According to PwC’s 2025 Annual Corporate Directors Survey, a majority of the public company directors surveyed would like to see at least one of their colleagues voted off the island. This excerpt notes that this sentiment is on the rise, and suggests some of the reasons that may be behind it:
Frustration in the boardroom is mounting, and directors are increasingly acknowledging it. This year’s survey reveals discontent with peer performance is at a record high: 55% of public company directors surveyed believe that at least one of their board colleagues should be replaced, up six percentage points from last year.
This suggests that directors are becoming more candid about underperformance among their peers. It may also reflect a greater understanding that directors are looking for more from each other in today’s dynamic business environment. Indeed, the most common concern fueling this point of view is a lack of meaningful contribution to board discussions.
The survey found 41% of directors who want a colleague to leave said that it was because that person didn’t contribute meaningfully to discussions. When asked to elaborate, those directors’ comments reflected “a broader concern about alignment, engagement and boardroom dynamics.”
Director tenure appears to play a big part in this, with PwC observing that in many cases, directors believe that long tenure may result in diminished performance. Bolstering that conclusion was the fact that 34% of directors who wanted to replace a board member also cited long-tenured directors as contributing to board underperformance.
While we’re on the topic of director deadwood, a recent Heidrick & Struggles report highlights the benefits of approaching board refreshment as a strategic discipline. As this excerpt points out, increasing the board’s ability to keep activists at bay is not the least of the benefits associated with a proactive approach to board refreshment:
While being assured of the quality of your leaders for today and tomorrow is the primary reason to prioritize board refreshment, doing so also helps reduce exposure to costly and time-consuming activist campaigns.
So far in 2025, 43% of activist campaigns have targeted board seats, according to one recent report. Though activists have been relatively quiet amid economic uncertainty, many are preparing for a surge in the months ahead. Companies, in turn, are quietly hiring advisers to prepare defenses.
It is important to note that even though public proxy fights are becoming less common, negotiations are still disruptive and expensive. Boards that have failed to demonstrate board refreshment discipline are more vulnerable to activist critique and less able to credibly defend their position.
The report goes on to observe that with research finding that more than 75% of institutional investors see activists as catalysts for change and more than 70% see them as catalysts for accountability, boards that fail to take the intiative when it comes to refreshment “may find their refreshment agenda shaped for them—by others.”
Rounding out “Board Governance Day” on TheCorporateCounsel.net Blog, be sure to check out our recent “Timely Takes Podcast” featuring my discussion with governance expert Ralph Ward. In this 26-minute podcast, Ralph and I discussed the following topics:
– Qualities that separate good boards from not-so-good boards
– Preparing boards to address emerging governance issues
– Effective communication between boards and management
– Keys to good board and committee meetings
– The role and dangers of AI tools in the boardroom
– Advice for prospective directors on their due diligence
– Improving interactions between the board and its advisors
– Preparing for unexpected crises
– Some boardroom “hacks” to keep in mind
As always, if you have insights on a securities law, capital markets or corporate governance issue, trend or development that you’d like to share in a podcast, we’d love to hear from you. You can email me and/or Meredith at john@thecorporatecounsel.net or mervine@ccrcorp.com.
Please indulge me with one last government shutdown blog this week.
The Corp Fin Staff was back to work yesterday following an end to the government shutdown on Wednesday, and they did not waste any time putting out new guidance on how they will process filings now that the government shutdown has ended. Those issuers who filed a Securities Act registration statement without a delaying amendment or filed an amendment to remove the delaying amendment got some welcome relief, with the Staff essentially saying that they would not stand in the way of allowing those registration statements to become effective after 20 days had passed pursuant to Section 8(a) of the Securities Act and Rule 459 thereunder. In the prior shutdown guidance, Corp Fin had indicated that the Staff may ask companies to amend a registration statement to include the delaying amendment following an end to the government shutdown.
1. Registration Statements Without a Delaying Amendment. The Division indicates that if a company removed a delaying amendment or filed a new registration statement without a delaying amendment while the Division’s operating status was closed during the government shutdown, the company does not need to amend the registration statement to add a delaying amendment now that the Division’s operating status has changed to open following the end of the government shutdown. Similar to the guidance that the Division issued at the commencement of the government shutdown, the post-shutdown guidance notes that the liability and antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws apply to all registration statements, including those that go effective pursuant to Section 8(a) of the Securities Act, and the Division cautions that the company and its representatives should ensure that the registration statement does not contain any material misstatements or omissions of material information required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading. In a change from the guidance issued on October 1, 2025 (as updated on October 9, 2025), the post-shutdown guidance no longer indicates that the Staff may ask companies to amend a registration statement to include the delaying amendment.
