The Libor Scandal: What’s Next? Re: London Interbank Offered Rate

GT Law

The London Interbank Offered Rate (Libor) is calculated daily by the British Banking Association (BBA) and published by Thomson Reuters. The rates are calculated by surveying the interbank borrowing costs of a panel of banks and averaging them to create an index of 15 separate Libor rates for different maturities (ranging from overnight to one year) and currencies. The Libor rate is used to calculate interest rates in an estimated $350 trillion worth of transactions worldwide.

The Libor Scandal

The surveyed banks are not required to provide actual borrowing costs. Rather, they are asked only for estimates of how much peer financial institutions would charge them to borrow on a given day. Because they are not required to substantiate their estimates, banks have been accused of Libor “fixing,” or manipulating the Libor rate by submitting estimates that are exaggeratedly higher or lower than their true borrowing costs. This scandal has resulted in the firing and even arrest of bank employees.

Libor’s reputation came under fire in June 2012 when Barclays PLC agreed to pay over $450 million to settle allegations that some traders fixed their reported rates to increase profits and make the bank appear healthier than it was during the financial crisis. In the wake of this settlement, investigative agencies around the world began to look deeper into Libor rate fixing, leading to a $750 million settlement by the Royal Bank of Scotland and a record-setting $1.5 billion settlement by UBS AG. To date, there have been over $2.5 billion in settlements, with many more investigations ongoing. One investment bank estimates that, in total, legal settlements could amount to as much as $35 billion by the time investigations conclude.

Replacing the Libor

In the wake of the Libor scandal, international and domestic agencies have advocated for its replacement. The BBA, the group responsible for setting Libor since the 1980s, voted to relinquish that authority, and a committee of the UK’s Financial Reporting Council is currently vetting bids from other independent agencies interested in administering the new rate.

The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Task Force on Benchmark Rates, led by the head of the UK Financial Services Authority Martin Wheatley and the US Futures Trading Commission Chairman Gary Gensler, released a report last month saying that the new system should be based on data from actual trades in order to restore creditability. Wheatley and Gensler agree on the need to create a transaction-based rate, but disagree on how to transition from Libor to the new system.

Wheatley proposes that: the estimate-based Libor system be kept in place while a new transaction based rate is introduced to run alongside it under a “dual-track” system (so as to avoid disrupting existing transactions), and that the decision as to if and when to abandon Libor be left to market participants as opposed to regulators.

Gensler proposes a wholesale replacement of Libor as soon as possible and cautions that its continued use undermines market integrity and threatens financial stability.

IOSCO is also pushing for a code of conduct that would hold banks to a higher standard of honesty in reporting and setting index rates, while other agencies, including the Financial Stability Board and the European Union, are working on the development of other potential solutions including stricter regulations and greater penalties for rate-fixing conduct.

The future of Libor is unclear, but it is certain that whomever is chosen to replace the BBA will be under immense pressure and scrutiny from the international financial community.

Recommendations

To stay prepared, parties to financial transactions should view existing and future contracts with an eye towards potential benchmark changes. Parties should perform contractual due diligence to establish the range of Libor definitions and benchmarks to which they are exposed. In addition, parties should review the fallback provisions dealing with change or discontinuance of Libor and other benchmark rates to understand the potential impact of such changes.

Going forward, parties should include fallback provisions in their contracts to allocate risk and set up alternatives to mitigate the uncertainty that could arise in the event of any changes to the Libor system or other relevant benchmarks.

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The Stockton Saga Continues: Untouchable Pensions on the Chopping Block?

Sheppard Mullin 2012

Judge Christopher M. Klein’s decision to accept the City of Stockton’s petition for bankruptcy on April 1, 2013 set the stage for a battle over whether public workers’ pensions can be reduced through municipal reorganization.

Stockton’s public revenues tumbled dramatically when the recession hit, leaving Stockton unable to meet its day-to-day obligations. Stockton slashed its police and fire departments, eliminated many city services, cut public employee benefits and suspended payments on municipal bonds it had used to finance various projects and close projected budget gaps. Stockton continues to pay its obligations to California Public Employees’ Retirement System (“CalPERS”) for its public workers’ pensions. Pension obligations are particularly high because during the years prior to the recession, city workers could “spike” their pensions—by augmenting their final year of compensation with unlimited accrued vacation and sick leave—in order to receive pension payments that grossly exceeded their annual salaries.

When Judge Klein accepted Stockton’s petition April 1, 2013, he reasoned that Stockton could not perform its basic functions “without the ability to have the muscle of the contract impairing power of federal bankruptcy law.” Judge Klein noted that his decision to “grant an order for relief … is merely the opening round in a much more complicated analysis.” The question looming is whether the contract-impairing power of federal bankruptcy law is strong enough to adjust state pension obligations.

Stockton will have the opportunity to present a plan of adjustment, which must be approved through the confirmation process. No plan of adjustment can be confirmed over rejection by a particular class of creditors unless the plan (1) does not discriminate unfairly, and (2) is fair and equitable with respect to each class of claims that is impaired under or has not accepted a plan. Judge Klein said that if Stockton “makes inappropriate compromises, the day of reckoning will be the day of plan confirmation.”

