95-16390. Revision of Holding Period Requirements in Rule 144; Section 16(a) Reporting of Equity Swaps and Other Derivative Securities  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 131 (Monday, July 10, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 35645-35648]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-16390]
    
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    17 CFR Part 230
    
    [Release Nos. 33-7187; 34-35896; File No. S7-17-95]
    RIN 3235-AG53
    
    
    Revision of Holding Period Requirements in Rule 144; Section 
    16(a) Reporting of Equity Swaps and Other Derivative Securities
    
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commission is proposing to amend the holding period 
    requirements contained in Rule 144 (d) and (k) to permit resales of 
    ``restricted'' securities after a one-year, rather than a two-year, 
    holding period, if the sale complies with all of the other provisions 
    of Rule 144. Securities held by non-affiliated shareholders could be 
    resold without restriction after a holding period of two, rather than 
    three years. In addition, the Commission is requesting comment on 
    whether Rule 144 should be revised to address new trading strategies, 
    such as equity swaps, and is reminding persons subject to reporting 
    under Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Exchange 
    Act'') that reporting of these transactions is required under the 
    current rules.
    
    DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before September 8, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be submitted in triplicate to Jonathan G. 
    Katz, Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street 
    NW., Washington, DC 20549. All comment letters should refer to File No. 
    S7-17-95 and will be available for public inspection and copying in the 
    Commission's Public Reference Room.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard K. Wulff, Office of Small 
    Business Policy, Division of Corporation Finance at (202) 942-2950.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is proposing to shorten the 
    holding periods in Securities Act of 1933 (the ``Securities Act'') 
    1 Rule 144,2 the non-exclusive safe harbor for resales of 
    ``restricted'' securities 3 and securities held by affiliates of 
    the issuer. Under the proposal, the holding period for resales of 
    limited amounts of securities by any person would be reduced from two 
    years to one year, and the holding period for resales by non-affiliates 
    without compliance with any provisions of the rule would be reduced 
    from three years to two years.4 This release also includes a 
    discussion of whether Rule 144 should be amended to reflect new trading 
    strategies, such as equity swaps, and a reminder to persons subject to 
    reporting under Section 16 of the Exchange Act 5 that reporting of 
    these transactions is required under the current rules.
    
        \1\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
        \2\ 17 CFR 230.144.
        \3\ ``Restricted securities'' are defined in Rule 144(a)(3). See 
    infra Note 7.
        \4\ The Commission has established the Advisory Committee on the 
    Capital Formation and Regulatory Processes (the ``Advisory 
    Committee''), chaired by Commissioner Steven M.H. Wallman. The 
    Advisory Committee is considering fundamental issues relating to the 
    regulatory framework governing the capital formation process, 
    including whether the current system of registering securities 
    offerings should be replaced with a company registration system. The 
    recommendations of the Advisory Committee may result in rule 
    proposals or legislative recommendations that, if endorsed by the 
    Commission, ultimately may address the matters discussed in this 
    release. Under some of the company registration models now being 
    considered by the Advisory Committee, many of the legal distinctions 
    between publicly offered and privately placed securities would be 
    eliminated, including the concept of restricted securities. 
    Securities issued by a company registered with the Commission would 
    be freely tradeable, regardless of the public or private character 
    of the transaction.
        \5\ 15 U.S.C. 78p. 
    
    [[Page 35646]]
    
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    I. Background and Proposal
    
        The Commission adopted Rule 144 in 1972 6 to provide an 
    objectively determinable safe harbor for resales of ``restricted'' 
    securities and ``control'' securities. ``Restricted'' securities 
    generally are securities issued in private placements; 7 
    ``control'' securities are securities owned by affiliates of the 
    issuer. The rule provides that a person that complies with its terms 
    and conditions will not be engaged in a distribution of securities and, 
    thus, not be an underwriter 8 for purposes of the Section 4(1) 
    exemption from Securities Act registration for ordinary trading 
    transactions.9
    
