SEC Gears Up for Flood of Rulemaking To Follow Passage of Dodd-Frank Act

The Senate passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act today and sent it to President Obama for his signature, expected next week. The Act includes numerous governance and compensation provisions that will affect all public companies, as well as comprehensive reform of the nation’s financial system.

In the Wall Street Journal, Kara Scannell reported this week that the SEC is gearing up for a heavy dose of rulemaking. In a story titled “SEC Enters Overdrive to Prepare for Overhaul” (subscription required for entire article), Scannell reported that the SEC is “on a tight deadline to write more than 90 new rules and complete nearly 20 studies.”

The story reports that the rulemaking process will be “burdensome” and will delay other initiatives the SEC considers important. For example, the SEC staff was engaged in a comprehensive review of public companies’ disclosure requirements, a process that will likely have to be put on hold. However, SEC officials say that they “remain committed” to adopt the proposed proxy access rules, as well as dozens of rules for which the timing is mandated by the Act. To prepare for the rulemaking, “ . . . the SEC’s divisions have assembled teams to tackle the various issues, and 50 to 100 staffers are involved in the preparations.”

The situation reminds me of the time after passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, when we were waiting for new SEC rules issued every few weeks. The next several months promise to be very interesting.

What’s on a Page? Right Now, Not Much . . .

I’m getting a little tired of dealing with the Dodd-Frank Act (currently available as a 2,323 page PDF file) and various alternative Congressional bills that have been more than 1,000 pages each. Of course, it’s easy to run up a lot of pages when each page has huge margins and one narrow column of text down the middle of the page. Who came up with that system anyway – do people really write lots of margin notes on each of 2,323 pages? Hopefully, after the Act is finally passed, there will be a version with more text on each page. Who knows – maybe it will only take up 800 or 900 pages.

Image: flikr
 

Say-on-Pay Provision of the Dodd-Frank Act Raises Many Questions

As I reported previously, the House-Senate Conference Committee has agreed on the final provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act (including the corporate governance and compensation provisions starting on page 207 of Title IX of the Act (PDF)). The provision that will probably have the greatest immediate impact on public companies is the requirement for regular shareholder advisory votes on executive compensation (Say-on-Pay).

In a pair of posts on his Proxy Disclosure Blog at CompensationStandards.com, Mark Borges of Compensia provided a great analysis of the Say-on-Pay requirements. He also discussed some open questions about how practical effect of the requirements. Borges’ blog is a subscription service, but he gave me permission to provide excerpts from his posts:

. . . New Section 14A(e) gives the Commission the authority, by rule or order, to exempt an issuer or class of issuers from the "Say on Pay" requirement. . . . . I don't expect the SEC to unilaterally exempt smaller reporting companies from the "Say on Pay" requirement without first soliciting input from the public; particularly the investor community. Consequently, this may be an issue that's assigned a low priority between now and year-end. . . .

This requirement [for Say-on-Pay] is to become effective for the first annual meeting of shareholders occurring after the end of the six month period beginning on the date the Act is signed into law. . . . As long as it is signed into law by Labor Day, the requirement will be in effect for the 2011 proxy season.

. . . One question that has surfaced is whether the advisory vote will necessitate the filing of a preliminary proxy statement. . . . Currently, Exchange Act Rule 14a-6 does not require the filing of a preliminary proxy statement in connection with a "Say on Pay' vote, but only in the case of a company subject to . . . [TARP]. While I expect the SEC to amend the rule to exempt the votes under Exchange Act Section 14A(a) from the preliminary proxy statement filing requirement, we'll have to wait and see how things unfold . . . .

While we've had plenty of time to consider the effects of the "Say on Pay" vote itself, the decision of the House-Senate Conference Committee to let shareholders determine the frequency of the vote - annually, biennially, or triennially - presents a host of questions that will play out over the next several months. Starting with the 2011 proxy season, companies will be required to conduct a shareholder vote to determine how often the "Say on Pay" vote will be held and, thereafter, to resolicit shareholder input on this matter at least once every six years. . . . It seems to me that, in drafting the resolution for shareholder consideration, a company should be permitted to structure the vote to be a choice between an annual vote and a periodic vote (that is, either every two or three years, in the company's discretion). In other words, the resolution should be a choice between two alternatives, since I'm not sure that the difference between a vote every two years or every three years is as significant as the difference between an annual vote and a less frequent vote.

However, the plain language of Section 14A(a)(2) appears to require that companies permit shareholders to choose between holding the vote every one, two, or three years. That is, I expect that the SEC Staff, if it chooses to address the question, is likely to require that shareholders be presented with all three choices. While that appears to be consistent with Congressional intent, it raises the possibility that the decision will be made by a plurality of shareholders (meaning that a majority of shareholders may not favor the choice that ultimately prevails). . . . As a reader pointed out, in many (perhaps most) states [including Delaware], the decision with respect to the frequency of the "Say on Pay" vote will require majority approval of the shareholders. . . . [W]hat happens if none of the three choices receive a majority? Proposed new Section 14A(a)(2) doesn't provide a default resolution. . . .

And, as Marty Rosenbaum of Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand has pointed out, it's not entirely clear whether the frequency vote (unlike the "Say on Pay" vote itself) is intended to be a binding vote - although it appears that it should be (otherwise it's pointless). If it is, then some sort of technical amendment (or SEC rulemaking) will be required as proposed new Section 14A(c) provides that the "shareholder vote referred to in subsections (a) and (b) shall not be binding on the issuer or the board of directors of an issuer . . . ." As presently drafted, this language encompasses both of the votes described in proposed new Section 14A(a), not just the general "Say on Pay" vote contained in Section 14A(a)(1).

There you have it. Borges’ posts contained ten times as much useful information as LeBron James’ television program on Thursday evening announcing his new team. And you didn’t have to spend an hour watching it.

Just Released: Text of Dodd-Frank Act; Also Released: Video of My Singing Act!

In this post, I report on the final financial reform bill from the Conference Committee in Washington. And then I start to sing (see video link below)!

After an all-night session last week, the Conference Committee passed the final version of what is now called the “Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act”. Title IX of the Act (362-page PDF) includes the corporate governance and executive compensation provisions (contained in Subtitle E, starting on page 207). The Act still needs to be passed by both houses and signed into law. In the coming days, I'll be blogging about specific provisions, including mandatory Say-on-Pay and granting authority to the SEC to adopt proxy access rules. The final version of the Act gives the SEC the authority to exempt certain companies (possibly including smaller companies) from these requirements, and the SEC will be “filling in the blanks” in these and other provisions. It promises to be an interesting year of rulemaking.

I Sing “My Attorney Bernie”

Last week, I performed as part of the “Lawyers With (More Than Legal) Talent” competition, which capped off the Minnesota State Bar Association Convention. I didn’t win (the winners were two Minnesota District Court judges). But I had a great time, and so did everyone else. My song was the hilarious “My Attorney Bernie”, written by Dave Frishberg. In my introduction, I said that this song is about the greatest “client testimonial” ever received by an attorney:

Tax attorney David Haynes of the Leonard Street firm provided the piano accompaniment. And speaking of great Frishberg songs, see this previous post for an animated video of “I’m Just a Bill”, which educates listeners about how a bill becomes law.

Video: YouTube