December 4, 2025

Takeaways from Our Webcast “This Year’s Rule 14a-8 Process – Corp Fin Staff Explains What You Need to Know”

Tuesday’s webcast – “This Year’s Rule 14a-8 Process: Corp Fin Staff Explains What You Need to Know” – featuring Corp Fin Chief Counsel, Michael Seaman, Corp Fin Counsel, Emma O’Hara, Cooley’s Reid Hooper and Gibson Dunn’s Ron Mueller and moderated by our colleague Liz Dunshee addressed a ton of procedural questions on the new 14a-8 process for the 2026 proxy season. The webcast replay is already posted and available for free — even for folks who aren’t members of TheCorporateCounsel.net.

In the meantime, here are just a few of the open questions addressed during the program (subject to the SEC’s standard disclaimer):

– The Staff doesn’t need the Rule 14a-8(j) notices to be particularly long, whether or not they seek a response. The notices only need to include information required by the rule (the proposal, an explanation of why the company believes that it may exclude the proposal, which should, if possible, refer to applicable authority, like prior Division letters, and an opinion of counsel, if applicable) plus the reasonable basis representation, if you want a response.

That said, the Staff recognizes that these notices might also be written for other audiences (e.g., the proponent, proxy advisors, other shareholders and other stakeholders) and include much more detail than the Staff needs for their purposes, although the Staff won’t be doing a in depth analysis of this material since that wouldn’t accomplish the intended purpose of reducing the burden on the Staff’s time.

– If the company wants a response and includes a reasonable basis representation, there is no magic language required, and it has already taken a few forms based on what has been submitted to date (see a few examples already posted). While the announcement refers to an “unqualified” representation, you don’t need to include the word unqualified. “Unqualified” was included in the announcement to avoid the representation being subject to assumptions. The company’s inclusion of language like “we represent we have a reasonable basis” will trigger the Staff’s process to issue a response.

– With the Staff continuing to respond to Rule 14a-8(i)(1) no-action requests, they were asked about no-action requests that raise multiple bases for exclusion — for example, (i)(1) and (i)(7). To this, the Staff noted that they hope companies don’t combine other basis for exclusion with their (i)(1) requests.

Finally, keep in mind that the sec.gov shareholder proposals site remains in flux — especially as it relates to no-action letters that were submitted prior to the announcement. Keep checking back since it will make more sense as it is further updated. For example, as companies that submitted a no-action request before the announcement submit their 14a-8(j) notices, those files will be moved to their appropriate bucket depending on whether they include the reasonable basis representation (in which case they’ll be included under Responses to Rule 14a-8(j) Notifications) or not (in which case they’ll be included under Rule 14a-8(j) Notifications With No Division Response Forthcoming). (They are currently in the “no response” bucket.)

They discussed so much more — like what to do with correspondence with the proponent, what to do if a proposal is received after the 14a-8(j) deadline and how companies will consider whether to exclude a proposal, especially where there are limited Staff concurrences. Listen to the full replay for more.

Meredith Ervine 

December 4, 2025

Rule 10b5-1 Trading Plan Guidelines in the SV150

Following up on its recent review of insider trading policies adopted by the SV150, Wilson Sonsini recently published a report on its survey of Rule 10b5-1 trading plan guidelines at SV150 companies. They looked at cooling-off periods, minimum and maximum terms, trading outside of the trading plan, early termination restrictions, and mandatory use of plans. This blog shares some highlights:

– A majority (53 percent) of guidelines adhere to the Rule 10b5-1 minimum cooling-off periods, but some apply longer cooling-off periods to additional personnel or impose longer durations than the minimum required in the rule.

– A significant minority (44 percent) of guidelines impose a minimum term, a maximum term, or both, with minimum terms ranging from three months to one year, and maximum terms ranging from one to three years.

– Nearly one-third (32 percent) of guidelines prohibit trading in company securities during the term of a trading plan outside of the trading plan, with some providing for limited exceptions such as dispositions of gifts.