        \6\ Release No. 33-5223 (January 11, 1972) [37 FR 591].
        \7\ ``Restricted'' securities include those acquired from the 
    issuer or an affiliate in a transaction or chain of transactions not 
    involving a public offering; those acquired from the issuer and 
    subject to resale limitations under Regulation D, 17 CFR 230.501-508 
    or Rule 701, 17 CFR 230.701; those subject to the Regulation D 
    resale limitations and acquired in a transaction or chain of 
    transactions not involving a public offering; and those acquired in 
    a transaction or chain of transactions meeting the requirements of 
    Rule 144A, 17 CFR 230.144A.
        \8\ See Section 2(11) of the Securities Act.
        \9\ Section 4(1) exempts transactions by persons that are not 
    issuers, underwriters or dealers.
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        The rule includes holding periods for ``restricted'' securities to 
    establish that the holder did not purchase with a view to an 
    unregistered public distribution. Under the rule, all ``restricted'' 
    securities must be held at least two years before any can be resold, 
    measured from the time the securities were purchased from the issuer or 
    an affiliate. For ``restricted'' securities held between two and three 
    years, other provisions of the rule require that the issuer be 
    providing certain current information about itself, that limited 
    amounts of securities are resold, that the resales are effected in 
    ordinary brokerage transactions or directly with a market-maker, and 
    that a notification of the resale is filed with the Commission. After a 
    three-year holding period, ``restricted'' securities may be resold by 
    non-affiliates without compliance with any of these provisions.
        The length of the holding period for ``restricted'' securities 
    significantly impacts the costs of raising capital in private 
    placements since investors require that the price of the securities be 
    discounted commensurate with the market risk during the holding period. 
    In each of the past four years, the small business community has asked 
    the Commission through the annual Government-Business Forums on Small 
    Business Capital Formation to consider shortening the Rule 144 holding 
    period.10 The two-year holding period has been in place since the 
    rule was adopted in 1972; the concept of ``free'' resales for non-
    affiliates after three years was adopted in 1981.11 In 1990, the 
    rule was revised 12 to permit the holding period to be measured 
    from the time that the securities were purchased from the issuer or an 
    affiliate, so that holders may tack each other's holding periods, 
    rather than requiring the entire holding period for each holder.
    
        \10\ Final Reports of the SEC Government-Business Forum On Small 
    Business Capital Formation (June 1992) (June 1993) (June 1994) 
    (February 1995). The Small Business Investment Incentive Act of 1980 
    directs the Commission to host this annual meeting for the purpose 
    of reviewing ``the current status of problems and programs relating 
    to small business capital formation.'' Pub. L. No. 96-477, Section 
    503, 94 Stat. 2275, 2292-93 (1980).
        \11\ Release No. 33-6286 (February 6, 1981) [46 FR 12195].
        \12\ Release No. 33-6862 (April 23, 1990) [55 FR 17933].
        Based on the Commission's experience with Rule 144 in the 20 years 
    since adoption, the Commission believes that it is appropriate to 
    enhance the utility of the safe harbor, and reduce costs for private 
    capital formation, by shortening the holding periods. Consequently, the 
    Commission is proposing that the holding period applicable to limited 
    Rule 144 resales be reduced from two years to one 13 and the 
    holding period for ``free'' resales by non-affiliates reduced from 
    three years to two. The Commission believes that these proposed holding 
    periods are sufficiently long to establish that the securities were not 
    purchased with a view to a public unregistered distribution.
    
        \13\ Conforming changes also are proposed to be made in 
    paragraph (e)(3) relating to determining the limitations on the 
    amounts resalable by pledgees, donees and trusts, reducing the 
    period from two years after the event of pledge default, donation or 
    trust acquisition, to one year.
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        Comment is requested as to whether the proposed revisions to the 
    holding period are appropriate. Are these periods sufficient to assure 
    that persons relying upon Rule 144 are not engaged in a public 
    distribution of securities inconsistent with the Section 4(1) ordinary 
    trading transaction exemption? Should the periods be retained, or 
    should the proposed periods be changed to be shorter or longer? If 
    other holding periods are suggested, the basis for the selected holding 
    period should be indicated.
    
    II. Equity Swaps and Other Like Investment Strategies
    
    A. Treatment Under Rule 144
    
        In 1990 when the Commission amended Rule 144 to allow tacking of 
    the holding period between investors, the Commission also deleted the 
    provision that previously tolled the holding period if the holder 
    engaged in short sales, puts or other options to sell 
    securities.14 The intervening 5-year period since implementation 
    of the holding period revisions has evidenced the growth of a variety 
    of investment strategies associated with separating the bundle of 
    rights that make up a security: strategies that are used in both the 
    private and public securities markets. Through the use of equity swaps, 
    forward contracts, derivatives and other financial tools, holders of 
    restricted and control shares are selling interests in such shares 
    while retaining legal title to the ``underlying'' security. Today, 
    record or beneficial ownership does not necessarily reflect who holds 
    the voting, investment or income interests of a security.15
    