Stockton’s plan of adjustment will likely propose periods of debt service relief and interest-only payments for some municipal bonds, followed by amortization. Stockton intends to actually impair other municipal bonds, potentially paying only cents on the dollar. However, Stockton does not intend to reduce its pension obligations to CalPERS under the plan. Provisions of the California Constitution and state statutes prohibit the reduction of public workers’ pensions, even in bankruptcy proceedings. These California state law provisions were thought to make public pensions virtually untouchable. Yet, the plan may not be confirmable if it impairs Stockton’s obligations to bondholders but not its obligations to CalPERS. Bondholders and insurers will surely vote against and object to the plan, claiming it unfairly discriminates against them, and Judge Klein will have to decide whether the treatment constitutes unfair discrimination. The unfair discrimination claim may have merit, because an overarching goal of federal bankruptcy law is to equitably allocate losses among competing creditors. Federal bankruptcy law often trumps state laws, but there is no precedent for how federal bankruptcy law applies to California’s pension provisions.

For now, cash-strapped municipalities around the country—and their creditors—are watching to see just how Stockton will restructure its obligations.

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The Jobs Act: Improving Access to Capital Markets for Smaller Companies

GT Law

On April 5, 2012, the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act or “Jobs Act” was signed into law by President Obama with the stated purpose of increasing American job creation and economic growth by improving access to the public capital markets for emerging growth companies. Specifically, the Jobs Act:

  • creates a new category of “emerging growth company” under the securities laws and reduces certain financial reporting and disclosure obligations on these companies for up to 5 years after their initial public offering;
  • directs the Securities and Exchange Commission to eliminate the prohibition on general solicitations for private offerings under Rule 506 of Regulation D and resales under Rule 144A;
  • legalizes crowdfunding through brokers and “funding portals”;
  • authorizes the SEC to increase the maximum amount permitted to be raised in a Regulation A offering from $5 million to $50 million in any 12-month period; and
  • increases the number of shareholders of record that a company may have before it becomes obligated to file SEC reports.

Creation of the ‘Emerging Growth Company’ Designation

The Jobs Act creates the “emerging growth company” as a new category of issuer under both the Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Act.

Definition of “Emerging Growth Company”

An “emerging growth company” is an issuer that had total annual gross revenues of less than $1 billion during its most recently completed fiscal year. The issuer would continue to be an “emerging growth company” until the earlier of:

  • the last day of the fiscal year during which it had total annual gross revenues of $1 billion or more;
  • the last day of the fiscal year of the issuer following the fifth anniversary of its initial public offering;
  • the date on which the issuer has, during the previous 3-year period, issued more than $1 billion in non-convertible debt; and
  • the date on which it is deemed a “large accelerated filer.”

Notwithstanding the foregoing, an issuer that consummated an IPO on or prior to December 8, 2011 will not be eligible to be deemed an emerging growth company. The relief provided to emerging growth companies is available immediately.

Benefits for Emerging Growth Companies

Emerging growth companies will have more lenient disclosure and compliance obligations with respect to executive compensation, financial disclosures and certain new accounting rules. Specifically, an emerging growth company will not be required to:

  • comply with “say on pay” proposals or pay versus performance disclosures;
  • include more than two years of financial statements in the registration statement for its IPO;
  • include selected financial data for any period prior to the earliest audited period presented in connection with its IPO; or
  • comply with new or revised accounting standards that are only applicable to public reporting companies.

In addition, emerging growth companies will be exempt from the auditor attestation requirements of Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, or SOX, and be given a longer transition period for compliance with new audit standards. Further, SOX has been amended to provide that any rules of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, or PCAOB, requiring mandatory audit firm rotation or auditor discussion and analysis will not apply to an emerging growth company. In addition, any future rules adopted by the PCAOB would not apply to audits of emerging growth companies unless the SEC determines otherwise.

The Jobs Act provides that emerging growth companies may start the IPO process by confidentially submitting draft registration statements to the SEC for nonpublic review. Confidentially submitted registration statements would need to be publicly available at least 21 days prior to beginning the road show for the IPO. Emerging growth companies would also be free to “test the waters” with qualified institutional buyers and institutional accredited investors before and during the registration process.

Analyst Reports for Initial Public Offerings of Emerging Growth Companies

The Jobs Act removes some of the restrictions on investment banks underwriting public offerings while simultaneously providing analyst research reports on a particular issuer that was designated as an “emerging growth company.”

Elimination of Prohibition on General Solicitation For Accredited Investors and Qualified Institutional Buyers

The Jobs Act directs the SEC to revise its rules to:

  • provide that the prohibition against general solicitation or general advertising will not apply to offers and sales of securities made pursuant to Rule 506, provided all purchasers of the securities are accredited investors, and
  • provide that the prohibition against general solicitation or general advertising will not apply to offers and sales made under Rule 144A, provided that the seller reasonably believes that all purchasers of the securities are qualified institutional buyers.

