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Foreign Private Issuers – F Forms - YouTube
Channel: LawCast
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I am 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 continuation in a LawCast series
discussing U.S. investments in foreign businesses
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and foreign companies trading in the U.S.
public markets.
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Although a foreign private issuer may voluntarily
register and report using the same forms and
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rules applicable to U.S. issuers, they may
also opt to use special forms and rules specifically
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designed for and only available to foreign
companies.
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Form 20-F is the primary disclosure document
and Exchange Act registration form for foreign
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private issuers and is analogous to both an
annual report on Form 10-K and an Exchange
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Act registration statement on Form 10.
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A Form F-1 is the general registration form
for the offer and sale of securities under
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the Securities Act and, like Form S-1, is
the form to be used when the company does
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not qualify for the use of any other registration
form.
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A Form F-3 is analogous to a Form S-3.
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A Form S-3 allows incorporation by reference
of an annual report and other SEC reports.
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And to qualify to use a Form F-3, the foreign
company must, among other requirements that
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are substantially similar to Form S-3, have
been subject to the Exchange Act reporting
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requirements for at least 12 months, and filed
all reports in a timely manner during that
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time.
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The company must also have filed at least
one annual report on Form 20-F. A Form F-4
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is used for business combinations and exchange
offers, and a Form F-6 is used for American
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Depository Receipts, or ADR’s.
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Also, under certain circumstances, a foreign
private issuer can submit a registration statement
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on a confidential basis.
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Once registered, a foreign private issuer
must file periodic reports.
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A Form 20-F is used for an annual report and
is due within four months of fiscal year-end.
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Quarterly reports are not required.
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A Form 6-K is used for periodic reports and
captures the information that would be required
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to be filed in a Form 8-K, information the
company makes or is required to make public
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under the laws of its country of domicile
and, information it files or is required to
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file with a U.S. and foreign stock exchange.
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As noted in the last LawCast on this subject,
a foreign private issuer may elect to use
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either U.S. GAAP; International Financial
Reporting Standards, or IFRS, or home country
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accounting standards with a reconciliation
to U.S. GAAP in the preparation and presentation
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of its financial statements.
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Regardless of the accounting standard used,
the audit firm must be registered with the
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PCAOB.
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All filings with the SEC must be made in English.
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Where a document or contract is being translated
from a different language, the SEC has rules
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to ensure the translation is fair and accurate.
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The SEC rules do not have scaled disclosure
requirements for foreign private issuers.
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That is, all companies, regardless of size,
must report the same information.
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A foreign private issuer that would qualify
as a smaller reporting company or emerging
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growth company in the U.S. should consider
whether it should use and be subject to the
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regular U.S. reporting requirements and registration
forms.
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If the foreign company opts to be subject
to the regular U.S. reporting requirements,
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it must use U.S. GAAP for its financial statements.
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I am 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.
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