Yesterday, the Supreme Court announced that it would hear an appeal in the case of Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which involves a direct challenge to the Chevron doctrine. This case will be considered by the Court in the next term. The outcome of the case could have a significant impact on SEC rulemaking efforts.
As I discussed in the blog last year, in 1984 the Supreme Court decided Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, which created the doctrine that courts normally must defer to a government agency’s reasonable interpretation of a law that it administers when that law’s language is ambiguous. The SEC has argued that Chevron deference should be accorded to its actions over the years, often to the agency’s advantage.
The Chevron doctrine has been viewed as vulnerable since the Supreme Court’s decision last year in in West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, in which the Court considered the “major questions doctrine,” a presumption that when an administrative agency asserts authority over questions of great economic and political significance, it may act only if Congress has clearly authorized it to do so.
In Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the relevant question that the Supreme Court agreed to hear is “[w]hether the Court should overrule Chevron or at least clarify that statutory silence concerning controversial powers expressly but narrowly granted elsewhere in the statute does not constitute an ambiguity requiring deference to the agency.”
The case involves a herring fishing company named Loper Bright Enterprises, which is appealing a ruling that left in effect a National Marine Fisheries Service regulation based on the Chevron doctrine. That regulation requires herring fishing boats to allow a federal observer aboard to oversee operations and to compensate them for their time. Loper Bright Enterprises argues that the regulation significantly impacts its business and that the agency did not have the authority to impose the regulation.
The Conferences are virtual, taking place on September 20th – 22nd. You can bundle registration with the “2nd Annual Practical ESG Conference” that’s happening virtually on September 19th, for an additional discount. You can register online, by emailing sales@ccrcorp.com or by calling 1-800-737-1271.
On Friday, the SEC announced that it is reopening the comment period for the proposed amendments to the beneficial ownership reporting rules that were originally proposed in February 2022. These proposed amendments would modernize the filing deadlines for initial and amended beneficial ownership reports filed on Schedules 13D and 13G and make other changes to the applicable rules. The SEC is now reopening the comment period to allow interested persons an opportunity to comment on the additional analysis and data contained in a staff memorandum that was added to the public comment file on April 28, 2023. The reopening release does not contain any proposed revisions to the proposed amendments. The referenced memorandum from the Division of Economic Risk and Analysis (DERA) states:
In particular, this memorandum provides additional background and baseline data on Schedule 13D and 13G filings in Section 1 below, followed by supplemental analyses on two specific points pertaining to Schedule 13D filings. First, in Section 2, this memorandum further investigates potential effects on activism that may result from the proposed change to the initial Schedule 13D filing deadline. Second, in Section 3, this memorandum provides additional analysis of potential harms to certain selling shareholders under the existing filing deadline. Both Sections 2 and 3 include a discussion of relevant academic research as well as new quantitative analysis.
The new comment deadline for the reopened proposal is 30 days after publication of the reopening release in the Federal Register or June 27, 2023, whichever is later.
The reopening of the comment period for the beneficial ownership reporting rules is similar to what the SEC did with respect to the share repurchase disclosure rulemaking, when back in December 2022 the SEC reopened the comment period to post a memorandum from DERA analyzing the impact of the enactment of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. The SEC also reopened the comment period for the clawback rules (for a second time) back in June 2022 to allow for comments on a memorandum from DERA.
The practice of reopening comment periods to consider additional economic analysis appears to be relatively novel concept. In the past, DERA’s role has been focused on providing the required economic analysis for proposing and adopting releases for a rulemaking, but it now appears that, in at least some rulemakings, DERA is continuing its research and analysis to inform the rulemaking effort in real time, and the Commission appears to be compelled to provide that research to the public in case it might change the public’s mind about various aspects of the rule proposal.
Another reason for reopening the comment period is when the Commission determines that it may be appropriate to significantly alter the proposed rules, but there does not appear to be sufficient latitude based on the original proposal and the comments submitted to make such changes without soliciting additional comment under the Administrative Procedure Act. If the Commission were to adopt a final rule that strays too far from what is proposed or suggested through the comment process, then that opens the agency up to a legal challenge that its actions were “arbitrary and capricious” in adopting the final rule. We recently saw this sort of reopening situation in the clawback proposal, where the SEC used a reopening release to propose, among other changes, the use of little “r” restatements as a triggering event under the required clawback policies. A similar situation played out with the pay versus performance disclosure requirements, when, in January 2022, the SEC reopened the comment period to revisit the calculation of compensation actually paid and propose additional performance measure disclosures. The Commission ended up adopting the final rules largely as they were described in the reopening release.
Could we see the Commission reopen the comment period for its other open rulemaking projects, such as climate change disclosure and cybersecurity? Anything is possible at this point.
In 2022, I had the opportunity to delve into the efforts of the Operations Subcommittee of the End-to-End Vote Confirmation Working Group. As we noted in the January-February 2022 issue of The Corporate Executive, the Operations Subcommittee of the End-to-End Vote Confirmation Working Group announced last year that it had agreed to provide end-to-end vote confirmation during the 2022 proxy season for Fortune 500 annual meetings that were tabulated by members of the Operations Subcommittee, and to pilot an early-stage vote entitlement reconciliation process for 20 Fortune 500 meetings. End-to-end vote confirmation is the affirmation to a nominee from the tabulator (and to the nominee’s beneficial owner by the bank or broker) that the vote made was counted as cast. Vote entitlement refers to bank’s or broker’s voting entitlement on behalf of their clients.
As Liz recently noted on The Proxy Season Blog, the Operations Subcommittee of the Working Group has published a report on its findings from the 2022 proxy season, which it shared with the full Working Group and the SEC. Liz notes the following key takeaways from the report:
– Need for industry participants to continue working together to identify cost effective and efficient solutions.
– Need for the regulators to review the findings and assist in moving forward regulations to strengthen the proxy process and continue building trust in the system. (Note: in large part, this will be determining (i) which party is responsible for resolving issues e.g., the tabulator or the bank/broker and its service provider, and (ii) a consistent process by which certain complex holding structures are voted, e.g. where shares are held via a US bank or broker via a Canadian participant or another foreign participant in a CSD.)
– Investigate whether a tabulator can efficiently and legally combine all entitlements for a bank or broker whether they are held at DTCC, a foreign depository, registered in firm name, or registered in customer name.
– Exchanges and regulators should ensure record date information is published prior to record date, including in the SEC’s Edgar system, preferably standardizing with the NYSE’s 10 calendar day record date notice requirement.
– Require tabulators to electronically receive or access omnibus proxies versus requiring paper, thus ensuring omnibus proxies are processed and adjusted promptly.
– Build the technology for vote confirmation to be “pushed” to the institutional and retail beneficial investors versus requiring the investors to retrieve. The industry recognizes this will be costly for the proxy service providers.
While the pilot may have fallen short of expectations in some cases, it was undoubtedly an important step forward for proxy plumbing reform, and hopefully we will see some rule changes and other developments come out of these efforts.