving completeness and comparability of information across registrants”
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and “evaluate methods of information delivery and presentation and explore methods for discouraging
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repetition and the disclosure of immaterial information.”
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This approach is thought of as a principled approach with a concentration on materiality
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as opposed to just filling in line item information whether relevant or not to a particular company.
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It is believed, and I completely agree, that simply providing required line item disclosures,
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that are not relevant to a particular company, dilutes the material important information
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regarding that particular company and has the unintended consequence of weakening necessary
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disclosure to potential investors and the public trading markets.
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Even before the FAST Act, in May 2015, General Electric filed its annual 10-K with a complete
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make-over from prior years.
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GE’s 10-K, the first like it, is full of colorful charts and graphics and has scaled
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down narrative from what was once a virtually incomprehensible document.
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GE worked with the SEC on the new 10-K utilizing the materiality approach.
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I’m securities attorney Laura Anthony, founding partner of Legal & Compliance, and producer
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of LawCast.
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Should you have any questions about today’s topic, please visit Securitieslawblog.com
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and LawCast.com, or contact me directly.
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Inquiries of a technical nature are always encouraged.