SEC Proposes Revisions to Cross-Border Transaction Exemptions

This post is from Andrew R. Brownstein of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz.

Together with Adam O. Emmerich, David A. Katz, James Cole, Jr. and Sabastian V. Niles, I have recently distributed a memorandum entitled Cross-Border M&A – SEC Proposes Revisions to Cross-Border Transaction Exemptions, which discusses proposed revisions by the SEC to the current regulatory regime for cross-border transactions. The revisions represent a modest advance toward clarifying existing exemptions and, if implemented, would provide US and non-US bidders with somewhat greater certainty and flexibility in structuring deals for non-US targets. The release also requests comments on a number of additional possible changes that could further broaden the exemptions. The proposed revisions do not address a key concern that under existing regulations foreign issuers are subject to potential exposure under the anti-fraud, anti-manipulation and civil liability provisions of the US federal securities laws for transactions with relatively modest US entanglements. The risk of such exposure has persuaded many international issuers to avoid US markets and US investors altogether, to the detriment of global capital markets in general and US investors in particular. The present amendments may thus be a way-station to a more comprehensive future revision of the cross-border rules.

The memorandum is available here.

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