2. Continuation of Rule 430A Guidance. The Division reiterates the Rule 430A guidance that it provided on October 9, 2025, noting that “the Staff will not recommend enforcement action to the Commission if a company omitted the information specified in Rule 430A from the form of prospectus filed as part of a registration statement during the shutdown and such registration statement goes effective after the shutdown by operation of law pursuant to Section 8(a) of the Securities Act and Rule 459 thereunder.”
3. Acceleration Requests. Consistent with the prior guidance, the post-shutdown guidance notes that the Staff will consider requests to accelerate the effective date of registration statements for which the delaying amendment was omitted, or that were amended to remove the delaying amendment, if such registration statements are amended to include a delaying amendment prior to the end of the 20-day period “and acceleration pursuant to Rule 461 is appropriate.”
4. Pending Post-Effective Amendments. The guidance notes that, for any post-effective amendments to registration statements that were filed during the time when the Division’s operational status was closed, the Staff will declare those post-effective amendments effective, unless the Staff hears from that company indicating that it does not want the post-effective amendment to be declared effective until a later time. Companies are encouraged to reach out to their assigned industry office as soon as possible if they want to delay the effective date of a pending post-effective amendment.
5. Pending Preliminary Proxy or Information Statements. The guidance indicates that those companies with pending preliminary proxy or information statements can file their definitive proxy or information statement once the 10-calendar-day period has expired; however, the Division notes that if the Staff had indicated that it would review the filing prior to the shutdown, the Staff will continue its review of the filing now that the Division’s operational status is open.
6. Pending Exchange Act Registration Statements. The guidance indicates that pending Form 10 registration statements filed to register a class of securities under Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act will go automatically effective after 60 calendar days, and the Staff reminds companies that they will be subject to the current and periodic reporting requirements of the Exchange Act once the Form 10 goes automatically effective. The Staff notes that it may review subsequent periodic reports filed by the company under the Exchange Act.
7. Filing Reviews. The post-shutdown guidance notes that if the Staff had indicated that it was not reviewing a pending registration statement prior to the government shutdown, the company many now submit an acceleration request when ready. For those situations where a filing was under review before the government shutdown, the Staff will continue to review those filings in the order that they were received. With respect to those registration statements that included delaying amendments and were filed during the government shutdown, the Staff will process those filings in the order that they were received. This same approach applies to draft registration statements that were submitted during the government shutdown.
Corp Fin’s post-shutdown guidance does not address other types of SEC submissions that require Staff action, such as no-action or interpretive requests, but as I mentioned earlier in the week, I expect that the Staff will respond to such requests in the order in which they were received.
I would also note that those companies that are seeking to list securities on an exchange in connection with, e.g., an IPO, should work with the exchange to determine whether they are going to permit the listing when a Securities Act registration statement goes effective by lapse of time pursuant to Section 8(a) of the Securities Act. As I noted earlier this week, the exchanges are likely to revert back to their pre-shutdown approach to IPO issuers seeking to list on the exchanges, in that they will expect issuers to resolve all Staff comments before approving a listing.
Earlier this week, Chairman Atkins delivered a speech at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia where he provided more details on the SEC’s “Project Crypto.” He offered these core principles underlying Project Crypto:
Before I walk through how I view the securities laws as applied to crypto tokens and transactions, let me state two basic principles that guide my thinking.
First, that a stock is still a stock whether it is a paper certificate, an entry in a DTCC account, or represented by a token on a public blockchain. A bond does not stop being a bond because its payment streams are tracked using smart contracts. Securities, however represented, remain securities. That is the easy part.
Second, that economic reality trumps labels. Calling something a “token” or an “NFT” does not exempt it from the current securities laws if it in substance represents a claim on the profits of an enterprise and is offered with the sorts of promises based on the essential efforts of others. Conversely, the fact that a token was once a part of a capital-raising transaction does not magically convert that token into a stock of an operating company.