It is currently unclear whether these exemptions will apply to offerings exempt from registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act to the extent they do not satisfy all of the conditions of Rule 506. The SEC has 90 days from the date of enactment of the Jobs Act to promulgate rules to effect elimination of the specified prohibitions on general solicitation and general advertising.

Creation of a ‘Crowdfunding’ Exemption

Crowdfunding refers to the recent (often internet facilitated) technique of seeking financing for a business through small investments from a relatively large pool of individual investors. Under current securities laws, crowdfunding raises a number of problematic registration exemption issues. The Jobs Act attempts to remedy this by creating a new crowdfunding exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act for transactions involving the issuance of securities through a broker or SEC-registered “funding portal,” for which:

  • the aggregate amount of securities sold in the previous 12 months to all investors by the issuer is not more than $1 million; and
  • individual investments by any investor in the securities during any 12-month period are limited to:
    • the greater of $2,000 or 5 percent of the annual income or net worth of such investor, as applicable, if either the annual income or the net worth of the investor is less than $100,000; and
    • 10 percent of the annual income or net worth of such investor, as applicable, not to exceed a maximum aggregate amount sold of $100,000, if either the annual income or net worth of the investor is equal to or more than $100,000.

Such securities would be considered restricted securities subject to a one-year holding period, with certain exceptions, such as sales to accredited investors or family members. The Jobs Act also provides express securities fraud remedies against the issuer of securities sold under the crowdfunding exemption, which includes extending liability to directors, partners and certain senior officers of the issuer.

Disclosure Requirements

The issuer must file with the SEC, provide to the broker or funding portal, and make available to potential investors at least 21 days prior to the first sale, certain information about the issuer. This information is similar to what many companies currently use in offering memoranda in private offerings and includes:

  • the name, legal status, physical address and website of the issuer;
  • the names of officers, directors and greater than 20% shareholders;
  • a description of the issuer’s current and anticipated business;
  • a description of the financial condition of the issuer, including, for offerings where the aggregate amounts sold under the crowdfunding exemption are:
    • $100,000 or less, income tax returns for the most recently completed fiscal year and financial statements, certified by the principal executive officer of the issuer;
    • more than $100,000, but less than $500,000, financial statements reviewed by an independent public accountant; or
    • more than $500,000, audited financial statements;
  • a description of the intended use of proceeds;
  • the target offering amount and the deadline to raise such amount;
  • the price to the public of the securities, or method to determine the price;
  • a description of the ownership and capital structure of the issuer, including the terms of the offered security and each other security of the issuer and how such terms may be modified, limited, diluted or qualified;
  • risks to purchasers of minority ownership and corporate actions, including issuances of shares, sales of the issuer or its assets or transactions with related parties; and
  • such other information as the SEC may prescribe.

The issuer must also annually file with the SEC and provide to investors its results of operations and financial statements.

‘Blue Sky’ Pre-emption

Securities sold pursuant to the crowdfunding exemption are “covered securities” for purposes of the National Securities Markets Improvement Act, or NSMIA, and, therefore, are exempt from state securities registration requirements, or “Blue Sky,” laws. This preemption does not prohibit state enforcement actions based on alleged fraud, deceit, or unlawful conduct.

Creation of ‘Funding Portals’

A person acting as an intermediary in an offer or sale of securities under this new crowdfunding exemption will have to register with the SEC as a broker or funding portal and will also need to register with any applicable self-regulatory organizations. Such intermediary will also have to comply with a number of requirements designed to ensure that investors are informed of the possible risks associated with a new venture, including conducting background checks on each officer, director and greater than 20% shareholders of the issuer. Additionally, the Jobs Act instructs the SEC to promulgate rules or regulations under which an issuer, broker or funding portal would not be eligible, based on its disciplinary history, to utilize the exemption.

SEC Rulemaking

The SEC is directed to issue rules as may be necessary or appropriate for the protection of investors to implement the crowdfunding exemption within 270 days after the enactment of the Jobs Act. In addition, the dollar amounts are to be indexed for inflation at least every five years for changes in the consumer price index.

Raising the Regulation A Limit to $50 million

The Jobs Act amends Section 3(b) of the Securities Act to direct the SEC to amend Regulation A so as to increase the aggregate offering amount that may be offered and sold within the prior 12-month period in reliance on Regulation A from $5 million to $50 million. The SEC is required to review the limit every two years and to increase the amount as it determines appropriate or explain to Congress its reasons for not increasing the limit on Regulation A offerings.

No ‘Blue Sky’ Pre-emption

Predecessor bills would have made the Regulation A exemption more appealing by making Regulation A offered securities exempt from “Blue Sky” laws. Although the Jobs Act does not provide that securities offered under Regulation A are explicitly exempt, it does have a provision requiring the Comptroller General to conduct a study on the impact of Blue Sky laws on offerings made under Regulation A. Securities offered and sold to “qualified purchasers,” to be defined under NSMIA, or on a national securities exchange would be “covered securities” and exempt from Blue Sky laws.