– Many of the guidelines impose restrictions on early termination of trading plans including, for example, requiring notice or prior approval, only allowing early termination during an open trading window, or only allowing early termination when the insider is not aware of material nonpublic information.

– Only a small percentage of companies (11 percent) require company insiders to transact in company securities through trading plans, generally limited to directors, Section 16 officers, and, in some cases, other management or designated personnel.

Here’s more info on some alternative approaches to cooling-off periods:

– 28% apply the D&O cooling-off period to everyone.

– 16% of companies had approaches to cooling-off periods categorized as “other.” Of those, nine guidelines provide for the director and officer cooling-off period for directors and Section 16 officers but provide for something other than the minimum 30-day cooling-off period for all others.

– Variations include: The later of 30 days or the opening of the next trading window; the later of 60 days or the opening of the next trading window; and 90 days. Two sets of guidelines provide for the Rule 10b5-1 default cooling-off periods but include additional persons (management or other designated employees) in the director and officer cooling-off period, and one set of guidelines provides for a 120-day cooling-off period for everyone.

Meredith Ervine 

December 4, 2025

California to Pause SB 261 Enforcement After Injunction

Here’s something my colleague Zachary shared yesterday on PracticalESG.com:

California climate bills SB 253 and SB 261 were sailing along towards implementation. Despite litigation challenging the laws, the lower courts initially refused to issue injunctions against them. Plaintiffs were appealing to the Supreme Court for an emergency injunction that seemed like a long shot.  Then, somewhat unexpectedly, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals enjoined SB 261, staying the law pending the outcome of litigation. However, confusion remained as to whether this injunction applied to all in-scope companies, or only those parties to the lawsuit. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) clarified this week that it would not enforce SB 261 against any companies at this time. A recent Gibson Dunn memo discusses CARB’s statement:

On December 1, 2025, the California Air Resources Board (‘CARB’), the state agency responsible for enforcing SB 261, responded to the injunction by posting an enforcement advisory stating it would not enforce the law ‘against covered entities for failing to post and submit reports by the January 1, 2026, statutory deadline.’ Instead, CARB ‘will provide further information—including an alternate date for reporting, as appropriate—after the appeal is resolved.’

SB 261 is now in limbo, meaning companies will not be required to report on climate-related financial risk. Its counterpart, SB 253, has not been enjoined and is still set to come into force. SB 253 requires disclosures of emissions data, and the first reports are due on August 10, 2026.  It’s unclear if and when SB 261 will be enforceable, but if the law survives its court challenges, then we’ll likely hear more from CARB regarding compliance timelines.

PracticalESG.com members can learn more about SB 261 and SB 253 here. If you’re interested in a full membership to PracticalESG.com with access to the complete range of benefits and resources, sign up now and take advantage of our no-risk “100-Day Promise” – during the first 100 days as an activated member, you may cancel for any reason and receive a full refund. If you are not a member, but you follow PracticalESG.com blogs, beginning January 15, 2026, those blogs will no longer be available without a PracticalESG.com membership. But there’s a new membership level just for the blogs – and sign up is live with a limited time incentive. If you obtain a blog-only membership before January 15, 2026, you can take advantage of a 50% discount off the regular first-year membership ($249.50 for a 2026 membership versus $499 regular price).

Meredith Ervine 

December 3, 2025

Chairman Atkins on Revitalizing America’s Markets

Yesterday, Chairman Atkins rang the NYSE opening bell and delivered a speech entitled “Revitalizing America’s Markets at 250.” He was introduced by NYSE president Lynn Martin, who focused her remarks on the declining number of publicly traded companies and the rising cost of going public, noting that the exchange looks forward to working with the SEC to create a simpler framework and reduce the regulatory burdens imposed on public companies.

