TheCorporateCounsel.net

Monthly Archives: May 2022

May 20, 2022

Deep Dive with Dave Podcast: Rule 10b5-1 Proposals

In the latest Deep Dive with Dave podcast, I am joined by Stan Keller of Locke Lord to discuss the SEC’s proposed amendments to Rule 10b5-1. Topics include:

• The historical context for Rule 10b5-1 and its relevance to the proposed amendments
• The potential impact that the amendments could have on the use of Rule 10b5-1
• Suggested changes to the SEC’s approach

– Dave Lynn

May 19, 2022

SEC Chair Requests More Resources

SEC Chair Gensler appeared before Congressional committees this week to present the SEC’s fiscal year 2023 budget request. The SEC requests $2.149 billion, an 8% increase over fiscal year 2022.

In his remarks, Gensler noted that the Division of Corporation Finance has shrunk a whopping 19% since 2016. Over that same period, the Division’s workload has grown. Gensler notes that in fiscal year 2016, Corp Fin reviewed filings related to approximately 510 new registrants, while that grew almost fourfold last year, to 1,960.

In addition to seeking resources to support the SEC’s programmatic areas, Gensler also highlighted the need for more technology resources:

The amount of data that the SEC processes has grown by 20 percent annually for the past two years. Further, cyber threats have placed our financial sector on high alert. As technologies evolve, it is important that the SEC’s information technology follows suit.

We continue to need additional resources to support the Commission’s data, cybersecurity, and other IT needs. While our $370 million request for the Office of Information Technology is basically flat with the last two years of spending, in real terms it is up only modestly from FY16. Moreover, for comparison’s sake, JPMorgan spends an average of $1 billion in technology each month.

It is critical that the SEC have additional technological resources to incorporate analytics and machine learning capabilities for our oversight and surveillance functions, protect agency and registrant information, provide data to the investing public, and much more.

Gensler’s remarks also note that the agency has made a separate $57.4 million request to support the build-out and move to a new SEC headquarters. It still feels to me like the SEC just moved to 100 F Street, but I realize that was 17 years ago now!

– Dave Lynn

May 19, 2022

The SEC is Hiring: Is it Your Time?

Noting the striking decline in headcount in Corp Fin that was outlined in Chair Gensler’s budget testimony this week, I see why the SEC seems to be posting a lot of open jobs these days. As anyone who has ever tried to get a job at the SEC knows, the hiring window there tends to open and close randomly. Right now, the window seems to be wide open.

My guess is that the SEC is experiencing the same sort of challenges attracting and retaining talented staff that we are all facing. The war for young talent in the legal profession has pushed compensation to unprecedented levels, and the SEC has no way of competing with that trend. I also fear that, as with so many other organizations, the esprit de corps that the SEC has been long known for has been tested by two years of working remotely due to the pandemic (the Staff is still not back in the office).

Even with all of those challenges, I still think the SEC is a great place to work and well worth considering, particularly if you have already had a few years of law firm experience doing capital markets and public company work. Corp Fin is made up of very talented Staffers that you can learn a lot from, and it is a great way to distinguish yourself in your legal career. I am always grateful for my two tours in Corp Fin, which were truly highlights of my time practicing law. If you ever consider applying to work in Corp Fin, please reach out to me, I would be happy to discuss it with you.

– Dave Lynn

May 19, 2022

More SEC ALJ Drama: Fifth Circuit Rules Use of SEC ALJs Unconstitutional

Earlier this week, I blogged about the Supreme Court granting cert to review whether the SEC’s Administrative Law Judges are unconstitutionally protected from removal. Now comes word that on Wednesday a three judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, in a 2-1 decision, ruled that the SEC’s ALJ system violated a person’s right to a jury trial in federal court and relied on unconstitutionally delegated legislative power. The opinion also said that statutory restrictions on the removal of the SEC’s ALJs are also unconstitutional.

As this Bloomberg article notes, the decision stems from an action that the SEC first brought in 2013 against a hedge fund manager and his fund.

– Dave Lynn

May 18, 2022

JOBS Act at 10: Exempt Offering Legacy

For some reason, 2022 turns out to have a lot of big anniversaries. I have mentioned in the blog several times that my 15-year anniversary of writing for TheCorporateCounsel.net and our other publications is fast approaching. My 30-year wedding anniversary is coming up in June. But I did not want to let one big anniversary pass by unacknowledged — the 10-year anniversary of the JOBS Act!

On April 5, 2012, the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act was signed into law by then-President Barack Obama. The JOBS Act required the SEC to write rules and issue studies on capital formation, disclosure, and registration requirements. It was a rare piece of bipartisan legislation that was made up of various measures that had been circulating in Congress. Recall that in 2012, we had just made it to the other side of the Financial Crisis and the Great Recession, and there was a great deal of interest in stoking the economy by encouraging capital formation, particularly for smaller companies. On top of that, the number of public companies in the U.S. had been consistently shrinking following the pop of the late 1990s Internet bubble, the early 2000s corporate scandals and the enactment and implementation of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

One of the most striking things about the JOBS Act to me was the way that it reshaped the exempt offering framework. In the Fall semester when I co-teach a course on exempt offerings at Georgetown Law Center, I think about how short the class would be if we did not have all of the JOBS Act exemptions to talk about. While over the years I have sometimes been critical of some of the “new” JOBS Act exemptions, they were enacted and faithfully implemented by the SEC with the noble goal of trying to improve access to capital for smaller companies. Pre-JOBS Act, smaller companies seeking capital pretty much just had Regulation D and a few other relatively narrow exemptions to utilize, while now they have a much broader menu of options, such as Regulation A+, Regulation Crowdfunding and Rule 506(c) (unbound from the chains of general solicitation). Further, the reforms to the mandatory registration thresholds in Exchange Act Section 12(g) gave private companies more runway to raise capital and compensate employees without being forced to go public. Finally, with the SEC’s 2020 exempt offering harmonization rulemaking, these offering alternatives became more useful and the overall exempt offering framework was substantially improved.