Modifying Registration Thresholds

Currently, Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act requires an issuer with assets in excess of $1 million and a class of security held by more than 500 shareholders of record to register such security with the SEC and, therefore, become subject to the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act. The Jobs Act amends the registration thresholds to require registration only when an issuer has:

  • either 2,000 or more shareholders of record, or 500 shareholders of record who are not accredited investors, and
  • assets in excess of $10 million.

Exceptions to “Held of Record” Definition

Further, the Jobs Act amends the definition of “held of record” to exclude securities held by persons who received the securities pursuant to an employee compensation plan in transactions exempted from the registration requirements of the Securities Act. It also directs the SEC to adopt rules providing that securities acquired under the crowdfunding exemption are similarly excluded.

Increased Thresholds for Community Banks

The Jobs Act amends Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act by increasing the shareholder registration threshold in the case of an issuer that is a bank or a bank holding company to 2,000 persons. The bill also makes it easier for banks and bank holding companies to deregister and cease public company compliance requirements by increasing the threshold for deregistration for those entities from 300 persons to 1,200 persons.

Implementation of the Jobs Act

SEC Rulemaking and Studies

The Jobs Act directs the SEC to adopt rules implementing certain provisions of the act as well as to conduct a number of studies and report back to Congress.

SEC Concerns

A number of SEC Commissioners, including Chairman Mary Schapiro, have publicly expressed concerns on the balance between enhancing capital formation and the reduction in investor protections. The Jobs Act does not affect Rule 10b-5 of the Securities Act and adds some additional securities fraud remedies, so issuers should continue to be scrupulous about compliance with their disclosure obligations.

Full Text of the Jobs Act

The Jobs Act was enacted on April 5, 2012. The text of the act is currently available at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hr3606enr/pdf/BILLS-112hr3606enr.pdf.

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California Requires Many Foreign Corporations To Send Annual Financial Statements To Shareholders

AM logo with tagline

California is a net exporter of corporate charters, but it remains home to many corporations. As a result, the California Corporations Code has a preternatural concern with foreign corporations.

One example is Section 1501(a) which requires the board to cause an annual report to be sent to shareholders.  This report must include a balance sheet as of year end and an income statement and statement of cash flows for the year.  The statute doesn’t require that the statements be audited, but if an independent accountant has issued a report, then that report must be sent along as well.  If there is no report, then the report must include a certificate of an authorized officer that the statements were prepared without audit from the books and records of the corporation.  If the corporation has fewer than 100 holders of record (determined in accordance with Section 605), the financial statements need not be prepared in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles if the statements reasonably set forth the assets and liabilities and income and expense of the corporation and disclose the accounting basis used in their preparation.

The report must be sent not later than 120 days after the close of the fiscal year and must be sent at least 15 days (or, if sent by third class mail, 35 days) prior to the annual meeting of shareholders held during the following fiscal year.  Cal. Corp. § 1501(a)(1) & (2).

This requirement applies to domestic corporations, a term that embraces any corporation formed under the laws of California.  Cal. Corp. § 1501(g).  Thus, it includes corporations not formed under the General Corporation Law. See Cal. Corp. Code § 167.  However, a corporation with less than 100 holders of record (determined in accordance with Section 605) may include a bylaw provision that waives the annual report requirement.

The statute also applies to any foreign corporation if the corporation has its principal executive offices in California or it customarily holds meetings of its board in California.  Cal. Corp. § 1501(g).

Publicly traded companies are not exempted per se from this requirement.  However, corporations with an outstanding class of securities registered under Section 12 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 will satisfy the annual report requirement if they comply with Rule 14a-16 (17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-16).  Cal. Corp. § 1501(a)(4).  [Note that this statute purports to include future amendments and this may give rise to a constitutional problem, see Why Incorporation May Be Unconstitutional.]

Here is a flow-chart describing the application of the statute.  This is probably a good time to remind readers that this blog does not provide legal advice.  There are other requirements in Section 1501 (including possible quarterly reporting requirements) that are not covered in today’s post.  Moreover, there are other nuances that I’ve not mentioned.

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The Legal Challenge to the SEC’s Conflict Minerals Reporting Regulations

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In the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, the United States Congress required, inter alia, the SEC to promulgate regulations requiring certain manufacturers to trace the sources of tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold that are contained in products they manufacture or contract to manufacture to allow them to report yearly to the SEC whether the products are “not DRC [Democratic Republic of the Congo] conflict free.” Conflict free was defined by Congress as meaning the products do not contain minerals that finance or benefit violent armed groups in the DRC or adjoining countries. Congress required the SEC action because “it [was] the sense of Congress” that the exploitation of conflict minerals from that region was financing armed groups that engaged in “extreme levels of violence” creating “an emergency humanitarian situation.”

Various industry groups lobbied heavily against the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act and later submitted comments during the SEC’s rulemaking challenging the proposed regulations’ due diligence and reporting obligations as unduly burdensome and costly. After considering the comments, the SEC, where it would not run afoul of the Congressional mandate, did reduce some of the burdens that would be imposed on industry. However, the SEC acknowledged that compliance with Congress’s intent precluded reduction of other burdensome aspects of the regulations. The SEC promulgated the regulations in August 2012.