These principles are hardly novel. They are embedded in the Supreme Court’s repeated insistence that we look to the “substance” of a transaction, not its “form,” when deciding whether the securities laws apply. What is new is the scale and speed at which asset types evolve in these new markets. This pace requires us to be nimble in response to market participants’ urgent requests for guidance.
Chairman Atkins noted that, in the coming months, he hopes that the Commission will consider “a package of exemptions to create a tailored offering regime for crypto assets that are part of or subject to an investment contract.”
This week, I have been celebrating 50 years of The Corporate Counsel and all of the related publications by showcasing some of my favorite contributions to the newsletter over the years.
When I started working for Executive Press after leaving the SEC in May 2007, I was very excited to join the editorial staff of The Corporate Counsel newsletter, given my long history with the publication that I described in the blog this week. Up until this point in my career, I had never really had the unique experience of writing for a blog or a newsletter, having instead cut my teeth on writing legal memoranda and disclosure in SEC filings. The thing that I soon learned about blogs and newsletters is that they very much have a “voice,” and if you are writing for them, you need to adapt your writing style to that voice. While this may sound straightforward, I found it hard to adapt my writing style to the more casual, conversational approach that is associated with these publications. I greatly appreciate the patience and understanding of Mike Gettelman, Broc Romanek and Julie Hoffman, who successfully guided me to the “voice” of our publications that carries through to this day.
For today’s featured article from The Corporate Counsel, I highlight one that is less practical and more personal. Even though this piece does not really include any practical guidance, I definitely find myself referring back to it from time to time. In the July-August 2020 issue of The Corporate Counsel, I penned a tribute to my late friend Marty Dunn, who had been a big part of The Corporate Counsel family for almost a decade. I still have a very distinct memory of when I asked Marty to join me as an editor of The Corporate Counsel, and he was so excited to get a chance to collaborate with me and contribute to an iconic publication that he had also relied on for many years. We announced Marty’s arrival in the May-June 2011 issue of The Corporate Counsel, and over the course of his tenure Marty and I had a very healthy competition trying to come up with the most practical guidance in our contributions, and I have to say looking back that Marty usually won on that front! My tribute to Marty is as follows:
In Memoriam: Marty Dunn
We lost a securities law legend when Marty Dunn passed away on June 15, 2020. Marty was the most recognizable person in the securities bar, having spoken at so many conferences and events for so long that it is impossible to count them all. Marty was also a key contributor to our publications, serving as an Editor of The Corporate Counsel for the past nine years, as a co-host of “The Dave & Marty Radio Show” on TheCorporateCounsel.net and as a panelist, comedian and puppeteer at the annual Proxy Disclosure Conference. Marty loved the securities laws and spent his life sharing that love with others, always seeking to teach us something new, while at the same time making sure that we did not take it all too seriously.
Marty’s wit and good humor was legendary. He always had a funny story or witty retort when speaking on an otherwise dry panel, and audiences loved him for that. For many years, Marty and I would travel around the country, like a pair of securities law troubadours, bringing the Dave and Marty show to conferences and events. Although, I must admit, it was mostly the Marty show. We had such a great time on those trips. I will treasure those memories forever.
Marty had spent nearly 20 years at the SEC, where he was responsible for many of the SEC’s most significant initiatives on disclosure, governance and capital-raising, including, among many others, reforming the securities offering process, implementing the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, adopting plain English requirements, implementing electronic proxy delivery and easing capital formation for small businesses. Marty spent his entire government career in his beloved Division of Corporation Finance, where he held several key positions, including Associate Director, Chief Counsel, Deputy Director and Acting Director.
Marty truly loved the SEC and Corp Fin. I can distinctly recall sitting in his office, drafting some new rule, interpretation or regulatory relief, and Marty would say, with a mix of amazement and admiration, “We just made that up!” Marty was the best at taking something complex and making it understandable, as well as taking on the most difficult problem and finding a practical solution for it. These skills made him the great teacher, mentor, regulator and counselor that he was.
After leaving the government, Marty was in private practice at O’Melveny & Myers and Morrison & Foerster. Clients and colleagues sought Marty out for his wise counsel and his aforementioned ability to solve difficult problems with practical solutions. I had the pleasure of working with Marty again for the past seven years, and we were able to accomplish so much together, but yet we had so much more that we wanted to do. I am going to miss him as a valued friend, mentor and colleague.
