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Commission
Approves Rules Implementing Provisions of Sarbanes-Oxley Act,
Accelerating Periodic Filings, and Other Measures
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2002-128
Washington, D.C., August 27, 2002 —The Commission took the
following actions at its open meeting today. The full text of detailed
releases concerning each of these items will be posted to the SEC Web
site as soon as possible.
| 1. |
The Commission approved a
delegation to the General Counsel to issue certain orders in
Commission administrative proceedings. The delegation authorizes
the General Counsel to issue orders, pursuant to Rule of
Practice 411(b), under which the Commission would take up on its
own motion the issue of what sanctions are appropriate in the
public interest.
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| 2. |
The Commission adopted amendments
to accelerate the filing deadlines for quarterly reports on Form
10-Q, and annual reports on Form 10-K, required under the
Exchange Act. The Commission also adopted new disclosure
regarding access to reports on company Web sites.
The changes accelerate reports
for domestic companies that:
- Have a public float of at
least $75 million;
- Have been reporting for at
least 12 months;
- Have previously filed one
annual report; and
- Are not eligible to use the
Commission's special forms for small business issuers.
The changes to filing deadlines
will be phased in over three years, with no change for the first
year. The annual report deadline will remain 90 days for the
first year, change to 75 days for year two, and change to 60
days for year three and thereafter. The quarterly report
deadline will remain 45 days for the first year, change to 40
days for year two, and change to 35 days for year three and
thereafter. The first reductions-to 75 days for annual reports
and 40 days for quarterly reports-would occur for accelerated
filers with fiscal years ending on or after Dec. 15, 2003.
Regarding disclosure of Web site
access to reports, an accelerated filer will be required to
disclose in its Form 10-K, beginning with reports for fiscal
years ending on or after Dec.15 of this year, whether the
company makes its periodic and current reports available, free
of charge, on its Web site as soon as reasonably practicable
after such material is electronically filed with, or furnished
to, the Commission.
This acceleration of the periodic
reports will occur less quickly than originally proposed by the
Commission in April. The original proposals would have
accelerated annual reports from 90 to 60 days and quarterly
reports from 45 to 30 days. The proposals did not include a
phase-in period. The Commission received responses from more
than 300 commentators, falling generally into two groups. The
first group, representing investors and other users of company
reports, uniformly supported the proposals and the Commission's
objective to provide investors with more timely access to
company filings. The other group, consisting primarily of
companies, business associations, law firms and accounting
firms, opposed the proposals as written because, in their view,
the proposed timeframes were too short, and could result in less
accurate filings. While many did not believe any acceleration
was warranted, a large number, including most business
associations, generally supported the Commission's objectives,
and offered alternatives to reduce potential costs and burdens.
These included a more gradual phase-in or transition period, and
a less extensive acceleration of deadlines. Also, while comments
were mixed, more believed it would be more difficult to
accelerate the quarterly report, than the annual report. As the
Commission stated in its proposing release, establishing filing
deadlines requires a balance between the market's need for
information with the time companies need to prepare that
information. Accordingly, after carefully studying the comments,
the Commission staff recommended the modifications that were
adopted today by the Commission.
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| 3. |
The Commission adopted rules under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company
Act of 1940 that require an issuer's principal executive officer
and principal financial officer to certify the contents of the
issuer's quarterly and annual reports. The rules will implement
Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, which was enacted
into law on July 30, 2002. Section 302 directed the Commission
to adopt, by Aug. 29, 2002, rules requiring issuers' principal
executive and financial officers to certify their quarterly and
annual reports. These new rules supersede the certification
proposal included in the Commission's June 14, 2002 release.