In his speech, Chairman Atkins outlined his “vision to strengthen U.S. capital markets for the next century and what the SEC is doing now to lay that groundwork” and restated the three pillars of his plan to make IPOs great again – including disclosure reform, “de-politicizing” shareholder meetings and reforming the litigation landscape for securities lawsuits. On disclosure reform, he highlighted two main goals:

– To root disclosure requirements in the concept of financial materiality; and

– That disclosure requirements scale with a company’s size and maturity.

On materiality, he noted:

[O]ur disclosure regime is most effective when the SEC provides, as FDR advocated, the minimum effective dose of regulation needed to elicit the information that is material to investors, and we allow market forces to drive the disclosure of any additional aspects of their operations that may be beneficial to investors.

In contrast, an ineffective disclosure regime would be one where the SEC requires that all companies provide the same information without the ability to tailor the disclosure to their specific circumstances, with the only view that such information should be “consistent and comparable” across companies.

He cites the SEC’s executive compensation disclosure rules as an example of where he feels disclosure requirements have gone off the rails:

[E]arlier this year, the SEC held a roundtable that brought together companies, investors, law firms, and compensation consultants to discuss the current state of the agency’s executive compensation disclosure rules and potential reforms. Somewhat to my surprise, there was universal agreement among the panelists that the length and complexity of executive compensation disclosure have limited its usefulness and insight to investors. We need a re-set of these and other SEC disclosure requirements, and this roundtable was one of the first steps to execute my goal of ensuring that materiality is the north star of the SEC’s disclosure regime.

With respect to the scalability of disclosure requirements, he suggested:

[T]he SEC should give strong consideration to the thresholds that separate “large” companies, which are subject to all of the SEC disclosure rules, and “small” companies that are subject to only some of them. The last comprehensive reform to these thresholds took place in 2005. This dereliction of regulatory upkeep has resulted in a company with a public float of as low as $250 million being subject to the same disclosure requirements as a company that is one hundred times its size.

For newly public companies, the SEC should consider building upon the “IPO on-ramp” that Congress established in the JOBS Act. For example, allowing companies to remain on the “on-ramp” for a minimum number of years, rather than forcing them off as soon as the first year after the initial offering, could provide companies with greater certainty and incentivize more IPOs, especially among smaller companies.

Notably, in his conclusion, Chairman Atkins reiterated the ambitiousness of his agenda, saying, “But these are only the first steps in a broader effort to realign our markets with their most fundamental purpose, which is to place the full measure of American might where it belongs: in the hands of our citizens instead of the regulatory state.”

Meredith Ervine 

December 3, 2025

ISS Launches “Protect the Voice of Shareholders” Website

Late last month, ISS launched a PR campaign in the form of this “Protect the Voice of Shareholders” website, with the goal of correcting “misinformation about ISS and the role of proxy advisers” and helping “ensure investors’ and shareholders’ right to invest how they choose is preserved and protected.” Launched in the wake of various lawsuits and regulatory initiatives, the website says:

Excessive or agenda-driven regulation of proxy research firms could impair the ability of institutional investors to help ensure effective corporate governance and accountability at the companies in which they own stock, which in turn can adversely impact the retirement savings of millions of Americans. It can also undermine the free market.

Here are some facts highlighted on the site that you may or may not know:

– Approximately 90% of voted shares processed by ISS globally are tied to voting policies customized by the investor, instead of utilizing ISS’ Benchmark or Specialty policy options.

ISS voting recommendations reflect how its institutional investor clients want to vote the shares they own or manage in public companies, and the factors they deem most relevant to those voting decisions. Clients can choose these criteria by choosing from a wide array of voting guidelines, including ISS’ Benchmark policy, which is developed with input from investors and public comment, thematic ISS policies for those focused on faith-based investing, governance, or other such considerations, or customizable policies reflecting a client’s specific considerations. Clients not only choose their voting policy, but they also receive reports outlining the rationale underlying ISS’ recommendations and do not always choose to vote in accordance with its recommendations.  Clients also may elect to receive shareholder meeting research that is informational only and does not include voting recommendations.