In October, 2012, the National Association of Manufacturers, along with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, commenced a legal challenge to the conflict minerals regulations. Since then, voluminous briefs have been filed by NAM and the SEC along with briefs by numerous interested groups. These briefs outline the parameters of the dispute and suggest that NAM faces an uphill battle.

The crux of the industry’s challenge is that the SEC failed to properly quantify the benefits and costs associated with the regulations and thereby acted arbitrarily and capriciously in promulgating them. NAM claims the reporting requirements will not aid the DRC and could cripple the region economically. It also claims that the SEC failed to agree to certain revisions that would have lessened the burdens and costs on business, like carving out a de minimus exemption for manufacturers whose products used only trace amounts of conflict minerals and predicating a burdensome due diligence requirement on whether a manufacturer had “reason to believe” that their products contained conflict minerals that may have originated in the DRC as opposed to whether the products “did originate” there. NAM asks the court to strike the entire regulation and send the SEC back to square one.

The SEC responds that it was not its responsibility to quantify the benefits of the regulations, noting that Congress had made that calculation and had determined that the benefits justified the reporting requirement Congress mandated. In fact, the SEC admitted it could not quantify the benefits because it lacked data to do so. Rather it performed a qualitative analysis. It also defends its rejection of NAM’s proposed revisions that would have reduced the costs of compliance. The SEC noted, and various members of Congress agreed, that Congress had considered and rejected the de minimus exemption because it would defeat the purpose of the rule. Congress concluded that thousands or millions of trace amounts can add up to a significant amount, the trade in which would undercut the rule’s purpose of stopping the flow of money to armed insurgents in the region. The second NAM proposal was rejected because in the SEC’s view, it would encourage willful blindness by industry. That is, if a business encountered a red flag suggesting the sources of its minerals were not conflict-free, it would investigate no further, so as to avoid a determination that they did originate there.

An interesting issue concerns the regulation’s imposition of the reporting requirements not just on manufacturers but also to those who contract for the manufacture of goods. NAM believes that this extension of the reporting requirements is contrary to the express language of Dodd-Frank. It supports its position through application of rules of construction routinely used in interpreting statutes and its argument is logical. However, former and current members of Congress came to the SEC’s aid on this issue claiming in their brief that they intended to include those who contract for the manufacturer of goods, again to prevent exemptions that would significantly undercut what the regulations sought to achieve.

Oral arguments are scheduled for May 15, 2013. It will be very interesting to see how receptive the panel from the DC Circuit is to NAM’s arguments. Asking the court to scuttle the entire regulation, the parameters of which Congress as a matter of policy framed, makes NAM’s challenge all the more difficult.

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Takeover Code Amendments Extend the Rights of Pension Scheme Trustees

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Amendments include new requirements regarding offerors’ intentions, documents provided to trustees, trustees’ opinions on offers, and publication of agreements between offerors and trustees.

On 22 April, the Code Committee of the UK Panel on Takeovers and Mergers (the Panel) published response statement RS 2012/2 (the Response Statement), which introduces amendments to the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers (the Code).[1] The Response Statement follows a consultation to consider extending the rights of trustees of offeree company pension schemes. Broadly, the amendments to the Code provide the following:

  • An offeror is required to state its intentions with regard to the offeree company’s pension scheme.
  • Certain information is required to be published in the offer document or otherwise provided to pension scheme trustees.
  • Trustees are allowed to provide an opinion on the effects of an offer on the company’s pension scheme.
  • Agreements between an offeror and pension scheme trustees that relate to pension scheme funding may be required to be published if they are material.

Background

On 19 September 2011, significant changes were made to the Code, including an extension of the obligations of the offeror and offeree in relation to information to be provided to, and the obligation to publish opinions of, the offeree company’s employees and employee representatives. During the Panel’s consultation on those changes, the pensions industry lobbied significantly for similar provisions to be added to the Code in relation to trustees of pension schemes. Proposed amendments to the Code were published in public consultation paper PCP 2012/2 (the PCP)[2] on 5 July 2012, and a period of consultation followed. The Response Statement sets out the Panel’s response to that consultation and the resulting changes to be made to the Code. Although many of the changes will be adopted as originally proposed in the PCP, certain modifications have been made.

In determining the new regime, the Panel has been mindful that the intended effect of the changes is to create a framework within which the effects of an offer on an offeree company’s pension scheme can become (i) a debating point during the course of the offer and (ii) a point on which the relevant parties can express their views.

Application of New Code Provisions to Defined Benefit Schemes

The new provisions of the Code are limited to funded pension schemes sponsored by the offeree (or any of its subsidiaries) that (i) provide pension benefits (either in whole or in part) on a defined benefit basis—and (ii) have trustees (or managers, in the case of non-UK schemes). The Code provisions are not limited to UK pension schemes and apply to all such schemes, regardless of size or materiality in the context of the offeree’s group.

The new provisions do not apply to pension schemes that provide pension benefits only on a “defined contribution” basis, as the Panel believes that the provisions of the Code granting rights to employees and employee representatives already create an appropriate framework for discussion in relation to the impact of an offer, and the offeror’s intentions, in relation to such schemes.

