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To: Ellen who wrote (41390)2/12/1998 5:02:00 AM
From: Ditchdigger  Respond to of 55532
 
ACCESS TO SHAREHOLDER LISTS:
WHO AND HOW?

Individuals occasionally ask the Securities and
Exchange Commission to provide lists of names of
shareholders of certain companies. Of course the
SEC does not have these lists. Only the company
itself has this information. Federal securities
statutes and SEC rules provide that companies
must provide access to such lists in only two
limited circumstances.

One SEC rule (Rule 14a-7) says that if a
company solicits proxies for the votes of its
shareholders at a meeting, any shareholder eligible
to vote and contesting the proposal can ask the
company to provide a shareholder list so that the
shareholder may contact other shareholders. If a
company is unwilling to provide the list, it may
instead offer to mail the shareholder's materials to
other shareholders at his expense. The requesting
shareholder must prove to the company that he
does own shares and provide an affidavit or
similar document describing what he is proposing
in the solicitation or mailing. The requesting
shareholder must also attest that the list will only
be used with respect to the meeting for which the
company is soliciting proxies.

The company must notify the shareholder, within
five business days of receiving the request,
whether it will provide a shareholder list or mail
the shareholder's materials. If the company
decides to mail the shareholder's materials, it must
also disclose how many shareholders will be
solicited and what the solicitation will cost.

The shareholder can also request that the
company provide the shareholder list or mail his
materials if the solicitation relates to a "going
private" transaction or a "roll-up" of a limited
partnership.

The second rule (Rule 14d-5) relates to people
making tender offer bids for securities. The target
company must notify a bidder no later than the
second business day after the bidder's request as
to whether it will forward the bidder's tender offer
materials to stockholders or provide a list of
investors who hold the relevant stock. If the
company decides to mail the tender offer
materials, it has to start sending them out within
three business days of getting the materials. On
the other hand, if the company intends to hand
over a stockholder list, it has three business days
after receiving the bidder's request. Usually,
companies opt to send out the bidder's materials
rather than furnish a shareholder list.

These are the only instances in which federal
securities laws allow access to shareholder lists.
However, a corporation's charter and by-laws, or
the laws of the state where it is incorporated or
does business, may provide for access to
shareholder lists in other circumstances, usually
when an investor shows a legitimate corporate
purpose.

Investors with questions about access to
shareholder lists and relevant federal securities
laws should contact the Office of Consumer
Affairs, Securities and Exchange Commission,
Washington, D. C. 20549. Questions relating to
shareholder lists also may be directed to the state
regulatory authority that oversees state securities
laws or corporate matters for the state where the
company is incorporated.