So while the exempt offering legacy of the JOBS Act isn’t perfect, the availability of more exemptions for small business capital raising is certainly something we have all benefited from, and will continue to benefit from in the future.

– Dave Lynn

May 18, 2022

JOBS Act at 10: Registered Offering Legacy

One of the more jarring aspects of the JOBS Act for me was the “IPO On-ramp” portion of the legislation, which established a new class of registrant – the “emerging growth company.” Emerging growth companies are afforded an easier path to going public, with a reduced disclosure burden and the benefit of some significant accommodations in the offering process. As you may recall, the IPO On-ramp provisions of the legislation were immediately effective, so we in the private bar and the SEC Staff had to really scramble to figure out how it would all work.

I recall the thing that upset me the most as a securities lawyer was the enactment of Section 5(d) of the Securities Act, which gives emerging growth companies the ability to “test the waters” for a proposed registered securities offering. Prior to the JOBS Act, pre-filing testing-the-waters was only permitted in Regulation A offerings, which were rarely conducted. Having spent the first fifteen years of my career worrying about “gun jumping” in the registered offering context, the notion of testing-the-waters before an IPO seemed like heresy! But, as with so many things, it has become accepted practice, so much so that the SEC decided to expand the accommodation to all issuers, not just emerging growth companies. For an in-depth discussion of the development of testing-the-waters, take a look at the September-October 2021 issue of The Corporate Counsel.

Another big accommodation that the JOBS Act provided to emerging growth companies was the option for confidential submission of the registration statement to the SEC. This accommodation has had a significant impact on the way that offerings are done today, and as with testing-the-waters, the SEC decided to extend the confidential submission accommodation to other issuers beyond emerging growth companies. From today’s perspective it makes perfect sense to permit confidential submission, but a decade ago it definitely seemed like a radical notion for IPOs to be reviewed confidentially.

The interesting legacy of the registered offering portions of the JOBS Act is that the emerging growth company “experiment” was a success, and it helped get the SEC and the market very comfortable with extending the emerging growth company accommodations to a much broader range of issuers. I don’t know that we would have seen that sort of innovation in the regulation of the registered offering process had it not been for the JOBS Act.

– Dave Lynn

May 18, 2022

Deep Dive with Dave Podcast: JOBS Act Anniversary

In the latest Deep Dive with Dave podcast, I am joined by Anna Pinedo of Mayer Brown to discuss the 10-year anniversary of the JOBS Act. Topics include:

– Dave Lynn

May 17, 2022

California Board Gender Diversity Law Ruled Unconstitutional

Last week, Judge Maureen Duffy-Lewis of the Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles, found that SB 826, the California law requiring that California-headquartered companies have a minimum number of women directors, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the California Constitution. The decision states:

As to the claimed interest that S.B. 826 was passed to remedy discrimination, defendant has not met its burden to show that this is necessary nor narrowly tailored. Therefore, for all the above stated reasons and analysis the Court determines that S.B. 826 violates the Equal Protection Clause of the California Constitution and is thus enjoined.

As noted in this L.A. Times coverage, in her decision, Judge Duffy-Lewis found the state could not prove that the “use of a gender-based classification was necessary to boost California’s economy, improve opportunities for women in the workplace, and protect California taxpayers, public employees, pensions and retirees.” Further, she found that the state could not provide any evidence of a specific corporation that discriminated against any woman and would have been subject to the law.

Last month, Judge Terry A. Green of the Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles, granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment in a case challenging the legality of AB 979, which required California-headquartered companies to have a specified minimum number of members on their boards of directors that were from specified underrepresented communities.

– Dave Lynn

May 17, 2022

Headed to the Supremes: The Court to Consider the SEC’s ALJs (Again)

Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to review whether the SEC’s Administrative Law Judges are unconstitutionally protected from removal. The case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Michelle Cochran. The question in the case is:

whether a federal district court has jurisdiction to hear a suit in which the respondent in an ongoing [SEC] administrative proceeding seeks to enjoin that proceeding, based on an alleged constitutional defect in the statutory provisions that govern the removal of the administrative law judge who will conduct the proceeding.

The Supreme Court is expected to hear arguments in these this case and a related FTC case in the Fall. You may recall that, in its June 21, 2018 opinion in Lucia v. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Supreme Court held that SEC ALJs are “Officers of the United States” under the Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution, and are not mere employees. I have been very interested in these SEC ALJ cases because I started out my career at the SEC as a clerk in the Office of Administrative Law Judges.

– Dave Lynn

May 17, 2022

Trying to Keep Up: Check Out our Proxy Season Blog!

With proxy season in full swing, it can be difficult to keep up with all of the developments. I encourage you to check out the Proxy Season Blog, where we cover the latest proxy season and corporate governance developments. Some of the recent topics include:

You definitely do not want to fall behind at this critical time – check out the Proxy Season Blog today. If you do not have a subscription to the TheCorporateCounsel.net, be sure to email our sales team at sales@ccrcorp.com.

– Dave Lynn