Above all else, Marty was a family man. He loved his family so much, and he talked about them all the time. Marty is survived by his wife Linda and daughters Emily, Molly and Maggie, as well as many other family members, friends, colleagues and clients who loved him.
I hope you have enjoyed my celebration of 50 years of The Corporate Counsel, and if you are not a subscriber to The Corporate Counsel and The Corporate Executive newsletters, be sure to sign up today. Please email info@ccrcorp.com or call 1.800.737.1271 to subscribe.
Overnight, the House passed a measure restoring federal government funding, and the President signed that legislation soon thereafter, making 43 days the new high water mark for federal government shutdowns. As of early this morning, the SEC’s website was updated to remove a notice indicating that the agency was shut down due to a lapse in appropriations, but no guidance has been provided as of yet regarding the agency’s reopening. As of my writing of this blog, it is unclear whether the furloughed SEC Staff will be returning to work today or tomorrow.
UPDATE: Since I wrote the blog very early this morning, NBC4 Washington has reported that the Office of Personal Management sent the following notice last night to federal workers in the Washington, DC area: “Employees are expected to begin the workday on time. Normal operating procedures are in effect.”
As the political parties crank their spin machines up to full blast to try to convince us who “won” this government shutdown, the one thing for certain is that we the U.S. taxpayers all lost. Holding the federal government hostage for a month and a half in the end appeared to accomplish very little, but yet it disrupted the lives of many Americans who are just trying to go about their lives with little regard for political machinations in Washington, DC. I am afraid that we have become too numb to these government shutdown shenanigans, and that does not bode well for our future – particularly given that we could face the same fate as soon as the end of January!
For the SEC, the shutdown could not have come at a worse time. The SEC Staff, already demoralized as a result of DOGE cuts, early retirements and a return-to-office directive, was forced to sit on the sidelines with no paychecks for nearly a month and a half. As a result of the shutdown, critical rulemaking initiatives that have been outlined by Chairman Atkins ground to a halt and momentum was lost. Now that the government has reopened, the Staff will have to dedicate scarce resources to working through a backlog of filings and requests. I know that the Staff is up for the challenge, but it is unfortunate that they have to face this challenge at all.
Yesterday, the WSJ reported that the proxy advisory firms Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis are being investigated by the FTC for potential violations of antitrust laws. The article notes:
The probe, which is in its early stages, is focused on the firms’ competitive practices and how they steer clients on hot-button issues such as climate- and social-related shareholder proposals, people familiar with the matter said. The FTC told Glass Lewis it was investigating whether it and others may have engaged in “unfair methods of competition,” according to a letter sent in late September that was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
The FTC probe follows an antitrust review launched by the Republican-led House Judiciary Committee this spring.
“This non-public investigation does not mean the Commission is suggesting Glass Lewis has acted unlawfully. With complete confidence in our longstanding commitment to high ethical standards, Glass Lewis is fully cooperating with the FTC’s document request,” a Glass Lewis spokeswoman said in a statement.
An ISS spokesman declined to comment.
Earlier this week, the WSJ reported that the White House is considering an executive order that would seek to restrict certain activities of ISS, Glass Lewis and the largest institutional investors. That article notes:
Trump administration officials are discussing at least one executive order that would restrict proxy-advisory firms such as Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis, people familiar with the matter said. That could include a broad ban on shareholder recommendations or an order blocking recommendations on companies that have engaged proxy advisers for consulting work, the people said.
Officials also are exploring limits on how index-fund managers are allowed to vote, seeking to curtail the power of such behemoths as BlackRock, Vanguard Group and State Street, the people said. These three together own on behalf of clients roughly 30% or more of many of the biggest U.S. publicly traded companies. One measure being discussed would require these index-fund managers to mirror their votes in line with clients who choose to vote.
We will be monitoring to see where all of this goes, because these measures could radically change the landscape for public companies.
My ongoing tribute to 50 years of practical guidance from The Corporate Counsel continues this week with yet another article that I contributed to the publication that I find particularly useful and go back to time and time again in my practice. But first, yet another reflection on my interactions with The Corporate Counsel over the years.