Publication of Offeror’s Intentions in Relation to Pension Scheme

An offeror will now be required to include in the offer document a statement of its intentions with regard to relevant offeree pension schemes, including with respect to employer contributions and arrangements for deficit funding, benefits accruals for current members, and the admission of new members to the scheme. However, the Panel has not required that the offeror include a statement on the likely repercussions of its strategic plans for the offeree company on relevant pension schemes. Similarly, the Panel has confirmed that such statements do not need to include an assessment of the future ability of the offeree company to meet its funding obligations to its pension scheme.

The Panel also confirmed that the general rule under Note 3, Rule 19.1 of the Code will apply to statements of intention made in respect of pension schemes. This means that an offeror will be considered to be committed by any such statements for 12 months after the offer ends (or such other period of time as is specified in the offeror’s statement), unless there has been a material change of circumstances.

Under the PCP, the Panel originally proposed to require the offeree to include in its offeree circular its views on the effects of the implementation of the offer—and the offeror’s strategic plans for the offeree—on the offeree’s pension schemes. However, following the consultation, the Panel did not make these changes but did confirm that the offeree board may include its views on these subjects in the offeree circular should it wish to do so.

Provision of Information to Pension Scheme Trustees

The amendments to the Code provide that trustees of the offeree company’s pension scheme will be entitled to receive the same documents that offerors and offerees are required to make available to employee representatives. These documents include the following:

  • The announcement that commences the offer period
  • The announcement of a firm intention to make an offer
  • The offer document
  • The offeree board circular in response to the offer document
  • Any revised offer document
  • The offeree board circular in response to any revised offer document

Pension Scheme Trustees’ Opinion on the Offer

Under the revised Code, pension scheme trustees will have the right to require the offeree’s board of directors to publish the trustees’ opinion on the effects of the offer on the pension scheme, and the offeree will be obliged to notify such trustees of this right at the commencement of the offer. As with employee representatives’ opinions, if the trustees’ opinion is received in good time, the opinion must be appended to the offeree board circular. If it is not received in good time, it must be published on a website, with such publication to be announced on a Regulated Information Service.[3] The Panel has confirmed that the trustees’ opinion may cover more than the impact of the offer on the benefits that the scheme provides to members (and other matters to be included in the offeror’s statement in the offer document) and that the opinion may also extend to the trustees’ views on the impact of the offer on the post-offer ability of the offeree company to make future contributions to the pension scheme (i.e., the strength of its funding covenant).

Unlike employee representative opinions, the offeree will only be responsible for the costs incurred in the publication of the trustees’ opinion and not for any other costs incurred in relation to its preparation or verification.

Agreements Entered into Between an Offeror and Pension Scheme Trustees

The revised Code also contains certain provisions relating to any agreements between an offeror and the trustees of an offeree pension scheme, for example, in relation to the future funding of that scheme. Following the consultation, the Panel determined that any such agreements should be treated in the same manner as any other offer-related agreement, with certain variations. As a result, the amendments contain the following requirements for agreements between offerors and pension scheme trustees:

  • Where any such agreement is a material contract for the offeror within the meaning of the Code, it should be published on a website in the same manner as any other material contract.
  • Where such an agreement is not material, but is nevertheless referred to in the offer document, there will be no requirement to publish it on a website.
  • Where such an agreement relates only to the future funding of the pension scheme, it will be excluded from the general prohibition on offer-related agreements contained in Rule 21.2(a).[4]

Pensions Regulator

The Panel has confirmed, following discussions with the UK Pensions Regulator, that there will be no obligation under the Code for the offeror or offeree to send offer-related documentation to the Pensions Regulator, nor will there be any obligation on the Panel to notify the Pensions Regulator of takeover offers. Accordingly, it is for the offer parties (and any other interested parties) to decide whether they wish to engage with, or seek clearance of the offer from, the Pensions Regulator.

Entry into Force

The amendments introduced by the Response Statement will take effect on 20 May 2013, and an amended version of the Code will be published on this date.


[1]. View the Response Statement here.

[2]. View the PCP here.

[3]. The UK Financial Conduct Authority has published a list of information services that are approved Regulated Information Services in Appendix 3 of the Listing Rules, which is available here.

[4]. The Panel, however, emphasised that any obligations or restrictions on the trustees regarding any other offeror or potential offeror would not be permissible.

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IRS Extends Transition Relief for Puerto Rico Qualified Plans to Participate in U.S. Group Trusts and Deadline to Transfer Assets

Posted in the National Law Review an article by attorney Nancy S. Gerrie and Jeffrey M. Holdvogt of McDermott Will & Emery regarding  U.S. employers with qualified employee retirement plans that cover Puerto Rico:

On December 21, 2011, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued Notice 2012-6, which provides welcome relief for U.S. employers with qualified employee retirement plans that cover Puerto Rico employees.  Notice 2012-6 provides that the IRS will extend the deadline for employers sponsoring plans that are tax-qualified only in Puerto Rico (ERISA Section 1022(i)(1) Plans) to continue to pool assets with U.S.-qualified plans in group and master trusts described in Revenue Ruling 81-100 (81-100 group trusts) until further notice, provided the plan was participating in the trust as of January 10, 2011, or holds assets that had been held by a qualified plan immediately prior to the transfer of those assets to an ERISA Section 1022(i)(1) Plan pursuant to a spin-off from a U.S.-qualified plan under Revenue Ruling 2008-40.