Highlights of the New Rules
Contents of Certification
New Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and
15d-14 will require an issuer's principal executive and
financial officers each to certify, with respect to the issuer's
quarterly and annual reports filed or submitted under Section
13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, that:
- he or she has reviewed the
report;
- based on his or her knowledge,
the report does not contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary in
order to make the statements made, in light of the
circumstances under which such statements were made, not
misleading;
- based on his or her knowledge,
the financial statements, and other financial information
included in the report, fairly present in all material
respects the financial condition and results of operations
of the issuer as of, and for, the periods presented in the
report;
- he or she and the other
certifying officers:
- are responsible for
establishing and maintaining "disclosure controls
and procedures" (a newly-defined term reflecting
the concept of controls and procedures related to
disclosure) for the issuer;
- have designed such
disclosure controls and procedures to ensure that
material information is made known to them, particularly
during the period in which the periodic report is being
prepared;
- have evaluated the
effectiveness of the issuer's disclosure controls and
procedures within 90 days of the date of the report; and
- have presented in the
report their conclusions about the effectiveness of the
disclosure controls and procedures based on the required
evaluation;
- he or she and the other
certifying officers have disclosed to the issuer's auditors
and to the audit committee of the board of directors (or
persons fulfilling the equivalent function): - all
significant deficiencies in the design or operation of
internal controls (a pre-existing term relating to internal
controls regarding financial reporting) which could
adversely affect the issuer's ability to record, process,
summarize and report financial data and have identified for
the issuer's auditors any material weaknesses in internal
controls; and - any fraud, whether or not material, that
involves management or other employees who have a
significant role in the issuer's internal controls; and
- he or she and the other
certifying officers have indicated in the report whether or
not there were significant changes in internal controls or
in other factors that could significantly affect internal
controls subsequent to the date of their evaluation,
including any corrective actions with regard to significant
deficiencies and material weaknesses.
The new rules will apply to the
principal executive and financial officers of any issuer that
files quarterly and annual reports with the Commission under
either Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, including
foreign private issuers and small business issuers. The new
rules will require that the certification be included in annual
reports on Forms 10-K, 10-KSB, 20-F and 40-F, quarterly reports
on Forms 10-Q and 10-QSB and amendments to any of the foregoing
reports. The staff of the Commission's Division of Corporation
Finance will release a statement regarding compliance with the
certification requirements of Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and
15d-14 by asset-backed issuers.
Disclosure Controls and
Procedures
New Exchange Act Rules 13a-15 and
15d-15 will require an issuer to establish and maintain an
overall system of disclosure controls and procedures that is
adequate to meet its Exchange Act reporting obligations. These
rules are intended to complement existing requirements for
reporting companies to establish and maintain systems of
internal controls with respect to their financial reporting
obligations.
Comments on the question of
certification of proxy statements should be received within 30
days of the date of publication of the rules in the Federal
Register. The rules will apply to reports filed after Aug.
29, 2002.
Registered Investment Companies
New Investment Company Act Rule
30a-2 will implement the certification requirement of Section
302 for registered investment companies. Rule 30a-2 will require
the principal executive and financial officers of a registered
investment company that files periodic reports under Section
13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act to certify the company's
semi-annual reports on Form N-SAR, as well as the financial
statements on which the financial information in Form N-SAR is
based. Form N-SAR is the form designated for registered
investment companies to comply with their periodic reporting
requirements under the Exchange Act.
In addition, the Commission voted
to propose amendments designed to better implement the intent of
Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 with respect to
registered investment companies. These proposed amendments
would:
- require registered management
investment companies, including mutual funds, to file
certified shareholder reports with the Commission, on a new
Form N-CSR. These certified shareholder reports would
consist of a copy of any required shareholder report,
information regarding the company's disclosure controls and
procedures, and the certifications required by Section 302;
- require all registered
investment companies to maintain, and regularly evaluate,
disclosure controls and procedures designed to ensure that
the information required in all its disclosure documents is
collected, processed, and disclosed on a timely basis; and
- uniformly apply to all
registered investment companies, and not just those required
to file periodic reports under the Exchange Act, the
requirement to include a certification of their principal
executive and financial officers in their reports on Form N-SAR.
Comments on the proposed
amendments should be received within 30 days of the date of
their publication in the Federal Register. The rules will
apply to reports filed after Aug. 29, 2002.