When I served as Chief Counsel of the Division of Corporation Finance back in the 2000s, I would occasionally receive calls from Jesse Brill about topics that he was covering in The Corporate Counsel or The Corporate Executive. Even though some in Corp Fin told me not to talk to Jesse, I found it useful to discuss topics with him and understand his point of view, while of course trying to say as little as possible that he could attribute to me! Jesse was well known by the Corp Fin Staff, because over the years he was always willing to engage with the Staff in pursuit of providing the readers of The Corporate Counsel with the most practical, up-to-date guidance.
A topic that we frequently cover in The Corporate Counsel is insider trading policies, and for many years we have provided readers with a model insider trading policy and related materials. It has always been gratifying for me to see how many issuers follow The Corporate Counsel’s model policy, proving that it has been a great resource for companies seeking to implement effective insider trading compliance programs.
In the November-December 2018 issue of The Corporate Counsel, as part of our periodic update of the model insider trading policy, I wrote a piece that delved into the “why” of insider trading policies. I believe that understanding why companies adopt insider trading policies is very helpful when implementing an effective insider trading compliance program and dealing with compliance issues that come up over time. The article notes:
Often when we revisit an issuer’s insider trading policy and procedures, the question inevitably arises of “why do we need an insider trading policy?” As insider trading policies have become ingrained into issuers’ ever-expanding menu of controls & procedures, we fear that sometimes the importance of the policy and procedures (to both the issuer and the insiders/employees) is lost.
If insiders/employees are looking at the insider trading policy as yet another policy that they glance over in the employee handbook, unfortunate errors in judgment can prevail and an individual (and perhaps the issuer) could face an SEC enforcement action or private securities litigation. For these reasons, we do not think it hurts to review the legal basis for having the insider trading policy and whether the policy and the procedures that it contemplates operate in a manner consistent with that legal standard.
Enter ITSFEA and the Modern Insider Trading Policy. While insider trading policies have been a mainstay for regulated entities (e.g., broker-dealers, funds, banks) for many years, it was not until the enactment of the Insider Trading and Securities Fraud Enforcement Act of 1988 (ITSFEA) that the notion of having a detailed insider trading policy and implementing procedures for other types of issuers began to take hold. Prior to the middle of the 1980s, the insider trading enforcement tools at the SEC’s disposal were relatively weak, limited to seeking injunctions against future violations and disgorgements of profits or losses avoided.
With insider trading scandals running rampant at the time, Congress was prompted to act, first enacting the Insider Trading Sanctions Act of 1984 (which gave the SEC the authority to seek treble civil monetary penalties) and then ITSFEA. The changes to the securities laws in ITSFEA included: (i) mandating that regulated entities such as broker-dealers and investment advisers must adopt, maintain and enforce policies and procedures designed to prevent insider trading; (ii) providing that entities (including issuers) could be subject to insider trading violations by persons who the entities directly or indirectly control; and (iii) expanding the definition of
“controlling person.”
The concept of controlling person liability as contemplated in ITSFEA changed the dynamic between the issuer and its insiders/employees. Under the ITSFEA provisions, controlling person liability would not apply in situations where the controlling person has “acted in good faith and did not directly induce the violation;” however, if the controlling person allows access to material nonpublic information (either about itself or about other entities) without implementing procedures to prevent the improper disclosure of the information or insider trading, then the controlling person could be subject to liability based on the controlled person’s actions.
The hits just keep on coming, folks! Stay tuned for my final 50th Anniversary blog tomorrow! If these celebratory blog posts give you the irresistible urge to subscribe to The Corporate Counsel newsletter, please email info@ccrcorp.com or call 1.800.737.1271 to get signed up.
Last night, we came one step closer to an end to the federal government shutdown, with the Rules Committee of the House of Representatives voting to advance the Senate-passed bill that I mentioned in the blog on Monday. The House is scheduled to reconvene at noon today, and votes on the bill could begin as early as 4:00 pm this afternoon. While one should never count one’s chickens before they hatch, the Speaker of the House appears confident that he has the votes to pass the bill. Once the House passes the bill, it is off to the President for his signature. If all of this goes according to plan, we could see appropriations restored by tonight or tomorrow.