Notice 2012-6 also extends the deadline for sponsors of retirement plans qualified in both the United States and Puerto Rico (dual-qualified plans) to spin off and transfer assets attributable to Puerto Rico employees to ERISA Section 1022(i)(1) Plans, with the resulting plan assets considered Puerto Rico-source income and not subject to U.S. tax.

There are now two separate deadlines:

    • First, in recognition of the fact that Puerto Rico adopted a new tax code in 2011 with significant changes to the requirements for qualified retirement plans, the IRS has extended the general deadline to December 31, 2012, for dual-qualified plans to make transfers to Puerto Rico-only plans, in order to give plan sponsors time to consider the effect of the changes made by the new tax code.
    • Second, in recognition of the fact that the IRS has not yet issued definitive guidance on the ability of an ERISA Section 1022(i)(1) Plan to participate in 81-100 group trusts, the IRS has extended the deadline for dual-qualified plans that participate in an 81-100 group trust to some future deadline, presumably after the IRS reaches a conclusion on the ability of a dual-qualified plan to participate in an 81-100 group trust, as described in Revenue Ruling 2011-1.

For more information on the issues related to participation of ERISA Section 1022(i)(1) Plans in 80-100 group trusts, see “IRS Permits Puerto Rico-Qualified Plans to Participate in U.S. Group and Master Trusts for Transition Period, Extends Deadline for Puerto Rico Spin-Offs.”

For more information on the issues plan sponsors should consider with respect to a dual-qualified plan spin-off and transfer of assets attributable to Puerto Rico employees to ERISA section 1022(i)(1) plans, see “IRS Sets Deadline for Transfers from Dual-Qualified to Puerto Rico-Only Qualified Plans.”

© 2011 McDermott Will & Emery

The Credit Mark Predicament: A Bank Recapitalization Hurdle

Recently posted in the National Law Review an article by The Financial Institutions Group of Schiff Hardin LLP regarding community banks are searching for capital:

 

 

 

Many community banks are searching for capital either as a cushion to cover credit losses, to meet higher capital standards set by regulatory enforcement actions, or to support balance sheet growth driven by open or closed bank acquisitions, branch purchases or organic expansion.

Any community bank that intends to raise capital has to deal with investor skepticism over the bank’s credit quality. That skepticism gets addressed in most cases by a third-party credit review performed at the direction of the bank, with the results later confirmed by the investor’s own review firm. Because third-party credit reviews have become a gating issue to raising capital, management teams are making decisions about what firm to hire for the work, the scope of the review and how to strategically manage the risks inherent in these reviews.

Many of the risks and strategic approaches for managing third-party credit reviews may not be obvious to bank management, which is for the first time retaining a firm to perform this type of review with the very specific purpose of inducing investors to invest. Likewise, management may not be fully informed as to how the portfolio review will be used by potential investors to evaluate the merits of their investment.

It is hard to over-emphasize the importance of management being careful and strategically thoughtful in: the selection of its third-party credit review firm; the timing of the review in relation to an impending regulatory exam, year-end audit or capital-raising transaction; the scope and methodology of the review; and the use of the results of the review once completed. There are nuances galore in this process and the very survival of the bank can rest in the balance if the process is mishandled.

The attached article surveys the key issues management should consider before retaining a third-party credit review firm, and explains how these reports are used by potential investors in making determinations about investing in a particular bank. In addition, the article reviews common mistakes made in retaining third-party credit review firms.

In assessing a particular third-party credit review firm for hire, the following are ten key questions:

  1. Are the bank’s files and documentation in good shape before the third-party credit review begins? If questionable, will several days of advance “triage” of the portfolio be useful in assessing whether the bank will show well based on the order of its documents, all in an effort to avoid judgmental credit downgrades based on file quality?
  2. Does the firm have a senior project manager with strong verbal communication skills that will facilitate discussion of the review results with the board of directors and any potential investors?
  3. Will the firm commit to remaining engaged and active throughout the recapitalization process, to serve in a rebuttal capacity with third-party credit review firms retained by potential investors, and to update its work if necessary as the recapitalization process progresses?
  4. Will the firm provide value to the bank solely by providing a credit valuation, or would the bank benefit from a firm that has not only valuation experience but also skills and capabilities to provide post-valuation loan workout services, including assisting in developing recovery strategies on an individual NPA basis?
  5. Should the firm provide a verbal conclusion on its credit mark before committing its conclusions to writing?
  6. Should the firm be retained by the bank’s legal counsel as opposed to directly by the bank?
  7. Should the firm review and value only the NPA portfolio, or should the review extend to the performing portfolio as well, and, accordingly, assess migration risk of the performing book?
  8. Is the bank seeking capital from institutional investors that will insist on a brand name credit review firm in order to give the review results credibility?
  9. Will the firm review only “paper” in the files or will it spend time with both the bank’s chief credit officer and other credit professionals in reaching valuation determinations?
  10. Finally, will the bank’s personnel have the time and capacity to respond to the document calls by the third-party credit review firm given the other demands on management’s time, recognizing the burden these reviews place on management?

