ARTICLE
16 January 2024

Senate Proposes To Extend Section 16 Requirements To Foreign Private Issuers

AO
A&O Shearman

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A&O Shearman was formed in 2024 via the merger of two historic firms, Allen & Overy and Shearman & Sterling. With nearly 4,000 lawyers globally, we are equally fluent in English law, U.S. law and the laws of the world’s most dynamic markets. This combination creates a new kind of law firm, one built to achieve unparalleled outcomes for our clients on their most complex, multijurisdictional matters – everywhere in the world. A firm that advises at the forefront of the forces changing the current of global business and that is unrivalled in its global strength. Our clients benefit from the collective experience of teams who work with many of the world’s most influential companies and institutions, and have a history of precedent-setting innovations. Together our lawyers advise more than a third of NYSE-listed businesses, a fifth of the NASDAQ and a notable proportion of the London Stock Exchange, the Euronext, Euronext Paris and the Tokyo and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges.
The U.S. Senate recently passed the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (the "NDAA"), which, if enacted, would subject insiders (i.e., directors, executive officers and greater than 10% shareholders) of foreign private issuers ("FPIs") to the requirements of Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
United States Corporate/Commercial Law

The U.S. Senate recently passed the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (the "NDAA"), which, if enacted, would subject insiders (i.e., directors, executive officers and greater than 10% shareholders) of foreign private issuers ("FPIs") to the requirements of Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, with respect to their ownership and transactions in the securities of the relevant FPI. Specifically, Section 6081 of the NDAA amends Section 16(a)(1) to include FPIs as subject to Section 16 and nullifies Rule 3a12-3, which currently exempts securities of FPIs from Section 16. If enacted, Section 6081(c) of the NDAA would require the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue final regulations (or amend existing regulations) to carry out the amendment to Section 16(a)(1) no later than 90 days following the enactment of the NDAA.

If the NDAA is enacted, this would be a substantial change for FPIs and their insiders, adding another layer of U.S. regulation and requiring FPIs to build new compliance and administrative systems. However, one important aspect of complying with Section 16—determining the issuer's executive officers—is well underway by FPIs due to the new Dodd-Frank Clawback Rules. The definition of executive officers that are insiders under Section 16 is the same definition used to determine the individuals who are covered persons under the new clawback rules.

We will continue to track developments and keep you informed of the NDAA as it makes way to being enacted.

Originally published September 21, 2023.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.



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