– The ISS Benchmark policy voting aligned with board recommendations on management-sponsored resolutions approximately 96 percent of the time for S&P500 companies during the 2025 proxy season.

– ISS has implemented a firewall to segregate the work of ISS-Corporate, the business unit which provides products and services to publicly traded companies, from the ISS teams preparing research on publicly traded companies: ISS Research works independently of ISS-Corporate; ISS-Corporate is physically separated and is separately managed; ISS Research team members do not know the identity of ISS-Corporate clients; and ISS-Corporate maintains a “Blackout Period” during an issuer’s solicitation so that it does not sell to issuers during that period.

To provide transparency and demonstrate the independence of our proxy research, ISS discloses to institutional clients the identity of all ISS-Corporate subscribers, the types of products and services they receive, and the fees paid to ISS-Corporate.

The website also touts ISS’s recent victories in courtrooms — as it now turns to sway the court of public opinion.

Meredith Ervine 

December 3, 2025

Today’s CompensationStandards.com Webcast: “Equity Award Approvals: From Governance to Disclosure”

Today on CompensationStandards.com at 2:00 pm Eastern, join us for the webcast “Equity Award Approvals: From Governance to Disclosure” to hear Troutman Pepper Locke’s Sheri Adler & David Kaplan and Pay Governance’s Jeff Joyce discuss common foot faults for equity award approvals and share best practices to help you dot your i’s and cross your t’s when awarding equity in 2026. The panel will be covering the following topics:

  1. Not Your Kindergartener’s Math: Share Counting
  2. Planning Ahead: Award Design
  3. Approval Formalities:
    • Who Approves?
    • What Gets Approved?
    • Grant Timing, Sizing and Disclosure
  4. Documenting and Communicating Awards

Members of CompensationStandards.com are able to attend this critical webcast at no charge. If you’re not yet a member of CompensationStandards.com, subscribe now. If you need assistance, contact our team at info@ccrcorp.com or at 800-737-1271. Our “100-Day Promise” guarantees that during the first 100 days as an activated member, you may cancel for any reason and receive a full refund. The webcast cost for non-members is $595.

We will apply for CLE credit in all applicable states (with the exception of SC and NE, which require advance notice) for this 60-minute webcast. You must submit your state and license number prior to or during the program using this form. Attendees must participate in the live webcast and fully complete all the CLE credit survey links during the program. You will receive a CLE certificate from our CLE provider when your state issues approval, typically within 30 days of the webcast. All credits are pending state approval.

This program will also be eligible for on-demand CLE credit when the archive is posted, typically within 48 hours of the original air date. Instructions on how to qualify for on-demand CLE credit will be posted on the CompensationStandards.com archive page.

Meredith Ervine 

December 2, 2025

D&O Questionnaires: It’s That Time Again!

I know, too soon! But here we are. Memos on annual reporting and proxy season are starting to roll in. One of your early questions might be: “Do I need to make any updates to D&O questionnaires?” The answer is: not necessarily. But here are some things you may want to think through:

– Do the independence questions capture close personal friendships and other social ties with management as potentially material relationships for the board’s consideration? As this Mayer Brown alert notes, companies are taking another look at this question after an SEC enforcement action, although you may have already considered this last year.

– Do you need to update questionnaires to address EDGAR Next Form ID requirements for new directors and officers? If you haven’t already added, the alert says you should be including “whether the applicant, any account administrator, or the Form ID signer has been convicted of, or civilly or administratively enjoined, barred, suspended, or banned in connection with federal or state securities violations (noting that this requirement is not subject to a 10-year lookback).”

– Should your questionnaires collect information about skills in cybersecurity and AI? The alert says you may want to supplement your expertise questions to address the board’s fluency in “digital transformation, cyber risk, and AI governance.”