        \14\ In 1990, the Commission rescinded former subdivision (d)(3) 
    of Rule 144, which generally tolled the holding period while a 
    holder had a short position in or an option to sell securities of 
    the same class as the restricted securities.
        \15\ See Release No. 33-7190, which addresses other issues 
    relating to equity swaps and similar transactions.
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        The Commission is examining whether it may be appropriate to revise 
    Rule 144 to reflect the economic realities of these transactions. For 
    example, is it appropriate to treat securities as ``held'' in the 
    private markets if the economic risk of the investment has been shifted 
    to the public markets? If not, should this be addressed through 
    reintroducing holding period tolling concepts for periods when the 
    holder is not at risk, or should the rule be revised to require 
    compliance with the rule when the risk shifting transaction to the 
    public markets occurs? If Rule 144 were to be revised to address these 
    questions, what changes would best ensure that the economic benefits 
    and risks of investment are not shifted during the prescribed holding 
    period? Also, should any possible revisions distinguish between 
    companies that are and are not widely followed in the market and, if 
    so, why? In addressing the question generally, commenters should 
    provide their views as to the need to have a fungibility doctrine 
    underlie Rule 144 to assure that the safe harbor in fact protects 
    resales that are not part of the distribution and that are consistent 
    with investment intent.
    
    B. Reminder of Requirement To File Section 16 Reports
    
        Questions are being raised as to the adequacy of information to the 
    markets about the securities transactions effected through equity swaps 
    and similar 
    
    [[Page 35647]]
    strategies.16 In August 1994, the Commission's release proposing 
    revisions to rules under Section 16 of the Exchange Act 17 
    included a discussion of reporting obligations arising from equity 
    swaps and similar risk-shifting transactions. In that release, the 
    Commission stated that Section 16 insiders must report equity swaps and 
    similar transactions in equity securities of the issuer,18 unless 
    the swap relates solely to interests in securities comprising part of 
    specified market baskets or indices of stocks.19
    
        \16\ See Rocker, ``Short Interest: No More Bullish Bellow,'' 
    Barron's, May 1, 1995.
        \17\ Release No. 34-34514 (August 10, 1994) [59 FR 42449].
        \18\ The term ``insider'' as used in this release refers to 
    officers, directors and holders of more than ten percent of a class 
    of equity securities who are subject to Section 16.
        \19\ 59 FR 42449, 42457, footnote 101 and accompanying text. No 
    Section 16 consequences would flow from a swap transaction to the 
    extent the swap relates solely to interests in securities comprising 
    part of a broad-based, publicly traded market basket or index of 
    stocks, approved for trading by the appropriate federal governmental 
    authority, that are deemed not to confer beneficial ownership for 
    purposes of Section 16 pursuant to Rule 16a-1(a)(5)(iii) [17 CFR 
    240.16a-1(a)(5)(iii)] and/or are excluded from the definition of 
    ``derivative securities'' pursuant to Rule 16a-1(c)(4) [17 CFR 
    240.16a-1(c)(4)].
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        The release provided the following example of an equity swap 
    required to be reported. An insider agrees to pay to the counterparty 
    for a period of three years the value of dividend payments on 100,000 
    shares of issuer common stock, in exchange for payment of a fixed 
    interest rate based on the market value of the 100,000 shares of stock 
    at the commencement of the swap term. The parties also agree that at 
    the end of the swap term, the insider will pay to the counterparty the 
    cash value of any appreciation on the shares during the term, or, 
    conversely, the counterparty will pay to the insider the cash value of 
    any depreciation. The insider retains title to and any voting rights in 
    the securities.
        The release suggested a method of reporting entering into and 
    closing out the swap using stock appreciation and depreciation rights 
    and deemed acquisitions and dispositions of the underlying securities. 
    In setting forth this analysis, the Commission specially noted in the 
    release that it was not suggesting that previously filed forms 
    reporting swap transactions in another manner needed to be revised, or 
    that swap transactions reported differently would be subject to 
    disclosure pursuant to Item 405 of Regulations S-B or S-K.20 The 
    release solicited comment on whether the Commission's approach reflects 
    economic reality and whether a separate reporting code for equity swaps 
    is needed. The Commission wishes to remind Section 16 insiders that 
    reporting at the time these transactions are entered into and when they 
    are closed out is required.21
    
        \20\ 17 CFR 228.405 and 229.405.
        \21\ To the extent settlement of the parties obligations occurs 
    on an interim basis during the term of the swap, such as quarterly, 
    the insider's Section 16 obligations would arise with respect to 
    each settlement.
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    III. Summary of Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        The Commission has prepared an initial regulatory flexibility 
    analysis in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act.22 The 
    analysis notes that the amendments to Rule 144 are being proposed as a 
    result of recommendations developed at the SEC Government-Business 
    Forums on Small Business Capital Formation. The purpose of the 
    revisions is to remove unnecessary restrictions in the resale of 
    securities while maintaining important protections to the investing 
    public.
    