© 2011 Schiff Hardin LLP

Beware of Online Applications and Background Check Authorizations

Posted in the National Law Review on December 15, 2011 an article by Luis E. AvilaNancy L. FarnamRichard D. FriesJeffrey T. Gray, Jr.Richard A. Hooker and David E. Khorey of Varnum LLP regarding class actions against employers’ conducting background checks:  

 

Varnum LLP

An increasing number of employers have been recipients of proposed class actions alleging that the way they conduct background checks on prospective employees violates the Fair Credit Reporting Act 15 U.S.C. §1681 (“FCRA”).

A recent example is a claim filed in Virginia, which focuses on the employer’s online job application. The process asks potential employees whether they are willing to allow the company to obtain a consumer report or criminal background check on them. Applicants must then click a button labeled either “Accept” or “Decline.” The claim alleges that for purposes of the FCRA, an electronic disclosure is not one made “in writing” and that an electronic signature (Accept/Decline) does not satisfy the requirements of the act.

As it relates to employers conducting background checks on prospective employees, the FCRA requires that a person may not procure a consumer report for employment purposes with respect to any consumer, unless (1) a clear and conspicuous disclosure has been made in writing to the applicant at any time before the report is procured, in a document that consists solely of the disclosure that a consumer report may be obtained for employment purposes; and (2) the consumer has authorized in writing the procurement of the report by that person.

Electronic disclosures of this sort have traditionally been viewed as falling under the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (“E-Sign”). However, this claim challenges this understanding of E-Sign by alleging that the law does not apply to job applicants, but instead only to consumers, which it defines as an individual who obtains products or services.

Under the FCRA, employers may be liable to each class member for up to $1,000.00 or actual damages, plus punitive damages and attorneys’ fees and costs. So far this year, two companies have agreed to multimillion-dollar settlements in similar cases.

We strongly recommend that employers review their online job application process to ensure that it does not run afoul of the FCRA and obtain competent labor counsel to address any concerns

© 2011 Varnum LLP

Google, Microsoft Assume Roles of Judge, Jury and Executioner on the Web

Published December 6, 2011 in The National Law Review an article by Nicole Kardell of Ifrah Law regarding Google, Yahoo! and Bing have suspended their accounts with hundreds of advertisers and agents associated with mortgage programs under federal investigation:

 

 

Google, Yahoo! and Bing have suspended their accounts with hundreds of advertisers and agents associated with mortgage programs under federal investigation. The move by Google and Microsoft (Microsoft powers Bing and Yahoo!) has basically shut down these businesses: Without the vehicle of the search engines, these sites cannot effectively generate traffic.

Why did Google and Microsoft cut the cord of these companies, and is there anything the companies can do? Google and Microsoft (we’ll call them the Government’s “Judge, Jury, and Executioner” or the “Enforcers”) acted upon the request of SIGTARP, a federal agency charged with preventing fraud, waste, and abuse under TARP’s Home Affordable Modification Program(The pressure started a while back, as we wrote last March.)

SIGTARP is investigating mortgage programs that it believes have been wrongly charging “struggling homeowners a fee in exchange for false promises of lowering the homeowner’s mortgage.”

According to a source at SIGTARP, the agency handed Google and Microsoft a list of some 125 mortgage “schemes.” Apparently, the Enforcers then took that list, identified advertisers and agents associated with those mortgage programs, and opted to suspend relations with those companies (about 500 advertisers and agents for Google and about 400 for Microsoft). (SIGTARP’s announcements on these actions can be found here andhere.)

So it looks as if these companies have been penalized through government action without any adjudicative process, merely through government pressure on private companies, i.e. Google and Microsoft. (More analysis from us on this to come.)

It’s easy to understand why the Enforcers would feel pressure. Google just settled with the Department of Justice and agreed to pay more than $500 million for its role in publishing prescription drug ads from Canada. Those familiar with that settlement may see Google’s recent actions for SIGTARP as follow-on. Likely Google is more apt to buckle to the Feds quickly because of the costly settlement, but the matters are not directly related. In fact, the prescription drug settlement agreement relates to prescription drug ads only.

While the SIGTARP investigation is “ongoing,” and Google and Microsoft are continuing to cooperate with the agency, what can companies who have been caught up in this firestorm do? The Enforcers do, fortunately, have grievance processes (see, for instance, Google’s grievance process here).

Either on their own, or with some added strength through legal representation, the companies can try to make their cases regarding the content and nature of the ads at issue.

What is the next step going to be? If the Federal Trade Commission identifies, say, a group of websites that it believes are promoting bogus weight-loss schemes, will the Enforcers simply move to shut off their access to the Web, without further ado?

© 2011 Ifrah PLLC