– Is your board diversity question part of a stock exchange section? If so, you may choose to move it to a general section and conform the demographic self-identification categories to the federal EEO-1 form (as Goodwin did in its form D&O Questionnaires).

With few changes, maybe this is the year to invest some time in improving the understandability and usability of your questionnaires.

Meredith Ervine 

December 2, 2025

Your 10-K & Proxy: More Miscellaneous Stuff Not to Miss

It’s nice that we have a year where there are no major updates to SEC regs or stock exchange listing standards requiring us to draft entirely new sections of Form 10-Ks or proxy statements. But there are a few funky things about 2025 that will need to be considered for particular disclosure updates, as Liz noted last week. Here’s another great reminder from this Mayer Brown alert that may not be top-of-mind.

Certifications, Exhibits, Signatures and Consents. Interestingly, growing areas of SEC Staff comments include the certifications, exhibits, signatures and consents to expertised portions of a filing, including consents of subject matter experts and counsel. In terms of the certifications required by Item 601(b)(31) of Regulation S-K, the Staff often comment when the language of the certification does not exactly match the language of Regulation S-K, or when the language has been incorrectly modified.

In terms of exhibits, the Staff will often comment if an exhibit is missing, for example, when a material contract was entered into or amended during the reporting period and not filed as an exhibit. The same stands true for expertized consents—where the findings or opinion of an expert, such as a tax or mining expert, for example, are included or summarized in the filing, the company must include the expert’s consent as an exhibit to the filing.

And here’s more on a topic that Liz mentioned last week:

EDGAR Next Transition Delays and Regulation S-K Item 405 Implications. Some [EDGAR Next] bottlenecks, combined with the September 15, 2025, deactivation of legacy filing access codes for submissions, resulted in late Section 16(a) reports for many companies and insiders who could not timely complete EDGAR Next onboarding or obtain new credentials. Companies should be mindful of the Regulation S‑K Item 405 implications in their 2026 proxy statements. Item 405 requires disclosure of any known failures to file timely Forms 3, 4 or 5 during the most recent fiscal year, including identification of the reporting persons and the number of late reports and transactions.

In preparing 2026 proxies, issuers should carefully reconcile insider reporting logs against EDGAR timestamps, assess whether delays were attributable to EDGAR Next transition issues, and include required delinquency disclosure where appropriate. Even if transition delays may have been operational in nature, Item 405 is a bright-line, disclosure‑based requirement. Therefore, issuers should treat EDGAR Next-induced late filings no differently from other late filings and make clear, accurate delinquency disclosures in their 2026 proxy statements.

Check out our “Proxy Season” and “Form 10-K” Practice Areas, where we’re posting all the related resources.

Meredith Ervine 

December 2, 2025

Today’s Webcast: “This Year’s Rule 14a-8 Process – Corp Fin Staff Explains What You Need to Know”

If you deal with shareholder proposals in your practice, you do not want to miss today’s webcast – “This Year’s Rule 14a-8 Process: Corp Fin Staff Explains What You Need to Know” – to hear from Corp Fin Chief Counsel, Michael Seaman, and Corp Fin Counsel, Emma O’Hara, on how the Staff will handle the Rule 14a-8 process for the 2026 proxy season in light of Corp Fin’s new statement. Cooley’s Reid Hooper and Gibson Dunn’s Ron Mueller will also give their perspectives on strategy and how issuers should be thinking about and approaching the new process, with our own Liz Dunshee moderating.

I look forward to hearing about how the Staff is working through its post-shutdown backlog, the expected substance of the notice submitted by companies under this year’s approach, what language should be included for the “unqualified representation,” what to do after submission, what happens if there’s a withdrawal and the carve-out for Rule 14a-8(i)(1) requests.

Keep in mind these few important differences from our typical programming:

1. This webcast is free for anyone who wants to attend, even if you aren’t currently a member of this site. We want to do what we can to get the word out about the Staff’s approach so that the season is as smooth as possible for everyone (especially given the Staff’s workload after the shutdown).