        \22\ 5 U.S.C. 603.
        A copy of the initial regulatory flexibility analysis may be 
    obtained from Twanna M. Young, Office of Small Business Policy, 
    Division of Corporation Finance, Securities and Exchange Commission, 
    450 Fifth Street, NW., Stop 7-8, Washington, DC 20549, (202) 942-2950.
    
    IV. Statutory Basis, Text of Proposal and Authority
    
        The amendment to the Commission's rule is being proposed pursuant 
    to sections 2(11), 4(1), 4(4) and 19(a) of the Securities Act.
    
    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 230
    
        Reporting and recordkeeping. Securities.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 17, chapter II of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as follows:
    
    PART 230--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 230 continues to read in part, 
    as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s, 77sss, 78c, 
    78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78w, 78ll(d), 79t, 80a-8, 80a-29, 80a-30, and 
    80a-37, unless otherwise noted.
    * * * * *
        2. Section 230.144 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1), 
    (e)(3)(ii), (e)(3)(iii), (e)(3)(iv) and (k) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 230.144  Persons deemed not to be engaged in a distribution and 
    therefore not underwriters.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Holding period for restricted securities. * * *
        (1) General rule. A minimum of one year must elapse between the 
    later of the date of the acquisition of the securities from the issuer 
    or from an affiliate of the issuer, and any resale of such securities 
    in reliance on this section for the account of either the acquiror or 
    any subsequent holder of those securities, and if the acquiror takes 
    the securities by purchase, the one-year period shall not begin until 
    the full purchase price or other consideration is paid or given by the 
    person acquiring the securities from the issuer or from an affiliate of 
    the issuer.
    * * * * *
        (e) Limitation on amount of securities sold. * * *
    * * * * *
        (3) Determination of amount. * * *
    * * * * *
        (ii) The amount of securities sold for the account of a pledgee 
    thereof, or for the account of a purchaser of the pledged securities, 
    during any period of three months within one year after a default in 
    the obligation secured by the pledge, and the amount of securities sold 
    during the same three-month period for the account of the pledgor shall 
    not exceed, in the aggregate, the amount specified in paragraph (e)(1) 
    or (2) of this section, whichever is applicable;
        (iii) The amount of securities sold for the account of a donee 
    thereof during any period of three months within one year after the 
    donation, and the amount of securities sold during the same three-month 
    period for the account of the donor, shall not exceed, in the 
    aggregate, the amount specified in paragraph (e)(1) or (2) of this 
    section, whichever is applicable;
        (iv) Where securities were acquired by a trust from the settlor of 
    the trust, the amount of such securities sold for the account of the 
    trust during any period of three months within one year after the 
    acquisition of the securities by the trust, and the amount of 
    securities sold during the same three-month period for the account of 
    the settlor, shall not exceed, in the aggregate, the amount specified 
    in paragraph (e)(1) or (2) of this section, whichever is applicable;
    * * * * *
        (k) Termination of certain restrictions on sales of restricted 
    securities by persons other than affiliates. The requirements of 
    paragraphs (c), (e), (f) and (h) of this section shall not apply to 
    
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    restricted securities sold for the account of a person who is not an 
    affiliate of the issuer at the time of the sale and has not been an 
    affiliate during the preceding three months, provided a period of at 
    least two years has elapsed since the later of the date the securities 
    were acquired from the issuer or from an affiliate of the issuer. In 
    computing the two-year period for purposes of this provision, reference 
    should be made to paragraph (d) of this section.
    * * * * *
        Dated: June 27, 1995.
    
        By the Commission.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secreatary.
    [FR Doc. 95-16390 Filed 7-7-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/10/1995
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
95-16390
Dates:
Comments must be submitted on or before September 8, 1995.
Pages:
35645-35648 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release Nos. 33-7187, 34-35896, File No. S7-17-95
RINs:
3235-AG53: Reduction of Holding Period Requirements in Rule 144
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3235-AG53/reduction-of-holding-period-requirements-in-rule-144
PDF File:
95-16390.pdf
CFR: (1)
17 CFR 230.144