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| 4. |
The Commission voted to adopt rule
and form amendments to implement the accelerated filing deadline
applicable to change of beneficial ownership reports required to
be filed by officers, directors and principal security holders
under Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended by Section 403 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The
Commission announced in Exchange Act Release No. 46313 (Aug. 6,
2002) that it would consider adopting such amendments. The
amendments:
- Conform all references to the
Form 4 filing deadline to the amended statutory filing
deadline;
- Require transactions between
officers or directors and the issuer previously reportable
on an annual basis on Form 5 to be reported within two
business days on Form 4; and
- Modify the Form 4 reporting
deadline for certain transactions, if the insider does not
select the date of execution. For these transactions, the
reports must be filed within two business days after the
insider receives notice of the transaction, but the
notification date may be no later than the third business
day after the transaction is executed. These transactions
are:
- Transactions pursuant to
Rule 10b5-1(c) arrangements; and
- Specified plan
transactions defined as "Discretionary
Transactions," such as fund-switching transactions,
pursuant to employee benefit plans.
The rule and form amendments
apply to transactions executed on or after Aug. 29, 2002.
Comments on the amendments and related issues should be received
no later than Sept. 30, 2002.
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| 5. |
The Commission voted to grant a de
minimis exemption from the trade- through restrictions of the
Intermarket Trading System Plan for transactions in
exchange-traded funds tracking the Nasdaq-100 Index (QQQs), the
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIAMONDs), and the Standard and
Poors 500 Index (SPDRs). The exemption will cover transactions
that are executed at no more than three cents ($0.03) away from
the national best bid and offer displayed in the Consolidated
Quote. The exemption will be effective for nine months
commencing on the date of publication of the order in the Federal
Register.
The Commission also directed the
Division of Market Regulation to present a proposal for a series
of interactive public meetings on aspects of market structure.
In order to facilitate the Commission's decisionmaking, and give
the public the opportunity to become better informed on this
range of important issues, the Commission expects that the
meetings will involve market participants, as well as experts
from the financial service industry, corporate America and
academics, in discussions of the steps, and alternatives, for
improving the national market system.
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| 6. |
The Commission voted to adopt rule
amendments and a new rule under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 that were proposed for comment in the Federal Register
on June 10, 2002. New paragraph (e) of Rule 10b-10 and new Rule
11d2-1 are designed to clarify the disclosures broker-dealers
effecting transactions in security futures products in futures
accounts must make in the confirmations sent to customers
regarding those transactions.
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| 7. |
The Commission decided to propose
amendments to Exhibit A to Exchange Act Rule 15c3-3 in light of
the anticipated trading of security futures products under the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000. Exhibit A sets
forth the formula, commonly called the "Reserve
Formula," for calculating the amount a broker-dealer must
deposit in a reserve bank account for the protection of customer
assets, as required under Rule 15c3- 3. The proposed amendments
delineate the treatment under the Reserve Formula of customer
margin related to security futures products required and on
deposit with clearing entities. The proposed amendments are
designed to minimize regulatory costs associated with conducting
a customer business in security futures products. Generally, the
proposed changes would permit a broker-dealer, subject to
specified conditions, to include the amount of customer security
futures product margin required and on deposit at a clearing
house as a debit in the Reserve Formula. One of those conditions
is that a broker-dealer obtain from its DCO an undertaking,
which is provided to the Commission, that confirms that
representatives of the Commission may examine the DCO for
compliance with requirements of Rule 15c3-3a. The Commission
solicits comments on the proposed amendments. In particular, the
Commission seeks comment on whether the undertaking is necessary
to protect customers. Comments should be received no later than
30 days after publication of the proposals in the Federal
Register. Security futures products may begin trading before
adoption of final rule amendments to the Reserve Formula in
Exhibit A to Rule 15c3-3. Any concerns that arise with regard to
the treatment under the Reserve Formula of customer security
futures product margin before commencement of trading should be
brought to the attention of the Division of Market Regulation.
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http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2002-128.htm
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