This leads us to the inevitable question: How soon could the SEC be back up and running once an appropriations bill has been enacted? For an answer to this question, we look to the SEC’s Operations Plan Under a Lapse in Appropriations and Government Shutdown, which was last updated in August 2025. With regard to the resumption of operations following an end to the government shutdown, the Operations Plan states:
Resumption of Duties
Non-excepted employees should monitor the news for information on an additional appropriations bill and, unless told otherwise, should report back to duty on their next scheduled workday once a continuing resolution or an appropriations bill is enacted (passed by the House and the Senate and signed by the President).
– The Agency will use the SECAlerts system to notify employees regarding changes in Agency status. Plans for restarting Information Technology (IT) systems and avoiding any data loss or interruption may include requiring that some IT personnel report to work earlier than their normal work schedule to ensure that IT systems are up and running as soon as possible.
– Procedures for resuming program activities, particularly related to contracts, may include steps to ensure appropriate oversight and disbursement of funds. Office of Financial Management staff will make sure all financial transactions that occurred during the lapse in appropriations are processed and recorded accurately in the agency’s financial system.
Under this guidance, the SEC could be back up and running as soon as tomorrow if the appropriations legislation is enacted today. In trying to glean how the SEC – and in particular Corp Fin – will resume its operations, we can look back to how things played out at the end of the 2018-2019 government shutdown during the first Trump Administration.
The 2018-2019 government shutdown ended on a Friday, so the SEC had some time over the weekend to get ready for the onslaught when its doors reopened on Monday. The Corp Fin Staff posted transition guidance on Sunday, January 27 noting the “first come, first served” approach that I mentioned in the blog on Monday, but also indicating that that the Staff would consider requests to accelerate the effective date of registration statements that were filed without delaying amendments or amended to remove delaying amendments if the issuer amended the registration statement to include a delaying amendment prior to the end of the 20-day period. The transition guidance also noted that response times for things such as comment response letters, financial statement waiver requests, and no-action and interpretive requests would be longer than normal. We will be on the lookout to see if the Staff issues similar transition guidance when the current government shutdown ends.
My blog on Monday and the sudden prospect of an end to the government shutdown has prompted a flurry of questions, and I attempt to answer some of them below. I qualify all of this by noting that any Staff guidance that is forthcoming following an end to the government shutdown will supersede any of the guidance that I am going out on a limb here to provide.
Will the Corp Fin Staff apply the same screening criteria when determining whether to review registration statements and proxy statements that were filed during the course of the government shutdown?
While it is entirely within Corp Fin’s discretion to review a registration statement or a proxy statement, we know that following the 2018-2019 government shutdown, the Staff was generally trying to “clear the decks” of pending filings as quickly as possible. Practically speaking, it would be very difficult for the Staff to go back and review pending filings, and the current leadership at the SEC has indicated that it does not want to stand in the way of capital formation. For these reasons, it seems likely that the Staff will not undertake reviews of a significant number of pending filings and will work with issuers to get registration statements effective as quickly as possible.
If the SEC reopens during the 10-day waiting period for my preliminary proxy statement, should I wait to hear from the Staff for some time following the expiration of the 10-day waiting period before I mail and file definitive materials?
In my view, the Staff has always consistently held the view that, whether the agency is open or not, if you do not hear from the Staff during the 10-day period, then you are free to mail and file your definitive materials. For the same reasons that I mentioned above, I don’t think that the Staff will be particularly interested in reviewing preliminary proxy statements given the backlog.
An issuer removed the delaying amendment from its registration statement, and as a result the registration statement will go effective on the same day that the SEC reopens following the government shutdown. What should that issuer do?
Subject to further general guidance from the Staff, if this issuer does not hear directly from the Staff upon reopening, I think that it would be reasonable to allow the registration statement to go effective under Section 8(a) of the Securities Act and proceed with the offering. Following the 2018-2019 shutdown, the Staff took a case-by-case approach to registration statements without delaying amendments. As in prior shutdown situations, I suspect that the Staff has been monitoring those registration statements that do not have delaying amendments so they will be ready to contact issuers once agency operations resume.
How will the NYSE and Nasdaq approach the SEC’s reopening following the government shutdown?
I expect that the exchanges will revert back to their pre-shutdown approach to IPO issuers seeking to list on the exchanges, in that they will expect issuers to resolve all staff comments before approving a listing. The exchanges do not face a backlog situation, because they were open during the shutdown.
Let’s keep our collective fingers crossed that this government shutdown nightmare will soon be over!