SEC Regulations Committee March 21, 2023 — Joint Meeting with SEC Staff
NOTICE:
The Center for Audit Quality(CAQ) SEC Regulations Committee meets periodically with
the staff of the SEC to discuss emerging financial reporting issues relating to SEC
rules and regulations. The purpose of the following highlights is to summarize the
issues discussed at the meetings. These highlights have not been considered or acted
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meeting and do not purport to be a transcript of thematters discussed. The views
attributed to the SEC staff are informal views of one or more of the staff members
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are urged to refer directly to applicable authoritative pronouncements for the text
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I. ATTENDANCE
SEC Regulations Committee
|
Securities and Exchange Commission
|
Observers and Guests
|
---|---|---|
John May, Chair Paula Hamric, Vice-Chair
Timothy Brown Muneera Carr Jason Cuomo
Kendra Decker Fred Frank Pat Gilmore
John Griffin Michael Henson Steven
Jacobs Sandy Peters Mark Shannon Scott
Wilgenbusch |
Staff from the Division of Corporation Finance
(Division) and Office of the Chief
Accountant
| Lisa Mitrovich, Deloitte Kavish Singh,
PwC Denise Muschett Wray, Mazars Annette
Schumacher Barr, CAQ Observer Erin Cromwell, CAQ
Observer |
II. ORGANIZATIONAL, PERSONNEL AND PROJECT UPDATES
A. Staff Update
Thestaff provided the following personnel updates in the Division:
- Cicely LaMothe has been named Deputy Director of Disclosure Operations.
- The Division is also finalizing hiring from the public posting of additional associate directors in Disclosure Operations.
III. CURRENT FINANCIAL REPORTING MATTERS
A. Applicability of the new Form 10-K restatement check box when the financial statements include disclosure of an error in previously issued quarterly financial statements but not in any annual periods
In connection with the new rule and rule amendments for the recovery of
erroneously awarded compensationin the event of a required accounting
restatement, a check box with the following language was added to the cover page
of Form 10-K:
If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of
the Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the
registrant included in the filing reflect the correction of an error to
previously issued financial statements.
Asimilar check box was not added to the cover page of Form 10-Q.
The retrospective correction of a material error in a registrant’s previously
filed interim financial statements may be presented in the disclosure required
by Item 302(a) of Regulation S-K within an unaudited note to the annual
financial statements included in a Form 10-K. However, those financial
statements might not disclose the correction of an error to any annual periods
as the error being corrected only existed in the interim periods.
For example, assume a registrant presents (in an unaudited note to the financial
statements for thefiscal year ended 2X23 in Form 10-K) the correction of
material misstatements in its financial statements for the interim periods ended
03/31/2X23, 06/30/2X23, and 09/30/23. The error only affected those interim
periods. The annual periods presented in the 2X23 Form 10-K were not impacted by
the errors.
The Committee asked the staff whether the registrant in this example would need
to select the check box.
B. The staff indicated that they are continuing to consider whether this example would need to select the check box. Pay versus performance disclosure transition
The Committee and the staff discussed the following question regarding
implementation of the recently adopted Pay versus Performance rules:
If a
calendar-year Emerging Growth Company (EGC) that completed its IPO in March
2020 lost its EGC status on December 31, 2023, how many years of Pay versus
Performance disclosure would the registrant be required to provide in its
annual meeting proxy statement to be filed in early 2024?
Thestaff confirmed that consistent with the transition provisions in S-K
402(v)(8) and Instruction 1 to S-K 402(v), the registrant referred to above
would be required to provide three years of Pay versus Performance disclosure
(two years for a Smaller Reporting Company (SRC)) in its early 2024 proxy
statement.
C. Staff Legal Bulletin No. 2 (SLB 2)
In light of current economic circumstances, the Committee and staff discussed SLB
2. Companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court are not
relieved of their Exchange Act reporting obligations. However, in Release 9660
(1972), the SEC indicated that it may accept reports which differ in form and
content from reports otherwise required to be filed under the Exchange Act from
issuers that are in Bankruptcy. SLB 2 was issued in 1997 to provide the staff’s
views on requests to modify periodic reporting obligations for registrants that
are either reorganizing or liquidating under provisions of the United States
Bankruptcy Code. For example, SLB 2 states that “the Division will accept,
instead of Form 10-K and 10-Q filings, the monthly reports an issuer must file
with the Bankruptcy Court under Rule 2015 . . . on a Form 8-K within 15 calendar
days after the monthly report is due to the Bankruptcy Court.”
Given the passage of time since the issuance of SLB 2, the Committee asked
whether there have beenany developments with respect to the views previously
expressed by the staff. For instance, noting that many Form 8-K due dates have
been accelerated from 15 calendar days to 4 business days since the issuance of
SLB 2, the Committee asked whether the 15 calendar-day deadline still applies.
As part of the discussion, the staff noted that the timing of information is
usually driven by bankruptcy courts. The staff indicated that they would not
expect to see significant delays between the time the information was filed with
the bankruptcy court and when the Form 8-K was filed with the SEC. However, the
staff would continue to accept filings within the current 15 calendar-day
deadline.
The Committee also discussed with the staff whether registrants are required to
seek a no- action position prior to using the type of modified Exchange Act
reporting referred to in SLB 2. As part of the discussion, the staff noted that
registrants oftentimes refer to relevant prior no- action positions that have
been published to help determine whether modified Exchange Act reporting would
be appropriate in the registrant’s individual facts and circumstances, and that
there is no requirement to obtain a no-action position from the staff prior to
using the SLB 2 modifiedExchange Act reporting model. However, registrants may
choose to obtain the staff’s views in order to reduce the risk that their facts
and circumstances may be different from those contemplated by prior no-action
positions. The staff emphasized that modified Exchange Act reporting would not
be appropriate in a situation in which a registrant was not current with respect
to its prior Exchange Act reporting obligations or if the registrant’s
securities are still trading on an exchange or otherwise have an active trading
market.
D. Transition for new disclosures required by the SEC’s recent insider trading rulemaking
Section III of Release 33-11138, Insider Trading
Arrangements and Related Disclosuresstates in
part:
Issuers that are SRCs will be required to comply with the
new disclosure and tagging requirements in Exchange Act periodic reports
on Forms 10-Q, 10-K and 20-F and in any proxy or information statements
that are required to include the Item 408, Item 402(x), and/or Item 16J
disclosures in the first filing that covers the first full fiscal period
that begins on or after October 1, 2023.
Similarly, the February24, 2023 Small Entity Compliance
Guide relating to the new rules contains the following guidance with
respect to transition for SRCs:
Item 408(b), Item 402(x), and Item 16J
(for foreign private issuers) disclosure and tagging requirements in the
annual report on Form 10-K or Form 20-F that covers the first full
fiscal year that begins on or after October 1, 2023.
The Committee wanted to confirm that a Form 20-F filer can apply the SRC test to
determine if it could use the SRC transition date for its Item 16J disclosures.
For example, the Committee wanted to confirm that a Form 20-F filer with a June
30 fiscal year-end that would meet the definition of an SRC if it were filing on
domestic forms could begin complying with the requirements of Item 16J in its
Form 20-F for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2025 (i.e., the Form 20-F that
covers the first full fiscal year that begins on or after October 1, 2023)?
The staff confirmed under the transition provisions of the Insider Trading
Arrangements release, for the limited purpose of this disclosure, if a
foreign private issuer qualifies as an SRC, it will be permitted to begin
complying with the Item 16J requirements in its Form 20-F for the fiscal year
ending June 30, 2025.