2. It’s happening from 11:00 am – 12:00 pm Eastern.

3. Since this is a pop-up webcast, we aren’t offering CLE credit for this one.

If you’re hunting for CLE credits by the end of the year, remember that members of this site can earn live and on-demand credits through our other programs. As you can see on our home page, we have two live CLE programs in December, including:

“The (Former) Corp Fin Staff Forum” webcast at 2 pm ET on December 11th featuring former Corp Fin Senior Staffers discussing the SEC’s regulatory agenda, recent Staff guidance, shareholder proposals, filing reviews and what might be coming down the pipe in 2026; and

– Our “Anatomy of a Shelf Takedown” webcast at 2 pm ET on December 18th featuring experienced capital markets partners discussing legal and practical issues involved in a shelf takedown of debt or equity securities.

Meredith Ervine 

December 1, 2025

This Year’s Rule 14a-8 Process: SEC.gov Updated Accordingly

Last week, the website on SEC.gov that houses shareholder proposal no-action letters was updated. To reflect the new process for the 2026 season, the shareholder proposal no-action letter page now directs to this site, which gives a quick summary of the past and present approaches:

Companies intending to exclude shareholder proposals from their proxy materials must notify the Commission and provide the information required by Exchange Act Rule 14a-8(j) no later than 80 calendar days before filing their definitive proxy materials.

Historically, most Rule 14a-8(j) notifications took the form of no-action requests where companies asked the Division of Corporation Finance to state its informal, non-binding views on whether it concurred that there was a legal basis to exclude shareholder proposals from their proxy materials under Rule 14a-8. On November 17, 2025, the Division announced that during the 2025-2026 proxy season it will not respond to no-action requests related to any basis for exclusion other than Rule 14a-8(i)(1). The Division will continue to respond to Rule 14a-8(i)(1) no-action requests until such time as it determines that there is sufficient guidance available to assist companies and proponents in their decision-making process.

The Division also will respond to Rule 14a-8(j) notifications when a company or its counsel includes, as part of the notification, an unqualified representation that the company has a reasonable basis to exclude the proposal.

The site then directs you here for Rule 14a-8 correspondence and Division responses, which includes four separate sites for:

Rule 14a-8(j) Notifications With No Response

Responses to Rule 14a-8(j) Notifications

Incoming No-Action Requests Under 14a-8(i)(1)

No-Action Responses Issued Under 14a-8(i)(1)

As Liz shared last week, at least one Rule 14a-8(j) notice & response had already been posted on the SEC’s website, although it related to a pending, and already posted no-action request submitted prior to the Staff’s statement, so it wasn’t entirely clear until this page was rolled out that all the notices & responses would be posted. It now looks like they will be.

There are a number of other procedural questions floating around, and I’m excited to hear from SEC Staff during tomorrow’s TheCorporateCounsel.net webcast, “This Year’s Rule 14a-8 Process: Corp Fin Staff Explains What You Need to Know.” Tune in from 11:00 am – 12:00 pm Eastern to hear Corp Fin Chief Counsel, Michael Seaman, and Corp Fin Counsel, Emma O’Hara, address some frequently asked questions from our own Liz Dunshee, Cooley’s Reid Hooper and Gibson Dunn’s Ron Mueller, who will also give their perspectives on strategy and how issuers should be thinking about and approaching the new process.

Keep in mind that this webcast is free — even for folks who aren’t members of TheCorporateCounsel.net. There’s no need to register in advance, even if you are not a member. But head to the webcast landing page linked above to add the webcast to your calendar so you don’t miss it! (I know if I don’t get a 15 min. prior reminder pop-up, I won’t show up anywhere!) This webcast also won’t be eligible for CLE credit — but we have lots of other options, both coming up live (see the home page) and on-demand — if you need that!

– Meredith Ervine