Meteor trades on the Over The Counter (OTC) NASDAQ symbol (MMIBF) Apparently the new changes to this rule will make it easier for American investors to buy Canadian stocks in their Retirement Accounts. Offer and Sale of Securities to Canadian Tax-Deferred Retirement Savings Accounts
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Commission is adopting a new rule that would permit foreign securities to be offered to U.S. participants in certain Canadian tax-deferred retirement accounts and sold to those accounts without being registered under the Securities Act of 1933. The Commission also is adopting a new rule that would permit foreign investment companies to offer securities to those U.S. participants and sell securities to their Canadian retirement accounts without registering under the Investment Company Act of 1940. These rules will enable investors who hold securities in certain Canadian tax-deferred retirement accounts, and who reside or are temporarily present in the United States, to manage their investments within those accounts.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 23, 2000.
4.2 1934 Act
The 1934 Act is designed to help ensure that securities markets are fair and honest. It requires issuers subject to its provisions to disclose on a timely and ongoing basis material information about their business operations and financial condition. The 1934 Act contains various anti-fraud sections as well as both registration and reporting requirements.
Registration. Sections 12(a) and (b) of the 1934 Act require any issuer that has a class of securities listed on a U.S. securities exchange, or a class of equity securities quoted on the NASDAQ national market, to first register that class under the 1934 Act.
In addition, Section 12(g) of the 1934 Act requires every issuer of securities engaged in a business affecting commerce in or with the U.S., or whose securities are traded by use of the U.S. mails, which at the end of its last fiscal year had total assets of US$10 million or more and a class of equity security (for example, common stock) held of record by 500 or more persons, to file a registration statement with the SEC under Section 12(g) with respect to that security, unless an exemption is available.
Any "foreign private issuer" is exempted from the Section 12(g) registration requirement by SEC Rule 12g3-2(a) in respect of any class of securities issued by it which has fewer than 300 holders of record resident in the U.S. A "foreign private issuer" is defined by the SEC to mean any foreign issuer other than a foreign government, unless (i) over 50% of its voting securities are held of record, either directly or indirectly owned by U.S. residents, and (ii) the majority of its executive officers or directors are U.S. citizens or residents or more than 50% of its assets are located in the U.S. or its business is administered principally in the U.S.
If the foreign private issuer cannot utilize the 12g3-2(a) exemption because it has more than 300 U.S. stockholders, it might still be exempt from the Section 12(g) registration requirement if (a) it is not a company regularly reporting to the SEC (see Reporting below), and (b) it meets the requirements of the "information supplying exemption" in Rule 12g3-2(b) under the 1934 Act. To qualify for this exemption, the issuer must furnish on a continuing basis to the SEC copies of information which would be material to investors which the issuer (i) makes public in its own country, (ii) files with a stock exchange on which its securities are traded and is made public by the exchange, or (iii) distributes to its security holders.
Registration under the 1934 Act is usually separate from and in addition to any registration requirements under the 1933 Act discussed above, and is usually accomplished by foreign issuers on a Form 20-F. Form 20-F serves as a registration statement under the 1934 Act and as a reporting company's annual report (see "Reporting" below). It includes the disclosure of most of the information required by the 1933 Act registration forms discussed above under "1933 Act". Form 20-F has recently been revised to conform to the international disclosure standards endorsed by the International Organization of Securities Commissions. Issuers must file on the revised Form 20-F beginning with their first filing after September 30, 2000.
Reporting. Issuers of securities registered under either the 1933 Act or 1934 Act must file annual and other periodic reports with the SEC under the 1934 Act. Foreign issuers that are reporting companies under the 1934 Act must file annual reports on Form 20-F, no later than six months after the end of the fiscal year covered by the report. Note that the company's financial statements that form part of a Form 20-F report filing (as in the case of a Form F-1 registration statement filing) must either be prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP or, if U.S. GAAP is not used, must be accompanied by a reconciliation to U.S. GAAP as to the materially different items in the financial statements. In addition, reporting foreign issuers must file periodic reports on Form 6-K setting forth or attaching information made available by the company to its stockholders pursuant to the law or stock exchange regulations of the company's home country or otherwise distributed by it to its stockholders.
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Requirements. Any person who owns more than 5% of a class of securities of an issuer registered under either the 1933 Act or 1934 Act must file with the SEC periodic reports of their ownership of the issuer's securities. If the person owns less than 20% of a class of equity securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the 1934 Act and does not own the securities for purposes of controlling the issuer, the ownership may be reported on a simplified form, Schedule 13G. Broker-dealers and certain qualified institutional investors are also eligible to file on Schedule 13G. Schedule 13G requires, among other information, the disclosure of the person's name and address, the amount of securities owned and the purpose for which they are owned. If Schedule 13G may not be used by the particular security holder, they must report their interest on the more complex Schedule 13D.
If the foreign issuer does not qualify for foreign private issuer status, the officers, directors and any holder of more than 10% of a class of securities must file reports with respect to their ownership of the issuer's securities, and are subject to a number of rules designed to prevent short-term profit on the issuer's securities. (Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act.)
Proxy Rules. The 1934 Act regulations also contain the SEC's "proxy rules" which govern the information that registered companies must include in proxy statements when proxies are solicited for voting at meetings of stockholders. However, the proxy rules do not apply to foreign private issuers.
Tender Offers. The 1934 Act also regulates "tender offers" to purchase securities of an issuer. The term "tender offer" has not been defined by the SEC, and the analysis of whether a particular offer to purchase securities constitutes a tender offer can sometimes be complex. In addition, the SEC rules governing tender offers are complicated. Consequently, it is important to engage a team of professional advisors, including lawyers and financial advisors, well in advance of a contemplated tender offer.
A person making a tender offer must normally abide by restrictions as to the timing of the purchases, the types of consideration offered and purchases or sales outside the terms of the tender offer. However, tender offers for the securities of foreign private issuers may be exempt from the requirements of the 1934 Act, depending on the percentage of the issuer's securities owned by U.S. persons. Generally, a tender offer for the securities of a foreign private issuer will be exempt if U.S. security holders hold less than 10% of the issuer's securities. Certain more limited exemptions are also available for foreign private issuers when U.S. security holders hold less than 40% of the issuer's securities. |